Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI)
- Class of 1966
Page 1 of 310
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
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Text from Pages 1 - 310 of the 1966 volume:
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108th liber brown university providence, rhode island 1966 BROWN UNIVERSITY, product of two hundred years, child of Keeney and Wriston and Manning, father of Hay, Hughes, and Green: Brown exists, changes; alters lives and in turn is altered by them. The long-repaired Revolution- ary hole in University Hall, no more nor less than the not- yet-repaired sewer line hole in Barus and Holley's back yard, remind us that even at age 202 Brown is no closer to decrepitude or stagnancy than in the year one. Buildings are razed; new ones sprout, mature, earn their ivy, and the Universityorganic, unified-maintains all the life proc- esses of the educational institution without so much as a flutter of the flesh-stone-and-steel heartbeat. Students, pro- fessor, administrators also arrive, enact their roles, depart -and every act, every million dollar grant and E in Eng- lish comp, is registered in the red brick of two centuries plus one-more-day. o THE PRESIDENT: Barnaby C. Keeney describes his own function as the responsibility for the whole operation, which involves about 7500 people, quite a lot of money, real estate, and activity. He must be a little more like an executive or a professional man than is a Professor, a Dean, or a student, and yet a little more like a Professor than a business executive. Like the greatest of Brown's presidents, Mr. Keeney has combined these necessary quali- ties and added many of his own-wit, scholarship and tre- mendous personal energy, to name a few. As chief officer of the Corporation and of the Administration, and as a mem- ber of almost all standing committees of the administra- tion and faculty, the President's power extends to every phase of the University's activity. Knowing when and how to use his power, and when and how to seek advice, Presi- dent Keeney has set the direction, the tone, and the char- acter of Brown. In short, the President must take final responsibility, must allow his name to become associated with everything the University does. Barnaby Keeney ac- cepted this responsibility, and it is indicative of the strength of his commitment that as soon as he announced his decision to retire, the decade 1955-1965 became known as the Keeney years at Brown. THE MAN who leaves Brown this year after twenty years on College Hill also leaves an as- sortment of fact, legend and anecdote which has built up around his name. Keeney-studies have proliferated in University publications for the past few years; most of these include the high- lights of his academic and administrative ca- reers. A graduate of the University of North Carolina, Mr. Keeney received his A.M. and Ph.D. from Harvard. After a war-time military career which saw him rise to the rank of captain and win several combat medals, he came to Brown in 1946. He established himself as a me- dieval historian his doctoral thesis, Judgment by Peers, has gone through two editions, but his career at Brown took an administrative turn in the early 1950s. After serving as Dean of the Graduate School and Dean of the College, Mr. Keeney became the twelfth president of Brown in September of 1955. The holder of sixteen honorary degrees, Mr. Keeney has also been honored by election to more than half a dozen learned societies. Most recently, he served as chairman of the National Commission on the Humanities, and when that groups recommendations were accepted by Congress, he was appointed head of the result- ant National Endowment for the Humanities. Aside from his impressive array of personal accomplishments, President Keeney has won the esteem of his colleagues and subordinates through his reservoir of wit and through such personal mannerisms as his studied walk and the owlish grin and thinking seconds that proceed his epigrammatic replies. The fabled Keeney wit, in the best neoclassical tradition, is keen, perceptive, and worthwhile. Thus, on the reputation of a national educational institu- tion: it resembles the reputation of a woman's virtue . . . both lag five years behind the facts, and on the meaning behind a student cliche: Apathy is when you are not excited about the same things I am. Many observers feel that as the size of the University has increased, the degree to which responsibility has been delegated has not kept pace-so that the office of President today car- ries an enormous burden. At any rate, the drain on the energies of President Keeney has been considerable. When asked what advice he would give his successor, Mr. Keeney replied, I'd have him paint the President's office some color other than blue. When the question was restated, he answered evenly, If I had a clear-cut program for Brown and the energy to carry it out, I would not have resigned. g y THE ADMINISTRATIONS assembled under the President during the Keeney decade can take pride justly in the University's accomplish- ments of that period, for they have helped make them possible. Although positions are shifted and titles changed as the need arises, the essen- tial fact is that Brown has found capable, dedi- cated men to do the jobs required. The Dean of the College is perhaps best known to students, and along with his assistant for student affairs, he is the administrator most involved in and most influential in undergradu- ate activities. Charles H. Watts and Edward R. Durgin the last Dean of Students were among the first in these positions during the Keeney years; more recently, Dean Morse and his assistant Robert Hill filled the posts. Long- popular Dean Robert Schulze finds himself as chiet college administrator now, and he has been aided during his tenure by Deans Walsh and Roman. Other important functions are carried out by equally capable men. For instance, Gordon Dewart has been head counselor for several years, while Mr. Charles H. Doebler has success- fully directed admission policy since 1958-and there are equally important men in financial aid, public relations, development, and the like. Some of the top administrative officers have only limited contact with students, but are nonetheless influential in University policy- making and implementation. Zenas Bliss, Pro- vost of the University for many years until his . - o retirement in 1965, functioned in a position similar to that of executive vice-president. John Elmendorf, who also left Brown recently, was a vice-president in the public relations field with an cye toward fund-raising. Another vice-presi- dent of long standing is F. Morris Cochran, whose position as Business Manager requires him to oversee the entire budget. Perhaps the most col- orful figure in Brown's administration is the Secretary of the Corporation, John Nicholas Brown, whose dedication and energy have kept his voice among the foremost in the determina- tion of the University's future. 10 o LT THE DECADE 1955-1965 saw Brown expand- ing in several directions at once. The most obvi- ous improvement and largest expenditure came in physical plant; new buildings and renova- tions of old structures benefitted almost all signif- icant segments of the University. For under- graduates, the West Quad and the new Pem- broke dormitories were built, and extensive ren- ovations were carried out in several of the older residence halls. Athletics were boosted by the purchase of the Dexter Asylum and the con- struction of Meehan Auditorium-and the al- most overnight upswing in the quality of hockey pointed toward more monetary commitment to other sports. No fewer than six of the sciences received their own buildings and laboratories: the Hunter Psychology building, the Wilson Bi- ology lab, the computer lab, Prince Engineering lab, the new greenhouse, and the Barus-Holley complex. The humanities finally received rec- ognition in the form of the Rockefeller library, with the promise of more to come. In addition to the purely physical develop- ment, Brown has grown in other ways. The size of the faculty has almost doubled. The quality of the faculty has improved, and median salaries have increased substantially. Similarly, the size and quality of the student body has increased, as has tuition. In fact, almost all the dollar- measures have multiplied during the Keeney administration: the market value and income of the endowment have more than doubled, the amount of government and foundation grants have risen e.g. the two Ford Foundation chal- lenge grants, and the amount of financial aid given to students has been raised. On other fronts, the graduate school was en- larged; university-owned land showed a net gain of some forty acres; the Brown University Press came into existence; and the college celebrated its 200th anniversary with all the pomp and lavishness it could muster. 13 THE YEAR 1965-1966 began with the admission of an enormous freshman class, and record numbers of seniors, juniors, and sopho- mores moved off-campus as a result of the squeeze. Throughout the tall, Brown received frst-rate coverage in all the national news media; unfortunately, the items found newsworthy were usually those the public relations office would have liked to forget. Irony, however, is always interesting, whether it be a disciplinary dean's lack of self-discipline or a psychology professor's psychotic behavior. Birth control was an explosive issue, but after a few wecks in which U.H. had announced no policy change, everyone accepted or torgot the fact. Undaunted, Brown continued to grow, change, and remain the same. Finishing touches were added to the new library and Barus- Holley; ground was broken for the new grad center; an ancient elm on the college green succumbed to blight but Wilbour Hall remained firmly entrenched on the otherwise sacrosanct John D. Rockefeller block. Another tuition raise made Brown's fees tempo- rarily tops, the grading system and parietal rules underwent revi- sion, and one hoax issue too many proved the demise of an out- spoken, highly opinionated BDH board. While some fraternities split with nationals over the bias question, a redefinition of the magic 50 clause of the '62 Housing Report gave others a new lease on life. Viet Nam affected most Brown men in some way, if only by increasing their worries about grades. The black-out of November 9th was more immediate, less serious. Much too soon or much too late, the 1965-1966 academic year ended for each of us; the Keeney decade passed; and Brown was older by three more $easOns, tWo IMOre SEIesters, one Mmore year. THE FUTURE depends in a great degree on Presi- dent-elect Ray Lorenzo Heffner. Vice-president and dean of faculties at Indiana University, Mr. Heffner spent thirteen years at that institution after receiving his B.A,, M.A., and Ph.D. from Yale. During the last years of his Indiana tenure, he managed an academic budget of $40 million per year and was instrumental in establishing programs in foreign language and in- ternational study which have been highly praised. The job awaiting him is a big one, even if it en- tails a redefinition of the duties, powers, and respon- sibilities of the office of President. Problems requiring immediate decisions include the nature and extent of tuture expansion, the means of meeting the Univer- sity's ever-growing financial needs, and the validity of the residential college idea in a growing, urban university. Changes are inevitable. Further increases in physi- cal size are well past the planning stagee.g. the projected graduate center, medical complex, and fine arts building. In years to come, the burgeoning grad- uate school will almost certainly receive more atten- tion, but care must be taken so that it does not begin to usurp undergraduate facilities. Balance between the three branches of the University is a constant goal, and it must be preserved if the tradition of the university-college is to be upheld. Notwithstanding the need for and the inevitability of change, it is encouraging to note one of the early, guarded statements of the new President: To me, the guidelines for the future seem clear. Specific deci- sions may still be difficult, but the course charted in the last two decades is in general the right course, and we need not pause too long to ask, Where are 10 we, and where are we going? academics RETIRING this year from his posts as vice- president and business manager of the Univer- sity, Mr. F. Morris Cochran has served Brown since 1945. He came to Brown after twenty years experience in handling the business affairs of educational institutions and has since become an active and influential figure in busi- ness, religious, and educational affairs, both in the Providence community and in wider fields. He was made vice-president of the University six months after taking the post of business manager. His duties include responsibility for all the business operations of the University and the administration of the budget. In addition Mr. Cochran holds the posts of secretary of the Administrative and Executive Committee, dep- uty treasurer, and secretary of the Investment Committee. Mr. Cochran also has many interests outside the Brown campus. He served as president of the Eastern Association of College and Univer- sity Business Officers, as a director of the Na- tional Federation of College and University Business Officers Associations, and as president of the National Association of Educational Buy- ers. He is presently a trustee of the College En- trance Examination Board and a member of its Finance and Audit and Executive Committees. In addition Mr. Cochran was president from 1960 to 1962 of the Greater Providence Cham- ber of Commerce. He served for a term as first vice-president of the Rhode Island State Council of Churches. Commenting on changes during his tenure at Brown, Mr. Cochran notes that the school has become increasingly more complex and varied; research has leapt forward. But Mr. Cochran be- lieves we have maintained a proper balance be- tween the humanities and sciences by our ex- cellent resistance to the national trend to over- emphasize science at the expense of the humani- ties. Hopefully, Brown can continue to main- tain this balance through its continued expan- sion. A MONK'S CELL would probably have more generous proportions than the office in which Lloyd W. Cornell, Jr., administers the more than one million dollars in financial aid given to Brown University students every year. Such an office, however, suits well the warm and friendly personality of Brown's director of fi- nancial aid. His personal approach to each stu- dent's case typifies the method employed by the Financial Aid Office in judging financial need. Although computers at the Educational Testing Service at Princeton make all the initial compu- tations, Mr. Cornell's office reviews each calcula- tion for accuracy and judgment and makes changes in about a quarter of the cases. This touch is the same as that employed in the yearly review of financial aid. We have no mecha- nistic approach; the emphasis is on individual abilities. A Brown graduate of the Class of 1943, Mr. Cornell returned to Brown in 1947 as an admis- sions officer. He served in various capacities in the admissions and financial aid offices until 1962, when he was appointed to his present post. His eighteen years of continuous service testify to his fondness for an exciting place to work. He cites the growth and expansion in the Wriston and Keeney eras of both the amount of financial aid and the proportion of financial aid to charges. While the scholarship growth has kept pace with the doubling of tui- tion in the past ten years, the amount of money loaned to undergraduates has increased seven- fold. Thus, while Mr. Cornell sees no limit to tuition raises, he feels that financial aid will continue to increase so that very few qualified students will be lost for financial reasons. He notes that in the past eighteen years the Univer- sity has enrolled more students at higher tui- tions, but We are doing more to help them. Our biggest problem is still not being able to solve the problems of everyone admitted. But Mr. Cornell has the answer for that problem: Hard work, he says with a wry smile. GREAT-GRANDSON of Nicholas Brown, Jr., after whom the University was named in 1804, Mr. John Nicholas Brown has ably served Brown for many years and now holds the prestigious position of Secre- tary of the Corporation of the University, Mr. Brown, an honorary member of the class of 05, first became connected with the University as a member of the Board of Management of the John Carter Brown Li- brary, which was originally the Brown family library. Elected to the Board of Trustees in 1930 and to the Board of Fellows in 1985, he is presently chairman of the Planning and Buildings Committee which is in overall charge of the physical needs of the University and is responsible for general planning, choosing ar chitects, and checking of designs and bids. Calling himself a frustrated architect he is an honorary member of the American Institute of Architects, Mr. Brown insists that Brown should have a beautiful campus; and he has been a moving force in develop- ing the striking buildings recently erected here. Mr. Brown feels strongly that final decisions about the University must be made by an outside board. While he believes that it is healthy and good for the Corporation to meet more with students, it is, he says, not the function of either the students or the faculty to run the University. According to M. Brown, most students do not realize that the trustees spend an enormous amount of time and resources, rewarded only by the satisfaction of helping a good cause. Since graduating magna cum laude from Harvard, where he was a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Mr. Brown has been an outstanding participant in varied activities. He is president of the Counting House Corporation and a director or officer of several other business corporations. A devoted student and patron of the arts, he has been president of the Byzantine Institute, treasurer and fellow of the Medieval Acad- emy of America, and a fellow of the American Acad- emy of Arts and Sciences. For his work in preserving works of art in Europe after World War II, the French government awarded him the Legion of Honor, and the Belgian government presented the Order of Leopold II. President Truman appointed him Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Air in 1946, and he served in Washington until 1949. At this time, he is a regent of the Smithsonian Institute and is chairman of the National Portrait Gallery Com- mittee and of the Armed Forces Museum Advisory Board. With a record of service and achievement behind him that would be the pride of any man, John Nich- olas Brown continues to make z great contribution of energy and ability to Brown and to many other ac- tivities. A BUSINESSMAN in an academic society, William Nash Davis says jokingly that this raises no problems at least none that money can't solve. As director of plant, housing and food operations, Mr. Davis works under the Vice-President of the University; among those who find him directly above them in the chain of command are Mr. Hill, Mr. Dunham, and Mr. Daggett at Brown and Miss Law at Pembroke. A 1931 Cornell graduate, Mr. Davis spent several years in private business and ten years as housing supervisor at M.I.T. before coming to Brown in 1947. President Wriston hired him at that time to help consolidate dining lacilities in Sharpe Refectory. With the opening of the Wriston Quad in 1951, Mr. Davis also took on the task of overseeing residence halls. Then in 1955, he assisted Mr. Keeney, Mr. Durgin, the architects, and a student board in plan- ning the West Quad. Taking control of the Building and Grounds department six years ago, Mr. Davis added the responsibility for all academic buildings to his previous concerns of residences and food opera- tions. His job today includes budgeting and expendi- tures in all these fields. Mr. Davis feels that Brown's expansion under President Keeney has been well organized and well directed, due to the fact that specialists have been hired in each necessary field. He notes that a net of some 100 acres of land have been acquired in the past ten years, and that the development in general has been directed by a well co-ordinated team. Personally, Mr. Davis likes to think of himself as basically an educator, since education comes first in an educational corporation. He enjoys talking to students and misses the close contact he had with undergraduates when he was manager of dining halls. When we get to the point where we can't listen, he says, it's time to fold up the tent and get out. 22 INTEGRATING the assistance of the various alumni offices, the advice of the admissions commit- tee, and the experience of fifteen years in University Hall, Mr. Charles H. Doebler 1V, Director of Admis- sions, strives for one main objective: quality. As the number of applicants increases and the size of the student body does not, quality becomes more and more difficult to isolate; it is not necessarily reflected in such concrete data as college board scores or aca- demic records. What is needed is sensitive discernment, subjective examination, and empirical intuition. When the task of admitting applicants reaches this point, the work becomes very arduous. Although Mr. Doeb- ler's approach to this crucial area cannot be divulged entirely, his success is amply evident in the continuing high calibre of the student body. Serving as a member of the Admissions Board since 1951 and as director since 1958, Mr. Doebler's official capacity does not confine him to the hallowed halls of U.H. Throughout the year he travels to various lo- cales, often interviewing interested applicants. De- scribing his job in no less a term than fascinating, Mr. Doebler emphasizes the wide range of selection that now challenges his committee and its resources because of the ever-growing national popularity of Brown. Admitting that the actual quality of a class is not best judged until many years after its members have departed from Brunonia's halls, Mr. Doebler never- thelessasserts that the potential of a class does fall within his committee's evaluative jurisdiction. Con- cern is concentrated in this area, and thus far a nota- ble record has been achieved. SERVING as acting University chaplain while Mr. Baldwin is on leave, the Reverend Julius Scott em- phasizes that the goal of the University Christian As- sociation and the chaplain's office is not to evange- lize the student body, but rather to analyze critically and, wherever it might prove beneficial, to offer guid- ance to the new thrusts which are manifesting them- selves in the University community. The classical concepts of theology are no longer sufficient to meet the questionings of the contemporary collegian. A more relevant and meaningful dialogue between the possibilities of religious faith and the student's aca- demic and social pursuits must be established. We want to examine opportunities for students to get involved in crucial areas, and Mr. Scott singles out the Latin American Project, run under the auspices of the U.C.A., as a prime example of this concern. The outline of this project calls for a number of stu- dents to spend two months during the summer living in a village in some Latin American country. This summer it will be held in Guatemala. This frank and realistic confrontation of religious pursuits with criti- cal, secular situations is, Mr. Scott believes, respected on the Brown campus, and he hopes that it will be continued. Mr. Scott came to Brown in 1963 to serve as execu- tive secretary of the UCA. In 1965 he was appointed Assistant Chaplain, and he assumed his present office in June of 1965 He received his Bachelor of Divinity at Garret Theological Seminary in Evanston, Illinois. Presently he is studying for his Ph.D. at Boston Uni- versity. His plans for the future are uncertain, but one can be sure that he will continue his own brand of Christian activism. OFFERING ADVICE AND CONSENT to students planning to attend law, business, or medical schools, Associate Dean of the College Gordon Dewart is also available to counsel students about other prob- lems at Brown. Dean Dewart was appointed to his present position after serving as dean of the class of 1964 and as Assistant Dean of the College: Head Counselor. Dewart assists seniors by giving them basic information about the policies and distinguishing traits of the various graduate schools and by trying to answer the common question, Can I get into Har- vard? In keeping with Brown's policy, Dewart is also a scholar and a teacher. His specialty is the nineteenth century French novel; he has written a thesis on Zola and spent a semester studying in Paris. His present course is on French nineteenth-century realism. Dean Dewart is outspokenly optimistic about Brown. Since he first came here as an assistant profes- sor in 1948, a great deal has been accomplished, he believes. He adds that Brown is nowhere near as bad as the BDH and discontents make out, and he points to such objective signs of success as the eighty per cent of Brown graduates who go on to graduate school. Agreeing that Brown students have changed in their attitude toward the school, Dewart says that although school spirit isn't so prominent anymore, it comes out in new waystutoring, community service, fraternity parties for the underprivileged. I think that it's equally healthy to do this to replace the rah rah type of school spirit that colleges had in the past. Speaking about his own job, Dewart admits, I have had my successes and my failures, but he be- lieves that he and the other deans on the whole suc- ceed very well in aiding students who just feel bet- ter to have someone around here who cares. YEARS OF PRACTICE in the field of pediatrics came to a close in the fall of 1963 when Dr. Roswell Johnson left New Brit- ain, Connecticut, to become director of Brown's University Health Service. Dr. Johnson taught pediatrics at Yale and Tulane medical schools and from 1951 to 1963 was Chief of Pediatrics at New Britain General Hospital. Most of his time, though twenty-four hours a day, three hundred sixty-five days a year, was taken up with an unending flow of children in and out of his office. Dr. Johnson's present office in Andrews House is the only one he occu- pies, and yet it combinesin a waythe three milieus university, hospital, private residence in which he has spent his medical ca- HEET Dr. Johnson finds that working with college students is much more rewarding than what he had done previously. He enjoys dealing with such a highly selected, intelligent, and basically healthy group. Most important, Brown men are a nice group of people to talk to. More than half of the Health Service's work is non-objective, and, since he is the only full-time M.D. on the staff, Dr. Johnson does a majority of the general counseling. Unlike some other schools, Brown has a policy of counseling and diagnos- ing students with psychological problems; those needing treatment receive it outside the University. Commenting on the nationally famous birth control pill contro- versy that erupted this fall, Dr. Johnson maintains that the Brown Daily Herald was fair, but unwise. As a result, some press stories had a misplaced emphasis; there was an implication that Dr. John- son was culpable of some wrongdoing. Dr. Johnson asks, What is nasty about a rumor that pills are being given out? As most people know, what Dr. Johnson did was standard medical practice. 24 THE SON of a director of athletics, Philip R. Thei- bert was a four-sport varsity letterman at Ambherst, mathematics instructor, art history instructor, coach, dean of students, and chairman of the admissions committee at various schools before he became direc- tor of athletics at Brown in 1963. In addition, he has played professional baseball, earned a masters degree in fine arts, and had his watercolors exhibited in var- ious small shows. To call him versatile would be an understatement. The athletic program at an Ivy League school is run similarly to an academic department. Director Theibert has a limited budgetary allocation for a limited range of activities. As of this year, coaches are not allowed to make initial contacts with sub-fresh- men; that job is now left to alumni and undergradu- ates. Mr. Theibert points out that an athlete who considers going to Brown must first be sold on educa- tion. Least important in attracting scholar-athletes, Mr. Theibert feels, is the coach, who rarely sees more than a third of his potential team members. Most important is the first representative of Brown, usually an alumnus, who works on the boy, sells him on the school, and gets him to apply before other schools can make their offers. As a member of the coaches committee of the Ath- letics Council, Mr. Theibert plays a large role in screening candidates for coaching positions. Outside Brown, Mr. Theibert is constantly working with Ivy League and ECAC committees in various capacitics. Currently president of the New England Track Asso- ciation, next vear he will be secretary of the Ivy League and president the following year. A very busy and concerned man, My Theibert plays a leading role in making athletics at Brown a most respectable and attractive feature of the University as a whole. MOVING from his modernly furnished office in the twelve-year-old Wriston Quadrangle to suite 209 in 200-year-old University Hall, Benjamin Roman suftered the loss of wall-to-wall carpet- ing for a step upward in the administrative hi- erarchy. Upon the resignation of Dean Walsh in December, Mr. Roman was elevated from his position as Adviser for Student Affairs to Assist- ant to the Dean of the College: Student Affairs. A most congenial gentleman, and a Brown man, Mr. Roman enjoys extensive contact with the student body in three different capacities. Those students who are called to his office in UH probably wish themselves to be elsewhere; but Dean Roman is anything but an unsympathetic, strict disciplinarian. Latin scholars come to know him as their skillful tutor in Latin 6 and Latin 12. And for the residents of Bronson House, Mr. Roman is their friendly man with the wine and good conversation, both free of charge at his weekly open houses. Dean Ro- man enjoys his tri-partite position at Brown, for in each role he meets undergraduates in a different, revealing, and rewarding context. Mr. Roman feels that the new parietal system has been relatively successful, adding that the registration procedures can and will be im- proved. He notes that during the latter half of the first semester, there was only limited use of the new social code; the number of parties re- mained about the same as in recent years. He feels that when a hockey game or similar event is scheduled for a Saturday night, the whole evening is usually more successful than if only a social function were available. Mr. Roman hopes that other forms of entertainment, such as concerts, will become increasingly popular weekend fare. Commenting on the somewhat limited stu- dent involvement in numerous campus Organ- izations, he feels that the undergraduate's work load plays a very important part in keeping participation low. Those people who are really dedicated maintain an interest; but those who know the demands of graduate school admission tend to restrict their constructive leisure time activities. Looking to the future, Mr. Roman hopes that the new undergraduate housing unit will, with its arrangement of student rooms, provide a different social set-up, so that individ- uals can get to know their associates far better than is now possible in the West Quadrangle. UNKNOWN AND UNAPPRECIATED on the Brown campus, Miss Rosemary Pierrel, Dean of Pembroke College and Protessor of Psychology, is normally depicted as a medieval obscurantist preventing the enlightened modern morality from reaching her young charges. In fact, to the Brown student in a position to talk with her, she is revealed as an accomplished scholar, a fine administrator, and an outspoken defender of the virtues of Pembroke. Dean of Pembroke since 1961, Miss Pierrel's duties are a combination of those of a college president and a head counselor. An important part of her time is devoted to public relations work. She represents Pembroke throughout the country, speaking to alumnae groups and rais- ing funds. She is not unknown in the offices of the Ford Foundation. In addition she works closely with development planners and can oc- Easionally be seen climbing over construction sites. Miss Pierrel often consults with Dean Schulze on the curriculum, the faculty, and as a member of the Committee on Academic Stand- ing. She and Dean Morse were largely responsi- ble for developing the new curriculum which went into effect in 1963. Seeing students also takes up much of Miss Pierrel's time. She and Assistant Dean Quevedo provide academic counseling for Pembroke juniors and seniors, and she is always available for discussion of more personal problems. She terms her job ex- citing. After having served as a faculty member for many years, she enjoys the opportunities for fuller responsibility. Dean Pierrel believes, It's not impossible for a man to be a dean of Pem- broke, but a man has never been a girl, and even at my advanced age I can remember how I felt. According to Dean Pierrel, Less than half of Pembroke graduates will make direct use of their college education. But she states, I'm not worried that the others wasted their time here at Pembroke. They will be much better informed citizens, wives, mothers, people. They too are making contributions they would not have made without a university education. Her duties as dean, full as they are, still allow Miss Pierrel time to teach one class a semester in psychology and to supervise graduate students. She is now applying for a second five-year grant from the United States Public Health Service to continue her research on learning in rats. A dedicated psychologist, she declares, I would probably give up my administrative post if I couldn't continue to teach and do research. As for her own future, It would be a shame to quit being a dean since I've just spent five years learning the job and can answer some of the questions. TO LIKE AND DISLIKE one's job is the lot of most men; but to offer the same reason for both opinions is something else again. Robert O. Schulze, Dean of the College, has an unremit- ting sense of being caught up in the madness of things, which can both exhilarate and frustrate anyone. Dean Schulze gets the feeling that he is being spread so terribly thin all the time. What with the numerous important committees he is on, students streaming into his office all day, constant conferment with President Keeney, and the teaching of Sociology 1, 2, it is no won- der Mr. Schulze takes the attitude he does. Commenting on the wave of major and minor protests that annually sweep over Brown and other university campuses, Dean Schulze says, Students do not properly appreciate the com- plexity of things or the human frailty of things. He wholeheartedly supports Dr. Keeney's advice given this fall to the junior class, Be kind to your deans. Mr. Schulze en- courages the students to use the deanery as the proper liaison between students and the Presi- dent and the Corporation. He thinks that un- dergraduates should neither be uncritical nor accentuate the positive. It is most important that students not get so bugged about things that disturb them that they do not try to take advantage of opportunities that exist. It is far better to spend one's time thinking about what to say to a professor than to complain that he is inaccessible. Early this fall, Dean Schulze said that he had second thoughts on the housing committee re- port of 1962 and, in fact, housing policy for the last decade. Then, in November, Mr. Schulze's committee decided to re-examine the 1962 report on fraternities and begin concrete exploration of the plans for a new, large under- graduate housing unit. A progressive in this area of university life, he claims to be old-fashioned when it comes to the goals of a college curricu- lum. Dean Schulze worries about over-speciali- zation and over-professionalism in what has been an essentially liberal arts college. He likes a curriculum that forces students to explore broadly and to develop an ability to question, to make sense out of life. Mr. Schulze will find, if he does not already know, that the majority of the student body agrees with his philosophy and attitudes, and they wish him continued suc- cess in his battles within and outside the walls of University Hall. BELIEVING that the United States has been the leader of the contemporary art movement since the end of the Second World War, Gerald Needham de- cided to leave his native England for further study and employment in this country. Mr. Needham, who has been an instructor of art at Brown for three years, received his bachelor's degree from the Univer- sity of Nottingham in Great Britain and his master's from the Institute of Fine Arts in New York City. The father of two small children, Mr. Needham is married to an American Fulbright scholar who in her spare time serves as an editor for the Brown Univer- sity Press. An art historian specializing in the art of America and the art of the nineteenth century, Mr. Needham has enjoyed his experiences in the Brown art depart- ment, whose contemporary emphasis he finds lacking in the art departments of many other institutions. Because he feels that a lifetime on the lecture ros- trum could be a destroyer of personality, Mr. Need- ham keeps busy both in and outside of the classroom. As a sportsman, he has played for the Osterling Rugby Club near London and serves as a forward for the Brown Rugby Club; as a scholar, he is working toward his Ph.D. at the Institute of Fine Arts. Al though he has not yet published any major works in his own right, Mr. Needham views writing as part of his future plans. CLASS OF 1924, Professor of Music Arlan Coolidge looks forward to improvements in academic facilities for the fine arts comparable to the recent wide-scale construction for the sciences. A limited number of practice and rehearsal rooms and the startling lack of space for any large orchestral presentation on campus are some of the inadequacies. Mr. Coolidge feels that improved facilities will remind and encourage all stu- dents to maintain a balance among the academic dis- ciplines which is essential for a true liberal education by re-emphasizing the importance of the fine arts. It must be pointed out that even under present condi- tions Professor Coolidge teaches excellent courses in American Music and Music in the Classic-Romantic Era. Mr. Coolidge contributes actively to campus, com- munity, and regional organizations for the advance- ment of the fine arts. He is currently president of the Rhode Island Fine Arts Council and holds executive positions with several local musical organizations. A special honor accorded Professor Coolidge on the Brown campus is that of bearing the mace, symbol of the presidency, in commencement exercises. This honor is bestowed upon a senior member of the fac- ulty who is a graduate of Brown. Currently, Professor Coolidge is studying the prac- tically forgotten American composer, Harrison Mil- lard 1829-1895. Mr. Goolidge remarks that in his research he has uncovered many facets of Millard's life which relate closely to events in American his- tory. Rediscovery of such relations underlines the sig- nificance of a country's cultural and scientific history. Professor Coolidge states that failure to consider any aspect of history leads to an incomplete familiarity with the past. A humanist in and out of his scholarly garb, Professor Coolidge hopes that the community's general interest and participation in cultural affairs will flourish and enhance the intellectual atmosphere. POPULAR AND EFFECTIVE with his students, Assistant Pro- tessor S. Paul Kashap brings to Brown a highly diversified educa- tional background and two years of teaching experience. Born in India, Mr. Kashap received his Bachelor of Arts and Master of Arts degree from the University of Bombay. He then attended the University of Edinburgh where he completed the four year course for the honors degree of Master of Arts in two years. He completed his education at Oxford and received the degree of Bachelor of Letters, an equivalent of the American Doctor of Philosophy. Mr. Kashap came to this country in 1961 and taught for a short time at Brown before joining the Wheaton College philosophy department. He returned to Brown as an assistant professor in 1963. His courses this year included a graduate seminar on Liebnitz, a course in ancient and medieval philosophy, and a course on the philosophy of religion. His lectures are notable for their careful preparation and for his willingness to discuss fully any questions brought up by his students. As a scholar Professor Kashap is particularly interested in meta- physics, logico-linguistic analysis, and moral philosophy. He has published one article in Analysis, and another one will appear shortly. Currently he is also working on the general outlines of a book on Spinoza's moral theory. Although there is no pressure on him from the department to do research, Professor Kashap finds it impossible to imagine not being working on some problem. He says that pressure for research comes from the individual himself if he is truly interested in his field of study. As his students can attest Professor Kashap combines excellent teaching ability with a vital interest in his subject. 2 PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE is the special field of Assistant Professor Jaegwon Kim of the philosophy department. A graduate of Dartmouth, Professor Kim received his doctorate from Princeton and taught at Swarthmore before coming to Brown three years ago. He is presently teaching a course in the philosophy of science and in symbolic logic. Considered a stimulating, even inspirational teach- er, Mr. Kim enjoys teaching both graduate and undergraduate students. This department has excel- lent graduate students, and it is possible to establish a professional rapport with them. As for undergrad- uates, he finds teaching them to be exciting. He feels that in some cases he can have an important influence on them in a way that is impossible with graduate students. Professor Kim has published about six scholarly pa- pers in his specialty. In his course on the philosophy of science and in his papers he examines concepts in science which are open to philosophical investigation. Such concepts as causation and explanation are ex- amined; other main questions have to do with the scientific method. Scientific ideas are considered with reference to philosophical theories of knowledge and metaphysics. Currently he is examining the mind- body problem. The combination of high general standards, an ex- cellent philosophy department, and a relaxed atmos- phere makes Brown attractive to Professor Kim. He enjoys teaching and studying here, and in just three years he has gained the admiration and respect of his students and colleagues. LEAFING through a mound of departmental paperwork, Professor Elmer E. Cornwell, Jr. smiled and explained that chairing a growing political science department is a time-consuming job, but somebody has to do it. He is grateful, however, that the University has abandoned its policy of life chairmanships because the work involved interferes with a professor's teaching and research. In the case of Dr. Cornwell the interference is not evident. He has found time to teach two popular undergraduate courses each semester and to publish, in January, 1965, Presidential Leadership of Public Opinion. Since joining the Brown faculty in 1955 as an assistant professor, he has seen the political science department grow from 25 students and a few professors to its present size of 60 to 70 concentrators. The high turnover of faculty which characterized the early years has been reduced to almost nil by the excellent hiring practices of Professor Cornwell and his im- mediate predecessor, Professor Dodge. Dr. Cornwell denies that recent developments in the sciences have caused it to outstrip the humanities during President Keeney's tenure. He points to the university professors in the departments of history, religious studies, and political science. The Chinese Center, summer stipend pro- grams, and additional funds for the humanities and social studies have all come about under President Keeney. The political science department hopes to establish a center for political leadership in the near future. In the next two or three years, at the end of his tenure as department chairman, Professor Cornwell plans to take a sabbatical leave in England to study the British Prime Ministership on lines roughly paralleling those he followed in his study of the American President. If past performance is any indication, we can expect a book valuable to the scholar, the student, and the general public. A SEMINAR by candlelight held during the November 9 power failure exemplifies the devotion to his profession of William McLoughlin, Pro- fessor of History. For the last three years he has taught a most provocative and challenging course, The Social and Intellectual History of the United States. Every one of his lectures is a comprehensive discourse on a topic, including some facts but mostly historical concepts and personal and scholarly interpretations. Despite an extensive list of required reading, his course continues to draw increasing numbers of undergraduatesas well as many grad studentswho are willing to devote the time and effort necessary to make the course as intellectually rewarding as possible. Dr. McLoughlin has centered the majority of his historical research on subjects related to the history of religion in America; he offers a bi-annual course and yearly seminar in that area. Completed early this year was a history of the separation of Church and State in New England. A biography of Baptist preacher and Brown trustee Isaac Backus is soon to be published by Litdle Brown An anthology of Backus's pamphlets is now being pre- pared for the John Harvard Library. Most important in the series of books on Backus, 4 long neglected champion of religious liberty, is the beginning of a major project financed in part by Brown and in part by the National Historical Archives Commission. Over the next ten vears, if all goes as planned, the Brown University Press will publish ten volumes of the Backus papers, collected and edited by Professor McLoughlin Somewhere among the wealth of historical materials in Dr. McLoughlin's office is the beginning of a textbook for 8th graders on the history of religion in America. The professor remarks, Scholars have an obligation to write for students in the primary and secondary schools, not only for other scholars A man of great learning, dedication, and the highest principles, William McLoughlin takes more than his share in the task of educating for excellence. STUDENT, teacher, scholar, and administrator, C. Peter Magrath is the complete professor. He is a stu- dent in the wider sense, taking a broad historical approach to his field of political science and applying it to his specialty, constitutional development. As a tecacher he conducts one of the most highly praised courses in the University, American Constitutional Politics. His lectures are polished, detailed, exciting, and witty. Professor Magrath radiates his pleasure in teaching, especially to Pembrokers, whom he con- siders pretty, intelligent, and charming. As a schol- ar, he soon hopes to publish his second major book, Yazoo: Law and Politics in the New Republic. Dr. Magrath's role as Associate Dean of the Gradu- ate School occupies an increasingly large portion of his time. Although he has not moved his office from the comfortable confines of Prospect's basement to symbolic UH, Professor Magrath's attitudes on many topics are those of a seasoned administrator. He berates those undergraduates who take a parochial attitude toward the graduate school and those who do not try to understand it. Brown's graduate school, he says, is integrally related to the student's educa- tion, especially since four fifths of the senior class plan to go to graduate schools. Grad students are living with us, are in our classes, teach us, and grade us; it behooves undergraduates to come to know them. With Dean Magrath in command, we can look forward to a growth in the mutual respect and un- derstanding of Brown men and Brown's graduate students. GOOD FIELD-NO HIT, Forrest McDonald abandoned his hopes of being a big time baseball player and wound up as a major league historian. As an undergraduate at the University of Texas, he studied the sports pages of The New York Times from 1900 to 1944 and gained an exhaustive knowledge of baseball. After a hitch in the navy and a start at writing fiction, he realized that the major concern of his early life was historyif only of baseball. His efforts from that point centered on American history. Says Professor McDonald, I plunged in with demonic energyand here I am. He is the author of five books, the most recent being E Pluribus Unwm, the next for his course, The Formation of the American Republic. Dr. McDonald is known for his unique classroom manner, which combines wit and informality with an almost omniscient grasp of his subject. His desire in teaching is to jar students loose from the cliches they have clung to, agitate their minds, and disci- pline them to be able to think freely Professor McDonald notes that an occupational hazard of historians is to confuse what they are saying with real history. To cover 3 million pecople for a 20 year period is tough enough: he shudders at the thought of teach- ing the history of Western Europe in thirty weeks In 1964 Professor McDonald became involved with the Gold- water forces in Rhode Island. His motivation, though, was more curiosity than political fervor. Personally, he claims to be devoid of partisan feelings and emotional involvement. He regards politics as this nation's number one spectator sport although football gives it a good battle. To participate in it is not only a lot of fun but a chance for the historian to set the present in political perspective and relate it to America's past. Professor McDonald knows how to get the most worth out of whatever he is doing, and the students in his class are sure to share in the experience. CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL in background, Associate Professor Lewis P. Lipsitt is now leading Brown's internationally known department of psy- chology into an extensive exploration of the general area of experimental child psychology and child de- velopment. This fall he announced the findings of a study which demonstrates how learning can take place in infants as early as one day after birth. Al- though psychology is a young science, the professor observes that our culture is coming to realize that it may even be the most important science. He cites the serious problems of mental illness, mental retarda- tion, and the threat of human annihilation from psychological causes-our inability to negotiate ver- bally, to make social concessions, and our propensity for losing control at the peace-talk table. Dr. Lipsitt notes that President Keeney has shown a considerable interest and remarkable insight in the area of child and adolescent development, and that he was a main force in the institution of Brown's summer program for under-achievers. With the help of Dr. Keeney, the department has expanded its grad- uate training program in child psychology, supported by the National Institute of Mental Health, in which one third of the psychology graduate students are ac- tively involved. Under the direction of Dr. Lipsitt, honors undergraduates, NSF undergraduate research participants, graduate students, and faculty members research in the areas of infant learning and percep- tual processes of infants and children. In addition, undergraduates, such as those in Professor Lipsitt's course in methods of child psychology, make regular visits to Brown's various community laboratories. Brown can be duly proud to have as energetic and dedicated a professor as Dr. Lipsitt to aid in the study of the problems of child psychology. A PROFUSION of books strikes the visitor entering the quarters of Diman House's resident fellow. Numerous volumes line the walls; all appear to have been well read. Living among these catalogs of knowledge is J. William Hunt, Assistant Professor of English. The fall of 1963 saw Mr. Hunt's arrival at Brown, and he brought impressive credentials with him. After obtaining his A.B. and M.A. in philosophy from Fordham, this scholar pro- ceeded to earn another ML.A., in classics, from Georgetown Uni- versity. Four additional years of study brought, in 1963, a Ph.D. in comparative literature from Yale. While working toward these degrees he studied German at WOCILA, iindn Al Besancon in France, and taught at Georgetown, Yale, and Con- necticut College for Women, among other schools. At Brown Mr. Hunt teaches a variety of English courses, as well as an exceptional seminar, The Classical and Renaissance Epic. His interest in his students is great, and the ones he has met here, both while teaching and in his capacity as resident fellow, have impressed this intense young man favorably. He feels that the majority of them are truly seeking an honest, liberal education, with dedication and seriousness. As for his colleagues, Mr. Hunt believes Brown is exceptional in its spirit of cooperation among the various professors. A mini- mum of rivalry and impersonal treatment makes contact be- tween members of the faculty easy, bringing them near to the achievement of an ideal-a true community of scholars. AN ACTOR in his undergraduate days, John W. Shroeder is famous among Brown men today for his highly stylized but nonetheless impressive manner of lecturc delivery. He enjoys large lecture classes, and as the 200-plus students in his English 141, 142 class will attest, Brown men enjoy his speaking. Special- izing in Elizabethan poetry and American prose fiction, Mr. Shroeder has recently published two articles in learned journals on Spenser and Hawthorne and is currently preparing a mono- graph on the same subject. Aside from his characteristic lecture style, Mr. Shroeder cndears himself most to students by his fond- ness for detail: there can be no theorizing, he says, not based on solid factual data. Professor Shroeder came to the Brown faculty in 1960 from Northwestern. At first dissatisfied with Brown, he was on the verge of returning to his ultimate city of Chicago; however, his enjoyment of his administrative duties and a growing appre- ciation of Brown changed his mind. He currently functions as the graduate director of English, and his work entails admis- sions, financial aid, and advising of graduate students. In addi- tion to his enjoyment of certain levels of administration, Mr. Shroeder says he admires Brown, Brown under Keeney's presi- dency, and the Brown man-for his general moderation. No discussion of Professor Shroeder would be complete with- out mention of one other facet of his personality: I paint, he exclaims, and the Liber certainly wouldn't want to ignore that. He equates his feelings about his Baroque cartoons with Hemingway's regard for his own boxing abilityjust as Hemingway called himself a boxer before a writer, so Mr. Shroeder likes to say he is a painter before I'm a professor of English. 33 VETERAN of only two years on the hill, Assistant Professor of Sociology Robert von der Lippe has already acquired a name for himsclf among the student body. To pre-meds, he is the fellow who wakes them up at 8:00 A.M. with a provocative talk on the sociology of medicine. Those concerned about the problems of general deviant behavior find his handling of Sociology 138 a rewarding experience. For the student of this country's racial problems there is his course on Races and Minorities. Finally, a new offering, Occupations and Professions, provides some of the reasons why people choose different careers. Professor von der Lippe's diversified range of interests extends to his research. He is a co-author of an extensive study of a plan for treatment of mental retardation in Rhode Island. This fall he began an evaluation of the Brown-Pembroke NSM tutorial program in the Doyle and Jenkins schools in Providence. When asked to comment on a magazine article about sociol- ogy, he remarked, It's always nice to be taken seriously. Dr. von der Lippe cites the new importance of sociology in policy- making. It is not enough, he feels, to simply manipulate the banking or educational systems in order to keep society in time with technological advances. In addition, he is critical of those sociologists who are slow to commit themselves on contemporary problems such as civil rights. Professor von der Lippe is not only a likeable and stimulating teacher but a man vitally concerned with the issues of our day. APPLYING SCIENCE to the most pervasive of human ac- tivities, language, is the object of linguistics. In 1960, when the Division of Modern Languages was expanded, Professor W. Freeman Twaddell was named first chairman of the department of linguistics. Since coming to Brown in 1946, he has served as president and associate director of linguistic societies and twice has been a consultant to national centers of language study. His range of teaching currently runs the gamut from introductory linguistics to advanced German. Professor Twaddell has taught in Japan, Germany, and all around the United States in his thirty-five year career. Presently, he is working on a project in the United Arab Republic. Brown is cooperating with Cornell and Texas in a program sponsored by a Rockefeller fellow- ship. University representatives confer with American-trained specialists who teach English in the Egyptian school system. In addition, graduate students from the three schools spend time in Egypt in preparation for assuming positions as teachers of Eng- lish in African and Asian countries. Professor Twaddell journeys to the Nile periodically to lend a hand in the operation. While at home, he has found time to co-author a recently completed four year series of German textbooks constructed according to modern principles of language learning and the structure of language. In addition, he is constantly working on new formula- tions of German and English grammar. The professor states that since 1955, his division has edu- cated Dr. Keeney in the foreign languages, in the sense that the President has become a judicious and understanding supporter of improvements in the study of foreign languages and linguis- tics. The qualitative and quantitative growth Marston Hall notwithstanding could not have taken place without President Keeney's help. When asked why the study of language is so vital, Professor Twaddell retorts, If we were fish, we would want to know something about water. Professor Twaddell is himself most vital to the study of linguistics at Brown-and around the world. AS A MARINE in the Far East at the end of the Second World War, Assistant Professor James J. Wrenn naturally became interested in the Chinese language. After graduation from Yale in 1953, he pursued graduate work there, but took time out in 1959 and 1960 to act as Director of Studies at the Inter-University Fellowship program at Taipei, Tai- wan Formosa is a Portuguese word! . He continued his graduate work and teaching at Yale from 1960 to 1962 and received his Ph.D. in 1964. Coming here in 1962 as the University's first lecturer in Chinese, Pro- fessor Wrenn found Brown a welcome change from the language mill atmosphere at New Haven. A personable, engaging man, Dr. Wrenn enjoys teach- ing It's more funand finds the small classes at Brown and the small town atmosphere of Provi- dence much to his liking. He likes to get to know his students and, with the unique rotation system of teaching in the Chinese Department, he gets to know all of them early in the program. He finds them very intelligent and feels that his department gets a high percentage of the brilliant and interested students. The Chinese language program was instituted un- der the department of linguistics in 1962. The Uni- versity now employs two full-time instructors and two graduate assistants to work with the undergraduates in the program. The department is extremely fortu- nate in having available the Charles Sidney Gardner Collection of approximately 30,000 volumes, most of them in Chinese. Dr. Wrenn describes it as a choice but growing collection, indispensable for a language such as Chinese where library work is so important. Although primarily interested in teaching, Professor Wrenn is also devoted to research. Working in pri- mary textual criticism and in the pre-modern novel, he will employ computer analysis in a machine colla- tion on unpunctuated Chinese texts. Through schol- arship and teaching, Professor Wrenn and Brown University are attempting to redeem Chinese, and Non-Western studies in general, from the left field to which they have been relegated by most American universities. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS after having joined the Brown faculty, Dr. Merton P. Stoltz now occupies the highest posi- tion in the deanery and is second only to the President in the administrative hierarchy. Upon the resignation ol Pro- vost Zenas Bliss in 1964, the new position of Dean of the University was created, and Professor Stoltz, then Associate Dean of the Graduate School and chairman of the econom- ics department, was named to fill it. Like all deans at Brown, Dean Stoltz continucs to teach, alternating each year between an undergraduate course in statistical meth- ods and a graduate course in econometrics. He regrets that he has little time now to do research and misses the close contact with graduate students he formerly enjoyed. Yet the fact that Dean Stoltz is both administrator and profes- sor testifies that he enjoys each of these positions. For many ycars Dean Stoltz has been active in Rhode Island community affairs. In 1957 he headed the special Providence Committee on Municipal Revenue which ren- dered a comprehensive report on municipal finances two years later. In 1961 he was a prominent member of a simi- lar group that studied state finances. Moreover, he has served in many capacities for the American Red Cross and in 1962 was named to the Eastern Area Advisory Council of the national organization. Dean Stoltz and the President are responsible for the selection and development of the faculty, improvement of the curriculum and instruction, and supervision of all but the administrative aspects of the university research. In other words, anything that is academic in the whole Uni- versity comes before his attention. Dean Stoltz feels that the primary goal of a college education is to teach the student how to approach any situation, however new, not in terms of a fixed set of prescriptions but with the appara- tus needed to solve the problem. He comments that what has happened to Brown under President Keeney is nearly without precedent; not so much the buildings, budget, or endowment, but the quality of the place has grown re- markably. A tireless worker who always gets the job well done, Dean Stoltz will play a leading role in Brown's jour- ney with greatness. 35 RUNNING A MILITARY ESTABLISHMENT on an ivy-league campus is somewhat of a unique experi- ence for a professional flying officer. Lt. Col. William J. Grundmann, professor of air science and com- mandant of the AFROTC detachment for the past four years, has also found it to be a particularly chal- lenging assignment. The unit at Brown does not supply the Air Force with great numbers of second lieutenants; what Brown supplies is quality. The nature of the program itself is somewhat different at Brown than at some other colleges across the nation. It lasts two years, with emphasis on academics, leaving the traditional military training to be accomplished off the campus. As such it is ideally suited to Brown. Colonel Grundmann feels that he has received dur- ing his tour at the University at least as much as he has given: I not only get professional satisfaction out of giving the Air Force good people, but I've had the personal satistaction of knowing the capabilities of these young people who in a few years will be solving the problems we've been working on for years. With few exceptions, my faith has been re- stored a great deal in the generation that's going to inherit these problems. At the conclusion of this academic year, Colonel Grundmann will be reassigned, he feels, to Viet Nam. His years at Brown will not be forgotten, however, either by the colonel himself, who is seriously consid- ering educational administration as a second career after retirement from the Air Force, or by those who have had the privilege to know him while he was here. A FORMER DEAN of the freshman class, assistant Professor of Engineering Barrett Hazeltine has an abiding interest in undergraduate education at Brown. He is presently serving as a liaison between Barus-Holley and the third floor of University Hall, helping to increase the enrollment of engi- neers. The drop-out rate of 509, in the Division of Engineering compares favorably, he says, with that of all other majors - a tribute to the quality of students attracted to Brown's difficult Sc.B. program. For two years, Professor Hazeltine has taught basic engineering to high school students in the National Science Foundation summer program. From this experience he has developed an electronics course, with his own text- book, for non-engineers, which was offered for the first time in the spring semester. He also teaches a course in energy conversion. In 1964-1965, the professor was the recipient of a Ford Foundation grant that sent college teachers into industry for a year to see what real engineering is like. Dr. Hazeltine worked in the Space and Information System Division of Raytheon and is currently a consultant on communica- tions for the Apollo project. His interests range from electronics and com- munication to medicine, where he has worked on a new method of locating tumors by the injection of radioisotopes. A graduate of Princeton, Professor Hazeltine says Brown is on equal footing with his Alma Mater, in great part due to the tremendous efforts of President Keeney. He points out that Brown is surrounded by larger Ivy neighbors to the north and west, leaving no population mass from which the university can draw its freshman class. With a man of the character and dedication of Professor Hazeltine, Brown should have little difficulty in attracting and educating engineering students of the highest calibre. AFTER AN ABSENCE of nine years, Professor Gerald S. Heller returned to the Brown campus in 1963. He had earned both his masters and doctorate degrees at Brown and from 1948 to 1954 was an assistant professor of physics. In 1954, he moved to Boston and began an eight-year stay at the Lincoln Laboratory of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he was group leader. In 1962, he felt a longing for academic work and so became visiting professor of electrical engineering at M.I.'T. But Professor Heller found that he preferred Brown because it was a more traditional type of academic institution. Upon the renewal of his relationship with Brown, he was appointed professor of engineering. Currently, Dr. Heller is teaching two undergraduate courses-Electricity and Magnetism, and Electronic Circuitsand a graduate course in electro- magnetic theory. Professor Heller is known for his enjoyable lectures and the ability to create a rapport with his students. Dr. Heller's research centers around his main field of interest: that part of the electromagnetic spectrum between microwaves and far infrared waves. This is a region of very limited investigation because of the difficulty in generating and detecting radiation. The professor's most recent concern has been the magnetic properties of matter. Over his distinguished career, Dr. Heller has published about forty scholarly papers. When not in the lab, the classroom, or at various scientific gatherings around the country, he might be found skating at Meehan Auditorium. Some of his time is spent with the faculty committee on admissions, whose work he enjoys very much Professor Heller genuinely takes pleasure in being involved with what is going on at Brown He is the faculty adviser of the LEE.E. More important, he is a consultant for NASA on their new electronics lab in Cambridge. Professor Heller foresees the use of that region of the spectrum he is investigating in future space exploration. AN EXPLOSION OF KNOWLEDGE is cur- rently taking place in practically all fields of learning as a result of the development of highly sophisticated methods of gathering in- formation. One of the most dramatic examples is the area of elementary particle physics, which employs not only the most complex computers, but also the huge, circular, high-energy accelera- tors or atom smashers. Robert E. Lanou, Asso- ciate Professor of Physics, is one of four Brown professors currently analyzing data recorded last year at the Brookhaven National Laboratory on Long Island. Professor Lanou received his doctorate from Yale in 1957. For two years he worked at Berkeley before coming to Brown as a research associate. In 1963 he was promoted to the rank of associate professor. Dr. Lanou has been widely hailed by his students in Physics 47, WIDELY ADMIRED as a teacher and a scholar, Professor John A. Dillon, Jr., of the physics department is leaving this June to become graduate school dean at the University of Louisville. His long and productive career at Brown University began in 1948 when he came to Brown as a research assistant after graduating from Fordham University. He became an assist- ant professor in 1954, an associate professor in 1960, and a professor in Electricity and Magnetism, as one of the most likeable and friendly teachers one could hope to meet. His warmth-and professional skill-was put to good advantage in the spring semester when he helped students in the labs for two new courses, Physics 6 and 48. This assignment re- sulted from the department's new policy of plac- ing ranking faculty members in laboratories. It was not an accident that the improve- ment of Brown's physics department began with the tenure of Mr. Keeney as President, Dr. Lanou notes. In no disparaging terms, he com- ments that for a humanist, President Keeney has a real appreciation of science. He has been very good to the department and has given everyone a fair deal. The benevolence is re- ciprocal, for Dr. Lanou has been very good to the University, especially to his students. 37 1963. He has also served two years as Assistant to the Dean of the College and has been a resident fellow at Pembroke since 1960. In 1963, Dr. Dillon was appointed executive officer of the physics department. Dr. Dillons main field of research concerns the electrical and chemical properties of solid surfaces. He is also currently doing research on the nature of meteorites gathered by rockets. As a teacher, Professor Dillon has taught most courses in the books and some which have disappeared. He has especially enjoyed teaching Physics 1, 2, an introductory course aimed primarily at liberal arts majors. He feels that this course is very important and also interesting to teach; he foresees trouble unless educated people have a feeling for science. It's a great problem to teach non-professionals, to communicate with non-scientists. But Dr. Dillon enjoys teaching and finds working with non-scientists stimulating. In addition to his own teaching, Dr. Dillon has devoted considerable time and effort to problems related to the teaching of science at all levels. He has played an active role in various programs of science training for high school teachers and is the Rhode Island Regional Counselor for the American Institute of Physics. Commenting on leaving Brown, Dillon says, Keeney and I will prob- ably spend the rest of our time here commiserating each other about our decisions to leave Brown, but life somehow goes on. At the University of Louisville, Professor Dillon hopes to be able to continue to teach and do research, but he realizes that he might get bogged down in administrative work. Hopefully, the students at the University of Louisville will get an opportunity to see beyond the dean to the fine teacher and scholar students at Brown have come to respect and admire. A BROWN MAN of the class of '43, Dr. Robert E. Parks returned to his alma mater in the summer of 1963 as Professor of Medical Science in the University's new Division of Biological and Med- ical Sciences. Dr. Parks received his M.D. from Harvard and his Ph.D. from Wisconsin, where he was a professor of pharmacology from 1954 to 1963. Dr. Parks' research in the areas of abnormal nucleotides and anti-tumor drugs at Wisconsin led him and his colleagues, Dr. and Mrs. Cha, Dr. Miech, and Dr. Mourad, into a study of the enzymatic mechanisms by which energy is trapped and made ready for utilization when food is catabolized. As he says, this process is pretty basic for all living things, including the hu- man body. In addition, Dr. Parks has continued investigation of how certain nitrogen bases inhibit the growth of cancer cells. In the classroom, Professor Parks as a lecturer in Biology 9 is re- puted for his encyclopedic knowledge of bio-chemistry, especially the latest published research. He is participating in the develop- ment of a four-semester sequence in biochemistry, physiology, and pharmacology to be taken next year by the first group of M.M.S. Candidates. As for the medical science program, Dr. Parks asserts that this is the reasonable way to teach medicine. The six-year curriculum demands well-motivated and highly-talented stu- dents, a high percentage of whom will eventually return to aca- demic life. Dr. Parks has been actively involved in the develop- ment of the curriculum, recruitment of faculty, and supervision of building plans. Brown's program, he feels, will continue to be unique: it is now the only such new endeavor at a private university, where quality rather than quantity of doctors is most important. Might Brown have its own medical school? Says Dr. Parks, It will happen some day. GOVERNMENT GRANTS and increased help from the University have aided the teaching and research of Professor John Ross of the chemistry department since he came here as an assistant professor in 1953. Funds from the fed- eral government have allowed him and many other faculty members in the physical sciences to undertake projects without worrying about ex- penses. According to Dr. Ross, The only lim- itations on my work are my time and my abil- ity, and the grants have not restricted him to particular studies. Dr. Rosss work, both theoret- ical and experimental, has been in the area of chemical kinetics, molecular beams, statistical mechanics, and transport properties. Currently his research is supported by grants from the Atomic Energy Commission, the Naval Research Department, and the National Science Founda- tion. He has published about thirty-five articles in scholarly journals. During the years of the Keeney administra- tion, the number of staff members and graduate students in the department has risen fifty per- cent. This has meant that the formal teaching load has been reduced. Senior faculty members now handle all courses, and they are available in the laboratories. Professor Ross teaches Chemistry 3, an introductory physical chemistry course. Dr. Ross believes that it is now possible to experiment with undergraduate teaching .. . All faculty are now in a position to filter information from research to freshmen. In this way research and teaching blend so that they are not always distinguishable. The student benefits from his professor's research, and the professor in turn can learn through teaching. CULTIVATING an ever-growing interest in the field of American ideas and institutions, Mark Stern has elected to do honors work in the American Civilization program. Currently, he is examining the manner in which local govern- ments have approached the social problems aris- ing from increased urbanization. For his honor thesis, Mark has conducted an extensive study of New York City's efforts to control air pollu- tion. He has delineated the problem from scien- tific, historic, economic, and political points of view. Mark spent many days during the summer of 1965 interviewing numerous and varied rep- resentatives of industry, public health, govern- ment, and education. As a result of this re- search, Mark hopes to be able to define the atti- tudes of urban, state, and federal governments, health agencies, related industries, and the pub- lic in general, and to spell out the problems inherent in each group's position. Initially stimulated in this area by Professor Roelofs of New York University, Mark has for the past year conducted his work under the supervision of Professor Cornwell, chairman of the Political Science Department. Although he has condensed the normal four years of undergraduate work into three, Mark has found time to undertake an active role in many campus activities. As a member of the Bruin Club, he is constantly in contact with the high-calibre students in the area of his home town, Yonkers, New York. Moreover, he has en- gaged in some intercollegiate wrestling home matches only. A member of Alpha Pi Lambda fraternity, Mark is known among his friends for marked proficiency in flatulent self-expression. As for the future, Mark hopes to receive an ap- prenticeship in Washington this summer. After that, he will enter law school or graduate school, continuing his study of America's cul- ture. FIVE ACRES in Portsmouth, R. I. constitute J. Michael Mer- etta's off-campus establishment. The farm, with its private beach, runs substantially more than a room in Archibald, but it's worth it. Mike commutes to Brown daily in his woody-a '50 Ford wagon with the estatename Sea Stones on the side and spends one night a week at most in the campus area. Living alone in south county is this year's kick for Mike; last year's was keeping a horse in Purchase, N. Y., where he would often extend his riding weekends from Thursday to Tuesday. Among his other interests are competitive swimming during the summer primarily for clubs in his hometown of Cincinnati and target-shooting with his rifle during the school year. Although he pledged a fraternity in his sophomore year, he has since dissociated himself because he wouldn't want to limit my contacts to one group of people. Mike also enjoys social- izing a bit-but I wouldn't want to be classified as a socialite; I have friends from all walks. 39 In addition to his outside activities, Mike has found time to do honors work in his Latin-Greek major. His main first semes- ter project was a thesis comparing Sappho's usage of nouns and adjectives to similar usage in Homeric poetry. He became fasci- nated by Sappho's expression while taking Mr. Putnam's Greek lyric course, and later narrowed his topic down to one facet of that expression. During second semester, Mike hopes to prepare another thesis, this one on a Latin poet. Hopefully Juvenal, he says, he's so relevant today-I'd like to try updating some of his work if possible. Despite his scholarly efforts, Mike says he doesn't want to be typed as an intellectual: T don't study nearly as much as I should; I'd hate to have my professors know how little T study. A SUPERHAWK and a TR-6 have provided Mike Williams' transportation for most of the five years since he entered Brown; during his first extended vacation three semesters, he and the Honda made it from Boston to Acapulco and back. At other times in the past few years he has been a caretaker for an estate in Massachusetts, a construction worker in California, and a long-distance truck driver. Originally Class of '65, Mike hopes to graduate in January of 1968. In addition to his love for cycles, speed, and noise, Mike enjoys playing the drums conga, bongo, etc., reads widely, and is an avid rugby player rugby's a different world-some peo- ple criticize the fatalized athleticism in non-jock types like me, but the game just cranks me up. By far his major interest, however, is creative writing. A prolific writer of prose fiction and poetry he has contributed to the Literary Anthology of this volume, Mike likes to experiment in writing. At one point he surprised himself by composing a creative, 50-question, multiple- choice examination-as with the bulk of his writing, solely for the benefit of himself and his close friends. Paradoxically, English courses are not his forte. A D in Eng- lish 1 preceded his A in English 4, and before succeeding in his philosophy courses his major he failed English 15. A part of the problem in 15 was attendance, but he did not help his cause by entitling his last paper E it was a one-sentence, five-page paper dumping on Brown's English department in general and anything related to my instructor in particular. A great many people here feel you must be critically aware of your own writ- ing before it has any validity, he says, and adds that not believing this isn't getting me anywhere. Bearded but not beat, Mike has a legitimate interest in phi- losophy: I want to know the various philosophical systems in- side and out, so that my work will withstand metaphysical prob- ing. He hopes to master French eventually and teach philoso- phy in a French lycee. SUPERMAN is his favorite, but the X-Men' are on the upsurge. Honors English concentrator Jon Keates dab- bled in comic books in early childhood, switched to Play- boy at 9, and having reached manhood is hooked on Supie again. He has read good literature all his life as well and has for years considered a career in writing. At expository prose, he is proficient enough o achieve a 375 average in his major. Jon entered as a pre-med, but a D in chemistry 40 was an ominous warning to leave the sinking ship before it was too late. He never wanted to be a doctor anyway. assistantship at the University of Leicester, and admission The developnient of latalism in Ihomas Hardy's prose is to the graduate schools of Harvard, Princeton, Duke, and the subject of Jon's honor thesis. Stanford. Jon wants to teach in a university, do some writ- A proctor in Mead House, Jon likes to counsel his ing, perhaps become an administrator. If that does not chatges intormally, lend out his comics, and conduct a lais work out. the opportunities for creativity in advertising sez-faire administration. Most of Jon's time is spent at will probably occupy his talents. A major extra-curricular Lambda Chi he was vice-president andor rotting his interest is films; he admires the work and career of director mind away. Having hung around athletes all his life, Jon Richard Lester especially. Jon's loudest praise is reserved was naturally drawn to the house he considers an anom- for the poets Corso and Ferlinghetti; he compares 4 Coney aly on the Brown campus. A jock in his own right, Jon is Island of the Mind with Lyrical Ballads as a herald of a a quarter-miler and a member of the foursome that broke new age in poetry. That individuality and creativity he the Brown record for the mile relay in 1964. values in the arts are themselves primary elements in the He applied this fall for a Wilson fellowship, a tutorial life of Jon Keates. CONCENTRATING ON STUDENT GOVERNMENT while attempting an honors major in American Civiliza- tion, Pembroke senior Carol Dannenberg has discovered the limit to which one can involve herself in the Univer- sity. Carol is not doing an honors thesis; she does not have the time. Graduation with honors now depends upon her average. As evidenced by her endeavors, the combina- tion of a stiff academic program and opportunities for practical application of knowledge is what Carol values most highly in her college experience. The high point of her extra-curricular life was Carol's term as president of Pembroke's Student Government As- sociation. She has found that students frequently are so sure of their moral positions that they are unable to enter- tain the somewhat different ideas and morality of an ad- ministration representing another generation. For mutual understanding and communication-and not a belligerent confrontation-each side must be willing to offer positive answers as well as constructive criticisms. Thus, for a stu- dent body to realize those freedoms deemed essential to its maturity, it must be able to participate in a dialogue be- tween generations. A hockey fanatic in the winter, Carol spent last sum- mer with the Peace Corps in this country and enjoyed it enormously. After graduation, she hopes to work for the Peace Corps or VISTA, or perhaps a political figure she admires. Carol rules out a political career for herself- perhaps because she realizes that talk, talk, talk and no action achieve minimal results in this world. STARTING SLOWLY with two hooks and a dog as a freshman, Stanley Schretter hit his stride in upper- level engineering courses; he now has a 3.9 average in his major. Stan changed from a four-year Sc.B. to a five year A.B.-Sc.B. primarily for the opportunity to take humanities and social studies courses that partic- ularly interested him. In the five-year program, Stan takes 16 engineering courses out of a total of 40. Still, he says, it is very difficult to know engineering with such a limited background, and he is therefore going on to do graduate studies. Stan's honors project, simply stated, has to do with determining the size and shape of an object illumi- nated by radar. Since no one else has published rele- vant research, Stan is having difficulty finding mate- rials that will help to evaluate the data. With the aid of Professor Bolle of the Division of Engineering, Stan is learning to program the new IBM 3860 com- puter for use in analyzing his results. He first became interested in this electromagnetic jazz while work- ing summers on detection and radiation problems at the Navy's Underwater Sound Lab in New London. For three years, Stan was in charge of Brown's radio club and its station, W1VPY. He is a member of Tau Beta Pi, the executive board of the Brown Engineering Society, and a new intramural hockey team, the Engineers, which boasts Professor Heller as a participating skater. Stan's most avid interest out- side of engineering is economics, in which he is tak- ing several courses. He plays the stock market on paper, reads all current economic news, and occa- sionally debates both amateurs and professionals on economic policy. Combining his scientific talents and academic interests, Stan looks forward to teaching and jor industry as a career. LEAVING BROWN with an honors degree in Hu- man Biology, Clark Hopson will leave behind a fine record as an athlete in addition to his academic ac- complishments. For his honors project, Clark worked under Dr. G. Settipane of the allergy clinic of R.I. Hospital to study bee sting allergies. One technique he used was to inject passive cutaneous anaphylaxis to determine the presence of undesirable antibodies in the blood. Clark is bound for Cornell med school, and in the future he wants to specialize. Although he is still indefinite as to the specialty, he claims to be thinking about obstetrics and gynecology. As an athlete, Clark has been outstanding in foot- ball and track. A center on the football team, he received honorable mention on the All-Ivy team. A PURELY THEORETICAL study of multi- dimensional, radiating gas flows about a wedge- shaped object is the planned subject of Peter Smith's honors project. His project, which he is doing under the supervision of Dr. Ira Cohen of the engineering department, will probably be the basis of his masters thesis. Specifically, Pete will attempt to solve the the- oretical equations for the flow field to find the effect of the radiation of the body on it. Work of this kind has practical application to the problems of space capsule re-entry. Concentrating in aerospace engineering, Pete is in the five-year program and will receive both his Sc.B. and his Sc.M. next year. He is highly pleased with Brown's engineering program and especially praises Professor Maeder, chairman of the division, for his outstanding and enthusiastic help for Brown stu- dents. Pete believes that all the courses are good and that the basic courses give an excellent background. They make an effort to give good teachers in all the undergraduate years. Elected to Tau Beta Pi, the engineering honorary society, in his junior year, Pete has also been involved in many campus activities. He was treasurer of his fraternity, Sigma Nu; chairman of the Manning Chapel Board; captain of the rugby team; and treas- urer of the ATAA. He has taken several courses out- side of the science area and is especially interested in music. In short, he has combined an outstanding aca- demic performance with a vital interest in many phases of Brown life. Throwing the discus for the track team, he set new school records five times in his freshman year, twice in his sophomore year, and five times in his junior year. Unfortunately, injuries have plagued Clark's .athletic career, especially his football playing. Draw- Ing one serious injury per year, he suffered a broken shoulder, a broken ankle and a serious concussion during three different football seasons. Clark has been active in other campus affairs: he was IFC representative for his fraternity Lambda Chi Alpha, a member of the Brown Key, and a stu- dent proctor for two years. His professional air carries over to all his activities; even those friends who nick- named him Howdy Doody' many vears ago have called him Dr. Doody of late. ENTERING BROWN just a short time after leaving Greece, John Mylopoulos had some trouble with Eng- lish 1, but since then he has done well enough 1o spott 4 38 in his electrical engineering concentiation and a 358 overall This year he is working on an honors project forming the first part of his masters thesis, which he hopes to complete at Brown next year. His general field is cybernetics. In an attempt to explain basic characteristics of the nervous system, he will build a system like a simple nervous system, study any new properties he finds, and then compare with a real system to see if these properties are also present there. John wants to build a model to act like a rat; if he is successful, his model will respond to training the same way a rat does. For example, he will be able to teach the model to make a choice between three things. This is not his first independ- ent effort; as their junior year project, John and Dave Stepner built a digital multiplier unit. Born in Athens, John studied English for ten years before coming to the U.S. He played freshman soccer, but since his freshman year he has devoted almost all his efforts to his engineering work. His efforts have been so successful that another excellent engineering student unreservedly described him as the most bril- liant student in his class. After completing his mas- ters next year, John plans to go back to Greece. Al- though he would like to teach and do research, oppor- tunities are very limited, and he expects to work for private industry. His record at Brown indicates that his engineering future should be highly successful whatever his environment. TRAVELING to Greece in the summer of his junior year, classics major John Kenfield received a Brown University M-program fellowship to study at the American School of Classical Studies in Athens. While doing research in Argos, he became interested in a recently-discovered Greek suit of armor that dated back to 725 B.C. The foremost authorities in the field of life-size Greek statuary had claimed that the major influence on this art form occurred when the Greeks gained access to Egyptian culture in 615 B.C.; however, John noted similarities between the musculature patterns of the armor's breastplate and those of early statues. As the breastplate antedated the onset of Egyptian influence by more than 100 years, he concluded that these musculature patterns were indigenous to Greece. Under Mr. Ross Hollo- way, John prepared an independent studies project discussing the influence of armor on Greek statuary and vice versa, and the probability of a circular de- velopment toward realism arising from the interac- tion of the two. When accepted by Harvard as well as Brown, John chose the latter on the strength of the classics depart- ment's reputation. He has not regretted his decision: The classics department has been very good to me. John has maintained a high B average despite his honors work and despite his participation in the Yachting Club, the Classics Club, and Alpha Delta Phi fraternity. Prior to his summer of study in Greece, John spent three summers sailing in the merchant marine; he has lived in several different areas of the U.S. as well as the three years he spent living in Barbados. THE ONLY PEMBROKER in Professor Schoedel's course on Pauline Letters of the Greek New Testament, senior Linda Bedrick can not be accused of shifting the curve. She is the sole student in an offering given this year especially for her. An honors concentrator in religious studies, Linda is also taking Classical He- brew and Chinese Intellectual History in addition to preparing for her thesis. She is exploring one phase of the interpenetration of the Old Testament and the New Testament, Paul's use of Abraham in his proselytizing activity among the Gentiles. Abraham's expression of faith in God's promise to him is generalized by Paul to apply to Gentiles confronted by the apostolic preaching about the redemp- tion effected by the crucifixion. Linda's thesis will state, in part, that in Paul's view, Gentiles who manifest a faith like Abraham's participate in this redemption by their incorporation into the ranks of the heirs of God's promise. Two summers ago, Linda was the recipient of an NSF grant in what was then her major, chemistry. Last summer, she worked on her religious studies honors thesis at Columbia on a Ford Founda- tion grant Linda had changed her major during the intervening academic year when she found that her elective religious studies courses were more stimulating in both personal and intellectual terms. Despite only two years of work in Biblical studies, Linda is preparing to go on to graduate school. She looks forward to pursu- ing research in problems that involve the inter-relation of the Old and New Testaments. Linda's unique combination of talents and interests is further enhanced by her remarkable good looks. NOT THE ONLY politico in Brown's undergradu- ate body, Steve Romansky has nevertheless taken upon himself a lion's share of the work involved in educational organizing extra-curricular social and tunctions. During his two-year tenure as president of the Class of 1966, he was instrumental in expanding the banquet-speaker program, which included such notable speakers as CORE'S James Farmer. In addi- tion, Steve helped to initiate the first joint Brown- Pembroke class dinner. He holds the position of vice- chairman of the Dean's Committee on Convocations, and is proud to note that thirteen of this year's twenty convocation speakers came from outside the campus community, as opposed to two or three of twenty in past years. As a member of F.H.B.G., Steve handled the formidable task of managing that organ- ization's lecture series which brought Thomas, Edward Albee, and others to Brown; he was chairman of the student bi-centennial weekend committee, and he has been an active member of Alpha Pi Lambda for three years. Majoring in history, Steve is as well-informed on current events as he is in the political, economic, and social trends of past eras. He reads some dozen peri- odicals per week, several newspapers daily, and sub- stantial amounts of current non-fiction. Considering his consistent academic performance and vast extra- curricular involvement, it should surprise no one to learn that Steve sleeps 514 to six hours a night as a matter of habit. During the summers, Steve has done political re- search for the New Republic, a publication whose dispassionate objectivity fascinated him. He de- scribes himself as slightly left of center? politically. He has also worked for the Urban League and other civic organizations in his hometown of Washington, D.C. Steve hopes to study in London next year for a degrece in international politics, but he also notes hat he will have to go to law school eventually. Norman . LECTURERS AND SPEAKERS THE RANGE of speakers and lecturers who address the Brown community each year is a reflection of the liberality of the University. Edward Kuhn of the American Bar Association spoke to juniors about his profession. Carl Oglesby of Students for a Democratic Society eloquently delineated his beliefs concerning U.S. foreign policy and Vietnam. A well-attended teach-in on Vietnam presented opinions covering numerous facets of the war. Senator Wayne Morse delivered the keynote address at a large Latin Ameri- can Conference; South Africans black and white dis- cussed that nation's domestic state of affairs. Congressmen abounded on campus during the spring semester. The freshman class heard James Roosevelt and Richard Bolling at their convocations; guest speaker at the class dinner was Senator Jacob Javits. Juniors were addressed by Republican Silvio 0. Conte and Democrat Edwin Willis, chairman of the House Un-American Activities Committee. Harvard men were well represented. Historian Bernard Bailyn delivered the Colver lecturers in the fall. Oscar Handlin addressed the sophomore class in convocation. Frank Freidel, professor of political in- stitutions, spoke at the senior class dinner in Febru- ary. In March, noted Russian authority Merle Fainsod talked to juniors at noon in Sayles. In the 1965 Meikeljohn lecture, Harvard Law School alum- nus and Justice of the Supreme Court, William O. Brennan, delivered a major address on the interpre- tation of the First Amendment. From the New School came President Robert Maclver and Professor Saul Padover. Other institutionsmost notably Brown- were also represented. STUDENT-RUN F.H.B.G. filled Alumnae Hall five times in the fall with an exciting Contemporary Lecture Series. Starting with American socialist Nor- man Thomas on foreign policy, audiences heard Rod Serling, Edward Albee, Richard Hofstadter, and finally a panel discussing Sex on the College Cam- pus. In the spring of 1965, the Brown Daily Herald sponsored an address by controversial author Imman- uel Velikovsky, whose theories were challenged by a panel of Brown professors. The overflow audience was enthralled by the spectacle of a devoted believer defending himself before an imposing array of scien- tific fact and accepted theory. The Cammarian Club and the Student Government Association hosted rep- resentatives of the Ivy League schoolsboth male and female variety-who gathered at Brown in the fall to discuss areas of common interest and to share ideas. Lesser known, relatively unpublicized, and poorly attended, the weekly rounds of University Lectures and departmental colloquia brought to Brown ex- perts covering the entire spectrum of academic en- deavors. Resident Fellows' Luncheons became Uni- versity Luncheons, and quite a few nonindependents could be seen Tuesdays in the President's Dining Room. The M-program seminars opened their doors to the entire University, and the community became aware of this splendid arena for student-faculty inter- change on timely and often controversial topics. PROE Kucrra LITERARY ANTHOLOGY Brown's student writers are dependent on bi-annually absent professors for criticism and the seldom issued, rarely read Herald Review for their outlet. As a result, much of the best work done at Brown is never published and is circulated only among small groups. Messrs. Hawkes and Honig are among the finest directors of creative ability, but their recurrent leaves of absencecoupled with the writers' and readers' apathy toward the Reviewseverely limit the effectiveness of the English expression program. The following anthology of poetry and prose fiction rep- resents the Liber's attempt to collect some of the best writ- ing in the University today; the quality herein shows that Brown should indeed be capable of supporting a produc- tive, worthwhile literary establishment. Mario Kujawski, a member of the class of '66, is an art major from Cleveland, Ohio. He has studied in Germany and writes poetry in Spanish as well as English. Premonition of winter in Providence The streets like pants in the afternoon, newly washed and white, slightly wrinkled at the ends. The winter waits in all the shadows, and in the dust of chimney tops writes messages in the sky. Quiet nuns of surprise encounters, realizations of faded greens on the trees that line these streets. Oh, those dripping, passing, afternoons, hung out to dry by women waiting for the sudden sun that never comes. Slow dripping afternoons, continuations of a frozen wind, infinite permutation on the linen line. The streets like pants in the afternoon, newly dried and stretched, never to be worn. Weighty and important deeds manufactured by the sun wait for their narrow end. I see him, master of this fading afternoon, seated on his wooden throne underneath his house, of linen hung stiff and dry, glancing through the dying streets at that bony sky. from: Songs of Passing As I pass behind your curtain you can feel me. As I call your name in silence you can hear me. When I dream my dream of you you will see me. When you walk above my grave you will know me. 641 from: Songs of Passing Even before I hold your hand, or touch your face must kiss you goodby. Even before I see you, see me must kiss you goodbye. Even before I happen to come here must say farewell- to all that is near. And so I must run from star to star you know how infinite the sky. Please no sadness, no tear only in passing, loving you, already gone I say goodbye. Michael J. Williams, a philosophy major from Beverly, Massachusetts, is described in another section of this book. The Tears of St. Lawrence He sat down on the leather couch, across from the white haired lady, somewhat next to the ancient Ichabod Crane of a man. He shivered incessantly, although it was an Au- gust evening in northern New Jersey, not quite cold, yet cold enough, he thought as he waited to be offered some coffee or tea. Did you have a nice ride? the woman offered, then took back quickly in a look that told him it didn't really matter if he had or not. Yes, yes nice, he said, between the convulsions which shook his whole body. Then thinking of traffic in Hartford and the near miss on the New York thruway he said, no, no I didn't to the medallion on the wall over her head. Did your scooter give you any trouble? without lifting her head from the medical journal, so indifferently he could have frozen to death. It isn't a scooter, Martha, it's a cycle isn't it, Tad? The old picklemaker was giving her battle yet, Tad thought. The old man was at the edge of his chair waiting for the reply, consciously turning off the glare of the ice chiselled lady. She had on a dress of midnight blue and was really glamorous in a way. An ice age sort of way. Choosing frostbite to overeating pickles, Tad said Yes, in fact it is a cycle Doc, 350 cc's, scooters run 175 the largest, smaller wheels you know. Sounds like blood tests with all those cc's she snipped, the three-wayedness of the conversation drifted out the window into the New Jersey night, he heard tires squeal- ing in the distance and thought of Shelly at the rally. Tally ho with your tartan scarf, your wool skirt and bon- nie bowed stretch knee-socks. Down to second, round Mil- ler's bend, damn this sweater-covered sweater which itches; leave me room to shift, Shell. Over the hill and toddy tinkem too, Tad thought. Bottled three peck, like to try a few Tad. The sports car faded out of sight. Tad's stomach turned, he needed some hot black coffee. Outside the wind whistled through the carburetors of his idle bike. The oil from his valve covers, inhumanly shiny, dripped once every three minutes and fifteen seconds to the stain on the drive- way. The cycle was dying for another night, becoming the icy cold of whatever temperature nature decided to be. The moisture of inhuman tears formed from condensation in the night. He wished her nose would stick to the medi- cal journal. Yes, I'd like a few pickles, Doc. Then put the coffee on, I have to go down cellar and get them. He turned on the water for coffee, the kitchen was warmer than the ice room. On the table he saw a newspa- per, it was opened, and the third column halfway down caught his eye. The Tears of St. Lawrence, an astronomical phenomenon will delight thousands of stargazers tonight. . . . Tad looked up from the paper and walked to the window. The Doc came in unnoticed behind him, catching him gazing out the window at the darkness. Lot out there, eh boy spoke the gangly, crooked mouthed man, lot out there we still don't know about, Princeton's working day and night, though, want to see about harnessing the cold light from stars, interested in stars? Will delight thousands of stargazers tonight. What are the Tears of St. Lawrence, Doc? An M.G. was failing on a hill three miles on the other side of Tamarin mountain. The coffee water was boiling now. G'head, take a mittful, no sense munching on one pickle. Made three peck. Tell me about 'em Doc, the Tears, that is. Through his shadowed eyes, the Doc grinned a very hu- man smile. He hitched at his pants as he set the bottle of freshly opened pickles on the table. Tad was sitting on the washing machine, his blue parka still zipped to his throat. Will delight thousands, thousands, thousands. I'm really a mountain goat. No, a chimney sweep. A crying erudite. Another drop fell from the valve cover of his bike. I will vibrate the foundations of the cities when T am resurrected it said as it died for the night, cold still. It's one thing, Tad, to go out and look at them, an- other to try and understand them; down at Princeton there's men working day and night. Stargazers, thousands of them; glaring eyes, cocked heads, all witnessing the astronomical phenomenon of the Tears of St. Lawrence. What are they Doc, the Tears? Same light as fireflies, cold light, yep, ninety-eight per- cent efficient, no heat loss you know. Have a pickle Tad, grab a mittful. I wish I had a mistress and lived on a hill in a house with a glass roof, Tad thought, we could take turns look- ing at the stars. A TR-3 spun out on the corner down by the Riverdale drugstore. Tad hadn't reached for a pickle yet, but was waiting instead for the warm crutch that coffee was. It in the cup was as dark and aromatic as Madi- son Avenue spent millions insisting it was. The coffee beans grown ripe in rich Columbian soil, in healthy Columbian sunshine, in dirty American warehouses. Doc pulled a bot- tle from somewhere in his coat. It wasn't pickles, they grow in jars. Tad looked out the window again, concentrating on the moongleam dancing on the chrome of his cycle. For a second he feared it might start by itself and roar into the distant night, into an oblivion similar to that in a man's mind from which it came. Then he sipped the reinforced coffee that Doc had placed in His cold hands and was all right. So you'd like to see the Tears. Doc's head came up, ears cocked like a Shepherd Tad once had, the sound of a Healey crossing the finish line had penetrated his more elevated thoughts. Shelly was in the Red Healey, her hair blowing in the chill August wind, the tweed of her skirt ended abruptly across the firm roundness of her thighs. It was nice to know how to wear what at a rally. A nice group of people and machines, respectively oblivious to the causes and reasons for things. St. Lawrence shed a tear. Shelly know you were coming? No, she, uh, I didn't tell her. Damn, damn the coffee was good, just the right temperature to gulp down now. Tad unzipped his parka. No, he never told her when he was coming. It never made that much difference that he came. Sounds in the night. Sounds of motion. When will it all stop? The motorcycle sat cold silent still. It's crisp clear out Tad, we'd have a vantage view from the hill, it's not every year we get such a chance at the Tears. What are they? What are they, Doc? Tad was unconsciously digging at the pickles Doc had made. The creaking of the stairs indicated a change in the glacial position. Goddamn why doesn't that kid in the M.G. put new points in. It sputtered in the lost night, then caught, then sputtered again. The tears were falling more steadily now. Well let's get out there. There's night and stars and lots of heaven waiting to reveal itself to us. Doc didn't bother putting the coffee cups in the sink. The two of them walked out of the door, in Egypt a slight tremor shook the foundation of one of the pyramids, a secietaty in Long Island was putting on a pair of lavender underpants, two stray youngsters were having it out in the middle of an lowa cornfield, a swallow perched on a cross beam in the next to the top row of steel in the Eiffel tower, two honeymooners in Maine discovered that all virgins don't bleed, a dog howled from the top of a hill in West Virginia, in Kenya a lion tore the heart out of an antelope. on a straight stretch of Arizona highway two mangled cars and several blood-soaked bodies proved that no one was chicken, a pilot jumped out of his jet over the Indian ocean, several sad goodbyes were said to sons and lovers in train stations and bus depots on mountain trails and by hospital beds, a rat scurried along the edge of a manure filled stable in a dead man's farm in Wooster, Ohio, in Berlin a young man stood silent, shaking as he faltered the third time from jumping out a fifth story window to the crippled freedom of the West, a lonesome couple fell asleep on the rug of a Malibu apartment convinced that the other had finally made it, seven men took turns beat- ing a newsman in subterranean Bronx because of an arti- cle he had written condemning some one or thing, a powder puff barmaid smiled wearily in the neon light as she stuffed a drunk's five dollar bill between the crevice of her bosom, two men died beaten by each other as a woman walked away from them. Some rose, some fell, some died, some gave birth. Some cared, some didn't, some noticed, some were noticed. Some roared, some cowered; some were so certain of themselves and their own mode of existence that St. Lawrence shed another tear. Did you see it Tad, did you see that one go! Tad thought he saw a spark of light reflected on the chrome of his bike. No. No he didn't, the bike was cold and wet and still as the death Jesus promised wouldn't be. Shelly was sitting on the trunk of the Healey, a can of Bud in her left hand, a Marlboro in her right. She laughed at something or other, her head back a little, her blonde hair caught in the headlights like a Breck girl. She noted the face of every boy she caught looking at her well ex- posed legs, she would wear that skirt more often. She laid back, leaning her elbows on the trunk, let them look all they want, she looked up at the heavens. For one second she saw and wondered about a streak of light that shot brightly somewhere over the underside of the elm leaves which sheltered their party. The moment was lost in the turning on of a car radio; it was time to swing again. But St. Lawrence had shed a tear for her. Tad lay warmly wrapped in Army blankets on the cot Doc had brought up on the hill where they had watched the meteorite shower. Now and then a flicker of light stirred in the silent sky, Tad liked this, outdoors, alone in the night. And it had been a wonderful thing to see, just he and Doc, watching the firebrands hurl themselves across the sky in all directions. He puffed on a cigarette that Doc had given him, laying tightly wrapped with only his face and one arm exposed to the cool air. Doc was delivering a baby. Somewhere bloody, wailing; patient Doc, mother and child. The sounds of the rally had died and Tad tried to forget the blonde who hadn't o1 been there by reflecting on the after-images of bright me- teor trails. What color were they? Shelly was just like that, they'd have had a fine time if she hadn't already made plans. Then he began thinking of plans; plans people had and plans people made. He had none really, and thought that the reason he was alone and here and caring about the life that somehow stretched ahead of him. He thought of Shelly being out there with someone else, somewhere out there over his hill. It was very late, and he didn't like the thought at all. He had so much wanted to see her tonight. Two meteorites crossed paths in the West; they were the last ones he saw that night. When she came through the front door Tad was waiting, sitting on the washing machine with a half empty pop bottle in his hand. She came into the kitchen, her face windnipped red and clothes wrinkled a bit, looked at Tad amusedly, saying, ' Tad. What are you doing here? Then as dreams come true she came over close and was in his arms leaning up against the washing machine and he kissed her gently and hoped in the somewhat transcendent quality of the mo- ment that he could keep her then and forever just like this, away from all harm, everyone else and live his life with her. She backed away firmly gripping his both hands, looking tired and he said he had to talk to her but some- how in a smile and a quick shuftle of feet and the fading flutter of frills round the corner she was gone and Tad remembered it was night, cold and dark, and he was tired. The day had left him futilely tired. Doc walked through the office door with a sad smile on his face. A whiskey bottle peeked out of the corner of his right hand pocket; small spatterings of drying blood cov- ered his pant cuff, and socks, and shoe. You'll get to see her in the morning, son. Yes sir, I will. In the morning. The little stinker made it; gave us both a rough time, though, put up a bloody battle. I have to check on his mother in the morning. Good girl though. His hand wasn't shaking at all as he held out the pickle jar to Tad, but before he realized it Tad was out the door, walking past his cycle up the hill to the cot. He put the jar on the table, turned off the lights and reached to his coat pocket for another glass container. The lights went out in the house, Tad turned back to look at it, the night was more dark now. He thought of the warmth and lightness of the bedroom Shelly had gone to, where alone she lay in the feminine comfort of waiting for all the frivolous promises hinging on the rising of tomor- row's sun. All it had to do was rise. Rainbows and blos- soms on the trees were for her he thought, O God for her. The cold mist had settled to cover the turned back blan- kets, the trees surrounding the clearing on the hill had merged to one impenetrable darkness; formless but for jagged treetops outlined against the more immense dark- ness of the sky. He lay tight in the now damp pocket of the blankets, shaking and cold as he had been when he first stepped into the warm white house at the bottom of the hill. The last sports car he heard faded in a distant night. He closed his eyes. Then a streak of pure white light shot across the very top of the bowl of heaven. St. Lawrence shed the last tear for him. Wanderstill time An attic box, locked up the way to it blocked up within it a clock ticking off chinks of imaginative evidence that there was is or will be some inroad to an informative center tick a lifeless song tick a lover gone tick a vagrant's wager tick a woman sager than the typehouse prisons than preamblic preludes than Khubla Khannic dreams ten million stumble over ten million stumbling over ten million stumbled tick a restless flutter tick a flowing stutter tick a window chain tick a tearful rain like random clockwork each splash and sprinkle separately smashing my whole love of time in time. From cool clear heights of philosophical discourse I have fallen to booze filled nights jagged street corners where Mitgarb plays her dizzy harp four wheels minus two tell me where Aristotle went if your voice is louder than the cement mixer or how come Aphrodite transcribes every bluejeaned ass which peddles by forgive me Plato my fits are all too paperback and in the forest I clamber to climb tall hills to think tall thoughts but my toes still drip of beer. 52 A Woodrow Wilson Fellow, Steve Zwicker is a Ph.D. candidate in the English department. He received his B.A. from U.C.L.A. The Chase The night is poised above the hills and in the dark a silent car speeds through a mountain pass and scatters light along the road. The wolves push through the hillside scrub and search the mountainside for prey, and from a distant manzanita tree the owl recites his mournful song. The hunt renews, and each degree, driven by the primacy of need, will stalk his prey. No innocent can hide. All force is anchored in the restless execution of the chase. The car alone remains and forces light upon the road. A mind reflects the deep uncharted regions of the night. All fact removed, hope will abide, will, in the long hours of dark silence, produce the vision worthy of a dream. The Funeral today time stood still as it never has before the way it should in cheap novels or bad adaptations for the screen. And I, from the corner of an eye, stood waiting for the scene where she would drop her handkerchief and with the vacant stare of oh, so many movie queens, send chills running down the curving spines of silent passers by. but instead enter wind the trees waved me on; a man, black pin striped pants, motioned cars to follow in the line, and this particular death becomes the unimportant breaking of an unimportant scene. A Pembroke sophomore from Lexington, Massachusetts, Ancelin Vogt was the winner of last year's Liber poetry prize. Her work has also appeared in the Herald Review. I, however, fall like rain grayly down the pane of afternoon, streaking city dust across the sill, the faded rocker creaking in the fading light and still- ness of the withered hand, far-misted eye of yester- day. I run upon the floor across the splintered band of oak-soft slints which fester with this falling, as before. I drip from ledge to lap, upon the purple-pansied wudge of apron under yellowed yarn. curving needles dully tap each hour past in grudg- ing jointed crook of darn- ing finger, stiff upon the wool. the thumb moves cracked and almost bleeding at the pull of roughened thread across the tip; calluses eroded from the hand by falling time and sullen drip. smearing grayness down the pane, watches, the persistent rain. no matter what you say, spring is a dying season. cream colored butterflies floating in the fog and crocuses gravelling by the drainpipe in clear cold water are not enough. nothing is enough to show that life comes up again each year and softly spreads its powdered wings on sunshine. spring-born colors rise pale against the darkness of your going. Glenn Stokes is a junior from Savannah, Georgia major- ing in international relations. He is on the literary staff of the Liber, and his poctry has appeared in the Review. THE PULLED BOW He was in the monk's habit of mind, And climbed sacred hills to find No Mecca hidden in the big stones, Hardly a distance-veiled meadow with peace And lucky love near. He was alone at home, sitting in a busy chair With the same lapped book as before, Same voices, constant breath of sound. To the thought too many words were pinned. The bent bow in the battle breaks the wind. For one moment of lonely luck, He played the laughter of a life, And said that beyond his warm halo One war or another labored, the obsessions Merely of any troop of soldiers, And before the busy battle, confessions Were heard as usual before the sacrament, A wonder to be alone in listless life For now, only for now. Every act Becomes the shadow of the object, The object of the shadow, Before and after the fact. This, he told a tried friend. The bent bow in the battle breaks the wind. THE BEGINNING TIME The sky that fell on the drop, But made the drop more the drop. In vibrant afterthought in afternoon, The voices faded into time's oblivion, The eve began to whisper, And not one senile word fell dead On the lips of the mother explaining The end of time to the beginning child. Then streets are lost playgrounds In the web of the city; They torment the birds of the slain tale . . . Broken gifts these dreams that fade, Crying child these winds that wail, The dream was made in Eden's shade. Mark Magarity is a senior from Holyoke, Massachusetts. He is majoring in English literature. A Horse Story They burned in my palm, and the grease shined through their thin wrappers in the bright light that burned in tall, flourescent tubes which grew like trees out of the blacktop in the parking lot. Two Big Boy, K.-K., hamburgers with just O to go; and a package of Kelly's clam cakes, just six of them in a tight, white, package, all grease and dough, no clams. I handed the white package to Joey, and he stuffed it between his legs. The Hare shot the cara Mus- tang, grey and sleek with a big cube, a stick-four, a British tack and The Hare's heavy heel-into first and we tooled that fine machine onto Third Avenue. The tires stropped the cobblestones and we jerked up to the light. And I was lucky to be along, for Joey was my big brother. I sat in the back with my cheeks straddling the drive shaft, or so I imagined, even though I sat on the warm and soft leather seat. Tunes, The Hare said. And whomp, transistors sprang, and Murray the K. leaked into the car. A neon Don't Walk sign fluttered like cymbals, gassed out, and the street was bare. Only neon signs and grated up store fronts. A lady in turquoise leotards waited with her hands stuck in her leopard skin coat, while her white poodle pissed steam on a parking meter. The Hare hovered over the wheel and waited for the yellow. And not to lose his emphasis he smoothed the grey cloud into first and coasted up the street. We found it at last, The Hare said softly. He scanned the streets waiting to spring. A girl with a hive of teased hair, black net stockings, a lavender sleeveless sweater and deep black eyes sang, He's bad, but he's good-bad. into our thumping radio. Here, in the heart of The City, right here in the middle of Big-Town, a Kelly's Big Boy, all white and red and clean. That's what I like about that place, it's clean. So clean it squeaks, Joey said. The car caught another red and The Hare pumped the discs, jolting the machine to a stop. A guy in dingy brown and grey clothes, that hung on his frame like rags, swept the street outside a grated-up jewelry store. But that kid had more mounds on his mug than Peter Paul, Joey said. I can see him squeezing his zits in the shit house on coffee breaks. He unwrapped the steaming Big Boys and dusted them with a thin paper package of crushed salt. Puberty. The Hare slowly eased the tips of his fingers over the curve of his angular chin. He had more pits in his face than Third Avenue had sewers. It's clean stainless steel counters and glass walls. They're new and clean. And the kid's togs were clean. He depressed the clutch and slid the stick into first. This 1i . . . ight, he shouted. You catch one, you catch them all, Joey said. A small flame of steam burned up from a man-hole cover into the cold air. Joey popped three tops and handed a cold can to The Hare, and he reached one back to me. The machine spoke to us in low moans as The Hare prodded the four barrels lightly, and the thin needle of the tack bounced in response. The compound in the cooling system was luke- warm and the oil pressure was a precise eighty pounds. The battery ate a slight charge, and electricity coursed through the Mustang's maze of wires. The instrument panel was a blue and red board of blinking lights. Short- flames of hot vapor leaked from our tail pipe into the cold air. We waited through the red countdown. A car, a maroon Pontiac, nosed and decked and lowered with tight wired wheels, pulled up along side of us, and the driver slowly turned his head and looked into our car. The Hare nodded. Joey slapped the Big V on his arm and The Hare backed her off with short, quick stabs. Joey sipped his cold Knick and bit into his hot Big Boy. Munching slowly, he looked into the maroon pig and caught the driver's eye. The Pontiac roared in response, and a small cloud of blue smoke, a fine blue healthy color, shot from her pipes. The mondo's flaming, Joey said through the burger. The light changed and The Hare had three shifts and two hundred feet on the Pontiac, before Joey tilted his can and washed down his mouthful of Big Boy. My beer had spilled and a small puddle of foam rested on the red leather upholstery. Ouickly and quiedy I sponged the liquid with the corner of my coat. Our giey Mustang slid down the cannon of deserted buildings, and the round, steel stud, the size of a half- dollar, that The Hare had imbedded in the right front ite, ticked evenly on the blacktop. We sped through twenty blocks without a stop. The buildings rose in tight, granite slabs into the dark night and only one yellow light burned in a tall and distant office building. In a blue blur we passed a ten toot, neon cocktail glass that blinked outside a juice-joint. Parking meters and curving street- lights, trash barrels and green stop lights passed us with the precision of our even speed. Rock thumped into the darkness of our warm machine. The Big Town's died on us. The Hare reached be- tween Joey's legs and plucked a clam-ball from the pack- age. He took it whole, And I got the feeling that some- thing big was gonna happen tonight. And no sooner had The Hare uttered the words than what had been waiting for us all night pulled up along side in a black whisper. It idled without a quiver, four mag. wheels, Dunlop tires, no caps, no chrome, black five- ply lacquer, a black muted top, and three mondos, all eyes. It barely touched the white line of the crosswalk. And the threat of that 476 horsepower block sent a dark thrill of fear coursing through my veins. A black, '65, C10L We're lighter, we got her. The Hare had not turned his head to look at the other car. It was as though he had sensed its presence, the pure balls of that shining black machine. Joey grinned into the other car and he slapped the Big V on the purple sleeve of his jacket. He sipped his beer through smiling teeth, and two identical, yellow streams ran from the corners of his mouth and formed two large drops that hung from his chin. That mondo driver looked away and backed off his black machine with a surge of pounding valves. And now we're going back in your life, the Jockey said with the husky voice of a spectre, like the pages in a book. A corpse from WINS golden goodie groove, the light changed, yard. The Hare stomped on the gas and popped the clutch, and we shot in a screech of rubber smoke across the intersection and down the uneven street. It was true, we were lighter. The G.T.O. fell one car length behind us. The Hare downshifted and braked and I rose up on the back of Joey's seat, as the car stopped on the touchline of the intersection. I plucked a clamball from the greasy white package and popped it into my mouth. At that speed we caught every light. Sucked her, sucked her right up, Joey said. He grinned over at the mondos in the G.T.O. We wiped her ass. Joey slapped the padded dashboard and he placed his dead can on the floor. He popped two tops, and he handed me a can through the gap between the bucket seats. Have one kid. The light changed and The Hare reacted so quickly that the ass end of our Mustang fish-tailed down the street. Again we had taken them The chromeless beast moved into line and the mondo driver rolled down his window. Hah! Joey shouted. We're lighter, The Hare said calmly. Don't tell them what we've got in her or theyll want a longer strip. Bad rubber. Hey, Big boy, the mondo driver said. What kind of balls you got. Joey rolled down his window. Wha? I say, what kinda horse you got stuck in her. Joey hesitated for a short moment that wouldn't seem unnat- ural 10 a stranger, but if Joey was your brother you would have known he was about to lie. We could only get a six month guarantee on it. The light changed and again we hurtled past dark delicatessens and dry goods stores, silver fireplugs and chrome grates, stuck in the crotch of tall steel and glass skyscrapers that rose into the neon haze of the dark night. We still had that black machine by one car length. What's this six-month-guarantee stuff? the mondo asked. His hair swept back flat on his head like an oily brown mat, and his face was round and fleshy. Joey slowly sipped his cold Knick. They wouldn't even take it off the truck for us. If we wanted it, they said we could touch it ourselves, its so hot. Again the light changed and we shot down Third Avenue with that black G.T.O. nuzzling our tail pipes. Kansas City, a voice from the radio sang, as though from the hollow of a deep cave, Kansas City here we come. The compound in the cooling system was now more than luke- warm, but The Hare was calm. We stopped. So how many horses? The mondo leaned out of the window and slowly checked our overall. He opened the door and lowered his head to look under our panting ma- chine. His shoes were black with pointed toes and thick sculptured heels like a dancer's. And the dashboard of that black machine was blind and lightless, not one red button or tube. We had to cut the chassis to slip it in her! Joey held his dead can out the window and dropped it between the two beasts. What kind of go? the mondo asked. Dodge. The Hare popped the clutch and geared up into third toward another stoplight. The high and sultry voice from the radio sang, But if I have to walk there, gonna fly there just the same. The Hare eased the go, as we approached the light and the mondo pulled his ma- chine along side our Mustang. We need plasma. He ran the light and pulled into a gas station on the far corner of the intersection. With the green we crossed the road and stopped behind the black car. I sipped from both my cans of Knick. The three mondos, dressed in tight, black coats, collar- less and belted with narrow, cuftless pants, pea green, jumped out of their machine and walked back to our car. The driver slapped our hood. Open up. The Hare, slowly cranked his vent, and spoke out onto the oil-stained concrete of the station. You felt it, why see it? For to worship a new cube. But I hear Ford, not Dodge, Ford. The Hare slowly reached for the switch and stopped the idling cube. We want a long run with your new cube. Where? Joey asked. The tunnel. Wait, The Hare said, we wiped already, why some more? You felt our balls. Let's see them, the mondo said. Let's see your green for a long run. You show us green and we'll run long. Number two mondo pulled his wad and showed five. No, No, The Hare said, A long run. 1 see twenty- five. That was an all balls bluff, for The Hare had bought the beers with our only money, my money, and now I had a dollar in change. Number three mondo pulled three greens from his wallet. And yours?' he said. The Hare reached for his wallet, a thin, blz;ck, alligator wallet with an impressive gold trim. He slapped it in his hand. Who holds? he asked. No trust in Big-Town. The operator, The driver pointed toward the station attendant. Ahn. The Hare shook his head. No trust. How 'bout your Mondo number three said, No. Go, Joey said. Let's run them for shits. He handed The Hare a clam-ball. The Hare took it whole. Where? F.D.R., you can follow. The mondos paid the attend- ant and we pulled through the rows of gas-stained pumps with clock-faces. We shot out of the dirty red and white gas station and we passed through the dark streets toward the tunnel. We passed row after broken row of dark buildings, and only lighted drugstores with windows of machined cigars, and facial make-ups and hair-stays, with long empty snack bar counters of chrome steel, broke the blackness of the night. The girl wearing the tight, sleeveless lavender sweater and those tall and pointed high-heels returned to the radio. She was dancing in the streets and she sang, Liar, Liar, pants on fire, your nose is longer than a tele- phone wire. The blue beacon of a silent ambulance, a long chrome cigar, flashed by us. The Hare finished his beer. Joey popped three. And we drank through the bare street. The stud ticked steadily on the smooth blacktop and kept time in even beats with the red rear eyes of that black machine. The tunnel was an iron lung. A glazed brick tube and a long row of bright flourescent lights imbedded in the ceil- ing. The bricks gleamed like many small light bulbs. Be- hind that black machine we waited in the dirt at the side of the road, while a knot of traffic passed by and disap- peared in red dots into the tunnel. The Hare swung our machine around the black car until both gleaming noses lined up, each in a separate lane. He hovered over the wheel and stroked the stick until his white fingernails and sweating hands glided up and around the metal ball, lubed and ready. Three count, the mondo yelled. The Hare stabbed the pedal with short, quick jabs, and the car rocked with each burst. Through the roar of the engines The Hare, Joey and I, and the three mondos in their five-ply, black-lac- quered machine shouted, One, two, grab! I gripped the seat with my hands and held my full cold beer between my legs, and we shot into the tunnel and for two jarring gears we kept a ten foot lead. The even gleam- ing blocks and the regularly spaced lights seemed to slow our speed. Slowly and irresistably we yielded to that black machine and its mondo driver, as foot by foot the chrome- less machine closed the gap in third. The glazed bricks reflected in tiny bright bulbs the two white lights of the gaining machine. And just as its black nose caught our bright bumper, our machine died suddenly, and the G.T.O. flew by us. Wha . . . What? Joey asked the board of blue and red lights. With his stiff fingers, The Hare stabbed and stabbed the glass that covered the gas gauge. We're flaming out! We're flaming out! he shouted. No more go-juice. No more go-juice! The car sputtered and The Hare brought it to a stop at the end of the tunnel. He curbed the dead machine. The traffic shot by us and the red eyes of the mondo's black G.T.O. dwindled into the dark night. I met him in the laundro . . . The Hare snapped off the radio. Here kid, Joey said, Have a clam-ball. I got a burger. The grease shined through the thin wrapper. One Big Boy, K.-K. hamburger with just O to go. The beer between my leps had spilled and a white blotch of foam covered the leg of my pants. . . activities Ll CAMMARIAN CLUB HEATED CONTROVERSY over qualifications for class election tempered the newly elected Cammarian Club, preparing it for this year's crucial challenges. The legacy of the recent past was a stu- dent loss of faith in the importance, effectiveness, and relevance of the Club. This problem was complicated by a new faith in the student exhibited by the administration. Thus it was the responsi- bility of this Cammarian Club, under the leadership of president Peter Broderick and vice-president John Sennhauser, to clarify and strengthen its relations with students and their organizations and to redefine and expand the role of the student and his government within the University. The spring was devoted to preparation for the major activities scheduled for the coming year. The Club joined the National Stu- dent Association and obtained a federal grant to salary three ad- ministrative assistants. In addition, the Club passed unanimously a report proposing the liberalization of parietal rules. Despite certain alterations, the Corporation's acceptance of this proposal marked a major change in the social system and its underlying philosophy. Atfter attending the White House Conference on Education and the National Student Association Congress during the summer, members returned to Brown with new ideas and renewed enthusi- asm. The Cammarian Club initiated and organized the first mean- ingful cooperation among Ivy League student governments by sponsoring an Ivy League Student Body Presidents' Conference in October. Another first was the establishment of a Brown Washing- ton Summer Intern Program to encourage and assist students in obtaining summer internships in Congressional offices and federal agencies. THREE NEW COMMITTEES were established. The University Publicity Committee, chaired by Mark Augenblick, condemned present Brown publicity as inadequate and ineffectual and sug- gested a program to improve Brown's reputation. Under Elliot Maxwell, the Student Employment Committee saw its recommen- dations for an increased minimum student wage and a thorough reevaluation of student employment accepted by the University. Lawrence Aufmuth's Academic Calendar Committee proposed that the school year begin earlier in order to end first semester before Christmas. The proposal was favorably received and is presently being studied by students and faculty. The Cammarian Club's studies of traditional areas of interest were expanded. The Student Activities Committee, chaired by Jeffrey Heidt, was instrumental in involving students in the alloca- tion of funds for student activities and in obtaining a significant increase in these funds, thereby strengthening the Club's relations with student organizations. The Academic Affairs Committee, un- der the leadership of Peter Billings, brought about a major im- provement in the academic counseling system by suggesting the use of undergraduates to counsel fellow students. John Sennhauser's Refectory Committee played an important part in improving the dialogue between students and administrators over food services and also suggested a series of necessary changes after consulting with experts. The Club was also successful in revising freshman class election procedures, gaining serious consideration of a student discount in the bookstore, broadening the composition of its com- mittees, obtaining offices for the first time, and compiling a library of educational material. The most significant progress made was the increase of student participation in the University's decision-making process. The first three student-faculty committees were established, and it was clear that many more would follow. Students were involved for the first time in the meetings of the Alumni Advisory Council and the Brown University Associates. Students replaced administrators in the allocation for student activities. Representatives met with the Corporation committee studying the problems of student-corpora- tion communication. Before the faculty decided on matters such as grading and academic freedom, students were consulted. In gen- eral, cooperation and communication between students and fac- ulty, administrators, and alumni was greatly increased. The questions raised regarding student maturity and responsi- bility had been answered. The Cammarian Club had begun the redefinition of the role of the student within the University. NI vy s easess L L T S L FAUNCE HOUSE BOARD OF GOVERNORS bR M pussYCAT ACTION-DIRECTED enthusiasm inspired this year's Faunce House Board of Governors. The eighteen Brown men and six Pembrokers who comprise the Board arranged, as in years past, the cultural, intel- lectual, and social activities that supplement academic life. This year successful innovations were introduced to broaden the scope of campus culture. Maintaining its tradition of bringing excellent and diversified speakers to Brown, the Board of Governors provided formal and informal lectures designed to interest many different students. A Contemporary Lecture Series, featuring Edward Albee, Norman Thomas, and Gael Greene, was instituted in the fall. Representatives of several large corporations met in- formally with students at Gareer Luncheons to discuss after-graduation opportunities in business. Entertainment this year included the Charles River Valley Boys, a rock and roll concert featuring the Crystals and Martha and the Vandellas, Winter Weekend's Cambridge Circus, and the Fellini Film Festival. The annual Casino Night's vicariousness once again proved highly successful as did the perpet- ually popular Saturday night movies and exam week cartoons. Advisor to the group, Mr. William Surprenant, worked with the Board to insure its effective func- tioning. In the Student Activities Office, Mrs. Samp- son and Mrs. Thorpe pave out general information and handled ticket sales. FHBG served the entire Brown community by pro- viding diversified, stimulating, and enlightening ex- periences. PENDING their rcorganization this past fall, the Brown Key was, beneath the surface of public events, internally split and unusually inactive. One faction resented the Cammarian Club's plans to draw up a new constitution for the Key. Being the more influen- tial, it decided not to have any meetings other than those necessary for making plans for Homecoming. Saturday night of Homecoming, after the queen had been crowned, twenty juniors were inducted. But the reorganization was ecffected; in the second semester, sixteen sophomores were elected to serve for four se- mesters, guaranteeing a continuity in policy and pro- viding experienced members who would help new in- ductees. Previously consisting of juniors alone, the Key now boasts representatives from the three upper classes. In the second semester, the new membership initi- ated several features. Their Athlete in the Spot- light board in the Post office lobby paid tribute to the outstanding members of varsity athletic teams. Between periods ol hockey games, the Key provided up-to-the-minute information of all Brown sports. On February 26th, the Key honored 1965 -collegiate hockey Coach of the Year, Jim Fullerton. Later, in the spring, a Brown Key sports night feted Brown's top athletes. Traditional Key activities included ral- lies and song-sessions during freshman week, and campus tours for sub-freshmen throughout the year. The abstract aim that these activities are meant to realize is the maintenance of spirit. In the words of Key president Steve Wiley, The real spirit we seek is the deep pride in Brown as a Universitythe awareness of the lofty position that Brown occupies among educational institutions, a product of Brown's intellectual, athletic, and social opportunities. Con- sidering the nature of the Brown student and his conception of his role in the University, the task of the Key is unenviable. OFFICIAL student drama group, Sock and Buskin continued this year to produce plays of quality and distinction. Beginning the season with its annual Shakespeare production-Donald Warfield as Rich- ard IIT-Sock and Buskin went on to a wide variety of theatrical offerings. Guys and Dolls, a Broadway fable, became a smash in Providence. Serious modern drama was represented by Ugo Betti's The Queen and the Rebels. An English Restoration comedy, Wil- liam Wycherley's The Country Wife, closed out the season. Auditions for all plays were open to the entire undergraduate community. Production Workshop, now in its sixth year, pre- sents the more progressive and avant-garde side of drama. The entire organization is fully independent and self-contained, supported by the contributions of the audience. PW is an important supplement to Sock and Buskin, although in no way connected, since it is less time-consuming, more diversified in its material, and open to the entire University commu- nity. PW also offers students a chance to direct plays and to write plays for production. The group presents four shows a year: two sets of from one to three plays chosen for their divergence from standard SB material; one religiously or morally significant play in cooperation with the UCA; and from one to three original one-act plays written by members of the University community and chosen through an annual play-writing contest. This year Production Workshop produced plays by Pinter, O'Neill, Pirandello, Shaw, Chekhov, and Arrabel. HERE ISNO ESUS Sy EACL Nm mi WK DROVERES 29 62 DRAMA ORIGINAL music, lyrics, book, choreography, and talent make up the annual productions of Brownbrokers. The Brownbrokers Board, consisting this year of Sylvia Welch, Martin Broomfield, Norman Segal, and Vincent Buon- nano, is advised by Professor Leslie O. Jones. A competi- tion is sponsored, and the best original musical play sub- mitted is presented in the Faunce House Theater each March. Five packed houses saw the Brownbrokers' 1965 produc- tion of Potatoes Bourgeois. The book and lyrics were writ- ten by William Kirkpatrick, 65, who also acted in a role suited perfectly for his talents and temperament. The mu- sic, composed by Paul Klein, '65, was arranged for a cham- ber orchestra. Charles Ansbacher, '65, conducted the group with his usual verve and precision. The essence of the script was a sardonic comment on the conformity that per- vades suburbia. The emptiness it attacked was filled quite humorously with some clumsy hoodlums, gorgeous street- meets, and a full scale resurrection. Much of the action centered around The W. T. Goddard Memorial Machine, which made public-works concrete from peanut butter. Lorraine Lorenzo, official undergraduate backstage seam- stress, outdid herself with the costumes in this show. Fea- tured onstage were Joe Tarontolo, Bill Kirkpatrick, Mal- lory Hoover, Martha Barylick, Ancelin Vogt, Bob Sedge- wick, and Sylvia Welch. The director, Martin Broomfield, did a fine job of keeping the play fast and funny. GLEE CLUB LAST SPRING Erich Kunzel capped his fine career at Brown by leading the Brown University Glee Club on a tour that covered ten of the largest cities between Provi- dence and Minneapolis. Unfortunately, the tour ended with the announcement of his resignation. This year, under a young and exciting director, Charles Fidlar, the club has worked diligently to maintain its position as one of the finest choral groups in the area. The fall semester was highlighted by a December concert with Junetta Jones, Metropolitan Opera singer, as guest soloist. Miss Jones and The Brown-Pembroke Chorus teamed together to climax the program with the singing of Poulenc's Gloria; it was one of the most challenging pieces of choral music ever performed at Brown. Miss Jones's per- formance was outstanding. The spring semester saw the growing maturity of the young group. The women performed with the men of M.I.T., and the men combined with the women of Con- necticut College's Russian Chorus to provide two concerts of enjoyable listening and scores of new acquaintances. The highlight of the spring season was the production of Carl Orft's Catulli Carmina. This unique concert, featuring the singing of the Chorus and the dancing of the Pem- broke Modern Dance group, was the first of its kind at Brown. Exciting plans for next year's Chorus and Glee Club include a concert at a New York City music festival and an extensive spring tour. BRUINAIRES MANY AUDIENCES saw before them a substantially new group this year; yet the characteristic humor, the versatile repertoire, the musical excellence, and the unique charm for which the Bruinaires are famous were again maintained in every way. With their love of a good song and a good show as the main point in common, the Bruinaires brought together twelve di- verse individuals to form a spirited and entertaining group which was enthusiastically received by audi- ences throughout the East. Under the creative leadership of Stephen Tooker, the Bruinaires entered their twenty-second year with the new situation of being an independently organ- ized group. Included in this year's concert schedule were frequent performances in the Providence area for clubs and service organizations, as well as numer- ous trips to colleges in the New York-New England area. FOLLOWING its raucous tradition of camaraderie, the Jabberwocks of Brown University attempted to enchant many girls from the campuses of the Univer- sity of Michigan to the west, Hollins to the south, and Smith to the north. As one of the nation's oldest surviving octets, the group in 1965-66 had another successful season of wine, women, and songs. Reorganizing the Jabberwocks, J. Gibson Hender- son, Jr. led many choreographic routines, including a Vietnam version of the Jab standard, the Civil War, as well as directing the group itself. Christo- pher Hagedorn, a near monotone, used sign language to approve all the contracts for the group. The Jabberwocks remained as in the past, a group without pretensions: satire, wit, and humor provided the basis for its presentation. With the primary inter- est of having fun, the members of this year's Jabber- wocks only hope that their audiences enjoyed them- selves as much as they. RAISING its collective voice in song at Brown and Pembroke convocations is the seventy-member con- vocation choir, which is directed by Professor William Dineen. The choir seeks to supplement the speaking programs of the Convocation Committee with appro- priate musical selections ranging from little-known Russian folk songs to the works of Benjamin Britten. In addition to its regular appearances at convoca- tions, the Choir undertakes several projects each year. The Christmas Service of Lessons and Carols has be- come a University tradition. The choir also takes part in the Latin Carol Service and the Messiah sing. Student co-directors Frederick Bargoot and Virginia Tice put the group through its warm-up paces before the performances in Sayles and Alumnae Halls. The Convocation Choir has not only added to memorable convocations programs but has also served to rescue some of the not-so-memorable. BRASS CHORALE CHOIR IN ITS SECOND YEAR as a purely studentrun mu- sical group, the Brown University Brass Chorale per- formed with distinction in conjunction with various other organizations and on its own. Within a period of four days last December, they played at the annual Latin Carol Service and the Orchestra concert. In February the Chorale appeared with the Band and again joined the Orchestra in March. The highlight of the winter season was their always festive appear- ance before the Providence Art Club. Also during the second semester, the Chorale enjoyed a brief engage- ment with the Convocation Choir in Sayles Hall. Under the unofficial leadership of guiding light Paul Braden, bass trombonist, the group consisted of Ed Round, Tim Reiley, and Art Brostrup, a young musician noted for his timely entrances. CONVOCATION CHAMBER SOLOISTS FOR THE FIRST TIME since its conception in 1962, the Brown Chamber Soloists was not led by Charles A. Ansbacher. This unusual state of affairs evolved immediately after the slow realization that Charlie would graduate in 1965. In a competition for the post of conductor, composer-violinist-cymbalist Robert S. Cohen, '67, was awarded the baton. He instituted a policy of music for slightly smaller groups than had performed in the past, introducing music for quartets and other small ensembles into the pro- gramming. In general, the music remained as diverse in style as ever. Pieces ranged from Bach and Corelli, through the Classic and Romantic periods, to works by Hindemith and by the conductor himself. These choices apparently met with the approval of the com- munity, as Sayles Hall was strained to capacity, a rather unusual achievement for a strictly musical event. Along with the usual on-campus concerts, which numbered three this year, the Soloists continued their practice of playing guest concerts. This season they appeared at the Music Clubs of Rhode Island Con- vention and at several local colleges. LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, presenting the Brown University Marching Band: Martin Fisher, di- rector; Earl Holt, president; and Jack Monrad, drum major. . . . Featuring a fine group of musicians and its own inimitable marching style, the Brown Band again provided laughter and spirit for the often gloomy Saturday afternoons of the football season. The band's subjects ranged from a salute to URI's Ramettes to recognition of Uncle Sam's attempt to alleviate overcrowding of student rooms as the band marched from TI-S into I-A, playing You're in the Army Now! Following an irreverent tribute to Ben- jamin Franklin in the City of Brotherly Love, the band rolled on to New York and the World's Fair, where it confused many by performing under a Guy Lombardo banner. For Colgate the band produced an invisible shield. At Homecoming the band was joined by its alumni in a serious tribute to President Keeney. Finally, after overshadowing the mighty Harvard Band, the Big Brown returned to New York to cheer the team on to victory in Columbia's dried- up Baker Field. The band termed this the first bowl game of the year: the Columbia Dust Bowl. The conclusion of the football season did not mark the end of activity for the band. The pep band main- tained the spirit generated in the fall through the winter months at home hockey and basketball games. The concert band, Michael Rosen, chairman, satis- fied those band members with a taste for some of the more challenging works in the repertoire. On-campus concerts included one at Sayles Hall and two much- enjoyed Sunday afternoon concerts on the College Green. The brass chorale and the other ensemble groups performed at various functions throughout the year. 1966 also saw the formation of the dance band. Dedicated to the preservation of the big band sound, this group of talented musicians had an out- standing first year, and they are looking forward to an expanded program. The hard working and enthusiastic Band Board, led by Earl Holt, president, included: Laurence Pizer, vice-president; Brewster Smith, secretary; Jeffrey Jones, treasurer; Jack Monrad, drum major; Richard Mains, sophomore representative; Neil Bromberg, executive manager; and Dorsey Blake, business manager. Pt ' ' 3 3 - . - At g S J;i A ,z,:'f 5 h o v m A M THE PERSONAL STYLE of the editor-in-chief has always been evident in the pages of the Brown Daily Herald, but perhaps never more so than in the past year. A professional journalist among amateur students, a man capable of ac- cusing University Hall of obfuscation, a boy capable of accusing the Sharpe Refectory of incompetence, a writer idealistic in his treatment of principles, an editor cynical in his manipulation of words, dedicated to his craft, crafty in his dedication, fun-loving, pragmatic, acidic, intelligent, conscientious . . . M. Charles Bakst or Charley, as he was known to his friends and University officials alike was the 1965 Brown Daily Herald. The Bakstian style of journalism permeated the entire paper, but it was on the editorial page that it displayed itself most flamboyantly and repeatedly and, with a few notable exceptions, most successfully. For example, when Student Government Association president Carol Dannen- berg thrilled a Pembroke convocation with a speech on the values of their student government, the Herald saw fit to editorialize on her remarks under the headline, Is SGA followed by a picture of Mickey Mouse and a poignant question mark. Whatever was run under the headline was obviously superfluous to the thrust of the editorial. No one man working even more than full time can by himself publish a daily newspaper. Published five times a week, the Herald has always billed itself as a daily, proba- bly on the Puritan-ethic theory that only working days matter. Responsible for the day-to-day running of the pa- per, for forming editorial policy in conjunction with the editor-in-chief, for curbing the radical excesses of Bakst's mind, and for proposing equally wild ideas of their own were managing editors David Gilbert and Stephen Veiner. Gilbert served as the paper's ex officio liaison with Presi- dent Keeney; Veiner was the author of the Pill story that received nationwide coverage in newspapers and maga- zines. They were joined on the executive committee of the managing board by Gerald White, a New York City boy who brought a Madison Avenue flair to the management of the paper's financial affairs. Ly 1 ML A ST10PS HERE 3 BROWN DAILY HERALD ICIMEN BIN Seo Pags F Bl FRANMS Y 61 MONGAY e wnan A v Prsn Tam merm Pembrokers Get Apartments; ixperiment Begins in Spring ' o lApparendiy, the decieion wes - So I iOT'S Apply Today Plorret e 4, Cataaiion BARST WM expanston .im Col- ot rmcod atn yostaTiay B AT P 4 pesteg S v eiwat, kS e 58 Vs O WY e T e o Dywhoosane, e o i By s e e p SRR ggur it WA ey R R P T P . W wming i Tt S i 1 sl arteone B e T At s x i BOTH CRITICS AND DEFENDERS of the '65 BDH agreed that there was nothing timid about its editorializing. The editors initially demonstrated their vigor in the year's first issue, when an editorial on exam cheating stared at readers from a command- ing position atop the front page. In the following weeks the Herald explored the problem of marijuana on the campus, publicized the fact that the Univer- sity Health Service had prescribed birth control pills to two unmarried Pembrokers, reported on the issue of student involvement of University decision-mak- ing, and commented on the Dean Walsh petition and subsequent convocation speech of President Keeney. Both in its editorials and its aggressive news-report- ing, the Herald consistently argued for more openness in the University's decision-making apparatus. It cried FOUL in bold-face type when the Cammarian Club indulged in what the Herald considered an un- ethical decision on the eligibility of a Club candidate but supported the student governing body in general and particularly in its advocacy of more liberal parie- tal rules. The Herald ranged off campus in its pursuit of reportorial and editorial greatness. A team of report- ers followed the Civil Rights March on Selma, Ala- bama. The Herald sent Ellwood Carter '68 to Touga- loo to write on the problems and successes of the cooperative program. On Page Two, the Herald crit- icized LBJ for his administration's War on Truth in Vietnam, supported John Lindsay for the New York City mayoralty, and rallied to the support of a Provi- dence area girl who was censured by her bishop for entering and winning a beauty contest. The topic which the paper stressed most through- out the year was the desirability of a liberalization of the Pembroke social system. This concern culminated on December 6 in the publication of a special hoax isste purporting to tell of the University's decision to allow 100 Pembrokers to live off campus. Bakst, Gil- bert, and Veiner conceived and executed the idea. When the issue caused a luror in University Hall and a generally negative reaction among the students, the three editors resigned. For the rest of the semester, Stephen Schwarz served as editor-in-chief and Kristie Miller as managing editor. In a statement which appeared in the December 7 issue of the Herald, the three resigned editors said of their tenure, We would like to think that we have raised serious issues in a serious way and that we have stimulated some thought and activity at this Univer- sity. No campus paper can do more, and Bakst Co. certainly did not achieve less. sl T e A e e JCEMEN BN Wow Pagss Pembrokers Get Apartments; Exp Apparently, the decislon was a prag- matc one, As hack as Octobar 8, Dean Plerrel umwmlmzwmbmmm, fo . - coltege, she mikd, haow e e the Aot st W sk Shamis. iy A ATTINE VY, 3 P iy B w5 e eriment Begins in Spring Seniors Apply Today by M. Chiani DARET o U0 s Cnbeniaity Wnsmasoaed vate yoiaeay St S0 T iy s e e e e R B N vee yuAsiame, wes, Y88 4 e vnThy atsnaey, Wi sabiwn w0 awh g i 'V L T gemiin. a4 s . 8 IR BOTH CRITICS AND DEFENDERS of the '65 BDH agreed that there was nothing timid about its editorializing. The editors initially demonstrated their vigor in the year's first issue, when an editorial on exam cheating stared at readers from a command- ing position atop the front page. In the following weeks the Herald explored the problem of marijuana on the campus, publicized the fact that the Univer- sity Health Service had prescribed birth control pills to two unmarried Pembrokers, reported on the issue of student involvement of University decision-mak- ing, and commented on the Dean Walsh petition and subsequent convocation speech of President Keeney. Both in its editorials and its aggressive news-report- ing, the Herald consistently argued for more openness in the University's decision-making apparatus. It cried FOUL in bold-face type when the Cammarian Club indulged in what the Herald considered an un- ethical decision on the eligibility of a Club candidate but supported the student governing body in general and particularly in its advocacy of more liberal parie- tal rules. The Herald ranged off campus in its pursuit of reportorial and editorial greatness. A team of report- ers followed the Civil Rights March on Selma, Ala- bama. The Herald sent Ellwood Carter 68 to Touga- loo to write on the problems and successes of the cooperative program, On Page Two, the Herald crit- icized LBJ for his administration's War on Truth in Vietnam, supported John Lindsay for the New York City mayoralty, and rallied to the support of a Provi- dence area girl who was censured by her bishop for entering and winning a beauty contest. The topic which the paper stressed most through- out the year was the desirability of a liberalization of the Pembroke social system. This concern culminated on December 6 in the publication of a special hoax issue purporting to tell of the Universitys decision to allow 100 Pembrokers to live off campus. Bakst, Gil- bert, and Veiner conceived and executed the idea. When the issue caused a furor in University Hall and a generally negative reaction among the students, the three editors resigned. For the rest of the semester, Stephen Schwarz served as editor-in-chief and Kristie Miller as managing editor. In a statement which appeared in the December 7 issue of the Herald, the three resigned editors said of their tenure, We would like to think that we have raised serious issues in a serious way and that we have stimulated some thought and activity at this Univer- sity. No campus paper can do more, and Bakst Co. certainly did not achieve less. SPECIALIZING in incompetence, the managing board of the 1966 Liber was distinguished primarily by its total in- ability to agree on anything except the inacceptability of everything. There were exceptions. Trainee editor-in-chief Clarke Cochran succeeded most in doing a little of every- thing, and succumbed least to the temptation to do a lot of nothing. Business manager Jay Baer kept impeccable books and reminded us often of our impending perdition, but otherwise avoided the office so as not to be the subject of any more compromising photographs than necessary. Sen- ior editor Glen Ramsay, acting in a position created espe- cially for his unique talents, amazed everyone by finding considerable amounts of work to do-and often, doing it. Lesser luminaries included associate editor Hayden An- derson and copy editor Bruce Noble, who did a remarka- ble job of surrounding our pictures with words, many of them meaningful. When not writing themselves, they tried soliciting outside talent; their major success consisted of the discovery of bearded wonder Mike Williams, who provided reams of good pages of printable copy. Although past Libers have usually been written through the joint efforts of Phi Gam, Beta, and Hope College, a renegade Phi DeltGrant Miller-wrested control of the lay-out staff this year. Anyone who questions the consist- ency with which members of certain fraternities appear in the Liber hierarchy should be advised that when deadlines approach and staffs disappear, fraternity pledges often prove surprisingly willing to work. IN YEARBOOK PUBLICATION, photography is allimportant. Sharing photo editor Ira Cot- ton with the Brun Mael and the bulk of our staff with the BDH, we nonetheless produced pictures of nearly 759, of the things we needed to cover. Co-photography editor Tom Earp and Ramsay turned in a phenomenal number of usable printsdespite the mid-year staff shake- up, despite the condition of the darkroom, and despite the intangibility of various staffers. Sales manager Steve Sumberg and Pembroke sales manager Karen Robinson continually de- lighted us by selling hundreds and hundreds of non-existent books. They also turned up a small but efficient band of hard-core mercenaries, who would gladly join the sales staff-on a strictly commission basis. Our other business concern ran less smoothly, but ad manager Jeff Jones schemed, wrote letters, and somehow contracted almost as much advertising revenue as it cost us to procure it. In addition to this volume, the Liber put out four minor publicationswhich netted no money, no prestige, and not much of anything else other than the right to speak of Liber Brunensis Publications in the plural. During the summer, Ric Yaffee prepared the 69 Class Album more or lessy while Kris Parnicky han- dled Bear Facts; in the fall, two fraternity pub- lications were produced by the technique known as the staff fudge. TURNOVER was a problem this year as man- agerial personnel and staff members faded out, faded in-in when cocktail parties and ban- quets rolled around, out when pictures and copy came due. No more constant was our dead- line schedule, which despite our iron-clad print- er's contract and our utmost attempts at effort, tended to slide from time to time. In fact, even our most serious aspirationsplans to re- novate the darkroom, install an elevator be- tween the post office lobby and our fourth-floor office, and equip our executive suite with re- frigerator and coucheswere put aside as the year progressed and the yearbook perversely re- fused to write itself. Colloquially speaking, the '66 Liber had its ups and downs. Cocktail parties found us sel- dom dry, often high; one such occasion is ru- mored to have prompted a new U.H. policy on the amount faculty members are advised to im- bibe at student-faculty functions. Deadlines, on the other hand, found some of us down in the darkroom, some of us sitting down to typewrit- ers, and some of us down in the pool room. But in spite of our mismanagement, in spite of our procrastination, and in spite of ourselves, we finally managed to publish this volumefor dear old money, dear old grad school applica- tion fillers, and the dear old Liber Brunensis. -f e .,---v.ww WBRU - e . AFTER FIVE YEARS of hope, trial, tension, and finally success, WBRU finally began operation of an FM station. Broadcasting at 20,000 watts, WBRU-FM presents the image of Brown University to the south- eastern New England listening area. The station is a showcase for the University, offering educational, cul- tural, musical, and sports programs. A subsidiary role of WBRU-FM is to fill a gap in current local FM entertainment. WBRU-AM, 560, and WBRU-FM, 95.5, simulcast from 11:00 AM to 7:00 PM and from 10:00 PM to 1:00 AM. The offerings include Big Band music until the evening, as well as news reports on the hour. At 7:00 there is a world, national, and local news summary, followed by a ten minute review of the day's sports news. From 7:30 to 8:00, Insight pre- sents lectures, speeches, interviews, and panels that take place on and around the Brown campus. Big Band music resumes at 8:00, and a jazz show takes the air from 10:00 PM to signoftf. All hockey and football games, home and away, are now presented by WBRU. Coverage of other varsity sports is in the planning stage. On Sundays the station begins with a religiously-oriented show, then moves on to five and one-half hours of classical music, one hour of show music, three hours of folk music, and finally Desti- nation Jazz. With the aid of Mr. William Pearce of the Univer- sity Secretary's office, WBRU has secured a $4,000 grant from the Sears Foundation. The money is being used to produce twenty hours worth of panel pro- grams featuring members of the Brown faculty and administration debating topics of general interest. Professor Barry Marks moderates three out of four weekly discussions covering areas other than current politics. Professor Lyman Kirkpatrick moderates the political affairs panel held monthly in Alumnae Hall and open to the general public. 81 THE ERECTION of a new tower on the Wilson Lab roof is symbolic of the new BRU spirit. The station has now gone artsy craftsy, dropping rock and freez- ing iceman Jerry Hubeny. The staff of forty-five in- cludes four fulsome lasses from Pennyville-on-Meeting who worked in spite of the rabies scare. The station's new goal of providing cultural sounds for the people of southern New England is designed with the pock- etbook in mind. The station i1s $40,000 in debt to UH, which has shown no interest recently in giving its money away, especially to students, and, as a re- sult, the station, despite its intellectual prowess, has to prosper commercially. Overseeing BRUs expand- ing operations was the board headed by John Leistritz, who was assisted by Pete Bedard, Fred Brack, Fred Mattfield, Dick Brodsky, and Art Nor- walk. WITH A BLEND of academic study and military training, Brown Naval ROTC men prepare them- selves to become broadly educated and professionally competent Naval and Marine Corps officers. In the classroom, a broad spectrum of professional subjects, including military history, navigation, and leader- ship, is presented by Naval officers. On the drill deck, the Midshipmen Battalion, commanded this year by Roger Freise and Bill Peters, practiced military evo- lutions and the exercise of command. Outside the classroom, practical experience was gained on field trips that included an aviation indoctrination at Pensacola, Florida. The drill, rifle, and pistol teams provide the battalion with competition and excite- ment. Every summer, the regular as opposed to contract NROTC students participate in a cruise. After their freshman year, Midshipmen spend their summer at sea. Following the sophomore year, they learn am- phibious techniques and receive flight instruction; every Midshipman takes off and lands a plane. Those students who elect the Marine option in their junior year go on to more specialized instruction after their sixth semester, as do the future Naval officers. On the morning of graduation, they receive their commis- sions. NROTC AFROTC 84 GONE ARE THE DAYS of massed formation and drill at Aldrich-Dexter Field. The new emphasis of AFROTC is on an enriched curriculum which in- volves the cadets directly in the learning process. Geared to developing the communicative skills of the future Air Force ofhicers, the academic program cen- ters around student briefings and discussion seminars of the Air Force and related subjects. The flight instruction program is an integral part of the AFROTC plan for those who want to enter pilot training. Roger Wardle, for one, completed the schedule of thirty-eight hours of flying time during his senior year at Brown. This training qualifies the participating cadet for a civilian flying license in ad- dition to fulfilling his pre-commissioning training re- quirements. Orientation trips to active military installations provide some of the highlights of a cadet's AFROTC experience. These trips, designed to provide a first- hand view of current Air Force operations, have taken Brown students to Cape Kennedy and Elgin Air Force Base in Florida and Myrtle Beach AFB, South Carolina, during the past two years. Senior ca- dets Wardle, Diaz, Sommerfield, and FEastler were among those who planned the visit to Wright-Patter- son AFB in Ohio which members of the Brown corps took during the 1966 spring recess. WORKING within the Cadet Corps, the Arnold Air Society has striven to create a closer and more effi- cient relationship with the United States Air Force and to emphasize the purpose, tradition, and con- cepts of this branch of the armed services. In addition to its function as a service organization, the Air Soci- ety has also sponsored several social activities. A movie held in Faunce House in late February provided the Society with its annual fund raising project. Activities also included a ceremonial dinner as well as a spring outing. Highlighting the year for the Air Society Cadets was the five day National Con- clave held during April in Dallas, Texas. Local repre- sentatives were Cadets Donald W. Sommerfield, Ad- ministrative Officer, and Robert L. Diaz, Squadron Commander. ARNOLD AIR SOCIETY A NATIONWIDE ORGANIZATION, the Semper Fidelis Society is devoted to the heightening of esprit de corps among college men who have chosen to be- come officers in the United States Marine Corps. The chapter at Brown University seeks to provide for any officer candidatePLC, PLCA, or NROTC Mid- shipmen-an opportunity to associate closely with fel- low Brown men who will be among his contemporar- ies when he receives his commission. It further pro- vides an excellent means for any individual desirous of obtaining information relative to obtaining a com- mission in the Marine Corps to speak directly to SEMPER someone actually participating in such a program. Through its activities, the Semper Fidelis Society suc- FIDELIS cessfully brings to the college Marine Officer Candi- date the spirit of the Marine Corps during his years as an undergraduate. A COMMUNITY of concerned men and women, the University Christian Association attempts to bring to- gether faculty and students who share a common commitment. Its sphere of operation is bipartite. Through a program of Sunday suppers with faculty and students, dinners with outstanding theologians and professionals, and a series of study seminars in relevant areas of discussion, UCA secks to come to a better understanding of the Christian faith and what it means to be truly human. On the other side, an attempt is made to put the group's insights to work by making contributions to the campus and to the Providence community. Al- though the Saturday work camp idea has become out- moded in many ways, the UCA is attempting to find new ways of relating to the Providence community the instructional swimming program is an outstand- ing example by consultation with the leaders of Pro- gress for Providence and other local anti-poverty groups. Several students were also instrumental in bringing the attention of the campus to focus on the South African problem on the weekend of February 12. More than five hundred students, faculty, and visitors from other campuses spent an intensive day trying to come to grips with Apartheid and white minority governmendt. Plans are continuing to be made which will in- creasingly involve more students at a deeper level. Successful programs, such as the theatre weekend in New York City during the month of November, will be continued and expanded. And, most importantly, where walls exist between people are organizations some of which the UCA has been instrumental in erecting, the University Christian Association will try to build bridges that will render the walls useless. UNIVERSITY CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION EPISCOPAL COLLEGE CHURCH PROMOTING a Christian attitude on the Brown- Pembroke campus and fulfilling missionary aid to other Christian communities are the two main objec- tives of the Episcopal College Church. With the Sun- day worship service at St. Stephen's Church and the coffee hour which follows serving as its main focal point, the E.C.C. investigates opportunities for its members to donate moral, physical, or financial as- sistance. Such past activities included contributing to the Episcopal Theological School and the Bishop's Discretionary Fund and a very successful stewardship drive to support the chaplains at Keio University in Tokyo and at Tougaloo College in Mississippi. Working under the auspices of the Rev. Bennett Owens and Miss Judith Speyer, the E.C.C. has had the privilege to host such speakers as the Rev. Walter Dennis, a Canon Resident at St. John the Divine in New York, who spoke on the subject of Poverty, Prejudice, and the Church. The group also heard Howard Moody, who discussed the Harvey Cox book, Secular City. Realizing the value of first-hand experience, the E.C.C. traveled to the Hampton Institute in Virginia in order to become more aware of the racial problems which are confronting the South and to obtain an overall view of the area's social structure. With a similar purpose in mind, trips were made to under- developed areas in New York City and Boston. Within the more immediate social situation here at Brown, the group held their annual fall and mid- winter dinners and inaugurated a new concept in campus entertainment in the form of Halloween and St. Valentine's Day discotheques. NEWMAN CLUB DEVELOPMENT of a Christian community built on awareness, understanding, and charity is the goal of the Newman Apostolate at Brown. Mass at Manning Chapel provides a focal point for this development; it is supplemented by an ecumenically oriented pro- gram of religious education. Guest lecturers have in- cluded Fr. Edward Flannery, author of The Anguish of the Jews, and Mr. James Egan, vice president of the National Council of Christians and Jews. Two weekly discussion groups and a semi-weekly class in moral theology round out an extensive educational program. An annual intercession retreat, a Christmas party for underprivileged children, and occasional sherry hours are part of a scheme designed to develop the whole student and to instill a sense of commit- ment and true Christian responsibility. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION THE WORD that best describes this year's Christian Science College Organization is growth. It has grown in membership and in campus attention and even more important has promoted the spiritual growth of its members. Weekly meetings provide in- spiration for participants and teach them how to put their religion into practice both in their studies and in their relationships with others. These meetings are open to the whole University. A lecture on Christian Science for the entire community was given in the spring by Lenore D. Hanks, C.S.B., member of the Christian Science Board of Lectureship. The Organization serves Brown, Pembroke, Bryant, and RISD. Under the active leadership of its officers Phil Campaigne, Terry Anne Peake, and Susan Hindmarsh-and under the guidance of its advisor, Mrs. Mary D. Bullard, the Organization has ex- panded its publicity of events, even to the distribu- tion of semi-annual letters to alumni. It has also made available subscriptions to the Christian Science Monitor at half price. Second semester saw a free Christian Science literature display in Faunce House. The Organization also donated books on Christian Science to the Rockefeller Library to help make a more complete collection of such works available. PROVIDING spiritual guidance, intellectual stimu- lation, and social opportunities, the B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation remains one of the most influen- tial organizations in the Brown community. This year, under the leadership of Eugene Achter, Richard Narva, and Helen Spector, Hillel House has con- tinued its varied program of student functions. Among the regular activities are the weekly Sab- bath Services, the enlightening study groups with Rabbi Rosen, the Israeli folk dancing, as well as the entertaining Sunday brunches. These brunches offered food for thought by presenting renowned speakers in many areas of theological discipline. In the first semester of 1965-1966, Professor Mordecai Kaplan, founder of Reconstructionist Juda- ism; Dr. Trude Weiss Rosmarin, editor of the Jew- ish Spectator; Professor Magrath; Cantor Ivan Perlman; and Professor Asher Finkel, of the religious studies department, were among the guest lecturers at the Hillel brunches. The second semester speakers in- cluded Rabbi Richard Israel, Yale University; Profes- sor Herbert Gezork, religious studies department; and Dr. Jane Adams, Vice-President Emeritus of Brown University. Although suggesting a light, in- formal atmosphere, the brunches presented such pro- found, controversial topics as the Basis of Recon- structionist Judaism, God, Country, Yale, and So- cial Action, and God is Dead. This semester, in addition to the regularly spon- sored Hillel functions, a symposium was organized in conjunction with the Newman Club and Father Flannery of the Providence Visitor. Through its growing social and cultural program, under the able direction of Rabbi Rosen, Hillel Foundation is succeeding in its aim to provide Jewish students at Brown and Pembroke with a modern and progressive religious program. BROWN YOUTH GUIDANCE SERVING the handicapped and unfortunate in many ways, the eight agencies which comprise Brown Youth Guidance are the campus' closest tie with the Providence community. Programs in recreation and in arts and crafts are organized at Chapin and Brad- ley Hospitals and the Oaklawn Training School for Girls. Volunteers work with physically handicapped adults and with children who need tutoring at Nick- erson House. At the Rhode Island School for the Deaf students are given a valuable opportunity to learn to communicate successfully with the speaking world. Brown volunteers make weekly visits to the children at the Rhode Island Children's Center and the Southside Project, and they have planned several special excursions. This year, trips to the Journal- Bulletin, the Rhode Island State House, Slater's Mill, and the Roger Williams Zoo have enabled these chil- dren to expand their usually limited horizons. A skat- ing party at Meechan Auditorium, holiday parties, picnics and athletic events enhanced the programs at many agencies beyond their weekly meetings with the children. The newest agency, the Cooperative Motivation Program, was originally a project operated by the ed- ucation department. It attempts to introduce the al- ternative of college to high school students who would probably not otherwise be steered in this di- rection. Tours of the campuses, facilities, and activi- ties of Brown, Bryant, and Rhode Island College have proved to be effective mechanisms of exposure. A particular advantage of the program is the appro- priateness of a college student as guide. His intimate knowledge of and enthusiasm for college life enable him to establish valuable rapport with the students he introduces to the campus communities. This year's membership was competently organized and directed by president Dick Parisen. Helping Dick, in addition to the house captains and executive board, were vice-president Mike Marcson, secretary- treasurer Judie Gough, and transportation director Jerry Meyer. il BROWN CHARITIES DRIVE 812 COMMUNITY SERVICE is the one thing that the ten charities sponsored by the Brown Charities Drive have in common. Four student-run organizations, Brown Youth Guidance, the Brown University Blood Service, the Ambassador Abroad program, and the Latin American summer project, depend heavily on the drive to implement their programs. Six outside organizations are also supported by the drive. These organizations, the Meeting Street School, CARE, the National Mental Health Foundation, Inc., the Ameri- can Field Service, the National Scholarship Service and Fund for Negro Students, and the World Uni- versity Service, all make notable contributions to the communities of which they are parts, and the Brown Charities Drive considers them well worth any sup- port the Brown community is able to give them. In the past, the Brown Charities Drive has been plagued with poor organization and subsequent dis- appointing financial results. This year, however, with the help of Mr. William Surprenant and Miss Nancy Simons, the drive was reorganized so that it was a financial success and was able to start a self-perpetu- ating organization for future drives. Every member of the Brown community was contacted at least by mail, and the faculty and students were solicited on an individual basis. Even with the addition of three new charities, this year's drive was one of the most success- ful and beneficial in the school's history. PRAGMATIC in seeking a new style of leadership and program, the Brown Young Republicans tried to bring their message to the Brown campus. With presidents Dan Grocer and Rob Blackburn heading active executive boards, the club sought to make its presence felt through programs designed both to provide a political forum for the student body and to serve as a means of self-evaluation. Interesting guest speakers included Howard Russell, R.T. Republican chairman, and James Williamson, director of the state department of motor vehicles and a probable fu- ture congressional candidate. Joseph O'Donnell, state di- rector of administration and a close Chafee aide, was scheduled to address a dinner meeting in November but was mysteriously blacked out. An attempt was made to expand club activities beyond the campus. Treasurer Bill Aikman led an effort to aid Republicans in the Pawtucket city elections; secretary Pris Fletcher spent much of the year enticing off-campus speak- ers to come to Brown; and vice-president Frazer Lang was active in ensuring that YR clubs of neighboring girls' schools took advantage of Brown's programs. INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS YOUNG REPUBLICANS A BANNER YEAR for the new International Rela- tions Club was made possible by an unending stream of exciting programs. In October the IRC accepted the University's invitation to host the Chamber Choir from the University of Chile at Valparaiso. A magnifi- cent concert and several receptions highlighted the Choir's two-day stay. The IRC also hosted a state- wide UN Day Dinner with Wilbur Zeihl from the U.S. mission to the UN. December featured the screening of Felix Greene's China! at the Avon Cinema. All of Providence began discussing this IRC program, which also netted $500 for the Club's coffers. Students also attended model UN's and conferences on the Middle East, Latin America, China, and South Alfrica. Rene Murai and Jane Benedict organ- ized the New England Conference on International Affairs which this year discussed apartheid. John Cross twice represented the IRC in Montreal. In the second semester, the IRC initiated Perspectives, a review of the week's news with faculty members. The IRC wound up the year with its annual membership meeting at which Chancellor McLeod received the Club's parchment scroll commending the University for its activities in world affairs. 94 CLASSICS CLUB OLDEST of the majors clubs, the Classics Club works both to extend the interests of the members in ar- chaeology, history, and literature and to bring stu- dents and faculty of the Classics Department together on the ground of their common interests. Wellattended meetings both semesters featured a variety of speakers. Professor Holloway, addressing the first meeting, described the findings at Brown's archaeological project at the Agora in Athens. At a later meeting, John Kenfield spoke about his summer trip to Greece. The first semester culminated with the now-famous Latin Carol Service in December. During the second semester, the club heard talks by Profes- sors Putman and Donovan. As always, the club's ac- tivities climaxed with its annual banquet the night before comprehensives. OPERATING as the international voice of Brown University, the Amateur Radio Club was founded to further both the hobby and service aspects of amateur radio. The club, located in the east wing of Faunce House, maintains station W1VPY. An extraordinary amount of work is needed merely to keep the equipment in operating shape and to insure the efficiency of the antenna systems. Technically-inclined members of the station find an ever-present need for their soldering guns. Thanks to their efforts, WIVPY now operates full legal power on all popular bands and plans to add other frequencies in the near future. Working at the station has many facets. While some members take delight in communicating with stations on distant continents, others are content to talk to local stations and conduct leisurely discussions with amateurs who share their interests. The station regularly signs into traffic nets, groups of stations which meet at specified hours to pass messages handled for the public as a service. Operators often participate in contests, the object of which is to amass points by contacting great numbers of amateurs in varying arbitrary contest sections during a given time period. BUSIER THAN EVER this year, the Xi Eta chapter of Alpha Phi Omega, National Service Fraternity, worked both on and off the campus. The fall blood drive was so successful, collecting 150 pints of blood, that the spring drive was expanded from one to two days. APhiOs work with the YWCA ranged from chaperoning teenie-bopper dances on Friday nights and help- ing with a rec room renovation project to spending a servicerecreation weekend at Camp Scaside on Jamestown Island. In scouting, sev- eral brothers served as assistant scoutmasters for local groups, while the chapter as a whole spent a work weekend at Camp Noquochoke and ran the concession stand at the council-wide Demo- rama. Several dinners and parties, a hockey team, and weekend trips to regional APhiO conclaves balanced the chapter's program of service for the year. ALPHA PHI OMEGA QB ANY WEEKEND, EVERY WEEKEND, in the fall semester, the Brown-Pembroke Outing Club sponsored a trip. The energy ex- pended in just one of these jaunts probably surpasses the annual activity of some other campus organizations. Under the expert supervision of president Bill Powell and a host of lively commit- tee chairmen, the B.P.O.C. has as diversified a range of activities as an outsdoorsman could wish. The biggest fall trip was to Lake George, where sixty Bruins joined five hundred other outing clubbers for a weekend of canoeing, mountain climbing, dancing, and camping. Other trips saw the group climbing amidst the White Mountains of New Hampshire; skiing-120 strong-on the powdery slopes of Maine and New Hampshire; camping and climbing in the Blue Ridge and Smoky Mountains of the South; bicycling on nearby Martha's Vineyard. Someone who knows has said, It is nearly impossible to de- scribe the atmosphere of an outing club trip. For many Brown students, it is hard enough to conceive of an atmosphere where no matter what the weather, assignments, or exams, he can breathe and relax and let his spirit wander free. BROWN-PEMBROKE OUTING CLUB EVERY TUESDAY NIGHT the bridge club meets in the Rockefeller Room of Faunce House. Between thirty and forty students show up in complete disregard of their studies, spend- ing an entire evening in quest of a fraction of a master point. The intrinsic enjoyment of the game, of course, goes far beyond this nominal recognition for proficiency, although attendance is usually larger for the monthly whole master point tournaments. Winners of the early sessions this year in- cluded Charles Smith, Steve Woodruff, Carl Wamser, Gary Seningen, Donald Rae, Gerald White, Jack Bishop, and Mickey Targoff. A se- ries competition in the fall was won, after a month of contests, by Smith, Woodruff, Al Fox, and Steve Fish. Smith and Woodruff, along with Morgan Dyer, are the only officers of the club and are responsible for organizing, publicizing, and scoring all the organization's activities. WHEN THE MARTIANS finally invade the earth, the Brown University Chess Club will probably be spared, thanks to their sponsorship of the movie, War of the Worlds, highlight of the year's fund-raising activities. On a more realistic plane, this past spring the Brown chess team fought off the challenges of numerous local organizations as it captured first place in two out of three divisions of the Rhode Island Chess League Tournament. The thirty-member club also clinched second place in the Rhode Island Team Tournament this year. Headed by president James Stuart, the group gathers every Friday night in the Faunce House Art Gallery. Other members of the chessboard are Larry Forman, vice-president; Roger Schulze, secretary-treasurer; and Steve Chilton, tourna- ment director. The club stresses friendly games rather than championship competition in its weekly meetings. FOLK STRANGE LANDS and Old World customs are brought to life DANCING every Monday night in Lyman Hall as the Brown University Folk Dancing Club offers instruction in the traditional dances of many foreign peoples. Open to the entire community., th? club frequently has sixty o1 mote cager participants, 1anging 1 age literally from seven to seventy. For the Brown students, who comprise the nucleus of the group lolk dancing serves both as an outlet for creative desires in movement and a release from the tensions of schoolwork. For everyone attending it is a won- derful way to meet and come to know cach other as entire people. . The club tries to appeal more to the beginner than the ex- perienced folk dancer. A subsidiary group, the Brown Festival Dancers, composed of the more polished members, performed at the New York World's Fair last year. Donations received for such presentations are the prime source of the club's ftunds. Club officials look forward to increased advertising for their Monday nights 50 as to become better known on campus. Guest director Lawton Smith points out that in other parts of the countr?l, folk dancing is a popular alternative to standard weekend SOFlal ac- tivities, and not nearly so far out as some local people think. PROSPERING during its twenty-seventh year on the Brown scene, the Tower Club, led by Jerome L. Coben and Jay R. Baer, concentrated primarily on providing its members with a full and varied calen- dar of social events. The club, however, still found time to expand its community service project at a south Providence settlement house. While the club TOWER CLUB 98 undertook several Sunday afternoon projects, many of the individual members served as tutors for children in the neighborhood. The class of 66 will not forget the extensive refur- nishing which took place during the year. Three re- paintings were required because of the lack of uni- form opinion on the color scheme. The parties, the kids who were helped, the painting, the Monday night meetings, the annual auction, the philosophy, the new constitution-all these things are Tower Club, but the greatest thing about Tower Club is the membership; Tower Club is people, and it will al- ways be remembered in personal, not physical terms. RES PUBLICA DEVELOPING Brown's political awareness is one aim of the new political journal. This new developer is Ira Magaziner's baby. He conceived and delivered it and called it Res Publica. Of course he needed help. Senators Mansfield, Tower, Pastore, Javits, and Pell; Congressmen Fogarty and Cellar; General Hershey; Professors Borts, Kirkpatrick, and Stultz; assorted students; and even Gover- nor Chalee helped Ira. Many faceless people helped Ira too. They bought his magazine. The Liber helped Ira. It adopted his child to protect it from the hungry wolves of second floor Faunce House. Finally, along with Spring, Res Publica sprung. Looking not like Playboy and not quite like the Yellow Pages, Public Things bounced onto the newsstands. The BDH reviewer wasn't sure what it was. The Pembroke Record was afraid it would become another Time, sometime. The mag even had cartoons nytimes-style- goodandgrayandnot-too-funny. Growing pains. ENLARGING the scope of its operations this spring, the Photo Club sponsored an exhibit of the best photographic art produced at Brown. New chairman Joe Parsons, who succeeded Ira Cotton at mid-year, expressed a desire to see the organization become more than a name attached to the darkroom used by Liber and BDH cameramen. Structurally, the club consists of all regular BDH and Liber photo staff members and independents who are willing to pay the nominal fee of $2.00 for darkroom keys and the privilege of using the equipment. The financial burden is supported equally by the yearbook, the newspaper, and the Photo Club itself. For the majority of the year, the club's main business consisted of keeping its major equipment enlargers, print dryers, etc. in good repair, and supplying the smaller accessories trays, develop- ing tanks and reels, etc. which are essential to the production of good negatives and prints. Minor functions of the club were arbi- trating darkroom disputes between the Herald and the Liber, and attempting to work with and or around Crazy Arthur of Met Photo. TERTULIA GRACIOUS HOSPITALITY is the key ingredient. Blend in a variety of academic material-say fifty to seventy-five students and a dash of professorial flavoring. Add a tempting array of excellent refreshments. Now top it all off with two warm, personable hosts and one has the makings of a highly successful Spanish tertulia. Conducted by Professor Kossoff and his wife, these weekly gath- erings of Spanish culturists have gained a reputation which now exceeds the boundaries of the Brown community. Little is re- quested-much is given. Upon entering the attractive home, the guest abandons his Anglo-American background and embarks on an hispanic venture. The Spanish student at times feels limited, but after a daring Como esta usted?, he discovers his confidence restored and goes on to expound higher intellectual verbalizations. The more sophisticated may engage in more literary-oriented con- versations or nostalgically recall their experiences on the Iberian Peninsula. Professors find themselves conversing with students in a more pleasant, informal atmosphere than the chambers of White- hall or Marston are able to provide. Noting the distinctly Spanish setting, a visitor at times takes a moment or two to examine the wide range of artifacts which adorn his host's home. Amongst these are a set of prints collected during Professor Kossoff's travels abroad, curious ashtrays bearing Spanish proverbs, and pieces of sculpture. Professor Kossoff and his wife are the chief supervisors of the entire operation and the extremely pleasing results serve as a most fitting tribute to their efforts. DIE DACHBODENGESELLSCHAFT has a threefold purpose: to learn about aspects of German culture, to bring about closer com- munication between students and faculty, and to give the German student opportunity to speak the language outside the classroom. The atmosphere is informal. The members are from all parts of the Brown community. The club meets bi-weekly for a sherry hour and dinner followed by a guest speaker. Fre- quently the speakers are visiting professors from Germany, Austria, and Switzerland, foreign- born professors here at Brown, or graduate ex- change students. Recent topics have been Ger- man art, politics, philosophy, humor, economy, and literature. During February, the Rev. Ber- nard Haering, visiting professor of religious studies from the Academia Alfonsiana in Rome, spoke on recent trends in the new spiritual movement in Germany. Throughout the year, the Dachbodengesellschaft had occasional coffee hours, a Christmas party, a Fasching party, and a spring picnic. A BUSY SEASON at Le Cercle Francais was begun with a coffee hour at which new members of the French department faculty were intro- duced to students. In November, a dinner was held at which speakers talked about the Junior Year Abroad program and encouraged students to apply for it. Le Cercle had a gala fete de Nogl featuring the traditional Nol fondue and other French delicacies. In February, Le Cercle held a sherry hour and dinner where members of the department met students infor- mally. In March, Le Cercle held a dinner with guest Professor Henry Majewski giving a lecture on romantic art, literature, and music. Another GERMAN CLUB highlight of the spring semester was a hoote- nanny, in French, with Professor Jinot directing the participants. The French Club also spon- sored a classic French film, based on a novel by Diderot. In April, Professor Beverly Ridgely, act- ing chairman, spoke about his expedition in North Africa. FRENCH CLUB PRE-MED SOCIETY BROWN ENGINEERING SOCIETY THE FUTURE OF MEDICINE was the program theme for this year's Pre-Med Society. Through a se- ries of talks, panel discussions, and coffee hours, the group explored various aspects of this subject. In- cluded were such straightforward topics as rapid tech- nological change and the more controversial areas of organized medicine and socialized medicine. Imagina- tive leadership was provided by the executive board made up of Dan Sullivan, Dave Wyler, Harris Fin- berg, and Jerry Meyer. In addition, the Society took part in Freshman Week counseling of prospective pre- meds, sponsored movies and field trips to local hospi- tals, and held its annual dinner for its membership of about forty. s. REGARDED in the past as a composite of smaller technical societies, the Brown Engineering Society in fact merely coordinates the activities of these techni- cal societies. Since this should be only one function of Brown's governing engineering society, an attempt was made in the programming of this year's activities to give the B.E.S. its proper identity. Field trips were made to Pratt and Whitney Air- craft and General Electric Companies in order to ex- pose the engineering students to industry. The B.E.S. sponsored speakers representing business and law as well as engineering to demonstrate the full scope of engineering applications. This year the society initi- ated the first annual Holley Lecture, co-sponsored by the engineering department, to strengthen the soci- ety's position with the faculty. The society once again participated in nationally sponsored engineering competitions. For the past four years, Brown has had an eastern division winner. THE DESIGN of the Brown University Geology Club is to fulfill three important functions. First, it helps acquaint geology majors, and others interested in geology, with the faculty members in the depart- ment and other prominent men in the field, through lectures, films, and discussions. Second, the Club's ac- tivities inform geology majors, as well as possible, of the opportunities available for summer employment in the area of geology. Finally, it provides the mem- bers with such social and intellectual activities as field trips, picnics, and special projects. The Club is small and rather informal; occasionally a guest speaker adds to the organization's lustre with his eru- dition. Last year a lecture by Dr. Marshall Kay of Columbia University was attended by many people from Brown and other universities in this area. 103 GEOLOGY CLUB CHOSEN by the faculty from the junior and senior classes, Phi Beta Kappa members are selected on the basis of out- standing scholastic achievement in the liberal arts. This year's new members were initiated in the Corporation Room of University Hall where they signed the official Phi Beta Kappa register and met with the secretary of the Rhode Island Alpha chapter, Professor Ernest S. Frerichs. The newly elected members were seniors Richard D. Freund, Dennis E. Gartner, Herbert J. Johnson III, Richard A. Levy, Stanley H. Palmer, and Morton J. Simon, Jr. Four juniors were also elected: Roger D. Coloft, Les R. Greene, James S. Hiltner, and Scott R. Sanders. Members of the class of 1966 who were elected as juniors are Roger E. Berg, Robert A. Epstein, James K. Herstoff, John R. Low- Beer, and Paul M. Tukey. The distinctive Alpha chapter keys are the only ones authorized by the national academic honor society to have a different pattern from the familiar Phi Beta key. SCIENTIFIC activity on campus is stimulated by Sigma Xi, an organization which brings together the outstanding scientists both on the graduate and undergraduate levels of the University in the belief that mutual association among men of great ability and high interest is beneficial to the interchange of scientific ideas at a professional level. In March, the Brown chapter of the Society of the Sigma Xi held its 67th annual initiation and dinner. This year's seniors included William Adams, James Alberi, Jerome Auerbach, Robert Elliott, Robert Epstein, Roger Firestone, Richard Freund, James Herstoff, Clark Hopson, Stephen Jensik, Robert Johnson, Jon Kaswick, David Katz, Lewis Krey, Roger Ludin, William Melvin, James Murdock, Carl Pomerance, Robert Poyton, Stephen Quint, Donald Rae, Bruce Ross, David Samuels, Stanley Schretter, Peter Smith, Richard Sparks, David Stepner, Carl Wamser, Gilbert Wilcox, Richard Wilcox, David Wyler, and Stephen Zwarg. Requirements for membership as an undergraduate include research competence and achievement in two or more scientific areas. TAU BETA PI 106 10 MEMBERS, all very active, form the essence of the Rhode Island Alpha chapter of Tau Beta Pi, the national honorary engineering society. The calendar of activities began Freshman Week, when the society sponsored an outing for the incoming freshmen at the Haffenreffer estate in Bristol. There was softball, volleyball, and touch football in the afternoon, with everyone participating, and a picnic supper in the eve- ning. Then, on March 5, Tau Beta Pi sponsored a subfreshman day with the help of Professor Hazeltine of the Division of Engineering. Quali- fied high school engineering prospects attended a freshman engineering class, toured the campus with emphasis on Prince and Barus-Holley, dined with guest speaker Professor Kornhauser of the Division, and saw Brown romp over Dartmouth at Meehan. Throughout the year, members of the society tutored undergraduate engineering students, especially freshmen. Offi- cers this year were Bruce Ross, David Stepner, Stanley Schretter, Peter Smith, William Powell, and David Katz. 1 4 FOUNDED at Brown in 1904 as a society of fellowship, the Sphinx Club is composed of fac- ulty, graduate students, and undergraduates. The purpose of the Club is the promotion of stimulating discussion among its members. The club began the year with nineteen student members and thirty faculty members. Elections in March increased the student membership to thirty-four and the faculty membership to thirty- five. The Club offers an opportunity for stu- dents and taculty members to meet in informal surroundings to discuss scholarly and controver- sial topics. Outstanding speakers are invited to address the club, and open discussion and ques- tions are encouraged. SPHINX CLUB FOOTBALL LOST; soccer won; Joe and Eddie sang while Jackie Vernon clowned; Friday night saw twenty-five dormitory and fraternity parties; Saturday, thirty-eight. Homecoming Brown University: Providence, 1965. Bound in tradition and glossy with pretry girls, Homecoming this year-as alwaysim- printed itself on the pattern of our lives at Brown. The antithesis to that other weekend in the spring, Homecoming brought its rain and its tri-part tweeds, its highballs and its dignified cocktail parties, its alumni and its maturity. Far behind andjor far ahead: sunshine and bermudas-ducks-madras, beer cans and mass drunken rock n roll brawls, undergraduates, youthfulness-and all that. Delivery date was October 15, and Homecom- ing came right on schedule. 65 came home, as did '64, '60, '55, and a few remnants of '40-'30- '25; Wheaton came home, as did Conn, Welles- ley, Smith, and a smattering of Skidmore-Vassar- Briarcliff. Those of us who exist here hosted all those who ever called Brown home or wanted to. Brown seems a nice place to come home to, and the more ambitious and mentally agile among us tried to miss Brown a little, even be- fore graduating. JLo HOMECOMING CAME. So we were tweedy, we were refined, we were drunk; we were college kids; we listened with inward awe to the five- year grad's tales of the days when A.D. ruled the campus or Delt, Sigma Chi, Phi Psi, or of the time Durgin screwed this guy, saved that one, or Dean Watts did, or just plain how it used to be. We drank scotch and bourbon, and liked JB infinitely better than Johnny Walker; we pre- ferred the Hummocks to the Grist Mill, Har- vey's to Hillhouse, and the Esquire to the Bilt- more. We made varying degrees of love in vari- ous places, with varying degrees of finesse, sin- cerity, and success. We laughed in-laughs, danced some, and drank-really quite a lot. It was fun. . .. Homecoming can't be anything else. To the extent that we includes the ma- jority of the students at Brown, or even any sizeable portion of Brown men-and to the ex- tent that we is more than the social form of I -we had a fine old time, and were sorry to see the weekend go. THE PSO did its best. It put up some trees in Alumnae. It ran a Friday dance. It ran a Friday dance with classFrench of course. Fete des Etoiles they called it. The fraternities tried too. They threw parties for Providence residents called urchins. They also threw more formal parties for people called girls or dates. Even the FHBG did something. They put two men be- tween the Christmas trees in Alumnae. The men were Bibb and Shane. Bibb and Shane were supposed to bring more people into Alum- nae. They did bring some people, but not many. The ornaments on the Christmas trees liked the men who were doing things between the trees. It was good that the ornaments liked Bibb and Shane. It was good because there were more ornaments in the hall than people. That was Christmas Weekend. Yawn. CHRISTMAS WEEKEND WINTER WEEKEND THE THC ran a rousing, reveling Ratty Romp on Friday. Sharpe Refectory's decorations were the cause of millions of comments. The stainless milk dis- pensers and the crystal juice coolers were the conver- sation pieces of the decorinstitutional modern. Fill- ing the halls with their rocking sound were Ed Drew and his moving men, lately returned from a three week engagement at the St. Petersburg Civic Center. Sharing the stage with the Drew-men were the Cow- sills, a local puberty-pushing group, which also pushed a big, if slightly higher sound. Contributing to the night's festivities were the antics of the patrons of surrounding entertainment centers which thought- fully through special arrangement were open for business and money. Strangely, Brown's fraternal groups played little part in this or most of the rest of the weekend's activities the Sherryton movies were the major exception. Observers maintained that this lack of enthusiasm was due to the IFC's decree that winter was the period between March 25 and March 21 SATURDAY the Cambridge Circusminus ele- phantsset up its tents in Alumnae Hall. The FHBG thoughtfully covered up for the loss of the elephants by selling enough tickets to fill the ele- phants places with people. After the circus, assorted organizations set up watering holes upon the Brown campus, where again the people made up for the ab- sence of the elephants. In the only event to mar an otherwise perfect weekend, the University Food Servi- ces, through some mental lapse, served steak at the Saturday evening meal. Thoroughly shocked by this glaring inconsistency, many Brown men turned to drink, hoping that John Barleycorn and Demon Rum, or at worst Fred Narragansett, would somehow right things. Later in the evening, many adjourned to the River City Sherryton establishment which fea- tured two all-night flicks. Both were avant garde ex- periments with casts of thousands. Critical reactions were split, but a slight majority favored Knock, Knock over My God, It's a Pinkerton. Sic semper snowy weekend. SPRING WEEKEND 1156 THE SUN might as well have stood still and let us enjoy ourselves. But it has never stood in our way either, and besides, who wants it at midnight? We never really know ourselves until leisure has driven us crazy with delight, or, as with some people, beside ourselves with rebellion the rebellion of holding melancholy when there is joy all around us. It seems impossible at a moment's thought, just before running down- stairs to the date, but it happens, and really only turns out to be something learned about a friend. No one rebels for long, even if he gives in to the spring, and not to the weekend. SCREAMING LAUGHTER was not for sale, but beer was, and the girls were a question of your own wit. They seemed to appear from no- where, maybe out of the walls. The music was felt more than heard, and bounced about the quad, changing its tune from the Pi Lamb patio wall to the Diman House side window. We really never believed we could dance so long, in the middle of a squirming crowd, but the Shirelles convinced us to try, and it only made the sounds more intoxicating. From one frantic face to another, spinning about at rhythmic random, wecircled under the stage, and even the refec- tory in back danced a number but then, it often does. As we moved in slow gyrations, the beer in our stomachs stood still; at least it seemed vio- lently calm; only lying down could settle the conflict. We took one more long dance from the day into the night, and the music never stopped. The chords had become the prevailing attitude. Even people began to throb, becoming all alike, deliriously gay and friendly, decidedly a part of the oneness of the day, impervious to the refec- tory's food fare. IF NIGHTS always played excitement that way, we might petition for night classes, and turn the clock around. Party nights are rare enough, far enough from the pre-exam scrams to be put on ice with the beer and saved for the next weekend. We dream too much, we know; it happens after nearly a year of lectures. On that night, Saturday, we made up as many dreams as we could, and then played them through. From Jimmy's lard house to RISD's boot closet; from the Pembroke study lounges to Mr. Keeney's porch, the dreams screamed themselves into reality. We threw them fizzing about party lounges, and if a kill-joy got smart, we hit him over the head with one. For that one night, we even danced with dreams. Through the still after the lights were finally out, after the last beer can had clanked into a waste basket, the Provi- dence day soon started again. The sun never did stand still. It brought Sunday morning bombing into our heads with a nonchalant whistle. In that whistle was every changing tune we had heard the day before, now a part of the changing of memory, now a warning of the com- ing day, a gasp from the fading week- end, and a distant prelude to the com- ing year. L7 residences FRATERNITIES CHALLENGED by the need to demonstrate to the University community the value of fraternal life at Brown, the Inter-fraternity Coundil devated most of its efforts to public relations. Ably led by president Van Whisnand, vice-president Jeff Smith, secretary Phil Blake, and treasurer Mike Young, the Council published a new and more informative version of Fraternities at Brown. An TFC- Independent panel discussion repeated the same old cliches about fraternal versus independent living, and the IFC-Freshman Ban- quet featured a rerun of an old Dean Schulze speech. Smoothing it over with Providence the IFC once again sponsored its highly successful urchin carnival in October. Largely because of Van Whisnand's hard work and personal in- fluence, the University agreed to appoint a new committee to study again the much-disputed '62 Housing Report. The magic fifty clause almost disappeared, and several borderline houses gained a new lease on life. Dean Schulze's favorable personal opinion seenied to modify the attitude of UH toward the whole system, The IFC's addition to the Brown social season came about as a result of a mistake. Finding that they had muffed their plans for Winter Weekend, the IFC decided to establish a new weekend, featuring that high point of all weekends, the Biltmore show. It was somewhat more successful than the IHC Ratty special. INTER- FRATERNITY COUNCIL PASCO GASBARRO JR. GIBSON LANPHER DAVID KATZ ROBERT LYMAN JAMES DIAMOND MARK GARRISON WILLIAM NUNNELLEY GARY FRIEDMAN JOHN GRANT CHARLES ALLISON 111 CARLTON ASHER JR. WILLIAM MC NICKLE JOHN KENFIELD 11 ALAN ISELIN ALEXANDER KRITZALIS ALEXANDER SMITH ALPHA S DELTA PHI PAUL CHRISTIANSEN PETER CLAUSEN CARL CASPER JR. JAMES MC ELROY NEIL MILLER JEFFREY GODDESS PHILIP MORSE ROBERT HUGHES PETER COPPEDGE PATRICK LYNCH RICHARD VERNEY DAVID KERMANI JEFFREY TAYLOR STEPHEN HOLDSWORTH RONALD GREEN DAVID MANNING FREDERICK ARNOLD MARTIN STAMP JR. JAMES MCINTIRE CHRISTOPHER KLEIN BARRY MARSHALL TIMM REYNOLDS AFTER A SUMMER flled with the sweet tintinnab- ulous sounds of wedding processionals, the brothers of Alpha Delta Phi returned to their distinctive edifice in beautiful Patriots Court. A few hard games of fball pounded the turt into condition. In the proc ess, D.C. Devil's Childy Manning gained his reputa- tion as the man with the finest legs in the House. Green-Jobs had the best moves, however, and Verns was the fastest. Freddy the Fly, Dave the K, Turk, and the HoJo Flyer all contributed their best to the team. Needless to say, the squad of the oldest house on campus was broken up because it was too good for its competition. Rounding off the athletic scene, the River Squad of Lyman, Schoo, and Mack The Truck kept the Seekonk a-ripplin'. Bill also doubled as an organ grinder, an activity he was joined in by Porky Marshall. Barry had tried swimming, but he sank like a stone. The O.G.'s were not the only musical group in the House. The Swiss-Italian a cappella choir of Hughes the Muse, The Ale Man, and Portland Paulie sang through the complete works of Dylan several times this year, much to everyone's dismay. These three boys hit the boards several times, along with Neil the Steal and Brother Patrick. P.T.C. hippety-hopped down the hippy trail leav- ing his tale behind him, Holds wowed the Vernon Courtesans, Tails learned a new way of living, and The Bullet turned snakecharmer on Christmas Eve. Bam-Bam drove the Fox to lower levels, but his place was ably taken by T.B. The Pembroke Clipper was docked by Chem 3, McElls alias Frank Harris let the cobwebs collect on his light-switch, Kingfisher Hitz and Host Diana were snowed in with garlands of rosebuds, and Phil Morse laughed. A.Ds Guiding Light steered them through the stormy straits of Semester I into what was thought to be calmer waters, but several of the crew were washed overboard in the process. On the reverse passage, the new captain was beset by troubles. With fantastic de- mands on his time, the Crazy Mick, ably assisted by apostates Vic and Sharkey, entered the private dream world of Mr. Chips. Radcliffe left Europe with many remarkably astute observations; Beeper Friedman left Europe in ruins. Fawcett was in the ruins. Margaret Mead would be proud of the seniors who lived off-campus this year, for they changed the liter- ary tradition of the House into an oral one, but not before Goots and The Cabby had copped an interna- tional literary prize. Gentleman Chas returned from the crass world of finance, only to find ensconced in his George Street retreat the never phlegmatic, always fortunate, fortune hunters of the Wheaton Treasure Chests. The Harwichport Commodore brought back all his goods from Meadows West but upon arrival found that the covered wagon was also loaded with goods. Speaking of those goods, Smith had one bad fall, but it's doubtful if he'll have another. The Dean's List pacified Pasco, and Dave drank milk. Lanpher and Grant tried holding back the flood, while Willie and Klit conducted minnow experi- ments. And that was the year that was. 128 NEIL MILLMAN JOHN JABLOW ROBERT DOKSON DAVID GORDON BERNARD ROBINOWITZ ROBERT KOCSIS PETER KUPERSMITH STEPHEN BLOOM PETER BRODERICK MICHAEL SCHWAB ROSS DICKER ROBERT MARKS MICHAEL MARCSON ROBERT EBER JEFFREY BECKER MARK STERN CARLOS CAMINOS MARK LURIE BERNARD ADELMAN STEVE ROMANSKY JOEL WIDELITZ MICHAEL JOSELOFF FRANK BERNSTEIN MARSHALL GOLDBERG SETH FINN RICHARD BEARMAN ALAN LEVINE MICHAEL GORDON RONALD DUNLAP STUART KLEEMAN ROBERT CANTOR ALLEN BROWNE DAVID FRIEDMAN DAVID SCHORR ELLIOT MAXWELL THEODORE HERSH PAUL GOLDING ROBERT COOPER STEPHEN SAGAR MARC KOPLIK PHILIP ASBURY ALPHA . FTERY I Pl A D d . d LAMBDA CONTINUING as an innovator among fraternities, Alpha 125 Pi Lambda this year became the first to establish itself substantially off campus; the entire class of '66 took up apartment life and private affairs. Although latent Wilenzikism militated early in the fall for stronger bonds, it became the first two-year local fraternity on campus. Mansky Romansky steered the class of '66, the F.H.B.G., and his hypochondriacal M.G. between apartment and cam- pus, while his co-leaser Spook Broderick, president of Cam Club, on the model of his mentor R.F.K., stressed both political and home life. Connecting rooms intensified com- munal living for receding Bo and aggressive Schlebe as Kups hypothesized the Mets. And Rex Ross sought refuge at Bobo's, as the Young Turks on the third floor took power second semester. The War to Make the House Save on Dorm Damages reached its turning point when the old battlefield at the Refectory was paneled and painted. Broken windows hit a record low of five when the snow fell like glass around the quad. D.B. designed the social life to suit his dress, while C. Wayne epitomized the house's intellectualism. Nardo, of course, was boss! FRED RAPPOPORT PETER ZIMMERMANN EDWARD CHARNEY LES GREENE PETER JUCOVY SETH PERELMAN MICHAEL NATELSON CARLYLE THAYER STEPHEN PERLMAN STEPHEN SWEET RICHARD HODOSH ROBERT COHAN STEVE JEFFRIES MARC HECKER KENNETH GLADSTON KENNETH GOLDSTEIN JAMES LERMAN JOHN COHN JERROLD SOLOMON WILLIAM KOLB VAN WHISNAND LEE JENKINS HERBERT KARG DAVID SCHERMERHORN JOHN WISE WAYNE LONG LAWRENCE BEESON PAUL TUKEY PHILIP HELGERSON HAYDEN ANDERSON PAUL SETTELMEYER GEORGE BECKWITH Il ERIC RICHARDSON ANTHONY ROTELLI JOHN KWOKA WILLIAM O'DONNELL WILLIAM MEISTER DAVID HENSHAW HAROLD WOODCOME JOEL MOORHEAD WILL BROWN 111 RAMPANT LIBERALISM invaded the Beta House this year; V.C. sympathies ran high, excessive freedom marching endangered the house's academic standing, and rushing policies were relaxed enough to allow semi-literate members of ethnic minorities Okies and Rhode Islanders to fill in numerical deficiencies in the pledge class. Friday night rumbles at the B.O. Eleven Club rivalled the fare at Madison Square Garden, and the factionalism arising from the pool tablecolor T.V. controversy nearly split the house. However, a common enemy reunified all elements as P - 5 the campus police force attempted to wrest control of the Beta gatebut in the end, the house committee on public relations continued to screen out undesira- ble applicants for entry into the Quad, and the house demolition crew kept the gate unchained when the walls became too icy to climb. Monday morning trips to U.H. became a weekly affair for president Van Whisnand, who somehow managed to keep the house in the University's good graces. Whisnand did double-duty as I.F.C. president, but was nevertheless able to control his affairs from his Boston office for four days out of the week. Social chairman Bill O'Donnell succeeded in becoming a legend in his own time, but not because of the O'D- arranged social program-which included profes- sional entertainment direct from the renowned Val- ley Cafe of Central Falls, and an occasional treat from the Voice of Racing, John Wise. Informal en- tertainment was afforded by spontaneous Christmas caroling, which enlivened many mornings from mid- November to late January; song-masters Nick Beck- with and Baby Huey Voss outdid themselves with special choreography for O Holy Night. As always, there were laughs. But by mid-year the house had changed: newly-elected president Hayden Anderson began work on his moral rearmament pro- gram, Ponderosa brethren balked at the new financial requirements, a new memorial reading room was ded- TEFFT SMITH ROBERT KING PETER VOSS ROBERT VE! icated in the Lincoln Rockwell tradition, and A.J. Rotelli who couldn't find a hall closet after a year of house residence finally woke up and found himself a young and beautiful wife. O'D faded, Stack failed to return, the last of the old-timers had either made it or given up, and by graduation '66 there was no one left to complain that it certainly wasn't like the old Beta House. LYNN RYLANDER RRI RICHARD FINKELSTEIN JAMES CAMPBELL NEIL MARKSON NORWELL THERIEN JR. DUTY GREENE DOURTNEY WALSH KNUTE WESTERLUND ARTHUR NORTHROP JR. ANTHONY FALBO THOMAS PICKENS NICHOLAS ESPOSITO LEONARD CALDWELL WILLIAM TOMENY ROBERT STEVENS OSWALD MIKELL THOMAS MINNELL WILLIAM ADAMS JR. LEE WELKY EEWISTDESSEIFETIRL BRIAN REIDY FREDERICK TILLOTSON THOMAS INGOLDSBY EMORY WISHON ROBERT NEAD DAVID FOWLER MITCHELL VIGEVENO CHARLES BINDER WILLIAM BUSH Il FREDERICK HUNTINGTON WILLIAM CRANE HOWARD GINSBURG JOHN FOWLER LARRY STRONGOSKI DAVID BARRY JOHN ALEXANDER GREGORY MORGAN GERALD CRANE THOMAS CLIFFORD WILLIAM MAC NEISH JR. RICHARD MAYO ROBERT CLEARY THOMAS SKENDEMAN DAVID MEEHAN RALSTON JACKSON JR. ROBERT HOGAN ROBERT WELLS 128 MARKING a new era in the history of Delta Phi at Brown, the undergraduate brothers and the alumni this year voted to sever relations with the national organization. The fraternity is now known as Delta Phi Omega or, among the brothers, as St. Elmo Hall. The transformation of Delta Phi into a local fra- ternity has not altered their long tradition of partici- pation in a variety of campus and community activi- ties. Several of the seventy brothers are prominent members of Brown's athletic teams, including: Bob Hall, Tom Mennell, and Tom Stranko in football; Dave Ferguson and Bob Bruce in hockey; Bill Achilles and John Alexander in wrestling; Brian Reidy and Greg Morgan in baseball; and Tom Stranko and Larry Strongoski in lacrosse. Delta Phi also boasts three Brown Key members, brothers Hall, Mennell and Blatz. The brothers of St. Elmo have also continued their tradition of academic excellence by placing several members on the Dean's List and attaining a high house average. This diversity of interests and accomplishments among individuals has not prevented the fraternity as a whole from enjoying a varied program of social affairs and community services. The annual Christ- mas party for underprivileged children was a great success, as was the Delta Phi Omega booth at the IFC carnival. A cocktail party for the faculty, Parent's Weekend, and the house's own Alumni Weekend were all well attended. The social season was high- lighted by the annual, and now famous, Bermuda Weekend, at which time a lucky brother and his date were sent, with all expenses paid, to that picturesque island for a weekend. Meanwhile, back at St. Elmo's, the house zoo boasted such notable creatures as Moose, Sow, Toad, Tiger, Teddy Bear, and Leroy who left several indeli- ble marks on everyone's life here. Hot Lips became King of the Road, while Nitso and Super Nitso kept complaining about the French toast. Doog 11 was a hayseed Santa Claus; Lewalski never lost his love for tarts; and all are still waiting for Squeaky's voice to crack. PHILIP GULDEMAN ROBERT BRUCE ROBERT HALL ROGER FREISE RONALD DEL SIGNORE RICHARD BALLOU CARL YOUNG PETER KEATING ERIC WALBURGH DOUGLAS BLATZ TOM STRANKO JOSEPH SANTARLASCI PHILLIP MOWRY DOUGLAS SWEENY BRUCE WEBER WILLIAM ACHILLES EXCELLING in all academic, athletic, and social aspects of Uni- versity life, Delta Tau Delta under the leadership of Gerry Lynch, Bill Meckel, and Bill Brisbane proved itself to be one of the strongest fraternal organizations on campus. Academically, Delta Tau Delta placed more than ten men on the Deans List for first semester. Brothers Al Fishman, John Krupski second team All- America Soccer, Joe Randall All-Ivy Punter, Phil McGuire, Bo Wernersbach All-Ivy Soccer, Frank Forsberg All-Ivy Soccer, Rick Landau, and Gerry Lynch sparked their teams to successful seasons. The Delt social season, under the supervision of Mike Hutter, included a great diversity of activities but was enjoyed by all. Homecoming Weekend was a gala affair marked by the re- newal of old friendships, a fine showing in the Poster Contest, and the emergence of Yucca Flats. Harvard Weekend was highlighted by Midget's Agitators. Christmas Weekend, thought to be the most sophisticated event of all despite Hot Dog as Santa Claus, was shared with the underprivileged children of Providence as the brothers donated innumerable gifts to help spread Christmas cheer. Second semester saw Otto at Pembroke and Scooter with a debu- tante. Winter Weekend, LF.C. Weekend, the Jungle Party, and Spring Weekend provided much needed releases from the tensions of intense study. Besides these well-organized activities, the Delts, led by Lip, News, Evil Joe, and C.D., patronized the Valley, the First Chance, the pool halls, the Tap, and the various Crazy Eights parlors in search of new activities. For the most part everyone found satisfaction in pursuing his own diversions, and 1965-1966 proved to be a memorable year for all Beta Chi Delts. JOHN GAYDOS WILLIAM KOWALSKY ROBERT BERNIUS LAWRENCE ZIELINSKI JOHN MOGULESCU JOHN ADAMS PAUL WILLIAMS JOHN DONALDSON JOHN COSTA JOSEPH RANDALL SAUL ROTHMAN THOMAS VIRR SHAWN SMITH JOHN WILLIAMSON JOSEPH TANSKI RUSSELL BOSWORTH THOMAS BAER RICHARD BOLLOW GARY KAUFMANN RICHARD LANDAU PAUL HENRICI JOHN BOYLE THOMAS PONOSUK JOSEPH LAWLESS PETER GATES WILLIAM MULLIN CHARLES MODLISZEWSKI MICHAEL HUTTER MICHAEL FAHEY NEAL WEINSTOCK DOUGLAS BLAIR JOHN DOUGHERTY JAMES TREGLIO MICHAEL MAZNICKI SCOTT GUITTARR JOHN GOODRICH MICHAEL MICHNO JR. JOHN WEATHERBY ROBERT WERNERSBACH LAWRENCE LAPINE JAMES MANN JOHN KRUPSKI CHARLES GARDINIER GEOFFREY GOODALE WILLIAM KOLIBASH JERRY ZIMMER FRANK FORSBERG DAVID SANTRY ALBERT MILANESI ROBERT KISSAM GERARD LYNCH WILFRED MECKEL WILLIAM BRISBANE ANDREW PADDEN ROGER TRUE ALAN FISHMAN GERALD PIERSON HARRY PEDEN 1l RICHARD KAHN CHARLES HOUSTON CHRISTOPHER PARKER EDWARD WISEMAN PETER BILLINGS ALOYSIUS VASKAS GUY CARTWRIGHT JAMES NAUGHTON Il EDWARD ROSENTHAL THOMAS WINNER CHRISTOPHER SUMNER STEPHEN PAGE JERRY HAUSMAN ARTHUR GROSSMAN DAVID WHALLEY DENNIS HOLT DAVID BUSKIN JOHN CLAFLIN JAMES DANIELS JOHN GIVEN TOM NIEDERER GEORGE HISERT RICHARD BERGERON MAURICE QUINLAN PARKER SCHOFIELD ARTHUR DE LANO JR. JAMES CASTLE GABRIEL DOUMATO EDWIN BLACKWELL JOHN STEEN GERALD LYNCH CARL KLUNDER STEVEN RING ROBERT LE SHAY EDMOND ZAGLIO KENNETH MAZANEK PETER YUNICH JOSH KATES NEAL GARONZIK LESLIE JONES BARRY BRUSH MARK AUGENBLICK AS BAD YEARS GO, it wasn't a bad year at DU. The social and academic calendar was crammed with worthwhile activities, and the brotherhood responded accordingly. The first semester saw the arrival of Bubblehead and the reign of the King with everything being in the pink. Vic took an interest in comparative zoology, Sharkeys, and fishy Chips. Hisert spirit- ually moved off campus but not with Senio. Dan Bergeron found that he didn't mind being Terry's brother after all. Given made an art film while Fess Parker burned his draft card in aesthetic protest. Houston continued to main- tain sherry hours where brothers were not al- lowed and Otto took a lot of needling about his mosquito farm. Higgy, tiring of Refectory meals, began to eat out more. Castle took a sabbatical to finish a sociology paper entitled On Bring- ing Up Irving, and Alter made an admirable Jewish Santa Claus. Dufus endured. Sorenson and Moss leapt. The second semester was highlighted by the Howard Berry Testimonial Dinner and a speech by DU National Secretary Bill Butler, speaking on Justice Our Foundation. Brother Butler came on strong but fagged near the end of the evening. On the whole, the year turned out bet- ter than it was cracked up to be. VICTOR PEPPARD ROBERT HIGGINBOTTOM RICHARD ALTER ROBERT RICE JOHN ROBINSON ALAN SCARRITT VICTOR DE JONG PATRICK MIGLIORE MICHAEL CORBETT A SETET B CFY DELTA UPSILON WALTER INGRAM DEAN VEGOSEN RAY BARNUM II1 WILLIAM MC DONALD HUGH REBERT GERALD SHUGRUE DAVID DEUTSCH DONALD TYLER JAY BURGESS JOHN PFAFF ROBERT DIAZ KENT LOGAN LAWRENCE RHOADES WILLIAM CARR JOHN PATE JAMES PATTERSON WILLIAM DEBRULER MICHAEL RUBINGER ROBERT O'DAY HAROLD WILDER SCOTT HENSEL GEORGE ARMIGER HOWARD ZESKIND EUGENE NOONOO JOHN KEENAN SHERILL MOYER DAVID ROBINSON JOSEPH RUMA JAMES WILLEY STEPHEN WILEY ALAN MICHALOWSKI JAMES VANBLARCOM WHITT BIRNIE LARRY CORBETT DAVID GUSTAFSON i 2 WAYNE BADAN LEONARD O'DONNELL DAVID CASHMAN JOHN BOHN JOHN ADAMIAK DODD HILTEBEITEL HAROLD MUGFORD JR. STEVEN DANIELS KENNETH FITZSIMMONS ARTHUR DIMARTINO JR. WILLIAM PETERS RICHARD TRULL JOHN HOLSCHUH DAVID JOLLIN TIMOTHY MARSCHNER THOMAS MURPHY ROBERT DAVIS ROBERT MARTIN PATRICK O'HARE JOHN OLSON PAUL EISENHARDT RICHARD O'TOOLE GEORGE PLASTERAS RENE MURAI RICHARD EMERY JAMES ROONEY FRANK LANGWORTH JAN RUSSO JOHN KEANE PETER HOLDEN CHARLES O'BRIEN DAVID OLSON QUITE COMFORTABLE in its spot at the center of the Quad, the faded brick gazed at the endless stream of passers-by, inhaling or exhaling its members from or into the stream. The halls, still young, but aging, observedsometimes surely laughing, others somber and shared another year with Kappa Sig. It was the year that Batman and Robin chased the Riddler through the rock . . . the year Patter broke the C barrier . . . the year Ren taught the House, though it resisted, all about South Africa . . . the year John Francis and the Black Scorpion were dis- covered missing. The supreme decrees of Spider were ruthlessly enforced by Grand Procurator Dave Deutsch at the peril of being lashed by an umbrella. Tooty, as captain, with Billies Carr and Peters, dis- played their prowess on the gridiron as Rollo social- ized among the spectators, and Macker and Hugh pri- marily imbibed. Not infrequently stopping in at Brook's and Barney's, Plaster developed the character that has made him the Dudley that he is today. Crash upheld his tradition in a glorious bash through the North Country. Benny was back and we had him, a budding Picasso with a quart of 'Gansett; when on the ice with Diaz, he made Kappa Sig a veritable hockey terror. Burgess and Shugrue settled down to workthe depths one reaches as he approaches matri- mony. The corrupting influences of a wife led Bill De- Bruler to the Deans Team. Jan Russo, House fashion advisor, redecorated the lounge while Sir Logan, as always, remained his sophisticated, lecherous self, de- serving the only bottle of Stud ever produced. Maude slept a lot. 135 DESPITE a strong current of internationalism among the brothers of Lambda Chi Alpha, the order was grieved to learn that the Chinese have misnamed 1966 as the Year of the Hawk. Everyone knows, of course, that 1966 1s clearly the Year of the 'Gator. Saddened by the ruthless Communist plot to sub- vert over 650,000,000 people, the brotherhood-never an order to brood over circumstances beyond its con- trol-managed to indulge in collegiate revelry and conviviality throughout the semester. To be sure, de- fenestration is not generally marked conviviality, but Parry's date may return any time she chooses and need not fear exiting via the second floor window again. Perhaps she will remember to put her Batcape to Fuller advantage next time. The despicable vice of verbal bidding long rampant among other frater- nal orders of the Brown community, at last insinu- ated its foul sinews into the social policy of Lambda Chi. Thus far, three verbal bids have been offered: one posthumously, to Herbert Spencer; another to Stan Lee, creator of the Hulk, the Fantastic Four, Galactus, the Silver Surfer, and the Watcher, the lonely counselor of the starry cosmos; and another to Bat-cat. Although the University should be assured that there are no restrictive clauses discriminating against felines in the House charter, it is doubtful that he will be accepted into the brotherhood-after all, he washes his paws after every meal. Still, it is probable that Bat-cat will garner enough votes to make the going rough for the ambitious Echeverria, who has foul designs for gaining the coveted Peter Hansen Memorial Trophy. Although many of Licheverria's cohorts insist that a Bat-cat victory could only be won through fowl play, the pussy still has a lead. LAMBDA The 1965-66 academic year was one of great per- sonal achievement among the brothers. Sow left to CHI unselfishly dedicate himself to a growing alumni asso- ciation in Watertown, and Thor sought to instill the ALPHA 136 ideals of Americana, so thoroughly ingrained in his KENNETH NEAL PAUL KINLOCH JON KEATES JEFFREY BRETZ GERARD BROOKS ANDREW HESS JOHN CAMPBELL JOHN WARTON JR. ROBERT MADDOX ALFRED GOLLATZ JEFFERY HAYES ACKLEY BLOCHER ROBERT DE LUCA TERRY ZERNGAST DAVID STRAWBRIDGE DENNIS CALLAN TOM WARD JAMES FALCONER ROBERT FAR PHILIP MORELAND CLINT MAGNUSSEN JOHN SCHIERING MICHAEL O'CONNOR JAMES YARDLEY STEVEN BEHRENS THOMAS ECHEVERRIA LOUIS COLELLA character, to his youthful charges. Fanning flamed as Wheaton burned though some say it watered; nevertheless, he set a new world land-speed record in the process. The 'Gator thrashed through the house, the Kersts missionary zeal puided the Puritan Re form Movement to new heights of grandeur. Al though conversions were difficult, and field work dan- gerous, Kerst, armed only with a few six-packs of bap- tismal waters, persevered. Brother Kerst did a re- markable job mingling with the evil, earthly ways of sinners on Saturday nights, when most of the conver- sions were attempted. Religiosity was not the sole concern of the brother- hood, however. Long recognized for its distinctive academic record, the order once again asserted a fervid interest in scholasticism with the inception of the Visiting Scholars Program. First conceived by Brother Jack M. Garry before his most recent Cana- dian sabbatical, the program calls for a series of weekly lectures to be given in areas of interest to the brotherhood. Alexander Hofstetter was the keynoter of the series, and he lectured most knowledgeably on The Nature of Crystallization in Providence. So enthusiastic was the response to Mr. Hofstetter's lec- ture that nightly seminar meetings were instituted, and numerous field trips throughout the metropoli- tan area were undertaken. Many a night, members of the seminars staggered up College Hill, loaded with so many samples that their heads seemed to spin. Mr. Hofstetter was scheduled to offer a second lecture in another area of great interest to the brotherhood- temperance-but, unfortunately, Stet was hastily called away on government business. Paul F. Kelly was scheduled to offer a lecturer on Buddhist Medi- tation and Contemplation, but he slept through the appointment. The brothers rallied to the occasion re- sponding with true LXA spiritsand promptly broke into small seminar groups to continue their work in crystallization. Cactus Jack would have wanted it that way. CLARK HOPSON PETER THORBAHN BRUCE DARLING ROBERT NEWTON DAVID TAYLOR PAUL KELLY STEPHEN RYAN ROY CIOLETTI PAUL BUSCEMI JOHN WHITE Il GENE JOHANSON GERARD BOYLE TERRENCE BOYLE RICHARD MAURO JAMES FANNING STEVE BETTENCOURT DENNIS MACKS JACKSON FOWLER THOMAS COAKLEY CRAIG CAMPBELL THOMAS FAHEY JOE PETRUCELLI DENNIS WOODS SCOTT HALLSTED MARK WYATT HENRY STROZESKI ROBERT ROCKWOOD JOHN MAC DONNELL ROBERT GAUDREAU JACK STALEY NEILL ANDERSON ANDREW HALVORSEN 7 WINTHROP JESSUP Z RICHARD WHIPPLE JOHN CROSBY DANIEL CAIN WILLIAM MATTESON GREGORY BUIS THOMAS KERST GIBSON HENDERSON DONALD TARR GRAHAM JONES VINCENT BUONANNO PETER SMITH WILLIAM TURNER PATRICK MALEY ROBERT CONTA 138 UNITY AND DIVERSITY interacted to provide an envi- ronment conducive to both brotherhood and scholarship at Lambda Sig. From Zimmerman's discovery to the last loutine there was never a dull moment. The junior datepool provided the more serpentine members of the house unlimited op- portunities, and Yancey showed them all that beauty is only skin deep. The Judge pursued that oldest of all pro- fessions, and Brother Turner spent the year looking for someone up instead of South. Travel broadened the Panda, but circulation gave him the key to keeping prim. Teeny Bop dreamed of dikes until his finger was sore, and devious Bush searched for more meaningful relation- ships. All remember Louie, Louie at Arthur as well as by Fred, although some have difficulty recognizing Roddie, Sib, or Jack in the dim light of the plaza. The zoo was highlighted by the conflict between the moles and the birds who fought it out until Bugs and Mr. Moto took the White Tower by storm, relying heavily upon the Weeping Eagle. Further trouble was caused by Napoleon in rags and by the language he used. Gale warnings went up, and the sewer boots were broken out as winter came. Rugged individualism declined with these developments until even Tom Jones was forced to admit defeat. Gross now hopes to become a kingmaker after he made a President, while mass movements cloud the future of Brother Holbrook. Brother Henderson rumi- nated with a blank mind all year as the transatlantic cable was being laid down the hall. While the seniors were being tailored for caps and gowns, Oscar Jones was being fitted for a long-needed toupee, and Brothers Tarr and Richard- son looked over a new set of binoculars. At year's end the recalcitrant pledges finally allowed a film of their production to be filed in the Library of Con- gress. LAMBDA SIGMA NU HOWARD SNYDER PETER DWYER ROBERT SPENCER EDWARD DAUER THOMAS DOUGLASS ROBERT WESSELHOEFT Il DAVID ELTON JON KENT GEORGE MANFREDI ROBERT ARNOLD FREDERIC MARSH GREGORY FRITZ GERALD ZIMMERMANN JONATHAN BROWN KENNETH CLEGG MICHAEL HOLBROOK HARSHAW YOUNT SCOTT MANLEY WILLIAM STALZER HENRY HANSMANN STEPHEN CANTRILL RICHARD GRANT EDWARD HATCH JOHN DYSTEL DAVID HARDY ANTHONY LIOCE JR. WILLIAM BAZZY DAVID FORSYTH GROSVENOR BURNETT STEWART DISMUKE RANDY RICHARDSON DAVID HOUGHTON JOSEPH SERRITELLA FRED BUSH Il DAVID JERRETT WILLIAM RICCIUTI JR. JOHN HANES ROBERT JOHNSON WILLIAM HART PETER ADAMS CHRISTOPHER HAGEDORN ROBERT ROSENBLUM ROBERT COLLEY ROBERT BLISS JEFFREY MC CORMICK KEVIN BRUCE PHILIP BLAKE CHRISTOPHER SANDBERG DAVID WILBUR GEOFFREY GALLAGHER COLIN WHYTE PETER CONKLIN CARL CAMPBELL RICHARD SULLIVAN REED LOWRY WILLIAM GERARD EDWARD FITZGERALD EDWARD RODRIQUEZ BRUCE MURRAY JR. OSLER PETERSON MICHAEL GRIEM ROBERT TAYLOR JOHN KINSMAN ROBERT MANCHESTER DONALD VAN WIE COLBY BURBANK GRANT MILLER HENRY STEVENS TODD JOHNSTON PROGRESS was the word at Phi Delta Beta. During its first year as a local fraternity, the seventy-seven year old Brown chapter continued to keep pace with the Great Society. The house maintained excellent relations with the University by being in the upper third of all fraternities scholastically, and being even higher at faculty cocktail parties. Phi's fought the War on Poverty by contributing to Christmas Formal, folk singers, bands, juke boxes, window pane funds, mixer teams, and Julio's. Although Phi's presented the first Homecoming display ever written by Alexander Pope, modernity ruled inside the house. Would-be engineers vied for Saturday night supremacy with re- mote-control curtains, radios, lights, and alarms. The house sur- vived a Great Blackout nearly every weekend, but auxiliary power kept radios and phonographs going through these crises. Last year's pledge class gave the house even greater variety. Phi's were able to form an impromptu Rhode Island Historical Football Society, adopt a stray cat, form a motorcycle pack, go skiing en masse, watch Batman and Uncle in unprecedented numbers, and generally realize all their goals for the Great Society. BRUCE BRISTOW WILLIAM GIERASCH DWIGHT WOODSON IAN CRAWFORD FRANCIS BOGACZYK PAUL LINTON TERENCE HARKIN ERIK RINNE JOHN RIGSBY CLYDE GORDON JR. JOHN CLAIR EUGENE SEVI RICHARD HENKLE ROGER HOWELL DAVID BUCHANAN EDWARD FRAIOLI DONALD LUSARDI TIMOTHY LOGAN PHI DELTA BETA PHI GAMMA BEET A MY BROTHERS, let me admonish you that our position is once again precarious. No levity will be tolerated. Once again we are faced with the task of shaping up. A usual beginning for the year at Pi Rho; but now the seriousness of the situation called for a Fiji extravaganza. It fell on a fall Saturday-most attended, all grum- bled; they signed the pledge and survived. Brother B was glad to see Phi Gam survive, because now he was able to pin his little old lady from Pasadena. Chico went him one better and presented Illya with a J.C. Higgins engagement ring. While these loves were madly flourishing, other Fiji's were having a most interesting time at a Liber cocktail party. Those who didn't drink dominated the sporting scene. Jesse and Froggy led the soccer and swimming teams, and Zaa's wrestling record was unbelievable. Phi Gam conceded only a Grunt in regard to Rugby. Most remembered will be the assorted, out-of-the-ordinary things that occurred. First year man Scott saw Tusky dress like Cupid and earn the title of The Bare Best. This naturally brings to mind Harry and Roget, and the semester's best poker game. The year's high point, however, was easily the annual Christmas party. Santa did not bring new captains chairs, but his gifts were loudly cheered. The relationship he quickly formed with Howard's ultra-conservative date was in the best Christmas spirit. At the same time, Boon was distributing a few of his own gifts to the lads of Buxton House. Santa only comes once a year, said Zippy, but, alas, Phi Gam's Santa will probably come no more. Along with Nick, Panda was granted an extended sabbatical. Luckily for the house this gap was immediately filled by the return of the Red Fag and Tim Teen- ager. Over in the corner the Village Idiot cursed his luck-could it be true that the two returnees were actually his superiors at the bridge table? All too soon it ended, finally bringing to a close many long college careers. Yet, the Fiji tradition will continue to prevail. Rollo, Quigs, et al. will march forth under the purple banner, and the white star will continue to shine in the heavens. THOMAS RODGERS 11 RICHARD BURNS WILTON GRAY MICHAEL SZEGDA WILLIAM FINN THOMAS O'KEEFE Il ROBERT LYLE JONATHAN LAMBERT EDWIN NOEL JOHN NICKERSON THOR WILCOX STEPHEN BENTZ DAVID QUIGLEY CHARLES HINDLEY MICHAEL JOHNSON MARC GEVINSON WILLIAM HOOKS JOHN WESTFALL TERRANCE SOUERS DONALD KIMIECZAK TERRENCE MARR GLEN RAMSAY ANDREW MC NEIL CHARLES PIGOTT DAVID GNEISER CLARKE COCHRAN BRUCE GOODY JOHN STABB MICHAEL SCHMITZ CRAIG EVANS JOHN SOJA PHILIP CAMPAIGNE JOHN MONTGOMERY I BRIAN BARBATA WILLIAM CAMPBELL JOSEPH TOSCANO GEORGE MAUGANS MICHAEL KEENE ., JOHN SKONBERG i !; SAMUEL PAULES i i THOMAS EARP RICHARD CARPENTER ERIC GREEN 143 WILLIAM SUDELL JR. RICHARD PATT ROBERT COX JEFFREY SMITH JAMES BUCCI RANDOLPH THUMMEL JAN VAN LOAN THOMAS DUNN I WILLIAM KRAUTER RONALD HOLMBERG RICHARD WEBBER FREDERICK ROHRBACH DAVID WARNER DAVID FAGIANO JOHN WITMEYER ROBERT ERIKSON PETER GETZ HARRY UPHOUSE III EUGENE PARRS LAWRENCE SCHENCK RICHARD RASTANI JOHN NISBET JOHN RISTUCCIA ROBERT WESTON DAVID GALE CHRISTOPHER BAUM WILLIAM CATTERALL HARVEY FORMAN STEPHEN BRINN RUDY HANZSEK JR. VICTOR EMERSON RICHARD FERRELL DAVID COOLEY EDWIN JESSUP JOHN WOLCOTT RICHARD BERKSON JAMES CRISP PETER HOGGAN GEORGE HYDE LANCE BRUNNER JONATHAN JEANS RICHARD TAYLOR RONALD GERTS JOHN ANGLIM WILLIAM MILLER BRUCE HAMILTON RALLY, RALLY! the familiar cry rings out late at night as an- other invincible Phi Psi begins to falter but never fade-almost never. Hard work and harder play have been the keynotes of the past year as the entire brotherhood made a concerted effort at getting better grades and throwing stronger shows than ever be- fore. They will miss their seniors who, under the inspiring leader- ship of first Smitty and then Coxy, leave the house with such unforgettable memories as Santa Claus Loon, who didn't pass till the last poem; and Ringo, who still has never been seen in his room but whose wardrobe may be found anywhere, anytime. Then there was the wild one, the Whiskerman, who still can't decide whether to assault the sound barrier on four wheels or two. Never to be forgotten are Pompeus Maximus Bucci, who always carried five guts, one beneath his belt; superjock T.D. with his lounge hockey hat-tricks; casino king Steve, the world's biggest winner with empty pockets; and that famous gamester, the Klump, who just never got the cards. Finally there are the most valuable soft- ball players, Harvey and Rick, and of course the off campus engi- neers, Skoog and Webbs, who masterfully maintained the bad party tradition. As a group, Phi Psi can look back to such team efforts as the newly established Killington Alpha chapter; Newport and sand in your beer: roaring twenties at Homecoming and dinner at the Five Acres; road shows to Cornell, Penn, and Dartmouth; and of course the 21 7 drinking teams where the juniors began to assault the record. Then there was the mysterious Christmas weekend guest from Virginia; the all night effort on the Homecoming wave; the First Chance, Last Chance; and of course the cocktail parties starring Big Red, Oscar, Pig Pen, and always, Phi Psi's invincible grad student, the Hill. As Phi Psi looks back upon these memories the thought which burns most brightly is that we have not yet begun to fight! 145 SIGMA CHI exists no longer at Brown. On February 1 of this year it officially severed national ties and became the first fraternity on the Brown campus to adopt a non-Greek title. The name Swyndlestock was chosen mostly for its historical significance. This was a public meeting-place in the University town of Oxford, where students could as- semble to exchange freely their ideas and relax in a con- genial social atmosphere. The brothers felt this to be worthy of emulating; they hope to entwine the past with the present. The pledge class of 13 worked throughout the first se- mester to restyle the Big Bar, in keeping with the olde English taverne motif. The walls and ceilings were re- painted, roof beams added, and wagon wheel lights in- stalled to illuminate the massive bar. Brothers Morrison and Going designed an esoteric crest which is the basis of the club tie, also in the tradition of the select English club. This year, as in the past, the House has an active social calendar. The guidance of brothers Dog Hazard and Root Weiss proved superb as the House was treated to an array of diversified parties, a Tom Jones theme party, and sev- eral well-received fireside gatherings, culminating in the annual Christmas party. Plut substituted as Santa and proved to be a worthy successor to Stu Crane's legacy. With Roger Olien, Swyndlestock also hosted the Gettysburg Col- lege Glee Club at a coffee hour, extending a touch of Northern good will. Spring Weekend found the good Swyndles serenaded by The Fascinators, a versatile band of sorts, adept at the sybaritic facets which are so much a part of the weekend. Again the Sunday boat trip was hailed. Several brothers focused their attentions on the sports scene. Dave Chichester was the mainstay of the undefeated soccer team as he tended goal and dodged moving goal posts. Chi was elected co-captain of next year's team, a fitting tribute. Albie Moser, taking time from crew, proved to be a versatile lineman on the football squad as he alter- nated from offense to defense, tackle to guard. Rich Sher- SWYNDLESTOCK DAN MC CULLOUGH SCOTT BRIGGS JAMES DEAVER DAVID CHICHESTER GEOFFREY GOING STANLEY JAROS RICHARD KAFFENBERGER DAVID PIERONI RICHARD MORRISON EDWIN KLEIN ROBERT REYMERS ERIC SMITH ALAN GARBER RICHARD FOLEY STEPHEN HAZARD DOUGLAS SHARP RICHARD KOZAK MARK MACOMBER JOHN BOSCARDIN CHARLES SUBLETT DAVID WETTERHOLT DONALD WEISS JAMES BOBB ALAN WHITE GEORGE CONNELL JR. MICHAEL YOUNG JOHN TULP PETER SHAPIRO WILLIAM COVERLEY DONALD FANCHER THEODORE YNTENA CHARLES ATWOOD RODGER SMITH FREDERIC WELLS ALEXANDER NEWTON PETER HENDRICKS ALBIN MOSER JOHN BARRETT JR. ROBERT LANCASTER RICHARD REED man earned a spot on the hockey team, while John Bar- rett spirited between JV hockey and the bigtime. John Tulp was master of the squash courts, defending his Rhode 1 4 7 Island Squash Racquets titlebetween forays to Oates' and Julio's, inevitably accompanied by a goodly number of first mates willing to join any boat. Taking a cue from Mike Youngambassador, statesman, diplomat, and world traveler along with Hork, Lane, Bars, Sherm, and Shaps-Joel Wohlgemuth and Bob Lan- caster earned coveted spots on the University's Work Proj- ect team. Numerous Swyndles at the U Club and with Mrs. Baker enhanced this activist image. For the seniors, what beckons? Several will be in medical school, a number at law and business school, many in flight training and seamanship. Regardless what they seek, STEPHEN BIENEMAN 3 : 5 ; STEPHEN FISCHER they will find it here, at the sign of the flying knocker. JAY JACOBS JOEL WOHLGEMUTH RICHARD SHERMAN MICHAEL JONES STEPHEN GLUCKMAN MALCOLM SHOOKNER DONALD CURTIN GEORGE BOWMAN ROBERT BUSICK Il ROBERT SZUL STEPHEN BARBARO STEVEN LUDEMANN BRUCE BLODGETT DAVID ENNIS JR. JOHN COBOURN CARL SMITH ALAN CORDIS JOHN SCHINDLER SCOTT MULDOON RONALD TAFT ROBERT PASS BRACE LEMON STEPHEN ZWARG PETER SCHUSTER MICHAEL TARGOFF JOHN BISHOP WILLIAM KINSELLA JAMES FRANCO THOMAS WARNER ANTHONY BALDINO DAVID PRIOR STEVE KADISON RICHARD HILLER EDWARD MC ENTEE ANDREW MERCER CHRISTOPHER JOHNSTON JAMES BELL JAMES WATT WILLIAM MUENCHINGER DAN UMANOFF MICHAEL BURKE WILLIAM BURCH JR. HERSCHEL BIRD ROBERT WHORF JEFFREY NELSON RICHARD BUCILLA THE THUMPTY DUMPS of Theta Delta once again pulled through with a clutch pledge class, get- ting-with a minimum of cavorting and a maximum of connivingthirteen doubles and one single by the Housing Report and, coincidentally, one of the best classes that could ever be swayed into exjockdom. Led by Brown of the Flaming Ford, the scuts caused a few anxious moments in the domicile, while some say most were aimed at the Head. Cordts continued to keep the Ratty potato factory honest. Team captains were as abundant as ever with Ed McEntee wrestling, Bill Kinsella cross-country, and Steve Kadison baseball, followed by about two thirds of the House, with varying degrees of success. Intramurals captured the fancy of many this year, with Theta Delt having an excellent chance to win the Lanpher Cup for the third consecutive year, thus retiring it to clutter up the trophy case a little more. Naturally, this required de-mothballing a few erst- while athletes, done with reasonable success. Igor and the fabled princess have ever been seen wafting through the nights of late, dressed in their stolen baggy browns. Various other trivia captured the attention of the brothers this year, ranging from the late-lamented Wedge's War on Virginity mainly his own to a phantom 4.0 or two. Someone said Theta Delta has a clause. Jonesy alias St. Nick appeared once again for the Christmas Party, congenially grossing out the brothers. Dates yukked it right up. The PA dropped in favor as the Yankee Trader Special of Brook Street became known. Of course, one always has to watch out for the dark Black horse. Smowball began to approach trailer-sized dimensions, while the O'D seemed to have a monopoly on degeneracy. As usual, the annual Theta DeltaZeta Psi snowball fight was sorely missed; the Thumpty Dumps lie hop- ing that one day they'll come out. WILLIAM AUSTIN RANDALL BROWN ROBERT GAD Il KENNETH CHERNACK CLYDE HANYEN SAMUEL COES ROBERT COMEY JONATHAN BUCKLEY THOMAS ROBARDS RUSSELL BAUMANN JOHN MARTIN JR. JEFFREY WALTERS RICHARD KLAFFKY ROBERT LETNER 4 , 2 7 FREDERICK KEENAN JOSEPH COLLINS WILLIAM TILDES DAVID WALLACE WILLIAM JUDGE BRADFORD FLETCHER STEPHEN WILLIAMS DOUGLAS GORTNER STUART BUMPAS RICHARD FEE ROBERT EASTMAN LEE ADAIR GEORGE WISCHKOWSKY EDWARD ARNN THOMAS MORAN ANDREW PAN RICHARD TRELOAR ROGER METZLER GLENN MITCHELL ROBERT SESTON GORDON FERGUSON ALAN JOHNSON DONALD GLEITER CHRISTOPHER ANDERSON DAVID MOWDAY ALEXANDER FILIPP THOMAS FOGARTY HUGH BINGHAM PAUL CHASET MARK ROGERS RONALD BENNETT JOHN HALL DOUGLAS FRAZIER 150 WEDDING BELLS rang in the new year when Gleiter got hitched. Wally whined for Mar, and Zeke was a cool head. Williams talked to Uncle George While Steinsieck and Fran talked to Uncle Sam. Smegs passed and Mitch passed out. Mowds wrecked a car and the Judge made him pay. Sandy was pink- faced, Lanny was two-faced, and Collins was a cool head. Wichy felt a draft while Winnie felt a bear. Caliph made a definite statement, but Bingham was noncomittal. Fogarty cleaned up and Fletch cleared out; Pan got no apple jacks, but Bulger got a pair. White was surly while Al was burly. Seston had a heap, Smacks fell asleep, and Boom-Boom was a cool head. Chaset chased a mum; Fab's friends were scum; Sal babbled for kicks; and Parsons took pics. Gort- ner's mags were great, and Loar found a mate. Kee- nan waxed while Metzler waned. Hall threw a psycho, Fee threw a lunch, and Woo the Raper came back. INDEPENDENTS REPRESENTING INDEPENDENT INTERESTS, the Inter- House Council provided social, cultural, and other services for the non-fraternity contingent during the past year. Directing opera- tions from his new HQ in Stites House, president Pat Karieva, assisted by top men Gould, Beckham, Spencer, Gann, Reinhardt, Shacklette, and Fishbach, plunged into the year's work with more spirit than Ballantine and even found time to discuss arming the campus police with real weapons. Spring Weekend saw the IHC sponsoring two large events, a Friday night dance in Arnold-Bigelow lounges and a Saturday night boat trip complete with band. Homecoming had a slow band in Arnold and a frantic sound in Bigelow. The Cowsills and Ed Drew invaded the Ratty on Friday of Winter Weekend, marking the first organized social activity in many years to be held in the home of fine food. Cognizant of its responsibility to the community, the IHC spon- sored parties for underpriviliged children and studies into possible improvements in residential life. The IHC was proud to be respon- sible for the ID checks in the Rock during reading and exam periods. With an expanded council as a result of more freshman repre- sentation, the THC had one of its most satisfying years in serving independents well. INTER- HOUSE COUNCIL COMPETING successfully with its principal rival, a similar facility in the Bronx, Everett House held 150 specimens this year. The greatest attraction of the West Quadrangle Zoological Gardens, as the House is sometimes affectionately called, was an inhabitant called Walter the Hare who lived in the third floor phone booth. This remarkable rabbit it rhymes with Babbitt amazed all with its southern accent. Despite occasional outbursts resulting from extreme academic tension, Everett's inhabitants were a rela- tively quiet lot, apparently calmed by potions admin- istered by a tall, mysterious wizard, also named Wal- ter, who-like the harelived on the third floor. Saturday nights were exercise periods in Everett. The residents would descend to the exercise yard in the bowels of the house. Sometimes the more active would stroll down Thayer Street to get some fresh air before going down to exercise. Weird noises, atonal music, and acrid odors belched forth from the exer- cise yard: Sometimes the exercise would debilitate normally strong men, and they would fall to the floor where they would be trampled because exercise could stop for no man. Many visitors would come to watch and sometimes even take part in exercise. Often these visitors investigated other parts of the house for different kinds of activities. Weird noises, though subdued, came from parts other than the bowels of the place during exercise time. The Brown-Tougaloo program inspired Everett House to help a local institution with some of the same aims as Everett House. The men of Everett con- tributed a party and two record players to the Rhode Island Children's Center, which helps unfortunate children to grow up. 155 EVERETT'S MEN, athletes all; even those who weren't fared not so wonderfully well in the Univer- sity's version of intramural athletics. This rather poor showing was, in the opinion of informed sources, the result of injuries suffered in Everett's version of in- tramurals. Casualties were heavy throughout the year. Third Floor West reported 89 stretcher cases carried from its hockey rink. Fourth Floor East reported a similar set of statistics for its soccer field. Fourth Floor Central issued a slightly lower casualty list for its football activities. The First Floor received an award from Rhode Island Hospital for its heavy pa- tronage. The Second Floor released a unique sum- mary of the year's activities. Playing something called Limited War, the Second Floor reported 18 killed, 36 wounded, 6 captured, and 4 missing. Observers are still trying to assess the significance of these figures. JAMESON 7 HOUSE EXISTING as a living unit of approximately 125 members, Jameson House was, nevertheless, able to develop a strong feeling of spirit and house loyalty. Although it was not a closelyknit organization, the Jameson spirit evidenced itself in all of the dorm's intramural activities, enabling the house to be repre- sented in every sport and to compile a record ranking among the best in the West Quad. Jamesons involvement in University life went far beyond the sporting fields. In the fall, the house held cocktail hours and evening affairs after every home football game. Unfortunately, an inflationary spiral forced a curtailment of the good life during the win- ter months. Resident Fellow Edward J. Ahearn was Jameson's moving force in terms of time and energy. In addition to chaperoning nearly all of the house's parties, he and Mrs. Ahearn hosted weekly sherry hours throughout the year. These open houses, the scene of many lively discussions, provided each Jamesonian with an opportunity to become better ac- quainted with the other 124. One of the year's high- lights was the dorm banquet in December, which fea- tured as guest speaker the University's psychiatrist, Dr. Najera. Special recognition must be given to Jameson's proctorsAllen Dyer, Robert Winter, Paul Kinloch, and Ron Knightfor the outstanding jobs they have done, not only in policing the house, but also in advising and counseling its neophyte members. IMBIBING Mead-men always had to be careful lest they be caught by their temperance-minded proctor, Matt Medeiros, who would be sure to seize the vile spirits and dispose of them in the proper manner. Otherwise, the members of Mead House, that venera- ble institution at the Southwest corner of the West Quad, enjoyed in 1965-1966 a great variety of cul- tural, athletic, social, and antisocial events. Mead '69ers eminently displayed their athletic and animal skills in a wide variety of sports, including soccer, football, volleyball, basketball, track, softball, and tennis. Equally gruelling events were the bridge and Monopoly marathons. In February the House re- leased its energies in a massive snowball fight outside the dorm, during which several rooms were provided with free air-conditioning. On the intellectual side, in addition to the weekly sherry hours held by Mr. Harwood, the resident fel- low, Mead heard within its hallowed walls the likes of Messrs. Doebler and Schulze engaging in verbal pugilism, Mr. Leroy Smith on the problems of Alfrica, and two IFC members enlightening confused fresh- men on rushing. The 93 culture-seekers who packed themselves into the second floor for the premiere of Batman was still another highlight. The dorm din- ner was held during the second semester. Due recognition is given to the illustrious janitors, Cliff and Jack, for their resourcefulness in using the lounge in which to take naps; the entire Refectory staff, without whose efforts Toy Sun's and Gregg's would be out of business; and the Housing office, for its cleverness in finding such a wonderful place in which to put freshmen. The men of Mead say fare- well to their beloved house with tears in their eyes and lumps in their mattresses. 57 POLAND HOUSE HOME for one ecighth of the freshman class, Poland House was the headquarters for a wide range of ac- tivities. As House dwellers went in many directions, house activities moved apace. Opening the year with what proved to be the usual note of success, the Po- land Jacques captured the Freshman Week athletic trophy. Thereafter, the House fielded successful teams in soccer, volleyball, basketball, and hockey. Among the more forgettable social events, the Po- land House mixer with Garland, held in Arnold Lounge, was one of the year's best. The Christmas bash, preceded by a cocktail party at which Santa Claus shouted Ho, Ho, Ho, Oi Vey! was also a notable success, featuring the best of Yuletide Cheer and the Charters. Poland men were active in organizations as varied as crew, Bruinaries, class council, Cam Club, football, and the I.R.C. A dynamic, well-rounded group repre- sented not only the House but the University as well. In the second semester, Poland featured a Winter Weekend Blowout in Bigelow Lounge on February 26. The Charters again displayed their talents, and the party was a groove. Responsible for organizing and promoting Poland's various endeavors were offi- cers Otto Stohl, John Leventhal, Borden Anderson, Mike Shelton, Ken Stutz, Fred George, and Bob Davis. 159 BRONSON HAVEN for bands, booze, broads, and the Bopper, the West Quad's Bronson House survived another year. Highlights of the season were weekly parties, the student-faculty dinner, and the Spring Weekend cruise. Dean Roman's weekly open houses, top draw- ers on Wednesday evenings, provided a stimulating and intellectual experience, except when Ian was pulling a gross or the Mama was throwing a show. The Tube Team had to fight for seats when Bat- man and Uncle drew the masses to the lounge. Captain Moldy Moulthrop found it quite easy to cross the 2,000 miles between the Amazon and Texas, without missing either. Twink Smith, Peahead, and Rinky Dink Dyer turned pro and took over the Bridge Club, amassing an amazing .0000001 Master points. The Bardens, University horseshoe champs and true Mainiacs, were a welcome addition. Sam the Sham and Wicky Dilcox kept the average up while Punt City, Inc., was placed on the newly created auditory probationthanks to everybody's mother's son. Huge, hockey fan par excellence, made it to West Point and Dartmouth. Twee controled the fourth floor,except for the uncontrollable O'Don- nell-got chaperones, and stood in line for tickets. Chaplain Don kept the men in good spirits, although some of the freshmen couldn't keep them down. PROMOTING many areas of student activity, under the successive regimes of Ralph Levy and Clint Swift, Olney House established itself in its image of an in- dependent House with fraternity furnishings. Through a mixture of Saturday night blow-outs, night club parties, theater parties, and parietal hours, Jan the Man and Elias Safdie handled social affairs to everyone's satisfaction. Spring Weekend was wild; Georgie Porgie was gorgeous on Homecoming, and Saf-in his own inimitable and warm fashionrated weekly bands such as the Night People. The tradi- tional Patio Party climaxed the year's social events. In the face of Batman nights twice a week, Fraser Lang strived to raise cultural horizons. At the dorm dinners speakers such as former Governor Roberts of Rhode Island brightened the culinary offerings. Resi- dent fellow Roger Olien's open houses were replete with wine, women, and the conversation of such peo- ple as Francis Madeira and assorted members of the administration. This year Olney was fortunate to have Dr. and Mrs. Frederick Barnes, Professor and Mrs. Richard Dobbins, and Professor and Mrs. Elmer Cornwell as associate resident fellows. The Barneses poured a hot cup of tea, Professor Bobby Hull Dobbins sparked the ice team, Mrs. Dobbins aided the remodeling of the bar and the lounge, and the Cornwells advised on political projects. A word of thanks goes out to Dean Schulze for his many letters of apology. In other areas, George Cook's newsletters outclassed the BDH; John Hall weathered charges of embezzle- ment as treasurer; Frank Rycyk brewed plans for addi- tional improvements on the bar and tube room; Dave Miles, John Hushon, Dave Hawk, and Dick Holt ac- cepted their positions as IHC representatives in good humor, and Muscles Mosher got engaged. It was a very good year. HARD-WORKING AND CONCERNED, Diman House strength- ened its perennial position as the most active living thing on campus. Orgy-riffic parties every weekend showed Diman House as a caricature of the fraternities it tried to imitate. Heidt, Wand, Bonnano, Chase, and Appleyard kept both the people and the new bar flowing throughout the year, while treasurer Beuchle tried to keep the money flowing-in as well as out. House managers Gouse and Bogdanow somehow kept most of the bricks in place but lost count of the Zeted windows. Contrary to tradition, President Maurer learned, and remembered, the names of every other officer. Diman House stood out through the year in intramurals, with the house snowballers and rugged icemen continuing their winning ways. Active also in more civilized activities, the cultural affairs committee of Steve Meltzer and Seth Kern sponsored a series of sherry hours and dinners with faculty, administration, and, on one occasion, President Keeney, as guests. AFTER SEVENTY YEARS of dormancy, Stites be- came one of the more roaring houses on campus. Much to the shock of Wilbur Homer, a parking lot was created and a movement initiated to go local and change the name to Swizzle Stick. The movement ended when one of Homer's agents or someone from a recently Anglicized fraternal organization removed an exquisite sign proclaiming this change. But the spirit of the Stick could not be removed. Listing, yet not explaining, G. M. Johnson and his athletic sticks made good showings at all intramural sports. M.E.A. Wilkinson proclaimed that Stites was not a public house and overthrew the Kareiva political dynasty but only tied Harvey and Edwards in the wheel- bearing contest. While G.W. Asher took a sabbatical back in the corn country, D.B. Gardner dropped his agricultural extension courses and passed engineering. R.O. Klein and W.B. Fink carrying a salami led the library team, second honors going to D. Stepner, whose putz- mobile broke down in transit. P.B. Bailey made an attempt to join the team but couldn't find the time since he was too busy making reservations about his hotel in Florida. While D. Wile was exploring the inner woods of Seekonk during the big weekends, W. Thorson made his spirits apparent during the week- nights. R. Burgess caused Senate hearings in Wash- ington, D.C. S. Kirkman, between oral hygienic exercises, spent a memorable Wednesday night opposite the new Physics and Engineering Building. B. Ross was quick to point out that it was really the Engineering and Physics building. J. Hamilton sold his entire stock of useful products and became the first five-year A.B. candidate. E. F. Magee, proctor par excellence, kept order when he was not engaged, and R. Smith, Resi- dent Fellow, served his millionth cup of coffeewhen James returned from the mountains. SEITES HOUSE BOUNDING AND CAVORTING, flaming and fondling, hitting and handling, the men of Littlefield achieved greatnessindivid- ually and collectivelyin a fantastic variety of life experiences. The most mundane accomplishment was Littlefield's easy victory in the independent intramurals competition. On a higher level, numerous records were set at sherry hours, imbibing, and grossing out. The Spring Weekend boat party was a high-water mark in the dorm's social history although the Christmas Party has been called the show of shows. The beer fight on the green provided an interest- ing study break and necessitated a re-seeding job. Nice work there, BG. Someone stole the tubebefore finalsbut the tube captain flunked out anyway. South had the monopoly on bridge and poker, but North was dominated by gin. The Winter Weekend snow sculpture-a daring expos of modern man-was dashed by the men in green before it could be iced for viewing by a cultured University community on Saturday morning. A similar expos, ten times as revealing, was immortalized on film and is now on display in the dorm archives. In a related medium, an SRO crowd paid to see Littlefield's unexpurgated 8mm classic. At 46, Hepper finally fell in love. The Blue Flash alias Gump the Lunch, alias Maurice the Ace put on a show for the kiddies at Stowe. David's phone bill convinced him of the expediency of Razin's tried and true cheapies, a la Son of Fain. El Hash survived an attack of yellow journalism thanks to Dudley's editorial perspi- cacity. Speaking of editorialstough break, Dudley. The Shadows met the Phantom on the fourth floor, and the rest of the dorm in the bathroom. El Fam met his Shadow at the mixer, and every- where else for the rest of the year. Dennis spent a week in Wash- ington but cut it short to attend a crucial Saturday lecture. Only Gross Charlie lit them, but Gook was big on amplitude and Juicie high on frequency. There is no God: Cohen's adventures on Route 95 seemingly proved it, despite Leavitt's run-in with a church lamp post. Dirty Super alias Dirty Lil is still digging for that hidden treasure at V.C. J. Edgar's black widow declared war on house insects but was decidely neutral on the Vietnam issue. In the year's most abrupt turnover, Stidsen lost his streetie to Madge, the most passionate Scot in Providence. Sklarew and Sandy made the best of their short time together; but Neil's fortunes doglegged sharply the next week, with the demonic help of Grant. Noble impressed everyone but his date with his Homecoming performance; but Kenny never did understand what was said at the Bag Dinner. Maybe Shep's gift at the Bear's Christmas Bag Party helped him get the message. LITTLEFIELD RESIDENT FELLOWS 164 THURSDAY NIGHT at the Kuceras' used to be a habit for many Brown men. The living quarters of head resident fellow Henry Kucera and his charming wife were for years conveniently located in the Way- land Arch. This year, Professor and Mrs. Kucera moved off campus to 196 Bowen Street, in back of Andrews Hall-ideally situated for Pembrokers but a ten-minute walk from the quadrangle. For the first few weeks, interest was minimal and attendance sparse at the Wednesday afternoon sherry hours and dinners and the Thursday evening discussions. Then Professor Kucera began advertising, and the students responded in ever-increasing numbers. By November, the situation was back to normal as Brown men, Pembrokers, resident fellows, and guests gathered to partake of wine, conversation, and the Kuceras' graci- ous hospitality. One aspect of the resident fellows' activities did retain its usual address at the refectory. These were the luncheons held Tuesdays in the President's Din- ing Room, organized by Professor Walter Schnerr. Speakers usually drawn from the faculty are recom- mended to Mr. Schnerr by the other resident fellows, and the topics of their talks are so varied as to attract the interest of practically every student at one time or another. Certainly the most meaningful component of the entire program is the weekly sherry hour held in the rooms of the resident fellow, who can be found in practically every dormitory. Some wecks the sherry might be port or burgundy, the cheese might be a clam dip, the conversation might be esoteric. Resi- dent fellows are teaching assistants or department chairmen, and of course every rank in between. Most important, resident fellows are interested in the boys they live with and demonstrate this concern, whether it be remembering every name and face or requesting the Dean of the College to have the lawn out front seeded so the students can play football on a decent field. The resident fellow program is practically unique; that is, nothing quite like it exists at the other Ivy schools. It is probably the best way yet discovered to increase student-faculty contact and make the en- counter beneficial to both parties. Currently, resident fellows live only in independent housing units. Some fraternities have shown a strong willingness to have a fellow living in the house, while others express little or no desire at all. Eventually, it would seem, all undergraduates will directly participate in the pro- gram that Mr. Kucera has developed into one of the brightest features of campus living. THE PRICE OF FREEDOM is poverty, although this is only one of the many reasons that a student may be given official sanction to escape. Escape what? It is obvious that anyone who moves off campus with the intention of not jeopardizing his scholastic com- mitment is not escaping responsibility. The physical characteristics of the University? From November to February the Brown campus assumes a wasteland appearance, except when rain turns to snow. But for anyone seriously considering an apartment somewhere, it is already more than a question of ditching the atrocity that his particular view of whatever bricks and chunks of sky compose. Is it a sensing of the superficiality of the structure of housing in the Uni- versity? Apartment buildings in New York, or Boston, or the Los Angeles monolith, parietal hours or not, would convince one that moving off campus is not merely a reaction to being heaped together. Everyone attending Brown, regardless of his partic- ular situation, functions to some degree in the Uni- versity program. Moving away from the campus en- ables some students to adopt a somewhat more con- sciously critical attitude toward what the University is attempting in those isolated incidents which occur dailyincidents which when pieced together define the fluctuating status of Brown University today. Be- cause the student oftf-campus is less centralized, he has a more lucid awareness of the University as moving on a greater frame of reference and its integration within this frame. He can see the integration of Brown with what is around it because he beds outside the center. The off-campus situation-aside from its funda- mental utility as an overflow basin into which in- dependents striving to become truly independent and fraternity men shoving fraternalism to the back- ground vyearly flowhas many interrelated dimen- sions. One is the dispersion of the University throughout the surrounding area, demanding that Brown be more than a walled arena in which profes- sionals play. Another is a focusing from without upon the universal core of Brown. The bonds vary from apartment to apartment; each student has his partic- ular haven, and when all are sleeping soundly he can feel refreshed in his separation from the common breath. In isolation Brown has somehow lost its im- mediacy, but never its impelling force. A rack, a shack, a place to attack. Come on Pem- broke, R.I.S.D., Wheaton, U. of Las Vegas, we are well fortified. You may crack my rack but the shack is mine. Come Philly, New York, Tombstone; ill-lit cor- ridors shall not impede your way ici. This is home because we made it home. This center of lost aca- demic endeavor is yours; bestow your wisdom upon it three o'clock rainy mornings. I, you, we all are here retaining the universal student character: attempting to learn. Would Brown proper admit to being our only teacher? OFF-CAMPUS PEMBROKE IMPRESSIONS of the place, the ultimate real- ization of externalism, midnight, West Andrews, the clock-lit shiny place. The clock-hands point up; up and out to a universe as shielded by its apparent facade of stars and clouds midnight and dark as the university is by its bricks. Pem- broke is a travesty of security. Or this is the impression from midnight to dawn. Guards and police dogs roam the walls with high power rifles. And who knows, if they shot up, Pem- brokers might be blessed with the sight of a dead Canadian gander, who was flying imper- ceptibly high. 169 171 ARE PEMBROKERS MECHANICALLY DE- PLOYED? Who winds them? There are many women's colleges in the country who would find themselves envious of Pembroke's position on College Hill. Daylight Pembroke amounts to a garrulous group of guerrilla invaders who run rampant on Brown's campus. Essential to the understanding of the University's incorporation of its sister bears is the understanding of the destruction of the logical foundation for the separateness of anything. How is such a success- ful entrenchment fought? Key points are forti- fied by the 'brokers. Meehan Auditorium. The Rock. Carrie Tower. And how are Brown men expected to retaliatewith the new low reached by refectory meat? aN D ! THE ULTIMATE in almost every single Pem- broke student is an embedded and easily trig- gered-off concern for the mathematical quantity of her academic achievement, postulated by the University as grades. This ultimacy is, however, questionable and unanswerable. But then there are 'brokers who don't give such a damn for them. The commendability of these students lies in other fields. A professional hockey team has been organized; interest in unacademic endeav- ors among Stones fans flourishes. And then there are Whitman's fields being visited by Pembrok- ers scaling quadrangle walls. Fields covered with leaves of grass? In light of this barefoot, bewil- dered contingent a closer scrutinization of a once unwittingly relevant statement is in order: Really, your only problem is learning to walk in heels down College Hill. e ' J'ii!imifl REALITY is not a common ground through which people pass. Impressions are. Pembroke is a group of impressions, meaningful only in the light of the singular reality of each and every Pembroker. Is she a discoverer, a creator; or is she brainpower? A tenacity driven by an incom- prehensible fear? Pembroke remains, as every college, on the middle road, progressing at a snail's pace toward the brink of humanity's lim- its. Her students, like all students, oscillate be- tween the impeccable brilliance of creative in- surrection and the mass meanness of organized stagnancy. And against every attempt to to- getherize the Pembroke community, remains the realization that the mind is essentially a lonely thing, but out of loneliness and the synthesis comes discovery, comes creation, and ultimately communication. Four years at Pem- broke result for most women in the acquisition of direction. And historically, the course is a collision one with Brown. athletics THE TRADITION of cheerleaders is almost as old as the student tradition of not cheering at football games. This year, as in the past, these traditions clashed. Homecoming was an example of this conflict. Before the game, the cheerleaders fidgeted in front of the stands. Much to their surprise, their initial efforts to arouse spirit met with unqualified success- the crowd stood for the opening kick-off. Elated, the cheerleaders tried to lead cheers. The crowd, how- ever, was moping because of the Dartmouth touch- down scored on the kick-off return and refused to respond. The cheerleaders, ably led by John Pfaff, valiantly tried to raise a block-that-kick cheer, but all that was heard were muffled curses from the crowd. Later, when Brown drove toward the Dart- mouth goal, the spectators cheered. Their cheers, however, were not those of the cheerleaders. Instead of organized cheers, Give me a B, etc. the crowd whistled, screamed and blew horns, completely drowning out the cheerleaders. Feeling useless, the cheerleaders occupied themselves by throwing their megaphones in the air. The cheering followed a pattern. Wild yells of de- light when Brown threatened to score were followed by silence when Dartmouth scored. Whatever the game situation, the cheerleaders were ignored. Either they could not be heard or they were heard too plainly. And as the final score 35-9 indicated, often they cheered alone. Why our cheerleaders did not have the support of the crowd is an interesting, though perhaps un- answerable, question. The crowd's occasional bursts of energy indicated spirit willing to be tapped. The eagerness of our cheerleaders to arouse enthusiasm was obvious. A better football team might help. Pem- brokers down there could do wonders. IT'S ROUGH to go out to practice every day and knock heads together all afternoon long and still know that you're playing for a losing football team. Yet some 50-odd Bruin gridders did just that in 1965 as their spirited determination pulled them through a disappointing season. This past year's record marked the worst perform- ance by a Brown squad since the 1962 team compiled a 1-6-2 slate. Few observers figured that this would be a banner season; practically no one foresaw such a disastrous outcome. With 17 lettermen returning, there was reason o be optimistic. At a rally during Freshman Week co-captain Rich O'Toole told the gathering that they would be in for a number of surprises during the season. Surprised they were, but not in the manner O'Toole had implied. A series of bad breaks, inexperience, and a general lack of size led to the squads downfall. An upset victory over Colgate and a thrashing of Columbia in the last game of the season provided the oniy bright days on the gridiron for the Bruins and their fans. FOOTBALL BOB HALL was no less than spectacular in his third and final year on the varsity. He did everything that a coach could expect of him and more. Passing and running like an All-Ameri- can, he set numerous school and Ivy League marks. Coaches and sportswriters throughout the East sang his praises. The George Bulger Lowe award, symbolic of New England's top collegiate player, was presented to him at the season's end. He was on everybody's All-lvy team and was accorded honorable mention All- American honors as well. The Brown Football Association bestowed upon Hall their trophy emblematic of achievement and team leader- ship. And for the first time since the 1950s a Brown football player was drafted by the pros. Both the Minnesota Vikings of the NFL and the AFL's Boston Patriots laid claim to co-captain Hall, who signed with the Vikings in December. Senior Terry Zerngast established himself as one of the best linebackers in the East, being picked for the ECAC Team-of-the-Week three times and the AII-ECAC first team. Zerngast's bruising defensive play made him a well-deserv- ing All-Ivy selection as well. Another individual Bruin to do well in post-season polls was junior punter Joe Randall, who was chosen by the Ivy coaches as their kicker for the all-conference first defensive unit. COACH JOHN McLAUGHRY, taking advan- tage of a new substitution rule, shifted to two- platoon football in 1965. The team's weekly per- formance thereafter was analogous to the tossing of a coin; the coin sometimes turned up offense and at other times defense. Only in the last encounter against the Lions did both the offen- sive and defensive units jell simultaneously. Opening day at Brown Stadium saw the Rhode Island Rams walk off with their first vic- tory over Brown since 1961, 14-6. The loss was due to complacency and over-confidence more than anything else. But nobody was pushing the panic button yet. Next came Penn in Philadel- phia and the Quakers, led by Bruce Molloy, shut out the Bruin eleven, 7-0. Miscues proved costly in this encounter as a blocked punt led to the game's sole touchdown. The following weekend, Carmen Cozza's Yale crew looked more like puppies than bulldogs but still managed to emerge triumphant, 3-0. A fellow named Begel proved to be the margin of victory as the Eli's j.v. kicker booted a 23-yard field goal. Homecoming brought the eventual Ivy League champions, Dartmouth, to the Hill. An opening kickoff return by Gene Ryzewicz went 90 yards for a touchdown, setting the stage for a 35-9 Indian romp. The Bruins' first six- pointer in three games was scored by linebacker Tom Whidden, on a pass interception. Brown 6 SO O O $1 N N i o Y ALyl SCHEDULE Rhode Island Pennsylvania Yale Dartmouth Colgate Princeton Cornell Harvard Columbia Opp. 14 35 45 17 BROWN'S FIRST WIN of the season was to come seven days later. Colgate, until that time considered one of the East's better teams, displayed a scoring punch more impo- tent than Brown's. A touchdown pass from Hall to senior halfback Bill Carr was the only scoring in the 6-0 victory. The quarterback had a great day rushing, picking up 130 yards on the ground. Having led in the statistics for 3 of 4 games, the Bruins at last dominated the scoreboard. With a win under the team's belt, many still wondered how much longer that all-important goalline would re- main impregnable. Against Princeton something hap- pened; the team's latent offense achieved its full potential. But while the offense came alive the defense came close to falling asleep, as the powerful Tigers rolled to a 45-27 win. Against Cornell the story was essentially the same as the Big Red set back the Bruins, 41-21. Interceptions hurt the squad in the last home game of the campaign. The Bruins played better football than their opponents, but Harvard prevailed, 17-8. Still over the horizon was the battle with Columbia and a potful of gold and touchdowns. Neither offense nor defense could make a mistake. The 51-7 Brown victory was a fitting result to an all-out team effort, a shining finale to an otherwise ill- fated season. For fourteen seniors, it was a memorable cli- max to four years of hard work. An excellent example of the type of athlete who played Brown football this year was defensive halfback Bill Peters. An underrated player who got only token recognition for his exploits on the field, Peters was justly awarded the Brown Club of Rhode Island's War Memorial Trophy for his contributions to the sport at Brown. Although an infrequent winner on the playing field, the 1965 football squad ranks as a winner with its fans. It is easy to shine in victory; it is not that easy to maintain a sparkie in adversity. The victories were none too plentiful, but courage, determination, and spirit were overbundant. Brown 17 2 17 39 39 36 4th 2nd 14th 184 SCHEDULE Opp. Yale 42 Harvard 2 Dartmouth 42 Providence Coll. 2l URI 75 Fordham 22 Heptagonals New Englands 1C4A's SURPASSING most pre-season expectations, varsity cross- country under Coach Ivan Fuqua ran up a three-and-three record in dual and triangular meets in a schedule which included teams boasting the leading runners in the East. Since only one junior and one senior came out for the squad, observers felt that the harriers lacked the experi- ence necessary for a successful season. Nevertheless, the team demonstrated improvement throughout the year and did admirably in the Heptagonals, the New England Championship, and the IC4A's. The first meet was the season's only home meet. On a rainsoaked Butler Health Center course the Bruins de- feated Yale 17-42. They ran away from Dartmouth by an identical score but fell to the Harvard harriers, 23-34. In a triangular meet, Brown, with 89, placed second behind high-ranking Providence College, with 21, and ahead of URI 75. At Van Cortlandt Park in New York, the Bruins lost to Fordham in the last regularly scheduled meet of the fall season. In the Heptagonals, where Army and Navy as well as all the Ivy League schools participate, Brown finished fourth behind Army, Navy, and Harvard. The All-Ivy cross- country team consisting of the top ten Ivy Leaguers finish- ing in the Heptagonals included three Brown harriers: Captain Bill Kinsella, a senior, and sophomores Chip En- nis and Bob Busick. Perhaps the most outstanding performance of the year for the young varsity was in the New Englands. There, against virtually all the cross-country teams of the New England area, with the notable exception of the other New England Ivy League schools, Brown placed second behind Providence College. The most significant accomplishment in this annual event was placing ahead of Central Con- necticut, the team which was supposed to give P.C. a run for the championship. Brown also finished among the top fifteen teams in the IC4A's, in which nearly every school on the East Coast participated. CROSS- SOCCER UNDEFEATED is the adjective that will be most frequently used in the years to come to describe Brown's 1965 soccer team. Other words that should recur in stories about this season are balance, spirit, and cooperation. No one name should come to mind, except that of the man who is becoming some- thing of a living legend in the world of Brown athletics, CLll Stevenson. For three years in succession, Stevenson has coached varsity teams that have captured the Ivy League soccer title. The fresh- man squads in this period, personally recruited by Coach Ste- venson, have won or tied virtually all of their games. There is no single explanation for his success. He trains and conditions and pushes his teams into top physical condition. As an instruc- tor of soccer skills, he is invaluable to even the most talented athletes. He teaches his players that they must be able to think on the field and helps them to this end by carefully detailing the opposing team's offense and defense. Stevenson usually gets as psyched up for ball games as do the team members, sometimes even more so. During the contests, he is constantly shouting at and chiding the players; off the field, he is one of the guys, genuinely interested in their activities and problems. One var- sity booter comments, We want to win for Cliff as much as for ourselves. I can't imagine having a better coach. BACK IN THE SPRING of 1965, members of the varsity and freshman teams who weren't involved in other intercollegiate sports got to- gether for informal and unsupervised practice. This proved to be of great importance when sophomore players Kaufmann, Anakwa, Lynch, and Zimmerman were unable to compete this fall. The new crop of sophomores fresh from an undefeated season were called up to fill four starting berths. It didnt take long for the team to start working as a unit. The season opened before a crowd of 30,000 as Brown defeated a powerful University of Akron team, 3-0. It was the first of five shutout performances for junior goaltender Dave Chi- chester. Next on the schedule was perpetually tough Wesleyan, but they fell, 4-1. The big Bruin defense, led by seniors John Krupski, Frank Forsberg, and Tom Niederer, was the key to Brown's success in these and the other games. In practically every contest, Brown outshot its opponents, due to the defense's ability to stifle scoring threats before they could develop. Ivy League play began with a 3-2 victory over Penn. This was followed the next Saturday by an identical decision against Yale. The big crowd at Aldrich-Dexter, which has become a regular feature at home games, saw the Bruins hold off a late rally to preserve the win. A hard- fought battle with Dartmouth, a pre-season pick for the top of the league, ended 1-0. With a 3-0 League record, and none of the other teams re- maining unscathed, Brown became more than ever the team to beat. As a member of the squad recalls, Prior to the season, nobody ex- pected us to be so strong. The next three games were against non- league opponents. Last year, when Brown met URI after a disappointing road trip, the fired- up team gave the Rams a 14-0 clobbering. This season the booters had no real reason to be vengeful and settled for an 11-0 victory. At home against UConn, the Bruins broke a half- time tie to win 3-1. At Springfield, a penalty kick late in the game enabled the Maroons to gain a 2-2 tie, the only mar on Brown's regular season schedule. Returning to Ivy action, the squad tripped the Princeton tiger, 1-0. The turning point in the campaign came on November 6 as the Bruins met Cornell at Ithaca. For the first time, the booters defeated an Ivy opponent by more than one goal, 3-1, and set up a possible clinch- ing victory the following week. Never was a Brown team more up for a game than when the Bruins met traditional nemesis Harvard. In a pouring rain, the Brown offense completely dominated play, humiliating the Crimson, 6-0. The undefeated season was climaxed by the third 1-0 decision, over Columbia, as right wing- er Bo Wernersbach scored the winning goal. Brown 3 N O 00 N QO i QO QO SCHEDULE Akron Wesleyan Pennsylvania Yale Dartmouth Rhode Island Connecticut Springfield Princeton Cornell Harvard Columbia opp. 2 2 o a9 a9y R i 3 g7 THE NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP tournament committee picked Brown as one of the three representatives from New England. The Bruin's first round opponent was an undefeated squad from Ithaca College, led by two high-scoring Hungarian nationals. But the Brown defense was equal to the occasion. Insides Phil McGuire and Frank Golet registered the goals, the latter set up beautifully by Vic DeJong. Four days later, Brown met Navy at Annapolis. The Midshipmen were held for three periods, 2-2, but finally broke out and ended any hope for a Brown trip to St. Louis, 6-2. Co-captain McGuire and sophomore center forward Mark De- Tora were the team's leading scorers. DeJong was an outstand- ing performer on the balanced Bruin offensive line, dribbling spectacularly and passing to his teammates for the shot on goal. Co-captain Krupski, at season's end, was named to the first team All-Ivy, while seniors Niederer, Forsberg, and Wernersbach, and sophomores DeJong and Pat Migliore made the second team. Stevenson's skill at maneuvering his players paid big divi- dends this year. Sophomore Bob Cooper was converted from inside to a fine halfback, while junior Frank Golet, a spirited on- field leader, completed his second year on the front line, moving up from halfback. In addition, the timely switching of DeJong and DeTora effectively counterbalanced the opposing teams de- fensive strengths. When a coach of Stevenson's skill and temper- ament has a group of soccer players, each capable of being a star but willing to do whatever is asked of him to help the team, the result can be described in one word-greatness. 190 SCHEDULE Brown Opp. 75 Wesleyan 54 80 Brandeis 2 67 Colby 78 76 Rhode Island 70 67 Springfield 66 51 Yale 66 61 Rhode Island 87 59 Rochester bl 63 Columbia 83 52 Ohio University 90 48 Providence 66 57 Pennsylvania 91 46 Princeton 60 50 Columbia 84 68 Cornell 66 66 Northeastern 63 68 Cornell 85 56 Columbia 79 67 Princeton 79 64 Pennsylvania 92 65 Harvard 74 i3 Dartmouth 71 69 Harvard 80 76 Dartmouth 66 64 Yale il 47 Providence 51 ACCORDING to the weekly oddsmakers, Brown's 1965-66 basket- ball team was the favorite in only one of its twenty-six games. That contest was against Brandeis, and Brown won, 80-72. But Stan Ward's young squad was able to pull a few upsetsnamely eight, if one were to take the oddsmakers seriously. Although a 9-16 record does not usually generate enthusiasm, it would be hard not to praise the 1965-66 team for the marked improvement over the previous two seasons. Actually it was quite surprising that the team was ever able to get off the ground what with numerous obstructions early in the year. Billy Reynolds, the leading scorer from last year's freshman squad, was ineligible for the first semester and played in only the last ten games. Junior Dave Gale, Ward's top forward prospect, sprained his ankle in the seasons opener against Wesleyan and missed five games. Then just as Gale returned, it was discovered that backcourt ace Al Fishman had a broken hand. Fishman, aver- aging almost 20 points a game at the time of his injury, missed four games and was sidelined in two later contests because of a VITus. Even with the constant doubt over a starting lineup, the team went out and won four of its first five games. The big one was a 76- 70 victory over Rhode Island before a heavily partisan URI crowd at Brown's Marvel Gym. Fishman's 20 points and sophomore Steve Sigur's 16 led a patient Brown offense which mystified the Yankee Conference co-champions. Later that same week, senior Steve Kadi- son became a hero as he tossed in a 80-foot jump shot at the buzzer to give Brown its fourth win, a 67-66 triumph over Springfield. BASKETBALL THE IVY LEAGUE season was not to be so easy. Brown fin- ished 3-11 in the league, defeating Dartmouth twice and shocking Cornell. The Cornell game was another thriller, won by Brown 68- 66 in overtime on the Big Red's home court. It was the first time that a Brown basketball team had ever won at Ithaca. Senior Dave Houghton came oft the bench and scored ten quick points to help erase a 16-point Cornell lead and send the game into overtime, in which 5-8 sophomore Rick Landau scored two baskets to provide the winning margin. Brown's other wins were both close and both upsets. The Bruins topped small-college power Northeastern, 66-63, and surprised Rochester, 59-51, in the first round of the Kodak City Classic. The final game of the long season almost provided another surprise for the Eastern basketball world. A tight Brown zone defense foiled nationally ranked Providence College, but with the help of All- American Jimmy Walker the Friars prevailed, 51-47. Captain Don Tarr, who was a steadying influence on the team while scoring 8.2 points per game, was the only starting senior. The leading scorer was a sophomore, 6-3 Greg Donaldson, while juniors Fishman and Gale and sophomores Landau, Sigur, and Reynolds all exceeded 100 points. Also helping out were juniors Shawn Smith and Mike Fahey, seniors Kadison and Houghton, and sophomore Jan Hartke. Ward said to the team at the end of the year, You've made some mistakes, but you were always hustling. Brown 02 ,... .-. 00 NI O A UL O R N OO N O LR Ot O 0o SCHEDULE Northeastern Colby Boston College Princeton Harvard Providence College McGill Minnesota Duluth Loyola Army Northeastern Boston College Boston University Cornell Yale Cornell Providence College Dartmouth Harvard Princeton Yale Dartmouth 4th ECAC Tournament o -:: s e OY OO Qo : N O W B 00 R N GO O O W T R A GREAT SEASON behind them, another tough schedule this year, and the loss of seven regulars from the '64-'65 squad limited the hopes of Brown hockey fans to little more than guarded opti- mism. With six sophomores in his starting line-up, Coach Jim Full- erton felt that by February, when the tough Ivy League schedule got into full swing, the boys would be in pretty fair shape to defend their title. In mid-November, the coach remarked, I won't predict what the won and lost record will be but will simply say that we will be interesting to watch. An exciting Brown hockey team posted, at season's end, a very respectable 15-7 mark. With a new, reserved-seating plan in operation at Meehan Audi- torium, capacity crowds that were commonplace last year rarely materialized for the first few games. After victories over the Eastern Olympic Hockey Club and St. Nick's, the skaters opened regular season play at the Boston Arena against Northeastern. Led by all- American Bob Gaudreau and speedy sophomore Wayne Small, Brown romped to an 8-3 victory. On home ice, the Bruins did not look nearly as sharp as they defeated Colby, 3-1. Highly rated Boston College had too much for Brown's relatively inexperienced squad and shut them out, 3-0. Ivy play began at Princeton, and Coach Fullerton's skaters jumped into a 4-1 first period lead. But the Tigers came roaring back as Brown's defense was unable to work together, yielding five goals for a shattering 6-5 defeat. Four days later, a scrappy Harvard squad invaded Meehan and for 58 minutes another upset was in the making. Then Captain Bruce Darling took a Wayne Small pass on a fast break to tie the score at 3-all. With one minute to go in overtime, junior center Dennis Macks skated in all alone on goalie Bill Fitzsimmons, who made a spectacular save, but Darling tipped in the puck for the win. Darling again proved the difference against Providence College as he scored the second and third goals for a 3-1 victory. HOCKEY THE THIRD ANNUAL Brown Holiday In- vitational Tournament marked the first appear- ance of a new red line, with sophomore Phil Moreland replacing Steve Bettencourt on the big line with Macks and Darling. In the open- ing game against McGill, Macks scored three goals and helped his wings with three assists as the Bruins skated to an easy 10-4 decision. Fac- ing Minnesota of Duluth in the finals, Brown got off to an auspicious start as Captain Darling hit on a fifteen-footer at the nine-second mark. The Westerners came back with two goals, only to have Macks and Moreland put Brown ahead, 8-2, at the end of the period. After only 26 sec- onds of the middle period, Bob Gaudreau tallied from in close; six minutes later, Macks hit the red light. Minnesota scored late in the second period, but Brown came right back to score within the first minute of the final period as Macks got his second hat trick in as many nights. Brown won, 6-4. The new line accounted for 12 of 16 tourney goals. Going into 1966 with a 6-2 record, Brown looked forward to increasing their victory total with a decision over lightly regarded Loyola of Montreal. Macks and Darling each scored in the first five minutes and local fans anticipated an- other romp. But the Bruins could not find the nets for the rest of the night and lost decisively, 7-2. The following Saturday, the skaters trav- elled to West Point and opened up their offen- sive thrust against the Army. Led by Macks' three goals, Brown crushed their opponents, 10- 4. Over a four-game span, the first line scored on 21 of 28 tallies. Northeastern, out for revenge, came battling back at Meehan auditorium after trailing 3-1 to tie the score at 4-all in the third period. The Huskies won the game at 9:25 of sudden death overtime when Brown failed to clear. Converted sophomore defenseman Tom Coakley was hav- ing troubles in his new position; but with each game, he showed some improvement and earned, the spot two other sophomores were eager to fill. In the Boston College game, the defense held the injury-ridden ECAC champs to only fifteen shots on goal-tender Dave Ferguson as sopho- more center Bill Clarke, Moreland, and Darling paced Brown to a 3-1 win. s AT MID-SEASON, Brown's record stood at 84, in- cluding a 1-1 Ivy slate. At least one victory over fast, powerful, Canadian Cornell would be necessary for a shot at the Ivy title. Moreland became ineligible after the first semester, so the Bruins went to the Arena short-handed for their annual encounter with Boston University-a tough team out to reverse Brown's up- set victory in the 1965 ECAC semi-finals. The Bruins had trouble setting up against a crack BU defense and soon found themselves behind, 3-0. Meanwhile, senior defenseman Kenny Neal was seriously injured and saw no further action for the remainder of the game-or the season. Brown battled back to tie the score on three quick goals, but BU went ahead and then wrapped up the game as they hit on an open cage, winning 5-3. Three days later, the Bruins flew to Ithaca for the first of two games with Cornell. In a first period marred by twelve penalties, Darling opened the scor- ing with the help of defenseman Ed Sauer's skate. Cornell tied the count with Brown a man down and went ahead in the first minute of the second period both goals being protested by the Bruins. Cornell upped the margin to 3-1 on a tip-in. Junior defense- man Gerry Boyle slapped in Brown's second tally with four minutes remaining, but Cornell goalie Dave Quarrie hung on to insure the victory. It was Brown's finest effort of the season. A mid-week en- counter against fast-skating Yale was dominated by Brown's sophomores who scored all the goals in a 4-2 win. The Big Red came to Providence the following Saturday and put on a fine display of fancy skating, pin-point passing, and excellent defense as they again topped the Bruins, 4-1. The Brown offense started to break out of its dry spell starting with the second PC game. After a score- less first period, the Bruins fired 26 shots on goal in the middle stanza, scoring twice, and then added four more tallies in the third period to triumph, 6-3. At Dartmouth, another four-goal third period overcame a 3-1 deficit as Brown forced the Indians' goalie to make 45 saves Bob Caudreaus defensive play- outstanding all yearand Steve Bettencourt's scoring highlighted one of the team's best-played contests, a 4- 1 win over Harvard. REACHING its peak in February and March, the Brown team reeled off six consecutive victories and won the fourth seed in the ECAC tournament. A Winter Weekend crowd that waited upwards of four hours to get tickets was amply rewarded by a 9-4 thrashing of Princeton. The following Wednesday, a fired-up Dennis Macks hammered home four goals in helping Brown overcome a 5-3 deficit in defeating Yale, 7-6. Sophomore Wayne Small, who really came into his own late in the year, tied the score and Bill Clarke put the Bruins ahead for good. The final reg- ularly scheduled game against Dartmouth featured 2600 screaming partisans rooting on Bruce Darling as he tied and then broke the Ivy League career scoring mark. Macks scored three goals again and clinched the team scoring championship with 48 points. Without the excellent goal-tending of senior Dave Ferguson, Brown would have been just another good team this year. For two-and-a-half seasons Ferguson displayed the critical talent of coming up with the crucial save when it was needed. Gerry Boyle de- veloped into one of the top defensemen in the East, a select group undisputably headed by Bob Gaudreau, whose all-around finesse has seldom been matched by a player in a Brown uniform. Bruce Darling, Dennis Macks, and Wayne Small provided a scoring punch that made them the targets of opposing defensemen in every game they played. Coach of the Year in 1965, Jim Fullerton deserves as much praise as has been accorded him in the past for molding another excel- lent Brown hockey team. Brown 24 17 20 8th SCHEDULE Columbia Coast Guard Dartmouth Cornell Wesleyan Yale Princeton Rhode Island Pennsylvania Springfield Harvard Connecticut New England's Opp. 11 12 14 a2 14 19 12 26 31 10 VICTORIOUS in eight of its twelve matches, Brown's wrestling team enjoyed its best season in a long time. Coach Bob Litchard had the home en- counters rescheduled at convenient Lyman Hall, where capacity crowds vociferously urged on the Bruin grapplers. A great deal of credit is due to Coach Litchard, not only for popularizing the sport but for developing a team with a winning attitude and a winning record. Senior captain Ed McEntee provided his teammartes with a model of leadership and wrestling skill as he posted an 8-1 season mark in the heavyweight class. The other seniors on the squad-all in the upper weights-contributed valuable points throughout the year. They were Bob Bundy, Steve Zwarg, Don Kmieczak, and Bob Maddox. The junior contingent was led by lightweights Steve Gluckman 8-2-1 and Rich Whipple 10-2. Gluckman continued in the fine form he showed as a sophomore. while Whipple, under Litchard's tutelage, fast became a first-rate col- lege wrestler. Outstanding sophomores manned the middle weights. Robbie Harley, Bill Achilles, and John Alexander all had good records against some tough competition. Other members of the team who saw considerable varsity action included sophomores Randy Brown and Mal Shookner, and junior Steve Cantrill. Important wins were scored in the season's opener against heavily favored Columbia and in the Dart- mouth, Wesleyan, Yale, and Pennsylvania matches. Picked to finish last in the Ivy League, Brown placed fourth with a 3-8 record, the first time in nine years that the Bruins reached the .500 mark. COMPETING in the rapidly improving New England Swimming League and the already potent Ivy League, Brown's swimming team turned in a most respectable per- formance. As the 1965-66 swimming season progressed, the Bruin squad faced three types of competitiors. The first category consisted of those teams which were far superior Yale, Princeton, Harvard, Dartmouth, Springfield. A second group was comprised of those teams which were definitely inferior Tufts, Holy Cross, and Coast Guard. The third and most important group consisted of three teams which were as powerful or perhaps a little more powerful than Brown. Meets with these teams-Pennsylvania, M.I.T., and Connecticut-were to decide whether Brown's swimming team had a successful or unsuccessful season. Brown won all three. Each of these three victories was achieved by a deter- mined team effort. In all three, Brown's second man in each event made the difference. These swimmers deserve a great deal more credit than they have received: Tom Drummond, Russ Baumann, Dave Hawk, Clyde Hanyen, Mike Levy, Whit Birnie, Bob Ormerod, and Pete Taft. Of course, praise must also go to the lead swimmers in each event. In the team's most impressive victory, over U of P, every swimmer improved his best time. l.eading the Bruins were co-captains Paul Kinloch and Dave Prior, Harold Mugford, Dick Emery, Tom Warner, Butch Wilder, Larry Rhodes, and Mark Gevinson. The team's 6-8 record belies a successful season, made so by a determined team effort and the winning strategy of Coach Joe Watmough. SCHEDULE Brown Opp. 52 Southern Connecticut 62 21 Princeton 74 53 Holy Cross 42 38 Dartmouth 57 59 Coast Guard 36 39 Amherst 56 36 Springfield 59 26 Harvard 69 52 Pennsylvania 43 29 Yale 66 33 Columbia 62 50 M.IT. 45 60 Tufts 35 49 Connecticut 46 9th New Englands SWIMMING 18I SCHEDULE Brown Opp- 8 Rhode Island 1 0 Harvard 9 TENNIS 0 Princeton 9 8 Providence 1 7 Holy Cross 2 0 Yale 9 1 Williams 8 2 Army 7 6 Cornell 3 1 Dartmouth 8 5 Navy 6 0 Penn 9 9 M.IT. 0 ON THE UPSWING after nearly a decade of second-division ob- scurity, the 1965 tennis team finished with a 5-8 record, which, though not overwhelming, represents a first step in the rejuvena- tion of tennis at Brown. Retiring after the 1964 season, coach Art Palmer cited three fundamentals the team needed to attain stature: a full-time coach which Palmer could not be due to business commitments; a re- cruiting program; and cement courts for indoor practice. To these should be added the team's first early season Florida trip, which players felt helped more than the indoor concrete practice, since all regular matches are on clay courts. The arrival of a dedicated full-time coach in the person of Jim Dougherty, coupled with the Florida trip, was probably the biggest factor in the team's amelioration. And yet, with these improve- ments, Brown was still outplayed by a majority of its opponents, and in fact, was shut out four times by the league's leaders. The constantly shifted lineup was comprised of juniors Bobby Bruce co-captain, Ed Shein, Bob Higginbottom, George Connell, and Woody Bobb; sophomores Rick Foley and Shaw Yount; and seniors Gil DeLorme and Jim Schreiber co-captain. Given ade- quate facilities and an effective recruiting program, coach Jim Dougherty can look upon the 1965 season as offering promise to his future teams. Brown SCHEDULE Boston University Yale Pennsylvania Maine Holy Cross Boston College Dartmouth Harvard Opp. 42 76 9 21 30 48 49 67 THE THINCLADS continued their winning ways in the 1966 indoor season and sported a 6-2 final record. Although confident that his charges would overcome most of their opponents, Coach Fuqua was concerned over the loss of fourteen graduating lettermen. Since depth has always been the calling card of Brown's recent winning track teams, the Bruin mentor felt that the thinned out ranks would be somewhat pressed in class competition. Such was the case in the losses to Harvard and Yale; the Cantabs' and Elis' superior depth enabled them to stay just out of reach of the eager Bruins. The excellent facilities of the Howe-Waughtel Field House at Moses Brown, in addition to the Spir- ited leadership of co-captains Cliff LePage and Bruce Ross, were contributing factors to solid victories over Pennsylvania, Boston College, Boston University, Maine, Dartmouth, and hapless Holy Cross. A strong group of sophomores up from last year's fine Cub team included Jim Wich, a stellar performer in any event from the 440 on up; Tim Fahey, erst- while frosh hop-slep-and-jumper, who lent his abili- ties to an aged mile relay team; and Chip Ennis, a fine two-miler. They all helped bolster a thinning crop of juniors and seniors. For the first time in re- cent years, Brown appeared to be well equipped in the dashes; Winnie Anakwa, Bob Lancaster, and Ted Hersh all achieved fine indoor performances. OUTDOOR TRACK SCHEDULE Brown Opp. SHOWING considerable strength during the annual 93 Wesleyan 56 sojourn in South Carolina, Brown's outdoor track 80 Columbia 65 team returned North to rip through Wesleyan with a 80 Pennsylvania 7 93 point scoring binge. The following week the squad 58 Harvard 96 served notice on the Ivy League by thoroughly 93 Holy Cross 61 trouncing Columbia and Pennsylvania at Philadel- 80 Rhode Island 64 phia. Showing their traditional strength in the mid- 104 Dartmouth 49 dle and longer distances, the Bruins also displayed some startling talent on the field, with stellar per- formances by Clark Hopson in the discus and Alan Miller in the javelin. Brown dropped its only meet of 2 01 the season as against six wins in a bitterly fought contest with ever-powerful Harvard. The thinclads rebounded against Holy Cross, however, and defeated the Crusaders with another 93 point effort. A deter- mined Rhode Island squad offered the Bruin cinder- men a stiff challenge, but greater depth and fine per- formances by Jeft Havener, Dave Nutting, and Spike Henderson contributed to an 80-64 Brown victory. The thinclads closed out dual meet competition by obliterating Dartmouth, 104 to 49. Bruin mentor Ivan Fuqua was extremely pleased with the excellent record and expressed a wish that the Cantabs could have been scheduled later in the season, for the score most likely would have been difterent. At New Haven, Brown entered a strong team in the Heptagonal Championships. Bruin captain Hen- derson copped a third in the 440 yard dash, and the school record as well, with a fine 48.1 time. Other point winners were Bob Duhamel, John Robinson, Victor Boog, and Alan Miller. The meet was a fitting conclusion to an excellent season. BASEBALL Brown 2 O A 00 3 0o N N O 0o NT .-.. B N O Ot SCHEDULE Ohio Univ. William 8 Mary Wilmington Wilmington Wilmington Wilmington East Carolina East Carolina Yale Cornell Rhode Island Columbia Princeton Holy Cross Penn Dartmouth Harvard Navy Providence Ambherst Tufts Army Rhode Island Opponent 7 11 Qo i .-. 00 00 0O N1 O Ot O Ut O i O 3 v Hh O QO 00 Qo O - BROWN'S FORTE does not seem to be the major sports. Year after year the football, baseball, and basketball teams either finish with a losing season or just manage to break .500. Coach Stan Ward had predicted that 1965 would be a rebuilding year for the Bruins, but he only foresaw the beginnings of his troubles. The final result was worse than even the most pessimistic Brown fan would expect; the Bruins were 8-15 over-all and 2-7 in the Ivy League. According to Coach Ward, Although we had to break in an entirely new outfield, we felt we might have a reasonably good team until we began losing pitchers this spring. Brian Murphy, the sensational sophomore prospect, was signed to a $35,000 con- tract by the Braves. Don Carcieri decided to pass up baseball for his senior year, and sophomore Tom Mennell came up with a bad arm. This left Ward with Steve Kadison as his only experienced pitcher. The staff was rather inadequate to face 18 games in four weeks. Actually, Brown had two different clubs in 1965, a good one when Kadison was pitching 5-2, and a poor one when he was not 3-13. The Bruins were just not a good enough hitting team to carry the pitching. Dave Taylor, another junior, was the second most effective hurler, even though he had no previous experience as a college pitcher. He finished with an E.R.A. of 3.27. Brown's two Ivy League victories were over Yale, 4-0, and Penn, 7-6. Kadison hurled a five-hitter in blanking the Elis, while the Bruins much maligned hitting won the Penn game as sophomore third baseman Jerry Lynch hit a home run with two out in the ninth. Three other league games, Cornell, Princeton, and Navy, were close, but the rest of the schedule was rather dismal. At the close of the season, several players received honors for their contributions to the team. Bob Hall and Steve Kadison were chosen co-captains for 1966; Walter Becker was presented the Ed- ward H. Weeks trophy. The Bruins' regular shortstop for three years, Becker was captain of the 1965 team. Brown 0 6 13 12 8 18 21 22 13 14 8 24 25 3 22 47 11 5 RUGBY Columbia Old Blue Fairfield MIT Holy Cross Bermuda Inter-Leaguers Bermuda Rebels Bermuda Athletic Club Bermuda All Stars Indiana Columbia Harvard Business School Harvard Thufts Holy Cross Australian Navy Princeton Williams Boston AN ORGANIZED GROUP of men exists at Brown that, without official athletic status in the university, persists in winning a place of respect among the East- ern seaboard schools and clubs which endeavor the same for their Alma Maters. This organization is the rugby club. Captained in the spring of '65 by the total Terry Walsh and in the fall by the competent Pete Smith, this small faction of British imposters successfully entered into highly-rated competition in both seasons. Early in the spring Brown embarked for the tradi- tional American slaughter on the mid-Atlantic rugby stronghold, Bermuda. The island threw all they could at our ruggers, only to learn that this Brown team would be the first American club to leave un- vanquished by the natives. It was a week-long rugby fest, a week in which several men from this university established themselves as unforgettable athletes. The club returned, battered by the successive matches yet unwilling to falter, and knocked down previously undefeated Harvard Business School. The notorious Princeton team fell 47-0. The Australian navy team steamed half way around the world only to find themselves at the traditional after-game bash swilling their beer to the tune of a 24-0 defeat. Yale, Holy Cross, Williams, and even Indiana were made to bow before the Bruin might. What was rugby at Brown becoming? Pembrokers were selling rugby booster stickers at a buck a shot to re-uniform the dilapitated-looking participants. The sidelines were filling with people who knew that it wasn't a soccer game. Several players were regarded with quasi-re- ligious awe. That was Needham' or Lane, or Powell, or Diffily could be heard from the specta- tors. Guided by scrum half Ron Strasberg, led by the scoring punch of Eric Lane and Big Jim Diffily, and backed up by fullback Bill Powers, the spring team in 18 outings amassed 267 points against 60 for their opponents. It was more than a usual winning team. The fall team continued to conduct itself in the same manner, as Deutsch, Olson, and other veter- ans returned. Only a tew will have experienced the ecstacy ot rugby play in their tenure at Brown. Proportionate to the student body, only a few will ever really un- derstand the essence of that herd of muddy animals stomping ridiculously about in the far corner of AD Saturday mornings come hell or the All Blacks. Re- gardless of its intrinsic inaccessability to the majority of anything, rugby has stamped an indelible mark on the pages of this university's athletic history. SCHEDULE Atalanta Cup Harvard, Rutgers Northeastern Rutgers, Columbia Eastern Sprints I.R.A. Ist 3rd Ist Ist 3rd 5th THE WORD at the beginning of the season was that the Brown crew would take a step upward in 1965. As it turned out, the crew made that pre-season pre- diction seem a rather mild understatement. Brown's initial giant step came in the very first regatta. A large crowd lined the Seekonk and saw the varsity retain the Atalanta Cup over Boston University and Dartmouth. A backward step was taken the next week in Boston, where Brown finished third behind the immortal Harvard crew and Rutgers. The subse- quent Saturday was Spring Weekend, and the crew returned to the Seekonk for a thrilling one-second victory over Northeastern. On the Raritan River in New Jersey, the crew earned its revenge against Rut- gers. The varsity pulled away at the halfway point, and they won by a length and a quarter. None of Brown's victories compared to its perform- ance in the Eastern sprints in Worcester. All the ex- perts were foiled as fifth-seeded Brown won its morn- ing heat over such strong contenders as Syracuse and Cornell and came back in the afternoon finals to finish third behind Harvard and Cornell. Said Coach Michalson afterwards, This was beyond what we really had reason to expect. Fifteen crews were entered in the I.LR.A. Regatta June 19. Brown, perhaps over-anxious to assume its familiar place in the front of the pack, quickly took the number two spot. But in the last quarter of a mile the oarsmen simply ran out of gas and finished a still impressive fifth. Led by its two seniors, captain Emerson Moore and stroke Maurice Rocky Mountain, the crew team members aptly summed up the season when they pointed out, We finished ahead of every crew in the country except Harvard and Washington at least once. When one remembers that Harvard was the best college nine in crew history, that adds up to quite an achievement. CREW Brown 9 6 12 9 11 12 7 5 25 15 b 6 5 SCHEDULE Penn Baltimore Maryland Washington Coll. Yale New Hampshire Harvard Princeton UConn Holy Cross Wesleyan Cornell Dartmouth UMass Opponent 10 ;- S O U 0O NJ 0 0O O o D O LACROSSE STICKING IT OUT against some of the toughest teams in the nation, lacrosse fought its way to its fifth consecutive winning sea- son. In the highly competitive Ivy League, the Bruins placed fourth with two victories and four defeats, but they compiled an impressive 8-6 over-all record. Indicative of the quality of Ivy com- petition, all the league games were won or lost by two goals or less. Brown played impressive lacrosse against several high-ranked teams. The losses to Maryland and Baltimore were each by only three goals, and both were hard-fought contests. Brown handed Wesleyan its first defeat late in the season and thoroughly out- classed opponents such as New Hampshire and UMass who, a few short years ago, were an even match for the Bruins. Filling in vacancies, John Parry and Ralph Duerre joined re- turning defenseman Al Barney. With experience, the defense im- proved and in the last six games allowed only 22 goals. Another important factor in the defense was junior Rich Alter's superior performance in the goal, particularly outstanding inasmuch as he had a relatively inexperienced trio in front of him throughout the first half of the season. Sophomore George Armiger began the season in the crease. However, until Coach CIiff Stevenson moved junior Bill Carr to attack, placed Armiger at Carr's midfield spot, and moved Jerry Lynch to the crease, the offense was not consistently potent. Signifi- cant in aiding the offense were midfielders Chris Eustis and Bob Seiple. High scorer was Carr with 45. Armiger followed with 32. Other leading scorers were Mike Bassis 26, Dave Gneiser 19, Howie Zeskind 18, Chris Eustis 17, and Marty Dudgeon 17. Carr and Eustis were named to the first string all-Ivy lacrosse team. Some observers thought the team did not perform as well as it might have. Perhaps its insufficiencies could be attributed to the conflict between those who considered as most important the fine points of lacrosse and those who preferred to concentrate effort on overpowering the opposition. In any case, Coach Stevenson suc- ceeded in minimizing the effects of this conflict. Certainly the most significant factor in favor of the Bruins was their superior conditioning, which enabled them to outscore as well as outplay all opponents, 35-18, in fourth periods. As always, Coach Stevenson distinguished himself as one of the best liked and most respected coaches at Brown. 240 e RS e oot S 2 g S - o N 0O 0O O N 0o N 0O o o 3 2 SCHEDULE Columbia Princeton Ambherst Holy Cross Yale Providence Rhode Island Harvard Columbia Cornell Wesleyan Boston College Dartmouth 2 S PoNTRoN SEVEN MEN from each school compete in in- tercollegiate golf matches. To win, one side must register at least four victories in individual match play competition. Brown's 1965 varsity golf team accomplished this feat only once in thirteen tries. Five times, though, the Bruins came within one point of victory. It was a hard luck team all year, rather than one lacking the basic talent to be a winner. Captain Terry Walsh was hindered by a shoulder injury and saw only limited action. The most successful regular was sophomore John Crosby, who was 7- 6 for the season. Billy Rashman was 4-2, and Mark Aronson, Steve Battencourt, and Barry Weisman each registered three victories. Brown's golf team is distinctive, despite its lopsided record this year, because of two situa- tions that demand correction. First of all, Brown is one of the few schools in the East that does not have a home course; the varsity prac- tices and plays at various golf clubs in the Prov- idence area. Due to this lack of reliable facili- ties, golf is the only regular intercollegiate sport at Brown that does not have a freshman team. Coach Alan Soares does his best under the cir- cumstances, but an assist from the higher-ups might help make some balls bounce right for the Bruins. 18 BEVERLY DINGHIES, a boathouse, a full-time steward, and no less than 173 sailors make up the Brown University Yacht Club. In an unusual set-up, the club rather than the University sponsors Brown's varsity and freshman sailing teams, as well as the Pembroke team. The bulk of the club's activities, though, are recreational and instructional. The sailing team's 1965 spring season consisted of five regattas; Brown fared well in three. Led by Chuck Paine and Dave Noble, the Bruins successfully defended the Florida Spring Invitational Champion- ship on April 3 and 4. Later, they won the Sharpe trophy in a regatta with seven other New England schools. And on Spring Weekend, Brown placed third in the Ivy League championships held here in Rhode Island. This fall, Paine and club commodore Bert Goft helped capture the Wood trophy in the 36th sailing of this annual event at Dartmouth. In addi- tion, Brown placed fifth in the fall championship re- gatta for the top thirteen schools in New England. In cooperation with the physical education depart- ment, the yacht club this year began an instructional program in sailing for freshmen. It attracted 70 peo- ple in the fall and was considerably expanded this spring. The club is hampered in its operations by a lack of adequate dock space, the financial burden of sponsoring two intercollegiate teams, and the general state of the Seekonk River, which is not an ideal body of water for sailing. Nevertheless, the club has managed to attract over the years one of the largest followings of any organization on campus, probably because sailing is just plain fun. YACHT CLUB HOPING eventually to win varsity recognition from U.H., the Brown University Ski team, under the leadership of Captain Woody Bobb, '66, is one of the few teams in the New England Intercollegiate Ski Conference, Osborne Division, which still operates as an independent club activity. With the aid of faculty advisors Dr. Rohn Truell and Dr. Charles Elbaum, who have been instrumental in procuring funds this season, the team was able to participate in the Alpine Events which were held throughout New England each weekend. The team's roster of eighteen men in- cluded many freshmen. Notable performances this year were given by Bill Forbes, '69, and Don Fancher, '66. For the past two years the Brown team has spon- sored a Giant Slalom race at Glen Ellen, Vermont. UNDERMANNED but wellarmed, the Brown Rifle Club spon- RIFLE sored a University team in the New England Collegiate Rifle League, Southern Division. Captain Thomas Robb, Robert Gad, and Paul McKeever were the mainstays on a squad that never TEAM boasted more than eight members for any of the matches. Despite a second division finish this year, the Club is not graduating any men and looks forward to the marksmanship of two promising freshmen, Alden Armington and Ted Lobman. The club meets to shoot in the basement of Lyman Hall. Its activities are financed through the Student Activities Office. The club owns all of its equipment, and ammunition is free of charge. The shooters do suffer, though, from a lack of a faculty coach. Although the Brown club competes intercollegiately, it is the only team in the league still lacking an official mentor. ENTHUSIASM in the Squash Club continued this year as Brown put four teams into Providence league competition and established eight intramural teams. While the B league team was unable to retain its championship of last year, it nonetheless stood up well in strong competition. After reorganizing at mid- season, the D league team rose quickly to second place behind an excellent Rhode Island Hospital team. Meanwhile the rivalry between the two Brown teams for the top position insured the club of a strong finish in the E league, while the intramural system provided regular competition for more partici- pants than ever before. One of the highlights of the season was a trip to Smith College for matches with their faculty; result- ant social encounters, if unscheduled, were all the more welcome. Due to adverse playing conditions, in- adequate facilities, and lack of depth on the team, intercollegiate competition was effectively discour- aged. But the club members look to the completion of the proposed athletic complex for the improve- ment of this very unfortunate situation. SQUASH CLUB 2 PLAGUED throughout the season by bad luck, Coach Bob Litchard's football Cubs nevertheless closed out the season with a rousing last-minute triumph over Harvard. The season opener against Boston University was an omen of things to come. Litchard's eleven was leading 7-6 with four minutes to go, but B.U. struck twice before the final gun had sounded and walked off their field with an 18-7 victory. The next contest saw Yale beating Brown 33-8 in the Cub's only one- sided loss. Against the Dartmouth frosh the Cubs gained three times as many yards but were outscored 14-8. A fourth quarter pass from Jack McMahon to Greg Kontos accounted for the lone Bruin TD. The Cubs next battled the Ramlets of U.R.I., and their misfor- tune stayed with them. Rich Krafchin sprinted around end for a seven-yard score and linebacker Gene Campbell ran back an interception 47 yards for another tally as Brown took a 13-0 first quarter lead, but U.R.I. pushed two touchdowns across the goal line in the last period and edged out the Cubs 14-13. Another bitter defeat resulted at Columbia when a fourth-quarter Brown fumble on their own 13 gave the Lion contingent an easy seven points, enough for a 7-6 win. In the season finale the Cubs were still looking for their first victory and their opponent was a tough Harvard team. It appeared as if that elusive victory had escaped again as Harvard jumped off to a quick two-touchdown lead. But a sensational performance by McMahon produced a 40-35 verdict for the Cubs. Going into the last three minutes of play McMahon had had TD runs of 1, 71, and 4 yards, and had also thrown a 30-yard TD pass to Kontos. Darkness was beginning to envelope Brown Stadium at this point, and Harvard still clung to its lead. But with 1 min- ute 17 seconds remaining, McMahon sprinted 7 yards for the winning tally. It was fitting that the frosh finished a season marred by continual frustration and misfortune with a victory over an until then unde- feated Crimson squad. Paced by flashy Rich Biehl and goalie Bill Hager, Coach Mike Healy's freshmen booters went unde- feated in ten outings. Ed Glasband's long shot from the right corner started the season in excellent fash- ion as it gave Brown a 1-0 win over Springfield. In the second game Dennis Colaccio and Biehl each kicked two goals and Hager recorded his second con- secutive shutout as Brown triumphed 5-0 over Yale. Healy's team bettered their slate to five victories in as many games with a 10-2 romp over M.L.T., as Biehl booted three into the net. In the last game of the season the frosh booters scored two goals in the last period to win 4-3 over Harvard. 214 FRESHMAN SPORTS s - SO PO N AN s 5 . G e R o S S o Y e , 1 i rJ . 3 O A T T 3 o SR Mok TYR- 8 6 ETR o el XD A S L5 COACHED by Bob Rothenberg, '65, the cross coun- try team lost only one dual meet and placed second in the New Englands. The harriers reeled off four straight victories before losing to Fordham. The star of the team, Don Armour, placed first against Dart- mouth and second against Harvard. In the Rhode Island cross country championships, Armour clipped 30 seconds off the old course record in winning the race in 11:30.3. The wrestlers were victorious in their first five matches, including a sparkling 30-6 rout of Dart- mouth, a contest in which Brown did not lose one individual match. Coach Phil Coen's matmen opened their season with a 22-14 win over Columbia, and next easily outmuscled Coast Guard, 25-5. Perhaps the best performance was a 22-13 verdict over Yale. Alan Young, a former Bruin star, returned to guide the freshmen hoopsters for the 1965-66 season. Al- though beaten in two out of their first three games, the frosh found their shooting eyes in the next two games and won by 25-point margins over Springfield and Quonset. A hard-fought 70-65 win over Harvard was the high point of the first half of the season. Although hit hard by the loss of the top three point scorers through ineligibility at the semester, victories over B.U. and Brandeis improved their record to 7-6 after the first week of the second semester. A 5-2 win over Providence College and a hard-fought 6-6 tie with Boston University were the highlights of the first 13 games of the hockey season. Forwards Bob Devaney and Art Dunstan should provide varsity coach Fullerton with two promising stickmen. Dunstan lit the red light 8 times in the first 13 con- tests, while Devaney scored six and added 12 assists. 217 classes A FULL HOUSE, in fact a very full house, gave its undivided attention to the main speaker at the first formal gathering of the Class of 1969. What they heard was a rather embarrassed Director of Admissions trying to explain just why Sayles Hall was crowded with one hundred more freshmen than anticipated. They also heard the traditional welcome to the best university in the coun- try and had their egos inflated by being predictably called the most rigorously selected class ever to enter Brown. Indeed, tradi- tional is the best description of Freshman Week as a whole, with its battery of tests, innumerable receptions, class unity rallies, and inevitable orientation lectures. To start the week, all freshmen were subjected to the four-hour University placement tests which, to many, brought back not-so- fond memories of the College Boards. As the week passed, the new Brown men were introduced to everyone of importance on the campus, from the President to the Chaplain, with the notable ex- ception of their freshman counterparts at Pembroke. The Fresh- man Week Committee apparently felt that an acquaintance with the academic life of the University should precede a social ac quaintance. Accordingly, such matters as counseling, registration, and distribution exams were taken care of first. Later, on the week- end, Brown men were mixed with Pembrokers at a concert, the Newport outing, and a dance. The credit for the success of Freshman Week, as always, must go to the men with the white caps, the members of the Freshman Week Committee, who so ably coordinated the various activities and supplied valuable inside information not to be found in the Freshman Handbook. FRESHMAN WEEK 69ERS ALL, the rigidly selected freshman class hit Brown in a rainof water, parents, and extra people. Herded by Gib Henderson's tophands into the West Cor- ral, the frosh soon got down to the serious business of electing Ira Magaziner president. Ira and his Cam Club- selected council, featuring sometimes vice president Leslie Corwin, do-all head honcho Huey Stutz, clowns Billings and Dilorenzo, reformed jock notso-bland Cannon, and social whiz-kid Hi, my name's Nash! Schott, proceeded to all kinds of great things, from huge mixers to senators for dinner to regal shows to capers with the guardians of the gate. With its flying squad of tax collectors, the fresh- men collected dues from 989, of the class and became the most solvent group on campus; it rapidly took action to fight that problem by becoming mother to Ira's child, the political quarterly, and doting uncle to begging groups like the South African conference and Peter Broderick's fabled Cammarian organization. Dissatisfied with both the West Corral and the contents of their feedbags, the frosh presented exquisitely-typed re- ports to assist University Hall in running the ranch. In addition, they showed interest in resurrections, bringing back to lifewith, of course, the Magaziner touchthe Brown Debating Society and the Young Democrats. CLASS OF 1368 CLASS OF 1968 EMERGING from the confusion and uncertainty in- herent in freshman year and life in the West Quad, the Sophomore Class has made significant contribu- tions to the expansion of social and academic activi- ties within the Brown community during the past year. Under the able guidance of President Philip S. Asbury and Secretary-Treasurer S. Edwards Dismuke, members of the Class of 1968 enjoyed casual conver- sations with members of the faculty and deanery at class-sponsored coffee hours. In addition, the class welcomed Mr. Antony Hooper and the honorable Gale McGee, the Democratic Senator from Wyoming, as their keynote speakers at Class Banquets held in conjunction with Pembroke '68 and the Senior Classes of both Brown and Pembroke. In an eftort to aid sophomores and freshmen in their selection of fields of concentration, the Class of 1968 accepted the responsibility for the renovation and revitalization of the Majors Week program. A series of informal counseling sessions, Majors Week was reorganized to insure comprehensive coverage of each of twenty-six proposed fields of concentration. Fulfilling its social mandate with equal enthusiasm, the Sophomore Class sponsored the Annual Parents' Week Concert in October and hosted the visits of several hundred coeds from numerous women's col- leges to the Brown campus. Firmly committed to the expansion and improve- ment of life at Brown, members of the Class of 1968 side-stepped the proverbial sophomore slump to be- come influential participants in the facilitation of growth and development within the Brown commu- nity. PLANNING the most diverse events from exotic locations, Scott Manley, leader of the equi-probablist empiricist school of political leadership, deinstitutionalized his ad- ministration, coloring it Manley. His command posts were frequently shifted to avoid any semblance of permanency. New York, Miami, and Nassau offered their facilities to the Manley administration, which leased them with an option to buy. Sandy Ullman, taking over as secretary-treasurer, demon- strated his tremendous command of Keynesian economics by his successful wrestles with the largest and most com- plex budget in the University. His What's Wrong with Pink Piggy Banks? address has become a classic of modern economic theory. The first semester was run in accordance with the theme of the Taiwanese Quarter-Year, Fall of the Big Think- Tank. President Manley enlisted the aid of the Rand Corporation in planning activities for the coming year. Special consultant Matt Medeiros developed two totally new social conceptsa class dinner and something he dubbed a mixer. Fred Rappoport, special assistant for job security, planned and replanned Spring Weekend. Haunted by the Bay of Pigs fiasco five years previous, Fred was determined to come up with a smashing success. Conscious of the value of economy as always, President Manley proudly presented Arthur Frommer, dean of five- dollar-a-day travel, at a class dinner. Inspired by LBJ's peace offensive, Scott was determined to become involved in the international scene. Rebuffed in his attempt to pur- chase the UN, Scott inaugurated a series of International Sports Dinners featuring sports notables like Vito LaFata, M. Jan de Vroom, Bruno Lupia, Jr., and Luigi Chinetti. To quell the widespread anxiety about Spring Weekend, President Manley published his now famous Yes, Vir- ginia, There Will Be a Spring Weekend! letter in Janu- ary, in itself a remarkable accomplishment, considering that Scott was not himself sure at that time whether there was going to be a Spring Weekend. However, Scott came through in his usual fashion and after first toying with the idea of moving Brown to New York for the weekend, he transported comedian Dick Gregory, jazz pianist Ahmad Jamal, and a touch of New York's Arthur discotheque to the Hill, which was surrounded by a can-filled moat by Saturday. Thus worked the Manley-colored H,0,'d administra- tion. CLASS OF 1967 223 THE CLASS of 1966 took seriously the language of the Brown Charter of 1764 calling for a succession of men duly qualified for Discharging the Offices of Life with use- fulness and reputation. Under the dynamic leadership of the class officersPresident Stephen Romansky, vice-presi- dent Richard Hiller, secretary John Pate, treasurer Dan Bergeron, and recording secretary J. Gibson Hendersona successful effort was made to transform a fecundity of ideas into reality. They provided a diversified and provocative program of events to meet this challenge. The leadership of the Class of 1966 marked a turning point in the range and scope of class activities at Brown. Due to their impetus, classes played an increasingly signifi- cant role in the University community. The junior year was highlighted by six class banquets featuring such dignitaries as CORE leader James Farmer and Senator Thruston Morton. Ian and Sylvia appeared on Christmas Weekend, while Ella Fitzgerald entertained at the most memorable Spring Weekend. The Class also co- sponsored a special student Bicentennial Weekend that provided colloquia in the arts and politics. Max Shulman, Senator Edmund Muskie, publisher Robert Luce, Presi- dential aide Kenneth O'Donnell, and Cleveland Amory participated. Major innovations included the first joint Brown-Pembroke Banquet. During the senior year, the Class continued to intensify the spirit generated during the junior year. The 25th Anniversary Fund was efficiently handled. Speakers ranged from Senator Gale McGee of Wyoming and Representative Richard Bolling to architectural critic Wolf von Eckardt and historian Frank Freidel. The senior class dinner in June was planned to honor President Barnaby Keeney. Indeed, by its innovation and example, the Class of 1966 provided a new pattern for class programs. CLASS OF 1966 E. K. ACHTER W. L. ADAIR JR. B. R. ADAMS W. J. ADCOCK J. R. ALAIMO I. A. ALBERI J. W. ALCORN R. M. ALTER J. M. AUERBACH L. A. AUFMUTH R. W. AVERY J. R. BAER S. D. BACKIEL S. BAGHDADI M. C. BAKST A. D. BALDINO R. E. BALLOU T. R. BARD B. Z. AFRAME N. E. ANDERSON J. G. AITKEN C. R. ASHER, JR. ACHTER, EUGENE K. Address: 263 Saranac Avenue, Buffalo, New York. ADAIR, W. LEE JR. Sc. B. Chemistry. Born: May 27, 1944. Prepared at Central High School of Philadelphia. Bridge Club, Intramurals, Zeta Psi, Freshman Swimming, Varsity Swim- ming. Address: Naval Support Activity Box $254, FPO New York, New York. ADAMS, BERNARD R. A.B. Psychology Honors. Born: August 22, 1945. Prepared at White Plains High School. Dean's List, Alpha Pi Lambda, Brown Charities, Brown Youth Guidance, Class Council, Squash Club, Intramurals. Address: 4 Homewood Court, Hartsdale, New York. ADAMS, WILLIAM M. Address: 1157 Russells Mills Road, New Bedford, Massachusetts. ADCOCK, WILLIAM J. Sc. B. Applied Mathematics. Born: October 31, 1944. Prepared at Hillcrest High School. National Merit Scholar, Dean's List, University Christian Association Vice President, Episcopal College Vestry, Sphinx, Intramurals. Address: 5162 Yolanda Lane, Dallas, Texas. AFRAME, BARRY Z. AB. English Literature. Born: May 2, 1944, Prepared at Classical High. Dean's List, Second Thomas Carpenter Prize for Elocution, Marcy House Treasurer, President, Brown Daily Herald, Hillel, Intramurals. Address: 36 Kinney Drive, Worcester, Massachusetts. AITKEN, J. GRAHAM. Address: 370 Norwood Avenue, Warwick, Rhode Island. AKHAVI, SHAHIN. Address: 21 Shahriar Street, Teheran, Iran. ALAIMO, JOHN R. A.B. Literature. Born: September 23, 1944. Prepared at Torrington High School. Dormitory President. Address: 101 McKinley Street, Torrington, Connecticut. ALCORN, JEFFREY W. A.B. His- tory. Born: January 22, 1945. Prepared at Melrose High School. Dean's List, Corpora- tion Scholarship, Yacht Club, Canticum Glee Club. Address: 108 Heywood Avenue, Melrose, Massachusetts. ALEXANDER, LAWRENCE E. Address: 1608 Morton Avenue, Ann Arbor, Michigan. ALLOWAY, ROBERT M. Address: 80 East 242nd Street, Euclid, Ohio. ALTER, RICHARD M. A.B. Political Science. Born: June 6, 1944. Prepared at Baltimore City College. Michael T. Healy Political Science Award in American Studies, Delta Upsilon, Brown Key, Cammarian Club Corresponding Secretary, Lacrosse Cap- tain, Soccer. Address: 2204 South Road, Baltimore, Maryland. ANDERSON, NEILL E. SC.B. Engineering. Born: August 8, 1944. Prepared at Fulton High School. A.S.C.E. Vice President, Lambda Chi Alpha, Football. Address: 215 Fulton Avenue, Fulton, New York. ANDERSON, RICHARD L. A.B. Political Science Honors. Born: November 9, 1944. Pre- pared at Deerfield Academy. Freshman Soccer, Young Democrats, Squash Club, Golf, Psi Upsilon, Brownbrokers. Address: 502 Bedford Street, Fall River, Massachusetts. ANGILLY, FREDERICK E., JR. Address: 26 Hawthorne Avenue, Cranston, Rhode Island. ASHER, CARLTON R., JR. Address: 15 Highview Drive, Radnor, Pennsylvania. ATWOOD, CHARLES W. Address: 48 Oak Road, Janesville, Wisconsin. AUERBACH, JEROME M. Sc. B. Engineering. Born: June 13, 1944. Prepared at Classical High School. Dean's List, NROTC Drill Team, Brown Engineering Society. Address: 87 Overhill Road, Provi- dence, Rhode Island. AUFMUTH, LAWRENCE A. Address: 26343 Esperanza Drive, Los Altos Hills, California. AYERY, REXFORD W. A.B. Physics. Born: July 21, 1944. Prepared at Durham High School. Chess Club, Intramurals, Diman House Secretary, Freshman Soccer. Address: Valley Road, Clinton, Connecticut. BACKIEL, STEPHEN D. A.B. Psychol- ogy. Born: August 1 1944. Prepared at Livingston High School. Freshman Class Cabinet, Newman Club, Jenkins St. School Tutorial Program, Swash Club. Address: 12 Clover Lane, Livingston, New Jersey. BAER, JAY R. A.B. American Civilization. Born: Novem- ber 24, 1944. Prepared at S. Horace Scott High School. Tower Club Social Chairman, Secretary, Vice President, Liber Brunensis Production Manager, Business Manager, Hillel, Intramurals. Address: 12 South 13th Avenue, Coatesville, Pennsylvania. BAGH- DADI, SAMY. Sc.B Engineering Honors. Born: October 20, 1943. Prepared. at Classi- cal High. Dean's List, Brown Engineering Society, American Institute of Aeronautics and Aerospace, Freshman Soccer, Freshman Track, Rugby. Address: 222 Rochambeau Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. BAKST, M. CHARLES. A.B. American Civilization. Born: February 22, 1944. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Dan's List, Brown Daily Her- ald Editor-in-Chief, Squash Club. Address: 27 Bigelow Street, Fall River, Massachu- setts. BALDINO, ANTHONY D. A.B. Political Science. Born: June 5, 1944. Prepared at Notre Dame High School. Professor of Naval Science Appointment to Regular NROTC Scholarship, NROTC, Drill Team, Theta Delta Chi Secretary, Freshman Football. Ad- dress: 725 President Avenue, Trenton, New Jersey. BALLOU, RICHARD E. A.B. Interna- tional Relations. Born: April 21, 1944. Prepared at Greenfield High School. Delta Phi Rushing Chairman, Pledge Chairman, Winter and Spring Track. Address: 114 Birch Street, Greenfield, Massachusetts. BANCROFT, W. NORMAN, JR. Address: 34 General Health Avenue No., White Plains, New York. BARD, TERRY R. A.B. Religious Studies. Born: January 17, 1944. Prepared at New Trier Township High School. Hillel Presi- dent, Marching and Concert Bands, Tower Club, Social and Alumni Chairman, In- tramurals. Address: 199 Wentworth Avenue, Glencoe, lllinois. F. P. BARROWS, lII P. M. BARRY J. H. BECKER B. E. BECKHAM D. A. BECKMAN L. E. BEESON REEESBERG R. D. BERGERON D. S. BERNARDO E. W. BERNET P. E. BLAKE J. W. BLACKBURN BARROWS, FRANK P., Ill A.B. Art and Latin. Born: October 17, 1944. Prepared at New Bedford High School. First PrizePresident Wayland Contest in Latin, Delta Kappa Epsilon. Address: 143 Cedar Street, New Bedford, Massachusetts. BARRY, PHILIP M. Address: 125 Everett Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. BECKER, JEFFREY H. A.B. History. Born: September 18, 1944. Prepared at Horace Mann School. Dean's List, Class Council, Athletic Council, Intramurals, Alpha Phi Lambda, Freshman and Varsity Tennis. Address: 190 East Mosholu Parkway, Bronx, New York. BECKHAM, BARRY E. A.B. English Literature. Born: March 19, 1944. Prepared at Atlantic City High School. Inter-House Council Secretary, Brown Herald Review Assistant, Dormitory Proctor, Undergraduate Housing Committee, 1965 LIBER Prose Award, Freshman Basketball Manager, Address: 1244 Absecon Boulevard, Atlantic City, New Jersey. BECKMAN, DAVID A. Address: 803 Harding Avenue, Jamestown, New York. BEESON, LAWRENCE E. A.B. English. Born: February 9, 1944. Prepared at Horace Greeley High School. Liber Brunensis Copy Editor, Editor-in-Chief, Beta Theta Pi Secretary, Treasurer, Brown Youth Guidance. Address: 20 Hamilton Drive, Chappaqua, New York. BERG, ROGER E. A.B. History. Born: February 19, 1945. Prepared at Great Neck North Senior High. Dean's List, Francis Wayland Scholar, Phi Beta Kappa, Squash, Cammarian Club, Rugby, Intramurals. Address: 129 Hicks Lane, Great Neck, New York. BERG- ERON, RICHARD D. Sc. B. Applied Math. Born: August 8, 1944. Prepared at East Greenwich High. Faunce House Board of Governors House Committee Chairman, Brown Key, Junior Class Executive Committee Publicity Committee Chairman, Senior Class Treasurer, Freshman Class Council, Freshman Week Committee Lecture Com- mittee Chairman NSM Tutoring Program, Delta Upsilon, House Manager, Intramur- als. Address: 325 Ellington Avenue, Garden City, New York. BERNARDO, DONALD S. A.B. American Literature. Born: December 23, 1945. Prepared at Johnson City High School. Glee Club, Canticum Glee Club, Italian Club, Language Laboratory Student Assistant. Address: 25 Third Street, Johnson City, New York. BERNET, EDWARD W. A.B. Mathematics. Born: March 13, 1944. Prepared at Union High School. Chess Club, Intramurals, Inter-House Council, Brown Rugby Club. Address: 2572 Vaux Hall Road, Union, New Jersey. BERNS, JAMES R. Address: 1090 Bluff Road, Glencoe, lllinois. BESCH, MICHAEL H. Address: 25 Park Lane, Springfield, New Jersey. BISHOP, JOHN W., JR. Address: 151 A South Main Street, Attleboro, Massachusetts. BLACKBURN, JOHN W. AB. Psychology. Born: June 27, 1944. Prepared at Attleboro High School. Plantations House Committee Secretary-Treasurer. Address: 151 South Main Street, Attleboro, Massachusetts. BLAKE, CHARLES A. A.B. Biology. Born: November 6, 1943. Prepared at Moses Brown School. NROTC, Wrestling. Address: 297 Terrace Avenue, Riverside, Rhode Island. BLAKE, PHILIP E. A.B. International Relations. Born: Novem- ber 7, 1944. Prepared at Palatine Township High School. Phi Delta Beta President, Rushing Chairman, Social Chairman, Inter-Fraternity Council Secretary, Brown Youth Guidance. Address: 2157 W. Banbury Road, Inverness, Palatine, Illinois. BLOCHER, ACKLEY E. A.B. History. Born: February 4, 1944. Prepared at Deerfield Academy. Football, Track, Intramurals, Wrestling, Lambda Chi Alpha Rushing Chairman. Ad- dress: 209 Royal Dunes Boulevard, Ormond Beach, Florida. BLOOD, CHARLES H., JR. A.B. Economics. Born: December 17, 1944. Prepared at Watertown High School. Crew, Bronson House Social Chairman. Address: 6 Lockwood Drive, Watertown, Connect- icut. BOBB, JAMES WOODMAN. A.B. American Civilization. Born: July 26, 1944. Pre- pared at Mount Hermon School. University Brass Chorale, Orchestra, Band, Tennis Co-Captain, Ski Team Captain, Squash Club, Sigma Chi. Address: 278 E. Chocolate Avenue, Hershey, Pennsylvania. BOGACZYK, FRANCIS W. Sc. B Mechanical Engineer- ing. Born: June 19, 1944. Prepared at Vestal Central High School. Phi Delta Beta Pledgemaster. Brown Engineering Society, American Society of Mechanical Engi- neers, Freshman Baseball. Address: 208 Doris Avenue, Vestal, New York. BOLTON, H. PHILIP. Address: 1874 Hastings Avenue, East Cleveland, Ohio. BOPP, FREDERICK, IIlI. A.B. Geology. Born: October 1, 1944. Prepared at Middletown Township High School. NROTC Drill Team Commander, NROTC Pistol Team, Intramurals, WBRU, University Glee Club, Course Analysis Bulletin Associate Editor, Geology Club, Tower Club. Ad- dress: 550 Garrett Hill Boulevard, Belford, New Jersey. BOURDON, CLINTON C. Ad- dress: 374 South Main Avenue, Albany, New York. BOYAJIAN, AVEDIS N. Address: 97 Hatfield Street, Pawtucket, Rhode Island. BRAND, THOMAS S. Address: Westford Road, Eastford, Connecticut. BRANDON, JOHN S. A.B. Anthropology. Born: October 7, 1944. Prepared at Ockawamick Central. Dean's List, Research Assistant in Anthropol- ogy, Nicholson Scholar, Brown Key, Carrarian Club, Cross-Country, Track. Address: R.D. 1, Hudson, New York. BRENNER, DAVID LEWIS. A.B. Psychology Honors. Born: August 26, 1944. Prepared at Lynn Classical High School. Pre-Med Society, Tower Club, Junior Class Banquet Committee, Senior Class Committee, Basketball Manager, Crew Manager, Hillel. Address: 20 Surfside Road, Lynn, Massachusetts. A. E. BLOCHER C. H. BLOOD, JR. J. W. BOBB F. W. BOGACZYK F. BOPP, l w C. C. BOURDON T. S. BRAND J. S. BRANDON IEREZ G. S. BRIGGS W. D. BRISBANE P. P. BRODERICK C. D. BROWN D. L. BRENNER S. J. BRINN B. A. BRISTOW C. G. BROOKS R. S. BROWN BRETZ, JEFFREY T. A.B. Psychology. Born: August 18, 1944. Prepared at Camp Hill High School. Lambda Chi Alpha President, Brown Youth Guidance, Basketball. Ad- dress: 2130 Market Street, Camp Hill, Pennsylvania. BRIGGS, G. SCOTT A.B. Sociol- ogy. Born: January 10, 1944. Prepared at Amesbury High School. Dean's List, Sigma Chi Tribune, Athletic Chairman. Cheerleader, Fencing Club, Classions Club, Cam- marian Club, Brown Chairman, Pre-Law Society. Address: 5 Melrose Street, Amesbury, Massachusetts. BRINN, STEPHEN J. A.B. American Literature. Born: May 23, 1944. Prepared at Waltham Senior High. Phi Kappa Psi, Freshman Baseball, Varsity Hockey. Address: 35 Murray Street, Waltham, Massachusetts. BRISBANE, WILLIAM D. A.B. American Civilization. Born: September 2, 1944. Prepared at Donora High School. Dean's List, Delta Tau Delta Treasurer, Football. Address: Geneva College, Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania. BRISTOW, BRUCE ALLEN. B.A. English Literature. Born: August 2, 1944. Prepared at Oak Park River Forest High School. Phi Delta Theta, Tutor for Northern Student Movement, Track, Cross Country. Address: 535 Clinton Place, River Forest, lllinois. BRODERICK, PETER P. American Literature Honors. Born: July 25, 1944. Prepared at Bennett High School. Dean's List, College Scholar, IBM Corporation Scholar, Carborundum Corporation Scholar, Cammarian Club President, Recording Secretary, Class Cabinet, Alpha Pi Lambda Corresponding Secretary, Bruin Club, Liber Brupensis, Brown Daily Herald. Address: 130 Russell Avenue, Buffalo, New York. BROOKS, C. GERARD. A.B. Economics. Born: December 2, 1943. Prepared at Mamaro- neck Senior High School. Sophomore Class Cabinet; French Club, Tutoring Program, Doyle School, Lambda Chi Alpha Secretary, Football, Intramurals. Address: 626 Cort- landt Avenue, Mamaroneck, New York. BROWN, CHARLES D. Address: 112 Upland Road, Syracuse, New York. BRUCE, J. KEVIN. A.B. English Literature. Born: October 10, 1944. Prepared at Worcester North High School. Phi Delta Beta Treasurer, New- man Club Vice President, Freshman Crew, Varsity Golf Manager. Address: 559 Salisbury Street, Worcester, Massachusetts. BRUCE, ROBERT G. Address: 6 Gilson Road, Quincy, Massachusetts. BRUSH, PETER N. A.B. International Relations. Born: October 24, 1944. Prepared at Ridgewood High School. Dean's List, Band, Brass Chorale, Young Democrats, Dormitory Social Chairman. Address: 733 Hillcrest Road, Ridgewood, New Jersey. BUCCI, JAMES D. Address: 38 Circuit Drive, Riverside, Rhode Island. BUMPAS, STUART M. A.B. Classics. Born: October 7, 1944. Zeta Psi Secre- tary, Vice President, Rushing Chairman, Sock and Buskin, Brown Daily Herald, Inter- fraternity Council. Address: 5241 Meaders Lane, Dallas, Texas. BUNDY, H. ROBERT. Sc.B. Applied Mathematics. Born: January 13, 1944. Prepared at Homer High School. Wrestling. Address: 37 North Main Street, Homer, New York. BUONANNO, VINCENT J. Address: 5 Linden Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. BURGESS, JAY A. A.B. Political Science. Born: February 26, 1944. Prepared at Ferndale High School. Dean's List, Kappa Sigma Secretary, Bruin Club, Pre-Law Society Secretary, Freshman Football, Lacrosse. Address: 2350 Westridge Court, Ferndale, Michigan. BUSCEMI, PAUL K. B.A. Classics. Born: September 2, 1944. Prepared at Weber High School. Football, Lambda Chi Alpha Dormitory Vice President, Newman Club, Classics Club. Address: 4515 West Altgeld, Chicago, lllinois. BUTCHER, JOHN G. A.B. Mathematics. Born: July 27, 1944. Prepared at Morse High School. Convocation Choir, Freshman Cross Country, Freshman Track. Address: 19 Denny Road, Bath, Maine. CADY, FRANK C. Address: 4903 Aurora Drive, Kensington, Maryland. CALDWELL, LEONARD A. IV. A.B. Economics. Born: December 4, 1944. Prepared at Wamogo Regional High School. Delta Phi House Manager, Rushing Chairman, Corresponding Secretary, NROTC Drill Team Executive Officer. Address: Tyler Lake Heights, West Goshen, Connecticut. R. G. BRUCE P. N. BRUSH J. D. BUCCI S. M. BUMPAS H. R. BUNDY V. J. BUONANNO J. A. BURGESS P. K. BUSCEMI J. G. BUTCHER L. A. CALDWELL IV - s W I ic S x S1 i S S 3 o Z 0o s E ZE S i - as 0 -5 m : E . O s g E s o g o Bk 5 Gz O o 36 O Z ; . : iz j - m Z w - a A aninmisn S : CAMINOS, CARLOS H. Art HistoryBrown Univ. ArchitectureRISD. Born: June 20, 1944, Prepared at Needham B. Broughton High School. Alpha Pi Lambda IFC Repre- sentative, Herald Review Art Editor. Address: 83 Fairmont Avenue, Newton, Massa- chusetts. CAMPBELL, JOHN C. A.B. American Literature. Born: January 12, 1944. Prepared at Moses Brown School. Dean's List, Lambda Chi Alpha, Freshman Football, Swimming, Lacrosse. Address: 109 Bowen Street, Providence, Rhode Island. CANTOR, ETHAN J. A.B. Classics. Born: May 17, 1944. Prepared at Brooks School, N. Andover, Massachusetts. Glee Club, Classics Club. Address: 26 West View Road, Lowell, Massa- chusetts. CARABALLO, RAYMOND P. Address: 345 Buna Road, Fort Lee, Virginia. CAREW, JAMES L. A.B. Geology-Biology. Born: May 2, 1945. Prepared at Lynn English High. IHC, Geology Club Vice President, Golf, Dormitory Treasurer. Address: 10 Falls Street, Lynn, Massachusetts. CARR, BRIAN L. A.B. Political Science. Born: No- vember 1, 1944. Prepared at New Trier High School. Brown Daily Herald, Brown Tutorial Program. Address: 50 Corte Cordova, Greenbrae, California. CARR, WILLIAM RICHARDSON. A.B. Engineering. Born: April 20, 1944. Prepared at Beverly High School. Kappa Sigma, Football, Lacrosse Captain. Address: 189 Lothrop Street, Beverly, Massachusetts, CHENVEN, NORMAN HERBERT. A.B. Physics. Born: July 18, 1945. Prepared at Midwood High School. Brown Youth Guidance, Tutorial, Fencing Club. Address: 1290 Ocean Avenue, Brooklyn, New York. CHIPMAN, RALPH O. Ad- dress: 3547 Rushland Avenue, Toledo, Ohio. CHUKWU, ETHELBERT N. Address: Umuaro Nsu, Umuahia, E. Nigeria. CIMORELLI, ERNEST T. A.B. French Honors. Born: March 29, 1944. Prepared at Cranston High School East. Dean's List, 1st Mario Di Sandro prize in Italian, Italian Club. Address: 14 Turin Street, Cranston, Rhode Island. CINQUINA, FRANK R. Address: 102 Boston Avenue, North Arlington, New Jersey. CIOLETTI, ROY R. B.A. Biology. Born: July 19, 1944. Prepared at Eastside High School. Cammarian Club, Lambda Chi Alpha Pledgemaster, Freshman Football, Varsity Lacrosse. Address: 142 Lewis Street, Paterson, New Jersey. CLARK, THOMAS A. Address: 412 Queens Court, Sioux City, lowa. CLARKE, DAVID A. Address: 206 Division Street, East Greenwich, Rhode Island. CLARKE, ROBERT J. Address: 504 Glen Avenue, Scotia, New York. CLEMENTS, PAUL F. JR. A.B. Mathematics. Born: Septem- ber 16, 1944. Prepared at Robbinsdale Senior High School. Dean's List, Alpha Phi Omega, Campus Peace Corps Representative, Actuarial Science Club Co-Founder, Proctor, Baseball. Address: 4510 Drew Ave. No., Robbinsdale, Minnesota. CLENNY, JAMES TAYLOR Ill. A.B. Political Science. Born: July 12, 1944. Prepared at Wantagh High School. Dean's List, Band, International House of Rhode Island, German Club, WBRU. Address: 121 North Bel Air Drive, Cumberland, Maryland. COBEN, JEROME L. A.B. Economics. Born: August 24, 1944. Prepared at Shaker Heights High School. 2nd President Wayland Prize in Latin, Dean's List, Canticum Glee Club Accompanist, Glee Club, Junior Class Co-ordinating Committee Co-chairman Spring Weekend Com- mittee, Tower Club Treasurer, Rushing Chairman, President, Hillel, Intramurals. Ad- dress: 2682 Sulgrave Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio. COHEN, IVAN. A.B. Human Biology Honors. Born: October 18, 1943. Prepared at Lower Merion High School. Dean's List, Honors Program. Undergraduate Research Program, Bown Youth Guidance, Intamu- rals. Address: 16 Bala Avenue, Bala-Cynwyd, Pennsylvania. COLBY, ALLAN D. Ad- dress: 520 Clinton Street, Hudson, New York. COLLEY, ROBERT G. A.B. Geology. Born: March 29, 1945. Prepared at Radford High School. Geology Club, Phi Delta Theta. Address: 109 Bowen Street, Providence, Rhode Island. COMMOSS, KENMORE JR. Address: 51 Bridton Road, North Windham, Maine. CONNELL, GEORGE H. JR. A.B. American Literature. Born: June 11, 1944. Prepared at Emory University Academy. Sigma Chi Secretary, Social Chairman, German Club, Tennis Co-Captain. ESPO Cup, 1962; Exton Cup, 1963. Address: 2508 Dellwood Drive, N.W., Atlanta, Georgia. COPE, ROBERT D. Address: Stockton Street, Hightstown, New Jersey. CORONES, JAMES P. Sc.B. Physics. Born: September 15, 1945. Prepared at Columbia High School. Dormitory President and Vice President, Interhouse Council Social Chair- man, Northern Student Movement President, Manning Chapel Board, Steering Com- mittee for Brown-Tugaloo Exchange. Address: 7 Pinewood Avenue, East Greenbush, New York. COX, CHRISTOPHER F. A.B. Mathematics. Born: May 22, 1944. Prepared at Arnold High School. Dean's List, Actuarial Science Club, Alpha Phi Omega. Address: 1722 Alcoa Drive, Arnold, Pennsylvania. COX, ROBERT W. Address: 201 Brookletts Avenue, Easton, Maryland. D. A. CLARKE P. F. CLEMENTS, JR. J. T. CLENNY, II J. L. COBEN G. H. CONNELL, JR. J. P. CORONES I. R. CRAWFORD J. M. CROSS C. V. CROWE W. R. CUTLER W. H. CUTLER W. B. DARLING CRAWFORD, IAN R. Address: 39 Stanwich Road, Greenwich, Connecticut. CROSS, JOHN MICHAEL. A.B. History. Born: October 16, 1945. Prepared at Barrington High School. Tower Club, Glee Club, Manning Chapel Choir, University Chorale, Liber Brun- ensis, Edwards House Social Chairman, Vice President, Episcopal College Church Choir President, Yacht Club, French Club, International House, Hope College Cul- tural Affairs Chairman. Address: 9 Chapin Road, Barrington, Rhode Island. CROWE, CHRISTOPHER V. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: June 2, 1944. Prepared at Catskill High School. Dean's List, Brown Engineering Society, Student Tutor, American Society of Mechanical Engineers President. Address: 18 Cedar Street, Catskill, New York. CUNHA, GEORGE A. Address: 75 Scarborough Road, Pawtucket, Rhode lIsland. CUT- LER, WARREN R. Address: 64 Piccadilly Road, Great Neck, New York. CUTLER, WIL- LIAM H. Sc.B. Applied Mathematics. Born: April 20, 1944. Prepared at Liberty High School. Dean's List, Second Place in the Henry Parker Manning Prize in Mathematics, Intramurals. Address: 1818 Jennings Street, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. DARLING, W. BRUCE. Address: 94 David Street, Sudbury, Ontario, Canada. DAUER, EDWARD A. A.B. Religious Studies. Born: September 28, 1944. Prepared at Warwick Veteran's Memorial High School, Lambda Sigma Nu Pledge Marshall, Bridge Club, NAACP, Wrestling, Crew. Address: 22 Bayside Avenue, Warwick, Rhode Island. DAY, GEORGE H. Sc.B. Engineering Honors. Born: January 9, 1945. Prepared at University High School. Brown Engineering Society. Address: 713 Oregon Avenue, Urbana, lllinois. DeBRULER, WILLIAM C. Address: 349 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island. DELEHANTY, JOHN M. A.B. History. Born: July 31, 1945. Prepared at Weymouth High School. Dean's List, Hope College President, Vice President, Brown Daily Herald Managing Board Circu- lation Manager, Brown Young Democrats, Newman Club, Intramurals. Address: 65 Newbert Avenue, South Weymouth, Massachusetts. DEL SIGNORE, RONALD J. A.B. Classics. Born: November 16, 1944. Prepared at West Genesee Central High School. Brown University Scholarship, Pre-Med Society, Classics Club, Delta Phi Recording Secretary, Financial Chairman, Intramurals. Address: 109 Forrest Way, Camillus, New York. DE LUCA, JOHN A. Sc.B. Chemistry Honors. Born: November 14, 1944. Pre- pared at Weymouth High School. Dean's List, Merk Award for Excellence in Chemistry 145, Chemical Club of New England Scholarship, N. P. Hutchison Scholarship, Hockey. Address: 57 Mount Vernon Road, West, East Weymouth, Massachusetts. DE LUCA, ROBERT J. A.B. Sociology. Born: November 2, 1944. Prepared at Framingham High School. Brown Key, NROTC, Semper Fidelis Society, Lambda Chi Alpha Social Chairman, Freshman Football, Varsity Lacrosse. Address: 31 Saxony Road, Framing- ham, Massachusetts. DEUTSCH, DAVID A. A.B. Engineering. Born: December 23, 1944. Prepared at Great Neck North Senior High School. Kappa Sigma Vice Presi- dent, Brown Youth Guidance, Yacht Club, Football, Rugby Co-Captain, Sailing. Ad- dress: 14 Ridgeway, Great Neck, New York. DEWEY, ROBERT V. JR. A.B. Political Science. Born: September 15, 1944. Prepared at Henry-Senachwine High School. Alpha Phi Omega Treasurer, Actuarial Science Club Co-Founder, Goddard House Athletic Chairman, Intramural Athletic Council. Address: 614 Richard Street, Henry, lllinois. E. A. DAUER G. H. DAY R. T. DEANE W. C. DeBRULER J. M. DELEHANTY R. J. DEL SIGNORE J. A. DE LUCA R. J. DE LUCA D. A. DEUTSCH R. V. DEWEY, JR. J. A. DIAMOND R. L. DIAZ R. T. DICKER W. L. DIMAN S. H. DOGGETT, III R. N. DOKSON R. E. DOLING W. R. DONWAY D. DOVE, JR. W. G. DROMS DIAMOND, JAMES A. A.B. English Literature. Born: March 7, 1945. Prepared at Brighton High School. Faunce House Board of Governors Vice President, Junior Class Council, Senior Class Council, Alpha Delta Phi President. Address: 1392 Mon- roe Avenue, Rochester, New York. DIAZ, ROBERT L. Address: 38 Hillside Street, Red Bank, New Jersey. DICKER, ROSS T. A.B. History. Born: September 30, 1943. Pre- pared at The Mercersburg Academy. Faunce House Board of Governors, Freshman Week Comm. Secretary, Vice Chairman, Class Cabinet President, President Alpha Pi Lambda, Intramurals. Address: 311 Hudson Street, Ithaca, New York. DIMAN, WIL- LIAM L. Address: 45 Becker Street, Warwick, Rhode Island. DOGGETT, STANLEY H. Ill. Address: 15 Williams Road, Chatham, New Jersey. DOKSON, ROBERT N. AB. History. Born: October 17, 1944. Prepared at Horace Mann School. Junior Class Spring Weekend Committee, Alpha Pi Lambda Social Chairman, BYG. Address: 535 Ocean Parkway, Brooklyn 18, New York. DOLING, RICHARD E. A.B. Political Science. Born: March 16, 1945. Prepared at The Milne School. Class Council, Tutoring BYG, WBRU Jazz Director and Special Events Director, Student Proctor, Hockey Manager. Address: 62 Van Schoick Avenue, Albany, New York. DONWAY, WALTER R. Address: Plymouth Road, Holden, Massachusetts. DOVE, DAVID JR. A.B. Math Physics. Born: December 17, 1942. Prepared at Kimball Union Academy. Dormitory President, Treasurer, Social Chairman, Yacht Club. Address: 24 Hale Street, Beverly, Massachu- setts. DOWSHEN, JOEL F. Address: 123 Thornridge Drive, Levittown, Pennsylvania. DROMS, WILLIAM G. A.B. Psychology. Born: August 20, 1944. Prepared at Mohonasen High School. NROTC, NROTC Pistol Team Captain, NROTC Rifle Team, Brown Youth Guidance, Bruin Club. Address: 2451 Third Avenue, Schenectady, New York. DRUM- MOND, THOMAS W. Address: 9 Catherine Street, Peekskill, New York. DUBEY, STEVEN HARVEY. A.B. Music. Born: March 7, 1944. Prepared at Hope High School. Sock and Buskin Board Member. Address: 75 Pinehurst Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. DUNN, THOMAS E. Ill. A.B. Mathematics. Born: May 12, 1944. Prepared at Walpole High School. Newman Club, Class Cabinet, Phi Kappa Psi Chaplain, Athletic Chairman, Grievance Chairman, House Committee, Intramurals. Address: 257 Pleas- ant Street, East Walpole, Massachusetts. DUNNING, JOHN L. JR. A.B. History. Born: June 20, 1944. Prepared at Canterbury School. Newman Club, Northern Student Movement Tutoring, NROTC, Phi Delta Beta Vice President, Community Service Chairman, Rugby, Track, Intramurals. Address: 168 Prospect Avenue, Princeton, New Jersey. DWIGHT, RONALD A. A.B. History. Born: November 3, 1944. Prepared at North Attleborough High School. Dean's List, James Manning Scholar, French Club, Canti- cum, Glee Club, Canterbury, Chorale, Manning Chapel Choir Manager, International Association for Students in Economics and Business President. Address: Greenwood Lake, No. Attleborough, Massachusetts. DWYER, PETER C. A.B. Philosophy. Born: September 12, 1944. Prepared at East Aurora High School. Lambda Sigma Nu, Swim- ming. Address: 105 Walnut Street, East Aurora, New York. DYER, MORGAN C. D. Address: 105 E. Lanneau Drive, Greensville, South Carolina. DZIJA, ALAN T. Address: 73 Columbine Avenue, Pawtucket, Rhode Island. EAKIN, BRIAN. A.B. English Litera- ture. Born: January 29, 1944. Prepared at Rye High School. Dean's List. Address: 111 Hix Avenue, Rye, New York. EASTLER, THOMAS EDWARD. Sc.B. Geclogy. Born: Octo- ber 10, 1944. Prepared at Waltham High School. National Science Foundation Sum- mer Research Grant in Geology, Track, Cross Country, Hockey, Geology Club Presi- dent, AFROTC Commander, Bronson House President, 1966 Class Coordinating Committee. Address: 180 Prospect Hill Road, Waltham, Massachusetts. J. F. DOWSHEN T. W. DRUMMOND S. H. DUBEY T. E. DUNN, Il J. L. DUNNING, JR. R. A. DWIGHT P. G. DWYER A. T. DZIJA B. EAKIN T. E. EASTLER R. I. EBER A. R. EBERHART P. C. EBERLIN P. EISENHARDT R. D. ELTON R. A. EPSTEIN N. J. ESPOSITO A. FALBO R. S. FALK D. W. FERGUSON EBER, ROBERT I. A.B. American Literature. Born: June 3, 1944, Prepared at Poly Prep C.D.S., Freshman Class Council, Glee Club, Bruin Club, Hillel, Jabberwocks, Alpha Pi Lambda. Address: 177 Beach 137th Street, Belle Harbor, New York. EBERHART, AL- LAN R. Address: 2068 Lane, Topeka, Kansas. EBERLIN, PETER C. A.B. Psychology. Born: April 14, 1943. Prepared at Alexis I. Dupont High School. Biology Club, Outing Club, Bridge Club, Basketball Manager. Address: R. D. 1, Fairville Road, Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania. EISENHARDT, PAUL. Address: 714 Woodland Drive, Kenmore, New York. ELTON, R. DAVID. A.B. American Civilization. Born: September 30, 1943. Pre- pared at Williston Academy. Cammarian Club Secretary-Treasurer, Freshman Class Secretary-Treasurer, Freshman Week Committee, Inter-Fraternity Council, Lambda Sigma Nu, Baseball. Address: 333 E. 55 Street, New York, New York. ELY, ROBERT B., IV. Address: 311 Pine Tree Road, Tadnor, Pennsylvania. EPSTEIN, ROBERT A. Human Biology Honors. Born: April 3, 1946. Prepared at Midwood High School, Phi Beta Kappa, Francis Wayland Scholar, Brown Daily Herald. Address: 3101 Bedford Avenue, Brooklyn, New York. ERNST, ALAN C. Address: 640 Shore Acres Drive, Mamaroneck, New York. EPOSITO, NICHOLAS J. Address: 1001 Seneca Street, Rome, New York. EVANS, CRAIG R. Address: West Riding, Wellesley, Massachusetts. FALBO, ANTHONY. Address: 13 Robinson Avenue, Carbondale, Pennsylvania. FALK, RICHARD S. Sc.B. Applied Mathematics. Born: December 11, 1944. Prepared at Amherst Central High School. Dean's List. Address: 196 Getzville Road, Snyder, New York. FERGUSON, DAVID W. Address: 32 Keene Street, Providence, Rhode Island. FERRINO, H. PETER 11l. A.B. Sociology. Born: March 29, 1945. Prepared at Saint Sebastian's Country Day School. Crew, Sock and Buskin, Cheerleader, Intramurals, Kappa Sigma, Brown Chari- ties Drive, Yacht Club, Pre-Law Society, Chapin House President, Vice President, Ski Team. Address: 44 Winthrop Street, Winthrop, Massachusetts. FLEISCHNER, RICHARD. Address: 110 Waterman Street, Providence, Rhode Island. FLYNN, BRIAN C. Address: 103 Hamilton Avenue, Glen Rock, New Jersey. FOO, TIMOTHY W. Address: 40 Ken- nedy Road, 9th Flr., Hong Kong. FORMAN, HARVEY I. A.B. Political Science. Born: December 31, 1944. Prepared at Springfield Township High School. Phi Kappa Psi Alumni Chairman, Beverage Chairman, Student Director Of Intramurals, Intramurals. Address: 8107 MacArthur Road, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. FORSBERG, FRANKLIN C. A.B. Economics. Born: December 9, 1944. Prepared at Great Neck South Senior High School. Delta Tau Delta, Soccer. Address: 256-14 Kensington Place, Great Neck, New York. FOX, LESLIE R. Sc.B. Physics Honors. Born: January 13, 1945. Prepared at Edgewood High School. Dean's List. Address: 215 Woodside Road, Pittsburgh, Penn- sylvania. FRANCO, JAMES F. A.B. Political Science. Born: May 14, 1944. Prepared at Judge Memorial High School. Theta Delta Chi President, Cross Country. Address: 21 Lindahl Street, Manchester, New Hampshire. FRAZER, JOHN L. Address: 20 Calvin Avenue, Syosset, New York. FREISE, ROGER W. A.B. Economics. Born: February 12, 1944. Prepared at Arlington High School. Brown-Navy Club Award, Delta Phi, Inter- Fraternity Council, Brunavian Executive Board, NROTC Drill Team Commander, NROTC Unit Battalion Commander, Crew, Intramurals. Address: 1004 N. Highland, Arlington Heights, Illinois. FREUND, RICHARD D. A.B. Psychology Honors. Born: June 27, 1944. Prepared at Horton Watkins High School. Dean's List, National Science Foundation Undergraduate Research Fellowship. Address: 11 Highgate Road, St. Louis, Missouri. FRIED, STEPHEN S. Address: 1535 Aztec Way, Las Vegas, Nevada. FRIED- MAN, GARY J. Address: 4454 Black Rock Turnpike, Fairfield, Connecticut. FRISHMAN, LESLIE O. Sc.B. Physics. Born: November 22, 1944. Prepared at Scranton Central High School. Brown Daily Herald, Associate Business Manager. Address; 422 Madi- son Avenue, Scranton, Pennsylvania. FROST, RICHARD R. Sc.B. Electrical Engineering. Born: April 30, 1943. Prepared at Beverly High School. Ski Team, Rifle Team, Brown Engineering Society. Address: Beverly, Massachusetts. FURBER, LEE B. Address: 52 Moreland Road, Melrose, Massachusetts. GAGNON, JOHN S. A.B. Sociology. Born: September 14, 1942. Prepared at Mount Hermon School. Rugby Club, Phi Gamma Delta, Football. Address: 511 Saw Mill Road, Stamford, Connecticut. H. P. FERRINO, Il T. W. FOO H. I. FORMAN F. C. FORSBERG L. R. FOX J. F. FRANCO R. W. FREISE R. D. FREUND G. J. FRIEDMAN L. 0. FRISHMAN R. R. FROST pz' J. S. GAGNON J. P. GALKIN G. A. GALLAGHER C. D. GARDINIER B. P. GARDNER, JR. M. C. GARRISON P. GASBARRO, JR. R. R. GAUDREAU W. C. GIERASCH, JR. D. A. GILBERT D. B. GILLESPIE GALKIN, JAMES P. A.B. English Literature. Born: April 21, 1944. Prepared at Classical High School. Brownbrokers, Indoor Track, Outdoor Track. Address: 196 Morris Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. GALLAGHER, GEOFFREY. A.B. International Relations. Born: March 2, 1945. Prepared at Northport High School. Glee Club, Phi Delta Theta, Fresh- man Baseball Manager. Address: Williams Road, Bethel, Connecticut. GARDINIER, CHARLES D. A.B. History. Born: May 28, 1944. Prepared at Rome Free Academy. Brown Key, Delta Tau Delta, Hockey, Football. Address: 705 Lincoln Avenue, Rome, New York. GARDNER, BRUCE P. JR. Sc.B. Chemistry. Born: March 23, 1945. Prepared at Hackensack High School. Runk Scholarship Award of Harkness House. Address: 212 High Street, Emerson, New Jersey. GARRISON, MARK C. Address: 220 Godwin Avenue, Ridgewood, New Jersey. GARTNER, DENNIS E. Address: 11724 St. Michaels Drive, Dallas, Texas. GASBARRO, PASCO JR. A.B. American Literature. Born: April 3, 1944. Prepared at North Providence High School. Alpha Delta Phi, Freshman Hockey. Address: 8 Gibbs Street, North Providence, Rhode Island. GAUDREAU, ROBERT R. A.B. Economics. Born: March 8, 1944. Prepared at Hope High School. Dean's List, Lambda Chi Alpha, Hockey. Address: 416 Brook Street, Providence, Rhode Island. GENEREUX, PETER ALAN. Address: 133 Calef Avenue, S. Swansea, Massachusetts. GERLANC, MILAN D. Address: 111 Bedford Road, Pleasantville, New York. GIERASCH, WILLIAM C. JR. A.B. Political Science. Born: September 7, 1944. Prepared at Westhampton Beach High School. Phi Delta Beta, Freshman Football. Address: Baycrest Avenue, Westhampton, New York. GILBERT, DAVID A. Address: 15 Kingston Road, Newton, Massachusetts. GILLESPIE, DAVID B. Address: 207 Pleasant Valley Avenue, Moores- town, New Jersey. GINSBERG, ROBERT E. Address: 26 Greensbrook Way, Belmont, Massachusetts. GIVEN, JOHN CRESSON A.B. English Literature. Born: July 11, 1944. Prepared at Hotchkiss School. Glee Club Business Manager, Delta Upsilon. Address: 56 Skyline Drive, Morristown, New Jersey. GNEISER, DAVID A. A.B. American Litera- ture. Born: October 10, 1944. Prepared at McDonogh School. Dean's List, Phi Gamma Delta Social Chairman, Rush Chairman, Historian, Lacrosse. Address: 170 Merion Road, York, Pennsylvania. GOFF, EDGAR S. JR. Address: 124 Oakdale Avenue, Paw- tucket, Rhode Island. GOLDKAMP, C. EDWIN. Address: 56 Radcliffe Road, Weston, Massachusetts. GOLLATZ, ALFRED A. Address: 1021 N. Providence Road, Media, Pennsylvania. GOODALE, GEOFFREY C. A.B. English Literature. Born: April 23, 1944. Thayer Academy. Delta Tau Delta, Wrestling. Address: 589 Brush Hill Road, Milton, Massachusetts. GOODY, BRUCE A. A.B. History. Born: April 22, 1942. Prepared at New Hampton Prep. School. NSM Tutorial Program, Phi Gamma Delta Social Chair- man, President, Intramurals. Address: 101 Glen Street, Whitman, Massachusetts. GORDON, DAVID S. A.B. History. Born: September 22, 1944. Prepared at Brookline High School. Dean's List, Alpha Pi Lambda Secretary, Class Cabinet, Northern Stu- dent Movement Tutor, Intramurals. Address: 23 Arlington Road, Brookline, Massachu- setts. GOOGEL, FREDRIC R. A.B. Human Biology. Born: April 6, 1944. Prepared at New Britain High School. Pre-Med Society, Inter-House Council, Intramurals. Address: 227 Shuttle Meadow Avenue, New Britain, Connecticut. GRADY, THOMAS J. A.B. Biol- ogy. Born: May 5, 1944. Prepared at Boston College High School. Dean's List, Hockey Manager, Intramurals. Address: 84 Lyman Street, Waltham, Massachusetts. GRAY, MALCOLM. Address: 62 Park Street, North Attleboro, Massachusetts. GREENE, DUTY D. Address: Biltmore Dairy Farms, Asheville, North Carolina. GREGG, ROBERT G. Address: 18 Oakwood Street, Greenlawn, New York. GRIESEDIECK, JOSEPH E. Ad- dress: 50-50 Oakland Ave, St. Louis, Missouri. GULDEMAN, PHILIP E. Address: 15 Michelle Road, Jefferson Township, New Jersey. GUTTENBERG, E. RICHARD. Address: 31 Colby Street, Rochester, New York. HAAS, ROBERT H. Address: 54 Linden Drive, Fair Haven, New Jersey. R. E. GINSBERG J. C. GIVEN D. A. GNEISER C. E. GOLDKAMP G. C. GOODALE B. A. GOODY F. R. GOOGEL D. S. GORDON D. R. GORTNER T. J. GRADY D. D. GREENE P. E. GULDEMAN I. S. HABERMAN R. M. HAGER F. R. HALAS REESHALE o1 Ad; J. E. HANNSZ R. J. HARLAN, JR. M. W. HARRISON P. R. HARTOGENSIS J. G. HENDERSON, JR. A. E. HESS R. J. HILLER G. A. HISERT R. A. HOLMBERG C. F. HOMEYER J. W. HAMILTON, Il J. C. HANES, JR. P. J. HENDRICKS J. K. HERSTOFF C. N. HOPSON F. E. HORAHAN HABERMAN, IAN S. A.B. History. Born: March 1, 1945. Prepared at Bristol Senior High School. Brown Daily Herald Executive Editor, Marching Band. Address: 18 High Pine, Glen Cove, New York. HALAS, FRANCIS R. Sc.B. Chemistry. Born: March 15, 1944. Prepared at Christopher Columbus High School. Newman Club, Intramurals. Address: 74 Chestnut Street, Chelsea, Massachusetts. HALL, ROBERT F. A.B. Ameri- can Literature. Born: October 8, 1943. Prepared at Worcester Academy. Brown Key Treasurer, Delta Phi, Football Co-Captain, Baseball Co-Captain. Address: 32 Hutchinson Road, Walpole, Massachusetts. HAMILTON, JOHN WESLEY IIl. A.B. Eco- nomics. Barn: April 15, 1944. Prepared at Marblehead High School. NROTC, NROTC Pistol Team Captain, NROTC Rifle Team, West Quad Council Secretary-Treasurer, Intramurals. Address: 66 Longview Drive, Marblehead, Massachusetts. HANES, JOHN C. JR. A.B. History. Born: January 19, 1944. Prepared at St. Stephen's. Class Council, Sphinx, Freshman Week Committee, Sigma Nu, Episcopal College Church Treasurer, University Christian Association Swimming Program Chairman, Track. Address: 1319 Bishop Lane, Alexandria, Virginia. HANNSZ, JOHN E. A.B. Economics. Born: January 16, 1944. Prepared at James Madison High School. IHC Secretary, University Glee Club, Convocation Choir, Cross Country, Tennis, Intramurals. Address: 910 Cottage Street, S.W., Vienna, Virginia. HARDMAN, JOSEPH T. A.B. American Civilization. Born: February 18, 1943. Prepared at Lawrence Academy. Delta Kappa Epsilon, Football, Wrestling. Address: 31 Sunset Avenue, Chelmsford, Massachusetts. HARLAN, ROBERT J. JR. Address: 1791 Verbena Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. HARRIS, DANIEL C. Address: 120 Stonelea Place, New Rochelle, New York. HARRISON, LEONARD A. A.B. Greek and Latin. Born: July 28, 1934. Prepared at B.M.C. Durfee. Francis Wayland Scholar. Address: 175 New Boston Road, Fall River, Massachusetts. HARRISON, MAR- VIN W. A.B. Biology. Born: February 7, 1944. Prepared at Locust Valley High School. Marching Band Freshman Representative, Vice President, Crew. Address: Frost Creek Drive, Locust Valley, New York. HARTOGENSIS, PETER R. A.B. Poltical Science. Born: May 2, 1944. Prepared at Ridgewood High School. Dean's List, Brown Daily Herald News Director, Brown Young Republicans, Class Cabinet, Outing Club, Intramurals. Address: 618 Hillcrest Road, Ridgewood, New Jersey. HENDERSON, J. GIBSON JR. Address: 520 Richards Road, Wayne, Pennsylvania. HENDRICKS, PETER J. Sc.B. A.B. Engineering. Born: November 15, 1944. Prepared at Locust Valley High School. Dean's List, Sigma Chi Athletic Chairman, Beverage Chairman, Track. Address: 34 Madison Avenue, Bayville, New York. HENRY, JAMES P. Address: 3640 West 122, Cleveland, Ohio. HERSTOFF, JAMES A.B. Biology. Born: November 4, 1945. Pre- pared at Rogers High School. Phi Beta Kappa, Francis Wayland Scholar, Dean's List, Hillel, Pre-Med Society, Hockey Manager. Address: 151 Kay Street, Newport, Rhode Island. HESS, ANDREW E. A.B. History. Born: January 26, 1945. Prepared at Law- renceville School. WBRU, Freshman Week Committee, Lambda Chi Alpha Alumni Secretary, Tutorial Program, Soccer. Address: 48 N. President Avenue, Lancaster, Pennsylvania. HILLER, RICHARD J. Address: 19 Midwood Cross, Rosyn, New York. HISERT, GEORGE A. Sc.B. Applied Mathematics. Born: September 18, 1944. Prepared at Naugatuck High School. Sigma Si, Francis Wayland Scholar, James Manning Scholar, Delta Upsilon Corresponding Secretary, Steward, Treasurer, Undergraduate Teaching Assistant, Undergraduate Research Assistant. Address: 56 Sunset Drive, Naugatuck, Connecticut. HOLMBERG, RONALD A. A.B. English Literature. Born: Au- gust 1, 1944. Prepared at Elmira Free Academy. Everett House Vice President, Phi Kappa Psi Governing Board, Community Service Chairman, Intramurals. Address: 106 Wall Street, ElImira, New York. HOMEYER, CHARLES F. A.B. History. Born:August 12, 1944. Prepared at St. Louis Country Day School. University Christian Association Brown Vice President, UCA Committee, Slater Hall President, Edwards House President, Vice President, No. Caswell Hall President, Freshman Class Council, Intramurals. Address: 9033 Green Ridge Drive, Richmond Heights, Missouri. HOPSON, CLARK N. A.B. Human Biology. Born: March 25, 1944. Prepared at Clifford J. Scott High School. Dean's List, Biology Honors, Football, Track, Biology Club, Brown Key, Proctor, Pre-Med Society, IFC, Lambda Chi Alpha. Address: 380 Ridgewood Avenue, Glen Ridge, New Jersey. HORAHAN, FRANCIS E. A.B. American Civilization. Born: October 11, 1943. Prepared at Drury High School. NROTC, Brunavians, Rugby Club, Delta Tau Delta Guide, Football, Lacrosse. Address: River Road, Clarksburg, North Adams, Massachusetts. HOULE, CARL A. Address: 271 Richmond Drive, Warwick, Rhode Island. HOUSTON, E. CHARLES A.B. Sociology. Born: June 12, 1944. Prepared at Cheshire High School. Dean's List, Northern Student Movement Tutor, Delta Upsi- lon Rushing Chairman, Pledgemaster, Tennis. Address: 98 Glenbrook Drive, Cheshire, Connecticut. HUSEBY, JON S. A.B. Biology. -Born: August 21, 1944, Prepared at Du- mont High School. Freshman Glee Club, Track, Cross Country. Address: 159 Magnolia Avenue, Dumont, New Jersey. E. C. HOUSTON J. S. HUSEBY ENEEEYER J. G. JABLOW B. L. JAFFEE J. H. JAMESON, L. A. JAVELLE S. C. JENSIK H. J. JOHNSON, J. L. JOHNSON R. W. JOHNSON G. 0. JONES J. P. JONES R. H. JONES, JR. HYER, FRED H. AB. Biology. Born: November 21, 1944. Prepared at Lawrenceville School. Pre-Med Club, Alpha Phi Omega, Biology Club, Yacht Club, German Club, Pre- Med Seminar, Swimming. Address: 199 West High Street, Somerville, New Jersey. ISELIN, ALAN D. Address: 9 Clubway, Harsdale, New York. JABLOW, JOHN G. Ad- dress: 25 East 86th Street, New York, New York. JAFFEE, BARRY L. A.B. Economics. Born: November 20, 1943. Prepared at Worcester Academy. Brown Daily Herald, Pho- tography Club, Everett House Officer Chaplain, Soccer Manager. Address: 48 Brow- nell Street, Worcester, Massachusetts. JAMESON, JOHN H. IlI Sc.B. Engineering. Born: July 22, 1944, Prepared at DeVilbiss High School. Inter-House Council Corre- sponding Secretary, Intramural Athletic Council, Everett House Officer, Brown Engi- neering Society, Canterbury Club, Intramurals. Address: 2731 Rathbun Drive, Toledo, Ohio. JAVELLE, LOUIS A. A.B. German. Born: September 30, 1942. Prepared at St. George's School. Young Republicans, Yacht Club, Brown Film Society Treasurer, Intramurals. Address: 844 Union Street, Portsmouth, Rhode Island. JEFFRIS, THOMAS M. Address: 904 East Court, Janesville, Wisconsin. JENKINS, H. L. JR. Address: 262 Gano Street, Providence, Rhode Island. JENSIK, STEPHEN C. Sc.B. Biology. Born: August 15, 1944 Prepared at Niles Township West High School. Dean's List, Francis Wayland Scholar, Crew, Glee Club, Pre-Med Society. Address: 6409 Palma Lane, Mor- ton Grove, lllinois. JERRETT, DAVID H. Address: 178 Bowen Street, Providence, Rhode Island. JERVEY, STEPHEN D. Address: Harriman Road, Merrimac, Massachusetts. JOHNSON, HERBERT J. Il A.B. Linguistics. Born: June 14, 1944. Prepared at Strong Vincent High School. Francis Wayland Scholar, Russian Club. Address: West 6 Street, Erie, Pennsylvania. JOHNSON, JOHN L. A.B. Psychology. Born: May 1, 1944. Prepared at Cortland Jr.-Sr. High School. National Science Foundation, Undergraduate Research Participant. Address: 1315, Owego Street, Cortland, New York. JOHNSON, ROBERT W. Sc.B. Chemistry Honors. Born: July 17, 1944. Prepared at Brandywine High School. Honorary Brown National Scholar, Francis Wayland Scholar, Dean's List, Lambda Sigma Nu Chaplain, University Glee Club and Chorale, Bruninaires President. Ad- dress: 216 Oakwood Road, Fairfax, Wilmington, Delaware. JONES, GRAHAM O. A.B. History. Born: May 16, 1944. Prepared at The Lawrenceville School. Sigma Nu Vice President, Rushing Chairman, Brown Key Vice President, Pre-Law Society Vice Pres- identy Cammarian Club, Freshman Class Council. Address: 234 Tappan Road, Nor- wood, New Jersey. JONES, J. PHILIP. Address: 698 S.W. 2nd Street, Boca Raton, Florida. JONES, ROLLAND H. JR. A.B. History. Born: February 10, 1945. Prepared at East Greenwich High School. Intramural Athletic Council, Dormitory Athletic Chair- man, Actuarial Science Society, Basketball Manager, Hockey, Intramurals. Address: 401 Ceder Avenue, East Greenwich, Rhode Island. JONES, ROSS. Address: Pea Pond Road, Katonah, New York. JUDGE, WILLIAM F. B.A. Art. Born: December 15, 1944. Prepared at Glen Rock High School. Inter-House Council Publicity Chairman, Junior Class Coordinating Council, Zeta Psi Corresponding Secretary, Historian. Address: 60 Glen Boulevard, Glen Rock, New Jersey. KADISON, STEPHEN J. Address: 400 Park Ave., Highland Park, Illlinois. KAHN, RICHARD A. A.B. Political Science. Born: June 23, 1944. Prepared at Nichols School of Buffalo. Delta Upsilon President. Address: 832 W. Delavan Avenue, Buffalo, New York. KAMPMANN, ERIC M. Address: Flourtown Avenue, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. KANSER, ROBERT W. Address: 59 Forest Avenue, Glen Ridge, New Jersey. KANTROWITZ, JONATHAN D. A.B. Economics Honors. Born: April 14, 1945. Prepared at Andrew Wards High School. Dean's List, College Scholar, Rugby, Intramurals, Chess Club, Dormitory President. Address: 300 Collingwood Avenue, Fairfield, Connecticut. KAREIVA, PATRICK H. A.B. American Literature. Born: May 6, 1944. Prepared at Penfield High School. IHC President, West Quad Council President, Dormitory President, Brown Charities Drive Assistant Chairman, Cam- marian Club, B.Y.G., Wrestling, Intramurals. Address: 1941 Penfield Road, Penfield, New York. KARG, HERBERT W. JR. A.B. Economics. Born: May 17, 1944. Prepared at Columbia High School. NROTC, Beta Theta Pi Vice President. Address: 59 Brook Road, Middletown, New Jersey. KASWICK, JON A. Address: 614 North Roxbury Drive, Beverly Hills, California. KATSANOS, CHARLES E. A.B. Chemistry. Born: April 3, 1944. Prepared at Agawam High School. NROTC Drill Team, NROTC Pistol Team Secretary, Crew, Chemistry Club, Semper Fidelis Society, Brunavian Club, American Chemical Society. Address: 10 Silver Lake Drive, Agawam, Massachusetts. KEATES, JON C. A.B. English Literature Honors. Born: April 1, 1944. Prepared at Pascack Valley Regional High School. Dean's List, Brown Key, Freshman Week Committee, Proctor Mead House, Lambda Chi Alpha Vice President, Track. Address: 280 Ell Road, Hillsdale, New Jersey. KEATING, PETER F. A.B. Economics. Born: February 11, 1944. Prepared at Malverne High School. Delta Phi Vice President, Social Chairman, Brown Youth Guidance, NROTC Pistol Team, Semper Fidelis Society, Bruin Club, Swimming, Intra- murals. Address: 175 Wright Avenue, Malverne, New York. KEEDY, JOHN L. Address: 31 Downing Road, Norwood, Massachusetts. KEEGAN, PETER W. A.B. Sociology. Born: September 11, 15944. Prepared at Moses Brown School. Dormitory Secretary-Treas- urer, Cross Country, Indoor and Outdoor Track. Address: 143 University Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. W. F. JUDGE 7 q S. J. KADISON 245 H. W. KARG, JR. J. A. KASWIC: R. A. KAHN E. M. KAMPMANN C. E. KATSANOS J. C. KEATES J. D. KANTROWITZ P. H. KAREIVA P. F. KEATING P. W. KEEGAN F. KEENAN II. eh, TElC P. F. KELLY L. J. KENNEDY, JR. L. C. KINGSLAND, IlI W. P. KINSELLA J. S. KINSMAN J. L. KIRSTEN, JR. M. S. KNAPP R. W. KNIGHT KEENAN, FREDERICK. A.B. Classics. Born: April 27, 1944. Prepared at Lake Forest High School. NROTC Scholarship, Zeta Psi Secretary, Classics Club Steward, Yacht Club, Liber Brunensis, Band, Pistol Team, Track, Intramurals. Address: 770 E. West- minster, Lake Forest, lllinois. KEIL, JUERGEN G. A.B. Physics. Born: September 6, 1944, Prepared at Bethesda Chevy-Chase Senior High School. Publicity Committee Class of '66, Crew. Address: 6314 Avalon Drive, Washington, D.C. KELLY, PAUL F. A.B. International Relations. Born: September 25, 1944. Prepared at Archbishop Wil- liams High School. United Nations Leadership Institute, Collegiate Council far the United Nations, International Relations Club, Brown Key, Lambda Chi Alpha; NROTC, Brunavians, USMCR, Semper Fidelis Society, Newman Club, Football. Address: 19 Alden Road, Weymouth, Massachusetts. KENFIELD, JOHN F. lll. Address: 2707 May- view Road, Raleigh, North Carolina. KENNEDY, LOUIS J. A.B. Psychology. Born: March 17, 1945. Prepared at Fairfield Prep. Intramurals. Address: 100 Kneen Street, Shelton, Connecticut. KENT, JON E. A.B. American Literature. Born: February 26, 1944, Prepared at Fieldston School. Dean's List, Lambda Sigma Nu Secretary. Ad- dress: 201 East 66th Street, New York, New York. KINGSLAND, LAWRENCE C. Ill. A.B. International Relations. Born: August 17, 1944. Prepared at Cohasset High School. Convocation Choir, Glee Club, Brown University Chorale, AFS Club, German Club, Brown University Madrigal Group. Address: 300 South Main Street, Cohasset, Massa- chusetts. KINLOCH, J. PAUL. Address: 191 Lawnacre Drive, Cranston, Rhode Island. KINSELLA, WILLIAM P. A.B. EngineeringEconomics. Born: February 9, 1944. Pre- pared at Ridgewood Sr. High School. Theta Delta Chi Corresponding Secretary, Sen- jor Vice President, Cross Country Captain, Track Soccer. Address: 1043 Sunnyslope Drive, Mountainside, New Jersey. KINSMAN, JOHN S. A.B. Psychology. Born: July 14, 1943. Prepared at West Islip High Schoal. NROTC Drill Team, Lacrosse, Phi Delta Beta, Manning Chapel Board of Governors. Address: 20 Haynes Avenue, West Islip, New York. KIRSTEN, JOHN L. JR. Address: 130 Hubbell Lane, Fairfield, Connecticut. KMIECZAK, DONALD N. Address: RD 1, Center Valley, Pennsylvania. KNAPP, MARC S. A.B. History. Born: August 26, 1944. Prepared at Walt Whitman High School. Dean's List, Psi Upsilon, Yacht Club, Track. Address: 61 West 22nd Street, Huntington Sta- tion, New York. KNIGHT, RONALD W. A.B. Chemistry. Born: September 10, 1943. Prepared at Ridgewood High School. University Christian Association, Yacht Club, Pre- Med Society, Brown-Pembroke Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship Vice Presodent Proc- tor Jameson House, Northern Student Movement Tutorial Program, Olney House Offi- cer Inter House Council, Representative, Mameson House Officer Chaplain. Ad- dress: 913 Roslyn Road, Ridgewood, New Jersey. KNOWLES, ROBERT L. A.B. Mathe- matics. Born: November 26, 1944. Prepared at Mount Lebanon High School. Dean's List, Francis Wayland Scholar, Young Republicans, Conservative League Secretary, Mathematics Club. Address: 45 Longue Vue Drive, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. KOLI- BASH, WILLIAM A. A.B. History. Born: February 12, 1944. Prepared at Linsly Military Institute. Delta Tau Delta, Football, Lacrosse. Address: 76 Water Street, Benwood, West Virginia. KOLSTAD, LEWIS D. A.B. American Civilization. Born: October 22, 1943. Prepared at Harrison High School. Crew, WBRU, Convocation Choir, AIESEC Co- Chairman, International Relations Club Treasurer. Address: 429 East San Rafael, Colorado Springs, Colorado. KORN, SAUL B. Address: 174 Rochambeau Avenue, Prov- idence, Rhode lIsland. KOSTER, JAMES W. Address: 40 Laurel Road, New Haven, Connecticut. KOUTSOGIANE, PHILLIP C. A.B. History. Born: September 26, 1944. Pre- pared at Cumberland High School. Inter-House Council, Actuarial Science Club, Hockey. Address: 40 Beamis Avenue, Cumberland, Rhode Island. KOWALSKI, BARRY F. Address: 7204 Regent Drive, Alexandria, Virginia. KRAUTER, WILLIAM C. A.B. Politi- cal Science. Born: July 2, 1944. Prepared at Central Bucks High School. Freshman Football and Baseball, Intramurals, NROTC Drill Team, Phi Kappa Psi. Address: 201 W. Court Street, Doylestown, Pennsylvania. KREITLER, PETER G. Address: 186 High- land Avenue, Short Hills, New Jersey. KREVOR, MICHAEL D. Address: 7 Kirkwood Drive, Glen Cove, New York. KREY, LEWIS C. Address: 156 Jasper Avenue, Teaneck, New Jersey. KRITZALIS, ALEXANDER S. Address: 870 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York. KRONE, STEPHEN R. A.B. Sociology. Born: October 1, 1944. Prepared at Somer- ville High School. Dormitory Athletic Chairman, President, Intramurals, Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, Brown Youth Guidance. Address: 257 Altamont Place, Somerville, New Jersey. KRUPSKI, JOHN P. A.B. American Civilization. Born: April 14, 1944. Prepared at Mattituck High School. Athletic Advisory Council, Delta Tau Delta, Fresh- man Lacrosse and Basketball, Varsity Soccer Co-Captain. Address: Cutchogue, Long Island, New York. KUDLESS, ROBERT J. A.B. American Literature. Born: September 9, 1944. Prepared at New Dorp High School. Delta Kappa Epsilon, Freshman Football. Address: 189 Lowery Street, Staten Island, New York. KUJAWSKI, MARIO J. Address: 13444 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio. KUPERSMITH, PETER. Address: 126 Linden Street, Woodmere, New York. LAFFAL, PAUL D. A.B. Human Biology. Born: July 22, 1944. Prepared at Amity School. Dean's List, Lacrosse. Address: 527 Carriage Drive, Srange, Connecticut. LANPHER, E. GIBSON. Address: 606 Overlook Drive, Alexandria, irginia. R. L. KNOWLES W. A. KOLIBASH R. S, KOPS, JR. J. W. KOSTER P. C. KOUTSOGIANE W. C. KRAUTER L. C. KREY S. R. KRONE J. P. KRUPSKI R. J. KUDLESS P. KUPERSMITH P. D. LAFFAL L. M. LAPINE D. D. LAUFER H. B. LEMON C. B. LePAGE M. L. LEVY R. A. LEVY K. R. LINSLEY K. A. LOGAN R. V. LOLORDO W. W. LONG R. L. LUDIN K. R. LUNDSTROM LAPINE, LAWRENCE M. A.B. Political Science. Born: March 2, 1944. Prepared at Stamford High School. Varsity Baseball, Freshman Football, Delta Tau Delta. Address: Hardesty Road, Stamford, Connecticut. LAUFER, DAVID D. Address: 72 Norwood Ave- nue, Buffalo, New York. LEMON, HARVEY B. Address: 10805 Poppleton Avenue, Omaha, Nebraska. LePAGE, CLIFFORD B. A.B. Classics. Born: May 17, 1944. Prepared at Reading Senior High School. Dean's List, Classic Club, Dormitory President, Freshman Cross Country, Indoor and Outdoor Track Co-Captain. Address: 5213 Bella Vista Road, Drexel Hill, Pennsylvania. LEVY, MICHAEL L. A.B. Mathematics. Born: March 12, 1944. Prepared at Governor Livingston Regional High School. Dean's List, Swimming. Address: 1047 Elston Drive, Mountainside, New Jersey. LEVY, RICHARD A. A.B. International Relations. Born: January 3, 1944. Prepared at Niskayuna High School. Francis Wayland Scholarship, Dean's List, Social Affairs Chairman, Interna- tional Relations Club. Address: 2455 Brookshire Drive, Schenectady, New York. LINS- LEY, KENNETH R. AB. ScB. Engineering. Born: January 7, 1944. Prepared at Thomaston High School. Brown Engineering Society, Institute of Electrical Flec- tronics Engineers Bruin Club, Olney House President, Freshman Basketball. Address: 25 Gilbert Street, Thomaston, Connecticut. LITTLE, JONATHAN E. Ad- dress: 190 Chestnut Drive, Wayne, New Jersey. LOGAN, KENT A. A.B. Economics Honors. Born: August 14, 1944, Prepared at Westfield Senior High School. Hall-Mercer Scholarship, Kappa Sigma Social Chairman, Latin America Summer Project, Brown Youth Guidance, Crew. Address: 106 Fairview Drive So., Basking Ridge, New Jersey. LO LORDO, RONALD V. A.B. History. Born: October 18, 1944. Prepared at Cliffside Park Senior High School. Address: 28 Brinkerhoff Terrace, Palisades Park, New Jersey. LONG, WAYNE W. A.B. American Literature. Born: September 29, 1943. Prepared at Tabor Academy. Wrestling, Beta Theta Pi. Address: 301 Stage Harbor Road, Chatham, Massachusetts. LOW BEER, JOHN R. Address: 300 Central Park West, New York, New York. LUDIN, ROGER L. ScB. Physics. Born: June 13, 1944. Prepared at St. Peter's School. Dean's List, Glee Club Personal Manager, Diman House President, Treas- urer, Cultural Chairman, Liaison and Advisory Committee for Undergraduate Physics. Address: High Crest Drive West, High Crest Lake, West Milford, New Jersey. LUND- STROM, KENNETH R. A.B. Psychology. Born: May 2, 1944. Prepared at Warwick Veterans Memorial High School. Address: 52 Merle Street, Warwick, Rhode Island. LURIE, MARK I. A.B. American Civilization. Born: February 19, 1944. Prepared at Conard High School. 1965 Bicentennial Weekend Committee, Alpha Pi Lambda, Inter- fraternity Soccer. Address: 5 Lawler Road, West Hartford, Connecticut. LYMAN, ROB- ERT C. A.B. History. Born: December 6, 1944. Prepared at Saint Mark's School. Alpha Delta Phi Treasurer, Secretary, Crew Captain. Address: South Road Elm Farm, Ashby, Massachusetts. LYNCH, GERARD T. A.B. History. Born: May 23, 1944. Pre- pared at Westbury Senior High School. Delta Tau Delta President, Alumni Secretary, Newman Club, Lacrosse, Intramurals. Address: 856 Leonard Drive, Westbury, New York. MacDONALD, WILLIAM J. A.B. History. Born: January 1, 1945. Prepared at Providence Country Day School. Pre-Med Society, Delta Tau Delta, Intramurals. Ad- dress: 50 Bent Road, Rumford, Rhode Island. MacNEILL, JAMES R. Address: 92 Larch Street, Providence, Rhode Island. MacNEILL, ROBERT S. JR. Address: 32 Hill Street, Mayfair, London, England. MADDOX, ROBERT C. Address: 560 S 70th Street, Omaha, Nebraska. MAGEE, EDWARD F. A.B. Physics. Born: December 23, 1944. Prepared at McDonogh School. IHC Social Chairman, House Vice President, Proctory, Lacrosse, Intramurals. Address: Liberty Road, Sykesville, Maryland. MAGGIOLO, ALLISON J. Ad- dress: 120 Clinton Avenue, Mineola, New York. MANCHESTER, ROBERT E. A.B. His- tory. Born: November 1, 1944. Prepared at Westboro High School. Pre-Med Society, Biology Club, B.Y.G., University Christian Association, Pre-Law Society, Phi Delta Beta, Secretary, Scholastic Chairman, Alumni Secretary. Address: Route 1 Box 231, Rug- gles Street, Westboro, Massachusetts. MANFREDI, GEORGE A. Address: 184 Voorhis Avenue, River Edge, New Jersey. MANIAN, PETER G. Address: 5707 North 26th Street, Arlington, Virginia. MANN, JAMES A. A.B. American Civilization. Born: March 21, 1944. Prepared at North Kingstown Senior High School. Canticum Glee Club, Delta Tau Delta. Address: Tower Hill Road, Saunderstown, Rhode Island. M. I. LURIE R. C. LYMAN G. T. LYNCH J. G. LYON W. J. MacDONALD R. E. MANCHESTER G. A. MANFREDI J. A. MANN MANNING, JOHN G. A.B. History. Born: July 25, 1944. Prepared at Staples High School. Francis Wayland Scholar, Dean's List, Second Hartshorn Prize in Mathematics, Alpha Phi Omega, Brown University Marching Band, Crew Manager. Address: 169 Newton Turnpike, Westport, Connecticut. MARCSON, MICHAEL D. History Honors. Born: June 19, 1944. Prepared at Princeton High School. Dean's List, Brown Daily Herald, Rugby Club, NSM Tutor, Brown Youth Guidance Vice President, Intramurals, Alpha Phi Lambda. Address: 36 Marion Road, Princeton, New Jersey. MARKS, ROBERT S. Address: 22 Sunset Road, Lawrence, New York. MARKSON, NEIL R. A.B. Econom- ics. Born: December 12, 1944. Prepared at Longmeadow High School. Freshman Class Council, Brown Youth Guidance, Delta Phi Recording Secretary. Pre-Law Society, French Club, Intramurals, Golf. Address: 111 Meadowbrook Road, Longmeadow, Mas- sachusetts. MARLATT, WILLIS C. JR. Sc.B., Aerospace Engineering. Born: June 4, 1944. Prepared at Jonathan Law High School. Dean's List, Sailing, Brown Engineer- ing Society, Freshman Cross Country. Address: 41 Kohary Drive, Devon, Connecticut. MARTIN, LEONARD G. Address: 435 Webster Avenue, New Rochelle, New York. MAT- HEWS, ARTHUR B. A.B. Economics. Born: April 13, 1943. Prepared at Williston Acad- emy. Glee Club, Outing Club, Soccer, Freshman Hockey. Address: 15 Roaring Brook Road, Easton, Connecticut. McCORMICK, JAMES A. Address: Hopelands, RD 1, New Hope, Pennsylvania. McCORMICK, JEFFREY V. A.B. Economics. Born: May 8, 1944. Prepared at Manchester High School. Band, Yacht Club, Phi Delta Theta Cap- tain, House Manager, Warden, Secretary, Crew. Address: 501 Porter Street, Manches- ter, Connecticut. McCRAY, JOHN E. A.B. American Literature. Address: 2620 Old Orchard Road, Lancaster, Pennsylvania. McCULLOUGH, DAN R. Address: Box 266, Seville, Ohio. McDONALD, W. MICHAEL. Address: 1412 Meadowcrest Drive, Charles- ton, West Virginia. McDONNELL, JOHN A. A.B. International Relations. Born: May 13, 1944. Prepared at Stoughton High School. Dean's List, Inter-House Council. Address: 149 Howland Road, Stoughton, Massachusetts. McENTEE, EDWARD J. A.B. Anthropol- ogy. Born: January 26, 1945. Prepared at Bishop Thomas F. Hendricken High School. Freshman Class Council, Theta Delta Chi, Pre-Med Society, Freshman Football, Varsity Track, Varsity Wrestling Captain. Address: 231 Algonquinn Drive, Warwick, Rhode Island. McGARRITY, MARK C. Address: 8 Wyckoff Avenue, Holyoke, Massachusetts. McGUIGAN, PHILIP P. Address: 308 East 79th Street, New York, New York. McGUIRE, PHILIP L. Address: 41 Meadow Farms Road, West Hartford, Connecticut. McMATH, JONATHAN C. A.B. Sociology Honors. Born: November 6, 1943. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Dean's List, Pre-Med Society, Alpha Phi Omega. Address: 1218 Longfellow Avenue, Royal Oak, Michigan. McMORRIS, F. ARTHUR. A.B. Biology, Honors. Born: September 17, 1944. Prepared at Pittsfield High School. Dean's List, Undergraduate Research Program, French Club, Outing Club, German Club, AFROTC, Drill Team. Address: 95 Strong Avenue, Pittsfield, Massachusetts, McOSKER, DAVID J. A.B. Eco- nomics. Born: May 11, 1944. Prepared at Classical High School. Plantations House, Committee Secretary, Intramurals. Address: 27 Cole Avenue, Providence, Rhode Is- land. MEADORS, GILCIN F. A.B. Biology. Born: April 24, 1944. Prepared at Damascus High School. Recorder Society. Address: 1612 Shookstown Road, Frederick, Maryland. MECKEL, WILFRED J. A.B. International Relations. Born: December 25, 1945. Prepared at Garden City Senior High School. Brown Charities Drive, Delta Tau Delta Vice President, Community Service Chairman, Scholastic Chairman, Lacrosse, Intramurals. Address: 15 Merillon Avenue, Garden City, New York. MEIER, JOHN A. Address: 12927 Vernon, Huntington Woods, Michigan. MEIER, ROBERT C. Address: 1416 Tenth Street, Wilmette, lllincis. MELVIN, WILLIAM R. Address: 3 La Grange Road, Delmar, New York. MERCER, ANDREW. Address: 130 Nichols Road, Cohasset, Massachusetts. MERETTA, MICHAEL O. Address: 1808 Dexter Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio. MICHNO, MICHAEL, J. JR. S.B. Engineering Honors. Born: August 31, 1944. Prepared at Vestal Senior High. Dean's List, University Scholarship, Brown Engineering Society, American Society of Mechanical Engineers Vice President, Freshman Football, Rugby. Address: 836 Circle Drive, Vestal, New York. J. G. MANNING M. D. MARCSON R. S. MARKS N. R. MARKSON W. C. MARLATT, JR. L. G. MARTIN A. B. MATHEWS J. V. McCORMICK D. R. McCULLOUGH J. A. McDONNELL 2ol E. J. McENTEE P. P. McGUIGAN P. L. McGUIRE J. C. McMATH F. A. McMORRIS G. F. MEADORS W. J. MECKEL J. A. MEIER W. R. MELVIN A. MERCER M. O. MERETTA M. J. MICHNO, JR. MILANESI, ALBERT A. B.A. Sociology. Born: July 19, 1944. Prepared at Stevens Acad- emy. Newman Club, Delta Tau Delta, Basketball. Address: 614-79th Street, North Bergen, New Jersey. MILES, DAVID A. A.B. Economics Honors. Born: September 14, 1944. Prepared at Saint Raphael Academy. Dean's List, Dormitory Vice President, Inter-House Council, Brown Glee Club, Canticum Glee Club, Brown Charities Drive, Newman Club, Outing Club. Address: 19 Kilburn Avenue, Lincoln, Rhode Island. MIL- LER, ALAN B. B.A. English Literature. Born: April 27, 1944. Prepared at Abington High. Varsity Football, Track. Address: 119 Summit Road, Abington, Massachusetts. MILLER, JAMES A. A.B. English. Born: August 27, 1944. Prepared at Hope High School. Brown Daily Herald, Brown Herald Review, Dormitory Vice President, North- ern Student Movement, Sock and Buskin, Intramurals. Address: 187 Burnside Street, Providence, Rhode Island. MILLMAN, NEIL H. B.A. Political Science. Born: February 15, 1945. Prepared at Riverhead High School. Dean's List, Cammarian Club, Class Council, Class Secretary-Treasurer, Alpha Pi Lambda, Intramurals. Address: 159 Rob- inson Parkway, Riverhead, New York. MILSTEIN, JOSHUA. A.B. American Civilization. Born: November 29, 1943. Prepared at Union High School. Dean's List, Glee Club. Address: 333 Foxwood Road, Union, New Jersey. MINUTO, JAMES T. Address: 827 Congress Avenue, Waterbury, Connecticut. MOEN, JAMES M. A.B. English Literature. Born: June 24, 1944. Prepared at Mason City High School. Brown Youth Guidance, Amateur Radio Club President, German Club. Address: 85 Linden Drive, Mason City, lowa. MOHR, ROBERT K. Address: 905 Lyndale, North Mankato, Minnesota. MOLD- OVER, DONALD A. Sc.B. Chemistry. Born: December 20, 1945. Prepared at Bronx High School of Science. Brown-Pembroke Outing Club Executive Board, Hillel Execu- tive Board, Folk Dance Club. Address: USAID-PRAD co American Embassy, Rio de Janeiro, APO New York. MOREHOUSE, WILLIAM R. Address: 232 Long Meadow Circle, Pittsford, New York. MORRILL, GEORGE B. IIl. Address: Keene Street, RFD 2, Woon- socket, Rhode Island. MORRISSEY, PAUL E. Address: 91 Blodgett Avenue, Pawtucket, Rhode Island. MORSE, ROBERT E. A.B. Classics. Born: March 11, 1945. Prepared at Providence Country Day School. Canticum, Glee Club, University Chorale, Classics Club, Conservative League Treasurer, Manning Chapel Choir, University Christian Association. Address: Fall River Avenue, Seekonk, Massachusetts. MULDOON, K. SCOTT A.B. American Civilization. Born: January 23, 1944. Prepared at Eastchester High School. Rugby, Theta Delta Chi, Glee Club. Address: 19 Hickory Hill Road, Eastches- ter, New York. MUNSON, WILLIAM H. A.B. Math-Physics. Born: March 2, 1945. Pre- pared at East Greenwich High School. Dormitory President, Treasurer, Social Chair- man, Class Council, Vice President, Actuarial Science Club, Intramurals. Address: 207 Howland Road, East Greenwich, Rhode Island. MURAI, RENE VICENTE. A.B. Econom- ics Honors. Born: March 11, 1945. Prepared at Culver Military Academy. Dean's List, Kappa Sigma, Rushing Chairman, Vice President, Latin American Conference Com- mittee, Pre-Law Society. Address: 9761 S. W. 16 Terrace, Miami, Florida. MURDOCK, JAMES ALAN. Sc.B. Applied Math. Born: February 8, 1945. Prepared at H. Hoover High School. Dean's List, Brown-Pembroke Outing Club Equipment Manager, Winter Mountaineering Committee. Address: 311 Irving Avenue, Glendale, California. MYLO- POULOS, JOHN P. Address: 7 25th March Street Filothei, Athens, Greece. A. A. MILANESI D. A. MILES A. B. MILLER J. A. MILLER N. H. MILLMAN J. MILSTEIN 293 J. T. MINUTO R. K. MOHR D. A. MOLDOVER W. R. MOREHOUSE R. E. MORSE K. S. MULDOON W. H. MUNSON R. V. MURAI J. A. MURDOCK J. P. MYLOPOULOS o A K. R. NEAL A. D. NEWTON T. 0. NIEDERER D. D. NOBLE W. J. NOWACK W. S. NUNNELLEY A. NWACHUKU P. R. O'DONNELL, JR. 254 M. C. O'FARRELL D. W. OGDEN J. R. OLIVER N. R. ORD R NEAL, KENNETH R. B.A. American Literature. Born: December 29, 1942. Prepared at Deerfield Academy. Brown Key President, Lambda Chi Alpha, Football, Hockey, La- crosse. Address: 195 Waterman Street, Providence, Rhode Island. NEWTON, ALEXAN- DER DURAM. A.B. Political Science. Born: August 6, 1944. Prepared at Emory-at Oxford Academy. Dean's List, Honors Program, Fresca Scholar, Brown Charities Drive Executive Board, Young Republicans, Conservative League, Sigma Chi, Intramurals. Address: 801 Academy Street, Madison, Georgia. NEWTON, ROBERT A. A.B. Interna- tional Relations. Born: April 12, 1943. Prepared at Westboro High School. Dormitory President, Lambda Chi Alpha, Basketball, Golf. Address: 631 Val Lena, Houston, Texas. NICHOLS, RICHARD W. Address: 12 Mitchell Place, Little Silver, New Jersey. NIEDERER, THOMAS 0. A.B. Political Science. Born: November 22, 1944. Prepared at The Lawrenceville School. Delta Upsilon, Soccer, Baseball. Address: Bear Tavern Road, Titusville, New Jersey. NOWACK, WILLIAM J. A.B. Mathematics. Born: January 15, 1945. Prepared at Horace Mann. Dean's List, President, Secretary, Alpha Phi League Publications Chairman, Course Analysis Bulletin, Bridge Club. Address: 32-29 147 Place, Flushing, New York. NUNNELLEY, WILLIAM S. Address: 2012 Earlington Drive, Nashville 12, Tennessee. O'DONNELL, PATRICK R. JR. A.B. Art History. Born: June 19, 1944. Preapred at Scituate High School. Theta Delta Chi, Cross Country, Track. Address: 612 Country Way, Scituate, Massachusetts. O'FARRELL, MICHAEL C. Ad- dress: 2001 Quarrier Street, Charleston, West Virginia. OGDEN, DAVID W. Address: 227 Hunt Road, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. OLIVER, JAMES R. A.B. International Rela- tions. Born: September 7, 1944. Prepared at Summit High School. NSM Tutorials, Inter-House Council, Cultural Affairs Chairman, Sphinx Society President, University Christian Association Co-Chairman, Church Vestry. Address: 137 Long Lots Road, Westport, Connecticut. ORD, NICHOLAS R. A.B. English Literature. Born: March 21, 1944. Prepared at John Rennie High School. Brown Daily Herald Advertising Man- ager, Brown Glee Club, Brown-Pembroke Chorus, Inter-House Council, Intramurals. Address: 464 Lakeshore Road, Beaurepaire, Quebec, Canada. O'REILLY, VINCENT A. A.B. Psychology. Born: July 20, 1944. Prepared at Bishop Hendricken High School. Plantations House Social Chairman, House Chairman, Intramurals. Address: 132 Western Pomenade, Cranston, Rhode Island. O'TOOLE, RICHARD P. JR. Address: 15 Beech Avenue, Oradell, New Jersey. PAINE, CHARLES W. A.B. Engineering. Born: September 25, 1944. Prepared at Warwick Veterans Memorial High School. Yacht Club, Outing Club, Sailing Captain. Address: 64 Scarsdale Street, Warwick, Rhode Island. PALMER, STANLEY H. A.B. History Honors. Born: October 22, 1944. Prepared at Princeton High School. Dean's List, Brown Charities Drive, Brown Youth Guidance, Northern Student Movement, Classics Club, Inter-House Council Representative, Slater Hall Vice President Intramurals. Address: 7017 Kingsbury Boulevard, St. Louis, Mis- souri. PARISEN, RICHARD L. Address: 1548 St. Lawrence Avenue, New York, Bronx, New York. PARKER, CHRISTOPHER W. A.B. Political Science. Born: October 8, 1943. Prepared at Suffield Academy. Delta Upsilon, Soccer, Track. Address: 330 Pine Street Extension, Middletown, Connecticut. PASS, ROBERT N. Address: 5 Dartmouth Avenue, Riverside, Rhode Island. PATE, JOHN R. A.B. International Relations. Born: October 10, 1944. Prepared at Washington-Lee High School. Freshman Week Committee, Bruin Club, Junior Class Council, Executive Committee, Brown Key, Pre-Law Society Presi- dent, Brown Charities Drive Treasurer, Kappa Sigma, Senior Class Secretary, Fresh- man Football and Lacrosse. Address: 1503 N. Jefferson Street, Arlington, Virginia. PATTERSON, JAMES D. B.A. Classics. Born: July 23, 1944. Prepared at The Hill School. Glee Club, Brown Charities Drive, Brown Key, Sphinx Secretary, Jabber- wocks, Episcopal College Church President, Young Republicans Club, Kappa Sigma, Classics Club President, Wrestling, Cheerleader. Address: 2214 Orrington Avenue, Evanston, Illinois. PECK, JOHN F. Address: 429 Verna Hill Road, Fairfield, Connecticut. PEPPARD, VICTOR E. B.A. History. Born: November 4, 1944. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Liber Sales Manager, Delta Upsilon, Rugby. Address: RFD2 Box 378, Amherst, Massachusetts. PERRY, ROY R. Address: 116 Addison Street, Brockton, Mas- sachusetts. PETERS, WILLIAM C. A.B. Political Science. Born: September 14, 1944. Prepared at Rogers High School. Proctor, Brunavian Club Secretary, Semper Fedelis Club, Kappa Sigma, NROTC Battalion Commander, Football, Lacrosse. Address: 142 Prospect Avenue, Middletown, Rhode Island. PETERSON, THOMAS B. A.B. Economics. Born: October 28, 1943. Prepared at Browne 8 Nichols School. Dean's List, Social Chairman of Hegeman, Americans for a R. of our F.E. Policy. Address: 1 Yale Street, Winchester, Massachusetts. VNASIOIREEIRY . P. O'TOOLE, JR. J. A. PADDEN, JR. C. W. PAINE S. H. PALMER C. W. PARKER R. N. PASS I REEPATE J. D. PATTERSON V. E. PEPPARD W. C. PETERS T. B. PETERSON U ESEREARE T. D. PICKENS C. W. PIGOTT G. J. PLASTERAS R. E. PLENGE C. B. POMERANCE W. R. PONTE W. R. POWELL W. R. POWERS, JR. R. 0. POYTON PFAFF, JOHN F. Address: 105 Leone Drive, Bricktown, New Jersey. PICKENS, THOMAS D. A.B. Political Science. Born: October 9, 1943. Prepared at Gilmour Academy. Delta Phi. Address: 80 Hunters Lane, Devon, Pennsylvania. PIGOTT, CHARLES WILLIAM. A.B. Histroy. Born: December 9, 1944. Prepared at Williamsville High School. NROTC Company Commander, Semper Fidelis Club President, Phi Gamma Delta Presi- dent, Football Freshman. Address: Winding Court, Yorktown Heights, New York. PLASTERAS, GEORGE J. A.B. English Literature. Born: November 23, 1944, Prepared at Asbury Park High. Kappa Sigma, Cheerleader, Brown Charities, Social Chairman Caswell Hall, Pre-Law Society, Freshman Football and Baseball, Intramurals. Address: 104 Ocean Avenue, Allenhurst, New Jersey. PLENGE, RICHARD E. Address: 212 West College Avenue, Lenior, North Carolina. POMERANCE, CARL B. A.B. Mathematics. Born: November 24, 1944. Prepared at Valley Stream Central High School. First Henry Parker Manning Mathematics Prize, Dean's List, Students for a Democratic Society, Student Peace Union Executive Board, Northern Student Movement, Brown Band, Mathematics Club. Address: 39 Lynwood Drive, Valley Stream, New York. PONTE, WILLIAM R. A.B. Art. Born: December 7, 1943. Prepared at Mackenzie High School. Dean's List, Anonymous Print Prize 1965, Bruin Club, Liber. Address: 11385 Robson, Detroit, Michigan. POWELL, WILLIAM R. Sc.B. Engineering Honors. Born: October 26, 1943. Prepared at Williston Academy. Tau Beta Pi Treasurer, Outing Club Treasurer, President, Alpha Phi Omega Treasurer, Rugby. Address: 53 Stark Road, Worcester, Massachusetts. POWERS, WILLIAM R. JR. A.B. Math-Economics. Born: January 22, 1944. Prepared at Governor Livingston R.H.S. Delta Phi, Freshman Soccer, Rugby Captain. Address: 83 Burlington Road, Murray Hill, New Jersey. POYTON, ROBERT O. A.B. Biology Honors. Born: September 3, 1944. Prepared at East Providence High School. Dean's List, Marching Band Secretary-Treasurer, Outing Club, Intramurals. Address: 106 Miller Avenue, Rumford, Rhode Island. PRATT, PETER A. Address: 157 Ohio Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. PRIOR, DAVID D. Address: 122 Albert Avenue, Cranston, Rhode Island. PRODGERS, WILLIAM D. Address: Main Street, West Dennis, Massachusetts. QUINLAN, MAURICE J. A.B. American Literature. Born: July 18, 1944. Prepared at Medford High School. Brown Daily Herald, Outing Club, Delta Upsilon Secretary, Vice President, Lacrosse, Track. Address: 10 Robinson Road, West Med- ford, Massachusetts. QUINT, STEPHEN D. A.B. Psychology Honors. Born: December 9, 1944. Prepared at Woodrow Wilson High School. Dean's List, National Science Foundation Undergraduate Research Participant in Psychology, Faunce House Board of Governors Treasurer, Lecture Serier Committee Chairman. Address: 3250 Quesada Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. RADOVICH, THOMAS V. Sc.B. Engineering Honors. Born: April 18, 1944. Prepared at Mt Vernon High School. Inter House Coun- cil Representative, Brown Engineering SocietyAIAA Cultural Affairs Chairman, Dor- mitory Cultural Affairs Chairman, Newman Club. Address: 8327 Bound Brook Lane, Alexandria, Virginia. RAE, DONALD S. A.B. Mathematics. Born: September 4, 1944. Prepared at Darien High School. Dean's List, Brown Daily Herald National Advertising Manager, Bridge Club. Address: 21 Old Oak Road, Darien, Connecticut. RAMSAY, GLENWORTH A. A.B. Economics. Born: May 14, 1943. Prepared at Clifford J. Scott High School. Classics Club, Liber Brunensis Senior Editor, Phi Gamma Delta, Rugby. Address: 51 Ely Place, East Orange, New Jersey. REBERT, H. STANLEY. Address: 958 Country Club Road, York, Pennsylvania. REIFENBERG, JOHN W. JR. A.B. French Liter- ature. Born: May 8, 1944, Prepared at Bethpage High School. Glee Club, Mead House President, Treasurer, Track, Cross Country. Address: 19 Acme Avenue, Bethpage, New York. RENNE, MERLIN M. A.B. German. Born: January 10, 1945. Prepared at The Peddie School. B.Y.G., University Glee Club, German Club, University Christian Asso- ciation, Bronson House Vice President, NROTC Drill Team, Brunavians, Lacrosse. Intramurals. Address: The Training School, Vineland, New Jersey. RHOADES, LAW- RENCE J. A.B. Economics. Born: July 29, 1944. Prepared at Edgewood School. Kappa Sigma, Swimming. Address: 2506 Rohrer Drive, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. RICHARD- SON, RANDOLPH W. Address: 1130 Oak Hill Road, Downers Grove, lllinois. ROBIN- OWITZ, BERNARD N. Address: 2810 East 34th Street, Tulsa, Oklahoma. M. J. QUINLAN S. D. QUINT T. V. RADOVICH D. S. RAE G. A. RAMSAY J. W. REIFENBERG, JR. M. M. RENNE L. J. RHOADES R. W. RICHARDSON B. N. ROBINOWITZ oo A F. E. ROHRBACH S. H. ROMANSKY B. B. ROSS J. D. ROYALL . RUSSO . RYAN U 1 o EERYCYKEIRE A. M. SACCO D. P. SAMUELS C. F. SANDBERG ROHRBACH, FREDERICK E. A.B. Palitical Science. Born: July 1, 1943. Prepared at Ridgewood High School and Kimball Union Academy. Brown Youth Guidance, Phi Kappa Psi Secretary, Freshman Basketball, Rugby. Address: 380 Bedford Road, Ridgewood, New Jersey. ROMANSKY, STEPHEN H. A.B. History. Born: February 8, 1945. Prepared at Woodrow Wilson High. Junior and Senior Class President, Faunce House Board of Governors President, Dean's Committee on Convocation Vice-Chair- man, Bicentennial Weekend Committee Chairman, Sophomore Class Council, Young Democrats, Intramurals. Address: 6609-32nd Place, N.W., Washington, D.C. ROSEN- FELD, DAVID A. Address: 319 South Durand, Jackson, Michigan. ROSS, BRUCE B. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: June 30, 1944. Prepared at Haverford School. Dean's List, Wayland Scholar, Tau Beta Phi President, American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Dormitory Treasurer, Track Co-captain. Address: 6 Indian Way, Mal- vern, Pennsylvania. ROYALL, JOHN D. A.B. English Literature Honors. Born: May 15, 1944. Prepared at Tenafly High School. Dean's List, Medical Sciences Seminar. Ad- dress: 2 Summit Street, Tenafly, New Jersey. RUSSO, JOHN A. A.B. Economics. Born July 13, 1944. Prepared at Bristol Senior High School. Brunavian Treasurer, Kappa Sigma, Rugby, Lacrosse. Address: 3 Chestnut Street, Bristol, Rhode Island. RYAN, STEPHEN PAUL. A.B. American Literature. Born: May 25, 1945. Prepared at Moses Brown School. Lambda Chi Alpha, Platoon Leaders Class, USMCR, Football, Track, Rugby. Address: 388 Lloyd Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. RYCYK, FRANK, JR. A.B. Botany. Born: October 15, 1944. Prepared at Boonton High School. German Club, Olney House Chairman, Swimming. Address: Rockaway Valley Road, R.d. 2, Boonton New Jersey. SACCO, ARTHUR M. A.B. Chemistry. Born: July 6, 1944. Prepared at Westerly High School. Rhode Island State Scholar, Brown Glee Club, Brown-Pembroke Chorus, French Club, Intramurals. Address: Box 121 Shore Road, Westerly, Rhode Island. ST. JOHN, WALTER M. Address: 159 Langdon Street, Providence, Rhode Is- land. SAMUELS, DAVID PAUL. A.B. Human Biology Honors. Born: August 20, 1944. Prepared at Manhasset High School. Dean's List, NSM Tutorial Program, Pre-Med So- ciety, Bowling League, Intramurals, Brown Tutor. Address: 67 Rocky Wood Road, Manhasset, New York. SANDBERG, CHRISTOPHER F. Address: 16 Oakley Place, Great Neck, New York. SAVOLAINEN, ERIC C. A.B. Political Science. Born: March 4, 1944. Prepared at Attleboro High School. Dean's List, Institute of Aerospace Science, Brown Charities Drive, Swimming. Address: 8 Hazelwood Avenue, Attleboro, Massachusetts. SCHELLENGER, FRANK L. JR. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: June 29, 1944. Prepared at Millville Memorial High School. Dormitory Secretary-Treasurer, Intramurals, Address: 513 West Main Street, Millville, New Jersey. SCHERMERHORN, DAVID R. A.B. English- American Literature. Born: May 15, 1944. Prepared at Edison High School. Ski Team, Beta Theta Pi. Address: 2824 South Columbia Place, Tulsa, Oklahoma. SCHIMEL, ARTHUR L. Address: 2928 Pawtucket Avenue, East Providence, Rhode Island. SCHMITZ, MICHAEL D. A.B. History. Born: July 9, 1944. Prepared at The Lawrence- ville School. Brown Daily Herald Executive Editor, Phi Gamma Delta Corresponding Secretary, Track. Address: 4000 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W. Washington, D.C. SCHOTT, THOMAS FRANKLIN. A.B. Biology. Born: August 28, 1944. Prepared at Mid- wood High School. Dean's List, Bridge Club, Capin Hospital Volunteer, Intramurals. Address: 1097 East Eighth Street, Brooklyn New York. SCHRAGER, MARK A. AB. Physics. Born: December 23, 1943. Prepared at Fair Lawn High School. Dean's List, Marching Band, Concert Band Orchestra, Chamber Soloists, Intramurals. Address: 12 Berkshire Road, Woodcliff Lake, New Jersey. SCHUSTER, PETER E. Address: 905 Bushwick Avenue, Brooklyn, New York. SCHWAB, MICHAEL E. A.B. Political Science. Born: November 29, 1944. Prepared at Jamaica High School. Class Cabinet Social Chairman, Baseball, Alpha Pi Lambda Social Chairman. Address: 83-06 169 Street, Jamaica, New York. SCHWARZ, STEPHEN. A B. American Civilization Honors. Born: April 26, 1944. Prepared at Summit High School. Dean's List, Brown Daily Herald Sports Assistant, Sports Editor, Hope College Treasurer, Basketball Manager. Ad- dress: 44 Edgewood Road, Summit, New Jersey. SEALE, JONATHAN B. Address: 20 Shaffner Street, Worcester, Massachusetts. E. C. SAVOLAINEN F. L. SCHELLENGER, JR. D. R. SCHERMERHORN M. F. SCHLAGHECK M. D. SCHMITZ T. F. SCHOTT M. A. SCHRAGEK P. E. SCHUSTER M. E. SCHWAB S. SCHWARZ L. W. SEBERHAGEN R. F. SEEGAL S ERSERITEY R. M. SENIO J. H. SENNHAUSER P. A. SHAPIRO 260 R. M. SHAW E. L. SHEIN P. S. SHEMIN W. G. SHIER, JR. SEBERHAGEN, LANCE W. A.B. Psychology. Born: March 7, 1944. Prepared at Blake School. Dormitory Social Chairman, President Baseball. Address: Rt. 2 Box 1118, Wayzata, Minnesota. SEEGAL, RICHARD F. A.B. Psychology. Born: February 13, 1945. Prepared at Rogers High School. National Rhode Island Honor Societies, Rhode Island State Scholarship, Dormitory Officer, Yacht Club, Intramurals. Address: 4 Bliss Mine Road, Middletown, Rhode Island. SEELEY, JOHN E. Address: 813 Kensington, Flint, Michigan. SENINGEN, GARY E. Address: 21 Firethorne Lane, Valley Stream, New York. SENIO, RONALD M. A.B. History. Born: October 6, 1944. Prepared at Roosevelt High School. Cammarian Club, Junior Class Co-Ordinating Committee, Freshman Week Committee, A.F.S. Returnee Committee, Interfraternity Council, Fraternity Correspond- ing Secretary and Steward. Address: 53 Ridgeland Road, Yonkers, New York. SENN- HAUSER, JOHN H. Address: 145 Fourth Avenue, Apt. 18L; New York, New York SHAPIRO, PETER A. A.B. English Literature. Born: February 16, 1944. Prepared at Mount Hermon School. Class Coordinating Committee, Sigma Chi Treasurer, Pledge- master, Dormitory Vice-President. Address: 8 Hillside Road, New London, Connect- icut. SHAW, RICHARD M. A.B. French Literature. Born: July 11, 1944. Prepared at Springfield High School. Marching Band, Brass Chorale, Wind Ensemble. Address: RD31 Baler Road, Springfield, Vermont. SHEIN, EDWARD L. Address: 48 Ralph Mann Drive, Stoughton, Massachusetts. SHEMIN, PAUL S. Address: 31 Ocean Parkway, Brooklyn, New York. SHIER, WILLIAM G. JR. SC.B. Engineering. Born: October 6, 1944. Prepared at St. Mary High School. Brown Engineering Society, American Saociety of Mechanical Engineers Treasurer, Inter-House Council, Newman Club. Address: 110 Halstead Avenue, Byram, Connecticut. SHUGRUE, GERALD E. A.B. History. Born: May 28, 1945. Prepared at Northbridge High School. Dean's List, Kappa Sigma Treasurer, Athletic Chairman, Lecture Chairman, Pre-Law Society, Kappa Sigma, Freshman Football. Address: 11 West Street, Whitensville, Massachusetts. SIEMS, WILLIAM F. IIl. Sc.B. Chemistry. Born: February 1, 1945. Prepared at Westminster School. Canticum, Bridge Club, Psi Omega Psi Treasurer, Crew, Cross Country, Track. Address: 2182 Spring Creek Road, Decatur, Georgia. SIMON, MORTON J. JR. Address: 8108 Cad- walader Road, Elkins Park, Pennsylvania. SKINNER, ROBERT R. A.B. Economics and Engineering. Born: November 19, 1965. Prepared at North Central High School. Inter- House Council, Brown Engineering Society, Institute of Electrical and Electronics En- gineers, Soccer, Intramurals. Address: 301 Kessler Boulevard West Drive, Indianapolis, Indiana. SKLAR, MARSHALL D. A.B. Biology-Chemistry Honors. Born: August 25, 1944, Prepared at Camden High School. Dean's List, Tower Club, Liber Brunensis, Freshman Class Album Editor-in-chief Course Analysis Bulletin Associate Editor, Archibald House President, Basketball Manager, Intramurals. Address: 2407 Baird Boulevard, Camden, New Jersey. SLOANE, HARRIS R. A.B. Biology. Born: May 16, 1944, Prepared at Thayer Academy. Marching Band Secretary, Sophomore Class Cabinet, Junior Class Publicity Committee, Dormitory Secretary-Treasurer, Tower Club. Address: 15 South Main Street, Randolph, Massachusetts. SMITH, ALEXANDER J. Address: 2562 Factory Pond Road, Mill Neck, New York. SMITH, JEFFERY A. A.B. Political Science. Born: August 1, 1944, Prepared at Huntington High School. Alfred PI Sloan Scholarship, Phi Kappa Psi President, Inter-Fraternity Council Vice President, Class Cabinet, Freshman Soccer, Intramurals. Address: 123 LaRue Drive, Huntington, New York. SMITH, PETER C. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: June 15, 1944. Prepared at Livingston High School. Tau Beta Pi Corresponding Secretary, Dean's List, Chapel Board Chairman, Lambda Sigma Nu Treasurer, Convocation Choir, Rugby Cap- tain. Address: 38 Bennington Road, Livingston, New Jersey. SMITH, RODGER S. A.B. English Literature. Born: January 14, 1945. Prepared at Mount Hermon Preparatory School. Sigma Chi, Ski Team Manager. Address: 8 Conrad Road, New Canaan, Con- necticut. SMITH, THOMAS H. Address: Becket, Massachusetts. SOHN, MERRILL G. A.B. Mathematics. Born: October 6, 1946. Prepared at Midwood High School. Dean's List, International Relations Club, Brown Chairman, French Club, Chess. Address: 754 East 23rd Street, Brooklyn, New York. G. E. SHUGRUE W. F. SIEMS, Il M. J. SIMON, JR. R. R. SKINNER M. D. SKLAR H. R. SLOANE J. A. SMITH P. C. SMITH R. S. SMITH M. G. SOHN J. F. SOJA D. P. SOMERS D. W. SOMMERFIELD R. W. SORENSON 262 R. T. SOUERS R. A. SPARKS D. S. SPENGLER J. A. STABB U DISTALEY R. A. STANFORD R. A. STEINWEG H. W. STENSON, JR. D. E. STEPNER M. D. STERN R. A. STEVENS W. M. ST. JOHN i A SOJA, JOHN F. A.B. American Civilization. Born: June 23, 1944. Prepared at Spring- field Classical Sr. High. Sophomore and Junior Class Councils, Brown Youth Guid- ance, Phi Gamma Delta, Soccer. Address: 1937 Wilbraham Road, Springfield, Massa- chusetts. SOMERS, DONALD P. A.B. Mathematics-Economics. Born: February 4, 1945. Prepared at Hellertown-Lower Saucon High School. Canticum Glee Club, Glee Club, Dormitory Chaplain. Address: R.D. 1, Hellertown, Pennsylvania. SOMMERFIELD, DONALD W. A.B. Mathematical Economics. Born: September 28, 1944. Prepared at Wheaton Central High School. Dean's List, Alpha Phi Omega President, Arnold Air Society, AFROTC Executive Officer, Brown Daily Herald Sports Assistant. Address: 1913 E. Indiana Street, Wheaton, Illinois. SORENSON, RICHARD W. A.B. American Literature. Born: June 12, 1944, Prepared at Kingswood Academy. Sophomore Class Cabinet, Delta Upsilon. Address: 100 Westmont, West Hartford, Connecticut. SOUERS, ROBERT T. A.B. American Literature. Born: September 13, 1943. Prepared at Teaneck High School. Liber Brunensis, Phi Gamma Delta Recording Secretary, Soccer. Ad- dress: 972 East Lawn Drive, Teaneck, New Jersey. SPARKS, RICHARD A. Sc.B. Biol- ogy. Born: September 9, 1944. Prepared at Tower Hill School. Francis Wayland Schol- ar, Dean's List. Address: 1901 Greenbrian Drive, Wilmington, Delaware. SPENCER, ARTHUR L. JR. A.B. Classics. Born: October 29, 1944. Prepared at Reading Memorial High. Inter-House Corresponding-Secretary, Classics Club, Brown Youth Guidance, Newman Club. Address: 483 Summer Avenue, Reading, Massachusetts. STABB, JOHN A. A.B. History. Born: September 2, 1944. Prepared at New Hyde Park High School. Dean's List, Phi Gamma Delta Treasurer, Canticum Glee Club, Brown Glee Club, University Christian Association, Inter-Fraternity Council, NROTC, Manning Chapel Choir, Brown Charities Drive, Rugby. Address: 126 Laurel Drive, New Hyde Park, Long Is- land, New York. STALEY, JACK D. Address: 414 Broadway Ave. West, Watertown, New York. STEIN, SAMUEL R. Address: 8205 165th Street, Jamaica, New York. STEINWEG, RODNEY A. A.B. International Relations. Born: June 18, 1944. Prepared at Ossining High School. Regents Scholarship, Faunce House Board of Governors, Sigma Nu. Ad- dress: 24 Underhill Road, Ossining, New York. STENSON, HARVEY W. JR. Address: 818 South Chester Avenue, Park Ridge, lllinois. STEPNER, DAVID E. SC.B. Engineer- ing. Born: October 22, 1944. Prepared at Valley Stream South High School. Dean's List, Francis Wayland Scholar, Tau Beta Pi Vice President, IEEE President, Brown Engineering Society, Liber Brunensis, Interhouse Council. Address: 209 Bixley Heath, Lynbrook, New York. STERN, MARK D. A.B. American Civilization Honors. Born: Sep- tember 7, 1945. Prepared at Horace Mann Preparatory School. Dean's List, College Scholar Program, Alpha Pi Lambda, Wrestling. Address: 133 Ritchie Drive, Yonkers, New York. STEVENS, ROBERT A. Address: Hartshorn Horse Farm, Greenwich, New York. STOLZENBERG, HOWARD N. A.B. Biology. Born: May 30, 1944. Prepared at Norwalk High School. Address: 18 Edith Lane, Norwalk, Connecticut. STRONG, LOUIS S. R. STEIN H. Sc.B. Physics. Born: October 25, 1944. Prepared at Cranston High School East. H. N. STOLZENBERG Yacht Club, Brown Daily Herald, International Relations Club. Address: 22 Brooks Street, Cranston, Rhode Island. SULLIVAN, DANIEL C. A.B. Biology Honors. Born: Jan- uary 17, 1945. Prepared at Cranston High School East. Brown Daily Herald Photog- raphy Editor, Pre-Med Society Secretary, President, Intramurals. Address: 10 Abbott Street, Cranston, Rhode Island. SULLIVAN, DENNIS B. A.B. Political Science. Born: November 19, 1944. Prepared at De La Salle Academy. Marcy House Social Chair- man, Bridge Club, Brunavians, Intramurals. Address: 6 Bliss Road, Newport, Rhode Island. SULLIVAN, WILLIAM D. A.B. Sociology. Born: June 8, 1944. Prepared at Bis- hop Thomas F. Hendricken High School. Dormitory President, Proctor, Freshman Wrestling, Intramurals. Address: 133 Audubon Road, Warwick, Rhode Island. SUTTER, PETER E. Address: 147 No. Brookside Avenue, Roosevelt, New York. TAFT, RONALD S. AB. International Relations Honors. Born: October 11, 1944. Prepared at Asbury Park High School. Dean's List, Samuel T. Arnold Scholarship, Class Council Junior Class Social Committee, Spring Weekend Committee, Intramurals, Rugby, Theta Delta Chi, Lippit Hill Tutoring Program, Pre-Law Society, Brown Tutor Program. Address: 102 Inlet Terrace, Belmar, New Jersey. L. H. STRONG D. C. SULLIVAN D. B. SULLIVAN W. D. SULLIVAN R. S. TAFT M. B. TARGOFF R. D. TARR J. C. TATMAN TARGOFF, MICHAEL B. Address: 29 Center Drive, Roslyn, New York. R. DONALD TARR. A.B. Economics. Born: July 11, 1944. Prepared at Penncrest High School. Brown Ke;', Sigma Nu, Basketball Captain. Address: Green Lane, Gradyville, Pennsylvania. TATMAN, JAMES C. A.B. English Literature. Born: May 24, 1944. Prepared at Hunter- don Central High School. Address: 165 West End Avenue, New York, New York. TAYLOR, DAVID ELLIS. A.B. Political Science. Born: May 24, 1944. Prepared at Ridge- wood High School. NROTC, Lambda Chi Alpha, Semper Fidelis Club, Basketball, Baseball. Address: 129 Prospect Street, Ridgewood, New Jersey. TAYLOR, LAWRENCE M., JR. Address: Dennisport, Massachusetts. TAYLOR, ROBERT G. Address: 3422 Vista Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. THERIEN, NORWELL F. JR. A.B. American Literature. Born: May 17, 1944. Prepared at La Salle Academy. Brown Youth Guid- ance, Tutorial Program Northern Student Movement, Delta Phi Vice President, Freshman Hockey. Address: 52 Melrose Street, Cranston, Rhode Island. THORBAHN, PETER F. Address: 132 Temple Street, North Abington, Massachusetts. THORSON, WILLIAM L. A.B. History. Born: July 31, 1944. Prepared at Memorial High School. Brown Youth Guidance, Outing Club. Address: 118 Bedford Street, Middleboro, Mas- sachusetts. TILDES, WILLIAM J. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: May 28, 1944. Prepared at Lower Merion Senior High School. Freshman Class Council, Zeta Psi, President, Secretary, Sergeant at Arms, Historian, Athletic and House Chairman, Bridge Club, Sailing, Yacht Club, Intramurals. Address: 1311 Grenox Road, Wynnewood, Pennsyl- vania. TOMENY, WILIAM F. A.B. History. Born: February 20, 1945. Prepared at North Syracuse Central High School. Alfred P. Sloan National Foundation Scholarship, Class Council, Spring Weekend Committee Recording Secretary and Rushing Chairman, Delta Phi, Intramurals. Address: 7562 Totman Road, East Syracuse, New York. TONACHEL, RICHARD W. A.B. English Literature. Born: December 6, 1940. Prepared at Curtis High School. Address: 118 Power Street, Providence, Rhode Island. TOOKER, STEPHEN M. A.B. American Literature. Born: August 23, 1944. Prepared at Sewanhaka High School. Dean's List, Bruinaires Director, Marching and Concert Band, Glee Club, University Chorale, Northern Student Movement. Address 472 Ellis Place, Wyckoff, New Jersey. TRAGAKIS, CHRISTIE J. A.B. Psychology. Born: April 12, 1944. Prepared at Norwood Senior High School. Sophomore Class Council, Inter-House Council, Brown Youth Guidance. Address: 27 McKinley Road, Norwood, Massachusetts. TRICE, HARLEY N. Il. Address: 540 Glen Arden Drive, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. TROPP, MARTIN. AB. English Literature. Born: July 10, 1945. Prepared at W. T. Clarke High Schoool. Dean's List, Brown Youth Guidance. Address: 42 Martin Lane, Westbury, New York. TUKEY, PAUL M. A.B. American Literature. Born: July 31, 1944. Prepared at Mt. Greylock Regional H.S. Dean's List, Francis Wayland Scholar, Phi Beta Kappa, Beta Theta Pi, Intramurals. Address: 430 Terhune Road, Princeton, New Jersey. TULP, JOHN S. Address: Blackpoint Road, Rumson, New Jersey. TYLER, DON- ALD C. A.B. Biology Honors. Born: June 19, 1944. Prepared at Haddonfield Memorial High School. Dean's List, Fund Drive Section Leader, Kappa Sigma Treasurer, Presi- dent, Yacht Club Secretary, Wrestling. Address: 325 Rhoads Avenue, Haddonfield, New Jersey. UNGER, HAROLD M. A.B. Economics. Born: July 7, 1944. Prepared at Woodmere Academy. Class Council, Publicity Committee of the Class of 1966, WBRU, Tower Club, Intramurals. Address: 151 Beach 137th Street, Belle Harbor, New York. VAN LOAN, JAN A. A.B. Art. Born: May 6, 1944. Prepared at Manchester High School West. Phi Kappa Psi, Track. Address: 62 Wallace Road, Bedford, New Hampshire. VAN VOORHIS, BRUCE G. Address: 2165 Post Road, Darien, Connecticut. VEINER, STEPHEN T. Address: 219 Fuller Street, West Newton, Massachusetts. VERNON, ROBERT B. Address: River Street, Norwell, Massachusetts. VITO, LOUIS, A.B. Biology. Born: June 29, 1945. Prepared at La Salle Academy. Newman Club, Pre-Med Society, Dorm Social Chairman, IHC Representative. Address: 44 Lyndhurst Avenue, Provi- dence, Rhode Island. WAKEFIELD, HUGH C. Address: 14 Woodland Avenue, Denville, New Jersey. M. TROPP P. M. TUKEY DA CERNIEER D. E. TAYLOR L. M. TAYLOR, JR. . J. TRAGAKIS S. TULP M. UNGER N. F. THERIEN, JR. W. L. THORSON W. J. TILDES W. F. TOMENY S. M. TOOKER H. N. TRICE, Il J. A. VAN LOAN B. G. VAN VOORHIS D. G. WALLACE R. B. WALLACE C. C. WAMSER D. M. WARNER T. T. WARNER J. H. WARTON, JR. R. P. WAXLER J. M. WEATHERBY S. F. WEBB R. M. WEBBER J. A. WEBER, JR. D. R. WEINLANDT WALLACE, DAVID G. A.B. Economics. Born: September 28, 1944. Prepared at Belmont Hill School. Canticum Glee Club, Brown University Glee Club, Class Cabinet, Zeta Psi President, Vice President, Treasurer. Address: 2 Dartmouth Street, Winchester, Mass- achusetts. WALLACE, ROGER B. A.B. Political Science. Born: February 10, 1944. Pre- pared at Norwood Senior High School. Freshman Basketball Manager. Address: 393 Walpole Street, Norwood, Massachusetts. WALSH, COURTNEY D. Address: 104 Van Mara Drive, North Syracuse, New York. WAMSER, CARL C. Sc.B. Chemistry Honors. Born: August 10, 1944. Prepared at Governor Livingston Regional High School. Francis Wayland Scholar, James James Manning Scholar, Charles Evans Hughes Scholarship, The Junior Prize in Chemistry. Address 393 Mountain Avenue, Berkeley Heights, New Jersey. WARFIELD, DONALD K. JR. Address: 336 Essex Road, Kenilworth lllinois. WARNER, DAVID M. A.B. American Civilization. Born: April 4, 1944. Prepared at Guilderland Central High School. Honors Program, Glee Club, Phi Kappa Psi. Address: 117 Prospect Terrace, Altamont, New York. WARNER, THOMAS T. A.B. Philosophy. Born: September 4, 1944. Prepared at Baker High School. Dean's List, Theta Delta Chi, Swimming, Track. Address: 22 Sunset Terrace, Baldwinsville, New York. WAR- TON, JOHN H. JR. Address: 1455 Stratford Road, Deerfield, Illinois. WAXLER, ROBERT P. Address: 190 Plymouth Street, New Bedford, Massachusetts. WEATHERBY, JOHN M. A.B. Political Science. Born: November 29, 1943. Prepared at Summit High, St. Bernards School. Delta Tau Delta, Secretary-at-Arms, Football, Intramurals. Address: 20 Sunset Drive, Summit, New Jersey. WEBB, SIDNEY F. Address: 1025 Highland Street, South Pasadena, California. WEBBER, RICHARD M. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: April 14, 1943. Prepared at Bedford High School. Brown Engineering Society, Phi Kappa Psi, Freshman Baseball. Address: 61 South Road, Bedford, Massachusetts. WEBER, JOHN A. JR. A.B. Political Science. Born: October 31, 1942. Prepared at Trinity-Pawling School. NROTC, Drill Team, Sigma Chi, Football, Lacrosse. Address: 82 Larch Road, Briarcliff Manor, New York. WEINLANDT, DREW R. A.B. English Litera- ture. Born: November 23, 1944. Prepared at De Witt Clinton High School. Dean's List, Liber Brunensis, Brown Youth Guidance. Address: 2927 Valentine Avenue, New York, New York. WEISMAN, BARRY LEWIS. A.B. English Literature. Born: September 3, 1944. Prepared at Worcester Academy. Brown Youth Academy. Brown Youth Guidance, Sock and Buskin, Phi Delta Beta Cultural Affairs and Social Chairman, Gold Cap- tain, Intramurals. Address: 10 Spring Valley Road, Worcester, Massachusetts. WELLS, FREDERIC D. A.B. Psychology. Born: April 18, 1944. Prepared at Frankfurt-American High School. Brown Glee Club, Yacht Club Vice-Commodore, Cheerleader, Sigma Chi. Address: 441 Timber Lane, Devon, Pennsylvania. WERNERSBACH, ROBERT A. A.B. History. Born: October 3, 1944. Prepared at Massapequa High School. Delta Tau Delta, Soccer, Freshman Lacrosse. Address: 361 Massapequa Avenue, Massapequa, New York. WESSELHOEFT, ROBERT IIl. Address: 22 Homestead Lane, Chatham, Massachusetts. WESTERLUND, KNUTE B. A.B. Sociology. Born: January 4, 1943. Pre- pared at Vermont Academy. Intramural Athletic Council, Delta Phi, Freshman Foot- ball. Address: 39 High Street Brattleboro Vermont. WESTFALL JOHN C. Address: 207 Genesee St., New York. WETTERHOLT, DAVID G. A.B. American Civilization. Born: September 20, 1944. Prepared at Friends' Central School. Dean's List, Canticum Glee Club, Glee Club, University Chorale, Sigma Chi Chapter Editor. Address: 21 Llanfair Lane, Trenton, New Jersey. WHISNAND, VAN A. A.B. American Literature. Born: Jan- uary 26, 1944. Prepared at Thayer Academy. Dean's List, Beta Theta Pi President, Rushing Chairman, Freshman Hockey, Undergraduate Activities Board, Inter Fraternity Council. Address: 374 Atlantic Avenue, Cohasset, Massachusetts. WHITCHER, DONALD K. A.B. Anthropology. Born: April 8, 1944. Prepared at Hendricken High School. Way- land House Vice President, Freshman Wrestling, First Place Intramural Wrestling Tournament, Intramurals. Address: 43 Lakecrest Drive, Warwick, Rhode Island. 267 B. L. WEISMAN F. D. WELLS R. A. WERNERSBACH K. B. WESTERLUND J. C. WESTFALL D. G. WETTERHOLT V. A. WHISNAND D. K. WHITCHER A. F. WHITE G. I. WHITE D. E. WILBUR R. C. WILCOX G. M. WILCOX H. B. WILLIAMS 268 R. T. WILSON WHITE, ALAN F. A.B. Psychology. Born: May 13, 1944. Prepared at Bronxville High School. Sigma Chi, Cheerleader. Address: 1 Wellyn Close, Bronxville, New York. WHITE, GERALD I. A.B. Mathematical Economics Honors. Born: November 16, 1945. Prepared at Bronx High School of Science. Dean's List, Brown Daily Herald Advertis- ing Manager, Business Manager, Brown Youth Guidance. Address: 251 Seaman Ave- nue, New York, New York. WILBUR, DAVID EDMUND. A.B. Chemistry. Born: September 28, 1944. Prepared at Stevens High School. NROTC Rifle Team Secretary, Captain Brunavians, Yacht Club, Phi Delta Theta Librarian, Chorister, Publications, Intra- murals. Address: 126 Maple Avenue, Claremont, New Hampshire. WILCOX, GILBERT M. Sc.B. Physics. Born: August 13, 1944. Prepared at Mount Hermon School. Dean's List, U.C.A.,, Northern Student Movement Tutoring, Student Peace Union. Address: 140 Main Street, Terryville, Connecticut. WILCOX, RICHARD C. Sc.B. Physics Honors Born: August 31, 1944. Prepared at Binghamton North High School. Dean's List, N.S.F. Summer Research Grant. Address: 8 Mercereau Street, Binghamton, New York. WILLIAMS, STEPHEN C. Address: 5867 Dogwood Drive, Orlando, Florida. WILSON, RONALD T. AB. History. Born: November 12, 1941. Prepared at Boca Ciega High School. Brown Youth Guidance. Address: 5256 2nd Avenue South, St. Petersburg, Florida. WISE, JOHN T. Address: Mustato Road, Katonah, New York. WOODRUFF, STEPHEN M. A.B. Human Biology. Born: July 22, 1944. Prepared at Abraham Lincoln High School. Pre-Med Society, Bridge Club, Soccer, Intramurals. Address: 1254 Cox Road, Rydal, Pennsylvania. WOODS, LAWRENCE J. Ill. Address: 56 Ward Street, North Brookfield, Massachusetts. WOODSON, DWIGHT A. A.B. History. Born: June 23, 1944. Prepared at Tenafly, New Jersey. Sophomore Class Council, Junior Class Coordinating Committee, Phi Delta Beta Community Service Chairman, House Manager, Scholastic Chairman, Alumni Secretary, Intramurals. Address: 75 Serpentine Road, Tenafly, New Jersey. WOODWARD, RICHARD F. Address: 74 Barcliff Avenue, Chatham, Massachusetts. WYLER, DAVID J. Address: 36 Franklin Road, Scarsdale, New York. YNTEMA, THEO- DORE 0., JR. A.B. Sociology. Born: April 10, 1944, Prepared at Cranbrook School. Sigma Chi Kustos, Intramurals. Address: 3950 Franklin Road, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. YOUNG, MICHAEL T. A.B. International Relations. Born: December 28, 1944. Prepared at Classical High School. Inter-Fraternity Council Treasurer, Cammarian Club, Sigma Chi Vice President, Alumni Chairman, Latin American Project Participant, Admission Office Guide, Executive Board, Brown Charities. Address: 30 Woodland Street, Hart- ford, Connecticut. ZAMORE, JOSEPH D. A.B. Political Science Honors. Born: May 20, 1944. Prepared at Polytechnic Preparatory Country Day School. Dean's List, Honors Program, Course Analysis Bulletin Editor-in-Chief, Tower Club Social Chairman, Constitutional Revision Chairman, Glee Club, Hillel Executive Board Member-at- Large, Brown Daily Herald News Director, WBRU, Young Democrats Debate Chair- man, Class Council, Dorm President, Tennis Manager, Intramurals. Address: 1102 East 26th Street, Brooklyn, New York. ZERNGAST, TERRY J. Address: 622 North Fifth Street, Ottumwa, lowa. ZIFCAK, MICHAEL J. Address: QM Section HQS V Corps, APO 79, New York, New York. ZIMMER, JERRY A. A.B. Economics. Born: May 5, 1944. Prepared at Vestal Senior High School. Brunavians, Semper Fidelis Society, Delta Tau Delta, Football, Lacrosse, Intramurals. Address: Nanticoke Road, Maine, New York. ZWARG, STEPHEN M. AB. and Sc.B. Electrical Engineering. Born: June 13, 1945. Prepared at Haddonfield High School. Dean's List, Theta Delta Chi, Yacht Club, Foot- ball, Wrestling. Address: 215 Mountwell Avenue, Haddonfield, New Jersey. S. M. WOODRUFF L. J. WOODS, III D. A. WOODSON R. F. WOODWARD N. B. WOODWORTH D. J. WYLER T. O. YNTEMA, JR. M. T. YOUNG J. D. ZAMORE T. J. ZERNGAST J. A. ZIMMER S. M. ZWARG T Z d M 1 O z aa M M O C FINALLY it has come: the end. There is no more. Four years, maybe three, sometimes six-no matter how long it took, this 1is June, the campus is green, everyone is dressed in black, and we are graduating. The ceremony is traditionally called commencement from the British, who use the word to designate a university cere- mony at which degrees are awarded. Is A.B. sufficient? Does Sc.B. say enough? Ultimately, it depends on one's sense of values, on what Brown has meant to each of us, on time spent and time wasted, on experience and knowledge and the sense of having lived. We gain a piece of sheepskin and a titlebachelorthis first Monday in June; but something far less tangible is lost. Those few days before the ceremony, we seniors remain on campus-exams finished, the rest of the students gone, the alumni coming back. It is time to pick up the pieces and put the whole thing together. There is the campus dance on the college green, our last and probably most memorable social affair. Hours seem like moments, and four years are condensed in our minds to fleet- ing memories of words and images. Sundaythe Baccalaureate and the University is getting ready to close shop. In the Baptist Church, together with our classmates, we become aware of the history and tradition of which each man is now an integral part. Almost two hundred classes have passed before; how many will sit in these pews in the centuries to come? Monday dawns, sun shining, people smiling. Robes are donned, tassels adjusted. The line forms in the traditional order. Men wearing beefeater hats cause the eye to linger a moment: Corpora- tion members, the dedicated men who run this place, and their President, Dr. Keeney. The procession moves through Van Wickle Gateswe walked in as freshmen, today we slowly march outby the Rock, the Hay, the colonial houses, to the First Baptist Meeting House. Later on the green, we take our seats, and President Keeney takes the chair formerly occupied by all eleven of his predecessors. University Hall looks down kindly on the huge gathering. We see Faunce House, and Sayles oh, convocations!, Hope and Slater, and the John Carter Brown library we never set foot in. Up, stand up, our names are to be entered on the list; we join a succession of men. For some of us, the degree is the consummation. For most it is only a milestone in an education which has just really begun: a beginning and yet, very definitely, an end. We look at each other and at ourselves, and we feel a little bit older, perhaps wiser too. The years at Brown have been good to us and we feel reluctant to depart. 271 advertisers Artist's sketch of proposed Medical Science Building LANS WAREHOUSE COMPANY at Wayland Square Complete Moving Service Modern Storage QOur 61st Year HILLSIDE MOTOR LODGE ROUTES 2 AND 3 2 Miles from Providence 101 NEW LONDON AVENUE CRANSTON 10, R. I. Established 1836 PHILLIPS LEAD SUPPLY CO. Wholesalers of Plumbing and Heating Supplies 231 South Main Street Providence 3, R. L. RHODE ISLAND BUS CORPORATION Serving Brown University for all Activities 375 Promenade Street Providence, Rhode Island 861-5000 The Editors' Notebook is a compilation of some of the facts, incidents, anecdotes, rumors and legends which have warped the consciousnesses of Liber copywriters during the four- year stay of the Class of 1966. 1t is intended to complement the more literal coverage of Brown's year given in the bulk of this volume with a few of the bizarre, some of the humor- ous, and many of the typical happenings that constitute life at Brown. The editors sincerely hope that the following will be found comprehensible if not amusing, and interesting if not fully comprehensible. Sharpe Refectory is a focal point of student life for three, if not four years of most undergraduates college careers. Dozens of seniors, unable to break old ties, allow the refectory to supply their off-campus abodes with free milk, butter, desserts, napkins, silverware, glasses, and china. One enterprising group is reported to have even borrowed furniture: functioning with precision teamwork, they disassembled a table and removed it from the prem- ises as soon as the waiter had finished clearing it. 2T Two major revisions took place in the refectory this year: the addition of cool-aid dispensers and new names for the food. One day's fare included citrus salad, chicken risotto, buttered julienne beets, and pot roast of beef jardiniere. Brown's dining hall system has come quite a way from the days of Feeneyburgers and trainwreck. Minor revisions in the refectory included the admission of Pembrokers with cast-iron stomachs and the complete elimination of long lines at the cafeteria dinners which commenced three weeks prior to the start of any three day vacation. -Spring of 1965 saw Barnaby Keeney directing traffic for skateboarders on the University Course, a treacherous run along the sidewalks in front of U.H. Despite all the hue and cry about subversive activity earlier in the year, the SDS succeeded in infiltrating the SGA early in March. We wonder how many graduates have ever been re- united with the mysterious $15 student deposit which must be paid before admission. Bms'l Cnt BT VeIt RESIGN POSTS: SCHWARZ DESIGNATED hDITOR-IN-CHlEF Brown Charities The Brown Charitics Drive nreds helpe An informal dinne il take thos ue howev md previously hoen printed middle of Dec and mo hoax issue had been in on an issue currently un- verage m:hnundy. nad 1o x's issie were the subile hint on the fact that people who v wmwm fricnds and others that the i issue could not be Carl R Dan Bcn.bfxrmsxde of the Student n, Was one of those who early roc- the issue and posted signs to that e P ng t the issue w uuhuxwu texd on the vrollhmeh-h-m.w. Best Wishes Class of 66 DIMEO CONSTRUCTION COMPANY MANCHESTER and HUDSON CO. 300 STATION STREET CRANSTON, R. I. HO 7-8815 218 GASBARRO'S THE INTERNATIONAL WINE STORE CARRYING A FINE LINE OF IMPORTED DOMESTIC BEERS, LIQUORS WINES Visit Us Browse around with delight FREE DELIVERY - call 481 Atwells Ave Providence, R. I 421-41 70 GASBARRO'S LIQUOR STORE G. H. WALKER CO. Members of the New York Stock Exchange 840 HOSPITAL TRUST BUILDING UN 14000 In the first meeting of History 163 last fall, Forrest Mc- Donald lectured on the whorehouses of Trinidad; for the occasion, he wore bermudas and a T-shirt. One full professor of philosophy announced one after- noon in lecture that Milton was a master of the miltonic line. The first BDH April fool issue missed April 1st by several months, this year, and a hard-working, well-intentioned Herald board bit the dust. Almost everyone turns in a paper late at least once in his four years; some do it quite frequently. One 1964 graduate procrastinated all year long on his independent study proj- ect; hadn't even started in June; and somehow convinced his project supervisor to give him a provisional grade, based on his promise to finish up over the summer. The passing grade granted, he waltzed down college hill with his diploma, never to be heard from again. Not everyone can truthfully say he has actually seen the moat-mole . . . those of us who have not might well rank him among such mythical figures as the tooth fairy and the Great Pumpkin. CLASS OF 1966 EACH TIME THAT YOU LOOK AT THIS PAGE REMEMBER THAT YOUR YEARLY CONTRIBUTIONS ARE ESSENTIAL TO THE SUCCESS OF OUR 25th REUNION FUND., FOR THE GOOD OF BROWN SUPPORT OUR CLASS GIFT Telephone HOpkins 7-8818 A.C. BEALS COMPANY, INC. BUILDERS 155 HAREH S5 HEERET ERCNVIDENCE D K A. C. Beals, Pres. and Treas. MAnning 1.9239 MAnning 1.7280 SMITH'S RESTAURANT Italian-American Cuisine 391 ATWELLS AVENUE PROVIDENCE 9, R. I. NARRAGANSETT LUMBER CO. Hardwoods - Softwoods Maple Flooring 8? 950 IEEFERSON BI VD WARWICK RE 94000 THE BROWN UNIVERSITY DINING HALLS e the ivy room the coffee lounge o caterer to fraternities o caterer to dormitories Management Leasing Sales L NASSOIT-SULZBERGER Company, Inc. 654 MADISON AVE., NEW YORK 21, N.Y. TEmpleton 8-2000 lhere is no substitute for successful experience Serving Investors for over 60 Years Many of us remember the riot of Spring, 1963, which occurred because it was too damn hot. The riot delayed the revision of parietal rules for two and a half years-but if the extent of revision could have been known then, Brown students might have gone ahead and rioted the next night, too. New parietal hours were almost voted down by the members of several housing units, because they feared new methods of implementing the rule liberalization which might cut down the number of effective girl hours. The new parietals occasioned many feats of engineering skill . . . one Hegeman resident entertained a female guest with his door open the required slitbut he then braced his closet door against the room door and wedged a foot locker between the closet door and jamb, so that noth- ing short of a bulldozer could open his door more than a quarter-inch from the outside. One dean suggested that the ultimate solution to parie- tal problems would be the installation of glass doors on all student rooms. OUTLET THE OUTLET COMPANY OF RHODE ISLAND Providence + Garden City + Pawtucket GE 4-0551 HOMESTEAD BAKING CO. Quality Bakers Specializing in Bread and Rolls 145 N. BROADWAY EAST PROVIDENCE Compliments of Launderers Cleaners NEWPORT, R.I. BROWN UNIVERSITY PRINTING SERVICES THE CABINET 68 Waterman Street a great store in a great city CITY HALL STORE Welcomes you to shop both its main and annex stores in downtown Providence Hagiare, THE SHEPARD COMPANY Salutes The Class of 1966 After years of crusading, the IFC finally succeeded in abolishing the last traces of dirty rushing, verbal bidding, hazing, and pledge trips. Yet we know of several sopho- more fraternity affiliates who took weekend trips to Pitts- burgh, Montreal, or similar places of interest. The upper- classmen who proposed the journeys also proposed that they take them sans cars, sans driver's licenses, and sans moneybut most of the travelers somehow left with $20 bills wrapped in cellophane and pushed into toothpaste tubes, sewn inside belts, or sent ahead to friends along the major routes out of southern New England. Inter-fraternity competition is not limited to the intra- mural athletic fields. Two yearly contests of note are the Patriots Court pledge relay race one keg of beer as the prize and the Zeta Psi-Theta Delta Chi snowball fight one point per window-although Zete has disclaimed all willingness to participate in the latter event in recent years. Hughes Court hosts an occasional softball-hitting contest, with windows again as target, point, and prize. Sigma Chi altered its campus image drastically by local- izing and changing the house name to Swyndlestock. Sev- eral Lambda Chi's agreed that Swyndlestock did indeed carry several novel connotations for them-the primary new image being one of a domestic bird making gobbling noises. 281 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. OUR CONGRATULATIONS ON YOUR GRADUATION FROM BROWN'S FAVORITE IMPORTED CAR DEALER BITA PUAME o Avivw wnwil SZEKONK, MASS. THE AUTO SHOW 1241 FALL RIVER AVENUE SEEKONK, MASSACHUSETTS AUTHORIZED DEAILERS FOR TRIUMPH, SUNBEAM, RENAULT, VOILVO AND GRIFFITH SALES SERVICE PARTS - BODY SHOP 283 Most Brown men are familiar with conditions in the West Quad; therefore few people were surprised when a phantom Archibald resident tried to burn the Quad down on five different occasions last year. Equally as spectacular was the West Quad dweller who, shorting out, began taking pot shots out his window with a BB gun at the Dean of Men's Residences. He panicked when the target headed for the dorm entrance, and started downstairs with the gun still in hand. He and the dean met halfway up the stairs . . . case dismissed. Each spring, members of the West Quad Outing Club camp out on the grounds of the Rhode Island Historical Society on Charlesfield Street . . . a notice by Dean Ro- man discouraging such activity was generally disregarded. During the first semester reading period, the members of Harkness House built a beautiful snow sculpture complete with knuckles, fingernails, etc.and dedicated it to the Ratty. E. P. ANTHONY INC. Apothecary Shop ANGELL and THAYER STREETS Since 1895 Cife. 225 Tild im0 William H. Thurber WAYLAND SQUARE Sl GARDEN CITY NEWPORT WATCH HILL LLOYDR'S 17 king size sandwiches 119 WATERMAN STREET Corner of Brook TE 1-9242 ALLEN'S TOWEL a LINEN SUPPLY INC. Since 1906 Complete Towel and Linen Service 40 Amold Street Providence 6, Rhode Island GA 1-6026 Now In Our 15th Year! FAMOUS NAME MENS SHOES . . . For Business Dress Sport The BEST for LESS DExter 1-3541 136 Westminster St. Providence, R.I. EVERY DAY MORE FAMILIES HEAT WITH GAS PROVIDENCE GAS COMPANY 284 MS, INC. Gifts For All Occasions 278 THAYER STREET ek Mark Bawvid L1, CLOTHIER HABERDASHER 217 THAYER STREET FOUR FAMOUS ROOMS FOR DINING HUMMD CKS SEAFOOD Rostanrant 245 Allens Ave. Prov.461-6000 JUST THE PLACE FOR SEA FOOD-+ STEAKS A SIXTY YEAR TRADITION WITH BROWN MEN Visitors to the campus are often awed by the one-armed, ancient-looking statue of Augustus Caesar at the base of Hughes Court. Not even all undergraduates realize that Caesar lost his arm when an over-excited student used it as a swing, a few weeks after the statue's installation in the early fifties. We know of an English major who was more interested in finding an outlet for his creative ability than in showing his classics professor his knowledge of ancient history. Thus, he fabricated an entire term paper, with non- existent historical figures, contrived incidents, and a bibli- ography consisting of some twenty bogus books. The ver- dict: A; the comment: excellent reference work. Faunce House theater still amazes us . . . how many places can you see the world's best movies for 35 cents, and the world's best cartoons Road-Runners, of course abso- lutely free? Hockey ticket lines were ridiculous . . . one started on the fourth floor of the east wing of Faunce House, wound down four flights of stairs to the basement, crossed the basement ramp to the west wing, then went back up the 285 Pitman Street Providence, Rhode Island 02906 JAckson 1-6000 Tel. 421-6293 FRONTIER STORE Riding and Ranch Wear Square Dance Apparel 90 WEYBOSSET STREET PROVIDENCE 3, R.I. Compliments of UNITED CAMERA, INC. 297 ELMWOOD AVE. 467-5600 THE BROWN UNIVERSITY STORE THE PEMBROKE BOOKSTORE To the Class of 1966: We have appreciated your patronage during the past four years, and hope to see you whenever you are back on campus. BROWN AND PEMBROKE MEET HERE FOR THE BEST CHINESE AND AMERICAN FOOD TOY SUN 258 THAYER STREET NEW ENGLAND TENNIS CAMP Cheshire, Connecticut Boys and Girls, 12 to 16 yearsold stairs and ended at the student activities office door. We know of one unscrupulous fan who butted in line at five o'clockin front of a friend who had butted in line at 4:30-and drew number 91 when distribution began shortly before 7:00. Some of us remember the Brown Jug . . . its good food, friendly service, and fragrant aroma . . . but the old order changeth, and all this has been replaced by over-priced Momism. Providence offers a wide range of interesting night spots to the college student. The P.A. was a favorite in past years, but seems to have lost pre-eminence . . . for those who are culturally inclined, the F.E.I. and the Valley Cafe sponsor music and dance exhibitions . . . but now, as in the past, no favorite establishment outranks Brown's own Crystal Tap. Television rooms all over campus were packed for the premiere of Batman . .. but before the Batman cult had reached its peak, the new WTEV offering had cap- tured an audience of its own: Goodnight with Athena. 288 IMPORTANT LOCATIONS in PROVIDENCE Chamber of Commerce - 10 DORRANCE STREET For Industrial Information Rhode Island Bar Association - 17 EXCHANGE ST. For an Instant Lawyer Better Business Bureau 248 WEYBOSSET STREET For advice on Ethics Printers Service 8 Supply, Inc. - 231 Douglas Avenue For Sharp Camera Proofs and Type 4 SERVICES UNDER ONE ROOF T EAST SIDE JEWELERS Fine Watch and Clock Repairing All Work Guaranteed For One Year Watches Clocks Lighters Jewelry Leather Goods Watchbands and Giftware Brown Seal Charms, Jewelry 8 Pewter Mugs 219 Thayer St. at Waterman GA 1-2545 FAR EAST GIFT SHOP 183 Angell Street Providence Covers for 1966 LIBER BRUNENSIS By KINGSCRAFT KINGSPORT PRESS, INC. Kingsport, Tennessee The Blue Room extended itself this year, becoming the Blue Room a Go-Go Monday through Thursday evenings from 8:30 to 10:30. Hope College, perennially tops in academic standing among the independent dormitories, finally dropped from the number one spot for the first time in recent years. Perhaps the special version of the new parietals practiced in Slater was indirectly responsible for the fall. In the spring of 1965, elm blight claimed the ancient, stately tree in front of Sayles Hall . . . and there are those of us who miss it. Mr. Jonah, knowing well that students referred to the John Hay Library only as the Hay, was terribly worried that his new John D. Rockefeller Library would be nick- named the John. He was spared . . . possibly because students realized the semantic problems such a name would create. Some Brown men were surprised at U.H.'s liberality when they saw the Lady Godiva type advertisements for the new Honda-using a Pembroker as model-which ap- peared in the BDH. They should have seen the other pic- HWRES 5 o o Compliments of CARLING ELECTRIC, INCORPORATED West Hartford, Connecticut ASW sonar system for U.S. navy nuclear attack submarines The Most Comprehensive Detection System Ever Devised For An Underwater Vessel. - Raytheon ASW Sonar Systems play vital roles in today's nuclear attack submarines. The Raytheon Doppler Navigator and Pre-p cision Fathometer Recorder make important contributions to commercial navigation. Communication Systems Radar Systems Missile Systems Countermeasures Systems Reconnaissance Systems Sonar Microwave and Power Tubes Telecommunication Systems Data Processing Equipment Marine Navigational Equipment Industrial Equipment Radarange Electronic- Ovens Receiving Tubes Semiconductors Mechanical and Electromechanical Components Citizens Band Radios. Radarange is Raytheon's registered trademark for its microwave oven. 291 Who knows what the grey Buick Riviera with Rhode Island license plate number 50 was doing parked on the grass in front of University Hall three or four mornings a month? In the space of a few weeks this spring, many upperclass- men discovered that the University was an excellent source of short-term credit. We wonder if the Financial Aid office knows it helped purchase a few new motorcycles, sponsored a few Easter trips to Florida, and the like. The bizarre pet craze had its repercussions at Brown . we know of one maid who fainted when she discov- ered a boa constrictor in the bed she was making, and one janitor who let out a healthy scream at his first encounter with an iguana. One particular snake had an unfortunate historyits owner was dissatisfied because he had to sleep with it to keep it sufficiently warm, so he sold it to a Pembroker . . . someone with great dismay discovered the snake crawling loose on the floor of the girl's room, and she was suspended for two weeks for violating the anti- pet rule . . . the next Brown man to inherit the snake popped a mouse into its cage, and was bitten for his efforts . . we don't know where it is now, but if we see a boa for sale we think we'll pass it up. 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 heating. 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 Furnishers Clothiers Importers Providence HARVEY LAPIDES '46 S Lels PHILIP LAPIDES '50 ED DREW ORCHESTRAS fiE T SRR OF o 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 Itd 135 THAYER STREET i DISTINCTIVE MEN'S APPAREL Some people seem to think that rules like the no-drink- ing-at-athleticevents statute are made to be circumvented. For one football game during the Halloween season, three Brown men bought a pumpkin and hollowed it out for the purpose of smuggling in liquor. The bottle was too big, however, and it stuck out through the top . . . undaunted, one of the conspirators carried it up to the gate anyway he was immediately apprehended, and the guard thought it such a novelty that he called all the other spot- ters over to look at it . . . and while they looked, the other two Brown men walked right in the unguarded entrances with a bottle in each hand. We went all the way to Southeast Asia with LBJ, and every healthy student asked himself the question, Does Uncle Sam want me?' Brown men studied harder, applied to more grad schools, took fewer sabbatical leaves, and didn't bother Mrs. Brothers as much as in recent years. Professors were generally more lenient; the all-college aver- age was the highest in years; and corporations offered fewer jobs to potential 1-A's. Some fraternities worried about the magic fifty clause of the University Housing Report. We know of one house that, at the behest of its national organization, demanded BEST WISHES 1 HE CLASS OF 1966 FROM THE MERIN STUDIOS, INCORPORATED OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHERS TO THE 1966 LIBER BRUNENSIS All Portraits Appearing in this Publication have been placed on File in our Studio and can be duplicated at any time. Write or Phone Us For Information WAInut 3-0146 1010 Chestnut Street 3-0147 Philadelphia, Pa. 19107 295 the WAYLAND MANOR HOTEL Restaurant and Cocktail Lounge 500 ANGELL STREET AT WAYLAND SQUARE that each member sign a solemn pledge saying he would remain a residential member throughout his undergradu- ate career. A month or so thereafter, the president of the house moved off campus. George Lincoln Rockwell sent a letter to the Alumni Monthly, and we didn't know whether to laugh or cry. Some excerpts: . . . my own University treats me like a colored step-child . . . I believe the reason for this is the capture of a grand old New England college by Jewish and communistic radicals who are turning our kids into arro- gant, ignorant, hellraising peacecreeps . Thats ush He also complains that no one has asked him to speak at Brown . . . perhaps F.H.B.G. could book him on a triple bill, squeezing him in between the return of the Fair Play for Cuba campaign and the advent of the V.C. Blood Do- nation Drive. Shortly before the Herald exam sermon, the last instance of cheating occurred at Brown: a student in a classics course went to the lavatory some fifteen minutes after an hour exam had commenced, took a comfortable seat, and flushed several hundred sheets of tissue paper down the john before coming to the neatly folded fact sheets that had been inserted in the dispenser the evening before. Builders of the Barus-Holley Physics-Engineering Building E. TURGEON CONSTRUCTION CO., INC. 32 Custom House Street Providence, R.l. 296 Many of us will long remember the infamous day when the Cafe Michel-known to regulars as Mike's Diner broke loose from its moorings, rolled a few yards, and col- lapsed. With the exception of a few purists, we lowered our standards and took our after-hours business to the Haven Bros. Traying down college hill on borrowed refectory trays seems to be a dying phenomenon, but a new sport arose this year: the two-man stairway bobsled. Someone discov- ered that a trash can, laid on its side with its pyramid nose pointed downward, will carry two men down a flight of stairs in one to two seconds. At last report, several enthusi- astic sledders were reportedly trying to bank the corners of landings to get a two-flight run. Providence police are often lax in their attempts to col- lect on $1.00 overnight parking tickets; many of the Brown men who drive out-of-state cars arc aware of this; and some build up formidable collections of unpaid tickets over the months. The father of one such student, driving innocently through Providence on a business trip over the summer, was dragged into court to pay for the thirty-odd tickets his son had accumulated over the school year. The father was unhappy; the son, eventually, unhappier. COLLEGE LAUNDERERS and CLEANSERS, Inc. 223-A THAYER STREET BELLE LESTER Where the smile is only surpassed by the service. PROVIDENCE PAPER COMPANY ESTABLISHED 1885 160 DORRANCE STREET PROVIDENCE 1, RHODE ISLAND POST OFFICE BOX 819 Industrial Papers Printing Papers Office Equipment and Supplies 298 of PROVIDENCE Tailored to the college crowd with the RIGHT LOOK at the RIGHT PRICE! Open a Peerless Charge Account Pay Y5 Monthly for 3 months without a Service Charge PROVIDENCE ASHBY DEAN LTD. GIFTS and CARDS 289 THAYER STREET DE 1-9092 CThe pportunity QJle;ty The Parker Pen Company has intro- duced the world to a new line of writ- ing instruments. These do not feature just another style or color but are a unique series of ball pens and fountain pens made of sterling silver, gold-fill or vermeil. The pens bear the name, Parker 75. The high degree of quality and work- manship present in each Parker 75 is reflected in the pricing of these new models. The new luxury ball pen line begins at $12.50 while the fountain pens are priced from $25 to $50. Parker alone is positioned to satisfy the world market's growing desire for maximum quality. We are acting ac- cordingly, and meeting with success. THE PARKER PEN COMPANY MAKER OF THE WORLD'S MOST WANTED PENS Headquarters in the East for Foreign Sports Cars JAGUAR VOLKSWAGEN PORSHE ALFA-ROMEO LANCIA TRIUMPH FIAT Sales and Service Coreign Cars L. f Rhode dsland CORNER OF PINE 8 BROAD STS. PROVIDENCE, R. I. PHOTOGRAPHY Joseph M. Parsons, '68 Bruce A. McIntosh, 67 Ken Burrows, 62 Thomas S. Johnson, 67 Lyle S. Fain, 67 Thomas T. Ebbers, '67 Eugene G. Mattison, '69 James A. Ackroyd, '67 Eric F. Yaffe, '68 Stuart F. Crump, '67 John C. Nelson, '67 LITERARY Michael J. Williams, '65 Jon C. Keates, '66 Stephen A. Schwarz, '66 Glenn Stokes, 67 Ramiro J. Medina, '67 Mark B. Lefkowitz, '67 Andrew M. Razin, '67 Michael A. DiLorenzo, '69 Ronald F. Gaines, '69 Elliot M. Perlman, '69 Jeffrey A. Kelman, '69 Thomas A. Stewart, '69 Martin W. Feller, '69 BUSINESS John F. Kelsey, '69 Peter S. Voss, '68 William G. O'Donnell, '67 Thomas N. Herzog, '68 Frank C. Langworth, '67 Gerald E. Pierson, 67 Stephen P. Terni, '69 Kenneth R. Clegg, '67 Alan C. Levine, '67 Paul H. Ellenbogen, '69 Russell A. Ekeblad, '68 Alan M. Morris, '67 John H. Gardner, 69 Steven H. Spayd, '67 John G. Walsh, 69 David B. Sutter, '69 LAYOUd John S. Garcia, 68 Ronald F. Gaines, '69 Jonathan C. Ahearn, '69 Steven J. Wallace, '69 PEMBROKE SALES Mary Wylie, 67 Elizabeth Shipman, '69 Jane Perry, '69 Caryl Carpenter, '68 Terry Peake, '67 Rebecca Higier, '69 Catherine Walker, '69 Marguerite Hartley, '68 SPECIAL PUBLICATIONS 1969 Bear Facts: Kris Parnicky, '68 1969 Class Album: Eric F. Yaffe, '68 Rushing 1966: Glen A. Ramsay, '65 ABOUT THE BOOK This book was printed in offset lithography on Wm. J. Keller's 80-1b. Patrician paper stock, with the exception of the Literary Anthology section, which appears on a 70-1b. white Tweedweave manufactured by Curtis Paper Co. Typeface for the bulk of the body copy is 10 pt. Baskerville; the senior section is 6 pt. News Gothic; the headings are 24 pt. Times Roman, the lead-ins are 10 pt. Baskerville bold caps; and the innocuous page numbers are 24 pt. Melior. Covers were manufac- tured by Kingsport Press of Kingsport, Tennessee, using their Black Roxite Record Buckram material; senior photographs were by Merin Studios of Philadelphia. Less technically speaking, the book was printed in ink, on paper, by Wm. J. Keller Inc. of Buffalo, New York. The cameras used in procuring the 1,000-odd photographs in this volume included a Bronica, a Hasselblad, and two Rolleiflexes in the 214 square format, and no less than ten 35 mm cameras-including: a Beseler Topcon, a Petriflex VII, a Honeywell Pentax, a Leica, a Minolta, an Olympus, and a Nikon F courtesy William Meister, '68. Electronic flashes were provided by a Meteor Ultrablitz, an FR unit, and three Heiland Strobonars. Films used were almost exclusively Kodak Plus-X and Tri-X; they were developed in gallons of Microdol- X, Diafine, and Acufine; and almost all prints were made on Koda- bromide enlarging papers. LIBER BRUNENSIS Lawrence E. Beeson, '66 Editor Clarke E. Cochran, '67 Managing Editor Jay R. Baer, '66 Business Manager Glen A. Ramsay, '65 Senior Editor S. Hayden Anderson, '67 Associate Editor Bruce Noble, '67 Copy Editor Thomas L. Earp, '68 and Ira W. Cotton, '67 Photography Editors Grant R. Miller, '68 Layout Editor Steven M. Sumberg, '67 Sales Manager Karen Robinson, '67 Pembroke Sales Manager Bruce A. Goody, '65 Production Manager Jeffrey A. Jones, '68 Advertising Manager Bruce A. MclIntosh, '67 Cover Artist ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The editors would like to extend their thanks to the following people: Mr. William A. Surprenant, Director of Faunce House Mrs. Winifred Sampson Mr. Roswell Farnham, Jr., Wm. J. Keller Inc. Mr. James C. Sams, Kingsport Press, Inc. Mrs. Emma Costa Mrs. Vincella Picerno Mr. David Zucconi Mr. Daniel W. Earle, Director of Development The Secretary's Office, the Recorder's Office, the Admission Office, the Brown Station of the U.S. Post Office, and the Faculty Mail Room Mr. Philip A. Helgerson, for his efforts INDEX Administration Advertisements AFROTC Alpha Delta Phi Alpha Phi Omega ... Alpha Pi Lambda Arnold Air Society Band e S Baseball . Basketball . Beta Theta Pi . Brass Chorale Bridge Club Bronson House Brown Charities Drive Brown Daily Herald Brown Key . sl Brown Youth Guidance . Bruinaires Cammarian Club Chamber Soloists Cheerleaders Chess Club Christian Science Christmas Weekend Class of 1966 Class of 1967 Class of 1968 Class of 1969 Classics Club Commencement Convocation Choir Crew ; Cross Country Delta Phi Omega Delta Tau Delta . Delta Upsilon Diman House Drama Editors' Notebook ... Engineering Society ...... Episcopal College Church . Everett House . Faculty FHBG Folk Dancing Ecotbal i French Club Freshman Sports Freshman Week Geology Club German Club . Glee Club .. Golf Hillel Hockey Homecoming 18-27 .272-301 84 122-123 95 124-125 85 .. 70-71 202-203 .190-191 126-127 68 96 W59 92 . 72-75 61 90-91 66 58-59 G0 178 97 88 111 .. 224-225 223 222 , el 94 .270-271 68 ..206-207 184 128-129 130-131 132-133 R 161 . 62-63 .275-297 ... 103 oo O 154-155 508 ... 60 e 97 179-183 500 10N 214-217 oo 20 103 . 101 ............... 64-65 N 20 ............ 89 ..192-196 108-110 Independent Studies Inter-Fraternity Council ... .. Inter-House Council International Relations Jabberwocks Jameson House Kappa Sigma . P AGTOSSCl Lambda Chi Alpha Lambda Sigma Nu Lecturers e Liber Brunensis Publications .. Literary Anthology Littlefield Mead House Newman Club NROTC Off-Campus Olney House .. 2 Outing ClubE e e Pembroke Phi Beta Kappa . Phi Delta Beta Phi Gamma Delta . Phi Kappa Psi .... Photo Club . ... Poland House . ... Pre-Medical Society Radio Club Republicans Resident Fellows s Rifle Club Rugby e Semper Fidelis Society . Senior Section R, ot Sigma Xi Ski Club . Soccer . o Sphinx Club Spring Weekend Squash Club Stites House Swimming Swyndlestock . ....... i T L Tennis ETIPEY s s 2 Theta Delta Chi .. Tower Club Track ... University Christian Association WBRU Winter Weekend Wrestling Yacht Club Zeta Psi . S 4. 8089 303 39-44 bons A 153 93 . 67 156 ... 134-135 ...208-209 .....136-137 ..138-139 . 45-48 . 76-79 + 49-55 .............. 163 83 ... 166-167 ... 160 06, ..168-175 o104 .. 140-141 ... 142143 ..144-145 99 ... 158 102 95 e 193 ..164-165 o . 107 21D .185-189 100 114-117 213 106 199 . 100 ..148-149 Go0 ..200-201 86 .. 112-113 197 Sl ..150-151 1
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