Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI)
- Class of 1967
Page 1 of 352
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 352 of the 1967 volume:
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You probably never saw the place before, the city, Providence, and the Hill. Carrie Tower with its copper green clock may be the first new sound in late summer, to fade from day to day because you've heard it so often. Faunce may be the first indoor experience where the white caps from the F.W.C. stand out in the dusky air and the Brown Bear towers in his glass cage. R L. i aEn i b nanmny e i IOURLLLE 5 :' U1 From the terrace the greens are carpets to gates, and to the quads. Sayles, like an old man faithful to the clock, pokes an immovable finger to the blue, proud because he is the Dean of Protocol. You'd laugh at Marcus Aurelius if you knew the stories, but he looks impressive, even faded green, marching blindly towards Caswell. 1l The evening air stiffens in late season while crowds are thinned by its inclemency. . We stand and watch the faces at Faunce R i 3 when the first class has ended and a late i cup inside is worth the wait. ,, 7 ?vf, , Quick talk. Moustaches and white cups. Horn rims. Cokes. Smoke. The traffic is new again and the more you know the more there are. The University is that way this year. It never fails. Another rush. You are spinned about corners, living the day on the movefrom Manning to Rogersand on; a legacy of thoughts come along, and hesitating sight down brick walls or senile pillars, sensitive fingers on white paper, calligraphy in stone. All the gates are unlocked this time of day. RT 12 111 As though a fall from the blue dropped you back again, newer again. A frisbee gliding beneath bronze poise. The month is less cruel. It is usual now to be older and older. Buildings fall about you. Disappear. The place like a growing mind looks beyond its presence. Buildings come down. Libraries, living quarters, laboratories go up. Pipes drill their way through earth and edifice, as bulldozers and cranes make room for room. The bottom of the mind grows. The complex of simplicities. We can all get along here. And the day is shorter through autumn, going into a crowded dark street where fleeting figures chase the night. And cheers. and Cheers. And cheers. v You have discovered an open book which you cannot close, an extended day on a calendar which will not dim to evening. An indelible impression, they say. Look around at all you intend to leave, the shadows that project time, the lineaments in stone about you. HELPK o w w x a e o x A reflection in a pool becomes a photograph, a world becomes Narcissus, attentive to it. W hat changes does not change; who confides in these grounds when there is drought is a child who trusts that rain will fall again. i e I Ao S 0 e il St A Y 4 Xei A y 1 et 2 N - s Y o 8 1 Tl gqbtiixWIA L an.nm'amx?. There is time to doubt and time to know, to protect this ground from hollow feet. A thousand faces cross these walks every day, of people who are vines to these walls and cropped greens. They cross the face of a pool which never dries. 109th edition liber brunensis brown university providence, rhode island Ipos academics MOST FRESHMEN discard their beanies before the first day of classes, if the hats had been worn at all during freshman week. This year, one freshman wore his beanie periodically until the Yale game. At that time, freshman president Ray L. Heffner was still learning the ropes of his com- plex, demanding, highly responsible task: running a university from the top. The fact that Dr. Heffner no longer wears his beanie even in the rain, the fact that a stranger could pick him out on campus only by noticing the striped, knitted tie that disappears below his belt buckle indicates that the gentleman, the scholar, and the adminis- trator has become a typically hard-working Brown University president. Ray Heffner's first few months in office this past fall were, in the eyes of most students, an exercise in winning a popularity contest. We were all invited to his inauguration, where we could watch the representatives of academe welcoming a new member into the ranks of the most high. Each of us was encouraged to spend a part of our Wednesday afternoon with the president, discuss- ing our ideas or hang-ups regarding Brown which we felt the president should know about. And the president was eager to hear from us; after spend- ing an entire summer hearing about Brown from the administrators, he wisely chose to see the other side of the UniversityBrown as seen through our eyes, as experienced by undergradu- ates for four years of our lives. By late November, the President had the situa- tion well in hand. He said that he had observed a basic unanimity on what Brown is and should be. Although he had yet to evolve His own personal program for the future of Brown, the president declared that he saw no need for radical change; the University possessed admirable purpose and considerable momentum. Typical of the way Brown changes, he said that the current expan- sion of the student body in first the graduate school, then Pembroke, and finally the College will result in the maintenance of the present balance: nothing extraordinary, just another important step forward. SIGNIFICANT DEVELOPMENTS during the first se- mester of the presidents administration included a growing importance of the new faculty committee on academic freedom, increased knowledge of what tran- spires at faculty meetings, and the formation of an all- University committee to consider student conduct and the Brown social system. In November, a series of ad- dresses made by the president before various groups revealed that this Yale-educated, Indiana-affiliated pro- fessor of English wanted to see Brown excel in big-time athletics, namely football and basketball. No one could criticize him for that statement, although the Herald managed to find a way. Student power became an issue on the Brown cam- pus this year. President Heffner, in a senior convoca- tion speech, spelled out his opinions concerning the value of appeals to power and even violence as com- pared to the rational questioning of the structure and policies of an institution. The president noted that de- spite a Herald editorials counsel of despair, he be- lieves that Brown students are rational and are basi- cally committed to the ideals of higher education. He closed the speech by asserting his willingness to listen to reasoned suggestions and criticisms; but, he con- cluded, I think none of us is willing to reason with a mob. The applause of the senior class could be heard from Power Street to Pembroke. In that speech, President Heffner revealed an almost perfect understanding of what is going on among the Brown students; that is, nothing extraordinary. Through the Cammarian Club or sometimes the SGA, at private interviews or public gatherings, the president saw a student body that is mildly satisfied with the present state of affairs. Demands for reform coming from the students, when clothed in rationalism, are ra- tionally discussed by the administration and the corpo- ration and sometimes enacted. The University hitches its belt up here and there, keeping its nicely pressed crease right down the middle. That seems to be where the president is going, and we are all going there with him-following the white line down the yellow brick road toward those cherished ideals of higher educa- tion. RULING BROWN is a group of business executives, lawyers, and ministers collec- tively entitled the Corporation. Thomas J. Watson, Jr., currently one of the most outstanding members, strongly feels that this is the proper way to run the Univer- sity. But he emphasizes that the Corpora- tion is not quite what the average student thinks it is. The Corporation, Mr. Wat- son believes, is the off-campus con- science of the University. It is like the board of directors of a company; it should ask questions and provide ideas gained from non-Brown environments. The Corporation, according to Mr. Wat- son, should be concerned primarily with finance, the physical plant, and general philosophy. He strongly feels that the ad- ministration should make most of the de- cisions about the University. Mr. Watson is also a member of the boards of Sarah Lawrence and Cal Tech, and he believes that ideas learned at these two schools are of value to Brown. He concedes that he knows compara- tively little about Brown. In contrast to Cal Tech where board members meet with members of the various depart- ments, Brown Corporation members learn what they know of the school al- most entirely from the members of the administration. And although Mr. Wat- son is happy to see channels developing for some Corporation contact with stu- dents, he emphatically states that too much direct student contact could lead to chaos. Brown is Mr. Watson's main interest outside of TBM, and he has extremely ar- ticulate views on education. He places great emphasis on the College, and al- though he believes that Brown has a re- sponsibility to grow larger, he also be- lieves that it has to maintain its charac- ter. Mr. Watson's main criticism of Brown is its failure to project a national image, and he cites Amherst and Wil- liams as two smaller schools with better national reputations. Brown plays an im- portant role in the Providence commu- nity, but through symposia and convoca- tions it should attempt to play a larger role in the nation. And while praising the faculty at Brown, he definitely implies that it could be better. Suggesting that Brown should consider starting a business school, Mr. Watson is disappointed in the lack of understanding of business shown by undergraduates. His, own career indi- cates, he believes, how a success in busi- ness can provide a platform for doing many things. A 1937 graduate of Brown, Mr. Wat- son has had an outstanding and varied carcer. He was president of IBM from 1952 until 1961, and he is now chair- man. He is also a director of several other corporations. He is a trustee of the Rockefeller Foundation, a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, a trustee and director of the American Museum of Natural History, and a former president of the national executive board of the Boy Scouts of America. He has served on many Brown committees, including the one which selected President Keeney, and he is now a member of the Advisory and Exccutive Committee. According to news reports he is one of the prime busi- ness advisors to President Johnson, and his office contains autographed pictures of Eisenhower and JFK, a membership plaque in the President's Club, and a pic- ture of Mr. Watson and LBJ in hunting clothes. REVELING in a consensus that must make LBJ jeal- ous, Professor Robert O. Schulze, Dean of the College and Legend in His Own Time, is nevertheless a mys- tery to those who have most contact with him. To almost all students he is the good dean, the hot shot, the wit. Whether from the platform or in face-to-face discussion, his practiced informality is disconcerting but pleasing, and his goddamns and use of slang make many feel he is close to the student generation. To those who talk to him in his office or approach him at one of the many student parties he attends, he is help- ful and concerned and a great booster of morale. The student feels he is treated as an equal; his opinions are sought and apparently carry great weight. Mr. Schulze works for his popularity. On at least one occasion he responded to an insulting letter by going to see the writer. He attends all parties to which he is invited and performs as expected whenever he gets the chance. But what has it got in its pocketses, eh? Not string, precious, but not nothing. Does he work too hard for his popularity? Some students feel that what he says in private is only what they want to hear and that his statements are changed to fit the audience, or, perhaps, the whims of his superiors. One student who has had much con- tact with the Dean describes him as a radical moder- ate. To please the students his wording is radical, but the content, when analyzed, is commonplace. Mr. Schulze is a complex man, difficult to assess. His mind is subtle and always seems to be balancing innumerable conflicting elements. Offhand remarks are never offhand but are calculated to produce certain effects. A student who knows him well says that at times Mr. Schulze, asking questions and noting the re- sponses from a scientifically detached viewpoint, makes 4 ; v . Z him feel like the object of a sociological survey. Most people, however, find him overwhelmingly charming and convincing. The student flattered with the Dean's full attention finds it almost impossible to oppose his arguments which are phrased in friendly and under- standing terms but backed by the authority of his posi- tion. Yet there remains a hint of hypocrisy that rankles. One student leader summed up his feelings this way. I like Schulze; I like him a lot. But since I have come to know him well, I realize that the public person is not completely sincere. But I can't help liking him. Perhaps, however, this is just what is needed in a dean. Perhaps the public performer and the calculating administrator are both necessary to fill this complicated position. Perhaps, in short, popularity plus effectiveness precludes complete honesty. CRITICISM from refused applicants is the normal lot of Mr. Charles H. Doebler 1V, Brown's veteran direc- tor of admissions, but recently the most vocal criticism is coming from undergraduates. They are concerned that Brown is systematically excluding the potential ac- tivist. The admissions department, and Mr. Doebler in particular, are especially blamed for the quiet campus. Mr. Doebler, himself a Brown graduate, is intensely interested in the Brown tradition, and he demonstrates his knowledge of this field in his annual Freshman Week lecture. No one doubts that his interpretations of this tradition have an effect on his selection of students, but until recently there was little criticism. Now even while Brown's character is obviously changing, the rad- ical complaints have become more intense. More stu- dents, however, are worried about the change itself, not the hesitancy of the admissions department in encour- aging it. His personal interest in students, his memory for names and faces, and his intense desire to help any student he can make Mr. Doebler extremely popular. Those who criticize him have quickly found that his fans are legion. MONEY is not the principal concern of Lloyd Cornell, Brown's friendliest and most respected spendthrift. People are. Lloyd Cornell likes people. And he must love the ones that come to Brown; he uses every stratagem he's learned in fifteen years as an admissions officer and four years as director of financial aid to give maximum assistance to the increasing number of students unable to meet the ever rising cost of a Brown education. Dispensing over one million dollars annually from his cramped quarters in UHs fourth floor, Mr. Cornell can feel, to some degree, responsible for the presence of about 409 of the students in the college. The aim of Mr. Cornell's operation is quite clear: no qualified applicant will be lost be- cause of his financial needs; and to this end, Mr. Cornell arranges scholarships, loans, and work in combinations tailored to each student applying. He's not always successful because there's not always enough to go around, but he tries. He tries hardest. Ve EES by g 8 8 RESPONSIBLE to the president for many of the non- academic functions of the University, Malcolm S. Stevens is probably best known to students as the unknown man who introduced General Wheeler to a packed Alumnae Hall. Ap- pointed vice president last March in the administrative shuffling marking the arrival of President Heffner, Mr. Ste- vens took office on July 1 after a year as executive assistant to former President Keeney. A vice-president at Brown does many thingsmany im- portant and necessary thingsbut he does them behind such a smokescreen of interlocking responsibilities and lower echelon personalities that the vice-presidentif he is lucky pgoes unheralded. Mr. Stevens generally supervises the Universitys business affairs with additional responsibility for athletics, health services, personnel, and the administrative aspects of research, all areas with considerable impact on undergraduates. Yet Mr. Stevens is still about as well known here as he was when he was with the Westfall-Chafee Lami- nates Company in 1961-62. Mr. Stevens received a B.S. and an M.S. from M.L.T., and he has many years of administrative experience, including fourteen at M.L.T. 35 RELEVANCE is at the center of the Baldwin theory of being a college chaplain. Returning from a year at Yale on a Danforth Foundation Fellowship, Charles A. Baldwin plunged into a variety of activities with all of his characteris- tic vitality. Chaplain Baldwin, still a member of the ACLU, the Council of Community Serv- ices, the Urban League, and a host of like or- ganizations, slipped easily back into harness, and it seemed as if he had never left. Ranging high and wide, from the traditional like the UCA, to the novel like the Congregational Ur- ban Strategy Committee, to the spontaneous like the Rockwell protest, Chaplain Baldwin combines the rigid standards of the idealist with the practical logic of the pragmatist. This balance can be a tenuous one at best but Chaplain Baldwin has proved equal to'the task with a deft mixture of charm, tact, irreverence and immense ability. Preaching to and not at his congregation, willing to speak frankly and readily with the student, and able to combine and correlate the goals between the physical and the spiritual worlds, Charles A. Baldwin has skillfully pointed up the relevance of reli- gion in the scheme of the campus community. COUNSELING all seniors hoping to attend profes- sional schools, Associate Dean Gordon Dewart's lim- ited clientele makes him the least known of the College deans. Although he is a member of several important committees, Mr. Dewart is thought of mainly as a counselor and he is not what most students think of as a dean. Even among students who have discussed their futures with him, there is almost no feeling of respect, and few even say they like him. Dean Dewart's influence with the professional schools is very limited, but he has established excellent relationships with a few. One student discovered the extremes of Mr. Dewart's reputation during his law school interviews. At the first school, he indicated that he was not impressed with Mr. Dewart and was promptly informed of the excellence of the man. At his next interview, however, when he tried to avoid an- swering a question of Brown's counseling, he was told bluntly that Dewarts an ass. Still another law school representative asserted to a prospective student that Brown is the only college that has not tried to sell him on the quality of its students and has apparently not been interested in really learning about his law school. In general it is agreed that Dean Dewart can be technically helpful to the students who come to see him, and he has been especially helpful as chairman of the medical school advisory board. He does, however like anyone elsemake mistakes, and more than one student has been given overly pessimistic advice. He is overworked, and many people find him cold and prefer the advice of someone who appears more con- cerned. Yet, Mr. Dewart has aided many students. Their views are perhaps expressed by a senior who said, His questions were really probing; talking with him forced me to clarify my motives for going to grad- uate school. And isn't that as important as anything else? ABSOLUTELY amazing is how newly appointed Dean of Freshmen Eric Brown describes his first charges. At least as amazing is Mr. Brown's new position. Class of 58, Mr. Brown's role as an admissions offi- cer has introduced him to almost everyone now in the school. And it is as an admissions officer that he has gained the knowledge and experience necessary for his newly-established post. A freshman dean generally helps freshmen with their problems, and usually he has to wait for the freshmen to develop these problems before he can help them. But Mr. Brown has not been content to wait for freshmen to bring him problems to solve. He has instead, drawing on his admissions ex- perience, tried to anticipate these difficulties and with his own sort of brownian motion tried to jiggle things and people to avoid trouble or at least to make prob- lem solving smoother. It appears that the unwritten constitution for future freshman deans will be written by Eric Brown. A nice guy to talk to, a hard man to dislike, a harder man to do business with: the freshmen have got themselves quite a dean. AMIABLE and cautious, Mr. Benjamin D. Roman, assistant dean of the college for student affairs, has a deep interest in people, especially students. Awarded an LL.B. from Suffolk Law School in 1933, Dean Roman chose teaching for a career because of a de- sire to be involved more closely with people. A mem- ber of the class of 1925, he returned to the Hill in 1963 as Advisor on Student Affairs after many years of teaching and administrative work at various private and public secondary schools. Although thought of as a disciplinary dean, Mr. Ro- man is anything but unsympathetic and short. Always available to give advice to any student who seeks it, he serves as a link between the undergraduate and what seems to be an increasingly remote administration. In addition to his hours spent in U.H., Dean Roman en- joys extensive contact with students as a Latin teacher and as resident fellow of Bronson House. The prime student complaint against Dean Roman is his tendency to postpone decisions ad infinitum. Many an anxious undergraduate has been driven to distrac- tion by his apparent inability to make a judgment with- in a reasonable period. Other students lack respect for him. They have discovered how easy it can be to take advantage of his easy-going attitude and his astonishing credulity. Many students also feel that perhaps the gap between generations is greater than it was with his predecessors, and that this causes a lack of understand- ing. On the whole, however, Dean Roman's avuncular approach to his very difficult job is a pleasant and probably beneficial change from the immediate past. L 3 AUDITORY LEARNING is her specialty, or so the Dean of Pembroke College says. More relaxed as Miss Rosemary Pierrel than as THE Dean, she has managed to project more images than Madison Avenue could hope to build for her. To Pembrokers she is engaging but reactionary. To those Brown men she doesn't lec- ture toand even to some she does-she is stodgy and uninteresting. To some of her associates, particu- larly those at Brown, she is PoseyIlively and humor- ous. To her father she is my daughter at Pembroke. To Rosemary Pierrel she is a psychologist who enjoys being a dean, particularly a dean at Pembroke. Miss Pierrel likes Pembroke. She likes the way it has grown and changed from more like Wheaton to more like Radcliffe; and she thinks she likes the way it is moving now. On the road a good dealand she does like to travel, especially when it means meeting and talking to peopleMiss Pierrel is the principal salesman for Pembroke College to alumnae, prospec- tive students, and, increasingly, foundations. 38 The Pembroke dean describes her job as combina- tion president, academic dean, public relations agent, student deanbut primarily academic dean, perhaps revealing a lot about the Pierrelian concept of college. Miss Pierrel emphasizes very strongly her interest in academic affairsespecially in curriculum and free- dom of choice within the curriculum. She was a major architect of the current curriculum, and she thinks that freedom in course choice is the freedom that students should really be concerned about. She maintains that all other rules are of only secondary importance, neces- sary only to give some order to the college community. Most, or so the BDH would have us believe, Pembrok- ers and their cohorts to the southparticularly the sometimes journalistsvehemently protest that this evaluation is lunatic fringe right wing or worse, and the name Pierrel can still conjure images of a snorting, fire-breathing bakstian dragon. But has anyone ever heard of a dragon named Posey? PHENOMENOLOGISTS studying the intrica- cies of the upper echelons of Pembroke Col- lege's administration had little more success than their colleagues studying the top levels of the Communist Party of Outer Mongolia. Those able to penetrate Pembroke Hall, have learned however, that Miss Gretchen Estabrook Tonks, Assistant Dean of Pembroke College; Mrs. Anne Dewart, Dean of Students; and Miss Charlotte Lowney, Assistant to the Dean of Pembroke College, all help Dean Pierrel run Pembroke. Miss Tonks, a member of Pembroke's old guard, is a veteran of many course change hassles and with a confident, practiced air efficiently functions as an efficient assistant dean. Mrs. Dewart, half of a Brown- Pembroke deanery duo, has been in her posi- tion for only two years but already displays the expertise and mannerisms of a real Pembroke pro. After many years of placing both Pem- brokers and Welleslyites in positions, Miss Charlotte Lowney was appointed assistant to the dean last June and in her brief tenure has shown remarkable aptitude for putting Pem- brokers in their places. Efficient, capable, confident, matureDean Pierrel's assistants enable Miss Pierrel to be combination president, academic dean, public relations agent, student deanbut primarily academic dean. And another thing is certain: they are three very busy people. EXPRESSION takes innumerable creative forms. Edwin Honig has attempted many, and his inten- sity has yielded success. Writing, he says, is a person's attempt to connect and to relate. The three books of poetry he has published display his success in this endeavor in a variety of verse forms and motifs. One of todays exciting and dynamic poets, Professor Honig ranges from sharp and biting sarcasm and irony to serene con- templation. He strikes with shattering imagery against the failures of man to fulfill the goal of being human, and in quiet lyrics calmly expresses the serenity of man in proper perspective with the world. Whether enraptured with man's good or bitter at his failure, his poems are full of emotion, the products of an intense man relating to a sometimes disappointing world. A translator and a critic as well, Mr. Honig has published editions of several major Spanish writers. He sees translating as a stimulating and instructive challenge to a poet, giving him restric- tions to work within, yet inspiring, since poetry stimulates poetry. Not wishing to be considered the poet in residence at Brown, Mr. Honig claims first to be a teacher and feels that teaching po- etry becomes a very happy thing to do when you have good students. In class he is quietly excit- ing and patiently instructive. Anywhere one meets him, he radiates the intensity reflected in his poetry. Professor Honig taught at New York Univer- sity, Purdue, Claremont College, the University of New Mexico, and Harvard before coming to Brown in 1957. He has been a Guggenheim fel- low and has won the Saturday Review Annual Poetry Award. Raised in Brooklyn, he has been writing poetry since his youth, when he felt a need to communicate in a sometimes hostile world. His attempts at creative expression range beyond poetry and translation. Having written one play in verse, The Widow, he is now writing a play in prose. In 1957 he wrote for Hans Richter for a film, 8x8. When he can he seeks the stimulation of places where English is not spoken. In what spare time he has, he paints in a variety of techniques, finding the creative challenge of painting entirely different from that of writing. Tt is another mode of expression, another attempt at relation and communication, by a man whose concern for expression and involvement in crea- tivity are exhibited not only in his published works, but in his relations with people. As a human being Edwin Honig is a great suc- cess. MOTIVATED by a desire to do research and teach concurrently, Assistant Pro- fessor Walter Quevedo of the biology department left a position as senior cancer research scientist at Roswell Park Memorial Institute in Chicago to return to Brown in 1961. A 1956 recipient of a Brown Ph.D., he has also done research for the Atomic Energy Commission's Argonne National Laboratory. His current re- search is an investigation into the normal and cancerous aspects of pigment cells in mammals. His work has led to invitations to scientific conferences in Europe and Australia. Mr. Quevedo employs an intense lecture style broken very occasionally by sparks of wit. In his concentration on his lectures, he has been known to miss his students actions in the lecture hall. During one lecture, as a matter of fact, he not only failed te notice that one girl in his class had passed out and fallen to the floor; he also missed the sight of four Brown gentlemen carrying her out. Mr. Quevedo has been genuinely impressed on many occasions with the intellec- tual interest of his students and also with their sense of responsibility and their conscientious search for their proper role. But he is also interested in the not-so- intellectual student. In at least one case, he managed to give a C to a student with nothing better than an E on any test. Unlike many of Brown's outstanding scholars, Mr. Quevedo is interested in his students as persons, and many students, including those not basically oriented toward the life sciences, have benefited from his fine instruction in introductory biology. According to one student who took his course, He is the perfect instruc- tor for bio one; he makes the material come alive. For more advanced students, he has also taught highly praised courses in comparative anatomy and vertebrate paleontology. He is available to speak to any student at any length, and he is apparently as willing to talk about a tropical fish collection as his course. Many students, even some who are not biology majors, seek advice in planning their careers. They find him not only interested but informed. HIDDEN AWAY in the Metcalf chemistry complex is the office of one of the most vibrant and engaging per- sonalities at Brown, that of Dr. Julian Gibbs, chairman of the chemistry department. After graduating from Ambherst where he became a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi and Theta Delta Chi and earning his Ph.D. in physical chemistry at Princeton, Dr. Gibbs continued his work under a Fulbright grant at Cam- bridge University in England. On his return to this country he worked in research and development labo- ratories in industry before being appointed associate professor of chemistry at Brown in 1960. Dr. Gibbs thus has the sensitivity and dedication of the academic- ian blended with a refreshingly optimistic worldliness derived from his years away from the university com- munity. One of his major regrets is that his three jobs at Brown, research, teaching, and administration, leave him little time for his extra-academic interests. He is deeply involved with his researchprimarily theoreti- caland he is eager to discuss it at length in his flow- ing yet succinct style with any who express interest. He loves teaching, and regrets that he can't spend more time with his students. Dr. Gibbs dynamism results from a kind of work that requires the cooperation of theory and principle with practical application and a continuous, optimistic discontent with unanswered questions. APPROACHABLE best describes James A. Hanson of the econom- ics department. A Yalie and classic nice guy, Mr. Hanson is one of the faculty's youngest and best-liked members. In and out of the classroom Mr. Hanson displays what is probably the greatest willingness to speak with students of any member of the faculty. His students cite his informal manner and personal interest as the greatest factors in his popularity, and more than a few insist that Mr. Hanson has more hard scoops on graduate schools than anyone else on campus. His students feel that he is a member of their generation, and Mr. Hanson's looks certainly don't belie this. A senior explains that Mr. Hanson really is in the same generation as his students because he still has fresh memories of his own college experiences, but more importantly he has gone to school under the same conditions that we have; he knows firsthand what others can tell us only through hear- say. There is no doubt about it. The man is liked. Mr. Hanson likes Brown too. He prefers Brown's small economics department to Yales. He says that at Brown junior members can get excellent help from senior professors who are both very good and very interested in their associates, and he says that the same advan- tage is available to both graduate and undergraduate students and can help them through many rough spots. But Mr. Hanson feels that most Brown students are often too unfriendly or suspicious of close association between student and faculty to use this smallness and availability for their own benefit. The Brown economics department, according to Mr. Hanson, is dynamic. It has almost doubled in size in three years and is now specializing in macroeconomics and international economics, a strat- egy that Mr. Hanson feels will place the department in a good posi- tion to attract more graduate students and more grants for the Brown economics department. Impressing his students with both his command of economic the- ory and his ability to apply it as well as with his personality, and criticized only occasionally as an over-zealous party chaperone, James A. Hanson has a legitimate claim to the title of rising young star. YOUNG, articulate, and dedicated, Leo Francis LaPorte has helped breathe new life into the geology department since his arrival in 1959. The permanent faculty has swelled from three to ten members with expectations of further expansion both in the faculty and the department's out-dated graduate system. Holding B.A. and Ph.D. degrees from Columbia, Mr. LaPorte was made associate professor and granted tenure in 1964, in the face of concerted Yale attempts to lure him to New Haven. For his part, Mr. LaPorte has gone a long way towards making a so-called dead science one of the liveliest corpses around. Besides lacing his lectures with such unlikely sullies to his students as This may gross you out or You all took a bag, Dr. LaPorte has initiated the coveted if somewhat off-beat Arthur O. Cleaves Award, given annually to the student on his geology field trip who does the most artistic and effective job of diabolic deformation on a rock. The reward for the winner of the competition is a somewhat aged piece of cow feces, which Mr. LaPorte insists is in no way symbolic of the competition itself. Although frequently seen discussing invertebrate paleontology over cold beers with a group of his students, Dr. LaPorte still regrets that he does not have more time to spend at such pastimes. Besides his teaching duties, Dr. LaPorte is currently contributing to a nine- volume Prentiss-Hall series on Ancient Environments while making plans for a trip to Czechoslovakia for a year of study there. After an understandably enjoyable three-year stay as a resident fellow at Pembroke, Dr. LaPorte and his wife and two children live in a 160 year-old house which, like the subject he teaches, has been overhauled, expanded, and renovated while being made more com- fortable and up-to-date for all concerned. FOURTEEN years is a long time to spend in any one place even Brown. George Monteiro spent two of the past six- teen years earning a master's degree at Columbia University, then bounced back to his alma mater. And he has been here since thenstudying, teaching, writing, and adding more than a little zest to the English department. He is part of the new breed of scholar-teachers, one of the stimulators taking education from the stodgy old men the Herald speaks of, and giving it back to the excited and enthusiastic. Not an activist, Mr. Monteiro certainly is a critic of the inconsistencies and injustices of this education complex. Lis- tening to him, one can get under the tough hide of the University; talking with him one can see through his ironic smile and penetrating wit, that there is a pleasure in schol- arly work. The author of several critical essays and commen- taries, Mr. Monteiro is a scholar. But more than that, he is a teacher who enjoys a great deal of contact with students. In a university of arranged classes and brief office hours, his door is always open to students, and he welcomes discussion beyond the limits of class material. His dedication to teach- ing is reflected in the more than a handful of students doing independent studies projects under his supervision. He seems not to be able to help himself. I never dreamed of ever being a deanthen I was asked. And he was assistant to the dean of the College for a year. This year he was offered the position as resident fellow of Champlin Hall at Pem- broke, and he is there, with his wife and delightful little daughter. Mr. Monteiro's first book was published two years ago, by the Brown University Press, and reflects not only the quality of the Press, but the quality and type of work he is engaged in. Henry James and John Hay, the Record of a Friendship deals incisely with these two American historical figures. It is the first of a trilogy concerning the correspondences and friendships of Henry James, Henry Adams, and John Hay. Mr. Monteiro is also currently working on an edition of John Hay's novel The Breadwinners, and an edition of the poetry of Stephen Crane. One of the proponents of the newly revised English con- centration system, Mr. Monteiro has been deeply involved in the reconstruction of the survey courses now dealing with poetry, drama, and fiction. He is also among the group of English department members creating the new literary mag- azine, Novel. He has the sort of vitality reflected in his re- marks on Bob Dylan at the Dean's Banquet at Pembroke and at a freshman convocation, and the sort of enthusiasm that makes learning a dialogue rather than a recital. The past fourteen years have made a one-time political science major into a widely admired assistant professor in the Eng- lish department. The next years for Mr. Monteiro, hopefully at Brown, will be even more productive. PERMANENT astronomical advisor to the Providence Journal, holder of the world's eclipse-watching record, and chairman of the department of astronomy since its founding in 1938, Professor Charles H. Smiley has probably logged more milesa few of them in an F-104 Starfighter photographing an eclipse at 1500 mphthan any other member of the Brown community. Renowned in world astronomy for the first photographs of the Zodiacal light, many developments in astronomical photography, ex- tended studies of atmospheric refraction and hurricane behavior as well as his work in mathematical astronomy, Professor Smiley is best known on his home campus for teaching Astronomy 1, 2, universally Stars. Stars with Mr. Smiley is an experience. He has been known to lecture his classes on the flower gardens of Sir Bernard Lovell, the India-Pakistan border dispute, and the complexities of the life and legend of Josiah Carberry MA ad eundem 1966. And trips to the Ladd Observatory invariably leave lasting impressions on his stu- dents. One former Smiley student P'48 confesses that she still believes that Mr. Smiley owns the Ladd Observatory. Part of being a Smiley student is getting to know and as a conse- quence like Professor Smiley. Informal coffee sessions are his forte, and discussions of papers and texts provide Mr. Smiley with a con- venient excuse to engage students in long conversations. And once over the initial shock of being taught by someone who may have taught your father, student-Smiley relations are usually quite good. With his white hair, off-hand approach, and niche nearly as secure as Carrie Tower's, Professor Smiley should be a character. And with his flower garden lectures and invisible raccoon coat, he is Josiah Carberry incarnate. GUNG-HO is the only word to describe a professor who would volunteer to live with his family in the West Quad. Head of Jameson's resident family is Edward J. Ahearn, assistant professor of French and tolerator of tricycle- stealing freshmen. Teaching what is probably the toughest undergraduate French course in the universityBaudelaire and modern poetryMr. Ahearn has established a reputation as a de- manding but inspiring teacher and as a friendly and inter- ested man. His teaching is universally acclaimed by his students. A student of his calls his explications and cri- tiques of the poetry of men like Verlaine, Appollinaire, and Char the most valuable and impressive thing about French at Brown. Speaking French in class at a rate that could make a native cringe, Mr. Ahearn sparkles, and his students light up in the glow. Mr. Ahearn is not the kind of professor that students normally rave about, nor the kind they usually call a great guy. But they do. He is a hard taskmaster, assign- ing work in quantity and expecting the same kind of effort from them that he puts into his own work. He says that he tries to strain his students minds. More precisely, he makes them strain their own mindsa Pembroker says that he works us to the bone. Mr. Ahearn does make his students work, and he expects them to bear up under this work and produce, and produce well. A graduate student who took Mr. Ahearn's course while an under- graduate tells the story of receiving a paper back from him with the comment, Excellent paper; I learned a lot and the grade B. The study of poetry, according to Mr. Ahearn, is fasci- nating in itself, but it is valuable also simply as an intel- lectual exercise. He believes that in analyzing poetry one uses his mind and powers of analysis to their fullest ex- tent. Friendly and understanding to his students even after countless West Quad Saturday nights, Mr. Ahearn likes Brown, and those who know him like him teaching at Brown. TO KNOW the man is easy, at least on a rudimentary level. He never forgets a name or face. To become involved in his courses is no more difficult, if the student is talented enough or interested suffi- ciently to merit admission. When the experience is overand a year with George Morgan is most certainly an experiencethe student often comes away with a new outlook. Perhaps his opinion of the man, once molded by hearsay, is reshaped through encounter. Per- haps his attitude toward life, formerly vague and ephemeral, be- comes crystallized into something of lasting significance. For many students at Brown these generalities are not exaggerations. The man is not an ordinary professor, and certainly not an ordinary man. Professor Morgan was born in Vienna and came to this country before World War II. Educated at McGill and Cornell, he took a position at Brown in 1949, in the Division of Applied Mathematics. In 1959, he began teaching the first university course, Modes of Experience, which discusses science, history, philosophy and the arts. Everyone talks in this course at great length and often to the detriment of the learning experience. In his more recently introduced university course, Conceptions of Man: Diversity and Coherence, Mr. Morgan lectures for two of the three hours, and the man's philosophyborrowed in part from men more famous than he, but in sum his aloneemerges in beautifully constructed phrases filled with deeply lived ideas. He no longer teaches applied mathematics; his research is not done in a laboratory. His office is his home; his laboratory is his mind. Professor Morgan talks about the dangers of the scientific attitude toward man, the richness of the symbolic realms, the wholeness of the self. Students frequently take issue with his all-encompassing humanism. They call him dogmatic. But the reality is that Mr. Mor- gan is convinced of the value of his beliefs and is willing to defend his point of view beyond normal Brown limits. If he has a mission, it is to give his students the opportunity to explore and examine funda- mental ideas, whether his or their own. All is not somber in the university courses. Two or three times a semester, the classroom is traded in for the living and dining rooms of the Morgans' comfortable home on the East Side. Here topics range from the inherent advantages of dark bread to the problems of a social system and back around to the course material. In the warmth of this setting, Professor Morgan's students begin to develop a deeper appreciation of a man who leads a life according to his principlesprinciples honored by those holding a deep affection for mankind. A CONTROVERSIAL PROFESSOR, to be the subject of debate, must make himself heard. Professor Thomas G. Sanders has. A fellow teacher says, On a campus where the apathy of the students is exceeded only by the apathy of the faculty, he is a refreshing embodiment of the open mind in action. In the first edition of this year's Brown Daily Her- ald, Mr. Sanders charged the members of the Class of 1970 to choose for action, to join the new generation concerned about changing morality, the Negro in America, the ex- ploited people in backward countries. On the issue of aca- demic freedom and the role of a faculty review board, he commented that at Brown, where the president and the cor- poration are extremely powerful, the faculty, over the past two or three decades, has not seized the initiative as it might have. And Professor Sanders took a public stand on the Rockwell issue, defending the Nazi leader's right to speak while deploring what he stood for. His professional interests, as an associate professor in the department of religious studies, center around church-state problems and the political and social thought of religious groups. Last year, honored with the E. Harris Harbison Award of the Danforth Foundation, Professor Sanders lived in Brazil studying Catholic leftist organizations in particular and in general gathering evidence for his theories about the failure of the United States Latin American policies. He criticizes Washington for its inability to understand either the fundamental problems of underdeveloped countries or their nationalistic and socialistic movements as well as for its tendency to support conservative regimes. We support pro- gressive governments, he observes, only where they are not left of, say, the New Deal. Now in his eighth interesting, chaotic year at Brown, Mr. Sanders has retained all of the youthful enthusiasm that he finds in only a minority of Brown students. A cross coun- try standout at Duke, he continues to work out frequently 7 or 8 miles a workout and has run the Boston Marathon twice. With his wife, three young children, and a conspicu- ously large Irish wolfhound, he is often seen strolling, relax- ing, or just being friendly on the College Green. Teaching, philosophizing, or unwinding, the man is liked. 49 THOUGHTUL, quiet, complex, brilliant, original. If Madison Avenue had to develop an archetypal philosopher, Roderick Chisholm could save them a great deal of work. Renowned as one of the brightest lights of contemporary philosophy, Brown's Romeo Elton Professor of Natural The- ology is one of the most widely-published members of the faculty and also one of the most concerned about the effect and the value of his teaching. Too wrapped up in philosophy to be a political activist, Professor Chisholm is especially con- cerned with metaphysical questions about the self. Deeply thoughtful about his own work, he is anxious to make stu- dents aware of the importance of philosophy. And his plain- spoken, unpretentious lectures are lucid, serious, interesting, and stimulating. An outstanding scholar, Mr. Chisholm is the author of the following books: Perceiving. A Philosophical Study, pub- lished in 1957 by the Cornell University Press; Realism and the Background of Phenomenology, published in 1960 by The Free Press; and Theory of Knowledge, published in 1965 by Prentice-Hall. He is co-author of Philosophy, one of the works in The Princeton Studies: Humanistic Scholar- ship in America, published by Prentice-Hall in 1964. A consulting editor of Philosophy and Phenomenological Research and of The American Philosophical Quarterly, he is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sci- ences. He was vice-president of the Eastern Division of the American Philosophical Association in 1961; he has been a member of the executive committee of the Association for Symbolic Logic, the American Philosophical Association, and the Metaphysical Society of America. He has been visiting professor at Harvard University, Princeton University, the University of California, the Uni- versity of Alberta, and the University of Illinois. During the academic year 1959-1960, he was a Fulbright professor at the University of Graz in Austria. He was graduated from Brown University in 1938, re- ceived his Ph.D. from Harvard in 1942, and served in the United States Army from 1942 to 1946. He joined the Brown Faculty in 1947. NATIONALLY KNOWN as a composer and conductor of choral and orchestral works, Associate Professor Ron Nelson of the music department has recently returned from a round- the-world investigation of electronic music. During his trip he lectured and studied in Japan, Southeast Asia, India, the Middle East and Europe. Electronic music was not his only interest, however. He also studied the ethnic music of Hong Kong, Thailand, the Arab countries and Greece; and he studied ancient Japanese Gagaku music with musicians of the Imperial Palace in Tokyo. The composer of over fifty published works, Professor Nelson has worked on commissions from many organiza- tions, including the Ford Foundation, the Lima Symphony Orchestra, the Baptist Foreign Mission Society, and the Uni- versity of Minnesota. He received his master's and doctorate from the Eastman School of Music at the University of Rochester. In 1955 he received a Fulbright grant to study at the Ecole Normale de Musique and at the Paris Conserva- tory, and a year later he joined the Brown faculty. Among his best known works are the widely performed cantata, The Christmas Story, an oratorio, What is Man? and an opera, The Birthday of the Infanta. Brown is not exciting musically, and Professor Nelson naturally wants to be around people who are energetic and creative in his field. But with the national acceptance of his music and the opportunities presented him to conduct coast to coast, he has found that he can be fed by a national culture far broader than any found on the Brown campus. In spite of many limitations, he enjoys working at Brown. The limitations, however, are impressive. Facilities such as pianos, studios, and listening rooms are terribly over- crowded. At present a new building for the music depart- ment is not even on the list of priorities. Professor Nelson is currently serving as chairman of the department, and he also teaches three courses. His students describe him as clear and inspiring. And he is very interested in his students. He believes that the general level of intelligence is higher at Brown than at most conservato- ries, but that does not mean that his students are musical geniuses; they are different types of students with a wider range of interest. Their devotion to music impresses him, however, as they break into rooms and disobey the fire laws to find places to practice. Perhaps Brown could do better than continue to ignore Professor Nelson and his students. 3 EX-NAVY AVIATOR Anthony Davids entered Brown as a freshman in 1946. By 1949, he had graduated magna cum laude, a member of Sigma Xi and Phi Beta Kappa. After receiving his Ph.D. in clinical psychology and teaching for two years at Harvard, he accepted a dual appoint- ment as teacher at Brown and chief psychologist at Emma Pendeleton Bradley Hospital. Over the years, the emphasis of Dr. Davids' work has shifted from Bradley to Brown, so that, as direc- tor of psychology at Bradley, he currently directs the internship program there, doing little clinical work and spending more time at Brown. To avoid feeling schizophrenic about his dual responsibili- ties, Dr. Davids bridges the two by directing Brown and Pembroke students work at Bradley, where the psychiatric patient population serves as an excellent source for research data. In fact, his advanced abnormal child psychology course deals specifically with this population. His research over the years has covered several areas in clinical psychology. Originally, he was concerned with the personalities of bright college students, then with comparisons of emotionally distrubed and normal children. Later he studied psychological factors in pregnancy and early mother-child relationships. For the past six years he has studied bright underachicvers. The Na- tional Science Foundation summer program for high-achieving future scientists and the Aca- demic Potential Project for underachievers have provided an excellent comparison situation for determining the personality factors responsible for academic underachievement. Reams of data have been collected, and results are emerging. He considers this area of research the most in- teresting he has done. As the only clinical psychologist in a chiefly experimental department, Dr. Davids has had few colleagues here with whom he could directly work. Yet his own education here and his views of the goals of clinical psychology have helped him feel at home. He feels that the academic and research aspects are as important as therapy. Thus, his role as teacher and investigator has placed him in the forefront of Brown's psychol- ogy department. Although his work occupies most of his waking hours, Dr. Davids finds time to show his interest in student affairs, academic and non-academic. A golfer himself, he avidly follows Brown sports, especially hockey and soccer, and he constantly has honors students working with him; and he dis- cusses courses, research and vocations with many other students. f b M POPULAR and inspiring, Professor Carlos M. Angulo of the division of engineering has returned to Brown after a year's leave of absense for research in the Institute for Defense Analysis in Washington, D.C. Professor Angulo is currently teaching engineering 3-4, but he has taught several other graduate and undergraduate courses in elec- tromagnetic theory and applied math. He is particularly enthusiastic about teaching undergraduates. Graduate students are almost pro- fessionals or colleaguesthey need no motivation. On the the other hand, in undergraduate courses, Professor Angulo feels that at least half of the students are there only because their fathers want it, and so the teacher must inspire. And this is the attraction of a teaching career for Professor Angulo. He sees engineering as a pro- fession with many dimensionsmanagement, research, teaching which can accomodate many types of people; but teaching is his real forte. A witty, effective lecturer, Professor Angulo commands the respect and admiration of his students. He is simply described as a just really fantastic guy. Last fall he received recognition as an outstanding university engineering teacher in New England from the American Society for Engineering Education. Professor Angulo, a native of Madrid, completed his undergradu- ate education in Spain. He received his masters and Ph.D. degrees from Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute. He came to Brown in 1952 after serving as a consultant to several laboratories, including the microwave laboratory of Stanford Research Institute, the control sys- tems laboratory of the University of Illinois, and the microwave laboratory of the French Compagnie Generals de Telegraphic sans Fil. His major field of research is the propagation and diffraction of electromagnetic waves in non-homogeneous media. Professor Angulo has made contributions to the theory of directive antennas which utilize the surface wave properties of dielectrics. He has also made theoretical investigations of the limiting resolution of radar antennas due to inhomogeneity of the atmosphere. This problem, which has long been of interest to astronomers in the phenomena of star scinfil lation, has urgent practical applications to the detection of missiles by radar. Professor Angulo describes his main hobby, reading, as his pas- sion.? Although interested by many topics, his favorite is history. Professor Angulo was formerly the resident fellow in Everctt House and Hope College. Both he and Mrs. Angulo miss this informal contact with the Brown students, but the relatively small size of Brown. makes it easy to be a part of the Brown community. The Angulos are presently remodeling a newly purchased home in the East Providence section. VIET NAM is very much on the mind these days of Professor John Wermer, a member of the mathematics department since 1954. Deeply concerned over the devastation and suffering caused by the war, Professor Wermer is dismayed at what he calls the ignorance of the American public about the conditions in that country. Noting that almost everyone on the faculty is opposed to the war, he was sur- prised to find that so many students supported the war effort. Despite his opposition to the war, he finds many of the methods of Viet Nam protest distasteful. This social awareness is one of several surprises about Doctor Wermer. Described by students as very humorous and interesting, he is not a stereotyped mathematician, despite his appearance. A Harvard graduate and an instructor at Yale for three years, he is little known to the student body despite his interest in his students and his enthusiasm for teaching. One of five scholars invited to address an international gathering of mathematicians in Geneva, Doctor Wermer was a Sloan Founda- tion Fellow in 1960-1962 and a visiting lecturer at Harvard in 1959- 1960. Although he found his stay at Harvard very nice, he likes it very much at Brown and expresses no desire to leave. He is quite interested in attracting better students, especially graduate students. Noting the stiff competition among schools for these students, he feels that Brown offers a great deal and is doing better each year. Deeply involved in approximation theory research, Doctor Wermer wants to teach, and he wants to teach good students. Doctor Wermer enjoys the advantages of being a professor: shabby dress, beat up Volkswagens, and a disregard for social status. However, he warns that a professor's life is neither easy nor sheltered, citing especially the long lean years of preparation. THE POPULAR IMAGE of a great professorthe kind alumni reminisce about-is a man who delivers operatic lectures, writes books that are reviewed in the Sunday New York Times, and spends most of his waking hours chatting with students in the Blue Room. The Great Professor is usually handsome. In the memory of alumni, his exams were stringent but scrupulously fair ie, nobody flunked his course, or at least nobody will stand up from his bridge table or bar stool and admit it. As Daniel Huphes, himself a Great Man to the literary set at Brown until he perished in the publishing game, once described the ideal professor to the Brown Daily Herald: He teaches; he publishes; he goes to bad lectures; he makes love. He is some kind of man. His pupils tend to be some kind of boys and girls. The student, who is not yet an alumnus and consequently has not bothered to spin out elaborate caricatures of tcademia, will rightfully grow suspicious when he hears John L. Thomas ballyhooed as a Great Professor. A glance at the man and you grow even more leery of the legend, for Professor Thomas has all the superficial attributes to be named to a Brown Alumni Monthly All-Star team. He chain- smokes. His herringbone-tweed suits and button-down shirts mark him as a man-on-the-way-up. Like the most glib lecturer, he knows how to use his microphone as a straight man. His stentorian massive oak desk once belonged to a vice president of the United States. Armed with a briefcase, Thomas would appear as a Madison Avenue man or a character from a John P. Marquand novel. Yet present students, and perhaps even future alumni, will remem- ber him not as an Ivy League professor, or even as THE Ivy League Professor, but simply as a good professor. Beneath the mannerisms John L. Thomas reveals in the classroom and in his study is a man who knows what he is doing and cares about doing it well. What he is doing, in a word, is history: he is engaged in studying it, writing it, and enticing his students to do the same. That he sees himself as at once learner and teacher is the key to his success with students. He is able to demand excessive amounts of work from his students with- out falling into the familiar master-servant syndrome. He treats his students like professional albeit immaturehistorians, and they re- spond albeit immaturelyin kind. RICH, charming, confident, and intelligent, Scott Man- ley is considered by his friends to be the most likely to succeed of the class of '67. As the only student in recent years to be president of his class for four years, Scott has faced the problem of each year trying to develop activities to top the year before. Somehow he has managed to find the necessary ideas and the energy to carry them out. He belicves that serving as class president is an outstanding experience for an individ- ual, and he cites the development of personal contact with such people as Dean Schulze as his greatest source of satisfaction. Scotts non-campus experiences since he left high school have been varied. He took a year off before coming to Brown to work as an assistant to a veterinar- ian and a mason and to work in a summer theatre, an ad agency, and in T.V. in Hollywood. Last year his weekend excursions became legend, as he seemed to commute to Bermuda. Over this past summer, he worked for the Beatles in Europe and America as a road manager and as an assistant to their manager, Brian Epstein. Next year he plans to be somewhat more conventional. He plans to go to law school and hopes someday to combine criminal law practice with teaching. Scott is glad that he came to Brown. He is impressed by the number of challenging people, especially in his class, and Brown's size and personalized approach. The existence of such unifying organizations as fraternities and the class council have combined to give him a worthwhile four years. 1 Hi i 7 I 2 1l llle;Irir lflMJ L : 111 i . b SITTING in a friend's apartment and talking about the relative merits of being conventional, Lenore Wisney said, You have to adjust to the system; it's too easy to destroy yourself in a futile battle against it. The important thing is to ad- just without losing your integrity. It's really difficult. As a junior member of Phi Beta Kappa and an honors English concentra- tor, she seems to have adjusted pretty effectively. Working under the guidance of Mr. Schoedel, and with the aid of an M-program grant last summer, Lenore is preparing a thesis that applies the vocab- lary and methods of Mircea Eliade, an historian of religions, to Wordsworths re- ligious symbolism. She has enjoyed the opportunity to do independent work and to study with a man like Mr. Schoedel, whom she considers a model of a mind at work, integrating all its experience. In particular she likes the freedom to pick and choose in the regular curriculum. She has changed her entire registration every semester for eight semesters, and she considers her academic experience at Brown to have been almost uniformly stimulating and rewarding. Pembroke College is another matter. On the class gift Lenore said, I would like to contribute to establishing another professor's chair for a woman, but I won't contribute to sustaining the stifling regimentation at Pembroke. But unlike her friend Laurel Limpus, Lenore is un- willing to sacrifice her academic progress or peace of mind to a futile attempt to force a change in the system. She has worked through the system and around it, and if as she says, You only get what you bitch for, she seems to have bitched in a very charming manner. FILLED with soul, Robert S. Cohen is a composer, and a good one. When he came to Brown, he was a chemistry ma- jor, and that probably explains why he's here at what he calls a science-oriented college. Chosen conductor of the Brown Chamber Soloists last year, he has im- pressed even the somnolent Brown com- munity with his leadership, conducting, and composition. As only the second conductor of the Brown Chamber Solo- ists, Robert had to fill the role of Charles Ansbacher, the almost legendary founder of the Soloists. He quickly, however, managed to establish his own identity as a conductor, and the Chamber Soloists have continued to provide Brown with fine performances. A Dean's list music major, Robert be- lieves that Brown students, while intelli- gent, are rarely creative. He considers the music department to be a good one, but he emphasizes the need to work individ- ually. Robert likes the Providence area and Brown, and he is trying to make the most of what is available to the musically inclined. His work with the Chamber So- loists shows what an individual student can do with what is available. HHTTIT o7 SQUEEZING twenty-five hours out of every day, Stephen Gluckman, human biology major and aspiring doctor, has maintained diversification throughout his four years at Brown. For his honors project, Steve is studying the effect of sex reversal on tissue levels of the enzyme, glucose-6- phosphate dehydrogenase, in toads, chickens, and rats. Ac- complishing sex reversal by both operation and hormone in- jections, he hopes to clarify the link between G6PD levels and sex hormone release. Compiling a 31-8-2 intercollegiate record home and away matches, Steve served as captain of the freshman and co-captain of the varsity wrestling teams. Among the wres- tling honors he has won are a first place in the New England A.A.U. tournament and second place for the last two years in the New England Intercollegiate Tournament. The intensity and vigor Steve has displayed in his honors project and wrestling have also been manifested in his inter- est in teaching. Steve has been a laboratory instructor in biology 5 6 for the last two years, and during the past summer he instructed an endocrinology laboratory for M.A.T. candidates. His current teaching is being supported by an Undergraduate Teaching Assistantship grant. Finally, Steve has managed to devote a good deal of his time to student government as a member of the Cammarian Club. He is chairman of a committee evaluating the inde- pendent study and honors program at Brown, a program which he feels is not being developed to its greatest poten- tial. Next year Steve plans to attend medical school. He even- tually hopes to combine practice with teaching and research. A POET majoring in international relations, Glenn Stokes 1s concerned about the fact that the Brown literary world is composed of a band of silent phantoms, who are not willing to have their work published. There is something miss- ing in the atmosphere. something which would encourage more communication among the crea- tive writers on the Brown campus. Glenn is dis- appointed that there is not more exchange among writers. He does not claim to know why the liter- ary world at Brown is so silent, but he insists that the problem can be solved only by looking for new solutions, new organizations or unorganiza- tions which offer free and enthusiastic discussion among their members of their work and goals. He believes that writers should sling their verses around with pride, and not only is he willing to have his poems published by the Review and the Liber but he also serves as an editor of the Re- view and tries to encourage others to publish their work. His own poetry is consistently good, and he has written excellent prose for the Liber. Glenn is more interested in writing than in studying literature so after the demise of the Eng- lish expression concentration, he switched to in- ternational relations to get as broad a background as possible. He hopes to teach in Europe for at least a year after graduation, but his ambition is to enter the foreign service. STUDYING French literature to get a break from his work in applied math, Pete Johnson spent his junior year at the University of Strasbourg. Pete admits that he has no real interest in French literature, but he wanted to go to Europe, and studying was as good an excuse as any. He found Stras- bourg to be somewhat better than Providence, and for a science major he takes a strange interest in describing the beauty of the trees there. A member of both the freshman and varsity wrestling teams, Pete has also demonstrated that a good student can have time for outside activities. Currently his athletic ac- tivities are somewhat limited, but his cluttered apartment boasts, in addition to a red refrigerator, one of the finest dart games in the Brown area. Although he is majoring in applied math, Pete plans to study pure math in graduate school, and eventually he plans to teach. At Brown he has taken advantage of his many advanced placement credits to develop a very flexible pro- gram, and he has demonstrated an ability to do excellent work outside of the sciences. Although his friends speak of his academic ability with awe, they are also convinced he is one of the nicest guys at Brown. FRUSTRATING but challenging, articulate, and intelligent, Pascal Kaplan dominated the attention of the Brown community in a way unmatched by any recent student leader. At the beginning of his term as editor-in-chief of the BDH, Pascal over-reacted to the excesses of the Bakst-Gilbert-Veiner type of journalism and managed to produce a Herald that excited only boredom. Realizing that no one cared in the slightest about the newspaper, Pascal considered resigning, but after a summer's meditation, he radically revised his methods and embarked on a crusade to make the BDH significant. Faced with complaisant students and faculty uninterested in chang- ing the status quo, Pascal set out to make people think, to challenge the rule worshipping mentality prevalent among students. And al- though he concedes that many students do not take the Herald seri- ously, he believes that he has helped to create a new atmosphere at Brown by cutting down apathy and polarizing opinion. A hard core intellectual, Pascal somehow found time to write a religious studies honors thesis and amass an amazing number of A's Next year he plans to continue his religious studies work in graduate school, but his friends are convinced that he will manage to find time to raise hell about something. KAYAKS AND MICROSCOPES make up much of the world of Anne Caldwell, Pembroke's only senior in the six-year med program. Kayaks entered her life last summer when she added rapids- shooting to her other water activities. She is an officer of the Yacht Club and sailed throughout the Virgin Islands last sum- mer. She finds the thrill and speed a lot like skiing, about which she is also en- thusiastic. Laboratories and other works con- nected with her biology, pre-med pro- gram take up most of the time Anne spends out of the water and keep her away from the Pembroke dormitories for most of the day. She finds this much to her liking since institutional living be- comes annoying by senior year. The Providence apartment she lived in over the summer soured her on dormitories and she relishes the chance to live off- campus for the last two years of the pro- gram. For her medical career Anne is inter- ested in practice rather than teaching or research, which can become divorced from people. A warm and friendly man- ner and a thoughtful and aware personal- ity guarantee that Anne will never allow any such thing to happen to her. ACTIVE and almost too well adjusted, she is an excellent student without being a grind. From time to time she cuts a classhas no compunctions about cutting when it seems to be worth more to cut than to go, but when the class is worthwhile she rarely misses it. She reads and readseleven magazines a week, two newspapers daily, the New York Times and her hometown paper; she writes letters to the editor and sometimes they get printed. And she gets grades, not without trying I always do my work but without giving up real life for them. I read and write very fast. She likes thoughts, is admittedly an intellectual, but she likes people too, and she particularly likes thoughts about people, plans on using her interest in psychology when she becomes a domestic relations lawyer. Joanne Stern, of Teaneck, New Jersey, is an English ma- jor, likes Pembroke It's not the place that makes you happy, it's the person; I'd probably be happy anywhere, but I like it here. She socializes, as they say. She spends her weekends here., but prefers a small party where you can talk to a large, noisy one. Talk with her is usually intellec- tual, but not always on an abstract level You can be intel- lectual without being academic, and when she discusses humanism, or civil rights, or theories of learning she is prac- tical and idealistic, either in turns or simultaneously. She is lively, keeps odd hours, but has the incentive to work at odd hours and in apportioned amounts of time I wouldnt read a two hundred and fifty page novel in one sitting; I'd read fifty pages a night, plays some bridge, likes to dance, reads eleven magazines a week, is Phi Beta Kappa, knows how to turn cartwheels, reads eleven maga- zines a week, keeps her radio on often, and lives. ENGAGING, soft-spoken and subtle, Samuel Perkins likes people, cooking, and lots of other things. He calls himself an inactivist and thinks that the freedom to do and be interested in practically whatever one wants is the greatest thing about Brown. An honors classics major, Sam Perkins is funny, and he laughs at himself as readily as he does the architec- tural splendor of Rogers Hall. You just need a pile of books, some good teachers, and a pile of students to make a classics department, according to Sam, and he thinks that Brown's de- partment is great. He describes his deci- sion to enter classics as the result of an IR major taking Latin 51-52, Greek 1-2 and PoliSci 2 at the same time. After two years on campus, Sam de- lights in his Waterman Street apartment. He really likes to cook his own food, but probably likes to eat it more. He's not really a fan of the Refectory. He thinks about a lot of things, has -carefully thought out views on almost every issue, and is convinced that the last thing that Brown needs is 2500 student politicians. Sam Perkins is genuinely a nice guy, but with an intelligence, poise and wit that make him more than a Nice Guy; he's not the kind that finishes last. INTERNATIONAL politics is the prime, but certainly not the only, interest of Nick Robinson. As president of the In- ternational Relations Club, he made a rel- atively new organization into a popular campus discussion forum. Nick is presi- dent of the Collegiate Council to the UN, an organization with representatives from four hundred American colleges. Last summer while traveling in Europe, Nick consulted with UN officials in Geneva to gain information for his group, and he met with representatives of similar groups from other countries in Jerusalem. An outdoorsman, Nick spent one sum- mer hiking, camping, and excavating vol- canoes in Hawaii. He was also a member of the campus Outing Club. He has al- ways had a great interest in conservation problems, and he has written an excellent article on this topic for Res Publica. Nick has performed for four years in the Brown Chamber Soloists. He is a s A ERE s LA e member of the Sphinx Club, was head of A em e A et Re the Freshman Week Committee, and was f M::kosab instrumental in developing the Meikle- john Society. An outstanding student in spite of his many activities, Nick plans to study law and international relations. A DEEP CONCERN for the development of the individual in and through confrontation with society, tempered by a realistic ideal- ist's appraisal of the problems encountered by the individual in an academic environment, comprises the nucleus of the intellectual world of Scott R. Sandershonors English major, James Manning Scholar, and junior Phi Beta Kappa. After spending his first year and a half at Brown as a physics major, Scott realized that an English concentration would provide a more suitable medium for his intellec- tual development. Scott believes that the college years are a crucial period in the growth process, since they provide the last chance to experiment with one's individuality. As long as one remains alive, life will be a growing, broadening experience, but the demands of the post- college world require that one develop a sense of direction during the academic years. Part of a university's role is to provide a framework of direction within or about which the student must be free to ex- periment. The proctor program, Scott believes as a result of his own experience as a West Quad proctor last year, plays an important role in providing the human contact and communication so easily lost in a hectic college world. Active in extracurricular activities, Scott was vice-president of F.H.B.G. and the U.C.A. He was awarded the Class of 1952 award as the outstanding junior, and this year he received the William Gaston award as outstanding senior. LECTURERS PSYCHEDELIC things didn't happen at the Timothy Leary lecture; a putsch wasn't attempted at the Rockwell speech; nobody who listened to Earle Wheeler ran out to join the army; the campus was quict probably because everybody was listening. Lecturers and speakers were talking, and some of them actually said some important things. Russell Kirk and Bill Buckley are heavyweights in anybody's book; so are Ken O'Donnell and Ted Sorenson, though they play in another league. But Bennet Cerf was panned in the BDH, and an awful lot of people couldnt find either his medium or his message. There has to be something right with a place that can give platforms to Hannah Arendt and Lincoln Rockwell. COWBOY hat and cliches marked the arrival of Wayne Morse on the campus that was less than kind to General Wheeler. After dinner with the freshman class, the Sen- ate's resident Quixote delighted his philosophical com- rades by reading a speech he had given three days earlier at the University of Indiana. Peace and prosperity, like sex, always sells. The Middle East Conference was anything but peace and prosperity. Professional paranoids worried that Mid- dle East oil interests, the CIA, and the wizard of id con- trolled the conference, but Pat Maley and the other con- ference staffers just worried about living up to their prom- iseto make you an expert and succeeded. FOUR SUMMERS and twelve semesters of study after you enter in 1963, you have earned an A.B., an M.M.S. Master of Medical Science, and the opportu- nity to leave Providence at last. Of the thirty-odd students who were the initial participants in the 6-year medical program, eight have survived They have been joincd along the way by six other students. The hearty fourfeen arc: Steve Ring, John Shepard, Bart Alfano, Paul Alexander, Steve Sullivan, Sandy Ullman, Bob Wadle, Bill Sternfeld, Dan Umanoft, Al Dyer, Jeff Partnow, Larry Martel, Philo- mena Ikwuako and Anne Caldwell. Dr. MacV. Edds, Director of Medicine, has said, There are many routes to quality education. Qurs is to eliminate random courses and taking courses at the wrong time and for the wrong reasons. Ours is to provide six years of coordinated curriculum. a continuum with everything in phase. The 6-year meds would have preferred a greater freedom in their choice of courses. The Brown administration believes that the physician of the future should be a humanitarian as well as a scientist. Unfortunately, the only real opportunity to survey the liberal arts comes in the sixth year of the program, when the students are half way to becoming medical doctors and studying furiously for the national boards. The curriculum is rigorous; ordinary pre-meds, by comparison, have it easy. But the experience as a whole probably makes it worth all the effort. Excellent faculty people have been recruited. The facilities are first rate. For those students who prefer going to graduate school and not medical school this year, one or two, their foundation in medical science and related fields is solid and sophisticated. As for the dozen who plan to get their M.D. s right away, the knowledge of recent bio- medical research they have garnered from six years of study should put them in the forefront of American medicine in the future. SIX-YEAR MEDICAL SCIENCES PROGRAM activities LOSING initiative to the Magrath Committee, the BDH, and the Campus Action Committee, the Cammarian Club was of concern to only a few Brown Students. Previous clubs had concentrated on producing practical improvements, and they had been successful in a minor but meaningful way. This year the club did have its modest successes. GISP started as a Cam Club committee. The Club admin- istered the Student Activities Fund for the first time, and it was instrumental in gaining a discount for students in the bookstore. But not satisfied with the gradual but cumulative improvements of the past two years, Peter Billings and his associates abandoned pragma- tism for philosophy and managed to cast themselves adrift from the student body. The Cammarian Club chose to concentrate on examining the prin- ciples behind the rules governing student life at Brown. The members tried to examine the basis of their education and their educational environment. A series of interesting, if over-dramatic, reports pointed up flaws in the University, and the administration should at least examine the diagnoses presented even if it does not accept the sug- gested cure. But while the members asked questions which had to be asked, they found it difficult to accept that the world could not easily be summed up and analyzed. Student governments find themselves in a difficult position. If they do not show leadership, they are rightly condemned for not doing their job. But if in their attempt to lead, they lose sight of the desires and best interests of the majority of the student body, they cut them- selves off from their constituency. It is too early to say just what the shift in emphasis by the Club will mean. Perhaps the constitutional changes, especially the popular election of the president, will be looked on as crucial innovations. But from the point of view of the Brown student in the school year 1966-67, the Cammarian Club has been a philosophizing phantom. 72 UNATTRACTIVELY portrayed in the yellowed pages of the BDH and the Rec- ord, the SGA nevertheless seems to be just about what Pembrokers want in a student governmentsomething which will leave them alone. Sue Semenoff re- placed that most famous of radicals, Laurel Limpus, and quickly found that she was not exactly what the BDH wanted in a student leader. Undaunted she went her own way, and the election of Betsy Remage as her successor showed that most of the Pembrokers liked the middle of the road. Student governments are not very ex- citing. Rough surveys indicated that about as many Pembrokers as Brown men consider their student government irrelevant. Perhaps if the Cammarian Club and the SGA combine, they could produce something meaningful, and any- way they'd take up less room in the Liber. TAILORED to meet the social needs of Brown's co-ordinate college and the lead- ership needs of Pembroke politicians, the Pembroke Social Organization had a good year. Lynn Taylor, one of the prettiest PSO presidents in memory, ran a taut ship. For a change, Pembroke mixers were good, and the Christmas formal didn't have a theme written in French. Little things mean a lot, and the cumulative total of the little thingsIlike open houses and teasthat the PSO did is im- pressive. The May Day fertility rites happened again, and not a few alumnae must have been disturbed by the irreverent attitude that the PSOers had about the whole silly thing. About the only good thing that can be said about it is that the pic- ture of the May Queenthis year Linda Ann Smith-did a lot for the BDH's makeup. Mixing at the field house, graciously sipping tea in West Andrews lounge, and just acting like femalesPSO is some- thing to warm the cockles of anybodys heart. o 1 1 - . il g DE-HIBERNATION, a slow process by which the Brown Bear discovers at least the shadow of its former robust self, entered a second phase in 1966. Shepherd of the spirit of Butch Bruno, the Brown Key is attempting to recover not only seemingly lost Brown traditions and undergraduate allegiance, but much of its own tarnished image as well. The senior executive board of Steve Wiley, Gene Noonoo, Mike Bush, and Gabe Doumato gave way at mid-year to an ambitious group of juniorsJesse Jupiter, Ken Fitzsimmons, Art DiMartino, and Dave Cashman. In the past, the Key has been responsible for Homecoming Weekend, Cheerleaders, campus tours and mixers with various schools. Under the senior administration, a sports award night was instituted; Brown athletes and Key activities were featured on its Post Office bulletin board, and pep rallies were staged in the Quad for the benefit of a gallant football team. Under President Jesse Jupiter, the Key made itself increasingly con- spicuous on the campus. The bulletin board changed its pic- tures more frequently. Brown's All-American athletes in three sports were feted at the televised Brown-Cornell hockey game. New football coach Len Jardine spoke to an open convocation early in the second semester and then met informally with cam- pus leaders of both the College and Pembroke. The Sports Award Night this year featured a nationally-known speaker to complement the Key's sportsmanship award presentations. In addition, the Key planned to institutionalize a method of wel- coming visiting teams to Brown, just to be friendly. Finally, the Key turned to the alumni for increased moral support of Brown. BROWN KEY CONSISTENT, confident, concerned, conservative, con- genial, cocky, and probably a bit chicken-hearted, the Faunce House Board of Governors continued to provide Brown and Providence with a wide range of educational, cultural, and social activities. The job isn't the easiest. FHBG has to be the non-profit- but-break-even, student-run, world-pleasing entertainment and culture-dispensing agency to Brown's students, fac- ulty, factotums, and friends. The bulk of the Board's work is given little attention it has become that much a part of Brown life. The Satur- day movies, the career luncheons, the Course Analysis Bulletin, and exam week cartoons take time and work, but they would gain special attention only if they disap- peared. The lecture series has been the board's biggest success. Bringing controversial and non-controversial and socially unacceptable people to speak, the board has contributed to educating at Brown. Timothy Leary, Max Lerner, Rus- sell Kirk show the variety that FHBG has presented to the campus. This year the governors of Faunce House made a mis- take. Of all the speakers in the world there are probably few worse than George Lincoln Rockwell, and FHBG might have considered what it was getting itself into when it invited a second string fuehrer to speak. But the board's subsequent behavior was inexcusable. With courage com- parable only to that of the Italian army in World War II, or maybe to President Heffner's in this same Rockwell incident, the Board of Governors stood eyeball to eyeball with the enemy and blinked hard. Consistent, confident, concerned, conservative, con- genial, cockylots of people would like to add coura- geous to that alliterative amalgamation, but then medals cost money. FHBG 75 REQUIEM. Brown never has had much regard for journalism. It avoids publicity in the national papers, and Ray Heffner will never have to worry about being on the cover of Time. Charlie Bakst at least knew what good journalism was while he was mangling it on one crusade or another, but Pascal Kaplans only connec- tion with it is his position as editor-in-chief of the Brown Daily Heraldthe weapon hes used, in that most splendid tradition, to kill the fourth estate or at least turn it into a tennis court. Pascal began ordinarily enough. He put news in his newspaper, lots of it. At times he was very, very good like when the BDH turned its lights on the College Hill drug scene with its marijuana issue or when people read the orange colored hoax issue and then remem- bered that the stuff they were reading had happened. But when Pascal wasn't very, very good, he was very, very boring. In September Pascal came back and gave a speech. He reprinted it in his newspaper, belching forth fore- boding greetings to the oppressed and the oppressing wallowing in the brown muck. Having fired at every- thing in sight killing none and wounding only the pride of a few, Pascal began Phase II of his fall offen- sive. : And there's no doubt about it, Phase II was offen- siveand stimulating. Pascal began Phase II quite simply: he stopped putting news in his paper. But he did fill it with all kinds of things. No one knew what the hell was going on except that God was dead, that there was a conspiracy exploiting students, and that things looked pretty grim for neoliberalnewleftmod- erateradicalpopulist-republican Seymour Bergenstein, peace candidate for county supervisor in Provo, Utah. As Afghanistan seemed closer than ever, the Pascal Ring wrote and wrote and wrote. The BDH as a news- paper was dead, but alive, thinking, and kicking above and below the belt as a pamphlet. Charlie Bakst reported news, and when there wasn't any news and sometimes when there was, he made it. Pascal generated discussions. People talked about Charlie Bakst; sometimes most disagreed, sometimes few disagreed. But Bakst was a hardnose; sometimes he named the game, but most times he played whatever game was in townand people knew what game was in town. Pascal is a gut idealist. He writes well, too well. And he thinks, he thinks longer and harder and better but mostly deeper than a good editor should. When Pascal turned his newspaper into a series of pamphlets, he lost the most precious thing that a news- paper has and needscredibility. People didnt read; and those who read didn't think, they laughed. It was, it is, a shame. The fall offensive was mired hopelessly by a monsoon of chuckles. BROWN DAILY HERALD e THAT FITS We print o RES PUBLICA BETTER than it was but still not as good as it should be, Res Publica VOLUME TWO of the Brown Re- completed its second year with most of the same growing pains that plagued view contains only one number. Dated its first. Semester 11966, this year's only Graphically the Brown political journal was improving slowly. Covers issue of the Review appeared in Feb- were better, and pages began to look laid out instead of thrown together. ruary. Immediately thereafter, the lit- Editorially the magazine was still solid and stolid, quite convinced that erary magazine changed its name and there was nothing wrong with editorials with 73 footnotes and definitely elevated the business manager and cir- something wrong with seriously editing contributions. Financially the red ink culation manager to the post of co- was still everpresent, and a balanced budget a long way off. editors of the new venture. Res Publica is responsible and balanced and objective. It is a good college The one issue featured an excellent political quarterly; but it could be a good political quarterly, and there is no short story by senior Chris Coles, reason that it shouldn't. imaginative illustrations by Bruce Mc- Intosh, Andrew Ward, and David Schorr, three poems by Pembroke poet laureate, Ancelin Vogt, plus two stories, a poem, and three book re- views of more than passing interest. If the Review can be faulted for its poor layout and uninspired cover, this mat- ters little; judged by its content, the Review must be deemed worth waiting for. Nevertheless, in light of the virtual silence with which the Review was re- ceived, the cause of student literary magazines at Brownregardless of their price or qualitywill always be a difficult one. BROWN REVIEW ANALYSIS BULLETIN EXTREMISTS write most of the Course Analy- sis Bulletin, or so it seems from reading their copy. People with strong feelings one way or an- other about a course are most likely to answer questionnaires, and as a result Brown seems to have few mediocre courses. The idea of rating teachers is a good one in theory, but there are those who insist that the old grapevine was just as informative and not nearly as dangerous. Few teachers seem to improve their teaching after reading the Bulletin, but many get mad, and there is a suspicion that several unsus- pecting souls can blame the Bulletin for their Ds in what was once one of Bruno U's finest guts. Serious students desire an accurate rating sys- tem with full information on most courses at Brown, and the Bulletin fills this role moderately well. But it really should have an editor in charge of protecting guts for us and our posterity. AN OASIS in the middle of a news drought, the Pembroke Record firmly established itself as a bulletin board during the reign of Pascal Kaplan as editor-in-chief of the Brown Daily Herald. Cir- culation at Brown probably remained about the same, but the number of people reading the Rec- ord tripled. Plodding steadily on, the Record, with its often awful writing, yellow-pages makeup, and chatty features, wasn't quite the New York Times or the Boston Record-American either, but it wasn't the BDH, so people read it anyway. The paper's major activity during the year was firing broadsides at Pierrel's Pirates, that infa- mous band of cutthroats that, according to the Record, terrorized and bullied more innocents than Blackbeard and Captain Kidd combined. It was during its reporting of these dirty deeds that Pembroke's Pride rose to its finest hour. During the posey protests and midnight marches to the pierrelian palace, the Record pulled all the stops. With black, big headlines across sixteen columns on page 1 quite a feat with a five column page, ace combat corre- spondent Mary Tudor reported from the front lines and, on one occasion, from a position deep in enemy territory. She brought an air of urgency to her stories that hadnt been felt since Edward R. Murrow reported the Battle of Britain from the roof of a London warehouse. Standard features refused to die, and the year saw the continuation of two column, five line headlines and the growth of that biting social commentary, Scotch and Soda by C. C. Ryder. PEMBROKE RECORD A brief attempt at a crime column was discon- tinued after crime at Pembroke stopped suddenly following the theft of Pembroke's Christmas tree. Despite its conflicts with Pembroke Hall, the Record's standing with the Brown administration could hardly have been better as it continued to be the one newspaper in the world where the University's press releases appeared regularly. ENVIED by its Brown counterpart, Brun Mael has been consistently excellent. The lady bear is not really a college yearbook: It does not cover groups and people and events; it relates impressions. Without the Liber's problems but with substantial talent of its own, Pembrokes annual gets its point across. Although a picture may not be worth a thousand words, it sure looks better on a page, and photography has always been Brun Mael's strong point. Doggedly profes- sional yet engagingly personal, the Brun Mael has a quality hard to achieve in a yearbook and even harder to preserve. It's one of the best reasons for keeping our co-ordinate college. 81 GOOD INTENTIONS, later to be forgotten in the heat of battle, are the ingredients of any new Liber staff. But good intentions do not produce yearbooks; cynicism, hard scoops, a lot of luck, two telephones, and four typewriters do. Office hours serving only to confuse infrequent visitors, copy dividers, day-to-day work, and careful editing were supposed to be in ; bogus organizations, bad pictures, and unread copy were to be out. By the middle of March, when we were able to look back over the year, we realized that most of the work had been accomplished in the early morning hours immediately preceding each of our four deadlines. Moreover, much of the out was in and much of the in was not. We also discovered that we had produced and discarded more humor than the Jug, better literature than the Review, and more astute poli- tical commentary than Res Publica or the BDH with whom we carried on a year-long feud. Most of this year's copy was produced by the Beta contingent of always-rallied Hayden Anderson and LIBER BRUNENSIS PUBLICATIONS Mike Dil.orenzo, who provided editor Clarke Cochran with numerous opportunities to cut outrageous but true statements that would have led the staff to the same glorious end originally discovered by the 1960 editors. Pembrokers were prominently featured in an expanded Liber as well as in our office, where layout editor Ron Gaines managed to conjure up more staff members than old-timers had ever seen. Karen Robin- son, our first Pembroke executive editor, was responsi- ble for the unique and exciting coverage of Pem- broke sports. An unexpectedly large number of neb- bish dormitories at Brown made it both feasible and mandatory to include Pembroke dormitories in the book. Business manager Steve Sumberg kept tight rein on Liber funds by carefully avoiding the office so he wouldn't have to pay the editors bills. Bruce Noble, in a new position, handled seniors and our special pub- lications, generally raising Kane in the process. THE CLASS OF 1965 continued to exert an influence as Glen Ramsay decided to stay another year and lend us his wise counsel and his beautiful pictures, which make up the introductory section. We discovered an- other poet in the person of Glen Stokes, whose verbal imagery accompanies Glen's photography. Aspiring ar- chitect Grant Miller managed to spend enough time in the office to provide many good layouts, especially for the introduction. Tom Wyatt Earp egged on by Ramsay labored for many weeks changing darkroom locks but still found the energy and imagination to produce enough prints to cover our bulletin board. Most of the Liber's leg work was undertaken by John Kwoka and Steve Bentzan uneasy alliance of talents which annoyed more campus leaders than any other production team in Liber history. John Kelsey and Mary Wiley promised last June to sell unheard-of numbers of books and spent the rest of the year hoping to sell as many as last year. Advertising managers Tom Herzog and Jeff Jones the dynamic duo out of purely mercenary motives scoured Southern New England's largest shopping center and fired off pleading letters to deceased alumni. Since our original intention to have regular staff meetings never came close to realization, all of these good people didn't meet each other until the Liber pic- tures were taken in February. Notwithstanding editors who often passed like ships in the night, we all man- aged to gather at the publish and perish dinner where we could marvel at the wonder we had wroughtthe 1967 Liber Brunensis. AWERY Fi s COMBINING the opportunity to learn about radio with the chances to participate in the running of a business on a moderately high budgetary scale, WBRU now serves the southern New England area, where WBRU personnel are constantly on the move publicizing the FM station and sell- ing advertising to finance this ambitious business venture. WBRU points with pride to such WBRU graduates as WABC's Bobaloo, WNEW's Pete Myers, WKBW's Ted Hackett, WJAR's Sherm Strickhouser, WICE's Dave Pearce, Jerry Stevens, and George Hyde, and WHIM's Paul Payton. But WBRU also looks with pride to the scores of lawyers, doctors, engineers, and businessmen who enriched their ex- periences at Brown through participation on WBRU. WBRU-FM is now firmly established as a full-time com- mercial FM stereo station. Since February 21, 1966, WBRU- FM is the only college-run FM station in the nation that has stayed on continuously, through all vacation periods, during its first year of operation. In October WBRU-FM launched Music '67, a full 18-hour broadcasting day featuring mod- ern big band and progressive jazz. While WBRU-FM was put on a solid organizational basis, and began to be run on a business-like day-to-day plan, emphasis was again placed on WBRU-AM, the 31 year old closed-circuit operation serving the Brown campus. By March, AM was again the center for the campus rock 'n roll listening. WBRU's forte is news and public affairs. The highlight of the fall broadcasting season was a seven hour election night special which featured complete coverage of local races, a team of national correspondents, an elaborate Election Central set-up in the Faunce House Art Gallery, and elec- tion analyses by Professors Lyman Kirkpatrick and Forrest McDonald. CAMMERS aislis Pl;asc ea ve A JOKE in the days before it became an FM station, WBRU is now recognized as a station of professional qual- ity. Although many Brown students criticize the limited amount of time given to classical and folk music, BRU has designed its programming to fill the need in the Providence area for modern big band. Its music, news, and special pro- grams make WBRU an asset to the entire community. WBRU worked for many years to get an FM operation, and now that the actual running of the FM outlet is more than one year old, the staff under the leadership of Richard Brodsky is still excited by the continuing opportunity to learn radio and serve a potential listening audience of 14 million at the same time. TALIESIN FORMED during the first semester of this aca- demic year, the Evanescent Publishing Company, under the direction of John Stahl and Michael Price, a student at the University of Rhode Is- land, launched into a potentially wide-ranging program of magazine publishing. First to appear was Taliesin, which presented itself to the world in early February at Brown, Harvard Square, and various locales in Europe. Proclaiming itself a journal of minority opinion, Taliesin, edited by Price and Stahl, featured such esoteric material as an article describing perversion in the works of Jane Austen, and a thesis proclaiming that atoms are endowed with free will. With Taliesin established, Evanescent pushed on with further plans. Next on the agenda was Projections, a journal of criticism of the arts, with Ed Fitzgerald '69 as editor. In the formative stage were a volume of poetry by Carl Bedreau and several pampbhlets. As a routine Taliesin is impressive. As an inde- pendent effort by only a few students it demands respect. But the admittedly evanescent quality of its first issue precludes serious review, and only continued work by its publishers will make Taliesin an important publication by any stand- ard. HUMOR looks like the only thing that will save the Brown Jug, Bruno U's latest attempt at a humor maga- zine. Some quarters of the University community held that the Jug was not really a humor magazine at all. They were convinced that it was an experiment in psy- chological warfare financed by the CIA and staffed by the editors of the Wall Street Journal. While most peo- ple did not accept this allegation, there was a substan- tial group that favored dropping the magazine's first press run over the Mekong delta as a combination psy- chological warfare propaganda leaflet and fertilizer. But the CIA had nothing to do with the Jug. It was a legitimate student attempt to begin a new publica- tion, an attempt that ran into the usual problems facing fledgling student organizations. There were problems of knowing what sources of humor were available who could know that Howard Curtis, the normally sobersided secretary of the University, reportedly has the world's greatest store of banquet humor? There were problems with money, with sales, with just about everything. In fact, there were so many problems that one really could not expect the Jug to be funny for a while. Give it time. LIMITED by facilities that would outrage most high schools, Sock and Buskin has nevertheless managed to produce every year outstanding works ranging from Shakespeare to ephemeral musical comedies. This year's first production, The Merchant of Venice, was highlighted by fine performances by Bruce Fleischer as Shylock and Leslie Ann Kurtz as Portia, backed by a gener- ally able cast. Judi Pulver and James Naughton's performances in Tennessee Williams Sweet Bird of Youth were responsible for the second success of the Sock and Buskin season. The third produc- tion, Once Upon a Matiress, had a more mixed reception. While acknowledging that the play was well done, members of the audience found it diffi- cult to understand why a show of such low qual- ity had been selected. Only excellent performances and sharp direction kept the musical comedy from succumbing to its weaknesses. Once again Brown students have demonstrated an ability to overcome the disadvantages of Faunce House. Must they do this eternally? BUSKIN PRODUCING a completely original, student written, composed, directed, choreographed, and performed musical, Brownbrokers is the student drama group which rises each March from seem- ing amorphous hibernation to organized, enthusi- astic and hectic activity. Time was when the Brownbrokers show was nothing more, nor less, than a group of satiric sketches, created and enacted by the various fra- ternities on campus. Subjects were topical; and wit, incisive. The so-called lower forms of comedy were included, too: throwbacks to vaude- ville and inimitably silly male chorus lines. Fol- lowing the era of reviews Brownbrokers ventured into the realm of musical comedy. In 1965 the play Brownbrokers produced became less a comedy than a comment on suburbia, bitter if unfocused. Brownbrokers '66 explored still another area of musical theater: Brechtian protest, essentially of war. Kotlubi? was written by Don Warfield, with music by David Buskin and Earl Holt, and was directed by Bruce Fleischer. It perplexed audiences not only with its title the unmentioned last name of one of the chief characters but also with its episodic progress. Among the eighty-odd characters and forty actors were Paul Christian- sen, Mallory Hoover, Mark Lediard, Judi Pulver, Vincent Buonanno, and Ancelin Vogt. Freedom is Brownbrokers most outstanding and enduring characteristic. Freedom to diverge and produce whatever kind of musical play has been created on the campus that year. Review, straight musical comedy, social comment, semi- Brechtian protest, or whatever, if it is original, musical, and of excellence, it is produced. The future of Brownbrokers lies welcoming and open to the imagination and effort of students who cre- ate both the play and the production. BROWNBROKERS REPRESENTING Brown in the Providence art festi- val, this year's Production Workshop was a major con- tributor to the cultural life of the University. Providing for many their first legitimate contact with the theater, it constitutes one of the few outlets for free expression by writers, directors, and actors. Each year three or four members go on to the professional theater after discovering their talents as a result of their efforts in the Workshop. Founded seven years ago by a group of students, it remains an organization run entirely by its members. In the spring the group runs an annual play contest which gives three students an opportunity to see their work presented publicly. Open to everyone, the group looks toward community participation in the theater. PRODUCTION WORKSHOP CAMPUS ACTION COUNCIL THE BROWN CHAPTER of Students for a Democratic Society, an organization known among SDS national executives as one of the worst in the East, deservedly passed into oblivion this year. To fill the void, or so it seemed, old SDSers and other activists formed a group called the Campus Action Council. The council's activi- ties are directed by an executive board of six or seven undergraduates. Membership in the organ- ization is loosely defined. An accurate estimate of the number who participate is not available, al- though its smallness reinforces Brown's image as a quiet campus. Something for everyoneeveryone in the New Left, that iscan be found in CAC's three areas of concern. The Community Action Committee involves itself with social, economic, educational, and otherwise humanitarian renewal in the Provi- dence community. The Campus Committee fo- cuses attention on issues of primary interest to the students. The day President Heffner delivered his first State of the University address, CAC delivered its own message to the Alumni Council, emphasizing the less rosy aspects of Brown which they were sure Dr. Heffner would overlook. The Peace Committee jumped into action when the Rev. Al Perry announced his candidacy for Con- gress in February. Pascal Kaplan and Stan Griffith were members of the executive board conducting Perry's campaign, the goal of which was to attract 5 of the voters and thus demon- strate substantial dissatisfaction with the Johnson administration's domestic and foreign policies. ORCHESTRA MUSIC is a sometimes, few times thing at Brown University. The Brown Univer- sity Orchestra makes these few times worth waiting for. Playing good music well, the orchestra is led, cajoled, praised, and pleased by its director and conductor Martin Fischer. Mr. Fischer gets results from his musi- cians, and his efforts have pleased even the thick-hided Providence music critics. Solid directing, inspired conducting, devoted playing, and good publicity are going to bring a bit of culture to Brown, even if it has to be done in Sayles Hall. GLELE CLUB FAVORABLY ACCLAIMED, even by the Herald, the opening concert marked the definite return of the chorus to its former posi- tion as a viable and significant part of the music program at Brown. Music is the business of the Brown University Glee Club and its co- ed counterpart, the Brown-Pembroke Chorus. This year's major works impressively were Laud to the Nativity by Ottorino Respighi and Faure's Requiem. But as important as the quality of the songs they sing, the club values its autonomy and the consequent variety of its repertoire. Although the BUG club usually appears in mixed cho- rus with the Pembroke club, it maintains a number of selections to be sung by the men alone. Whether this fractional impulse is for greater versatility in artistry or simply for greater variety in female accompaniment is above consideration. But the club has travelled on concert tours to U. of P., Simmons, Skidmore and Cazenovia Junior College. Indicative of the Glee Clubs popularity is the doubling of its membership in the last year. By combining its business with pleas- ure, the organization affords a wide range of activities for interested singers. Of course the Club's main activity is giving concerts. But there are picnics where food, beverage and song form their tradi- tional triumvirate. There are nights of Christmas caroling where the spirit of the season is kept warm and friendly. And there is the annual Spring Tour about which the choristers often continue to sing deep into the summer. As an amateur chorus should, the Brown U. Glee Club blends into its song cheerful proportions of women and wine. CHAMBER SOLOISTS GROWING beyond their status as solely a cam- pus group, the Brown Chamber Soloists, under the baton of Robert S. Cohen and the manage- ment of Andrew G. Gann, had their banner year, both on and off campus. As a result of the enthu- siastic reception of conductor Cohen's Parable, opus 20, at their first concert, the Soloists were invited to play at other Rhode Island campuses. Also at the first concert, the traditional contribu- tions were redonated to the Committee for the Rescue of Italian Art, and the revenue made up by a grant from the Recording Industries Trust Fund. The format of the group remained the same, its concerts, mixtures of the baroque, classical, and modern, still filling Sayles Hall. Concertmaster Urs Rutishauser, Marion Maby, and Nick Robin- son, fixtures for four years, played their final con- certs. In their sixth year, the Chamber Soloists also served as a talent pool for Rhode Island amateur music, with members playing in three musicals, Freshman Parents Night, and engage- ments for conventions and a convocation. Once again they demonstrated what the ability and energy of only a few students can do. BRUINAIRES THESE are the Jabberwocks1Jeff Goddess: leader, sometimes musically, itinerant panderer-philanderer, driver of the little dull green pleasure ma- chine. Steve Messier: fat, funny, bow- tied song and dance man. Paul Minardi: dark, handsome, moody solo- ist of the augmented drunk mono- logue, in Salvy tweeds. Alan Morris: the littlest man of all, truly Mozart in disguise. Bill Cole: the blond screamer on whom descends the onus of granny glasses and the upper ranges. Carl Caspar: suffering Christ, driver of the now defunct and dearly loved 48 Beckett Mobile. Dale Lee: colloquium comedian, inveterate napper, and leader of other baritone-like activities. Dave Hardy: composer, arranger, and sometimes blushing singer. Don Burns: the symbol of authoritarianism, easily the loudest member. Dick Sugarman: egalitarian, Toyotaist, coil-connection- destroyer, bearded rocker; the only man who can sing in 98, nod in 2J4, snap in 48, and stomp in 35. Larry Allen: quiet guitar picker, a bass-ic man, driver of the tight Swedish pleas- ure machine. And in Memoriam: Andrew Fischer Tonks sigh. A COMBINATION of a wealth of talent and an uncompromising standard of musicianship has firmly established the Bruinaires as Brown's elite singing group. The unity and polish of these twelve fun-loving songsters finds them equally at home in languages as diverse as Hebrew, Indonesian, or Russian, or in styles divergent as traditional harmony or the upbeat modern tempo. Under the imaginative directorship of Eric Benson, the Bruinaires have delighted thousands of people in the New England area with performances for club and service organizations, numerous cocktail parties, and song fests. Highlights of the year included several television appearances, club work in New York City, impromptu serenading of that sister school, and a luncheon performance in September before scores of alumni and scholars from all over the worldhere to hear the Bruinaires and maybe catch a few minutes of the Heffner inaugural. JABBERWOCKS CLATTERCROCK?? Platter Box??? Chicken Pox???7? The Chattertocks, organized ini- tially as a one-performance spoof on the Jabberwocks, have successfully completed their seventeenth year of singing. Busier and having more fun than ever, the enthusiastic Pembrokers have traveled to New York and to the University of Connecticut, to various engagements in the Providence area such as the WPRO-TV performance with the Bruinairesand to Quonset Naval Base and the Bristol and Cov- entry Nike bases to bring joy to the valiant National Guardsmen defending Providence. At Brown, they have traveled often to the Wriston Quad, have sung their traditional performancesthe fresh- man concert, the Christmas dance, and the Latin Carol Service primo die festali. . . . and also per- formed at the inauguration luncheons and at the Pembroke 75th anniversary alumnae dinner. Stephanie Cotsirilos led them in their repertoire of old favorites, nov- elty numbers, and folk songs. Gwyn Walker kept adding new arrangements all the time, and Kay Shibley played the Blessed Virgin at Christmas. What is a Chattertock? She's a girl who loves to sing and loves to enter- tain. ONCE again this year, the Pembroke Double Quartet charmed audiences on campus and in the outside world. Autumn found the PDQ's dragging their dates out of the football stadium just before the final whistle, rush- ing back to Pembroke to change into PDQ garb, and racing down Thayer Street just in time to be ready to sing at a fraternity cocktail party, and then maybe running across Wriston Quad to perform again. PDQ dates are a patient breed. But the PDQ's dont mind the rushing; there are too many compensations. They love to sing, and their audiences sense this and respond to it. Fraternity parties are great places to sing, because the contact be- tween performers and audience is close and communica- tive, and the audience is often unable to move. The PDQs thoroughly enjoy performing in that type of situa- tion. But there were many other engagements too. There was the well-remembered jaunt to Cranston East High School to perform at an 8:30 A.M. student assembly; there were private parties, Pembroke activities, and off-campus teas and luncheons. On campus or off, performing or rehearsing, singing or just clowning around, the PDQ's had a busy year. . Z A M DARK SATURDAY AFTERNOONS at Brown Stadium seemed a little less gloomy when the band took to the field at half time to delight Brown's loyal fans with the fresh brand of humor that has become its trademark. The task of planning and executing the band's many activities and of consistently producing witty scripts was in the hands of its very able officers. This year's band board was composed of Larry Pizer, president; Jeff Jones, vice-president; Brew Smith, secretary; Roy Johnson, treasurer; Jack Monrad, drum major; Mark Hochberg, sophomore representative; Dave Mathieson, librarian; and Earl Holt, president emeritus. The vital managerial work was capa- bly handled by Neil Bromberg, executive manager; Dorsey Blake, business manager; and Paul Garrett, Marina Bandidos, and Karen Van Riper, assistant managers. Professor Martin J. Fischer, who resigned in December after twenty years as conductor, and Frank Marinaccio provided musical direction. Sparking spirit with pounding drums and waving straw skimmers, the band led the cheering both at home and away. Highlights of the season included the Princeton P at Harvard, a salute to trash collec- tion on Thayer Street, and the presentation of a straw hat to the band's first honorary member, president Ray Heffner. A fine group of freshmen gave support to an increased emphasis on musicianship. The marching band mixed more serious works with its traditional humor. The revitalized concert band, under the chair- manship of Earl Holt, offered the University an expanded schedule of excellent performances, and the brass chorale and other ensemble groups continued to challenge Brown's best musicians to develop fully their talents. The Brown Berets of the pepband, with Doug Ballon as chairman and Earl Holt as conductor, made their debut at Meehan Auditorium, directing the cheering for the hockey team and entertaining fans between periods with a crisply played selection of popular music. 101 CONVOCATION CHOIR HHRH l'!f ; 'it. HHE LI llllh LITHE in their black leotards, the Pembroke Modern Dance Club is a clandestine group of girls who spend more time contracting, contorting, leaping, and whirling than seeking notoriety. They prefer to try to reach great heights more by physical exertion than by public exhibition. In- volved in the intricacies of corporeal self-expres- sion, they emerge perhaps two or three times a year in productions which seem to prove simulta- neously both their existence and the impressive results of their dedication. But the world of the dancer does not rely on the more banal methods of communication to achieve rapport with the world at large. It is more reliant on introspection . . . often to the point that the world at large ceases to exist as such and becomes instead a supplier of stimuli: sound, light, space, color. Any artist must re- spond to produce; but the production is not de- pendent on the response of a public. Therefore the dance group may not often seek public ap- proval . . . or even perusal. But it is nice to know that they are there . . . spinning away. ,' '.'. v lil PEMBROKE MODERN DANCE SINGING or not, the Convocation Choir certainly has a good time. Under the warm and witty direction of Bill Dineen known in very few circles as Prof. Dineen and the assistantship of seniors Muffin Ames and Fred Bargoot, the group opens Pembroke and Brown Con- vocations with a song and celebrates spe- cial University functions such as Presi- dent Heffner's Inauguration. By far its busiest season is Christmas- time when it helps swing the University into the holiday spirit with the classic Latin Carol Service and the unique Serv- ice of Nine Lessons. It also backs the Rhode Island Civic Chorale, R.I. Phil- harmonic, and a massive audience in the traditional Messiah Sing. Each of the Choir's seventy members can sight-read music, making it possible to sing a voluminous program of music through the year with limited rehearsal time. The Choir performs a range of cho- ral types from Elizabethan madrigals through the contemporary compositions of Brown's own musicians Paul Nelson, Ron Nelson, and Robert Cohen. 102 Ny SHOKING TAKE OFF! Just 'round the corner or way into the boonies. There will be a million things to remembersongs and guitar playing around a pot-bellied stove; carrying within yourself the toasty warmth of the fire up the ladder to a cozy sleeping bag in the loft; a marshmallow hanging perilously over hot coals; astounded roommates listening to hair-raising tales of skill and unflag- ging courage in the face of outrageous opposition; the end of the ski trip and your car buried under three feet of snow; whooping and hollering down an untouched powder slope or leaping off a cliff at Cape Cod or Gay Head and running, falling, avalanching down to the beach and the ocean; salt mist in your hair or wind-blown snow, or sleeping bag feathers, or pine pitch. We may hear a lot of in-jokes and confirmed traditions, but a lot of our fun is in meeting new people and seeing new traditions starting, and we usually find that such habits as Glop, wet sleeping bags, Vibram treads, tin-cups, sauna baths, smoked socks, and moleskin are extremely con- B ROWN-PE MB R OKE terlig;?us, and become more widespread with every OUTING CLUB ALPHA PHI OMEGA ADHERING to its principles of leadership, friendship and service, the Brown chapter of Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity, continued its program both on campus and in the community. The blood drive is perhaps Alpha Phi Omega's most valued service to the Brown Community. From the University Blood Service any member of the Brown Community, or the immediate fam- ily of a member, may receive free replacement of any blood which he received at any hospital in the U.S. The past drive set a new record for total number of pints donated. To help coordinate its activities this year A Phi O acquired and redecorated its own chapter room on the third floor of Faunce House. Important events this year were the co-sponsoring of Peace Corps week on campus and the hosting of an Alpha Phi Omega regional conclave at Brown. Among A Phi Os long-term programs are service to both local and district scouting and to the YWCA by chaperoning of dances and helping with the maintenance of their recreation facilities. Rounding out A Phi O's program were several dinners and A Phi O's traditionally exciting intra- mural hockey team. YOUNG REPUBLICANS SPEAKING to a large gathering of students and state and local candidates at a reception in late September, Governor John H. Chafee began this year's program for the Brown Young Republicans by describing the tactics to be used in overcoming the great consensus in the Rhode Island area. Sparked by his call for Republican power, club members pursued several campaign activities in the weeks that followed. They visited homes, can- didates headquarters, rallies, and even the streets of Central Falls to aid in soliciting votes. On No- vember 8 they waited anxiously and then confi- dently. It was a Republican year. Campus activities, under the outstanding lead- ership of president Fraser Lang, ranged from the informative to the purely social. The highly suc- cessful Governor's reception afforded students an opportunity to meet state Republican candidates. In November, Secretary Lois Tingley diligently recorded amendments as the club slowly and carefully passed a new consitution. In spite of the ever-watchful eye of treasurer Terry Maguire, funds were allotted for a sherry hour held in late November. And even during the Iull after elec- tions, the club continued its slow but steady growth of membership and purpose. It was a good year; it was a Republican year. YOUNG DEMOCRATS 104 BI-ANNUALLY resurrected to lead the Democratic Party to victory, the Brown Young Democrats this year concentrated, successfully, on electing their state sena- tor. The East Side is traditionally Repub- lican, and 1966 was a Republican year. Brown's Democrats, under the leadership of Peter Jacobs, decided to devote their efforts to helping Harold Arcaro. Typing, stamping, sealing and canvassing, the col- lege students provided the bulk of the labor which, along with Arcaro's own drive and personality, led to the young Brown graduate's close victory. The ex- perience was unusual and valuable, an exercise in what Peter Jacobs called the not-so-glamorous sport of behind-the-glit- ter politics, of card filing, envelope stuffing, and plenty of doubts about the value of it all. The problem of a main stream college political group is not, however, arousing enthusiasm during a campaign, especially a campaign for an attractive candidate. The problem is continuing the organiza- tion between elections, and as yet neither group has been notably successful. PERHAPS on the football field Brown was not successful this year, but over the chess board Brown had a fantasti- cally victorious year. With Larry Forman, Jim Stuart and Tom Crispin coordinating activities, the club had its 36 record-number members enthusiastically participating in many Friday night contests. To the astonishment of everyone, the freshmen exhibited unbelievable chess prowess as they performed most sucessfully in the club tournaments. Class of '70s, Paul Gauthier and Jared Mc- Hatton captured first place in the Endgame Tournament; Tom Crispin, Larry Forman and Charles Young were the leaders in the annual Club Championship Tournament. For the 3rd consecutive season, Rolf Adenstedt captained CONDUCTING weekly duplicate bridge tournaments sanctioned by the American Contract Bridge League, this year's Brown University Bridge Club offered its fifty regular players and more than 150 others who play at least once during the year a diversified program of match play. A Master Point night is held once a month, and the winners of this tournament re- ceive a full master point. Featuring a full library of current bridge books to prepare its members for the qualifying tourna- ment of the Intercollegiate Bridge Tour- nament, the Bridge Club scheduled events to offer an opportunity for serious com- petition to the university's many bridge enthusiasts. G LSS CLUB a powerful Brown contingent which seized 1st place in the Rhode Island chess Association. With the Rhode Island Invitational Team Tournament being held at Brown, the host school finished 2nd in an exciting finish. Competing with the aggressive squads from Harvard, Yale and Dartmouth, Brown demonstrated that it is one of the top teams in New England. With convincing victo- ries in its home games against CCNY, Norwich University and URI, the club saw impressive performances from Neil Daniels, Stephen Cohen, Michael Terrin and Ronald Hanoian. As the season ended, the club had Larry For- man captain successful teams that travelled to Brandeis, MIT and Boston College. BRIDGE CLUB TERTULIA INFORMAL AND UNORGANIZED, the Tertulia is the center for the outside activities of all serious Spanish stu- dents. Conceived sixteen years ago by certain Pembrokers and conducted by Professor Kossoff and his wife at their house, the weekly meetings have no official connection with the University except for the approval of the Spanish Department and occasional small donations by depart- ment members. There are no officers, rules, dues, nor any other of the usual club attributes, and the only activity of the usual gathering of 60-80 students is conversation in Spanish. Participants feel that this is the only way to run a club. DIE DACHBODENGESELLSCHAFT, the German Club, conducted a program of sherry hours and dinner meetings with guest speakers. Most of the topics dis- cussed were politicalalthough Professor Moehring lectured in November on the idiosyncracies of the Vienna National Li- brary, and he left the club's members with a greatly increased appreciation for the Rock. A visiting German graduate student spoke to the club on his impres- sions of America and Americans as well as his impressions of what Americans be- licved about his homeland. And the Ger- man Deputy Consul was a guest at a club dinner and spoke about current political developments in Germany. The highlight of midyear was undoubt- edly the Weihnachtsparty, but the years climactic Ausflung to the beach made finals anti-climactic. GERMAN CLUB LES FEMMES SAVANTES, as presented by the fa- mous Treteau de Paris, opened the French Club's round of activities in early October. The performance was very well received by a sellout crowd in Alumnae Hall. In November the Club held a sherry hour and banquet in honor of the participants in the Junior Year in Paris program. Activities in following months included a Christmas tea in the Pembroke Field House with both French and American entertainment, a French film presented at Faunce House, and a picnic the first week in May. In addition to these social activities, a series of lectures was presented featuring Professor Fiore, visiting French professor M. Serge Gaulupeau, and an historian of French art. Hopes for a club production of a one-act play or series of scenes from French drama were largely un- founded. BROWN ENGINEERING SOCIETY 108 FUNCTIONING from a newly acquired office in Barus-Holley with a newly acquired membership of more than 100, the Brown Engi- neering Society expanded its program to attract those hard-to-find English majors who are interested in science. A new program featur- ing smaller, more informal meetings with interested faculty and ad- ministration members supplemented a lecture program which in- cluded speakers from Texas Instruments and Eastman Kodak. In hopes of more active and expanded work in the future, the Society formed student committees responsible for membership, Society affairs, student employment, and advising the library. BRIDGING the gap between the under- graduate years and those of medical school, the Pre-Medical Society started this year's program during Freshman Week counseling prospective pre-meds. Meetings included talks by various visit- ing physicians, and educational movies. In addition, sherry hours were periodi- cally held to facilitate communication be- tween students and counselors. The Soci- ety has also made an effort to form closer ties between four-year pre-med students and those in the six-year program, spon- soring a banquet for junior and senior members of the Society and the six-year medical students. The main purpose of the club is to ac- quaint its members with hospital activi- ties. Toward this end, there were tours to various local hospitals and medical insti- tutions, and the observation of actual op- erations. PRE-MEDICAL SOCIETY CLASSICS CLUB APPROXIMATELY ninety undergraduate and gradu- ate students and fourteen members of the faculty joined together in a Group Independent Studies Project at the end of first semester in an effort to evaluate their educational experience as individuals and as members of the Brown community. Divided into sections of about fifteen members, the participants, referring to an extensive bibliography, researched and discussed edu- cational philosophy at weekly meetings. These meet- ings, along with several general lectures, comprised a fifth, non-credit course outside the curriculum during the second semester. While studying educational goals and discussing pres- ent and alternative methods and systems, members of each seminar had a unique opportunity to create an academic environment of their own choice. A variety of approaches to the subject and the learning process, itself, were experimented with, and participants were encouraged to pursue their individual interests while sharing them with the group as a whole. In addition to this actual study of educational philosophy, over 200 colleges and universities were contacted concerning ex- perimental programs. This inquiry into experimental education at other schools and participation in an unorthodox academic situation at Brown are two ways in which GISP has tried to help professors and students alike develop their ideas about what education is and what it ought to be. THE OLDEST majors club at the University, the Clas- sics Club is an organization which not only gives its members an opportunity to broaden their education in the various fields of classical scholarship, but also al- lows both faculty and students to meet and converse on an informal level. The year's program of meetings at which either a member of the department or occasionally a guest lec- turer spoke were highly successful. Topics varied from an informal discussion of Classical Education in Eng- land to a slide-illustrated lecture on Damaretes Lion. The high point of the first semester was the traditional Latin Carol Service held in Alumnae Hall and attended by more than a thousand students and community residents. A successful year was culminated by the annual banquet and election of officers on the night before senior comprehensives. GIROUE TTNE STUDY PROGRAM DEPENDENT TRYING hard to sell, the Bruin Club has ma- tured into an organized body for the promotion of Brown to prospective students. With a member- ship of sixty selected to insure a wide geographic distribution, the club is now able to be run more efficiently and with a broader scope. Grove Bur- nett, the clubs chairman, has provided much of the needed impetus for the expanded activity. An office in Faunce House contains files on prospec- tive students, propaganda on Brown, and a club member always on duty to give tours and be of assistance to the admission staff and any sub- freshman. The club has gained prestige through the suc- cess of its program and has been officially recog- nized by Mr. Doebler and the Admission Office. One of its most interesting programs was a super- vised day at Brown for selected sub-freshmen from all over the nation. This day, sponsored by alumni in connection with the Alumni Office, was considered a success and will be continued and expanded. Another successful aspect of the club's activities has been the work done with Brown Alumni Clubs in members home areas, spreading the good name of the University. INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB BRINGING an awareness of international affairs to the University and Providence communities is the major aim of the International Relations Club. Perspectives met once a week, and while this foreign affairs forum never played to a full house, it did have a hard core of patrons, proba- bly the same stalwarts who subscribed to Chan- nels, the club's journal of foreign affairs. Delegates appeared sometimes to be the clubs main product with groups attending mock UN sessions in New York and Montreal, the Harvard conference on China, and Brown's own confer- ence on the Middle East. The Middle East con- ference, coming on the heels of the highly suc- cessful Africa conference the club sponsored last year, was the outstanding function of the year. The club kept up a fairly active program of guest speakers, featuring Noel Brown, political affairs officer of the UN. Taking its responsibility to the community seri- ously, the TRC sponsored the showing of films on Vietnam and China at the Avon and ran panel discussions in conjunction with the films. In a year full of wars, the IRC continued its efforts to at least inform if not arouse the Brown commu- nity. ACTIVISM ACTIVISTS 113 NO LONGER SATISFIED with the quiet campus, Brown and Pem- broke students called for changes on campus and also showed their concern about the Vietnam war. Protests at the Wheeler speech got out of hand and attracted national attention as a group rushed the stage at the conclusion. Far more effective was the quiet and orderly exit of a group of students led by one on Browns most distinguished faculty members. Choosing one of the most ridiculous statements in a generally ridiculous speech, these students and faculty members were far more eloquent in silent protest than the rabble who tried to force a physical confrontation. The Pembroke social system was the prime campus source of protest. This conflct between students incensed at the lack of logic of the system and a dean anxious to work with students but convinced of the correctness of her actions led to a protest to force the dean to meet with students. The frustration of many students with various aspects of the Uni- versity is understandable, yet the arguments of the Schulzes and the Pierrels are normally intelligent. A conflict such as those on campus, therefore, requires moderation and willingness to understand. The frustration of students with government policy in Vietnam is a different matter altogether. The polite, moderate discussions appro- priate to meeting with Brown's deans are no longer sufficient for many incensed with a senseless war. FOUR YEARS ago, a group of students caught up in the civil rights movement came together for the pur- pose of helping the cause of integrated education here in Providence. Plans had been made by the Providence School Board for the construction of an experimental elementry school at Lippitt Hill, on the fringes of a predominantly colored neighborhood. Students for the school would be drawn from the white Howell Avenue School and the colored Doyle and Jenkins Avenue Schools. Problem: the children from the Doyle and Jenkins schools would undoubtedly be unable to com- pete with the white, middle-class, and more education- oriented youngsters from the Howell Avenue School. A handful of Brown and Pembroke people, under the auspices of the Northern Student Movement, began a tutorial program in an attempt to strengthen the educa- tional background of the students in the Doyle and Jenkins schools. 114 ., NORTHERN STUDENT MOVEMENT At first, many teachers and parents were skeptical about college students coming into their neighborhood and into their classrooms. After a while, the boys and girls started coming home with stories about the new things they had seen and heard, the places they had visited. And when Principal Thomas J. McDonald and a few teachers won the support of the school system for the program, it could proceed virtually uninhibited. Federal funds became available, and the scope of the tutorial was broadened. Participation increased rapidly, so that by last year more than one hundred students devoted two afternoons a week to their selfless tasks. The Lippitt Hill School should open next year; a few years from now, we will get an inkling as to how suc- cessful was the tutorial. No matter what the final out- come, the Brown-Pembroke Lippitt Hill Tutorial will stand as a shining example of the college student's ac- tive participation in community affairs. PROVIDING the funds for such campus activities as Brown Youth Guidance, the Latin American Summer Project, and the University Blood Drive, the Brown Char- ities Drive also serves as a valuable ex- perience. The problems of organizing pri- vate philanthropy for the benefit of cam- pus organizations as well as for such diverse causes as the World University, the Meeting Street School for crippled children, and CARE give the student workers a unique opportunity to try out their managerial skills. The Brown Chari- ties Drive, through its support and pub- licity of campus charities, educational services such as the National Scholarship Service for Negro Students and programs of concern to the academic community exemplified by the drive's support of the Committee to Rescue Italian Art enlists campus understanding as well as finan- cial support. As a result of last year's reorganization and with the usual whole- hearted support of the Brown Commu- nity, this year's drive was one of the most successful and beneficial in its history. BROWN CHARITIES DRIVE DOING a good job at a lot of things, Brown Youth Guidance, the University's largest organization, planned and executed division-sized operations in the war on pov- erty with almost incredible frequency. Tutoring high schoolers at Nickerson Set- tlement House, playing with the kids at the state children's center, befriending the girls at the training school, or running a day in the country at the Smith farm, the BYG'ers managed to contribute substantially of themselves while remembering that it takes more than light and goodness to accomplish things in the social work business. Fear of Federal Hill and kite-eating trees straight out of Peanuts were overcome, and the 200 volunteers proceeded, at their own discre- tion, with skill and much enthusiasm. Bussing Brownies and Brokers all over the place cost money and meant problems. Nobody said that it would be cheap. Brown Charities and SCOPE were the sources of the group's money, and more than one BYG'er expressed the wish that Professor Kirkpat- rick's former employers might like to make another friend. Meanwhile, BYG was taking no chances. It loaned thirty of its people to Brown Charities as solicitors. Programs were constantly reviewed, and the BYG brassKaehler, Bearman, Mey- ers, Goldsteintried to do better than the pros. Sometimes they did, but more often it was the people and not the programs that made the difference. BROWN YOUTH GUIDANCE LINKING the former UCA, Newman Club, and Episcopal College Church, the University Chris- tian Movement was formed this year in an at- tempt to relate more meaningfully the interests and functions of various groups of Christian peo- ple in the communities of Brown, Pembroke and RISD. The movement parallels the widespread interest in ecumenism which many Christians have felt since the 1950s. More importantly, it seeks to counteract the isolationalmost antago- nismwhich Christian groups in this community have too often promoted among themselves. What is new about UCMBrown is the realiza- tion of Christianity's beginning in the centrality of Jesus Christ in history, despite extensive litur- gical and theological barriers to real unity. In this way, UCM is a new vision of what Christianity can mean for the College Hill community, since there is now the conscious intent that Christians not be separated, as before, into cliquish associa- tions. UCM will be open to all whose interests draw them to its program. It seems exciting that Christians here should recognize, at last, their uniting threads and try to reflect and to promote them. UCM's strength will develop from its diversity, from a varied program of activities and opportu- nities. In this sense, UCM openly seeks to involve Christians and interested non-Christians in reflec- tive dialogue about their common interests and concerns, and in joint action related to these in- terests. Thus, several groups have already this year transformed their concerns for peace, South Providence, ecumenical worship, and education into positive programs, and through the efforts of concerned people working through UCM, many other developments are expected to follow. HILLEL FROM the cookie jar to the study group, the B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation has provided spiritual guid- ance, intellectual stimulation, and social opportunity for the Jewish students of the Brown community. This year, under the leadership of Allen Heller and Richard Narva, the Brown Hillel chapter has taken an increasingly regional outlook, sending representatives to the New England Conference, and serving as one of the leading forces in New England to encourage re- gional unity and cooperation in the various New Eng- land Branches of Hillel. At Brown, as it has done now for twenty years, Hillel has provided Israeli dance groups, study groups in Jewish culture and religion, study-break sherry hours, sukkot-raising parties, mixers, and that Hillel backbone, the Sunday brunch. This year, speakers for the Sunday brunches included Professors Moehring, Frerichs and Baron from the Religious Studies Depart- ment, Professor Hargrove of the Political Science De- partment, Professor Workman of the Classics Depart- ment, Professor Quevedo of the Biology Department, Professor Edds of the Medical Science Department and the Dean of Brandeis University, Dr. Leonard Zion. With the help of the Jewish community of Provi- dence and the able direction of Rabbi Nathan N. Rosen, the Brown Hillel chapter has been consistently competent in providing for the needs of the Jewish students at Brown, Pembroke, and other colleges in the area. RETURNING from a year at Cambridge, Eng- land, Canon John Crocker was warmly greeted by many old faces at the first Sunday morning service and in the Episcopal College Church Vestry. Yet he readily admitted he had much lost ground to make up in meeting now both the freshman and sophomore classes at Brown, Pem- broke, RISD, and Bryant. Assisted by Judy Speyer and the Vestry led by officers Shaw Yount, Peg Griffin, Kean Crump, and Butch Wilder, Canon soon hit his strideand he constantly urged the Vestry to become some- thing more than the administrative body of the ECC, to become involved actively in campus affairs and to appreciate more fully the undercur- rents within the various Christian groups on cam- pus in working together more closely. Eventually, , in January, the Vestry voted to cut its number in 121 half and join in the formation of the University Christian Movement. EPISC OP AL On its own the Vestry sponsored two colloquia and contributed the proceeds of a Spring Stew- COLLEGE ardship drive to the chaplains of Tougaloo Col- lege and Keio University in Japan. CHURCH ACTIVITY th d to describe th Christian Scizvxfcse Srgvaonrizat?oneiairgfows C HRI S TI A N in 1967. Th b ith infor- 1mnal tea for enzxiarmcffsgrsv.vltln agcigb?:rr, SC IENC E Neil H. Bowles, C.S.B., member of the Christian Science Board of Lectureship, ORGANIZ ATION spoke on What Good is Religion? An- other highlight of the first semester was a workshop meeting with Godfrey John, C.S., a Regional Assistant from Boston. During the second semester members distributed free copies of The Spiritual Revolution, a non-denominational ad- dress on the spiritual forces at work in man's history, by Erwin D. Canham, edi- tor-in-chief of The Christian Science Monitor, and also prepared for the Seventh Biennial Meeting in Boston. In addition to providing opportunities for Christian Scientists at Brown, Pem- broke, R.I.S.D. and Bryant to meet and share experiences, the organization pro- vides information on Christian Science to the college community. Accordingly, it donated a copy of Prose Works by Mary Baker Eddy to the Pembroke Library and a copy of Mary Baker Eddy: The Year's Discovery by Robert Peel to both the Brown and Pembroke Libraries. Weekly testimony meetings were open to the entire University community. Sub- scriptions to the Monitor were made available to students at half-price. After five years of guiding, this was the last year as sponsor for Mrs. Mary Bullard. PROVIDING the Navy and Marine Corps with qualified and dedicated officers is the task of Brown's Naval ROTC unit. Combining academics and military training, NROTC students prepare themselves for military service as com- missioned officers. In class, military history, navigation, and leadership techniques are presented by a highly able and dedicated staff of professional naval officers. On the drill field, the midshipmen practice military formations and the exercise of command. NROTC students partici- pate in a cruise after their freshman year, learn amphibi- ous techniques and receive flight instructions after their sophomore year, and receive more specialized instruction and opportunities for command after their junior year. Augmenting this rigorous schedule of training is the Brunavians Club which provides midshipmen with a vari- ety of extracurricular and social events. Out of uniform and away from the drill deck, the Brunavians foster a lasting esprit de corps among those recently entered into the training as well as those about to begin active duty. The Brunavians take pride in furnishing formidable contenders on the ballfield, court, pool, or rink. Occasion- ally capturing a college trophy or two, the midshipmen are always battling for one of the top sports spots. Socially, the Brunavians sponsor parties, lecture- dinners, and the formal Military Ball. Whether gathering with beer mugs or cocktails, in formal dress uniform or more casual attire, sure and simple fellowship prevails in the best naval tradition. TODAY AFROTC's emphasis is on de- veloping talents which are necessary to fulfill successfully the role of the new officerthe executive, skilled in com- munication and problem-solving and dealing with managerial, interpersonal, and organizational relations. A supplementary course exists for sen- iors who qualify for pilot training. Class- room flight instruction and pilot training at Hillsgrove enable a cadet to obtain a civilian flying license as well as fulfill his pre-commission training requirement. The Arnold Air Society is a national service organization affiliated with the AFROTC and is responsible for estab- lishing a close relationship between the ROTC and the Air Force. The chapter squadron at Brown contributes to ROTC esprit de corps with such activities as Dining-In-Ceremonies and parties as well as Faunce House movies. BRIDGING the gap between fraternal and inde- pendent life, Tower Club combines some features of both with those derived from its off-campus location. Located at 286 Thayer Street, just a few staggers away from Pembroke, the recently re- furbished clubrooms served as the center of social life for sixty key-carrying members. As the club facilities are available to the mem- bers twenty-four hours a day, they provide an excellent place to go with a mid-week date, a group of friends or alone to watch television, or merely to relax with some liquid refreshment. Under the administrations of presidents Roger Roddie Colloff and Bill Wentz, the club has expanded its varied program to correspond with the diverse interests of the membership. Primarily a social organization, Tower Club sponsors weekly parties for members and their guests which run the gamut from dances with live bands to outings and mixers. Social chairmen Jim Rippe and Dave Kertzer augmented the regular activi- ties with elaborate semi-formal Christmas and Valentines Day dances featuring the music of the Gene Milton Quartet. A new addition to the schedule was the showing of feature movies. Despite its social orientation, the Club has not neglected the intellectual sphere. Among the big- gest successes of the year were two Tower Club Forums which brought together prominent mem- bers of the Providence and Brown communities to discuss the social, medical and legal problems of narcotics and abortion. In addition, the club held monthly dinner meetings featuring such in- teresting personalities as Michael VanLeesten, a Negro candidate for city council, and Len Jar- dine, Brown's new football mentor. TOWER CLUB For. S. Veiner B. Eldridge P. Garrett B. Smith H. Franklin N. Bromberg R. Guyotte R. Harris G. Blomgquist C. Hartenau D. McCarthy v A B. Singsen T. Giasi i A R. Colloft E. Holt L. Lantner T. Blumenfeld H. Hurwitz R. Johnson S. McCormick S. Ostrach B. Wentz G. Kovlomzin 1o, K. Brin P. Kertzer S. Miller E. Kronstadt D. Parker C. Primus B. Sherman B. Balderston K. French THE OLDEST scholastic honorary society in the nation added thirty-eight members to its rolls as the Rhode Island Alpha of Phi Beta Kappa inducted 23 Brown students and 15 Pembrokers at its annual dinner. University professor Carl Bridenbaugh brightened the Brown chapter's 137th anniversary dinner with a spirited discussion of colonial architecture and its future. Professor Bridenbaugh's talk probably disappointed student activists who were looking for something else; he had titled his presentation A Conflict with Oblivion. Initiation of new members took place in the Crystal Room of Alumnae Hall where the inductees signed the chapter roll under the watchful guidance of Pro- fessor Ernest S. Frerichs, chapter secretary, and Roger Colloff, undergraduate secretary. Recognizing outstanding academic accomplishment in the liberal arts as well as giving alumni something to hang on their watch chains, the Brown chapter con- tinued in the 191 year old tradition of America's oldest Greek letter group. i xi B 5 MOTHER to PhD's in the sciences, Sigma Xi completed its sixty-seventh year of bringing together the outstanding scientists, both faculty and students, on the Brown campus. Founded in the belief that mutual association between men of great ability and high interest is beneficial to the interchange of scientific ideas, the Brown chapter of the Society of the Sigma Xi continued to be that rarest of thingsan active academic honorary society. In addition to its 68th annual dinner, the society sponsored a series of lectures and meetings featuring noted researchers as part of its efforts to contribute to the scientific development of its members. 127 haay BETA Pl NATIONAL engineering honor society, Tau Beta Pi tries to encourage and recognize superior scholarship and exemplary character. Twice each year, the mem- bers of Tau Beta Pi select juniors and seniors to join their ranks. The society also elects faculty members whose attitudes and enthusiasm toward engineering make them outstanding teachers and engineers. Under the Iecadership of Ronald Verri, William Powell, James Davenport, and Gary Carpenter, this year the Brown chapter of Tau Beta Pi acted not only as an honorary society, but also as a service organiza- tion for the engineering community. During Freshman Week, the socicty sponsored an outing to the Haffen- reffer estate to give the freshmen engineers an opportu- nity to meet informally with the faculty and upper- classmen. In December, the Tau Beta Pi members served as guides for a nationwide group of high school science teachers visiting the campus. During February, Tau Beta Pi sponsored a drive to secure technical books for Vietnamese civilian students. In its role as an honor society, and through its serv- ice activities, the Rhode Island Alpha chapter strives to add unity and spirit to the Brown engineering com- munity. HELPING Eric Brown to end the dropout prob- lem, the Meiklejohn Society's 35 members coun- seled freshmen about academic and personal affairs as only undergraduates could. The society was formed in the spring of 1966 as a supplement to the system of faculty counsel- ing that has so often come under fire. Surpris- ingly, it worked. In its first year, the society chose a name, drew up a constitution, selected officers and faculty fel- lows, and got around to counseling freshmen. The Meiklejohn members met with the frosh during Freshman Week and tried their best to combat nutty scoops and to point out that there was more to Brown University than Sayles Hall and Pembroke. Nobody accused the fraternity men in the society of dirty rushing since everything the society did was in the name of enabling fresh- men to work at a level commensurate with their capabilities. MEIKLEJOHN SOCIETY SPHINX HER LADYSHIP'S Society opened its seventh decade with a distinguished series of meetings dedicated to the exploration of the enigma mundi and in the spirit of the society's motto, Qui Solvit, Solvitur. The members discussed the relevance of the learning experience at Brown to life in gen- eral, the relevance of religion to our lives today, and the relevance of ethics as revealed by the relevance of novels. Such a description becomes intelligible when it is disclosed that The Sphinx is a student-faculty honorary society which meets periodically during the academic year for discussions. Topics of de- bates range from philosophy to science to litera- ture to the arts. This year the membership re- turned in its own quiet cultural revolution to the founding principles of Alexander Meiklejohn; Her L adyship's Society actually dared fo believe that women might be worthy of discussing the Human Condition. Taking a Platonic definition of the ratio of worthy females to males, The Sphinx elected its first Pembroke members. There were those who lamented the passing of the last bastion of male supremacy in the College, but they lamented alone. HOMECOMING NO WEEKEND is like Homecoming. Homecoming's oot class. No yellowed white socks for this weckend, anyone can charge a new pair at Hillhouse. No hoagues either; a nice sweet import or maybe even a Pembroker. No Wheaton or Pembroke honey could be a hoague. No conventional parties; pay at least twenty more for the band; they have louder speakers; maybe even go formal; so different; so classy; so Lvy. Class, insist on class. Maybe that's why the deans send around two letters insisting that Homecoming dis- plays be in good taste. Good taste, those old men won't be able to pick it off, and what can they do anyway? But my date. It's about time she grew up. Browns an educational institution, so schedule Homecoming during mid-semesters. But insist that all the fraternities build enormous figures. Can't let South- ern Illinois State have more spirit than good old Brunonia. Thave slan with rv bare honds alion : a... ths uncrcurcise shilistne shall be as one of 'Hlem. FRIDAY. Entertainment. Nina Simone? Col- ored folk or jazz singer or something. Going? No, rather hang around the house. Gotta get an early start. My date loses control when she drinks. Freshmen go, some of the older upper- classmen too. Not too many like her though. No class. That crazy costume. Terrible French ac- cent. What are those crazy dances? Can't she sing a melody? She demands that her audience participate in her emotion. Poor Nina. They'll do a better job back at their parties. Tremendous empathy be- tween bass guitar player and dancers, tremen- dous. Maybe Nina should try Reed, or Antioch, or Swarthmore. Shes really not Ivy. Ne me Quitte Pas, Four Women,? I Love You Baby. What kind of songs are these? Nobody clapped after that French song. Don't these idiots even know enough to clap? How'd you do with your date; few beers loosen her up? Yeah, but she got sick and passed. Homecoming's got class. Football game. Big questions. How bad? Will the president play with the bear? Queen? How the hell can a stupid Pembroker be queen? Saturday night. Impress the hometown honey. Isn't this a great party? What? Oh, yeah, best this year. Hows your date? Got her drinking, no sweat. Sunday. Brag about your hangover. Rack with her? Naw, she got sick again. Great weekend though. Yeah, musta really impressed those honeys. But they wrecked it by picking that Pembroker; and why the hell couldnt they have the Lovin Spoonful? Homecoming's got class. NO LIQUOR was the dictum from the University's public relations office which was trying to end forever Brown's reputation as the nation's leading drinking school. Dire predictions of disaster were uttered by every campus sage for weeks preceding the weekend. The Brown Daily Herald forecast the ultimate proletarian realization that they live in an atmosphere of fear. Dean Pierrel had no com- ment, and what Forrest McDonald said is unprintable. The IFC took everything in stride. With three weeks warning, it had ample time to set up its very own teen-age night club featuring fresca and a view overlooking Manny's. Meanwhile, WICE had warned Providence residents that Brown was going dry. Hoagues planned to visit Providence College. Local pubs hired myopic bartenders, and, after hush-hush meetings, the entire state liquor board inspection force left on a ski trip to Nassau. Friday was lots of grins. A strange quiet pervaded the campus. Few people with dates left hotels, and the lines at the dorm sign-in lists rivaled those in Faunce House for hockey tickets, but here everybody was satisfied. Other people discovered new places in the town. The IHC ran a dance in the Refectory, and the Ratty staff came through in fine form with its milk machines doing a great business at fifty cents a shot. Saturday was even funnier. Fewer people appeared than antici- pated, and the FHBG had to cancel its afternoon happening. Rou- tines were scarcer than club ties on Ray Heffner's rack. Things hap- pened mostly as expected, but, also predictably, there would be some surprises, at a later date. The worst thing that happened all weekend was the fruitless trip made by Amherst fun-seekers looking for the promised land flowing with gin and bourbon. 133 VOLSTEAD WEEKEND 134 SATURDAY, Sunday, and Friday are parts of Pem- broke weekends. There are several of them. There is Christmas Weekend, an outgrowth of the Christmas Formal. This year the affair had a far more than ordinary queen; the decorations were good; every- thing was good except the male tweeds. Black ties are becoming extinct at Providences version of the Ivy League. Father-Daughter Weekend was a different story. Everybody dressed up like Mexicans. Some of the dads looked like Pancho Villa, but that really didn't matter, for, to quote an old Liber saw, a good time was had by all. While Communists throughout the world were cele- brating another step toward the demise of capitalist imperialism and plotting more dastardly deeds, Pem- brokers were dancing 'round the May pole, and their mothers were watching. Lowering the barriers raised by those sexually-caused conflicts between mothers and female offspring, Mother-Daughter Weekend just had to happen at the end of the year. After going to a formal with a guy in a three-piece suit and dancing with Pancho Villa, dancing around a pastel barber pole with mommy seems logical. A DODYANAVAVIVE - m.wc-,.,', TSrerieete T et 13443 1t L Fierde v PEMBROKE WEEKENDS o eg 2 0 b3 DOUBLE BED? Yeah, how do you make sure you get a double bed in a Bilt- more single? The University parietal rules are implic- itly based on the assumption that two sexes plus one bedroom plus liquor produce a po- tent combination. Of course too much liquor can render the combination power- less. And that was probably the only saving factor Friday night of Winter Weekend. Sandwiched in the tight Bruno U social schedule between Christmas and Spring va- cation, Winter Weekend provides a change of sceneand nothing else. The routines are the same as those of any other weekend, but an eighteen floor hotel contains many more things to break and infinitely more places to blow lunch. Some people professed that Winter Weekend was meant to be spent in a ski lodge somewhere, but why the hell should anyone drive north when riding down an elevator is as much fun as sliding down the slopes. And anyway winters in Providence are so beautiful. The rest of the weekend isn't much. 137 COMING OUT of the long sleep was like coming out of myself again. The weekend was different to me then, the lights, the crowds of parties and Budweiser cans on the court grass. I heard an entirc house scream at the same timeSearsfrom the other side of the quad. Those long-haired singers on the platform at Hughes Court, a circle of buildings around them bouncing their songs, multiplied, back at them. Bouncing rumps in tight lavender pants. Mascara on big, baby-blue eyes. Florida- rose lipstick on smiling, juicy lips Mummy ain't around now. Tall blond hair, with a big red rib- bon circling it all. Tight sweaters. The Wheaton girls visit the campus for the weekend. The Conn. College girls come. The home-townies show up for their sweethearts, a hotel room, and perpetual partyingas though the next drop of poorly- refrigerated beer will be the last. Spring has nothing on the weekend. I can swear I see some spring guy out there somewhere looking at flowers bloom, or skinny trees grow green with their pleasure. But climbing trees with a girl is the aesthetic way. Pouring song from a mug or cocktail glass is the way we decide to forget about classes for three days. The guys singing under long rock 'n roll hair- cuts, the girls singing because their pants are too tight, are parts of the same game. We like the Diman House partywith the more controlled band. We like Pi Lamb because they try harder. We like Dean Schulze enjoying a walk through the quad because he has a tiger in his tank, too. We're all filled to the tongue. Saturday night is a quick whisper. One breath, and it's all gone. But in a breath, in a screaming whisper, in a lounge party, there is timetime to think or not to thinkto hold the breath. There seem to be a thousand songs coming from everywhere. But if you're drunk, you dont care. Who's drunk, fella? Nobody. Ask your date whether she enjoyed the Friday night concert. She can't remember it? Neither can you? The night is a circling escape from the usual thing, the two-day stint with the Poli Sci course or the desperation weekend, when two exams are coming the next week. One throw of beer. One foaming hand. One foaming smile. One sweaty dance. One green-lit lounge. One electric band. One without electricity. One without haircuts. One more throw of beer and it's Sunday morningDoomsdaygrooms- day to see the girl off, to say: It's been nice seeing youuh-sweetheart. Does she remem- ber her name? Well, it happens. What begins ends. Who's sorry? residences 448 THE GREAT LEAP was the name of the year for Alpha Delta Phi. Still in quandry as to the direction of the jump, the AD's gathered the huddled masses, still quivering from the charge of King Quinn's Regency Routine, and prepared the house for the largest pledge class in history oh, a score or more!. As these sweet things were being w indoctrinated into the mysteries, etc.; ; Porsche Perley was turned into an electric harp and California-For-Days Neufeld mashed potatoes. As President CRA-3 tried to bring a little sanity to the chapter oh, but just a little, please, fellas, hot pas- tromi was being consumed by the ton, and Brother Mack got out the Amway to clean up the seniors, who were grovelling about on park benches in prolonged depravity. As the final rites of ADs marriage of heaven and hell came to a close, the patio was found littered with Uncle Ben's Per- verted Rice. It was a quasi-ceremony; the best man being the bluest of dogs and the master of ceremonies D.C. of Fantasy- land. Unfortunately, everything declined and was shattered, as the doves turned into pigeons. Seeing the house in gross financial straits, Neo-Jobs of the Sweet Talk went to the Crystal, the home of the good guys, but only to be rescued by Little N of the Slightly-Bent arrow. Doctor Death then be- gan putting people into trunks and flooded the halls with embalming fluid. The treas- urer put his stamp of approval on any alumni gifts, William Alonzo, and the mas- ter of subtle verbiage, Kiss-n-Tell Igor. Meanwhile, on the first floor, Scoops, the filet of soul, began to pickett sic!, as Gre- ville decided being a lifeguard was no fun. The second floor was silent, and it looked as if the team of Perlman-Kelma was going to break up. On the third floor, however, the R.I. contingent and Dizzy Dale screamed, B e - b R e Save your slab badges, and AD will rise JEFFREY KELMAN ADAM ALBRIGHT DALE ANDERSON ANDREW TONKS .sm Q JEFFREY KEAY SEPH PERLEY JOHN IRICK ROBERT I HUGHES E ANTHONY BUXTON PHILLIP A MORSE JEFFREY HITZ PATRICK F LYNCH JAMES W MCINTIRE JEFFREY S TAYLOR FREDERICK W ARNOLD. IV JOSEPH SULLIVAN FRANK Y. BERNSTEIN LES R GREENE THE INTERNATIONAL Protestant Conspiracy IPC made serious inroads in 1966 in its effort to eat away at the traditional power structure of Alpha Pi Lambda. Flinging its net from such far- out places as California, L.a Paz, Selma, and Cambridge, Mass., it threatened the time-honored outlook that the world is flat and New York its center. Despite this cancerous growth, Pi Lamb retained its vice-like grip on scholastic supremacy and still strikes fear into the hearts of those who would wield political power from a different stronghold. However, the IPC did appear to have some beneficial side effects as it kept the adminis- tration honest for the first time in years, and under the influence of new-found Calvinist indus- try, the house almost managed to remodel the tube room in the amazingly short period of one semester. Off-campus living for the seniors flourished as never before, but as some predicted, Frankie, Gords and Pearlman couldn't last. Jeffries be- came so enamoured of Baltimore from the reports of the scuts that he decided to inspect the area himself. Wee Wee, having firmly entrenched him- self as the fidus Achates to any stray grimalkin, branched out into cycling, and could be seen ca- reening around the streets of Providence in a BYG bus with his BMW hanging out the door in search of a repair shop. Card games reached their zenith with Bearman's two-table all-night extrav- aganza; Lerms, however, was turning over a new leaf and abstainedto the tune of sixty-five dol- lars. Hersh returned from Connecticut a little dis- appointed. Soon afterward, his door was mysteri- ously demolished in the still of the night. Freddy Rapps is no longer a teeny-bopper, celebrating the commencement of his third decade with seventeen-year-old Mustang Sally. Manny's was established as a base of operation for those who hung around Christmas ostensibly to get some ex- tra work done. The cuff link, the pink twink, and the sigma noo fink plan to establish their apart- ment as an annex to UH. Thus, the members of Pi Lamb continue in their quest for the Blakean vision, conquering generation through all experience on the road to regeneration. ALLEN F BROWNE STEVE JEFFRIES, JAMES LERMAN, ELLIOT E MAXWELL JOEL WIDELITZ DAVID FRIEDMAN MICHAEL JOESLOFF RONALD DUNLAP. JEROME ZIEGLER. 111 SETH EZRA PERLMAN PETER E. ZIMMERMAN RICHARD BEARMAN STEPHEN SWEET PETER JUCOVY EDWARD CHARNEY STEPHEN B PERLMAN MICHAEL NATELSON MICHAEL GORDON SETH M FINN MARSHALL GOLDBERC ALAN C LEVINE PAUL MAINARDI NIKO ELMALEH N PAUL GOIDINC IERROLD SOLOMON STEPHEN M SAGAR KENNETH J GOLDSTEIN RICHARD HODOSH WILLIAM KOLB, IR KENNETH DAWSON SCOTT BURNS 3 A D S T A Atflt JAMES R WRIGHT ERIC GERSHENSON AKC CARASS ROBFRT I SELL LAWRENCE GOTTLIEB FREDERICK RERK BRUCE HENDERSON BARNETT SATINSKY RICHARD SCHMIDT RICHARD CROCKER ANDERSON KURTZ KENNETH GOLDING MICHAEL JOHN SHELTON PAUL LEVINT A A o M 4 E R POLISHED practitioners of power displayed their cool command in contingencies and exer- cised expertise in eventful exigencies as the out- numbered forces of Beta Theta Pi maintained their position near the gate in a classic holding action. In the face of UHHQ demands that the gate garrison be increased and threats of replace- ment by a multilateral force, supreme comman- der Hayden Hopping Mad Anderson sand- bagged the patio and, with the help of Lithuanian and Italian exile forces, stalled the attackers mili- tarily while he won complete victory at the nego- tiation table. Meanwhile, normal peacetime activities contin- ued at the B.O. Eleven Club. Sometime-Canuck Will Brown staged a brief hockey rally, but true love and the Valley triumphed as Brown became right wing only politically. Early morning football games gave way to Christmas singalongs with the ERIC W, RICHARDSON BETA THETA 121 HAYDEN S ANDERSON JOHN KWOKA, IR ROBERT VERRI RICHARD FINKELSTEIN A. WAYNE DI MARZIO beginning of the Christmas season at the end of l . $ September. The always popular Friday night fights were discontinued this year after 36 Nugent- Smith return bouts left all but veteran Rhode Is- land Reds fans gasping. Homecoming was truly that as noted alumni returned from exotic places like Burlington, Ver- mont and Derry, New Hampshire to show every- body what the old Beta House was like. On Christmas Weekend, Choke Stanhope in- voked the magic and sounds of Allan Freed and sent the whole house back to 1959, with Nick and Dottie Beckwith twisting and Baby Huey Voss strolling. Even the normally sedate Tom Valashinas put down his machete, begged the muses to look the other way, and tripped the fan- tastic lightly. At the end of the first semester, the house was ! shaken by rumors of an impending coup. Strange Bavarian music belched forth from the second ! floor as the Mad Czech, fueled with Arriba, re- hearsed his role in the new order. On a lower o level, the mysterious group known only as the A ' team conducted midnight maneuvers and recon- naissance missions to previously strange places in Cumberland. The real coup, however, came from another direction. Assisted by the astute political counsel of little Jim Campbell and Bad Billy Meister, a new poli- tical giant, Big Boss Voss, appeared on the house political scene. Wayne Wilson Long, celebrated by sherry and song, found a true love and decided to stick around to see spring spring. Stack was back, but true kai triumphed as homecoming didn't happen twice, and Wilkinson's problems multiplied as somebody read him the Mann Act. The sons of the dragon were valiant and brave, quite ready to enter the fray. And they saw out the year in spite of it. THOMAS I VALASHINAS G NICHOLAS RECKWITH. IIl PAUL C SETTLEMEYER ANTHONY ROTELLI JOEL MOORHEAD COLLEN COATES, DAVID HENSHAW MERRILL CALLAWAY JOSEPH PETTERUTI JOHN RIZZO JAMES C. WHEELWRIGHT FRANK JOSEPH KAY, 111 RALPH THOMPSON DANIEL STONE ANDREW STANHOPE JIOHN F. WILKINSON. JR MICHAEL HUGHES MICHAFL DI LORENZO IN KEEPING with its historical traditions, Delta Phi Omega once again maintained its reputation as a leading campus organization, in this, its first full year of existence! Seven score years ago, the founding fathers of Delta Phi brought forth in this nation a new fraternity, dedicated to the pur- suit of knowledge, friendship, and morality. The brothers of Delta Phi Omega have retained these goals while establishing their independence as a local fraternity. The St. Elmo B.M.O.C. factory turned out more than its humble share of campus heroes. For varsity jocks we had Larry Morin in soccer, and the Toms Mennell, Stranko, and Gilbane in football. In winter sports, Willis Goldsmith played for the hoop squad; Art Dunstan was a veritable Hans Brinker at Meehan Rink, and John Alexander and Bill Achilles were matmen. Come spring, Russ Cozier, Brian Reidy, and Tom Skenderian made for the diamond, while Winn Major took to the links. Tom Stranko and Larry Strongoski made the lacrosse team, and Howie and Haven didn't make the track team. In less strenuous activities, Doug Blatz, Tom Mennell, John Alexander, and John Fowler lent their fin- ger-snapping abilities to the Brown Key. Mitch Vigeveno was IFC Treasurer and saw some fast action on the Cam Club. While Wellsey staged a one-man Bacchanalia, Larci, Weenie, Haven, Torp, Tilly, and Herb provided spirit and boola for the cheerleaders . . On the highways, Crash and Wild Man left a few skid marks Batman joined Hell's Angels . . . Kamakazai Kooter played Amelia Erhardt . . . The Inebriates made their radio de- but, and Wendel led them up the Chapel steps Sowta Claus was full of the holiday spirits, and Christmas Weekend was a flaming success. Thanks to Wug, the year was not without its small catastrophes. The Homecoming project broke and burned; the house hockey team invol- untarily withdrew from the Cactus Jack league; vandals invaded the pool room; and Wug was a perennial casualty. Way to go, Wug!! On the brighter side: Pop Top earned his yel- low belt . . . The Wells Cup was created . Prometheus remained bound Chris Craft commuted to Cape Canaveral . . . Mother knit the Transatlantic Cable . . . Beast's wedding was the Sowciety event of the year . . . The Chief played an admirable Brutus to Gomer's Caesar . Weenie left the world of computers to be- come an archeologist . . . and as Leroy left, Azro appeared. THOMAS A MENNELL DAVID 5. FOWLER DOUGLAS M. SWEENY THOMAS INGOLDSBY PHILLIP H MOWRY WILLIAM BAIRD, JR. RICK HUNTINGTON ROBERT N. NEAD LEE A, WELKY DAVID A. MEEHAN THOMAS A STRANKO BRIAN R REIDY CHARLES W BINDER A EMORY WISHON, 111 ARTHUR NORTHROP. JR CARL I YOUNG MITCHELL VIGEVENO THOMAS G. RAMSEY WILLIAM ADAMS, JR LEWIS DE SEIFE, JR DOUGLAS J. BLATZ GERALD P. CRANE ROBERT T WELLS THOMAS SKENDERIAN WILLIAM E. ACHILLES THOMAS E. CLIFFORD WILLIAM MAC NEISH, JR. JOHN ALEXANDER LARRY C. STRONGOSKI REDERICK TILLOTSON ROBERT J CLEARY PETER V. MORRIS JOHN P. FOWLER DAVID A BARRY RICHARD W MAYO WILLIAM GIBSON LAWRENCE P MORIN RALSON JACKSON, JR OSWALD L MIKELL GREGORY S. MORGAN THOMAS GILBANE. RONALD LEAX STEVEN WALLACE JAMES M. ROBINSON WILLIS GOLDSMITH RUSSEL M. COZIER ARTHUR DUNSTAN HOWARD WOOLEY WINFIELD MAJOR ARTHUR FOWLER ROBERT MADDEN HERBERT FOOTE WILLIAM H. GRUNWALD, JR. B NN 152 CATALYZED by H.H.s summer wed- ding and Stinky's third floor show, 1967 became the Year of Manifest Destiny for the Delts. Under the quite capable lead- ership of Jerry Pierson and Mike Hutter when not leading the Flesh Piles, the Delts extended their presence into many areas of campus activity. Not content with their accustomed spot, the house not only took over all of S. Wayland, and part of N. Wayland, but also other parts of the Brown and Pem- broke campus. In past years Andrews House was usually the scene for Delts only during exam periods, but now it be- came the center of activity every after- noon with endless football games. Jack Sprat, Dish and the rest of the P.P.A.C. ruled supreme in the Dust Bowl until Pablo, Greek and their boys decisively crushed them. At night a steady stream of Delts could be seen walking to Pem- broke, not for dates, but to Sayles Gym for basketball games. For those not inter- ested in these activities, the action cen- tered around the Pool Hall at Faunce House. Just ask Phantom, Sparrow, Ballo and Gopher, the most recent convert. In varsity athletics, the Delts were very prominent. Eighteen brothers were members of the football team. Joe Ran- dall, an All-Ivy selection, Tom Whidden captain-elect, Stock, Gator, and Maz were outstanding. In soccer, Bob Bobby Love Bernius captain-elect, Gary Kautman, All-Ivy, and George Gerdts led the booters to their third straight cham- pionship. Captain Al Fishman, Jumper, Shooter and Turbds led the basketball team. Despite the fact that the majority of the house were involved in varsity ath- letics, the Delts still retained the Lanpher Cup, symbolic of intramural supremacy. After the Deans edict that there would never be another Jungle Party, the social season did not seem too bright. But with Midgets great plans, Mullin's Yucca Flats, Burger's and Swamp's shows, Delt parties were better than ever. Perhaps this could also be attributed to Link's and Pigpen's adeptness on the streets. Among the unforgettable times were Evil Joe's buying spree at S. Green's, Feke's careful watch of the Brown Bear, Dog's job as M.C. at Par- ent's Weekend, G.K.s performance as Santa's elf at the Christmas Party, and Face at T. Baer's engagement party. Moreover, one cannot overlook all the pins that were being lost, especially the one of the house's illustrious president. MICHAEL HUTTER, JR GARY W. KAUFMANN JOSEPH R, RANDALL RICHARD C. BOLLOW LAWRENCE ZIELINSKI GERALD PIERSON DOUGLAS R. BLAIR JOHN J DOUGHERTY JOSEPH TANSKI ROBERT S. KISSAM THOMAS J PONOSUK JOSEPH A. LAWLESS JAMES TREGLIO , w0 STEPHEN D REES JOHN COSTA JOHN G DONALDSON JOHN M. GAYDOS, IR MICHAEL MAZNICKI SCOTT GUITTARR ROBERT C. BERNIUS WILLIAM DEAN LEON JALBERT TIMOTHY C REILEY JAMES R TOBEY FRANK A. TUCKER, IR ROHERT PURVIS EUGENE CAMPBELL HAROLD PHILLIPS MARTIN FELLER DWIGHT HULTMAN FRANK SCOFIELD DAVID WEISMAN CRAIG KEATS BRUCE RICHARDS 1 RAYMOND STROTHMAN DAVID HOMER WILLIAM B. LYONS GEORGE GERDTS JOHN RALLIS BRUCE PIERSTORFF GEORGE RODES DELTA UPSILON FEARING at the first of the year that the brothers of Delta U would be seri- ously hindered in their activities after an early epidemic of domesticity, president Alan Scarrit insisted that the newly pinned brothers would be a great boon to the house. However, overcoming seem- ingly crippling limitations imposed by pinmates and fiancees, DU's managed to continue to open pathways in liberal edu- cation. In the interest of progress, Harden patented a new floor cleaner, while Eyes perfected a revolutionary central heating system. Capitalist Litchficld broadened his financial horizons by buying up avail- able stock in the Playtex Corporation. Francois took an interest in community service and joined the Pawtucket Volun- tary Fire Department. Robby darkened the holly-strewn image of Santa. Getting a jump on most seniors, Guy and the Bear bought grey flannel suits and moved into the quiet suburbia of Barrington. Haus- man showed improvement by getting his first C on a paper, and The Human Fly discovered painfully that he couldn't fly. Standing out as DU's most distin- guished athlete, Hats developed the most successful punt since the legendary Scho- field. After finishing the soccer season as an All-America wing, Weitz was able to spend more time as a faithful pinmate. Pasqual began preaching his revelational religion founded on the sacred rites of Pounding on the Spot. Hippy Heller and Bollentin emerged as fine net fishermen. Sumner took up drag racing seagulls in his GTO, while Hippy and Killer Kings- land entered the Seekonk Enduro. Intersession saw the annual destruc- tion of Vermont, while spring held little more. Hair progressed to Cable; Diji came and went with her side show; the grass grew and the bushes flourished; and the year ended on a national note. ROBERT RICE JAMES J. NAUGHTON, 11l ALAN SCAKRITT GERALD LYNCH PETER BILLINGS JOHN D, CLAFLIN ,A$:$ L. EDWARD WISEMAN GABRIEL DOUMATO ALOYSIUS VASKAS. ARTHUR A DELANO EDWIN B BLACKWELL GEORGE VILES PARKER SCHOFIELD RICHARD LANDOW ROBERT LE SHAY ROBERT KATES CHRISTOPHEK SUMNER VICTOR DE JONG v lrjh KENNETH MAZANEK HERRY HAUSMAN BARRY BRUSH Ififfkt? . tA' ARTHUR GROSSMAN MICHAEL CORBETT NEAL 5. GARONZIK STEPHEN PAGE LESLIE A. JONES gf 4 STEVEN HATFIELD W. THOMAS MOULTON, JR. JOHN BILLINGS NICHOLAS LITCHFIELD ROGER LINTLOP ROGER BOLLENTIN DENIS COLACICCO. GREG KONTOS JOHN WILLARD, WILLIAM BERGANTZ JOHN DIOS EDWARD GLASEAND. ROBERT C KINGSLAND GREGORY GONZALES MALCOM SHELDRICK ROBERT HARADA ROGER STEEN JOHN C. OSTERLING STEVEN HELLEER EUGENE NOONOO JOSEPH RUMA DAVID GUSTAFSON JOHN B KEANE RAYMOND BENNISON 3 RICHARD EMERY lj ll ROBISON HARLEY TIMOTHY MARSCHNER Kmija Af f WHITT BIRNIE WAYNE BADEN RICHARD FILAK IOWARD E ZESKIND FRANK LANGWORTH .3 ROBERT C. 0'DA JAMES VAN BLARCOM JOHN J. KEENAN, IV GEORGE D. ARMIGER JAMES ROONEY m?a h. IKAn DAVID CASHMAN KENNETH FITZSIMMONS ARTHUR DI MARTINO. JR RICHARD TRULL STEVEN DANIELS JOHN OLSON PATRICK O'HARE IOHN BOHN o ..nztndj DAVID JOLLIN DAVID GRIFFITHS DAVID ROBINSON '! JOHN ADAMIAK. 4 ROBERT DAVIS LEONARD O'DONNELL CHARLES O'BRIEN HAROLD J MUGFORD, JK WILLARD PARKER PETER BALINT DANIEL STEWART MICHAEL LEVY MICHAEL Mc BEE RANDALL N. COOPER BLAND W. CANNON, JR KICHARD DREISSIGACKER CRAIG Mc GARVEY JOHN BUXTON CRAIG C. MURPHY SAMUEL ROTONDI CHARLES ELLIOTT BRIAN DUFFY JOHN D, RULON CHARLES G. CALLAHAN THOMAS LEMIRE RICHARD CARMELICH GENE DU BAY DONALD TYLER REFLECTING on its sixty-ninth year at Brown, one sees that the Beta Alpha Chapter of Kappa Sigma faced chal- lenges on many fronts. Despite desperate countering efforts by Rube, the Paul Revere of Academia, 1969s faltering fledglings dislodged the house from its traditional niche half way down the cel- lar stairs. With the PAC offices replacing the Chapter Hall, Jolter could no longer complain about bouncing billiard balls, and had to be satisfied with a weekly window . . . while G.P. Mother tallied endless bills. Heavy responsibilities as - president notwithstanding, eloquent El Butcho with Captain Dick soaked through another splashy season at the Colgate-Hoyt bathtub. During his infre- quent appearances on the Hill, Golden Boy Olie led his ruggers over all oppo- nents. Mcanwhile diamond captain Wiley promised to bring his batting average up to his Sigmar South level of performance Beany of the Social Chair ap- plauded every swing of the bat. All Americans Howie and George led Von Booboo and Sterile and the stickmen around AD field as ex-house-hockey- standout Snake nursed his shoulder back to shape on the Seekonk. Boomer, de- spite losing his cat tat gained renown as Kappa Sigma's off-campus Lothario, and the Atlanta Braves' Murph longed for Southern sunshine and bubble gum divi- dends. While Joe Don was finagling sit down meals as IFC vice-president, the Sheik was finagling foliage as Kappa Sigma's Ambassador with no portfolio whatsoever. When the urchins beckoned Langworth came, but when Bullet Bob called all that came were a pair of crutches. Finally an even balance was maintained between the juniors at Julio's and Baron von Keenan at ringside. A FORETOKEN of another great year for Lambda Chi Alpha was the unexpected appearance of Cactus Jack Garry, re- turned from the tundra wilds of North America. While Dean Roman fidgeted, Cactus introduced Cactus Juice, and the social season was under way. Homecoming highlighted the semester. Social chairmen Tom Ward and Bill Mat- teson outdid themselves on the parties, while house engineers erected a Home- coming project which again won the first place award happily shared with the magnanimous intellects from Hughes Court. Batcat strayed away leaving the Peter Hansen Memorial Trophy up for grabs. But, after a memorable Parents Week- end, all claimants conceded to the Bum, who, with a surprisingly fluid gesture, en- deared himself to the parents of a neigh- boring fraternity. The Viper offered late competitionwhich the indomitable Bum quickly fudged. T. Michael Kerst became the only liv- ing man to experience obituary status. One night Providence police received re- port of his demise from four involved homeowners. Cause of death: murder. The East Side Community trembled in terror until the capture of the killers Dennis Woods and Craig Campbell, de- scribed in all points bulletin as: Two white youths, over six feet, armed, and intoxicated. In sports Lambda Chi supplied co-cap- tains Wynn Jessup and Terry Boyle in football, captain Dennis Macks in hockey, and co-captain Rich Whipple in wrestling. But, to turn to less mundane matters, the brotherhood experienced a startling religious conversion. Thousands of years ago our forefathers worshipped a Golden Calf. Then, unfortunately, things became anthropomorphic. Speculation on the re- sulting disenchantment with divine per- sonalities raged among the brotherhood. A few predicted some sort of Second Coming; one predicted a First. But lo and behold! With wondrous oinking Stayne appeared; Providence once again revealed itself in the barnyard, to the complete satisfaction of all. Stayne, invoked with the solemn in- cantation come, quickly provided a spiritual guidance which developed in the brotherhood the cohesion of all minority groups. And, though the word sty was now and then overheard, L Chis imperi- ously continued having another great year. 1l A JONATHAN BROWN STEPHEN CANTRILL GREGORY K FRITZ CHRIS HAGEDORN FRED M BUSH. 11l e da:l KENNETH CLEGG ROBERT ARNOLD. 10 1933 PaA D. PATRICK MALEY, 111 D MICHAEL HOLBROOK o ROBERT CONTA GERALD ZIMMERMANN SHAW YOUNT FREDERIC MARSH WILLIAM TURNER HENRY HANSMANN Moy, HOWARD SNYDER WILLIAM RAZZY DAVID BYERLY DARRYL FANELLI GROSVENOR BURNETT RORERT ROSENBLUM JOSEPH SETTITELLA JAN HARTKE ANTHONY R. LIOCE. JR RICHARD GRANT EDWARD HATCH JAVID FORSYTH S. EDWARD DISMUKF JOHN 1. DYSTEL BILL RICCIUTI WILLIAM HART 0 B r f j ' ' 4 fn , o ' . ' WILLIAM LINEHAN FDWIN FRYER BRIAN BLAESSER WILLIAM FLINN WILMOT McCUTCHEN RICHARD HIMES PAUL OOSTERHUIS MARLEY R BROWN, Il JEFFREY CARTER WILLIAM MARSHALL e KENNETH J IMBODEN RICHARD MOORE THOMAS STEWART MICHAEL V. ELSBERRY BENJAMIN WOODBURY SOCIAL CRITICS may lamant the rou Fmizalion of life, but at 7 Patriots Court It was something of a status symbol as Unity somehow existed in the face of rau- cous diversity. Brother Trillo joined the ranks of the nouveau riche but, alas, with little style. Holo wonderedwill puberty never come nor catechism end? Turner inaugu- rated the concept of a No-Party Weekend while his darling prepped for graduate work at Tuskegee, and the male hoague continued his open door policy for all comers. Yancy found the essence of life in a jar of cherries, while Brother Zims was the leading proponent of the empirical method. To everyone's surprise Rex Manlo re- mained at home to practice the role of resident statesman, rationalizing in the end that LSAT's were never the forte of the Lord of the Manor. Friar Malo was cloistered in his fourth floor archives, working on his ticket to graduate school and minding his buffalo bow. Brownie's dates displayed superiority not only while studying rocks, but in climbing then as well. Brother Conta be- moaned the Fate of faith, and regretted all was swell at Cornell. Snyder led the list of honorary mem- bers at the F.E.I., while the Judge pre- ferred to take his Collins at The Edge. Arnold retained the ability to turn night into day at the drop of a pill, and traded his Mystic Molie for an honorary D.G. Ken set up housekeeping and there was speculation he'd receive an attache case, the usual seal to Wheaton common law agreements. Brother Greg lived with turkeys and a rabbit in a cold water flat; this environ- ment was hardly conducive to the Kraut's future planning, as he wavered between med school, law school, the nunnery, and working in the Israeli Embassy. Brother Peter had more pressing business to which to attend. Father Fred did his best minding the store, and was determined that North and South should never meet. Leaf trips, museum balls, and purely coincidental meetings at the Washington Airport were privileges enjoyed by the 259 less cavi- ties group. Fred fancied art, but his taste was only in his own palette. This was the mainstream of the social- ization process at Lambda Sig; however, the house remained strong in its tradi- tional role as primary leader-eater, center for gentlemen-jocks, refuge for the articu- late scholar, and target for Beta rocks. LAMBDA F sicMA NU 162 ROBERT C. BLISS CARL CAMPBELL DONALD VAN WIE COLBY L BURBANK RICHARD L. SULLIVAN R REED LOWRY PETER L. CONKLIN JOHN CLAIR DAVID BUCHANAN MENRY J. STEVENS, JR EDWARD J. RODRIGUEZ ROGER HOWELL RICHARD HENKLE GRANT R MILLER DONALD LUSARDI C,; Y Q BETA m a PARTICIPATING in and enjoying the rigors and Z delights of academics, social functions, sports, campus organizations, and community service, the Phis again proved to be an active group. Great pride was taken in placing fourth scholasti- ' g - cally among fraternities. The fifty-one members Sy participated in a very diversified social calendar. : A, Featured were the traditional football weekends, . L j 4 A PN . the renowned Christmas Formal dinner-dance, CAVERLY WHITTEMORE TINOTHY LOGAN ROBERT D. LADD. IR oD JOHNSTON CLYDE B GORDON. 1k and effervescent Spring Weekend, a foggy-dew Homecoming, and the infamous faculty cocktail parties. Individual successes were Brenda B., an off-campus hayride-barn dance, and weekly Fourth-of-July celebrations led by choreographers Wie and Tokyo John. Athletically, the activities and participations of the Phis were rewarded with the presentation of the interfraternity Sportsmanship Award and the establishment of the UPFL. On campus, the Phis again supported many organizations outside the fraternity. Favorites were the Cammarian Club, i the Liber Brunensis, the Bruin Club, and the fa- J . w p bled Brown Engineering Society. Community serv- , Y 4 A v ice proved to be another popular and well- P ROBERT MURRAY. IR WILLIAM ARMSTRONG SANFORD EDFIMAN ZACHARY L ZIMMERMAN attended activity. Beneficiaries of the Phi's sup- port were the Federal Hill House, blood drives, and the underprivileged children for whom out- ings and a Christmas party were held. Within the house, the Phis were hard at work improving themselves and the facilities. Instrumental in these areas were the Bookie's seminars and G.R.M.'s arousing of the brotherhood from their Sunday morning afterglow. All in all, the Phis will share vivid memories of another great and rewarding year at Brown. ALBERT SYDNEY OSLER L PETERSON TERENCE A. HARKIN JONN RIGSDY WILLIAM F GERARD PETER CHATELLIER RONALD HAAS JOHN ANDREOZZI HAROLD HIGGINS ALAN FOX LARRY WINNE WILLIAM LONGCORE JOSEPH WOODFORD RONALD SEFF STEVEN WARLICK o Lu,:vn::yv Y SPIRITED spring behind, the Fiji Funsters took on an au- gust autumnal attitude. John told Tacano to see that the door was loosely guarded. It was, and the Fijis met the requirements of the magic forty.? Next, John told the Rev- erend to play down the animal image in his notes to Wash- ington. It was true that Phi Gam had lost Panda, the Man TERRENCE D MARK I STEPHEN BENTE : JOIN M. SKONDERG from Mars, the Nigerian, and the Pig. But it was also true ' that the Bengal, the Weasel, and the Frog were at large among the Tomatoes, Potatoes, and Rocks. It all turned out for the best as Washington could not decide if Pi Rho was an animal, vegetable, or mineral house. While the Bent T was losing his hair over Campbell's social budget, the Fijis were enjoying every penny of it. Car- pontia had an American Farbero Express Card, while B. had to resort to thirty cent beers to pay for an engagement ring. Mcanwhile, Chico, now on a strict Peanut diet, was cautioning Bobando against any entangling moves. Bo, how- ever, saw it differently, and became engaged to the Fiji Homecoming Queen. Frenchie thought the whole thing was silly; in fact, he didn't even bother to get his own date. Things were pretty quiet during the week: Jesse, Froggie, Weasel, Charlies, and Jerry were playing sports. Quigs and Martz were busy in the country. The Red Fag returned to avenge himself against Rollo, but the kid from St. Louis had the foresight to retain Bill Hooks as bridge consultant. In between pitch hands, Carpenter and Hindalian taught O'Goon to play handball. Everyone was so busy studying and playing that even the Buxton Boys returned from the Rock to study in the quiet of the Lodge. Only twice during the entire fall did havoc prevail. The Great Ratty Robbery caused so much commotion that Ces came down for a piece of Froggie's loin, and Santa Claus QR e e and Roget each found a sucker. ' Even Wyatt and Greeno had to admit that things were looking better. The sophomores conveyed a Bright attitude, and Lobes contributed a great gift for the Logger. With the expected return of Belly and Mo-Jo, John was now sure that the white owl would always be seen in a beautiful purple heaven. H SAMUEL PAULES JOSEPH M TOSCANO. JOHN WESTFALL BRIAN J BARBATA RICHARD BURNS THOMAS C. O'KEEFE, 110 WILLIAM CAMPBELL MICHAEL A JOHNSON ROBERT S, LYLE EDWIN L NOEL 165 JOHN GARDNER PETER HALL MICHAEL SCHNEIDER WILLIAM BRIGHT 167 DECIDING that an increased appreciation of the cultural side of college life would be appropriate, the brothers of Phi Psi dedicated their efforts to- ward enchancing their standing as a community of scholars. While some debated the merits of the fish, others undertook an anthropological study of the heretofore forgotten Fugowie Indians. Scorch and Turke fought for the coveted position of Santa Claus in a campaign that revolutionized house politics; the Phi Psi combination football- field-hockey rink was returned to its original status as a lounge; and cries of Arriba, Arriba from the fourth floor echoed long into the night. We can never forget the seniors, veterans of three campaigns with Phi Psi. Perhaps more than any other class in the recent past, the Class of 67 has left its mark on the house in as many differ- ent ways as there were individuals. There were Klump and Whisker, who demonstrated the bene- fits of Brown's nine semester plan; R.T., whose taste in women was often imitated but never du- plicated; Skanker, whose exploits at Wheaton, Holyoke, and Killington can never be forgotten; and Rudy and H.G., known to the young ladies of Providence as simply Big Red and Oscar. Gene once again proved the axiom that clothes make the man, while W.C. Fields was reincar- nated in the person of R.A.P. Wit finally broke in his Corvair, and John defended his pantry against all would-be poachers. Chink and Abe set about demonstrating their prowess as sound effects technicians; Bob moved to Benefit Street to down his sours; and Chris earned his reputation as Phi Psi's Wild One. We left the driving to Pete and his Greyhound uniform, and the mere mention of Vic's name struck fear into the heart of many an opposing soccer player. Stick remained a disciple of Casey Stengel and the Mets, and although he still possessed the fastest glove in the East, Little Skoog was known to have been burned on oc- casion. Dave and Stoosh turned their attention to family life. Jon, the only brother to think that Applied Math was a gut, became our undisputed Pop-Corn King, while Rick cheered us with his happy tales of the joys of engineering. As the class of '67 sings The Halls of Old Phi Psi for the last time, they can be sure that their contributions will be appreciated and their pres- ence missed by those who follow. But with such figures as the Turk, Scorch, Beeper, Question Man, and Ron the Con assuming greater and greater significance, there can be no doubt in our minds that when better shows are thrown, Phi Psi's will throw them. LAWRENCE M SCHENCK EUGENE PARRS RANDOLPH THUMM EL WILLIAM F MILLER JOHN D WHITMEYER RICHARD A PATT JOHN N ANGLIM JOHN M. NISBET DAVID R COOLEY RICHARD G. RASTANI JONATHAN 5. JEANS M GARY UPHOUSE. 1l JOHN M RISTUCCIA RICHARD W. FERREL PETER M GETZ Fgae W. BRUCE HAMILTON JOHN M. WOLCOTT LANCE W. BRUNNER GEORGE C. HYDE PETER A HOGGAN RICHARD C. TAYLOR WILLIAM A. CATTERALL JOHN KEENAN RONALD GERTS EDWIN JESSUP THOMAS BERNABEI GEORGE MADEN RONALD WATT THOMAS W. FAHEY, JR WILLIAM POTTER RONALD HOILMBERG GREGORY BECKHAM WILLIAM KRAUTER W. TERRY MAGUIRE RICHARD YOST ROBERT F. BUCK SWYNDLESTOCK i EDWINFKLEIN JAMES W WELLS, JR RICHARD FOLEY CHARLES M. SUBLETT STANLEY T JAROS. ; ej' ; A .f JOHN T BARRETT, JR. RICHARD KAFFENBERGER DAVID N. CHICHESTER ROBERT W LANCASTER Fa it JOEL WHOLGEMUTH ROBERT REYMERS JAMES DEAVER DONALD WEISS RICHARD MORRISON GEOFFREY GOING ERIC SMITH STEPHEN C BIENEMAN ; 8 W JOHN BOSCARDIN RICHARD REED MARK E MACOMBER STEPHEN FISCHER MICHAEL E. JONES RICHARD KOZAK DOUGLAS SHARP STEPHEN P. TERNI - - - o l e JOHN F. KELSEY, Il 11M ORD JAMES NORTHROP BRUCE B JOHNSON KICHARD PRENTISS l ROBER KENNETH STUTZ JOHN LUCEY ENLIGHTENED by the guidance of Stanley M.G. Jaros and Steve Hot Dog Hazard, the worthy brethren of Swyndlestock found their first year as a local fraternity most aclive. A diversity of interests both inside and outside the pine pan- elled walls added a spirit of variety which could be seen in every function in which the brothers participated. A pledge class of nineteen effected some finish- ing touches to the Big Bar, adding booths to the once barren walls and refinishing the poultry coops. Also building a cocktail party bar and add- ing the necessary impetus to the Homecoming project, the Class of '69 proved themselves en- tirely fit to wear the Gilded Angel as proudly as their predecessors did the White Cross. Gobbling up the lions share of credit for a successful social year was Rick Kozak. His first semester Opus Maximus, an extravaganza fea- turing a Plutian-Frank Nitti party and Percy Up- tight, was eclipsed only by the Spring Weekend Rites. Lounge annexes on Doyle Ave. and Benefit St. also were responsible for much Swyg Hu- mor, often of an even more esoteric nature. Excelling in both inter-collegiate and intramu- ral athletics, Swyndlejocks lay claim to varsity stars Dave Chichester, captain of the soccer team, Albin Moser, gridiron tyrant, and Rich Sherman, 1029 skater. Jay Jacobs and John Lucey were responsible for some of the successes of the track and crew teams, the latter being often sparked by coxswain Steve Bieneman. Under the two-semester leadership of Doug Spic Span Sharp, the house quasi-jocks made a bid for the Fales Trophy with a better record than in any past year. Other activities drew the interest of many Swyndles: the Brown Youth Guidance hospital program was headed by Jim Wells; the Latin American Program was led by Bob Lancaster, and the Rhode Island Big Brothers included Mark Macomber and Geoff Going. Lounge Lizardry was as enthusiastic as ever before, with Tube Prince Pieroni and Card Chairman Bosco meriting special acclaim. With up-and-comer ranks swell- ing with the likes of Mort Anderson and Rodey, little apathy is expected in this department in the future. The future for the seniors is another matter: Perhaps Mad Telfer, Pear-bod Smith and nautical friends have their fates sealed with Uncle Sam; others still listen for opportunity's knock on their doors. And as Roger de Chesterfield has often said: There are many doors. Let Chaste Havoc Reign. HERSHEL BIRD JONATHAN BUCKLEY ROBERT GAD. 111 BARRY NEAGLE REGINALD MARDEN JAMES STEWART ROBERT WHOKF KENNETH CHERNACK PHILIP OSBORNE JOHN MARTIN. JR CHRISTOPHER BRUHL FREDERICK JENKINS IAMES WALKER - WILLIAM MUENCHINGE THOMAS ROBARDS it j JEFFREY WALTERS ROBERT COMEY ROBERT LETNER THOMAS BOSE WAL LACE BAKER ROBERT ROTHSTEIN s K RICHARD BUCILLA DAVID ENNIS, JK CARL SMITH JOHN AKOL JIAMES BALOW DALE GOODHUE VANCE SALTER MICHAEL BURKE RORERT SZU1 RANDALL BROWN KICHARD STEWAR THOMAS DOHERTY PETER MATHESON P CHRISTOPHER JOHNSTON JEFFREY NELSON RUSSELL BAUMANN STEVE LUDEMANN WILLIAM O'CONNOR THEODORE SIENICKI JAMES GREENFIELD CLYDE HANYEN A JAMES WATT ARUCE BLODGETT ROBERT BUSICK, 111 SAMUEL COES UNDER the watchful, if occasionally bloodshot, eyes of President Watt and Vice-President Nelson, the largest Theta Delt pledge class ever grew into brother- hood. The new class boasted a range of personnel from traditional jockdom to the realms of Polish folk music and ceaseless punning. Track men, swimmers and wrestlers abounded on varsity teams. Less numer- ous, though hardly less conspicuous, were the brothers engaged in crew, football, baseball and rugby. Football in Patriot's Court gained again in popularity; the grid was thronged until mid-December with the usual die-hards and one stubby steel linebacker. Spring brought forth the daily and well-audienced Burn 'im games on the patio. Scholastic accolades were prominent at Theta Delt this year as brothers Ahern and Bose received academic honors at the University Awards Convocation. Brothers Burke, Corwin and Jacobs rep- resented the Old Lady on the Cam Club, the last of whom succeeded in undermin- ing that organization as quickly as possi- ble while leading the Brown-Pembroke Young Democrats. Ibid became sports editor of the Herald and reporter Jacobs continued to expose campus questions. Chipper Pie, the former Pup, took lead of the troopies running cross country, while Daddy Croyd captained the track squad. Meantime, the bigger Klaffer swung a racket over the tennis bums. The social season was highlighted by the arrival of the Great Pumpkin on Homecoming. Astride this masterpiece of 23,000 napkins, Snoopy gave chase to the Red Baron. Charlie Brown secured the Tiger's tail, and one of the judges, it is said, had never been acquainted with the comic strip. A Hell's Angels Party the week after Homecoming provided an opportunity for brothers from Sigma LI RO 5 e RS Triton to join in the fun. Crew races were a huge success and the only com- plaint lodged that evening concerned the advantage of the visitors in costuming. At the Christmas Party Santa Claus ap- peared to have single-handedly sustained an epidemic of some sort. Although ema- ciated, he supplied the brotherhood, dates and Mr. and Mrs. Frenchy with an inebriated time. The house expressed its gratitude to the witty Frenchy for his many services by presenting him with a bowl-shaped emblem of cleanliness. 171 N HO B 1 1 i .. . LT u - H i T P BHEHE m.ngxm idatilidal TWO RATS jumped ship. Ron got pinned and Fee got purged. Wischy was full of bull while Whizz-Bang and Adair were full of booze. Klein discovered street meet and Morf used his. Alex took over the helm and Walt entered the realm as Collins retired. Spider stroked the crew while Caliph swigged brew. Pan was inscrutable and Bingham was immutable. Arnn got some Boon Gel, Smith got the hard sell, and the Pig and the Tool were happy together. Ellis was a tweed while Metz was a Bead and Wee-John was both. Sesko was another two-way man. White lost a love; Smegs was a dove and Don took Fab to Knuckle Junction. Bieluch left the spook list while Mowday and Seston got on. Young got a Yellow Belt and Hale's tube was certainly felt. Kohler had a puppet show while Fogarty kept his Pembroke doe. Loris made his point; Parsons grabbed a joint; while Mitchell and Watson were Physics. The Moose threw a screw; Pett threw a psycho; Sal threw a lunch and Moran came back. RICHARD 1 CASABONNE l 124 DAVID MOWDAY ALD GLEITER RICHARD TRELOAR, IR KOGER METZLER WILLIAM PETT SALVATORE MORGERA arafi ha MARK J ROGERS PAUL R WHITE DOUGLAS L FRAZIER JHN C. HALL BRIAN WATSON RICHARD ELLIS DAVID MORF Amjzmm THEODORE D, KLEIN ALDEN ARMINGTON ALLEN ADAIR STEPHEN SESKO. . INTER- FRATERNITY COUNCIL THE HIGHEST achievement of the IFC in the last twelve months was the sponsorship of an inter-fraternity trivia contest. Lesser events of the year for the IFC were varied. The fraternity system was strengthened by the addition of an unprecedented number of fresh- men. The Council underwent a self-examination in a lengthy white paper used for internal evaluation on the role of fraternities at Brown. Academic requirements for fraternities were made optional. Secretary Chris Hagedorn and his rushing committee received the endorsement of the fraternities for a more intensified rushing period that gave freshmen an adequate amount of time to make judicious decisions, while making the rushing period less burdensome for fra- ternity members. Vice-president Jim Rooney led the Council and fraternity sys- tem to another year of commendable community service, highlighted by the re-painting of the Meeting Street School, an urchin carnival, and participation in the Big Brother program. Financial success for the Council was guaranteed by the work of treasurer Mitch Vigeveno, whose able handling of fiscal matters brought an onslaught of appeals from peripheral organizations. All activities were ably led by Council president Alan Scarritt, whose energy and abilities in- sured an outstanding year for fraternities. DISTINGUISHED mainly by its good deeds at the Wheeler lecture, the Inter-House Council provided the independents with a very appealing and popular pro- gram of activities under the vigorous leadership of Robert Gould who, though declining to sponsor the appearance of George Lincoln Rockwell on the basis that he was not a very good tweed and would not reflect too well on the Council, was responsible for the appearance of that perennial member of the ten best dressed list, General Earle C. Wheeler, who provided scoops on American history to the far too ignorant University community. It was during this lecture that the IHC enjoyed its finest hour as it fought to protect General Wheeler from the vicious barbs of some over- active student activists. After this popular perform- ance, the rest of the IHC activities were anti-climactic. There was the annual Homecoming dance in the Ar- nold-Bigelow Lounges featuring the usual sophisticated entertainment from the Providence area. This was fol- lowed by a mixer with more than 600 girls from ten difterent schools in the New England area. This year's Winter Weekend was held in conjunction with IFC Weekend at the Biltmore. The highlight of the weekend was the dance in the Garden Room, although it was not quite as good as last year's dance in the Refectory. On the scholastic level, there was a study on com- prehensive examinations and on the feasibility of hav- ing two types of courses in a department, one for ma- jors and one for non-majors. ol gl Mx INTER- HOUSE COUNCIL DIMAN HOUSE INIMITABLE Diman House proceeded through 1966-67 in its usual fashion. Under the able lead- ership of King Rat, The Rock, F.T., and The Bat, the zoo upheld its old traditions while insti- tuting such new ones as King Rat Weekend. Baby Huey, The Toad, and the rest of the Old Line were this year joined by a number of new mem- bers, among them Phil Shute and the Staff of Life. Also prominent in this year's activities was the incomparable Goose, as he scuttled from room to room recruiting votes and bumming smokes. This year also saw some intra-house rivalry as the first floor challenged their third floor counter- parts for the Flame Championship. even Beak and the Butanes put on a creditable show, but the Gospel Singers brought in the winning points for the Thirsty Third, which emerged victorious shortly after Nick DeCaesare quietly celebrated his twenty first birthday Hat Shows and 2 Hell's Angels party brightened Saturday nights, as did our Christmas Rathskellar party, which fea- tured the appearance of an ad-libbing Santa Claus. Diman House intramural teams upheld our reputation admirably during 1966-67. Both foot- ball and hockey teams contended strongly for all- University titles, and it sometimes seemed as if Rod Flicker had everyone in sneakers. Dick Magid also brought fame our way with his brief but unforgettable guest shot on The Fight of the Week Refurbishing of downstairs social facilic ties also continued, although Bruiser never did get his favorite table repaired. All in all it was a highly successtul year for Diman. Brown's leading independent house. 177 GROWTH and spirit marked 1966-7 at Olney House. During the regime of Bruce Jaffee, the eighty-two House residents were joined by numerous outside social members in a superb social season under the direction of Dave Lawrence. Six cocktail parties, Saturday night blasts with the Night People and the Wailing Banshees, and the Christmas Party highlighted the social season. A special house im- provement fund led to such changes as renovation of the tube room, purchase of two chandeliers, a mirror, and an Olney House flag, with a design by Pete Taft. Michael Morganstern, resident fellow, quickly got into the spirit of the dormitory. With the assistance of Dr. and Mrs. Frederick Barnes and Professor and Mrs. Richard Dobbins, the resident fellow program remained strong and partially sponsored a highly successful faculty sherry hour. As one of a strong Sophomore contingent, Pete Allgeier provided a diversified program of dorm dinners: Prof. King Chen spoke about China and Viet Nam; Mr. Jack Heffernan spoke about sports, and Miss Athena Parker spoke about the more enjoyable things in life. In addition, John Hall took charge of innovating an alumni program. In other endeavors Rich Clark had to drop his trip to Bermuda as the treasury dwindled; Doug Franke kept the Cabinet in business; Jack Isom flamed; Clint Swift advised; Bird broke up apple fights; Larry Buc spirited away the weekends; Bob Gelb manned the tube room; Obe and D.L. were punched out by townies; Paul Dunn got Fat Sue; Bob Blackburn missed a few ice games; The Mag redeco- rated his room; Harris Finberg's gerbils refused to do it; the Boge was effervescent; Bill Flook slept; the jocks supported Ed North- wood; Repp and Christin terrorized, and the phantoms failed to answer the phone. JAMESON HOUSE WHETHER WRESTING a last-minute win in a touch foot- ball game or raising a Homecoming banner entitled Jun- gle, the members of Jameson, a housing unit one hundred and eighteen freshmen strong, displayed a spirit and drive which made them manifest in every aspect of University life. From the social set of Thayer Street to the Back Bay haunts of Boston the name of Jameson resounded, carrying with it a very special meaning. Around a well-organized social program, including several post-game cocktail parties, a series of highly successful dorm parties, and a dorm dinner at which Major Whelan, head of the Marine NROTC, spoke, the members of Jameson created a magnetic atmosphere which attracted members of the opposite sex from colleges all over New England, as well as from Pembroke. In addition to activities promoted by its members, weekly sherry hours were hosted by Professor and Mrs. Ahearn, the resident fellow and his wife, providing a congenial atmosphere for spirited discussion. On an informal level, Clubs were created wherever an interest demanded. The Jungle, a closely-knit group of young students in search of spiritual enlightenment, and the Club 217, a blow against Thayer Street, are only two of the many which sprung up during the semester. Typically, both of the officers of the freshman classPresident and Secretary-Treasurerwere from Jameson House. Whether chaperoning at one of our dorm functions or offering valuable counseling, the Ahearns radiated a warmth and sincerity which will remain in the memories of those who knew them. To their influence, and to the help and counseling of proctors Rich Brodsky, Rick Farrel, Scott Sanders, and Steve Daniels, Jameson owes much of its spirit and much of its success as a home. s GAME ROOM THREE in a room for two and two in a room for one . . . But at least you knew one other guy in your class! Then you found you were living in Bronson House and there were over one hundred new friends to be made. Some guy named Roman and his wife threw a little party for the men on your floor . . . Nice brownies . . A couple of upperclassmen say he's some sort of dean . . . Does every dorm get its own dean? Classes start tomorrow . . . Hit the sack early . . . 3 AM.? Good try . . . Met a cute broker and asked her to the party Saturday . . . She's nice . . . Upperclassmen are wrong about Pembroke but let's not tell them . . . Ought to study . . . Later . . . Sports . . . We win again . . . Party Saturday . .. Good show Hockey game tonight . . . Freshmen won . . . Varsity too . . . Ought to study . . . It's May what? Exams - . Open House . . . Christmas party . . . Hayride ? . . . Flunk what? . . . Shot down? . . . Upper- classmen might be right about the broke . . . THERE is Mead Househome of champions in hockey and lacrosse, seedbed of future Bruin leaders, hotbed of former go-go starlets, a touch of Eden in the West Quad. Never was such a brotherhood so tried and true, true to several parties like the Homecoming success, tried by the eventual financial collapse of the Puffer administration. Responsibility for difficulties rested squarely upon the failures of individual Meaders to take the situation seri- ously; but taking it like men they renewed with vigor the seeking of enjoyment. Big Peter Zwarg firmly grasped the reigns of power and prepared for Winter Weekend. There was a proctor, a world of wonder in a drop of brew, blower of the blue riot horn. And all Mead awaited the outcome of November politics in a smoke-filled, TV- centered room amid pretzels and punch, their hunger to devour the events of the outside real world as sharp as their drive to succeed in the Ivy League. And the gentle sounds of hall hockey lulled them all to sleep. MEAD HOUSE There was a resident fellow complete with tube and a sense of humanity, though one wonders which was more popular. Discussions of God, immortality and personal gratificationthe establishment of relations with Pandas continued far into the night. The biggest group gath- ered to watch a disappointing tie between Michigan State and Our Lady of the Football, but The Monkees and The Invaders also took their weekly toll. The resident fellow survived a train wreck, his duty to Mead surpassing mere mortality. And there were innovations at Mead, thick red rugs and newly-painted walls. If one had to go, one could at least go in style. That's the way Mead House did things. In friendships formed and goals sought, Mead had style. Grades provided a serious-minded foundation; Mead men provided a friendly structure, and Brenda, the Night Peo- ple and football spirit provided the style. l b T I LEELTT 7 1 lly V IV 'Nll,l ,,lf,'lINlIlI 11 STARTLINGLY SOBER, Poland House tried hard to improve its image and keep its birth rate low. At the start of Freshman Week, about 100 freshmen, many two in a single, called Poland House their home. As freshmen moved out for larger and better quarters, other students moved in, so that by the beginning of semester II there were 88 residents. Off and on throughout the year, Resident Fellow Dean Roger Olien hosted sherry hours for the resi- dents. In intramural football, Poland gloried itself by taking second place in the entire University. Residents from the house also made contributions to freshman football, basketball, and hockey teams. Social events were scattered through- out the first semester. Among other func- tions, Poland House hosted a West Quad bar over Homecoming. Second semester began with a night of silent movies. Sat- urday night of Winter Weekend, residents of Poland House helped out on a very successful party-dance, with what could have been the University's only non- liquor bar. IT was the best of times; it was the worst of times, but in spite of parietals, deans and personal morals, the cream or it might be the curds or maybe the whey of American youth, the Men of Everett House, maintained the fine Brown tradi- tion of all freshmenjust about, but not quite, getting creamed themselves. Ever- ett's horse-shoe slingers were second to one in the University. Using lower parts of the anatomy, Everett's soccer team was prepared to challenge the Varsity for the Ivy Championship after having won the University Championship. Guided by the Freshman Week Com- mittee, who got all the cute Pembrokers anyway; the guards; the janitors; the deanery; and, at the bottom of the list, Pascal Kaplan, Everett's inhabitants quickly learnedeven without Herr Schnerrwhat University life is about: booze, with mornings after and aspirin; sex with visits to Roswell Johnson and questions about Terramycin; cramming, with midsemesters and visits with faculty advisors; and last but not least, LSD is for lectures only, with Ivy flavored bulle- tins from University Hall. Usually well-informed sources discount the possibility that the whole population reached these conclusions while under the influence of drugs, but a source close to the president indicates that increased water pressure in West Quad showers may have induced severe pressures on freshman brains causing these mass hal- lucinations. With most kidding aside, however, all were proud of making Everett House a home for a year, even if a house is not a home. 182 ARCHIBALD HOUSE THE THIRD FLOOR of Archibald House ran, led, carried, and drank ask Ben, Chris, any of the three Bobs, or even Ray the otherwise lethargic dorm to notoriety this year. Besides dominating the power structure, the third floor even paid for this page, which is perhaps appropriate since, really, what is Archibald without the third floor? Although not as large as most of the other fraternities described in these hal- lowed pages, Archibald knows that there's always room for Dello. And speaking of room, Hap Patz who is purported to have spent some time in a cave added color to the social relations of the floor, truly in the Brown tradition. Bob's Bongo Board was entertaining; so was Dave's thing. Bob's Bongo Board was also overworked. Mark learned that superfluous unsheathing of his registered hands frequently came close to causing his connections with the University to be severed. When asked if the challenge, You're yaller, was to be answered by ob- scenity, Steve Voodoo replied, Riiight! Proctor Ken spent most of his waking hours breaking up parties or swearing about the refs, while the other Ken splashed around in his big bathtub trying to break fifty-five. Ho Chi Mark never got into the That's cause for a fight circle; Al never had a chance to say, Baby, ya move me; Rich finally moved, and Ron and Jack kept us all off the Dean's list. After reading this article, Pete the modest artist agreed with speedy Neil, loud-speaker Paul and A plus Wilson that it was pretty good . . . for you. Special notice should be accorded our upper-class compatriots: Ray, Jon, Neal, Pete, and good ol Ken; yes, special notice should be accorded them, but it won't be. And now as the sun sets in the west, and we move toward a broader college career, a familiar cry rings through the still air of third floor Archibald: Gotta grind! INDIFFERENCE to social grandeur and a num- ber of Tower Club members determined Caswell's status this year as merely that building by the arch. Hidden, however, behind that inherited, quiet, and unostentatious image lay an over- worked deck of cards, a Sunday morning pile of beer cans and bottles, and a unique opportunity C AS A N 7 E I I to street-meet from the comfort of one's own win- dow. If during the week the pervading silence became too deafening, the inmates knew how to HALL liven things up: A Bach concert from the first floor usually commencing no earlier than mid- night, a few cups of water over a few doors which usually initiated prolonged aquatic anarchy, the always present popcorn poppers, and, oh yes, that false fire alarm. During the year the silence was also shattered by the pounding of air hammers outside at 7:00 A.M. The distinctive character of South Caswell we're not referring to Stan included the fourth floor types who were much more likely to be playing loud rock and roll guitar than anything classical at any given time. There is also a tradi- tion, still alive in many minds, of general love of life and academic mediocrity. The jocks of second floor North Caswell, though not always victorious, had their joyous celebrations anyway and could not be controlled even by the fourth floor clique of rulers employ- ing a Bigger Staff in their lavish penthouse suite or by the quiet intellectuals of the other floors. ; THEY usually settle on the other side of the proverbial tracks. They prefer ethnic-type environments where the smell of boiled cabbage and freshly baked bread obscures some less delectable odors, and the rents are as low as the ceilingswhich are about nine feet high. Any combination of irregularly shaped rooms becomes an apartment. The decor of the dwellings ranges aimlessly from baroque to ob- sceneearly nouveau vague or perhaps antique abstract ex- pressionisminexpensively but adequately furnished by the Salvation Army store. Brick and board bookcases, records, dust, bare bulb hanging from the ceiling, puce-colored wall- paper hanging from the fifties, drafty windows, guitar or sitar, maybe a pet python or at least a stray cat, home-made shower ditto the stove, refrigerator bare except for milk and cheese, salami and beer, and inevitably somebody's mother's gooseberry jam. Sometimes the nicest thing that can be said of the place is that it's off-campus. The Brown men and Pembrokers who live off do so by choice. Why? Why choose a clanking vacuum cleaner rather than the dorm cleaning service? Why choose baked beans and garlic bread instead of Ratty food? Maybe it's the im- pulse to live in a home rather than a commune. A Kitchen's cozier than the Ivy Room, cheaper than the Jug, and later than Lous. They like having a hearth of their own kindling. They don't care if it isn't especially bright or even especially warm. It's theirs. So what if the home is a hovel? After all, it's the spirit of the thing that counts. OFF- CAMPUS THE UNIVERSITY, in 1966-67, has given the off-campus program increased support even if only tacitly. Although the official line still maintains that some students must be permitted to leave the dorms to solve the room shortage, the solution is apparently satisfactory. Even the cautious and protec- tive Pembroke Housing Office is participat- ing. As an experiment, thirty Pembrokers the dirty thirty who have reached ma- jority and have parental consent have been allowed to join the apartment syndrome. Perhaps the decision was a compensation for the lack of a home-ec. department for the girls; more likely, the realization that Pembroke, like the College, is not merely a place to live. Maturity and responsibility are not just myths and reformers slogans. In addition, meal contracts have been made optional, which for many fed-up off- campus seniors means non-existent despite rumors that Refectory food has changed. Cookbooks are prominently on sale at the bookstore, and there have been no known cases of starvation. There has been one documented case of food poisoning. Rather there are many gourmet chefs de- veloping. The program is expanding, and no one is complaining. Not the off-campus people they love their refuges where they find peace with or without quiet. Not the little grandmothers in the downstairs apartments they like baking cookies for appreciative eaters. Not the delicatessen and grocery store ownersthey're selling more food. And certainly not the East Side landlords they're overjoyed now as well as overpaid. b2 5 PEMBROKE DORMS 189 A PLACE to sleep and play bridge, a Pembroke dorm bears an uncomfortable resemblance to the Minden. Sally MacPherson's chain of ten build- ings of varying age and quality are home to nearly all Pembrokers. You can study in a Pem- broke dorm. You can go to sherry hours in a Pembroke dorm. You can use the dorm sun deck and be safe from Liber photographers. You cannot drink in a Pembroke dorm. You cannot keep a monkey or a boyfriend in a Pembroke dorm. You cannot go AWOL from a Pembroke dorm. Some people think that Pembrokers do not like Pembroke dorms; others hold that they just do not like to sign out of them. Anyway, they look nice. SEPARATED from the rest of the Brown com- munity and guarded by a formidable security force, the Pembroke residences manage to de- velop, at least as well as the fraternities at Brown, distinctive images. While there is a con- sensus that a deep and bitter cleavage exists be- tween the oldiesAndrews, Metcalf, Miller, 99 Brown, 87 Prospectand the goodies lumped under the identity of 351-2800, some observers maintain that Miller-Metcalf contain both Penny Artsy Craftsy; and Penny Artsy Craftsy,, that Emery-Woolley is the home of the boppies con- stantly groveling in the lounges, that grinding is the only sound in Andrews, and that the SGA is a Birch Society plot. That's about the story on Pembroke dorms, un- less you want to cover the Rock. B2 RESIDENT FELLOWS SR8 8 188403 REE PROVIDING a unique opportunity for undergraduates to meet fac- ulty members on a personal level, the resident fellow program, this year headed by Professor Hargrove, has developed into a popular and worthwhile program. The best part of the program is undoubt- edly the weekly open house of Professor Hargrove and Professor Schnerr. Usually about fifty students, five of whom come every week, are given a chance to talk with resident fellows and other faculty guests. The quality of the individual dorm resident fellow programs varies greatly. Several fellows treat the job as a good way to save money and nothing else. But on the whole the resident fellows, whether faculty members or graduate students, make a serious effort to pro- vide meaningful entertainment and conversation for the students in their dorms. This year, for example, Luther Ludtke in Harkness House demonstrated that a graduate student can do an excellent job, as he invited guests who led stimulating discussions on a wide range of topics. The weakness of the Resident Fellow program comes from the studentsthey just do not attend. Mr. Hargrove invites a group of freshmen every week and almost none come. Few fraternity men take advantage of the program; they often fail even to find out whether the buffer dorm resident fellows are interesting; and few attend the head resident fellow open houses. A few more interesting students would provide the faculty with a far better program. athletics e Eaniett il Sl Ll THE YEAR was the most successful in Brown's history. After losing their opener to Wesleyan, the Bruins went on to win eleven straight games. They won their fourth consecutive Ivy League championship while completing their second perfect Ivy season in a row, and they won the New England championship. In the process Brown dominated the Ivy League as perhaps no team has in the League's twelve year history. Brown's 29 goals scored was a new high; the number of goals scored by opponents, five, was a new low. The Bruins shut out four Ivy opponents and allowed two others only one goal apiece. With the final Columbia victory, Brown ran its victory streak in the league to 19, another new record. Brown is the only Ivy ever to win the title four years in a row; no other team has posted even one perfect season. The entire season also goes into the record books. The total of 49 goals scored is a new Brown record, while the defense also set a new mark in limiting the opposition to eight goals in a twelve game season. Six of Brown's last seven victories were shutouts, and Prince- ton did not even get a shot at the cage. Brown's 2-0 victory over Army was the first time the Cadets had been shut out in six years. Unfortunately, the Bruins could not go to the NCAA tournament because of the 1.6 dispute between that group and the Ivy League. They will never know if they were really number one. But they do have the satisfaction of knowing that they beat five of the teams that were selected to represent the EastArmy, UConn, and Springfield during the regular season and Bridgeport and Long Island University in pre-season games. If comparative scores mean anything Brown should have made the finals of the tournament. As Pat Migliore pointed out, All we know is that if we went to Berkeley we'd have a good time. We don't know how good we are. The trouble is we never will. Just remember that the sport is run for the players. The sports administrators are there to help them. Brown Opponents Wesleyan Pennsylvania Yale U. Conn. Dartmouth WERLIL Army Springfield Princeton Cornell Harvard Columbia ... WA AN OWPRONO O DO OD W THE TEAM was far more than a combination of individual players. Colum- bia coach Joe Molder called Brown the only class team in the league. Its success depended far more on depth and balance than on any individual star. But even on this type of team certain players stand out. Vic DeJong, gener- ally considered the best ball handler in the Ivy League capped his All-Ivy and All-New England honors by being selected as first team All-American left wing. Center halfback Pat Migliore received honorable mention for All- American while making first team All-Ivy and All-New England. Gary Kauf- man made second team All-Ivy, and Ned Zaglio and Bob Cooper made honorable mention. Ben Brewster and Kaufman were the team's leading scorers; each had nine goals. Bob Bernius at goal was impressive, especially in the Harvard and Army games, but normally he could depend on having his work eased by the deep defense of Dennis Colacicco, Migliore, and Zaglio. The line of Brewster, Kaufman, Gerry Zimmerman, Mark Detora, and DeJong displayed passing and breakaway skill, while halfbacks Frank Golet and Bob Cooper backed by Lance Brumner and Bill Bergantz kept the ball in the opponents end for the bulk of virtually every game. Also seeing much action were line substi- tutes Jesse Jupiter, George Gerdts, Rick Biehl, Larry Morin, John Claflin, and Don Smith. THE MAN was Clift Stevenson. As has been the case in recent years his brand of soccer continued to draw large crowds to Aldrich-Dexter Field. Close to 6000 fans were on hand for the Saturday morning game with Army. The games with Princeton and Cornell drew almost as many. The fans came not only to see a win- ning team, but to sec a winning tcam with a Stevenson verve that makes it a pleasure to watch. On offense, for ex- ample, the fullbacks and center half move all the way up into the attacking zone, always pressing for the break that will produce the quick goal. Of course, as is the case with any sys- tem, you have to have the players to make it work. And Coach Stevenson does have a plentiful supply of soccer talent on College Hill. And yet a prime role of the coach is recruiting. Success does breed success, but the overwhelming rec- ord of Brown soccer teams in recent years is a tribute to Stevenson's ability to get good players to come to Brown, and to his ability to mold them into a team that is much more than the sum of its parts. CITING the bad luck, the injuries, and the illness which plagued his squad throughout the season, Coach John McLaughry said, Our prospects weren't anything great, but we had hopes to come up with a couple of big upsets and these hopes were negated by our injuries. After starting the season with an encouraging victory over U.R.IL, the Bruins went down to eight consecutive defeats. Statistically Brown finished last in the league in total offense and in defenseand first in punting. Looking back on the season, Coach McLaughry felt that the bright spot of the season was the team's wonderful attitude and spirit which made it all worth while. Highest praise has to go to seniors Joe Randall and Neal Weinstock. McLaughry called Randall his most valuable player. Averaging over forty yards on punts for the past three years, Randall this year took over as the leader of the offensive team. Weinstock contributed much of what there was to the offensive attack. He wound up the team's leading ground gainer and scorer. For his efforts, Randall was presented with the War Memo- rial Trophy awarded to the player making the greatest contribution to the team, and was also an All-Ivy selection. FOOTBALL Brown 40 O 14 14 38 EERER Pennsylvania Yale Dartmouth Colgate Princeton Cornell Harvard Columbia Opponent 2 20 24 49 48 24 23 24 40 BAD SEASON or no, many of the Bruins deserved praise for their devotion and hard work. Tom Whidden and John Hutchinson, both hampered by injuries, man- aged to produce good performances. Jim Daniels, de- scribed by McLaughry as a terrific kid who lacked size but was the team's hardest worker, was the Brown center. Tom Mennell had a fine career as a place-kicker. Dave Jollin was a fine secondary defender and kick returner. Steve Yablonski, handicapped by his lack of size, managed to be a solid defense performer. Linemen Tom Stranko and Albin Moser also deserve credit for their work over the past three years. But individual performances are not sufficient; some students had hoped for a team where the most crucial player was someone other than the punter. By the end of the season the annual complaining about the coach had reached a new high, and once again rumors of McLaughry's impending resignation filled the air. 205 INEVITABLE as John McLaughry's resignation was, it still saddened the many people who liked him. In his resignation statement McLaughry commented that After eight difficult years which have been unsatisfac- tory both to the University and myself, 1 feel that a change would be best for all concerned. Under his leadership, Brown's football team compiled an unen- viable record of 17-51-3, but he had earned the respect and affection of many players, students, and alumni. Coaching at Brown is a difficult task. Ivy League pressures are as intense as those in any other league, and any coach faced with the difficulty of presenting the Brown University athletic facilities in a favorable light would have problems recruiting the top quality scholar-athletes Brown requires. But the time for a change had come. The University moved quickly to hire McLaughry's replacement. During the first week of January the Uni- versity announced that Leonard C. Jardine, assistant coach at Purdue, had accepted the position. Jardine, an outstanding student and athlete at Purdue, is only 29, but he has already had considerable coaching experi- ence at Purdue and as head coach of Loyola Academy. After his appointment he commented optimistically, With the fine school spirit and pride that I witnessed on the Brown campus, I'm sure that with hard work and dedication on the part of our players and new staff we can embody this spirit in our football program. We'll make every effort to awaken the hibernating Brown Bear. Good Luck. Brown Opponent Bl Yale 25 22 Harvard 33 15 Dartmouth 50 2nd U.R.L. and P.C. 2nd 24 Fordham 32 4th Heptagonals 4th 3rd New Englands 3rd 26th IC4A's 26th CROSS-COUNTRY RETURNING to their winning ways after a 3-3 season in 1965, Coach Ivan Fuqua's harriers posted a 4-2 record. Brown's upset of Fordham was the outstanding victory of a season that was also highlighted by a fourth in the Heps, and a third in the New England's, and a second-place Ivy finish. Brown's only two losses were to Yale and Providence Col- lege; the loss to PC, perennial Rhode Island champ, was by only one point. Victories were posted over Fordham, Har- vard, the University of Rhode Island, and hapless Dart- mouth which has now lost to Brown ten straight times. Although the Bruins did poorly in the IC4A meet, finish- ing twenty-sixth, they finished third in the New Englands. For the second year in a row, the harriers finished fourth in the Heps, but they were only second to Harvard among the Ivies. Juniors Chip Enis and Jim Wich were selected for the twelve-man All-Ivy team. Enis, consistently Brown's highest finisher this year, is a holdover from last year's All-Ivy squad. Other outstanding runners were George Bowman, Bob Busnick, John Cobourn, Don Humphrey, and Ted Sienicki. BASKETBALL DECIDEDLY a second-division Ivy team and the under- dog in nearly all its contests, this year's Bruin basket- ball team managed some major upsets while improving on last year's record. Hampered from the beginning of the season by the loss of junior forward Greg Donaldson, last year's leading scorer, the Bruins still managed to get off with their best start in years and were 6-3 at the Christmas break. After opening the season with an 87-78 victory over Wesleyan and a 68-66 win over Springfield, the Brown five faced nationally-ranked Providence College at Alumni Hall. With eight minutes to go, the Friars were behind 50-48, and an upset seemed imminent. However, Brown's 65 center Steve Sigur fouled out, and PC put the ball game away with an 11 point blitz. During the Christmas holidays, the club headed south to play four games against some top-flight competition. One of its victims on this trip was the previously unde- feated University of Georeia, a leader in the high-scoring Southern Conference. Led by the fantastic outside shoot- ing of senior guard Alan Fishman, Brown won 75-68. The cagers only loss on this trip was to a powerful Georgia Tech squad. After Christmas vacation, the Bruin's fortunes went steadily downhill. Dave Gale, much improved senior for- ward, sprained his ankle badly, and Greg Donaldson was lost for the remainder of the season because of an ankle injury. Brown's best effort in Ivy competition came on the weekend of February 10-11 at Marvel Gym against pow- erhouses Penn and Princeton. Although beaten by Penn at the Palestra 89-60 in January, the Bears led throughout the game only to lose 78-77 in the final minute. The next night, the five again led throughout the game only to lose it in the final minute, this time with a score of 57-59. Although not victorious, Brown played its best ball of the season against the Tigers who were ranked first in the East and third in the nation and who had previously de- feated Brown 94-50. The Bruins closed the season at home against perennial power PC. Again the Brown men fought gamely, but PC, led by All-American Jim Walkers 32 points, pulled away to win 77-68. Brown 87 68 62 86 65 87 75 75 75 59 50 60 57 73 66 90 69 77 54 79 77 73 70 74 65 68 Wesleyan Springficld Providence Boston Univ. Yale Jacksonville Florida So. Georgia Tech U. of Georgia WLIRLIL, Princeton Pennsylvania Cornell Columbia Northeastern Columbia Cornell Pennsylvania Princeton Dartmouth Harvard U.R.L Dartmouth Harvard Yale Providence 209 Opponent 78 66 76 70 76 69 65 93 68 80 94 84 74 83 86 88 81 78 37 il 92 65 63 91 86 77 SCHEDULE Brown Opponent Colby Northeastern Vermont Boston College Harvard Minnesota Duluth Minnesota Duluth Wisconsin Loyola Montreal Princeton Dartmouth Providence College Cornell St. Nick's Boston University Army Yale Harvard American International Cornell Providence College Princeton Yale Dartmouth QwOOGNOOSHOQHQMM-PO'-bHWQLM WA RN, UNWAQWLWAAR WO NP O WO W W 210 THE MOST POPULAR sport at Brown, this year as in each of the past four years, was hockey. Other teams have had better records, especially soccer. Football enjoys a larger gate attendance, if only because of the social amenities of a Saturday afternoon. But no team can rival hockey for fan loyalty, game-time enthusiasm and post- game discussion. This year's squad, in posting a 13-10 record worst statistically in four years, made a better showing than most pre-season experts had predicted. The talent had thinned out, other teams were stronger, and the top schools in the East were still on the schedule. Brown opened in Waterville, Maine, against a weak Colby team and won by the narrow margin of 5-3. At Northeastern, a perennial nemesis to Brown, the skaters were edged 5-4 in an overtime decision. The picture brightened in a 16-2 romp over Vermont, setting up the home opener against highly-rated Boston College. Hard- working Captain Dennis Macks and junior Wayne Small each scored in the first three minutes of play, but the Eagles soon tied it up. The visitors began to dominate play in the second period and won going away, 6-3. Un- derdogs against Harvard, the Bruins played the Crimson even, except in the scoring department, losing 3-1. Coach Jim Fullerton took his team out to Minnesota for two games with a Duluth squad that Brown had beaten a year ago. The Bruins dropped both encounters, and those of us who read the scores in the papers were beginning to lose hope. The defense, with only two regu- lars from last year and the goalie position still a toss-up between senior Dick Rastani and sophomore Mark Burns, would have to improve. Offensively, the lines were bal- anced so that none was outstanding. Brown recouped its losses out West by defeating Wisconsin and Loyola of Montreal in the fourth annual Brown tournament. These victories might have restored some confidence to the team and its followers, but they meant nothing in terms of the Ivy League race or a shot at the post-season ECAC tour- nament. THE TURNING POINT, as well as the low point, of the season was reached in the Princeton game. The Tigers, coming off a seven game losing streak, took advantage of defensive lapses to beat the Bruins, 8-5, before a disappointed Meehan crowd. After that Wednesday evening game, Jim Fullerton made the decision to put his three best skaters and scorersMacks, Small, and their fellow-Canadian, soph- omore Bob Devaneyon the same line. Senior Steve Bettencourt, returned to his regular forward position after sophomore Steve Wormith got into shape to play defense, centered for juniors Billy McSween and John Hoyer. Fast-improving Billy Clarke teamed with fellow junior Phil Moreland and sophomore Art Dunstan. But that first line, possessing great speed and hockey know-how, made the difference. In the next four games they scored 18 of the teams 27 goals. Home victories were registered over Dartmouth, 12-3, and PC, 7-1. A trip to Ithaca cooled the Bears off as they not unexpectedly went down to defeat, 6-1. After a semester-break win over St. Nick's, the Bruins and a hearty band of followers traveled to the Boston Arena to face num- ber one, Boston University. The Terriers skated by the Brown de- fense and built up a 5-0 lead. Wayne Small, who later got the hat trick, poked in Brown's first goal, and McSween's breakaway should have made the count 5-2, but the goal judge said no. With Dick Rastani digging in 43 saves the Bruins then staged a fantastic rally as they skated even with BU for the last two periods. A 7-6 loss was nothing to be ashamed of. The team suffered a let-down against Army, losing 3-1 to a mediocre team. But now the defense began to jell. Wormith became the best hitter and a fine rusher, while junior Tom Coakley excelled at blocking shots. Junior Bob Rockwood parlayed his passing skill into many assists. Senior Gerry Boyle, while bothered by a chronic knee injury, was still the most reliable of the four. Dick Rastani earned his goalie spot by good, hard work. And the forwards really started zeroing in on the opposing team's nets. In the next six games, the Bruins tallied 47 goals while yielding only 19. They knocked off highly touted Yale, 10-5. Avenging an earlier defeat, the Bruins embarrassed the Crimson 9-1 in their finest home performance. AIC fell, 9-2, before Cornell invaded Brown. The Bruin defense kept the contest close as the Big Red triumphed, 4-2. Another victory over PC preceded a must-win game at Princeton. Brown did just that as they opened up a 4-1 lead and coasted to an 8- 6 victory. With Wayne Small leading the Ivy scorers and nearing the Brown single-season record, the Bruins faced Yale at home in an- other crucial contest. After 50 minutes of play, Brown trailed 2-1 and was seemingly out of it. Then the team came to life, and Steve Wormith hit on a slap shot. Small and Macks, both bothered by heavy colds, raced down the ice less than a minute later, and De- vaney poked in the rebound for the winning goal. The following Saturday, Small got one goalhis 35th, tying the Brown mark-and two assists, to win the Ivy scoring race with 29 points, as the Bruins routed Dartmouth, 7-3. With that victory, they tied for second place in the Ivy League and earned the right to face League titleholder Cornell in the ECAC tournament. Credit for the Bruin's mid-season rally must be given to both their harsh, demanding and ingenious coach, Jim Fullerton, and to the boys themselves, who once again made the hockey team a source of great pride to the Brown community. 213 214 JUST WADING in the Colgate-Hoyt pool takes lots of guts. Even Coach Joe Watmough and his hard guys can't do much to awe visiting teams there, and secing the home waters of opponents at away meets can't do too much for mor- ale. The brightest spot in the year was the medley relay team of Vance Salter, Butch Wilder, Harold Mugford, and Dick Emery. The relay squad made coach Watmough look like a good prophet when it broke the Brown record in its event. Salter and Scott Stokes were more than adequate in the backstroke, and more than one observer called Salter the best ever to perform for Brown in this event. Leading the sprinters, captain Dick Emery, with strong support from veter- ans Dave Hawk, Bob Ormerod, and Russ Lauman, deserved much more than he got, especially from Lady Luck. It was a bad year for the swimmers. There is not really too much you can say about a 2-11 season except wait il next year. SWIMMING Brown 2 31 17 62 16 31 19 29 21 31 28 56 46 Princeton So. Conn. Dartmouth Coast Guard Ambherst Springfield Harvard Penn Yale Columbia M.L.T. Tufts Connecticut Opponent 68 64 78 33 79 64 75 66 74 64 58 38 49 Brown 18 14 30 22 13 28 12 23 3rd Columbia Wesleyan Dartmouth Cornell Yale Princeton Coast Guard U.R.IL Penn Springfield Harvard Connecticut New Englands Opponent 2 17 5 23 9 2l 20 9 21 25 202 17 WRESTLING ALTHOUGH TREATED to only five home matches this season, the growing number of Brown wrestling fans paid a tribute to the energy and enthusiasm of coach Bob Litchard and the team he took from the floor up to respectability. The grapplers 5-7 record is not an accurate reflection of their talent. Both the Wesleyan and Coast Guard matches could have gone to Brown with a little luck. The scores of the Penn and Harvard matches do not by themselves reveal how hotly fought these contests were. The Bruins showed their abil- ity to best advantage in the New Englands, where they came in thirdled by 137-winner, sophomore Fred Berk, and second-place finishes by Steve Gluckman at 115 and Robbie Harley at 160. Harley, a junior, had the most victories, posting a 7-2 season mark. Senior co-captains Rich Whipple and Steve Gluckman each won six matches in the lighter weight classes. Other regulars who performed wellwhich has to include everyone on the varsitywere senior Pete Johnson, juniors Mal Shookner and Randy Brown, and sophomores Jim Tobey, John Buxton, Tom Bose, Bob Christin and Joe Buttrill. Christin, a 180-pound heavyweight, personified hustle and desire as he improved with every match. Perhaps the most pleas- ant surprise was Mal Shookner's fine performance 4-2-3 against a string of tough opponents. Coach Bob Litchard made this team virtually single-handedly. He recruited all but the seniors, going outside official sources to the alumni for financial assistance. He drummed up enough support to buy the team a new mat and new uniforms this year. A new and strong j.v. schedule kept a lot of second-stringers out for a sport they might have quit. If his boys were in trouble academically, he got them out of it. When the team traveled, they slept in good lodgings and were served the right food. The coach had the matches moved on-campus. He even stuffed mailboxes with notices of each home contest. Wrestling became a big sport and the coach a popular guy. You could understand that Len Jardine would want his own fresh- man football coach, but that's hardly an excuse for the deal the University gave Bob Litchard, financially and otherwise; the last two weeks of the season, after the announcement of his resignation, coach Litchard worked without pay. That's one hell of a way to get Brown out of the bush leagues. 27 Brown Opponent 61 Boston Univ. 48 62 Columbia 47 Yale 76, Brown 44, Penn 17 84 Maine 29 Brown 72, BC 42, HC 23 70 Dartmouth 39 26 Harvard 86 INDOOR TRACK THE RETURN of 15 lettermen and the addition of a well-balanced sophomore group gave coach Ivan Fuqua his ninth straight winning indoor season. Veterans Chip Ennis, Bob Busick, George Bowman and John Cobourn combined with sophomore Don Humphrey to give the Bruins both speed and depth in the mile and two mile, and Brown record-holder Jim Wich, who will be back next year, was backed up well by sophomore Craig Boyd in the 1000. In his last year at Brown, sprinter Win Anakawa continued to win, this year with help in the dashes from sophomores George Lister and Jim Kelleher. Captain Jim Ackroyd and sophomore Tom Lemire were big men for Brown in the hurdles, and Ackroyd closed out his career here in his typical high-scoring fashion. You will probably never see an ECAC Track Meet of the Week,? but the thinclads were Brown's most successful winter sport and were, this year as most, solid performers. STANDOUTS studded Browns winning outdoor track squad as it continued to be nearly as successful as lvan Fuqua would want it to be. Win Anakawa was as fast as ever. He set Brown records in the 100 and the 220 and anchored the rec- ord-breaking Bruin relay team. Tim Fahey established a varsity record in the triple Brown Opponent jump, and George Bowman and Chip Ennis were sure 47 Harvard 107 point-getters in the distance events. Brown 92, Columbia 52, Penn 47 The 440 relay team of Anakawa, Ted Hersch, Tim 100 Holy Cross 54 Fahey, and Jon Keates was formidable throughout the 89 Wesleyan 60 season and was a substantial factor in the dual meet 90 Dartmouth 64 record of 5-1. 95 URL 57 Jim Ackroyd racked up points in the 440 hurdles 2 1 9 while Jim Wich was the tough man to beat in the 880. You just cant keep good men down. OUTDOOR TRACK I, e Z il P J 220 GRATIFYING and exciting are the only words to de- scribe the 1966 lacrosse season. The best Brown la- crosse team ever, the stickmen copped the New Eng- land crown with an 8-0 record, finished second in the Ivy League with a 5-1 slate, and took a fifth ranking nationally with an overall record of 13-3. After its annual Spring vacation trip to Maryland, the team opened its regular season with a 7-5 win over Rutgers. Highlighted by two come-from-behind victo- ries over strong Yale and Princeton squads and 20 and 27 goal barrages against Connecticut and New Hamp- shire, the season ended with the playing of Cornell at Ithaca for the League title. Unfortunately the tables turned and Cornell scored the winning goal in the final minute of the game. The only other losses were to pow- erful Maryland and Washington squads. oS nlm TR i RN S y 7 g v v Brown Rutgers Penn. Washington Maryland Loyola Md. Baltimore Yale Dartmouth Harvard Princeton New Hampshire Wesleyan Holy Cross Cornell U. Conn. U. Mass. Opponent 5 7 il 15 3 N i N N BN WWKnO Wnm ,-. LACROSSE INDIVIDUAL recognition came to many Brown players. Co-Captain Rich Alter, with 263 saves and 86 goals al- lowed in 16 games, and midfielder George Armiger both won first team All-American, All-New England and All- Ivy honors. Co-Captain Bill Carr captured second team All-American and first team All-Ivy and All-New Eng- land honors as he led the nation's scorers with 78 points. Midfielder Howie Zeskind was second team All-Ivy and All-New England and received honorable mention in the All-American lists. Defenseman George Davis was first team in the All-Ivy squad and second team All-New Eng- land. Bob Davis won honorable mention on the All-Ivy and All-New England teams, and was second high scorer for Brown with 48 points. With only Co-Captains Alter and Carr graduated, Coach CIliff Stevenson expects a strong team with consid- erable help from the 1966 freshmen, who compiled a 9-1 record. ZAN PN g g SN -, o S B TENNIS COMPETENT group performance as well as fine individ- ual play resulted in the first winning season for a Brown tennis team in the last decade. The performances of Bobby Bruce and Bobby Higginbottom boosted the some- times flagging spirits of a team hurt by the lack of indoor practice facilitjes and receiving minimum support from news media and the students in general. Playing on indoor courts, the team came from behind to nose Army five to four. Refusing to succumb to the Cadets, the Bruins Brown Opponent pushed nearly every match into three sets. Amherst was 612 Ambherst 2V beaten on outdoor courts on a bitterly cold day, and other 5 Columbia 4 victories were scored against Columbia, Wesleyan, 5 Wesleyan 4 M.L.T., Providence College, andas usualthe Univer- 1 Harvard 8 sity of Rhode Island. The graduation of Bruce and Hig- 2 Penn. 7 ginbottom will seriously hurt the 1967 team, but with a 9 Prov. Coll. 0 spring vacation of practice in Florida combined with a 7 M.LT. 2 stepped-up indoor training program Coach Jim Dougherty 9 U.R.L. 0 will try to offset the loss of the seniors. And the return of 2 Cornell 7 lettermen Ed Dismuke, Kit Sumner, and Ed Shein and 0 Yale g new talent like Spike Gonzales from the Cubs should give 5 Army 4 captain Rich Klaffky and Coach Dougherty some cause 1 Dartmouth 8 for hope. 2 Navy 612 Brown .- S 0 A W W N .-. S Pph N i W B0 O JWeH WwWo .-. Long Island Brooklyn Rider Trenton State Yale Tufts Penn. UERAE Ambherst Columbia Harvard Princeton Providence Dartmouth Army Navy Providence Connecticut Cornell UR.L Opponent ... NNWn RO NDOROOD RO I WwWwuNnOo BASEBALL INEXPERIENCE hurt as the Bruin nine lost five of its first six games and finished the season with a 9-11 overall record. However, its 5-4 record in Eastern Intercollegiate League play was good enough to garner a spot in the first division. Sophomores Art DiMartino and Tom Skender- ian were the brightest individual spots in the 1966 season. DiMartino, described by one of his teammates as Buzz DiMartinoa sidewheeling portsider was the mainstay of the Brown pitch- ing staff, posting a 6-2 record with 42 strikeouts in 58 innings. Leading the team with a .397 over- all batting average, Skenderian also held the team lead in hits, rbi's, and home runs. His .514 aver- age in EIBL play won him the Blair Bat award for the highest batting average in the league. Other standouts were Jesse Jupiter, an All-Ivy selection at second base; Tom Niederer with a .338 batting average; Steve Kadison, who hit for a .325 average and chipped in with a 1-0 shutout of URI; and hard-throwing John Hefferon who pitched 25Y43 innings in relief. With the return of most of the 1966 squad and help from cubs like John Rallis and Frank Szcze- paniak, Coach Stan Ward could have a serious contender for the first time in a long while. THE ROYAL HENLEY REGATTA is described by Coach Vic Michaelson as one race every oarsman dreams about. The dream became a reality in 1966 as Michaelson's crew, labelled Brown's best ever, qualified to represent the United States in the famed regatta. The long road to Henley began with an outstanding regu- lar season which included wins over Dartmouth, Boston University, Rutgers, Northeastern, and Columbia with only Harvard spoiling an otherwise perfect season. Murmurings about Henley started after Brown finished a strong second at the Eastern sprints in Worcester, Massachusetts; Coach Michaelson later called this the best day Brown ever had in rowing. Still, two large obstacles remained. A trip to Hen- ley would require alumni to raise about $10,000, but a more immediate worry to Coach Michaelson and his varsity crew was the upcoming Intercollegiate Rowing Association Race at New York. The Bruin scullers finished fourth in the IRA's, good enough to gain them the coveted berth at Henley. The loyal alumni raised the necessary funds, and for the first time ever a Brown crew broke water on the Thames. The bubble finally burst when Brown drew the Tideway scullers in the opening round. Considered Britain's best crew, the Scullers, bolstered by four Olympic medalists, eliminated an outclassed but very game Brown crew. It seemed appropriate that the end of the Keeney era should coincide with what was described as the greatest event in Brown University athletic history. Coach Michael- son promises more of the same to start the Heffner years with a veteran crew returning. The entire middle of last year's varsity boat, including Al Moser, Scott Hensel, Bruce Blodgett, and captain Jay Ambrosini are all back along with coxswain Dick Honig. Coach Michaelson is looking for per- haps even a better showing than last year, which means by July the big Henley trophy should find a home in the some- what spacious confines of the Marvel Gym trophy case. canttIILEEE Dartmouth, Boston University Harvard, Rutgers Northeastern Rutgers, Columbia Eastern Sprints I. R. A Royal Henley Regatta Ist 2nd Ist Ist 2nd 4th Brown Opponent 3 Princeton 4 415 Columbia 2V5 Ambherst Holy Cross Springfield AR Providence Connecticut Wesleyan Yale Dartmouth AR DN Wk NCINV, IV, I, leIN0, T O G DEDICATED and improving, the 1966 Brown golf team posted a 5- 8 season record and placed eighth in the Eastern Intercollegiate Championships, held in the snow on a very tough Cornell course. A good rebound from 1965 when the squad finished the season with a 1- 12 slate and a 19th in the championship tournament. Returning from their spring practice junket, the linksters opened up the season on the 15th of April against Princeton and Columbia at Columbia. A strong victory over Harvard on their own course and a win over Dartmouth at home highlighted the schedule. Plagued by inconsistency throughout the season, the team featured Bob Rochi, '68, who compiled an 8-2 record, and Dave Houghton who played well consistently. Although hampered by lack of funds and a home course, the squad should be a contender in the coming 1967 spring season. Losing only two lettermen, Pete Neidlinger and Captain Barry Weis- man, coach Alan Soares will have three two-year lettermen return- ing, John Crosby, Steve Bettencourt, and Bill Rashman, as well as John Mahoney, Houghton, and Rochi. 229 YACHT CLUB SPIRITShigh and otherwisemarked the yacht club's home regattas and the appearance of the new Pembroke racing team more than compensated for Lady Luck's frowns. Keelboats, kites, and committees came and went as the yacht club saw its seventy-second year. Commodore Bert Goft managed to complete his full term and moved on to serve ably as varsity team captain. Implementing his prede- cessor's plans, new commodore Chris Baum produced a new crashboat, ex- panded instruction, and made improve- ments to the faithful Beverlies. The graduation of Chuck Paine left the racing team with a serious gap, but it still placed fifth in the by-invitation-only McMillan Cup races. The board members, with especially hard work from seniors Anne Caldwell, Steve Hazard, Pudge Harrington, and George Allen, began planning a drive to acquire a new boathouse on new waters to help the club more than maintain its already high level of appeal and success. Brown 3 32 19 18 21 22 15 21 16 UR.IL St. Joseph's Penn State Pittsburgh M.IT. U.R.I. Holy Cross Harvard Old Blue Opponent 0 en ey o o e IN six years of Rugby, Brown has never had a losing season, and has been continually ranked among the top teams of the Eastern Rugby Union. The club is composed mainly of under- graduate students with a few experienced gradu- ate players lending their help. Over the years, Brown's development has also been furthered by a handful of foreign students from England, Australia and New Zcaland, who have assisted in explaining the finer points of the game. The organization and operation of the club, however, has always been handled by un- dergraduates with only a small grant annually from the University. Brown's impressive record of victories has been compiled against the best of foreign and domestic competition. The record includes winning the Bermuda Cup in April, 1965, when the Bruins were the first American team ever to leave the British colony undefeated, victory in the Virginia Commonwealth Cup tourney in 1966, and a clean sweep at the inaugural Penn State Invitational Tournament in October, 1966. This year, led by captain Dave Olson and vice- captain Ken Clegg, Brown completed its second consecutive fall campaign without a loss. Brown's success this year was built on the same founda- tion that has served the club so well since its inception in 1960unlimited enthusiasm, dedi- cated training and hard work in off-the-field or- ganization. ,v i PEMBROKE SPORTS ' oA TTATIH e PRANCING, pirouetting, performing, play- ing, Pembrokers, or at least some Pembrok- ers, are jocks. Synchronized swimming is a classic Pembroke sport and a classic Brown entertainment. Drunk or sober there just seems to be something funny about naiads in the less than Olympian Colgate-Hoyt pool. Fencing seems to be the most practical sport at Pembroke. The combination of Providence weather and the points on most umbrellas makes the training received in Sayles Gym a useful self-defense course for Pembrokers prone to walk the streets be- tween dorm and library, of course late at night. Molding the complete woman is a tough job. Different activities develop different tal- ents; and the penny coaches try to run a balanced program, but Brown's leg men would like to see a lot more running. BASHING, batting, brutalizing, battling with the best of themthis is the forte of a small group of Pembrokers who consti- tute the smallest power elite in the Uni- versity. Hardass is the only word despite its negative connotationsthat adequately represents the common quali- ties of the Pembroke Pandas and the field hockey squad. Playing good hockey in anybody's league, the Pandas play against teams like the Walpole Sweepers, who could probably replace a Russian public works detail, and do more than hold their own. Linda Fox, often assisted by another Fox this one a Janet, was the standout, skate-out, shoot-out number one. Jim Fullerton would have liked to have had her on his squad. Margot Madeira won regional recog- nition for her activities on the field hockey field, and the whole Pembroke squad acquitted itself well at the North- eastern Field Hockey Tournament. And who says hardasses can't be good- looking? PLAYING under the handicap of medi- SQU AS H C LUB ocre facilities in Marvel Gym, the Squash Club completed its most successful year. - All five teams did well in the local Rhode Island Squash League. The C League team, Brown's most experienced contin- gent, finished an unprecedented first sparked by Spike Gonzales, Jon Brown and John Shepard. Brown was also well represented in the post season tourna- ments with Gonzales, a talented sopho- more, copping the C League title. The organization is based on a ladder advancement system which permits any member to progress according to his abil- ity. The Club is looking forward to enter- ing intercollegiate competition within the Ivy League by 1969; however, the pres- ent courts are certainly not conducive to championship play. Future success of Brown's representatives will depend on the construction of adequate facilities in . Z the long-delayed athletic complex. KNOCKED down to a lower division last SKI C LU B year, the Brown Ski Team staged a val- iant attempt to regain its past glories. Racing in the Thompson Division of the New England Intercollegiate Ski Confer- ence, the Brown ten-man squad com- peted against eight schools in six eastern races. The team vied for top position with its major competitors, Princeton and Worcester Polytechnical Institute, and stacked up a first, a second, two thirds, a fourth and a seventh, putting it in third place overall. The squad is expected to return in full next year to assert its bid for first place. LACKING the talent of other Ivy schools, the freshman gridders tried to substitute guts and spirit for brawn and finished with a 0-4 record in Ivy competi- tion. Scoring 60 points while allowing 140, the Cubs will beas Bob Litchard saidsupplying the varsity with num- bers. Full of talent, the freshman soccer team finished its season with a 11-0 rec- ord, its third straight undefeated season. This year's cross country team could have used a lot more numbers, finishing first, that is, as it finished the season with an 0-6 record and finished twelfth in the New Englands, their worst record in more than a decade. FRESHMAN SPORTS E.. B '- nt-, n II,F:.. THE HIGHLIGHT of this year's Cub hockey team was the goal- tending of Don McGinnis, who should be one of he best in Brown's history. Finishing the season with an excellent 13-4-1 record, the Cubs will provide the varsity with several excellent stickmen, espe- cially on defense. Things look bright for varsity swimming prospects as Coach Watmough was able to attract a number of talented freshmen Fin- ishing the season with a 65 record, the Cub team should be able to break the losing streak at Colgate-Hoyt pool. ALTHOUGH not outstanding, and lacking a sorely needed big man, Alan Young's freshman hoopsters should be able o provide the var- sity with some good talent. The highlight of the Cub season was a 68- 62 victory over PC at Marvel Gym in the last game of the season. The Cub grapplers boasted a 6-5 record. their best performance being a 23-16 victory over Dartmouth. The concentration of best talent was in the lighter weight divisions, where the varsity is also strongest. i undergraduates THE LOWER CLASSES had to be satisfied with activitics no more exciting than those on the Brown campus. All three cooperated with Brown classes in an unsuccessful effort to add some spice to the year's activities. The class of 70 under the leadership of president Pat Windust went the normal speaker, mixer route both with and without their Brown counterparts. In November the two freshman councils met together at a dinner to discuss possi- ble joint projects. Later they participated in the traditional skating mixer at Meehan, and they also co-sponsored a class dinner during second semester. On their own the Pembrokers sponsored a mixer with M.LT., a coffee hour after the Joseph Heller lecture, a party for twenty underprivileged girls from the Providence area, and a series of well-attended class brunches. The Pembroke sophomore class council under president Margy Devenncy worked this year with the Brown sopho- more class to encourage more effective use of the resources of both classes in larger joint projects. The first of these was the Lovin Spoonful mixer in October. The Pembrokers also co-sponsored the Faculty Waltz Evening, sophomore ski weekend, and various speakers and mixers. Independently, the class council sponsored mixers and brunches, the Sadie Hawkins dance, and such traditional activities as a service project, and the Sophomore-Senior Christmas breakfast. Under the able guidance of president Mimsy Baker, the class of '68 participated in a variety of activities. The class sponsored trips to the Metropolitan Opera production of La Traviata and to Yale Law School, sherry and coffee hours with faculty and outside guests, a class dinner at Pembroke and another one in conjunction with Brown '68, brunches, a Thanksgiving party for the NSM tutorees and a spring outing with the children of the new Federal Hill Settlement House. The class council accepted responsibility to achieve rein- statement of junior-senior privileges in the dining halls, a change in the convocation cap and gown procedure, and an extension of the off-campus apartment trial. THE UPPER CLASS found its position somewhat changed by new rules, but it nevertheless managed to be almost as Pembrokian as ever. Thirty girls were al- lowed to live off-campus, and the dorm dwellers stayed out until 2:30 Saturday nights because as seniors they were now mature young women, no longer afraid of the dark. Those who moved off insisted that they would never move back on, but somehow most Pembrokers, even seniors, implied that they would be satisfied with only a rationalization of the on-campus social system. The seniors demonstrated their responsibility and independence by carrying on with traditional senior class activities as well as by creating a few of their own. Sunday morning brunches and class sherry hours, begun by the class of 67, were continued. In the fall they held career dinners, ran Corner Catchall, Father- Daughter Weekend, and Christmas breakfast. Dinners with Brown, with faculty, and with guest speakers kept all well fed and beautiful the class had a Christmas queen and a May queen. They wore cap and gown to senior convocation and less formal attire to dinner the night comps were over. They played bridge, wrote theses, and dug out the skate board when it got warm. But primarily they worried about walking down to the First Baptist Church in heels. 245 PEMBROKE CLASSES 246 CLASS OF 1970 THE FIRST YEAR at Brown is the most interesting one, probably because everything has to be learned at least twice. Freshman Week is designed to introduce the campus to the new students, but if it is a time of revelation, most of the scoops are nutty. The West Quad does not look so bad on the first acquaintance, and a crowded room is not too un- comfortable, as long as everyone spends every waking hour concentrating on being considerate. Pembrokers and Brown men traditionally have good first and last impressions of each other. Freshman Week Committee members are not average upperclassmen. Thayer Street is a new experience. Pascal Kaplan tried to ease the pain of the inevitable let- down by giving an extreme presentation of the unfavorable aspects of Brown, but it is unlikely that very many freshmen had any idea what he was talking about. And he concen- trated mainly on matters of interest to only a minority. Every report on the housing problem of Brown has recom- mended against putting all the freshmen together, but it took people a time to understand the correctness of this position. It takes a while to learn about Pembroke. The street loses its attractiveness. And the student quickly learns that all Brown men are not helpful or friendly. Freshmen officers also have to learn, to learn that their job is not an easy one. Paul Zimmering and Roderick Leong, elected president and secretary-treasurer early in the year, faced the same problems many other freshmen have faced. How does one develop an original program attractive to most of the class? Even Ira Magaziner had trouble. The class of 1970 decided to follow tradition. Mixers, seminars, speakers and reports were the main activities of the officers and their cabinet. And while they were not any worse than previous sets, they were not any better either. CLASS OF 1969 THE SECOND YEAR at Brown provides new challenges for class officers. The fraternities fragment the class. Talented people become involved in activities more stimulating than serving on the class cabi- net. People start to get tired of mixers. But the class of 1969 had Ira Magaziner. Although he might not be much to look at, Ira has energy and ability, and he is not satisfied with merely following the footsteps of previous presidents. Assisted by secretary Scott Burns and treasurer Bruce Henderson, he set out to demonstrate for a second year his ability to do more than any other class officer. He ran the largest mixer ever held at Brown, the October Lovin' Spoonful Concert. He introduced a new level of faculty-student con- tact at the March Faculty Waltz Evening. He organized the Brown sophomore ski weekend. And he also continued the usual round of speakers, mixers, and reports. Once again he demonstrated that the crucial factor in any student organization is the ability of the leadership. CLASS OF 1968 THE THIRD YEAR requires the class officers and their cabinet to produce a good Spring Weekend. Anything else they do is just extra. Trying hard to fol- low a good act, John Dystel in his first year as class president planned Spring Weekend to everyone's satisfaction. The quad show was as raucous as ever, and Peter, Paul, and Mary provided the per- fect Friday night concert. The class also managed to sponsor the usual speakers, and it contributed to the trend of having mixers larger than possible. Objectively the class had a great year. Perhaps, however, the most important success of John Dystel and Art Gross- man, his secretary-treasurer, was a strengthening of class unity. The break- ing down of class spirit over the years is hard to counteract. Fraternities and other activities begin to attract the main loyal- ties of class members. Only excellent leadership can provide the focal point about which class loyalties can be built. The class of 1968 had this leadership. CLASS OF 1967 250 PRR 4 THE LAST YEAR gives class pols a chance to show what they have learned. Scott learned delegation of authority. As a result, Clint Swift and Jon Brown ran the 25th Reunion Fund without consulting higher authority, and Matt Medeiros ran the only other class project, the business debate featuring IBM's Tom Watson. Traditionally the main senior class activity has been the Reunion Fund Drive, but there is nothing in the rules that says the class cannot do anything else. Scott seemed to feel that his career as a campus leader was behind him. His assistants from the first three years had gone on to greater things, and the largely inexperi- enced class council never got a chance to do anything important. Spurred, however, by Matt and vice president Sandy Ullman, Scott finally managed to flash some of his old panache; and the year ended with an atypical rash of activity. Clint Swift took most of the responsibility for the 25th Reunion Fund. Aided by Jon Brown, the questions of Ron Gidwitz, and a committee well-bribed by dinners and drinks, he managed to drag money from people convinced that Brown had never done anything for them and that they would never do anything for Brown. With sixty per cent of the class living off campus and with the interests of almost everyone transcending class activities, the Class of 1967 graduated quietly. Al ey rey i S. J. AARONSON J. A. ACKROYD J.J. ADAMS, JR. P. D. ADAMS 202 W. F. AIKMAN P. E. ALEXANDER R. O. ALEXANDER, JR. B. R. ALFANO, JR. RPPATENEN R. C. ALLEN C. R. ALLISON 111 J. D. AMBROSINI AARONSON, STUART J. A.B. Sociology. Born: December 28, 1944. Prepared at Hope High School. Liber Brunensis, Hillel, Bronson House President, Student Peace Union. Address: 105 Fosdyke Street, Providence, Rhode Island. ABERNETHY, PERRY C. Ad- dress: Route 1, Box 53C, Carlsbad, New Mexico. ABRAHAM, GERALD M. A.B. Physics. Born: May 28, 1945. Prepared at South Side High School. Dean's List, Orchestra, Band, Rosamond Lemaire Woodwind Prize, Freshman Track. Address: 320 East 23rd Street, New York, New York. ACKROYD, JAMES A. Address: 6 Thomas Olney Common, Providence, Rhode Island. ADAMS, JOSEPH J. JR. Address: 212 Burns Street, Forest Hills Gardens, New York. ADAMS, PETER D. A.B. Political Science. Born: April 7, 1944. Prepared at The Hotchkiss School. Hockey, Lambda Sigma Nu. Address: 57 East Manning Street, Providence, Rhode Island. ADAMS, ROE R. III. Address: 212 Old Billerica Road, Bed- ford, Massachusetts. ADAMS, WILLIAM C. JR. Address: 2179 Mandeville Canyon Road, Los Angeles, California. AIKMAN, WILLIAM F. A.B. Political Science. Born: August 1, 1945. Prepared at Ridley Park High School. Dean's List, Brown Daily Herald Associate News Editor, Brown Youth Guidance, Brown Young Republican Club Treasurer, Res Publica Copy Editor. Address: 311 Burk Avenue, Ridley Park, Pennsylvania. ALEXAN- DER, PAUL E. A.B.-M.M.S. Biology. Born: May 20, 1945. Prepared at Marblehead High School. Dean's List, Brown Youth Guidance, Course Analysis Bulletin Associate Editor, Hillel, Liber Brunensis, Pre-Freshman Conference Counselor, Tower Club Rush Chair- man. Address: 5 Tufts Street, Marblehead, Massachusetts. ALEXANDER, ROBERT O. JR. A.B. Economics. Born: July 21, 1945. Prepared at Providence Country Day School. Address: 140 Beamis Avenue, Cumberland, Rhode Island. ALFANO, BARTHOLOMEW R. A.B-M.M.S. Born: September 5, 1945. Prepared at Classical High School. Address: 57 Sagamore Road, Worcester, Massachusetts. ALFANO, DAVID W. Address: 35 Hammond Street, Providence, Rhode Island. ALLEN, GEORGE T. Address: 23 Wingate Road, River- side, Rhode Island. ALLEN, J. LAURENCE. A.B. Sociology. Born: January 24, 1945. Prepared at Conard High School. Jabberwocks, Outing Club, Lacrosse, Intramurals. Ad- dress: 25 Saddle Ridge Drive, West Hartford, Connecticut. ALLEN, RICHARD C. A.B. English. Born: September 28, 1945. Prepared at Canton High School. Crew. Address: Albany Turnpike, Canton, Connecticut. ALLISON, CHARLES R. IIl. A.B. Economics. Born: September 24, 1944. Prepared at Monroe High School. Freshman Glee Club, Rugby Club, Alpha Delta Phi Rushing Chairman, President. Address: 12 Vick Park A, Roches- ter, New York. AMBROSINI, JAY D. A.B. Biology. Born: September 12, 1945. Prepared at Culver Military Academy. Band, Outing Club, Crew Captain. Address: 1035 Whittier Road, Grosse Pointe, Michigan. ANAKWA, WINFRED N. Sc.B. Electrical Engineering. Born: March 5, 1946. Prepared at Achimota School, Ghana, and Windsor Mountain, Lenox, Massachusetts. Soccer, Track. Address: P.O. Box 158, Asamankese, Ghana. AN- DERSEN, MELVIN E. Sc.B. Chemistry. Born: December 13, 1945. Prepared at Cranston High School East. Dean's List. Address: 90 Puritan Drive, Warwick, Rhode Island. AN- DERSON, HOWARD W. Sc.B. Chemistry. Born: March 27, 1945. Prepared at Bristol Eastern High School. Actuarial Science President, Intramural Athletic Council, Intramu- rals. Address: 63 Momingside Drive West, Bristol, Connecticut. ANDERSON, S. HAY- DEN. A.B. Political Science. Born: June 17, 1945. Prepared at W. H. Lynch High School. Dean's List, Beta Theta Pi Social Chairman, Secretary, President, Liber Brunensis As- sociate Editor, Managing Editor, 25th Reunion Fund Publicity Chairman, Sailing Team. Address: 14 Lindbergh Avenue, Amsterdam, New York. ARMIGER, GEORGE D. A.B. Engineering-Economics. Prepared at Baltimore Polytechnic Institute. Sophomore Class Cabi- net, Brown Key, Lacrosse Co-Captain, Freshman and Varsity. Address: 106 Cedarcroft Road, Baltimore, Maryland. ARMSTRONG, JAMES G. ITl. A.B. Engineering. Born: April 4, 1945. Prepared at Cranston High School East. Brown Engineering Society, L.LE.E.E., Yacht Club, Sailing Team. Address: 38 Norwood Avenue, Edgewood, Rhode Island. ARNESON, RICHARD J. Address: 7616 65th Avenue North, Minneapolis, Minnesota. ARNN, EDWARD C. A.B. Psychology. Born: March 15, 1946. Prepared at Horace Mann School. WBRU, Freshman Glee Club, Zecta Psi. Address: 280 South Compo Road, West- port, Connecticut. ASHER, G. WILLIS JR. Address: 739 Lincoln Way East, Mishawaka, Indiana. BABCOCK, WARREN JR. Address: 55 Methyl Street, Providence, Rhode Island. W. N. ANAKWA M. E. ANDERSEN H. W. ANDERSON S. H. ANDERSON, JR. G. D. ARMIGER J. G. ARMSTRONG III E. C. ARNN G. W. ASHER, JR. BACON, WILLIAM JR. Address: Southbury Road, Woodbury, Connecticut. BAER, THOMAS. A.B. Political Science. Born: March 27, 1945. Prepared at Massapequa High School. Freshman Class Council, Delta Tau Delta, Wrestling, Lacrosse. Address: 260 West Shore Drive, Massapequa, New York. BAGWELL, JOHN L. Address: 5511 North 18th Street, Arlington, Virginia. BAILEY, PAUL B. A.B. Psychology. Born: March 6, 1945. Prepared at Westtown School. Canticum Glee Club, University Glee Club Assistant Public- ity Manager, Convocation Choir, Brown Charities Drive, House Vice President, Intramu- rals. Address: 81 Sharp Street, Millville, New Jersey. BALL, WILLIAM O. JR. Address: Mansion Road, P.O. Box 302, Block Island, Rhode Island. BALLAINE, WILLIAM G. A.B. Political Science. Born: March 8, 1946. Prepared at Moses Brown School. Dean's List Sophomore Class Council, Junior Class Council Chairman, Social Affairs Committee, Brown Daily Herald Advertising Manager, Littlefield Hall President, University Lec- tureship Committee, Cammarian Club Chairman, Counseling Committee, Freshman Ten- nis. Address: 8333 Austin Street, Kew Gardens, New York. BANCROFT, EDWARD S Address: 166 Walker Street, Lenox, Massachusetts. BANCROFT, W. NORMAN. A.B. Economics. Born: April 29, 1939. Prepared at White Plains High School. Dean's List, Intramural Basketball. Address: 34 General Heath Avenue, White Plains, New York. BAR- BOUR, DALE K. Sc.B. Electrical Engineering. Born: August 20, 1945. Prepared at Guilder- land Central High School. Dean's List, WBRU, WBRU-FM. Address: 9 Velina Drive, Albany, New York. BARDEN, ALBERT A. III. A.B. American Literature. Born: Septem- ber 15, 1945. Prepared at Old Town High School. Dean's List, Bruin Club, Glee Club, Chapel Board Chairman, Manning Chapel Choir, Meiklejohn Society, University Christian Association, Dormitory Proctor, Outing Club, University Doubles Horseshoe Champion, Intramurals. Address: Box 5, 889 Stillwater Avenue, Stillwater, Maine. BARDEN, HOW- ARD S. A.B. Anthropology. Born: September 15, 1945. Prepared at Old Town High School. Dean's List, Inter-House Council, Dormitory Vice-President, Glee Club Business Manager, Proctor, University Doubles Horseshoc Champion, Intramurals. Address: Box 5, 889 Stillwater Avenue, Stillwater, Maine. BARGOOT, FREDERICK G. Sc.B. Physics, Born: May 16, 1945. Prepared at West Senior High School. Glee Club, Chorale, Marching Band, Convocation Choir Assistant Director, Orchestra. Address: 32 Knowles Street, Pawtucket, Rhode Island. BARRETT, JOHN T. JR. A.B. Political Science. Born: June 4, 1945. Prepared at Moses Brown School. Third Prize Samuel Clement Award, Swyndlestock Corresponding Secretary, Treasurer, Junior Class Council, 1967 25th Reunion Fund Board, Hockey, Crew, Squash. Address: 130 Lloyd Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. BARTIS, JAMES T. Address: 180 Bowen Street, Providence, Rhode Island. BARTON, RAPHAEL G. JR. Address: 65 West Letitia Lane, Media, Pennsylvania. BASSIS, MICHAEL S. A.B. Sociology Honors. Prepared at Deerfield Academy. Delta Upsilon, Lacrosse. Address: Valley Ridge Road, Harrison, New York. BAUM, CHRISTOPHER C. A.B. Psychology. Born: June 19, 1945. Prepared at Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School. Yacht Club Secretary, Commodore, Brunavians, Bruin Club, Phi Kappa Psi House Manager. Address: 6844 Glenbrook Road, Bethesda, Maryland. BEARMAN, RICHARD M. Address: 3824 North Chesterbrook Road, Arlington, Virginia. BECKWITH, G. NICH- OLAS III. A.B. Classics. Born: March 6, 1945. Prepared at Hotchkiss School. Beta Theta Pi House Manager, Recording Secretary, Vice-President, Inter-Fraternity Council Repre- sentative. Address: Park Mansions Apartments, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. BEDARD, PE- TER C. A.B. Sociology. Born: December 8, 1945. Prepared at Barnstable High School, Hyannis, Massachusetts. WBRU Sales Manager, Treasurer, Sports Director, Music Direc- tor, Record Librarian, Folk Music Director, Tower Club. Address: 48 East Second Street, Mount Vernon, New York. BELL, CHRISTOPHER P. A.B. Psychology. Born: December 2, 1945. Prepared at White Plains High School. Brown Young Republicans, WBRU, Epis- copal College Church Vestry, Intramurals. Address: 2 Southminster Drive, White Plains, New York. W. BACON, JR. T. BAER P. B. BAILEY, JR. W. O. BALL, JR. W. G. BALLAINE E. S. BANCROFT W. N. BANCROFT, JR. D. K. BARBOUR 295 A. A. BARDEN III H. S. BARDEN F. G. BARGOOT J. T. BARRETT, JR. R. G. BARTON, JR. M. S. BASSIS C.C. BAUM G. N. BECKWITH III P. C. BEDARD GRERBEIS J.D. BELL F. G. BERNSTEIN R. W. BESHORE D. E. BESSER S. B. BETTENCOURT R. L. BICKERSTAFF W. C. BIELUCH, JR. P. W. BILLINGS, JR. C. W. BINDER H. G. BINGHAM H. N. BIRD R. J. BLACKBURN E. B. BLACKWELL D. R. BLAIR BELL, JAMES D. A.B. Political Science. Born: May 1, 1945. Prepared at Holy Cross Technical High School, Buffalo, New York. Cammarian Club, Class Council, Crew. Ad- dress: 105 Stevling Road, Hamburg, New York. BENNISON, RAYMOND E. Address: 200 Washington Street, Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts. BERMAN, EDWARD. Address: 21 Alden Street, Quincy, Massachusetts. BERNSTEIN, FRANK G. Address: 94 Hammonds- wood Road, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. BESHORE, RICHARD W. II. A.B. Political Science. Born: November 8, 1945. Prcpared at Cedar Cliff High School. NROTC, Brown Youth Guidance. Address: 901 Sixteenth Street, New Cumberland, Pennsylvania. BESSER, DONALD E. Address: 114 Adelaide Road, Manchester, Connecticut. BETTENCOURT, STEPHEN B. A.B. Political Science. Born: September 11, 1944. Prepared at Belmont High School. Hockey, Golf, Lambda Chi Alpha. Address: 135 Lewis Road, Belmont, Massachu- setts. BICKERSTAFF, ROBERT L. A.B. American Civilization. Born: March 26, 1945. Prepared at Classical High School, Providence, Rhode Island. Dean's List, Outing Club, North Caswell Secretary-Treasurer. Address: 24 River Road, Lincoln, Rhode Island. BIELUCH, WILLIAM C. JR. A.B. History. Born: August 3, 1945. Prepared at Kingswood Academy. Hockey Manager, Young Republicans, Liber Brunensis, Hope College Assist- ant Cultural Affairs Chairman. Address: 110 Westerly Terrace, Hartford, Connecticut. BILLINGS, PETER W. JR. A.B. American Civilization. Born: April 26, 1945. Prepared at St. Marks. Cammarian Club Corresponding Secretary, President, Bruin Club President, Freshmen Week Committee, Sophomore Class Secretary-Treasurer, Freshman Class Coun- cil, Meiklejohn Society, Delta Upsilon. Address: 1600 Arlington Drive, Salt Lake City, Utah. BINDER, CHARLES W. A.B. Economics. Born: October 13, 1944. Prepared at International School of Geneva. Pre-Law Society, Delta Phi Omega, Crew, Intramurals. Address: 2903 Aspen Lane, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. BINGHAM, HUGH G. A.B. Eng- lish Literature. Born: February 10, 1945. Prepared at Ridgewood High School. Dean's List, Northern Student Movement Tutorial, Karate Club, Zeta Psi. Address: 3 Garden Court, Ho-Ho-Kus, New Jersey. BIRD, HERSCHEL N. Address: 115 Lincoln Road, Brooklyn, New York. BLACKBURN, ROBERT J. A.B. Philosophy. Born: December 12, 1945. Pre- pared at Claremont High School. Dean's List, Brown Young Republican Club President, Vice-President, Treasurer, Brown Youth Guidance, Inter-House Council Secretary, Ad Hoc Committee on the Refectory, Pre-Law Society, Intramurals. Address: 4250 Piedmont Mesa Drive, Claremont, California. BLACKWELL, EDWIN B. Address: 13317 Locksley Lane, Silver Spring, Maryland. BLAIR, DOUGLAS R. A.B. History. Born: June 3, 1945. Prepared at Scarsdale High School. Northern Student Movement Tutorial, Delta Tau Delta Treasurer, Freshman Cross Country Captain. Address: 43 Ferncliff Road, Scarsdale, New York. BLATZ, DOUGLAS J. A.B. Biology. Born: June 2, 1945. Prepared at Auburn East High School. Brown Key, Proctor, Chapel Board, Delta Phi Omega, Football, Track. Address: 410 South Seward Avenue, Auburn, New York. BLISS, ROBERT C. Address: P.O. Box 783, North Attleboro, Massachusetts. BLOOD, CHARLES H. JR. A.B. Econom- ics. Born: December 17, 1944. Prepared at Watertown High School. Dormitory Social Chairman, Crew. Address: 6 Lockwood Drive, Watertown, Connecticut. BOGDEN, JOHN D. Sc.B. Chemistry. Born: September 5, 1945. Prepared at South Plainfield High School Dean's List, Newman Club, Bowling Club, Intramurals. Address: 479 Sampton Avenue, South Plainfield, New Jersey. BOJAR, DAVID M. A.B. Political Science Chinese Studies, Honors. Born: July 8, 1945. Prepared at Classical High School. Dean's List, Band Sec- tion Leader, Concert Committee, Course Analysis Bulletin, Inter-House Council, Interna- tional Relations Club Chairman, Asian Affairs Desk. Address: 49 Emeline Street, Provi- dence, Rhode Island. BOLLOW, RICHARD C. A.B. Sociology. Born: February 25, 1945. Prepared at Downers Grove Community High School. Delta Tau Delta, Basketball. Ad- dress: 4740 Oakwood Avenue, Downers Grove, Illinois. BOSWORTH, RUSSELL P. Ad- dress: 8 Longview Road, Livingston, New Jerscy. D. J. BLATZ C. H. BLOOD, JR. J. D. BOGDEN D. M. BOJAR R. C. BOLLOW R. P. BOSWORTH C. H. BOUDREAU GHERBONIPE T. W. BOYLE P. D. BRADEN R. F. BRENNAN W. R. BRENNER G. D. BRODY N. B. BROMBERG M. A. BROOKNER J. A. BROWN, JR. A. F. BROWNE A Q . w:; L 1 6$ v -..;J? ... BOUDREAU, CARL H. A.B. Religious Studies. Born: April 21, 1945. Prepared at B.M.C. Durfee High School. Crew Manager, Sock and Buskin Stage Crew, Karate Club Pres- ident. Address: Cary Lane, Little Compton, Rhode Island. BOYLE, GERARD P. Ad- dress: 16 Carver Road, Watertown, Massachusetts. BOYLE, TERRENCE W. A.B. Political Science. Born: December 22, 1945. Prepared at Pope Pius High School. Lambda Chi Alpha, Football Co-Captain. Address: 37 Palisade Avenue, Garfield, New Jersey. BRADEN, PAUL D. A.B. Classics Honors. Born: February 22, 1945. Prepared at Easton Area Joint High School. Dean's List, Francis Wayland Scholar, Marching Band, Concert Band, Brass Chorale Student Leader, Classics Club President. Address: R.D. 2, Easton, Pennsyl- vania. BRANIGAN, EDWARD R. Address: 2567 White Oaks Drive, Beloit, Wisconsin. BRAUDE, JOEL 1. Address: 93 Arlington Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. BRENNAN, RICHARD F. A.B. Classics Latin. Born: August 1, 1945. Prepared at Acton-Boxborough Regional High School. Bruin Club, Classics Club, Northern Student Movement Tutorial, Dormitory Trcasurer and Social Chairman. Address: 40 Piper Road, South Acton, Massa- chusetts, BRODY, GERALD D. Address: 110 Lakeview Avenue, Haverhill, Massachusetts. BROMBERG, NEIL B. Address: 14 ILargo Lane, Livingston, New Jersey. BROOKNER, MARVIN A. A.B. English. Born: July 11, 1945. Prepared at Hope High School. Track, Intramurals. Address: 80 Vassar Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. BROWN, JONATHAN A. JR. AB. Geology. Born: November 21, 1944. Prepared at Deerfield Academy. Squash Club President, Class Council, Freshman Week Committee, Outing Club, Lambda Sigma Nu House Manager, Freshman Soccer, Tennis, Intramurals. Address: 27 Sunset Road, Darien, Connecticut. BROWN, PETER D. Address: 951 Boardman Poland Road, Youngs- town, Ohio. BROWN, ROBERT A. Address: 544 Chain O Hills Road, Colonia, New Jersey. BROWNE, ALLEN F. A.B. Human Biology. Born: December 12, 1944. Prepared at Tustin Union High School. Yacht Club, Bruin Club Southern California Chairman, In- tramural Athletic Council, Class Council, Freshman Week Committee, Outing Club, Rugby Club, University Christian Association Work Camps, Alpha Pi Lambda, Freshman Baseball. Address: 12701 Red Hill Avenue, Tustin, California. BUCILLA, RICHARD H. Address: 13 Clearview Drive, Framingham, Massachusetts. BUCK, JOHN A. A.B. English. Born: Feb- ruary 4, 1945. Prepared at Conestoga High School. AFROTC Drill Team, Rifle Team, Outing Club, Course Analysis Bulletin Assistant Editor, Sock and Buskin, Res Publica Circulation Manager, Intramurals. Address: 499 Bair Road, Berwyn, Pennsylvania. BUR- BANK, COLBY L. IIl. A.B. Economics. Born: November 11, 1945. Prepared at Lynnfield High School. Phi Delta Beta, Track. Address: 9 Homestead Road, Lynnfield, Massachusetts. BURGESS, ROBERT S. A.B. Political Science. Born: July 6, 1945. Prepared at Westtown School. Canticum Glee Club, Brown Glee Club, Latin American Summer Project Commit- tee, Washington Intern, Brown Youth Guidance, Convocation Choir, Intramurals. Address: 117 Maple Road, Warren, Rhode Island. BURKE, MICHAEL J. A.B. American Literature. Born: July 2, 1945. Prepared at Salem Classical High School, Salem, Massachusetts. Deans List, Cammarian Club, Bruin Club, Proctor, Corporation Housing Committee, Theta Delta Chi, Cross Country, Track. Address: 126 North Hillcrest Boulevard, Inglewood, California. BURNS, RICHARD P. A.B. History. Born: June 2, 1945. Prepared at Jamesville-Dewitt High School. Dean's List, Phi Gamma Delta, Football, Rugby. Address: 14 Tanglewood Circle, Ormond Beach, Florida. BUSH, FRED M. III. Address: 1012 Fawn Drive, Tupelo, Mississippi. BUSH, WILLIAM W. III. Address: Office of the Naval Attache, New York, New York. BUXTON, E. ANTHONY JR. Address: 511 Eleuthera Lane, Indian Harbor Beach, Florida. J. A. BUCK C. L. BURBANK III R. S. BURGESS M. J. BURKE R. P. BURNS F. M. BUSH III W. W. BUSH III E. A. BUXTON, JR. F. R. CABRAL P.J. CAMPAIGNE P.J. CAMPANELLA R. I. CANTOR S. V. CANTRILL C. R. CAPACE E. A. CAPOMACCHIO, JR. G. E. CARPENTER A. H. CARPIEN G. C. CARTWRIGHT R. J. CASABONNE E. B. CHARNEY D. W. CHASE R. O. CHASE D. N. CHICHESTER 1, 1Bk LAFLIN 00 DECICASETIRE R. S. CLARK J. W. CASTELLAN P. CLAUSEN 216l CABRAL, FERNANDO R. A.B. Chemistry. Born: June 12, 1945. Prepared at Tolman High School. Canticum Glee Club, Convocation Choir. Address: 365 Kenyon Avenue, Pawtucket, Rhode Island. CAMPAIGNE, PHILIP J. A.B., ScB. Engineering. Born: July 2, 1945. Prepared at Haverhill High School. Christian Science Organization President, Treas- urer, Brown Engineering Society, Phi Gamma Delta, Freshman Basketball, Lacrosse. Ad- dress: 15 Passaconway Avenue, Haverhill, Massachusetts. CAMPANELLA, PAUL J. II. A.B. Anthropology. Born: August 30, 1941, Prepared at Ogdensburg Free Academy. Dclta Tau Delta, Soccer, Intramurals. Address: 401 Washington Street, Ogdensburg, New York. CANTOR, ROBERT I. Address: 200 Central Park South, New York, New York. CAN- TRILL, STEPHEN V. A.B. Physics. Born: November 30, 1945. Prepared at Miramonte High School. Dean's List, Faunce House Board of Governors, Class Council, Brown Key, Bruin Club Western Committee Chairman, Freshman Week Committee, Lambda Sigma Nu Treasurer, Wrestling. Address: 30 Irving Lane, Orinda, California. CAPACE, CHARLES R. A.B. Latin Honors. Born: April 3, 1946. Prepared at Cranston High School West. Dean's List, Classics Club, Geology Club. Address: 43 Dean Parkway, Crans- ton, Rhode Island. CAPOMACCHIO, EDWARD A. Address: 55 Belvedere Drive, Crans- ton, Rhode Island. CARPENTER, D. BOYD JR. Address: 66 Oldc Wood Road, Glaston- bury, Connecticut. CARPENTER, GARY E. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: December 12, 1945. Prepared at Annandale High School, Annandale, Virginia. Tau Beta Pi, Brown Engieering Society. Address: 28 Ninth Terrace, Cocoa Beach, Florida. CARPIEN, ALAN H. A.B. History Honors. Born: July 30, 1946. Prepared at Baldwin Senior High School. Hillel, Brown Daily Herald, Rugby. Address: 3252 Wolfson Drive, Baldwin, New York. CARR, ROBERT N. JR. Address: County Line Road, Gates Mill, Ohio. CARTWRIGHT, GUY C. Address: 20721 Avalon Drive, Rocky River, Ohio. CASABONNE, RICHARD J. A.B. Art. Born: April 27, 1945. Prepared at Saint Mary's Institute. Zeta Psi Secretary, Freshman Football Manager, Brown Youth Guidance, Brown Charities Drive, Intramurals. Address: 41 Summit Avenue, Amsterdam, New York. CASE, DELVYN C. JR. A.B. American Civilization. Born: January 15, 1945. Prepared at Newington Senior High School. Dean's List, College Scholar Program Biology, Glee Club, Pre-Med Society, Dormitory Secre- tary, Inter-House Council Representative, Social Chairman. Address: 71 Vincent Drive, Newington, Connecticut. CASPAR, CARL M. JR. Address: 86 Front Street, Exeter, New Hampshire. CASTELLAN, JAMES W. Sc.B. Applied Mathematics Honors. Born: February 20, 1945. Prepared at Nether Providence High School. Dean's List, Olney House President, Math Club Secretary, President, Bruin Club, Proctor, Track. Address: 709 Pine Ridge Road, Media, Pennsylvania. CHARNEY, EDWARD B. A.B. Human Biology Honors. Born: June 22, 1945. Prepared at Pleasantville High School. Dean's List, Class Council, Bruin Club, Brown Youth Guidance, Alpha Pi Lambda, Intramurals. Address: 255 Lake Shore Drive, Pleasantville, New York. CHASE, DAVID W. A.B. Art History. Born: May 4, 1945. Prepared at Bronxville High School. Brown Daily Herald Reviewer, Film Society President. Address: 30 Elmrock Road, Bronxville, New York. CHASE, ROBERT O. A.B. Political Science. Born: July 6, 1945. Prepared at Palmer High School. Diman House Athletic Chairman, Social Chairman, Intramural Athletic Council, Intramurals. Address: 28 Thorndike Street, Palmer, Massachusetts. CHICHESTER, DAVID N. A.B. American Civilization. Born: November 17, 1945. Prepared at Baldwin High School. Dean's List, Soccer Co-Captain, Baseball, Freshman Basketball, Cammarian Club, Meiklejohn Society, Proctor, Swyndlestock Assistant Treasurer, Pledgemaster, Brown Charities Drive. Address: 562 Irving Place, Baldwin, New York. CHRISTIANSEN, PAUL A. Address: 1666 Washington Avenue, Portland, Maine. CLAFLIN, JOHN D. A.B. International Rela- tions. Born: February 14, 1946. Prepared at William H. Hall High School. Delta Upsilon, Soccer. Address: 55 North Main Street, West Hartford, Connecticut. CLARK, RONALD S. A.B.-Sc.B. Applied Mathematics. Born: September 7, 1945. Prepared at East Providence High School. Dean's List. Address: 42 Huntington Drive, Rumford, Rhode Island. CLAU- SEN, PETER T. A.B. American Civilization. Born: January 7, 1946. Prepared at Tenafly High School. Dean's List, Brown Charitics Drive Chairman, Convocation Choir, Class Council, Freshman Week Committee, Alpha Delta Phi. Address: 24 Bliss Avenue, Tenafly, New Jersey. CLEAVES, ARTHUR W. II. Address: 6350 Pershing Avenue, St. Louis, Missouri. CLEGG, KENNETH R. Address: 517 A Street, Davis, California. COATES, PHILIP A. A.B. Mathematics. Born: December 28, 1945. Prepared at Andover High School. Inter- House Council, Dormitory Treasurer, Chess Club, Humor Magazine, Liber Brunensis, Dor- mitory President, Cross Country, Track. Address: 9 Willow Road, Harvard, Massachusetts. COCHRAN, CLARKE E. A.B. Political Science Honors. Born: January 9, 1945. Pre- pared at Loyola High School. Dean's List, Liber Brunensis Publications Layout Editor, Managing Editor, Editor-in-Chief, Newman Club, Bridge Club, Phi Gamma Delta. Ad- dress: 1313 Stonewood Road, Baltimore, Maryland. COHEN, PAUL B. Address: 183-18 Dalny Road, Jamaica, New York. COHEN, ROBERT S. Address: 45 Stony Ridge Drive, Hillesdale, New Jersey. COLE, CHARLES W. A.B. Sociology. Born: November 14, 1945. Prepared at Classical High School. Jabberwocks. Address: 65 Homer Street, Providence, Rhode Island. COLLINS, JOSEPH J. Address: 211 Wendover Road, Baltimore, Maryland. COLLOFF, ROGER D. A.B. History. Born: February 1, 1946. Prepared at Teaneck High School. Francis Wayland Scholar, Dean's List, Phi Beta Kappa, Tower Club Treasurer, Rushing Chairman, President, Brown Youth Guidance, Intramurals. Address: 124 Johnson Avenue, Teaneck, New Jersey. CONKLIN, PETER L. A.B. History. Born: July 17, 1945. Prepared at Mount Hermon School. Brown Youth Guidance, Classics Club, Inter-Fraternity Council, Class Executive Council, Phi Delta Beta Treasurer. Address: 76 Stratford Ave- nue, Garden City, New York. CONTA, ROBERT L. A.B. Economics-Engineering. Born: June 29, 1945. Prepared at Brighton High School. Canticum Glee Club, Brown University Glee Club, Outing Club, Yacht Club, Brown Engincering Socicty, Dormitory Treasurer, Lambda Sigma Nu, Sailing Team, Intramurals. Address: 25 Pickford Drive, Rochester, New York. COOK, GEORGE E. A.B. Sociology-Anthropology. Born: July 5, 1945. Prepared at Somerville High School. Brown-Pembroke Cristian Fellowship Secretary, Olney House Secretary, Brown Youth Guidance, Brown Young Republicans. Address: 64 Grove Street, Somerville, New Jersey. COOLEY, DAVID R. Sc.B. Civil Engineering. Born: September 4, 1945. Prepared at Daniel Hand High School. Band, Chorus, Phi Kappa Psi, Soccer, Fresh- man Baseball, Intramurals. Address: 7 Barberry Lane, Madison, Connecticut. COOPER, JOHN M. Address: Route 1, Box 1662, Bainbridge Island, Washington. COSTIGAN, JAMES P. A.B. Economics. Born: June 24, 1945. Prepared at LaSalle Military Academy. Address: 46 West Lane, Bay Shore, New York. COTTON, IRA W. A.B. Psychology. Born: December 29, 1945. Prepared at Wellington C. Mepham High School. Liber Brunensis Photography Editor, Brown Daily Herald, Photography Club Chairman, Hillel, Wres- tling. Address: 831 Virginia Avenue, North Bellmore, New York. CRANMER, DAVID J. A.B. German Literature. Born: November 2, 1945. Prepared at East Providence High School. Marching Band, Concert Band, German Club, Bruin Club, University Student Tutoring, Convocation Choir. Address: 14 Lakeside Circle, Riverside, Rhode Island. CRAWFORD, BRUCE M. A.B. Ocean Engineering. Born: February 27, 1945. Prepared at Middletown High School. Tutoring Program, Sailing, Brown Engineering Society, Research Assistant Geology. Address: 257 Paradise Avenue, Middletown, Rhode Island. CREASER, JOHN A. A.B. Geology-Biology. Born: October 9, 1944. Prepared at Darien High School. Dean's List, Geology Club, Brown-Pembroke Outing Club Canoe Chairman. Address: 24 CIliff Avenue, Darien, Connecticut. CROSBY, JOHN B. JR. Address: Indian Trail, Cummaquid, Massachusetts. CROWLEY, JOSEPH J. A.B. Psychology. Born: July 22, 1945. Prepared at Our Lady of Providence Seminary. Plantations House House Chair- man, Committeeman, Newman Club. Address: 3 River Road, North Providence, Rhode Island. CRUMP, STUART F. JR. A.B. American Civilization. Born: November 18, 1945. CIE: COCHRAN Prepared at Richard Montgomery High School. Christian Science College Organization P. B. COHEN Vice-President, Brown Daily Herald Assistant Photography Editor, Liber Brunensis, The Brown Jug Photography Editor, Chess Club, Band Photographer, Track, Soccer. Address: 101 Evans Street, Rockville, Maryland. CUMMINGS, STANLEY L. A.B. Biology. Born: April 1, 1945. Prepared at Greenfield High School. Inter-House Council, Cross Country, Track, Fencing. Address: Stone Ridge Lane, Greenfield, Massachusetts. CZECH, MICHAEL P. A.B. Chemistry. Born: June 24, 1945. Prepared at Tolman High School. Dean's List, Brown Undergraduate Research Participantship, Pre-Med Society, Plantations House Social Chairman, Committeeman at Large, Freshman Sailing, Intramurals. Ad- dress: 81 Hamlet Street, Pawtucket, Rhode Island. A. W. CLEAVES 11 P. A. COATES C.W.COLE, IR. ' R.D.COLLOFF z P. L. CONKLIN R. L. CONTA G. E. COOK D. J. CRANMER D. R. COOLEY B. M. CRAWFORD L 4 1 17 gy J. P. COSTIGAN J. A. CREASER I. W. COTTON J. B. CROSBY, JR. J. J. CROWLEY S. L. CUMMINGS, JR. S. F. CRUMP, JR. M. P. CZECH A. DALMOLEN J. W. DANIELS J. W. DAVENPORT R. A. DAVIDSON, JR. R. S. DAVIS S. J. DAVIS CIGIDAVY J. W. DEAVER 264 DALMOLEN, ALBERT. A.B. International Relations. Born: June 25, 1945. Prepared at Amesbury High School. Intramurals. Address: 11 Clark's Road, Amesbury, Massachusetts. DANIELS, JAMES W. A.B. American Civilization Honors. Born: October 13, 1945. Prepared at Fenwick High School. Dean's List, Meiklejohn Society, Delta Upsilon, Football. Address: 1005 Spring Road, Elmhurst, Illinois. DAVENPORT, JAMES W. Sc.B. Engincer- ing Honors. Born: July 8, 1945, Prepared at Robinson School. Tau Beta Pi, Deans List, Outing Club, Olney House Cultural Affairs Committee. Address: 1380 Aitken Drive, Deerfield, Illinois. DAVIDSON, JOHN P. Address: 1100 Grandview Boulevard, Lancaster, Pennsylvania. DAVIDSON, ROBERT A. JR. A.B. Psychology. Born: April 24, 1944. Pre- pared at Needham High School. Brown University Orchestra, Brown-Pembroke Psychology Club. Address: 40 Morton Street, Needham, Massachusetts. DAVIS, RICHARD S. Sc.B. Physics. Born: October 14, 1945. Prepared at Conard High School. Brown Daily Herald Executive Editor. Address: 95 Granby Street, Hartford, Connecticut. DAVIS, STANLEY O. A.B. Anthropology. Born: April 13, 1943. Prepared at The Bullis School. Anthropology Department Newsletter Staff, Freshman Sailing. Address: 113 Lee Drive, Cambridge, Maryland. DAVIS, STUART J. A.B. History. Born: May 1, 1946. Prepared at Hackley School. Deans List, WBRU News Director, Jazz Director, Northern Student Movement Tutorial, Course Analysis Bulletin. Address: 140 East 72nd Street, New York, New York. DAVY, CHRISTOPHER G. A.B.-Sc.B.-M.S. Applied Mathematics. Born: February 26, 1945. Prepared at South Side Senior High School. Tower Club, Radio Club, Convocation Choir, Glee Club Librarian. Address: 3 Shelton Court, Rockville Centre, New York. DEAVER, JAMES M. A.B. Biology. Born: November 13, 1942. Prepared at Evanston Township High School. Brown Youth Guidance, Brown Charities Drive, Canticum Glee Club, Freshman Track, Swyndlestock House Manager, Pledgemaster. Address: 2223 Cen- tral Park, Evanston, Illinois. DeCESARE, NICHOLAS JR. A.B. French-Italian. Born: January S, 1946. Prepared at Manchester High School. Dean's List, Sock and Buskin, Newman Club Publicity Chairman, Italian Club Secretary, French Club, Class Coun- cils, Inter-House Council, Intramurals. Address: 53 Arnott Road, Manchester, Connecticut. DeFAZIO, MICHAEL F. Address: 43 Marked Tree Road, Needham, Massachusetts. DEIGNAN, JAMES W. Address: 720 West Sheridan Road, Chicago, Illinois. DeLANO, ARTHUR A. JR. A.B. History. Born: April 24, 1945. Prepared at Huntington High School. Delta Upsilon Steward, Corresponding Secretary, Vice-President, Crew Freshman and Junior Varsity. Address: 5 Kew Court, Huntington, New York. DeSEIFE, LEWIS H. JR. A.B. Political Science. Born: July 9, 1945. Prepared at Upper Merion High School. Fort- night Advertising Manager, Class Council, SolicitorEpiscopal College Church Steward- ship Drive, Delta Phi Omega. Address: 1416 Lafayette Road, Wayne, Pennsylvania. DIF- FILY, MICHAEL E. A.B. Sociology. Born: November 6, 1945. Prepared at Mount Saint Michael Academy. Brown Youth Guidance, NROTC, Football, Rugby Treasurer. Ad- dress: 85 Bronx River Road, Yonkers, New York. DI MARZIO, F. WAYNE. Address: 9 Aiken Street, Derry, New Hampshire. DOCKE, JOHN W. A.B. Economics. Born: July 15, 1945. Prepared at Rutherford Senior High School. Liber Brunensis, University Christian Association. Address: 39 Hawthorne Street, Rutherford, New Jersey. DONNELLY, WIL- LIAM E. III. Address: 3804 Moore Place, Alexandria, Virginia. DOUGHERTY, JOHN J. Address: 15 Clairmont Terrace, Lynn, Massachusetts. DOUMATO, GABRIEL. A.B. Inter- national Relations. Born: October 11, 1943. Prepared at Central Falls High School. Class Council, Brown Key Treasurer, Dorm Proctor, Delta Upsilon, French Club, Lacrosse. Address: 74 Henry Street, Central Falls, Rhode Island. DUDGEON, E. MARTIN. A.B. Political Science. Born: March 7, 1945. Prepared at Trinity-Pawling School. Address: 108 Circle Drive, Plandome Manor, New York. DUNLAP, RONALD W. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: December 20, 1944. Prepared at South Side High School. Cammarian Club, Fresh- man Week Committee, Dormitory Proctor, Intramurals, Brown Engineering Society, Alpha Pi Lambda, Soccer. Address: Apartment 701-D, 25 Clifton Avenue, Newark, New Jersey. DUPEE, PAUL R. JR. Address: Atamannsit, Hatchville, Massachusetts. DURSIN, H. PETER. A.B. Geology. Born: November 24, 1945. Prepared at Peddie School. WBRU Chief Engineer, Sock and Buskin, Yacht Club House and Grounds Chairman, Amateur Radio Club Vice-President. Address: 14 Stephen Drive, Pleasantville, New York. N. DeCESARE, JR. A. A. DeLANO, JR. PHADESEIEERIRS M. E. DIFFILY F. W. DIMARZIO J. W. DOCKE G. DOUMATO E. M. DUDGEON R. W. DUNLAP H. P. DURSIN A.R. DYER M. C. D. DYER K. B. EARNHARDT, JR. J. R. EATON H. J. EDWARDS P. EISENHARDT B. ELDRIDGE R. C. ELLIOTT V. H. EMERSON, JR. R. D. EMERY W. W. ERICKSON D. FAGIANO M. C. FAHEY L. SUEAIN R. C. FAMIGLIETTI J. W. FANNING DYER, ALLEN R. AB-M.M.S. Born: November 10, 1944. Prepared at Maine Central Institute. College Scholar, Band, University Christian Association, Northern Student Move- ment Tutorial, Inter-House Council, Intramurals, Proctor, Chapel Board, Meiklejohn Soci- ety. Address: 34 Shaw Street, Newport, Maine. DYER, MORGAN C. D. A.B. Chemistry. Born: April 9, 1944. Prepared at John Burroughs School, St. Louis, Missouri. Dean's List, AFROTC Drill Team, AFROTC Rifle Team Commander, Bridge Club Co-Chairman, Bronson House Treasurer, Intramurals. Address: 996 S56th Avenue South, St. Petersburg, Florida. EARNHARDT, KENNETH B. JR. Address: 602 Woodland Avenue, Cinnaminson, New Jersey. EATON, J. RODERICK. A.B. History. Born: April 10, 1944. Prepared at The Lawrence Academy, Groton, Massachusetts. Brown Youth Guidance, Dormitory Vice-Presi- dent, Inter-House Council, Wrestling. Address: Bloody Brook Circle, Amherst, New Hamp- shire. ECKHERT, GEORGE L. JR. Address: 238 Brantwood Road, Snyder, New York. EDWARDS, HARVEY J. A.B. American Literature. Born: January 7, 1946. Prepared at Monroe High School. Brown Youth Guidance, American Field Service Club, Convocation Choir. Address: 378 Beresford Road, Rochester, New York. EISENHARDT, PAUL. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: September 18, 1944. Prepared at The Nichols School, Buffalo, New York. Freshman Week Committee, Bruin Club, Brown Engineering Socicty, Brown Chari- ties, NROTC, Brown Latin America Guatemala Summer Project, Kappa Sigma, Freshman Football, Rugby. Address: 714 Woodland Drive, Kenmore, New York. ELDRIDGE, BRICE. A.B. International Relations. Born: March 20, 1944. Prepared at Englewood School for Boys, Englewood, New Jerscy. NROTC, WBRU, Outing Club, Freshman Class Council, Yacht Club, Tower Club House Improvement Chairman, Assistant Varsity Basketball Manager. Address: 42 Westerly Road, Saddle River, New Jersey. ELLIOTT, ROBERT C. Sc.B. Biology. Born: April 16, 1945. Prepared at Nutley High School. James Manning Scholar, Sigma Xi, Outing Club, Rhode Island Committee for Peace in Vietnam. Address: 20 Saint Paul's Place, Nutley, New Jersey. EMERSON, VICTOR H. JR. A.B. Physics. Born: February 7, 1945. Prepared at Garden City High School. Lacrosse, Soccer, Phi Kappa Psi. Address: 93 Kingsbury Road, Garden City, New York. EMERY, RICHARD D. A.B. History. Born: March 5, 1946. Prepared at New Rochelle High School. Dean's List, Pre-Law Society, Swimming Captain, Freshman and Varsity, Lifeguard at Pool, Kappa Sigma. Address: 84 Hunter Avenue, New Rochelle, New York. ERICKSON, WIL- LIAM W. Address: 203 Early Street, Providence, Rhode Island. FAGIANO, DAVID. Address: 286 Williams Street, Providence, Rhode Island. FAHEY, MICHAEL C. A.B. American Literature. Born: August 16, 1945. Prepared at Clifford J. Scott High School. Proctor, Delta Tau Delta, Freshman Basketball Co-Captain, Varsity Basketball. Address: 84 Lafayette Avenue, East Orange, New Jersey. FAIN, LYLE S. Sc.B. Physics. Born: November 11, 1945. Prepared at Moses Brown School. Dean's List, Dorm President. Ad- dress: 400 Laurel Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. FALCONER, JAMES C. Address: 7400 Jackson Park, Birmingham, Michigan. FAMIGLIETTI, RICHARD C. Address: 198 Hope Street, Providence, Rhode Island. FANNING, JAMES W. Address: 4115 Marburg Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio. FAR, ROBERT A. A.B. Economics. Born: Fcbruary 3, 1946 Prepared at St. John's School. NROTC, Brown Youth Guidance, Rugby Club, Lambda Chi Alpha. Address: Adams Street East, Brookfield, Massachusetts. FARBER, STEWART A A.B. Chemistry. Born: December 6, 1945. Prepared at Warren Harding High School Dean's List, College Scholar in Biology, German Club, Pre-Medical Society, Students for a Democratic Society, Rhode Island Committee for Peace in Vietnam, Campus Action Com- mittee, Outing Club, Intramurals. Address: 231 Logan Street, Bridgeport, Connecticut. FARIA, JOHN G. A.B. Philosophy. Born: August 26, 1945. Prepared at Somerset High School. Dean's List, Brown Youth Guidance, Young Republicans, Northern Student Move- ment Tutorial. Address: 1822 Read Street, Somerset, Massachusetts. FEE, RICHARD M. T. A.B. Art History. Born: November 4, 1943. Prepared at Washington School. Dean's List, Young Democrats, Debating Union Executive Steering Committee, Zeta Psi Secretary. Address: 2600 Fifth Avenue Southwest, Austin, Minnesota. R. A. FAR S. A. FARBER J. G. FARIA R. M. FEE FENSEL, PHILLIP A. A.B.-Sc.B. Engineering. Born: May 11, 1945. Prepared at Fairmont High School. Brown Engineering Society, Track. Address: 1205 Lytle Lane, Dayton, Ohio. FERGUSON, THOMAS S. JR. Sc.B. Applied Mathematics. Born: December 19, 1945. Prepared at Oceanside High School. Dean's List, Hartshorn and H.P. Manning Mathematics Prizes, Bruinaires, Glee Club, Chorale, Math Club, Intramurals. Address: 2531 Yorktown Street, Oceanside, New York. FERRELL, RICHARD W. Sc.B. Civil Engineering. Born: June 25, 1945. Prepared at Wayne Senior High School. Brown Engineering Society, Ameri- can Society of Civil Engineers, Dorm Proctor, Phi Kappa Psi, Track and Field. Address: 5 Alpine Drive, Wayne, New Jersey. FILIPP, ALEXANDER. A .B. Russian Literature Hon- ors. Born: November 19, 1946. Prepared at Massapequa High School. Dean's List, Pre- Medical Society, Concert Band, Marching Band, Zeta Psi Vice-President, Pledgemaster, Athletic Chairman, President, Russian Club, Ski Club, Volunteer Work at Rhode Island Hospital, Intramurals. Address: 75 Unqua Road, Massapequa, New York. FINBERG, HARRIS J. A.B. Electrical Engineering. Born: January 7, 1947. Prepared at Classical High School. Dean's List, Francis Wayland Scholar, Marching Band, Concert Band, Pre-Medical Society Board Member, Secretary, President. Address: 200 Highland Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. FINCH. WILLIAM B. Address: 320 Fleming Lane, Fairfield, Connecti- cut. FINK, WILLIAM B. A.B. Economics Honors. Born: May 1, 1945. Prepared at Teaneck High School. Francis Wayland Scholar, Freshman Class Council, Orchestra, Squash Club, Intramurals. Address: 1340 Sussex Road, Teaneck, New Jersey. FINKLE, MICHAEL A. A.B. Human Biology. Born: March 22, 1946. Prepared at Hope High School. Dean's List, Brown Youth Guidance, Northern Student Movement Tutorial, Intramurals. Address: 294 Woodland Road, Woonsocket, Rhode Island. FINN, H. SETH. A.B. American Litera- ture. Born: April 18, 1945. Prepared at North Central High School. Dean's List, Herald Review Book Review Editor, Meiklejohn Society Vice-President, The Sphinx Secre- tary, Brown Ambassador Abroad to Yugoslavia, Alpha Pi Lambda Treasurer, President. Address: 1507 Collingwood Drive, Indianapolis, Indiana. FIRESTONE, ROGER M. A.B. Mathematics Honors. Born: August 23, 1945. Prepared at University High School. Society of the Sigma Xi, Francis Wayland Scholar, Second Henry Parker Manning Prize, Inter- House Council Parliamentarian, Marching Band, Concert Band, Mathematics Club, Hillel, Sock and Buskin, Brownbrokers. Address: 1808 Colvin Avenue, St. Paul, Minnesota. FISH- BACH, KENNETH J. JR. A.B. Engineering and Economics. Born: December 19, 1945. Prepared at Eastchester High School. Inter-House Council Publicity Chairman, Hegeman B President, Mead House President, Treasurer, Brown Engineering Society Social Activities Board, Outing Club, Intramurals. Address: 26 Forbes Boulevard, Eastchester, New York. FISHMAN, ALAN H. A.B. Economics. Born: March 16, 1946. Prepared at Erasmus Hall High School. Dean's List, Freshman and Varsity Basketball Captain, Mei- klejohn Society, Brown Key Homecoming Committee Chairman, Delta Tau Delta Rush Chairman. Address: 2 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York. FLANAGAN, FREDERIC F. JR. A.B. Art. Born: September 9, 1944. Prepared at White Plains High School. Dean's List, Nudywc Co-Chairman, Northern Student Movement. Address: 27 Bellwood Road, White Plains, New York. FLEISCHER, BRUCE D. Address: 169 South Rockingham Ave- nue, Los Angeles, California. FOGARTY, THOMAS W. A.B. International Relations. Born: September 18, 1945. Prepared at Detroit Country Day School. Glee Club, Young Republicans, Episcopal College Church Vestry, Freshman Football Manager, Zeta Psi Secretary. Address: 3836 Wedgewood Drive, Birmingham, Michigan. FOLEY, RICHARD L. Address: 218 Main Street, Norwich, Connecticut. FORSYTH, ALFRED S. JR. A.B. French Literature. Born: August 11, 1945. Prepared at Horace Greeley High School. Dean's List, Brown Youth Guidance, Cercle Francais Treasurer, Tennis. Address: 15 Leroy Place, Chappaqua, New York. FOSTER, JEFFREY. Sc.B. Applied Mathematics. Born: April 24, 1945. Prepared at Eastern High School. Dean's List, Association for Computing Machinery, Actuarial Science. Address: 10 Pine Court, Bristol, Connecticut. FOWLER, DAVID S. A.B. International Relations. Born: May 7, 1945. Prepared at Roxbury Latin School. Bruin Club, Delta Phi Omega House Manager, Vice-President, President, La- crosse, Intramural Wrestling. Address: 26 Oakridge Road, Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts. FOWLER, JACKSON E. JR. A.B. Human Biology. Born: September 17, 1945. Prepared at Niskayuna Senior High School. Dean's List, Dormitory Proctor, Junior Class Council, Lambda Chi Alpha Treasurer, Football. Address: 1137 Millington Road, Schenectady, New York. FRANKE, DOUGLAS C. A.B.-Sc.B. Engineering-Economics. Born: October 27, 1945. Prepared at Hanover Park High School. Dean's List, I.LE.E.E., Brown Engineering Society, Brown Young Republican Club, Brown Yacht Club, Olney House Secretary. Address: 6 Pleasant Valley Road, Whippany, New Jersey. FREY, DANIEL B. JR. A.B. American Literature. Born: September 25, 1945. Prepared at Fieldston School. Brown Daily Herald, Intramural Athletic Council, Freshman Baseball, Intramurals. Address: 211 Central Park West, New York, New York. FRIEDMAN, DAVID M. A.B. International Relations. Born: April 12, 1945. Prepared at Roosevelt High School. Brown Youth Guidance, Interna- tional Relations Club President, Alpha Pi Lambda, Intramurals, Freshman Basketball. Address: 64 Edgemont Road, Scarsdale, New York. A. S. FORSYTH, JR. THCHEOSTIER D. S. FOWLER J. E. FOWLER, JR. DEBRERENARE D. FRIEDMAN P. A. FENSEL M. A. FINKLE T. S. FERGUSON, JR. H. S. FINN R. W. FERRELL ANMGIFEED H. J. FINBERG W. B. FINCH W. B. FINK R. M. FIRESTONE K. J. FISHBACH, JR. A. H. FISHMAN F. F. FLANAGAN, JR. T. W. FOGARTY 269 R. W. FRIEDMAN G. K. FRITZ A. G. FURLER T. F. GAFFNEY D. GALE D. I. GARDNER D. F. GARDNER D. S. FROEHLICH, JR. FRIEDMAN, ROGER W. Sc.B. Applied Mathematics. Born: January 4, 1946. Prepared at Walter Johnson High School. Band, Hillel, Dormitory President. Address: 6226 Stoneham Road, Bethesda, Maryland. FRITZ, GREGORY K. A.B. American Literature Honors. Born: January 28, 1945. Prepared at Niskayuna High School. Dean's List, Glee Club, Crossroads Africa, Brown Youth Guidance, Lambda Sigma Nu. Address: 1360 Valencia Road, Schenectady, New York. FROELICH, DAVID S. A.B. Sociology-Anthropology. Born: March 23, 1945. Prepared at Columbia High School, Maplewood, New Jersey. Pre- Med Society, Dorm Social Chairman, Brown Youth Guidance Executive Board, Freshman Lacrosse. Address: 46 Cedar Street, Millburn, New Jersey. FURLER, ALAN G. A.B. Electrical Engineering-Economics. Born: September 10, 1945. Prepared at Glen Rock Senior High School. Dean's List, Brown Youth Guidance. Address: 94 West Main Street, Glen Rock, New Jersey. GAFFNEY, THOMAS F. A.B. Classics Honors. Born: August 29, 1945. Prepared at Gilmour Academy. Dean's List, Squash Club, Brown Youth Guidance, Liber Brunensis, Classics Club, Newman Club, Young Republicans. Address: 149 Sheridan Street, Rockford, Illinois. GALE, DAVID. A.B. Political Science. Born: June 30, 1946. Prepared at Paul D. Schreiber High School. Phi Kappa Psi, Freshman Soccer, Basketball. Address: 5 Alden Lane, Port Washington, New York. GANN, ANDREW G. A.B. French Honors. Born: May 9, 1946. Prepared at Conard High School. Dean's List, A.B. Johnson Prize in French, Brown Chamber Soloists Manager, Inter-House Council Treasurer, Proctor. Address: 17 Mansfield Avenue, West Hartford, Connecticut. GARBER, ALAN J. A.B. Biology. Born: February 21, 1946. Prepared at Jamaica High School. Sigma Chi, Lacrosse. Address: 84-01 Main Street, Jamaica, New York. GARBERSON, JEFFREY B. Address: 27 Sutherland Crescent, Sydney NSW, Australia. GARDNER, DANN 1. Sc.B. Electrical Engineering. Born: April 21, 1945. Prepared at Syracuse Central Technical High School. LE.E.E. Secretary, Intramurals. Address: 148 Sheldon Avenue, Syracuse, New York. GARDNER, DAVID F. A.B. Human Biology Honors. Born: March 5, 1946. Prepared at Polytechnic Preparatory Country Day School. Dean's List, Francis Wayland Scholar, Canticum Glee Club, Brown Charities Drive, Littlefield Hall Treasurer, Cam- marian Club Committee, Undergraduate Laboratory Instructor, Undergraduate Research Participantship, Intramurals, Pre-Med Society, Freshman Wrestling. Address: 1157 East 27th Street, Brooklyn, New York. GASKELL, ROBERT W. Sc.B. Physics. Born: July 9, 1945. Prepared at Corvallis High School. Dean's List, Sock and Buskin, Brownbrokers, Produc- tion Workshop, Tower Club, Intramurals. Address: 416 Crescent Valley Drive, Corvallis, Oregon. GELB, ROBERT S. Address: Box 21, Great Plains Road, Southampton, New York. GEREMIA, ROBERT A. Address: 4 Harbour Terrace, Cranston, Rhode Island. GERHAN, DAVID R. A.B. American Civilization. Born: September 22, 1945. Prepared at William Horlick High School. Dean's List, Delta Upsilon Community Service Chairman, Northern Student Movement Tutorial, Cammarian Club Academic Affairs Committee Chairman of Subcommittee on Teaching Methods, Intervarsity Christian Fellowship. Ad- dress: 170 Westminster Square, Racine, Wisconsin. GETZ, PETER M. A.B. International Relations. Born: January 27, 1945. Prepared at Englewood School for Boys. AFROTC, Arnold Air Society Commander, Phi Kappa Psi. Address: 273 Audobon Road, Engle- wood, New Jersey. GIDWITZ, RONALD J. Address: 970 Sheridan Road, Highland Park, Illinois. GILBERT, JAMES B. A.B. Psychology. Born: August 13, 1946. Prepared at Fayetteville-Manlius High School. Francis Wayland Scholar, University Christian Associa- tion. Address: 308 Palmer Drive, Fayetteville, New York. GILLIE, R. BRUCE. A.B. Sociology. Born: November 21, 1945. Prepared at Trinity-Pawling School. Dean's List, Pre- Med Society Vice-President, WBRU-AM-FM Assistant News Director, Executive Class Council, Hegeman E. Cultural Chairman, Intramurals. Address: 18 Ridgecrest West. Scarsdale, New York. GLEESON, PAUL F. JR. A.B. Anthropology. Born: March 2, 1944. Prepared at Classical High School. Dean's List, Plantations House Committee. Address: 17 Hoxie Court, Coventry, Rhode Island. GLEITER, DONALD P. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: November 29, 1945. Prepared at Hatboro-Horsham High School. Zeta Psi, Rugby Club. Address: 42 Home Road, Hatboro, Pennsylvania. GLENN, FLOYD A. III. Address: Clover Hill Road, Poughkeepsie, New York. GLUCKMAN, STEPHEN J. A.B. Human Biology Honors. Born: October 6, 1945. Prepared at Roslyn High School. Deans List, College Scholar, Theta Delta Chi, Cammarian Club Chairman, Honors Council, Brown Daily Herald, Yacht Club, Squash Club, Pre-Med Society, Wrestling Freshman and Varsity Captain. Address: 53 Knollwood South, Roslyn, New York. GODDESS, JEFFREY 8. A.B. Political Science. Born: September 18, 1945. Prepared at Evanston Township High School. Dean's List, Jabberwocks, Bruin Club, Alpha Delta Phi. Address: 1122 Hull Ter- race, Evanston, Illinois. GODDIN, C. STEWART. A.B. Economics Honors. Born: June 21, 1945. Prepared at East Greenwich High School. Dean's List, International Association President, A.LLE.S.E.C. President, International Relations Club, International House of Rhode Island, German Club, Liber Brunensis, WBRU, Dormitory Treasurer, Intramurals. Address: 923 Division Street, East Greenwich, Rhode Island. R. B. GILLIE C. S. GODDIN SR N VJ.,, xa;?: v F inwih J. B. GILBERT J. S. GODDESS - A S. J. GLUCKMAN PENMEGELZ A D. R. GERHAN F. A. GLENN II1 R. W. GASKELL D. P. GLEITER j A. G. GOFF G. W. GOING J. M. GOLDBERG M. GOLDBERG J. 8. GOLDMAN D. B. GOLDSTEIN M. L. GORDON R. M. GOULD GOFF, ADELBERT G. Sc.B. Applicd Mathematics. Born: July 3, 1945. Prepared at Joscph Case High School. Yacht Club Commodore, Chairman of House and Grounds, Repre- sentative to the New England Intercollegiate Sailing Association Special Projects Chair- man, Member-at-Large, Outing Club, Sailing Team Freshman and Varsity Captain. Ad- dress: 55 Sea View Avenue, Swansea, Massachusetts. GOING, GEOFFREY M. A.B. Art. Born: January 2, 1945. Prepared at Middlesex School, Concord, Massachusetts. Swyndle- stock, Intramurals. Address: Saddle Rock Road, Stamford, Connecticut. GOLDBERG, JOEL M. A.B. American Civilization. Born: June 25, 1945. Prepared at Sheepshead Bay High School. Dean's List, Inter-House Council Littlefield Representative, Social Chairman, Intramural Staff, Cross Country, Freshman Track. Address: 2675 Ocean Avenue, Brooklyn, New York. GOLDBERG, MARSHALL. A.B. History Honors. Born: January 31, 1945. Prepared at Edwin O. Smith School. Dean's List, $600 Summer Grant, Brown Youth Guidance, Class Council, Alpha Pi Lambda, Intramurals. Address: Hunting Lodge Road, Storrs, Connecticat. GOLDMAN, JEFFREY S. A.B. History. Born: May 28, 1945. Pre- pared at Highland Park High School. College Scholar, Bruin Club On-Campus Committee- man, Dormitory Social Chairman, Northern Student Movement Tutorial, Freshman Track. Address: 3390 University Avenue, Highland Park, Illinois. GOLDSTEIN, DENNIS B. A.B. History-Political Science. Born: November 10, 1945. Prepared at Cranston High School East. Deans List, Res Publica, Intramurals. Address: 84 Concord Avenue, Cranston, Rhode Island. GOLET, FRANK C. A.B. Geology. Bon: November 20, 1945. Prepared at Nathan Hale-Ray High School. Dean's List, Soccer Co-Captain, Intramurals. Address: R.F.D. 1, Box 218, Moodus, Connecticut. GOLNER, GEOFFREY R. Sc.B. Physics. Born: September 11, 1945. Prepared at Berkeley High School. Dean's List, Music Department's Applied Music Program. Address: 1825 Tacoma Avenue, Berkeley, California. GORDON, MICHAEL L. A.B. English Literature. Born: January 6, 1946. Prepared at University School. Dean's List, College Scholar, Alpha Pi Lambda Marshal. Address: 23351 Cha- grin Boulevard, Apartment 211, Beachwood, Ohio. GOULD, ROBERT M. A.B. Biology. Born: November 24, 1945. Prepared at Great Neck North Senior High School. Francis Wayland Scholar, Dean's List, Inter-House Council Vice-President, President, Cammarian Club, Class Council. Address: 23 Lighthouse Road, Great Neck, New York. GRANT, GARY E. A.B. Economics. Born: October 29, 1945. Prepared at Newark Scnior High School. Tower Club Athletic Chairman, WBRU, TutorChurch House, South Provi- dence, Intramural Council, Inter-House Council, Brown Charities Drive, Crew, Basketball, Intramurals. Address: R.D. 3, Lyons, New York. GREENE, LES R. A.B. Psychology Honors. Born: September 20, 1945. Prepared at Glen Cove High School. Dean's List, Phi Beta Kappa, James Manning Scholar, Hillel, Meiklejohn Society, Alpha Pi Lambda. Ad- dress: 5 Cleveland Place, Glen Cove, New York. GUYOTTE, ROLAND L. IIl. Address: 5705 Scoville Street, Alexandria, Virginia. HACHADOURIAN, GARRY B. Address: 842 Hope Street, Providence, Rhode Island. HAGEDORN, CHRISTOPHER G. A.B. English Literature. Born: November 25, 1944. Prepared at The Fieldston School. Inter-Fraternity Council Secretary, Brown Daily Herald News Director, Jabberwocks Business Man- ager, Sophomore Class Council, 25th Reunion Fund, Lambda Sigma Nu. Address: 45 Sutton Place South, New York, New York. HAGER, ROBERT M. Address: 126 Power Street, Providence, Rhode Island. HALL, JOHN R. JR. A.B. Mathematics. Born: February 25, 1948. Prepared at Yorktown High School. Dean's List, Member Brown's Honorable Mention Team, William Lowell Putnam Mathematics Competition, Brown Daily Herald, Math Club, WBRU Record Librarian, News Director, AM Music Director, Dorm Treas- urer, Vice-President. Address: 5733 North 27th Street, Arlington, Virginia. HALPERT, SAMUEL D. A.B. English Literature. Born: May 24, 1945. Prepared at Hope High School. Dean's List, Marching Band, Concert Band, Inter-House Council, Outing Club, Bridge Club, South Littlefield Secretary-Treasurer, Slater Vice-President, Intramurals, Tower Club. Address: 48 Savoy Street, Providence, Rhode Island. HAMMEL, ROBERT H. Ad- dress: 1149 Firwood Drive, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. HANSMANN, HENRY B. A.B. Mathematics. Born: October 5, 1945. Prepared at Highland Park High School. Dean's List, Bruin Club President, Sphinx Club, Lambda Sigma Nu, Freshman Swimming. Address: 910 Kimball Road, Highland Park, Illinois. HANZSEK, RUDOLPH JR. Address: 324 North 9th Street, Easton, Pennsylvania. HASEMANN, GEORGE. Address: 2132 Riviera Drive, Clearwater, Florida. HATCHER, DAVID L. Address: 76 John Street, Providence, Rhode Island. HAWK, DAVID Q. A.B. Mathematics-Economics. Born: November 5, 1945. Prepared at McKinley High School. Inter-House Council, Swimming. Address: 7416 Wood- crest Avenue, North Canton, Ohio. HAWKES, WILLIAM S. JR. A.B. Economics Hon- ors. Born: January 25, 1945. Prepared at Hingham High School. Dean's List. Address: 15 Beal Street, Hingham, Massachusetts. G. E. GRANT L. R. GREENE R. L. GUYOTTE III C. G. HAGEDORN J. R. HALL, JR. S. D. HALPERT R. H. HAMMEL H. B. HANSMANN R. HANZSEK, JR. D. Q. HAWK J. J. HAYDEN S. B. HAZARD J. D. HEBSON C. V. HECKLER J. L. HEIDT P. A. HELGERSON D. R. HELLAND B. F. HELMKAMP R. E. HELPERN SHICTHENSE HAYDEN, JAMES J. A.B. Chemistry. Born: December 5, 1945. Prepared at Pelham High School. Dean's List. Teaching Assistant Chemistry, Alpha Phi Omega Secretary, March- ing Band, Brown Daily Herald Associate Photo Editor, Intramurals, Pre-Med Society. Address: 105 Fifth Avenue, Pelnam, New York. HAYES, JEFFREY L. Address: 1279 Bradley Road, Springfield, Massachusetts. HAZARD, STEPHEN B. A.B. History. Born: April 28, 1945. Prepared at Mount Hermon School. Brown Yacht Club Secretary, Fresh- man Class Council, Swyndlestock Vice-President, Track, Lacrosse. Address: Bayview Lane, Huntington, New York. HEBSON, JAMES D. Sc.B. Electrical Engineering. Born: March 13, 1945. Prepared at Seton Hall Preparatory School. Brown Engineering Society, Squash Club, Newman Club. Address: 366 Beech Street, Arlington, New Jersey. HECK- LER, CHARLES V. Address: 6 Hickory Drive, Great Neck, New York. HEIDT, JEF- FREY L. Address: 72 Benevolent Street, Providence, Rhode Island. HELGERSON, PHILIP A. Beta Theta Pi. Address: 10 Church Avenue, Ruislip, Middlesex, England. HELLAND, DOUGLAS R. Sc.B. Applied Mathematics. Born: November 14, 1945. Pre- pared at Central High School. Brown Daily Herald Associate Business Manager, Tower Club, Freshman Crew. Address: 222 West Woodrow Place, Tulsa, Oklahoma. HELM- KAMP, B. FREDERICK. A.B. Human Biology. Born: February 19, 1945. Prepared at Clarkstown Central High School. Dean's List, Brown-Pembroke Outing Club, Convocation Choir, Freshman and Junior Varsity Soccer, Varsity Soccer Manager, Intramurals. Ad- dress: 10990 Southwest 173rd Terrace, Miami, Florida. HELPERN, ROBERT E. A.B. Political Science. Born: February 13, 1946. Prepared at Lawrence High School. Res Publica Business Manager, Proctor, Inter-House Council, Brown Charities Drive, Littlefield Hall President, Freshman Tennis. Address: 42 Auerbach Lane, Lawrence, New York. HENNE, ARTHUR W. Address: 62 Meeting Street, Providence, Rhode Island. HENSEL, SCOTT C. A.B.-Sc.B. Engineering. Born: September 19, 1945. Prepared at Port Huron High School. Brown Charities, Bruin Club, Brown Key, Brown Engineering Society, I.LE.E.E., Brown Youth Guidance, Brown Rowing Association, Kappa Sigma, Crew. Ad- dress: 3124 Strawberry Lane, Port Huron, Michigan. HERBOLD, RICHARD F. Sc.B. Civil Engineering. Born: September 26, 1945. Prepared at Hope High School, Providence, Rhode Island. Delta Kappa Epsilon, Track, Football, Rugby, Intramurals. Address: 1542 Barsine Drive, Orlando, Florida. HIGGINS, DUNCAN G. A.B. History. Born: February 5, 194S. Prepared at Washington-Lee High School. Young Republicans, Psi Upsilon, Freshman Track and Cross Country. Address: 1818 North Huntington Street, Arlington, Virginia. HILTNER, JAMES S. Address: 110 North Broad Street, Norwich, New York. HITZ, JEFFREY F. A.B. Political Science. Born: June 2, 1945. Prepared at The Hill School. Canticum Glee Club Co-President, Glee Club Librarian, Brown Charities, Sock and Buskin, Production Workshop, Alpha Delta Phi Historian, Treasurer, Intramurals. Ad- dress: P.O. Box 297, Jupiter, Florida. HOLBROOK, D. MICHAEL. A.B. American Civili- zation. Born: January 27, 1945. Prepared at Park School. Yacht Club, Lambda Sigma Nu Chaplain. Address: 7699 Washington Boulevard, Indianapolis, Indiana. HOLT, EARL K. III. A.B. Music. Born: December 31, 1945. Prepared at Concord High School. Band President, Orchestra, Young Republicans, Brownbrokers Board, Tower Club. Address: 23 Norwich Street, Concord, New Hampshire. HOLT, RICHARD N. A.B. English Litera- ture. Born: January 1, 1945. Prepared at Reading Memorial High School. Dean's List, Northern Student Movement Tutorial, Inter-House Council, Freshman Soccer Manager. Address: 8 Gardner Road, Reading, Massachusetts. HONIG, RICHARD G. A.B. English Literature. Born: March 30, 1945. Prepared at Cranston High School East. Dean's List, Inter-House Council, Tutoring Underprivileged Children, Tower Club, Crew. Address: 2 Beacon Circle, Cranston, Rhode Island. HOPCROFT, HARRY J. JR. Address: 261 Union Street, Holbrook, Massachusetts. HOUGHTON, DAVID G. Address: 17 Mill Lane, Hing- ham, Massachusetts. HOWARD, JONATHAN K. Address: Surfwood Box 166, Mendocino, California. HUBENY, JEREMIAH S. A.B. History. Born: April 9, 1945. Prepared at The Pingry School. WBRU Chief Announcer, Sales Manager, Program Director, Young Re- publicans, Sailing Club, Tutorial Program, Intramurals. Address: 345 Whitewood Road, Union, New Jersey. HUGHES, ROBERT J. Address: 48 Dogwood Road, Wethersfield, Connecticut. HULL, J. WEBSTER. Address: 41 Berkeley Street, West Newton, Massachu- setts. HUNTINGTON, FREDERICK L. Address: 21 Maple Street, Seneca Falls, New York. HURLBURT, PAUL R. JR. A.B. Political Science. Born: May 15, 1945. Prepared at Bennington High School. AFROTC, Semester at Tougaloo College, Brown Daily Herald Associate News Director, Brown Youth Guidance. Address: 206 Putnam Street, Benning- ton, Vermont. HUSHON, JOHN D. A.B. International Relations. Born: April 23, 1945. Prepared at Pompton Lakes High School. Dean's List, Inter-House Council, Newman Club, International Association of Students in Economics and Commerce, Brown Charities Drive, Pre-Law Society, Bruin Club. Address: 72 Perrin Avenue, Pompton Lakes, New Jersey. R. F. HERBOLD AL IR 1500177 D. M. HOLBROOK E. K. HOLT III R. N. HOLT R. G. HONIG J. S. HUBENY F. L. HUNTINGTON P. R. HURLBURT, JR. J. D. HUSHON J. W. HUTCHINSON, JR. M. J. HUTTER, JR. T. M. INGOLDSBY J. G. JABLOW J. A. JACOBS L. R. JACOBUS, JR. B. L. JAFFEE S. T. JAROS S. D. JERVEY W. S. JESSUP 276 HUTCHINSON, JOHN W. JR. A.B. Sociology. Born: February 26, 1945. Prepared at Vermont Academy. Dormitory Proctor, Football, Baseball Co-Captain. Address: 50 Free- dom Street, Hopedale, Massachusetts. HUTTER, MICHAEL J. JR. A.B. Classics Honors. Born: September 25, 1945. Prepared at W. T. Clarke High School. Dean's List, Class Council, Classics Club Treasurer, Newman Club, Delta Tau Delta Vice-President, House Manager, Freshman Baseball, Wrestling, Rugby. Address: 122 Stephen Street, Levittown, New York. INGOLDSBY, THOMAS M. A.B. American Literature. Born: May 17, 1945. Prepared at Georgetown Preparatory School. A.ILE.S.E.C., Delta Phi Omega Treasurer, Swimming. Address: 4054 52nd Terrace, Washington, D.C. JABLOW, JOHN G. Address: 25 East 86th Street, New York, New York. JACOBS, JAY A. Address: 519 St. Francis Road, Baltimore, Maryland. JACOBUS, LEWIS R. JR. A.B. International Relations. Born: June 8, 1945. Prepared at Ramsey High School. A.LLE.S.E.C. Treasurer, Channels Man- aging Editor, Business Manager International Relations Club Treasurer, Dorm Officer. Address: 34 Shadyside Road, Ramsey, New Jersey. JAFFEE, BRUCE L. A .B. Mathemati- cal Economics. Born: February 25, 1945. Prepared at Classical High School. President of Olney House, Marching Band Section Leader, Executive Board, Bruin Club Regional Chairman, On-Campus Committee, Course Analysis Bulletin Associate Editor, Cam- marian Club Academic Affairs Committee, Intramurals. Address: 109 Momingside Road, Worcester, Massachusetts. JAROS, STANLEY T. A.B. American Literature. Born: Febru- ary 25, 1945. Prepared at Gilmour Academy. Cammarian Club, Class Council, Swyndlestock Rushing Chairman, President, Bronson House Cultural Arts Chairman, Intramurals Address: 18850 South Woodland Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio. JEANS, JONATHAN S. Address: 27 Westbury Road, Garden City, New York. JERVEY, STEPHEN D. Address: Harriman Road, Merrimac, Massachusetts. JESSUP, WINTHROP S. A.B. Economics. Born: September 14, 1945. Prepared at Harriton High School. Inter-Fraternity Council, Lambda Chi Alpha Vice-President, Football Co-Captain, Track. Address: 233 Fairview Road, Narberth, Pennsylvania. JOHANSON, GENE W. A.B. English Literature. Born: October 1, 1945. Prepared at Marple-Newtown Senior High School. Lambda Chi Alpha Secretary Football, Baseball. Address: 57 Edgewood Road, Broomall, Pennsylvania. JOHNSON, ALAN S. A.B. Political Science. Born: April 12, 1945. Prepared at Moses Brown School. Canticum Glee Club, Class Council, Zeta Psi Rushing Chairman, Social Chairman. Address: 1 Manor Road, Barrington, Rhode Island. JOHNSON, CARL A. A.B. American Civilization. Born: May 14, 1944. Prepared at Berlin High School. Wres- tling. Address: 135 Hickory Hill Road, Kensington, Connecticut. JOHNSON, CHARLES M. A.B. International Relations. Born: March 14, 1945. Prepared at Charles F. Brush High School. Convocation Choir, House Treasurer, Intramurals. Address: 1239 Ford Road, Lynd- hurst, Ohio. JOHNSON, M. ARTHUR. Sc.B. Mechanical Engineering Honors. Born: Sep- tember 6, 1945. Prepared at Bellport High School. Dean's List, Brown Engineering Society, American Society of Mechanical Engineers, AFROTC, AFROTC Rifle Team. Address: 69 Country Club Road, Bellport, New York. JOHNSON, PETER D. JR. Address: 1100 Merlin Drive, Schenectady, New York. JOHNSON, THOMAS S. JR. Address: 115 Bowen Street, Providence, Rhode Island. JOHNSTON, PAUL C. Sc.B. Acrospace Engineering Honors. Born: December 12, 1945. Prepared at Glen Rock High School. Dean's List, Brown Engi- neering Society, Theta Delta Chi Corresponding Secretary. Address: 3369 Grenway Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio. JONES, JEFFREY R. Sc.B. Applied Mathematics. Born: July 15, 1945. Prepared at Southampton High School. Tutoring at Church House, South Providence. Address: 15 Overlook Drive, Southampton, New York. JOSELOFF, MICHAEL H. A.B. American Literature. Born: May 13, 1945. Prepared at Riverdale Country School. Brown Youth Guidance, Alpha Pi Lambda. Address: 1067 5th Avenue, New York, New York. JUCOVY, PETER M. A.B. English Literature. Born: December 15, 1945. Prepared at Great Neck South Senior High School. Dean's List, Alpha Pi Lambda. Address: 32 Old Farm Road, Great Neck, New York. OHANSON G. W. J A. S. JOHNSON C. A. JOHNSON C. M. JOHNSON M. A. JOHNSON T. S. JOHNSON, JR. P. C. JOHNSTON J. R. JONES M. H. JOSELOFF P. M. JUCOVY K. R. KAFFENBERGER P. E. KANDETZKI G. W. KAUFMANN J. J. KEENAN, JR. M. J. KEENE G. S. KELLOGG, IR. R. M. KENYON R. S. KISSAM S. R. KLEEMAN E. J. KLEIN KAFFENBERGER, K. RICHARD. A.B. History. Born: May 12, 1944, Prepared at Granby Memorial High School, Lenox School. Brown Daily Herald, Bruin Club Connecticut State Chairman, Liber Brunensis, Swyndlestock, Freshman Crew. Address: 38 Glen Road, Granby, Connecticut. KANDETZKI, PAUL E. Sc.B. Chemistry. Born: August 19, 1945. Prepared at West Haven High School. Dean's List, Actuarial Science, Freshman Cross Country. Address: 42 First Avenue, West Haven, Connecticut. KAPLAN, PASCAL M. A.B. Religious Studies Honors. Dean's List, Browr Daily Herald Editor-in-Chief, Con- vocation Committee, Sphinx Club. Address: 35 East 64th Street, New York, New York. KAUFMANN, GARY W. Address: 3448 Bunker Avenue, Wantagh, New York. KEENAN, J. JOHN, JR. Address: 60 Farley Road, Short Hills, New Jersey. KEENE, MICHAEL J. A.B. Biology-Geology. Born: June 23, 1945. Prepared at Baltimore Friends School. Geology Club, Rifle Club, Outing Club, Phi Gamma Delta. Address: 6011 Hunt Club Lane, Balti- more, Maryland. KELLOGG, GORDON S. JR. A.B. English Literature. Born: June 6, 1945. Prepared at Paul D. Schreiber High School. Chess Club, Brown Youth Guidance. Address: 5 Colby Road, Port Washington, New York. KENYON, RICHARD M. A.B. History. Born: May 1, 1946. Prepared at New Canaan High School. NROTC Operations Officer, Outing Club Ski Chairman, President. Address: 49 Cedar Lane, New Canaan, Connecticut. KISSAM, ROBERT S. A.B. Mathematic-Economics. Born: May 5, 1945. Pre- pared at Harborfields High School. Dean's List, Latin America Summer Work Project, Delta Tau Delta Recording Secretary, Freshman Baseball, Rugby Club. Address: 87 Broadway, Greenlawn, New York. KLEEMAN, STUART R. A.B. Human Biology Hon- ors. Born: June 18, 1945. Prepared at Bronx High School of Science. Francis Wayland Scholar, Dean's List, Cammarian Club, Meiklejohn Society, Alpha Pi Lambda Secretary, Marshal, Dormitory Social Chairman, Inter-Fraternity Council, Freshman Track and Cross Country Manager. Address: 5244 Netherland Avenue, Riverdale, New York. KLEIN, EDWIN J. A.B. International Relations. Born: May 10, 1945. Prepared at Kamehameha School for Boys. Swyndlestock Treasurer, Rugby. Address: Elepaio Street, Honolulu, Hawaii. KLEIN, RONALD O. A.B. Mathematical Economics. Born: November 8, 1945. Prepared at Classical High School. Dean's List, Convocation Choir, Brown Daily Hcrald Sports Staffy, Canticum Glee Club, Intramurals. Address: 153 Winter Street, Woonsocket, Rhode Island. KLINE, JAMES S. A.B. Mathematics-Physics Honors. Born: February 23, 1947, Prepared at El Nasr, Cairo, Egypt. Francis Wayland Scholar, Dean's List, Freshman Crew, Sock and Buskin, International Relations Club. Address: 4426 Meadowlark Lane, Santa Barbara, California. KONTES, C. WILLIAM. Address: Vineland, New Jersey. KOULOMZIN, GEORGE. Address: 38 Glen Byron Avenue, Nyack, New York. KROGH, FRANK W. A.B. Economics Honors. Born: November 20, 1945. Prepared at Deerfield Academy. Dean's List, Glee Club. Address: 4 Hillcrest Road. Hartsdale, New York. KRONSTADT, ERIC P. Sc.B. Applied Mathematics. Born: July 23, 1946. Prepared at Far Rockaway High School. Francis Wayland Scholar, James Manning Scholar, Dean's List, Marching Band, Concert Band Manager, Tower Club Cultural Chairman. Address: 3634 Paskin Place, Baltimore, Maryland. KROUSE, GEORGE R. JR. A.B. Psychology Honors. Born: September 30, 1945. Prepared at Sachem High School. Dean's List, Fran- cis Wayland Scholar, AFROTC Cadet Corps Commander, Brown University AFROTC Award for Academic Excellence, General Dynamics AFROTC Award, Bruin Club, Fresh- man Soccer, Baseball, Intramurals, Undergraduate Research Assistant Psychology, Psy- chology Club, Pre-Law Society. Address: 49 Cleary Road, Lake Ronkonkoma, New York. KWOKA, JOHN E. JR. A.B. Economics. Born: October 4, 1945. Prepared at Northampton High School. Liber Brunensis Production Manager, Beta Theta Pi Treasurer. Address: 32 Gleason Road, Northampton, Massachusetts. LaCIVITA, RICHARD G. A.B. Born: September 8, 1945. Prepared at Attleboro High School. Sock and Buskin, Brown Amateur Radio Club, Campus Action Council, Freshman Track. Address: 6 McKay Street, South Attleboro, Massachusetts. LANCASTER, ROBERT W. A.B. American Literature. Born: October 15, 1945. Prepared at Moses Brown School. Sigma Chi Rushing Chairman, Latin American Summer Project, Bruin Club, Track. Address: Albion Road, Lincoln, Rhode Island. LANE, SAMUEL O. JR. A.B. American Literature. Born: August 7, 1944, Pre- pared at Landon School. AFROTC, Arnold Air Society. Address: 2511 Inwood Drive, Houston, Texas. LANG, FRASER A. A.B. Political Science. Born: March 30, 1945, Pre- pared at East Providence Senior High School. Dean's List, Brown Young Republicans President, Vice-President, Speakers Committee Chairman, Olney House Cultural Affairs Committee Chairman, Political Forum Chairman, Northern Student Movement Tutorial. Address: 592 Fall River Avenue, Seekonk, Massachusetts. 279 R. O. KLEIN J. S. KLINE F. W. KROGH E. P. KRONSTADT G. R. KROUSE, JR. J. E. KWOKA, JR. R. G. LaCIVITA R. W. LANCASTER S. O. LANE, JR. F. A. LANG J. C. LANGHORNE F. C. LANGWORTH D. N. LAWRENCE G. W. LAYTON R.J. LEAVITT M. B. LEFKOWITZ A. C. LEVINE REFEVN LANGHORNE, JOHN C. Address: 5 Lake Road, Charlottesville, Virginia. LANGWORTH, FRANK C. A.B. International Relations. Born: August 25, 1945. Prepared at Port Chester High School. International Relations Club, Bruin Club, Brown Youth Guidance Executive Board, Kappa Sigma. Freshman Football, Rugby Club. Address: 97 North Ridge Road, Port Chester, New York. LAWRENCE, DAVID N. Address: Truxton, New York. LAY- TON, GEOFFREY W. A.B. Political Science. Born: June 22, 1945. Prepared at St. Ste- phen's School. Dean's List, Production Workshop First Prize, Play Writing Contest, Sock and Buskin, Brown Daily Herald News Director, Brown-Pembroke Democratic Club Executive Board, Freshman Class Council. Address: 2311 Connecticut Avenue Northwest. Washington, D.C. LEAVITT, RONALD J. A.B. Physics. Born: May 28, 1945. Prepared at Great Neck North Senior High School. Dean's List, Littlefield Treasurer, President. Address: 66 Essex Road, Great Neck, New York. LEDIARD, MARK W. Address: 39 Sylvan Street, Springfield, Massachusetts. LEFKOWITZ, MARK B. A.B. Psychology. Born: May 2, 1946. Prepared at Abraham Lincoln High School. Dean's List, Brown Daily Herald Sports Editor, Bruin Club, Class of 1967 Newsletter, Liber Brunensis, Northern Student Movement Tutorial. Address: 2940 West Sth Street, Brooklyn, New York. LEONARD, HUBERT A. Address: 1245 Southwest 84th Avenue, Portland, Oregon. LEVINE, ALAN C. A.B. American Civilization. Born: July 27, 1945. Prepared at B.M.C. Durfee High School. Brown Daily Herald Reporter, Brown Summer Intern Program Chairman, Alpha Pi Lambda Historian, Riflery, Fencing. Address: 727 Madison Street, Fall River, Massachu- setts. LEVY, RALPH. Address: 16406 Fernway Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio. LEWIS, DANIEL. A.B. International Relations-Political Science. Born: April 22, 1946. Prepared at New Lincoln School. Brown Youth Guidance, Northern Student Movement, SCOPE Ala- bama Trip, April, 1966, Brown-Pembroke Democratic Club. Address: 53 West 137th Street, New York, New York. LOEWENTHAL, NORMAN H. A.B. History. Born: December 9, 1944. Prepared at Verona High School. Dean's List, Glee Club, Northern Student Move- ment Tutorial, Class Council, Dormitory President, Sphinx Club, Intramurals. Address: 181 Sunset Avenue, Verona, New Jersey. LOFTUS, GEOFFREY R. A.B. Psychology Honors. Born: December 24, 1945, Prepared at Lincoln-Sidbury Regional High School. Dean's List, Crew Manager, Independent Sociological Research, Senior Teaching Assistant in the Psy- chology Department. Address: 298 Maynard Road, Sudbury, Massachusetts. LOWELL, ROBERT L. Address: 2805 Adele Road, Jacksonville, Florida. LOWRY, R. REED. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: September 26, 1945. Prepared at Winchester High School. Brown Engi- neering Society, Marching Band, Hockey Pep Band, Phi Delta Beta. Address: 158 Cam- bridge Street, Winchester, Massachusetts. LUKEN, ROBERT W. A B. Economics Honors Born: Scptember 7, 1945. Prepared at Culver Military Academy. Dean's List, Inter-House Council, Intramural Squash Captain, Intramural Wrestling Champion. Address: 3313 Greenwood Lane, Godfrey, Illinois. LYNCH, GERALD W. A.B. American English Litera- ture. Born: November 28, 1945. Prepared at Medford High School. Actuarial Science Club, Delta Upsilon, Freshman Soccer Captain, Soccer, Baseball. Address: 126 Chandler Road, Medford, Massachusetts. LYNCH, OWEN R. A.B. Economics. Born: September 10, 1945. Prepared at Half Hollow Hills High School. Brown Young Republicans Chairman of the Rules Committee. Address: 107-10 Shorefront Parkway, Rockaway Park, New York. LYNCH, PATRICK F. Address: 37 O'Callaghan Way, South Boston, Massachusetts. LYNCH, PETER E. A.B. Economics. Born: October 23, 1945. Prepared at Pelham High School. Northern Student Movement Tutorial, Brown Young Republicans. Address: 107 Monterey Avenue, Pelham, New York. LYONS, JOHN D. Address: 86 Belvidere Street, Springfield, Massachusetts. MACAULEY, PETER S. A.B. Sociology. Born: November 8, 1941. Prepared at Warwick High School. Address: 85 Mashuena Drive, Warwick, Rhode Island. MACKS, R. DENNIS. Address: 99 Riverside Drive, Sudbury, Ontario, Canada. MacVICAR, WILLIAM C. A.B. Greek and Latin Honors. Born: May 30, 1945. Prgpared at Frontier Central High School. Francis Wayland Scholar, Dean's List, Second President Wayland Prize in Latin, Selected Participant at Intercollegiate Center for Classical Studies at Rome, Italy, Classics Club Vice-President, Course Analysis Bulletin Associate Editor. Address: 506 Kennison Parkway, Hamburg, New York. MADDEN, J. PATRICK. A.B. English and American Literature. Born: September 28, 1945. Prepared at Burroughs High School. NROTC Awarded Navy Dress Sword for High Freshman Naval Science Average, NROTC Pistol Team Captain. Address: 400-A Tyler Street, China Lake, California. DREFEWIS N. H. LOEWENTHAL LOFTUS GHRS R. R. LOWRY R. W. LUKEN G. W. LYNCH O. R. LYNCH, JR. 17 180 IENANICTED 2, 120 IARICTS R. D. MACKS W. C. MacVICAR J. P. MADDEN 282 J. M. MADGE D. J. MAKSYMOWIC?Z MALEY III DEE S. E. MANLEY L. MARTEL N. D. MARTINS MADGE, JOHN M. A.B. English. Born: November 14, 1945. Prepared at Taft School. Bridge Club, Littlefield Vice-President, Intramurals. Address: 20 Dickerman Street, Wa- tertown, Connecticut. MAKSYMOWICZ, DANIEL J. A.B. English Literature. Born: Octo- ber 27, 1945. Prepared at LaSalle Academy. Dean's List, Marching Band. Address: 20 Rotary Drive, Johnston, Rhode Island. MALEY, D. PATRICK III. A.B. Political Science Honors. Born: October 23, 1944, Prepared at Highland Park High School Dallas, Texas. College Scholar Program, Faunce House Board of Governors, Freshman Week Committee, Sphinx Treasurer, Conservative League President, Co-Chairman Brown Conference on the Middle East, Class Cabinet, Lambda Sigma Nu Secretary, Intramurals. Address: 836 South Chilton, Tyler, Texas. MANLEY, SCOTT E. A.B. American Civilization, February 28, 1944. Prepared at Portage High School. President Freshman, Sophomore, Junior, and Senior Class, Cammarian Club Recording Secretary, Brown Key, Bruin Club, Lambda Sigma Nu. Address: 1050 Ogden Dunes, Portage, Indiana. MARLAY, ROSS. Ad- dress: 179 South Terrace, Boonton, New Jersey. MARSH, FREDERIC B. A.B. Engineering- Economics. Born: September 10, 1945. Prepared at Western Reserve Academy. Dean's List, Photography Club, Lambda Sigma Nu. Address: 63 Woolf Avenue, Akron, Ohio. MARTEL, LARRY. A.B.-M.M.S. Biology. Born: June 9, 1945. Prepared at Central Falls Senior High School. Undergraduate Research Participation Grant in Biology, Dorm Treasurer, Intra- murals. Address: 88 Elm Street, Central Falls, Rhode Island. MARTINS, NELSON D. A B. Psychology. Born June 23, 1944. Prepared at Bristol Senior High School. Address: 8 Button- wood Street, Bristol, Rhode Island. MATTFIELD, FREDERIC R. Address: 193 Brown Street, Providence, Rhode Island. MAUGANS, GEORGE W. A.B. Economics. Born: February 22, 1946. Prepared at Towson High School. Inter-Fraternity Council, Brown Youth Guidance, AFROTC, Phi Gamma Delta, Crew. Address: 1629 Aberdeen Road, Towson, Maryland. MAURER, WILLIAM H. AB. Chinese Studies. Born: September 9, 1945. Prepared at Wyoming High School, Kingston, Pennsylvania. Diman House Social Chairman, Vice-Presi- dent, President, Intramurals. Address: 427 Hickory Street, Scranton, Pennsylvania. MAURO, RICHARD F. A.B. History. Born: July 21, 1945. Bruin Club, Lambda Chi Alpha, Freshman Football, Rugby. Address: 4891 Depew Street, Denver, Colorado. McCLASKEY, CHARLES R. A.B. International Relations. Born: October 23, 1945. Prepared at Moses Brown School. Freshman Cross Country, Crew. Address: 3 Mynelle Drive, South Yarmouth, Massachusetts. McELROY, JAMES H. JR. Address: 48 Tolman Street, Waltham, Massachusetts. Mc- GOWAN, JOSEPH K. Address: 43 Thayer Street, Providence, Rhode Island. McINTOSH, BRUCE A. A.B. Sociology Honors. Born: August 17, 1945. Prepared at Greenwich High School. Dean's List, Undergraduate Research Assistant, Courses at Rhode Island School of Design, Dorm Officer, Photo Club, Liber Brunensis, Herald Review Art Editor, Univer- sity Christian Association, U.C.A. Work Camp in Puerto Rico, Outing Club, WBRU News- caster, Brownbrokers, Freshman Soccer, Intramurals. Address: 26 Bramble Lane, Riverside, Connecticut. McNICKLE, WILLIAM A. Address: 9100 North Bay Shore Drive, Miami, Florida. MEDEIROS, MATTHEW F. A.B. Political Science. Born: April 30, 1945. Pre- pared at the LaSalle Academy. Class Council Social ChairmanJunior Class, Class Offi- cer TreasurerSenior Class, Dormitory Proctor, Inter-House Council, Meiklejohn Society, WBRU, International Relations Club Head, African Affairs Desk. Address: East Main Road, Little Compton, Rhode Island. MEDINA, RAMIRO J. Address: 34 Haven Avenue, New York, New York. MEINERS, RICHARD J. Address: 1055 B Magnolia Lane North, Minneapolis, Minnesota. MENNELL, THOMAS A. Address: 3629 Matilda Street, Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania. MERRITT, DENNIS C. A.B. Mathematics. Born: February 24, 1946. Prepared at Division Avenue High School. Outing Club, Equipment Manager, Climb- ing Chairman, Yacht Club, Squash Club. Address: 10 Winding Lane, Levittown, New York. METZLER, ROGER J. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: February 4, 1945. Prepared at Austin Preparatory, Conestoga High School. Zeta Psi, Sophomore Class Council, Hegeman D President, Rugby Club. Address: 3755 Gregory Drive, Northbrook, Illinois. MICHA- LOWSKI, ALAN S. A.B. Physics. Born: April 27, 1944, Prepared at New Britain Senior High School. Dean's List, Intramurals, Kappa Sigma, Baseball. Address: 206 Wooster Street, New Britain, Connecticut. L e, X R. F. MAURO C. R. McCLASKEY B. A. McINTOSH M. F. MEDEIROS R. J. MEDINA G. W. MAUGANS III W. H. MAURER, JR. J. H. MCELROY, JR. R. J. MEINERS D. C. MERRITT R.J. METZLER, JR. A.S. MICHALOWSKI A J D. K. MILLER, JR. H. M. MILLER, JR. N. 1. MILLER G. W. MITCHELL 284 J. MONTGOMERY I11 G. B. MORRILL III A. M. MORRIS A. MOSER K. R. MOSHER D. S. MOWDAY R. 1 P. MORRISON H. MOWRY P. A. MORSE S. T. MOYER MILLER, DONALD K. JR. A.B. International Relations. Born: March 10, 1945. Prepared at West Middlesex Jt. Cons. School. Dean's List, Young Republicans, Northern Student Movement Tutorial, Brown Youth Guidance. Address: 513 Main Street, West Middlesex, Pennsylvania. MILLER, HOWARD M. A.B. English Literature. Born: October 4, 1943, Prepared at The Manlius School. Newman Club, Production Workshop, Brown Youth Guidance, Football, Track. Address: 1226 Manor Park, Lakewood, Ohio. MILLER, NEIL I. AB. English Literature. Born: August 16, 1945. Prepared at Kingston High School. Dean's List, Sock and Buskin, Production Workshop, Brownbrokers, Alpha Delta Phi. Address: 171 Main Street, Kingston, New York. MITCHELL, GLENN W. Sc.B. Physics. Born: February 23, 1946. Prepared at Admiral Farragut Academy. Course Analysis Bulletin, Zeta Psi, Track, Intramurals. Address: 446 Whitfield Street, Guilford, Connecticut. MONT- GOMERY, JOHN III. A.B. American Literature. Born: December 25, 1944. Prepared at Kingswood School. Phi Gamma Delta. Address: 107 Boulter Road, Wethersfield, Connecti- cut. MOORE, JAMES A. JR. Address: 207 Taplow Road, Baltimore, Maryland. MOR- RILL, GEORGE B. A.B.-Sc.B. Engineering. Born: July 3, 1940. Prepared at Holderness School, Plymouth, New Hampshire. Brown Engineering Society Treasurer, American In- stitute of Aeronautics and Astronautics President. Address: Keene Street, North Smith- field, Rhode Island. MORRIS, ALAN M. A.B. History. Born: February 19, 1945. Prepared at West Technical High School. Jabberwocks, Liber Brunensis. Address: 3115 West 90th Street, Cleveland, Ohio. MORRISON, RICHARD P. A.B. Art. Born: February 28, 1945. Prepared at Kent School. Art Award, Dining Hall Steward, Swyndlestock, Freshman Soc- cer, Intramurals. Address: 6 Butternut Road, Briarcliff Manor, New York. MORSE, PHIL- IP A. A.B. Psychology Honors. Born: May 13, 1945. Prepared at Pebble Hill School. Caesar Misch German Prize, Two National Science Foundation Grants in Psychology one summer and one winter, Convocation Choir, Glee Club, German Club President, Treas- urer, Secretary, Brown Youth Guidance, Meiklejohn Society, Alpha Delta Phi. Address: 16 State Street, East Bloomfield, New York. MOSER, ALBIN. A.B. International Relations. Born: March 29, 1945. Prepared at Adams Memorial High School. Swyndlestock House Manager, Crew, Football. Address: Orchard Street, P.S., Adams, Massachusetts. MOSHER, KEITH R. A.B. Psychology. Born: August 9, 1945. Prepared at Greenwich High School, Greenwich, Connecticut. College Scholar, Brown-Pembroke Inter-Varsity Chris- tian Fellowship, University Christian Association, Convocation Choir, Intramurals. Address: 2320 Fairmount Avenue, Lakeland, Florida. MOULSON, THOMAS J. Address: 18 Loreto Street, Providence, Rhode Island. MOWDAY, DAVID S. A.B. History. Born: September 6, 1945. Prepared at Cubberley Senior High School. Dean's List, Bruin Club, Brown Youth Guidance, Episcopal College Church, Zeta Psi Rushing Chairman, Secretary. Address: 3909 Middlefield Road, Apartment H, Palo Alto, California. MOWRY, PHILLIP H. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: June 16, 1945. Prepared at Greenfield High School. Delta Phi Omega Recording Secretary, Chairman, House Improvements Committee, Track, Intramurals. Address: 294 Davis Street, Greenfield, Massachusetts. MOYER, SHERILL T. A.B. Econom- ics. Born: April 21, 1944. Prepared at Mount Hermon School. Kappa Sigma Guard, Freshman Football, Lacrosse. Address: 250 East Market Street, Williamstown, Pennsylvania. MUENCHINGER, WILLIAM C. Address: 105 Beamis Avenue, Cumberland Hill, Rhode Island. MUNCK, ROBERT G. Address: 1315 Mary Jane Lane, West Chester, Pennsylvania. NATELSON, MICHAEL B. A.B. History Honors. Born: July 22, 1945. Prepared at White Plains High School. Dean's List, Northern Student Movement Tutorial, International Relations Club, Rugby, Intramurals, Alpha Pi Lambda. Address: 7 Sage Court, White Plains, New York. NAUGHTON, JAMES J. III. Address: 24 Spring Lane, West Hartford, Connecticut. NEAD, ROBERT N. A.B. English Literature. Born: September 3, 1945. Pre- pared at Rutherford High School. NROTC, Brunavians Club Secretary, Delta Phi Li- brarian. Address: 98 Maple Street, Rutherford, New Jersey. NELSON, JEFFREY L. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: June 7, 1945. Prepared at North Attleboro High School. Class Cabinet, Brown Engineering Society Committee Chairman, Theta Delta Chi House Manager, Vice- President, Rugby. Address: 175 Kelley Boulevard, North Attleboro, Massachusetts, NEL- SON, JOHN C. A.B. Biology. Born: May 7, 1945. Prepared at Ridgewood High School, Ridgewood, New Jersey. Dean's List, Canticum Glee Club Librarian, Brown University Glee Club Librarian, Publicity Manager, President, Bruin Club Off-Campus Committee State Chairman, On-Campus Committee, Brownbrokers, Orchestra, Freshman Crew. Ad- dress: 1325 Chilton Drive, Silver Spring, Maryland. NESTY, GREGORY B. Address: 6 Cromwell Drive, Route 16, Convent Station, New Jersey. NICHOLS, DONALD W. Ad- dress: 115-36 225th Street, Cambria Heights, New York. R. G. MUNCK M. N. NATELSON J.J. NAUGHTON III R. N. NEAD J. L. NELSON UHCHENEISON J. M. NISBET, JR. B. I. NOBLE E. D. NOONOO R. C. NOYES J. F. OCONNOR RICIOIDAY T. C. ODONNELL C. M. OETTINGER I CROIKFPERENII P.J. OLENICK NISBET, JOHN M. JR. A.B. Political Science. Born: January 1, 1945. Prepared at Central Bucks High School. NROTC, Brunavians Yearbook Treasurer, Navy Drill Team, Navy Flight Instruction Program, Phi Kappa Psi Scholarship Chairman, Liquor Chairman, Freshman Wrestling, Rugby, Intramurals. Address: Apartment 33B, Pine Grove Con- dominium, Isla Verde, Puerto Rico. NOBLE, BRUCE I. A.B. History. Born: November 8, 1945. Prepared at Baldwin Senior High School. Liber Brunensis Copy Editor, Executive Editor, Northern Student Movement Tutorial, Proctor, Cammarian Club Housing Commit- tee, Counseling Committee, Littlefield Cultural Affairs Chairman, Sock and Buskin, Her- ald Review, Intramurals. Address: 879 Schuman Place, Baldwin, New York. NOONOO, EUGENE D. A.B. English Literature. Born: June 10, 1945. Prepared at The Peddie School, Hightstown, New Jersey. Brown Key Vice-President, Freshman, Sophomore, Junior Class Councils, Student Administrator of Brown University Health Plan, Kappa Sigma, Freshman Lacrosse. Address: 34 Hawthorne Place, Malverne, New York. NORTHROP, ARTHUR W. JR. A.B. Economics. Born: February 5, 1944. Prepared at Johnson City High School. Jabberwocks, Delta Phi Omega, Football. Address: 210 Jerry Street, Johnson City, New York. NOYES, ROBERT C. A.B. History-English Literature. Born: October 24, 1945. Prepared at Hebron Academy. Meiklejohn Society President, Brown Youth Guidance, Bruin Club, Class Council, Inter-House Council, Brown Daily Herald, Young Republicans, Outing Club, Admissions Office Guide. Address: Box 6, Uncasville, Connecticut. O'CON- NOR, JOHN F. Address: 46 Woodbine Street, Cranston, Rhode Island. O'DAY, ROBERT C. A.B. International Relations. Born: December 1, 1945. Prepared at Archbishop Williams High School. International Relations Club, Kappa Sigma, Freshman Football Captain, Varsity Football. Address: 313 Highland Avenue, Quincy, Massachusetts. O'DONNELL, THOMAS C. A.B. Political Science. Born: June 22, 1945. Prepared at New Preparatory School. Bruin Club, Newman Club, Actuarial Science, Crew. Address: 24 Playstead Road, Dorchester, Massachusetts. OETTINGER, CRAIG M. A.B. International Relations. Born: January 13, 1945. Prepared at Westminster School. Goddard House President, Channels Editor, Brown Daily Herald Business Manager. Address: 505 Scofieldtown Road, Stam- ford, Connecticut. O'KEEFE, THOMAS C. IIl. Address: 46 Richland Road, Wellesley, Massachusetts. OLENICK, PAUL J. A.B. Political Science. Born: October 20, 1945. Pre- pared at Lawrence High School. Dean's List. Address: 92 Worcester Court, Falmouth, Massachusetts. OLSON, DAVID L. A.B. International Relations. Born: April 10, 1945. Prepared at Palos Verdes High School. Brown Key, Pre-Law Society Vice-President, Football, Rugby Club Captain, Ski Team Captain, Kappa Sigma Vice-President. Address: 48 Hidden Valley Road, Rolling Hills Estates, California. ORMEROD, ROBERT H. JR. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: January 11, 1946. Prepared at William E. Tolman High School. Brown Engineering Society, Freshman Week Committee, Inter-House Council, Dor- mitory Social Chairman, Vice-President, Swimming, Intramurals. Address: 90 Naushon Road, Pawtucket, Rhode Island. PAN, ANDREW J. Address: 3975 White Plains Road, Bronx, New York. PANDAPAS, GEORGE J. A.B.-Sc.B. Engineering. Born: March 15, 1945. Prepared at Ramsey High School. Brown Daily Herald, University Extension Pro- gram, Freshman Football, Rugby. Address: 48 Deer Trail, Ramsey, New Jersey. PARKER, GEORGE D. Sc.B. Applied Mathematics. Born: February 9, 1945. Prepared at Braintree- Randolph Union High School. Dean's List, Francis Wayland Scholar, First Charles C. Hartshorn Prize in Mathematics, Second Henry Parker Manning Prize in Mathematics, Undergraduate Teaching Assistant in Mathematics, Brown University Glee Club Personnel Manager, Marching Band, Hockey Pep Band, Concert Band, Brass Chorale, Mathematics Club. Address: 39 Forest Street, Randolph, Vermont. PARR, STEVEN R. A.B. Anthropol- ogy. Born: November 13, 1945. Prepared at Mount Lebanon Senior High School. Deans List, Northern Student Movement Tutorial, Chess Club. Address: 1009 Cowpens Road, Baltimore, Maryland. PARRS, EUGENE. A.B. English. Born: March 10, 1946. Prepared at Garden City High School. Dean's List, Phi Kappa Psi. Address: 49 Pell Terrace, Garden City, New York. PARTNOW, JEFFREY A. A.B.-M.M.S. Medical Science. Born: January 19, 1945. Prepared at Framingham High School. Dean's List, Proctor, Hope College Vice- President, Intramurals. Address: 41 Pinewood Drive, Framingham, Massachusetts. D. OLSON R. H. ORMEROD, JR. A.J. PAN G. J. PANDAPAS, JR. G. D. PARKER S. R. PARR E. PARRS J. A. PARTNOW e PASANEN W. E R. H. PASSMAN R. A. PATT H. S. PAULES F. S. PEARSON, JR. J. R. PELUSO S. M. PENNINGROTH S. E. PERELMAN PASANEN, WAYNE E. A.B. English Literature. Born: March 28, 1945. Prepared at Acton-Boxborough Regional High School. Dean's List, Pledge to Sigma Chi, Freshman Soccer. Address: 26 Concord Road, Acton Centre, Massachusetts. PASSMAN, RICHARD H. A.B. Psychology. Born: September 22, 1945. Prepared at Classical High School. Psy- chology Club President, Hillel Publicity Chairman, Social Committee, Freshman Base- ball Head Manager, Olney House Social Committee, The Brown Jug. Address: 36 Auburn Street, Pawtucket, Rhode Island. PATT, RICHARD A. A.B. Human Biology. Born: January 9, 1946. Prepared at The Hun School, Princeton, New Jersey. Phi Kappa Psi Secretary, Social Chairman, President, Pre-Med Society, Freshman Lacrosse. Address: Colony House, Apartment 9L, 1050 George Street, New Brunswick, New Jersey. PEAR- SON, FRANK S. A B. Sociology. Born: May 31, 1945. Prepared at St. Raphael Academy. Dean's List. Address: 180 Garden Street, Pawtucket, Rhode Island. PEDEN, HARRY E. III. Address: 6 Castle Court Road, Greenwich, Connecticut. PELLER, PAUL R. Address: 521 East 19th Street, Brooklyn, New York. PELUSO, JOSEPH R. Address: 228 Grove Street, Brockton, Massachusetts. PENNINGROTH, STEPHEN M. A.B. German Literature. Born: October 21, 1944. Prepared at Aufbaugymnasium im Schuldorf, Bergstrasse, Ger- many. Dean's List, Inter-House Council Chairman, Curricular Committee, German Club Vice-President, Convocation Choir, Northern Student Movement Tutorial. Address: Build- ing 4439, Apartment A-1, Lincoln-Siedlung, 61 Darmstadt, Germany. PERELMAN, SETH E. A.B. History Honors. Born: December 20, 1946. Prepared at Erasmus Hall High School. Alpha Pi Lambda, University Christian Association Freshman Religious Conference, Brown Youth Guidance. Address: 1060 Ocean Avenue, Brooklyn, New York. PERKINS, SAMUEL T. A.B. Greek and Latin Honors. Born: September 26, 1946. Prepared at Yorktown High School. Second President Wayland Prize in Latin, Dean's List, Francis Wayland Scholar, Classics Club. Address: 4322 North Carlyn Springs Road, Arlington, Virginia. PERLMAN, STEPHEN B. A.B. Physics. Born: August 5, 1945. Prepared at B.M.C. Durfee High School. Manning Scholar, Deans List, College Scholar Independent Studies in English Literature, Alpha Pi Lambda Vice-President, Rushing Chairman, Crew Coxswain. Address: 11855 Northeast 19th Drive, North Miami, Florida. PETER- SON, CARL E. A.B. Economics. Born: April 8, 1944. Prepared at Williston Academy. Dean's List, Doyle Avenue School Tutor, Sailing Club, Outing Club, Alpha Delta Phi. Address: Woods Hole, Massachusetts. PHILBRICK, R. LAWRENCE JR. A.B. Physics. Born: July 14, 1945. Prepared at John Marshall High School. American Field Service President, Proctor, Convocation Choir, Manning Chapel Choir, Glee Club, Sock and Buskin, Central Congregational Drama Guild, Congregational-Presbyterian Fellowship, Uni- versity Christian Association, Intramurals. Address: 1519 Palmyra Avenue, Richmond, Vir- ginia. PIERONI, DAVID T. A.B. Philosophy. Born: June 4, 1945. Prepared at Loyola Academy. Swyndlestock. Address: 324 South Avenue, Glencoe, Illinois. PIERSON, GER- ALD E. A.B. Economics. Born: February 2, 1945. Prepared at Vestal High School. Dean's List, Inter-Fratemity Council, Liber Brunensis Sales Assistant, Delta Tau Delta Presi- dent, Freshman Basketball. Address: 1017 Glenwood Road, Vestal, New York. PIKE, RICHARD A. Address: 96 Woodcrest Drive, Melrose, Massachusetts. PITT, ROBERT D. Address: 14 Gilbert Place, White Plains, New York. PIZER, LAURENCE R. A.B. History. Born: February 4, 1946. Prepared at Winthrop High School. Band Treasurer, Vice-Presi- dent, President, Orchestra, Brown Chamber Soloists. Address: 88 Somerset Avenue, Win- throp, Massachusetts. POLIAKOFF, ALEXIS T. Address: 207 North Columbus Street, Alexandria, Virginia. PRIMUS, CHARLES. A.B. History Honors. Born: April 19, 1946. Prepared at The Fox Lane School. Dean's List, Research Assistantship in History, Hillel Managing Board, Northern Student Movement Tutorial, Brown Daily Herald Review Review Assistant, Tower Club Rushing Chairman. Address: 60 Forest Drive, Mount Kisco, New York. PRZYSTAS, THEODORE J. Sc.B. Chemistry. Born: October 6, 1945. Prepared at New Bedford High School. Intramurals. Address: 84 Adams Street, New Bedford, Massachusetts. RAMSAY, GLENWORTH A. Address: 51 Ely Place, East Orange, New Jersey. RAMSEY, THOMAS G. A.B. American Literature. Born: March 30, 1945. Prepared at Austintown Fitch High School. Dean's List, Delta Phi, Freshman Football, Intramurals. Address: 3375 Sandlewood Lane, Youngstown, Ohio. RANDALL, JOSEPH R. A.B. Classics. Born: June 12, 1945. Prepared at T.R. Proctor High School. Classics Club, Brown Youth Guidance, Newman Club, Delta Tau Delta, Football, Rugby. Address: 78 Cross Street, Yorkville, New York. S. T. PERKINS S. B. PERLMAN 289 R. L. PHILBRICK, JR. D. T. PIERONI G. E. PIERSON R. D. PITT L. R. PIZER C. PRIMUS T.J. PRZYSTAS G. A. RAMSAY T. G. RAMSEY J. R. RANDALL D. H. RENFREW, JR. R. M. REYMERS E. W. RICHARDSON D. T. RIEDEL J. M. RISTUCCIA J. L. M. ROBERTS D. A. ROBINSON I11 J. M. ROBINSON W. S. RING II K. D. ROBINSON 2 291 R. D. RISNER N. A. ROBINSON F. A. RAPPOPORT G. L. RASHMAN, JR. R. G. RASTANI A. M. RAZIN J. C. REBOK B. R. REIDY RAPPOPORT, FRED A. A.B. Political Science. Born: December 11, 1946. Prepared at DeWitt Clinton High School. SecretaryClass of 1967, Faunce House Board of Governors Vice-President, Winter Weekend Chairman, Cammarian Club, Brown Key Homecoming Chairman, Brown Charities Drive Fraternities Solicitation Chairman, Ambassador Abroad Program Chairman, Latin American Mexico Project, Freshman Week Commit- tee, Freshman, Sophomore, Junior Spring Weekend Class Councils, Senior Cabinet, Lit- tlefield President, Inter-House Council, Bruin Club, Forum '67, Fortnight, Hillel, Student Tutor Society Coordinator, The Brown Bear Butch Bruno, Alpha Pi Lambda Chair- man for Academic and Cultural Affairs, Freshman Baseball, Intramurals. Address: 185 McClellan Street, New York, New York. RASHMAN, GORDON L. JR. A.B. International Relations. Born: December 17, 1945. Prepared at the Nichols School. Dean's List, Brown Daily Herald Business Staff, Golf. Address: 22 Dana Road, Buffalo, New York. RAS- TANI, RICHARD G. A.B. Political Science. Born: May 30, 1945. Prepared at Clinton Central High School. Intramural Athletic Council ChairmanFacilities and Equipment and Participation Committees, Phi Kappa Psi Athletic Chairman, Rushing Chairman, Hockey, Intramurals Fraternity Horseshoes Champion. Address: 9 Homewood Drive, Clinton, New York. RAZIN, ANDREW M. A.B. Psychology Honors. Born: August 10, 1945. Prepared at Boston Latin School. Dean's List, National Science Foundation Summer Research Participant, Winter Research Participant, Undergraduate Teaching Assistant, Brown Humanists, Liber Brunensis, Northern Student Movement Tutorial, Psychology Club, Yacht Club, Intramurals. Address: 64 Woodruff Way, Mattapan, Massachusetts. REBOK, JOHN C. A.B. Economics. Born: September 15, 1945. Prepared at Paulsboro High School. Tutor: Episcopal Church House, Tower Club. Address: 648 Beacon Avenue, Paulsboro, New Jersey. REIDY, BRIAN R. A.B. History. Born: October 12, 1944. Prepared at Fair- field Prep. Delta Phi Omega House Manager, Financial Committee Chairman, Football, Baseball, Rugby Club. Address: 105 West Meadow Road, Wilton, Connecticut. RENFREW, DWIGHT H. Sc.B. Physics. Born: November 17, 1945. Prepared at William Penn Charter School. Francis Wayland Scholar, Dean's List, Outing Club. Address: 1623 Madeira Ave- nue, Jenkintown, Pennsylvania. REYMERS, ROBERT M. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: Decem- ber 1, 1945. Prepared at Huntington High School. Sigma Chi, Brown Engineering Society, Rugby Club. Address: 39 Briarfield Lane, Huntington, New York. RICE, ROBERT L. A.B. History. Born: June 12, 1945. Prepared at Freeport High School. Class Council Co-Chair- man, Spring Weekend Committee, Delta Upsilon, Lacrosse. Address: 584 South Long Beach Avenue, Freeport, New York. RICHARDSON, ERIC W. A.B. History of Religion. Born: June 10, 1945. Prepared at Middletown Township High School. Class Council, Beta Theta Pi Social Chairman, Lacrosse, Football. Address: 2415 McKinley Street, Hollywood, Florida. RICHMOND, JOE P. Address: 295 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island. RIEDEL, DAVID T. A.B. English Literature Honors. Born: September 19, 1945. Pre- pared at Moon High School. Dean's List, Concert Band, Marching Band. Address: 425 Sharon Road, Coraopolis, Pennsylvania. RING, W. STEVES. A.B.-M.M.S. Biology. Born: August 12, 1945. Prepared at Nether Providence High School. Bruin Club, Basketball Manager, Delta Upsilon. Address: 219 Woodward Road, Wallingford, Pennsylvania. RISNER, RAY D. Sc.B. Electrical Engineering. Born: February 3, 1945. Prepared at As- bury Park High School. Dean's List, Brown Daily Herald Associate Business Board, Inter- House Council, Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Vice-President, Brown Engineering Society Treasurer, Course Analysis Bulletin Associate Editor, International Relations Club Chairman, Commercial Affairs Desk. Address: 174 Ampere Avenue, Oak- hurst, New Jersey. RISTUCCIA, JOHN M. A.B. Physics. Born: January 9, 1945. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Phi Kappa Psi, Freshman Baseball. Address: 127 Holt Road, An- dover, Massachusetts. ROBERTS, JOHN L. M. A.B. English Literature. Born: October 31, 1944. Prepared at Saint Andrew's School, Middletown, Declaware. Delta Upsilon, Track. Address: Box 147, Oxford, Pennsylvania. ROBINSON, DAVID A. A.B. English. Born: February 27, 1945. Prepared at Melrose High School. Kappa Sigma Social Chairman, Freshman Lacrosse, Hockey. Address: 378 East Foster Street, Melrose, Massachusetts. ROBINSON, JOHN M. A.B. Sociology. Born: November 30, 1945. Prepared at Mount Hermon School. Chess Club, Cammarian Club, Bruin Club, Class Council, AcolyteSaint Stephen's, Delta Upsilon Social Chairman, Recording Secretary, Freshman Swimming, Track. Address: 209 Scott Strect, Tuskeegee Institute, Alabama. ROBINSON, KENNETH D. Sc.B. Aerospace Engineering. Born: July 25, 1945, Prepared at North Yarmouth Acad- emy. Dean's List, Yacht Club, Brown Engineering Society, American Institute of Aeronaut- ics and Astronautics, Intramurals. Address: Raymond, Maine. ROBINSON, NICHOLAS A. A.B. History. Born: January 20, 1945. Prepared at Palo Alto Senior High School. Dean's List, Freshman Week Committee Chairman, Secretary, International Relations Club Presi- ident, Classics Club, Sphinx, Brown Chamber Soloists, Brown-Pembroke Outing Club Conservation Committee Chairman, Class Council Chairman Academic Affairs Commit- tee, Intramurals. Address: 433 Kingsley Avenue, Palo Alto, California. RODINSKY, BARRY L. Address: 73 Staniford Street, Providence, Rhode Island. J. L. ROONEY E. F. ROSENTHAL S. A. ROTHMAN E. B. ROUND, JR. R. J. RUBENSTEIN M. RUBINGER F. E. RUGG J.J. RUMA ROONEY, JAMES L. A.B. International Relations. Born: June 27, 1945. Prepared at William R. Boone High School. Inter-Fraternity Council Vice-President, Student Affairs Board Secretary, Kappa Sigma. Address: 3605 Conway Gardens Road, Orlando, Florida. ROSENTHAL, EDWARD D. A.B. International Relations. Born: July 29, 1945. Prepared at Weaver High School. Dean's List, Delta Upsilon Athletic Chairman, Soccer Coach at Portsmouth Priory, Squash, Lacrosse. Address: 336 Holcomb Street, Hartford, Connecticut. ROTELLI, ANTHONY J. JR. Address: 175 Smithfield Road, North Providence, Rhode Island. ROTHMAN, SAUL A. A.B. American Literature. Born: August 3, 1945. Prepared at The King School. Dean's List, Bruin Club, Junior Class Executive Committee, Delta Tau Delta Social Chairman, Rugby Club, Intramurals. Address: 215 Pepper Ridge Road, Stamford, Connecticut. ROUND, EDMUND B. A.B. International Relations. Born: Janu- ary 21, 1945. Prepared at Charles F. Brush High School. Marching Band, Orchestra, Brass Ensemble, Littlefield Hall Social Chairman, Cultural Affairs Chairman, Crew. Address: 1273 Ford Road, Lyndhurst, Ohio. RUBENSTEIN, ROBERT J. A.B. Human Biology. Born: August 22, 1945. Prepared at Staples High School. Brown Youth Guidance, Northern Student Movement Tutorial, Canticum and Varsity Glee Clubs, Concert Band Secretary, Orchestra, Hillel, Marching Band. Address: 10 Coleytown Road, Westport, Connecticut, RUBINGER, MICHAEL. A.B. International Relations Honors. Born: May 7, 1945. Pre- pared at Mamaroneck High School. Francis Wayland Scholar, Dean's List, Brown Youth Guidance, Kappa Sigma Secretary, International Relations Club Executive Board, South African Conference. Address: 6 Howard Street, Larchmont, New York. RUGG, FRED- ERICK E. A.B. Applied Mathematics. Born: October 15, 1945. Prepared at Taunton High School. Brown Youth Guidance, Intramurals. Address: 223 Norton Avenue, Taunton, Massachusetts. RUMA, JOSEPH J. A.B. Psychology. Born: August 20, 1945. Prepared at Matignon High School. Newman Club, Psychology Club, Kappa Sigma, Rugby, Freshman Track. Address: 179 Forest Street, Medford, Massachusetts. RUTAN, PETER C. A.B. Psychology. Born: November 11, 1945. Prepared at Dunellen High School. Brown Youth Guidance, Hegeman D President, Rugby. Address: 423 North Washington Avenue, Dun- ellen, New Jersey. RUTISHAUSER, URS S. Address: 103 East Altadena Drive, Altadena, California. SAFDIE, ELIAS. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: January 24, 24, 1947. Prepared at Abraham Lincoln High School. Social Chairman, Football, Track. Address: 2561 Ocean Parkway, Brooklyn, New York. SALMON, EDWARD D. Sc.B. Engineering Honors. Born: March 1, 1944. Prepared at Nottingham High School. Dean's List, Freshman Foot- ball, Class Cabinet, Ski Team Captain, Lambda Chi Alpha, Brown Engineering Society. Address: 86 Meadowland Street, Delmar, New York. SANDERS, SCOTT B. A.B. English Honors. Born: October 26, 1945. Prepared at Southeast High School. Class of 1952 Award, Phi Beta Kappa, James Manning Scholar, Dean's List, Faunce House Board of Governors Vice-President, University Christian Association Vice-President, International Relations Club, Pre-Law Society, Brown Charities Drive, Sphinx, Ad Hoc Housing Commit- tee Dean's Committee, Proctor, Intramurals. Address: 1817 16th Street, Lake Charles, Louisiana. SANDERSON, CHRISTOPHER. Address: 2408 Lincolnwood Drive, Evanston, Illinois. SANTARLASCI, JOSEPH H. JR. A.B. English Literature. Born: June 23, 1945. Prepared at Malvern Preparatory School. NROTC, Cheerleaders Captain, NROTC Drill Team, Delta Phi, Intramurals. Address: 291 Friendship Hill, Paoli, Pennsylvania. SANTRY, DAVID G. A.B. Born: June 21, 1945. Prepared at Marblehead High School. Cross Coun- try, Track. Address: 29 Devereux Street, Marblehead, Massachusetts. SCARRITT, ALAN B. A.B. Economics. Born: August 14, 1945. Prepared at Washintgon-Lee High School. Latin American Conference, Delta Upsilon President, Inter-Fraternity Council President, Freshman Swimming. Address: 3902 Aspen Street, Chevy Chase, Maryland. SCHENK, LAWRENCE M. A.B. Political Science. Born: October 23, 1945. Prepared at East Bruns- wick High School. Band, Phi Kappa Psi, Intramurals. Address: 79 Gage Road, East Brunswick, New Jersey. SCHER, KENNETH S. A.B. Human Biology. Born: August 22, 1945. Prepared at New Hyde Park Memorial High School. Francis Wayland Scholar, Dean's List, Bruin Club, Freshman Lacrosse. Address: 1310 Terrace Boulevard, New Hyde Park, New York. SCHMIDT, JOHN E. A.B. Applied Mathematics, Born: August 5, 1945. Pre- pared at Quaker Valley Senior High School. Glee Club, Sock and Buskin, Liber Brunensis Layout Staff. Address: 220 Bank Street, Sewickley, Pennsylvania. SCHOFIELD, PARKER F. JR. Address: Beirut International Airport, Beirut, Lebanon. SCHWARZ, ROBERT J. A.B. French. Born: October 16, 1945. Prepared at Horace Greeley High School. French Club, Brown Youth Guidance. Address: 81 Campfire Road, Chappaqua, New York. e ah P.C. RUTAN E. SAFDIE E. D. SALMON S. R. SANDERS m J. H. SANTARLASCI, JR. D. G. SANTRY A. B. SCARRITT L. M. SCHENCK SCHER K. S. J. E. SCHMIDT P. F. SCHOFIELD, JR. R.J. SCHWARZ R. K. SESTON P.C. SETTELMEYER R. A. SHEFTMAN J. W. SHEPARD, JR. F. B. SHIPLEY 11 R. M. SIEGEL N. D. SKLAREW J. M. SKONBERG V. L. SMERIGLIO A. P. SMITH III C. D. SMITH M. SMITH, JR. S. K. SMITH H. E. SNYDER S. H. SPAYD DI EJSPELTZ E. C. SMITH W. M. STALZER i SESTON, ROBERT K. A.B. International Relations. Born: December 15, 1945. Prepared at Wheaton Community High SchoolCentral. Zeta Psi Treasurer, Vice-President, Rushing Chairman. Address: 1120 North West Street, Wheaton, Illinois. SETTELMEYER, PAUL C. A.B. Economics. Born: June 11, 1945. Prepared at Millburn High School. Class Council, Bruin Club, Episcopal College Church Vestry, Beta Theta Pi Secretary. Address: 22 Hawthorne Road, Short Hills, New Jerscy. SHACKLETTE, LAWRENCE W. Address: RED 1, Laconia, New Hampshire. SHEFTMAN, RICHARD A. A.B. Mathematics. Born: June 16, 1945. Prepared at Stoughton High School. Deans List. Address: 48 Ralph Mann Drive, Stoughton, Massachusetts. SHEPARD, JOHN W. A.B-M.M.S. Biology. Born: July 24, 1945. Prepared at Manhasset High School. Freshman Swimming, Squash Club. Address: 81 Rocky Wood Road, Manhasset, New York. SHIPLEY, FREDERIC B..II. A.B. Econom- ics. Born: July 8, 1945. Prepared at Fairfield Prep. Conservative League Treasurer, Secre- tary, Course Analysis Bulletin Associate Editor, Economics, Brown Youth Guidance, Intramurals. Address: 3689 Cochise Drive, Northwest, Atlanta, Georgia. SHIPLEY, GRANT F. Address: 4434 Central Avenue, Indianapolis, Indiana. SIEGEL, ROBERT M. A.B. International Relations. Born: November 27, 1945. Prepared at Horace Mann School. Dean's List, Brown Youth Guidance, Sock and Buskin, Class Council, Brown Tutoring Program, Freshman Crew. Address: 625 Sagamore Avenue, Teaneck, New Jersey. SKLAREW, NEIL D. A.B. Political Science. Born: December 17, 1945. Prepared at Memo- rial High School. Littlefield Hall President, Intramural Staff. Address: 7 64th Street, West New York, New Jersey. SKONBERG, JOHN M. A.B. Political Science. Born: May 17, 1946. Prepared at St. Stephen's. Phi Gamma Delta President, Treasurer, Freshman Crew. Address: 6655 Van Winkle Drive, Falls Church, Virginia. SMERIGLIO, VINCENT L. A.B. Psychology. Born: August 12, 1945. Prepared at B.M.C. Durfee High School. Dean's List, Brown Youth Guidance. Address: 34 Eddy Street, Fall River, Massachusetts. SMITH, ARTHUR P. III. Sc.B. Physics. Born: November 22, 1944. Prepared at Glen Rock High School. Dean's List, Freshman Class Council, Inter-House Council, Brown Youth Guidance, The Boy Scouts of America, Intramurals. Address: 21 Pembroke Place, Glen Rock, New Jersey. SMITH, CHARLES D. A.B. Astronomy. Born: June 10, 1945. Prepared at Peabody Demonstration School, Nashville, Tennessee. Wingtips Sports Editor, Inter-House Council, Class Cabinect, Bridge Club President. Address: 37 Rock Garden Lane, Richmond, Vir- ginia. SMITH, ERIC C. A.B. Mathematical Economics. Born: November 27, 1945. Prepared at The Harley School. Swyndlestock Rushing Chairman, Rugby, Freshman Soccer, Glee Club, NROTC. Address: 3333 Elmwood Avenue, Rochester, New York. SMITH, MAL- COLM JR. Address: Catridge Road, Salem Center, New York. SMITH, SHAWN K. A.B. Sociology. Born: September 11, 1945. Prepared at Cardinal Spellman High School. Delta Tau Delta Co-Rushing Chairman, Executive Committee, Newman Club, Sociology Club, Basketball, Baseball. Address: 42 Palmer Street, Brockton, Massachusetts. SNYDER, HOWARD E. A.B. International Relations. Born: June 29, 1945. Preparcd at William Penn Senior High School. Bruin Club, Brown Youth Guidance Executive Board, Freshman Week Committec Assistant Chairman, Intramural Athletic Council President, The Ex- perimenter's Association, Lambda Sigma Nu Vice-President, Intramurals. Address: 514 Linden Avenue, York, Pennsylvania. SPAYD, STEVEN H. A.B. Political Science. Born: December 16, 1945. Prepared at Collingdale High School. Newman Club Region Chairman, Providence Secretary, Canticum Glee Club, NROTC Drill Team Executive Officer, NROTC Pistol Team, Brunavians Club President, NROTC Unit Company Commander, Intramurals. Address: 641 Aronimink Place, Drexel Hill, Pennsylvania. SPELTZ, DAVID E. A.B. International Relations. Born: April 28, 1945. Prepared at New Canaan High School. Brown Chamber Soloists, Student Peace Union Executive Board Member, Treas- urer, Brown Peace Committee of the Campus Action Council, Campus Action Council. Address: 92 Gardes Road, New Canaan, Connecticut. SPENGLER, DANIEL S. JR. Ad- dress: P.O. 14, Hampton Bays, New York. STALZER, WILLIAM M. A.B. English Litera- ture. Born: March 6, 1945. Prepared at Franklin High School. Faunce House Board of Governors President, Convocation Committee Chairman, Bruin Club Off-Campus Chairman, Western Committee, Sphinx, Dean's Committee on Housing, Lambda Sigma Nu, Intramurals. Address: 3001 Southeast 66th Avenue, Portland, Oregon. STEEN, JOHN A. Sc.B. Aerospace Engineering. Born: July 17, 1945. Prepared at Western Reserve Acad- emy. Language Laboratory Technician, Delta Upsilon Treasurer, Community Service Chairman, Freshman and Junior Varsity Soccer. Address: Route 1, Meadville, Pennsyl- vania. STERN, PHILIP S. Address: 201 East 79th Street, New York, New York. 295 J. A. STEEN W. C. STERNFELD R. W. STIDSEN L. G. STODDARD, JR. G. STOKES, JR. R. F. STOWE T. A. STRANKO D. R. STRAWBRIDGE J. M. STUART STERNFELD, WILLIAM C. A.B.-M.M.S. Biology. Born: June 2, 1945. Prepared at Thomas A. DeVilbiss High School. Crew Manager. Address: 2641 Cheltenham Road, Toledo, Ohio. STIDSEN, RICHARD W. Address: 52 Hilton Avenue, Worcester, Massachu- setts. STIEHL, PAUL W. JR. Address: 79 Chestnut Street, Nutley, New Jersey. STOD- DARD, LEROY G. JR. A.B. American Literature Honors. Born: December 10, 1945, Prepared at Abington High School. Dean's List, Francis Wayland Scholar, Young Republi- cans Club, International Relations Club, Liber Brunensis, Independent Study. Address: 209 Chapel Street, Abington, Massachusetts. STOKES, GLENN. A.B. International Relations. Born: December 30, 1944. Prepared at Commonwealth School, Boston, Massachusetts. Liber Brunensis Literary Staff, Herald Review Literary Editor, Brown Daily Herald Staff, Harkness House President, Vice-President, Track. Address: 2314 Augusta Avenue, Savan- nah, Georgia. STOWE, RONALD F. A.B. International Relations. Born: April 10, 1945. Prepared at Interlochen Arts Academy. Tower Club Member at Large, Treasurer, Brown Glee Club, Wayland House President, Intramurals. Address: 1145 Bucyrus Road, Galion, Ohio. STRANDEMO, NEUT L. Address: Box 375, Red Wing, Minnesota. STRANKO, THOMAS A. A.B.-Sc.B. Born: May 6, 1945. Prepared at Ambridge High School. Delta Phi Omega, Football, Lacrosse. Address: 1919 Beaver Road, Ambridge, Pennsylvania. STRAW- BRIDGE, DAVID R. A.B. Political Science. Born: August 19, 1945. Prepared at Harriton High School. Lambda Chi Alpha Ritualist, Track, Freshman Football. Address: 530 Broadacres Road, Narberth, Pennsylvania, STUART, JAMES M. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: February 9, 1946. Prepared at Upper Canada College, Toronto, Ontario. Chess Club Presi- dent, Brownbrokers, Freshman Hockey. Address: 414 Kindersley Avenue, Montreal, Que- bec. SULLIVAN, RICHARD L. A.B.-Sc.B. Enginecering. Born: September 19, 1945. Pre- pared at Danvers High School. Phi Delta Beta President, Rushing Chairman, Brown Engineering Society, Brown Youth Guidance, Liber Brunensis Sales Staff, Intramurals. Address: 202 Centre Street, Danvers, Massachusetts. SULLIVAN, STEPHEN F. A.B.- M.M.S. Born: August 1, 1945. Prepared at De La Salle Academy. Inter-House Council, Class Council, Newman Club Choir. Address: 6 Simmons Terrace, Middletown, Rhode Island. SUMBERG, STEVEN M. A.B. Political Science. Born: December 23, 1945. Pre- pared at The Albany Academy for Boys. Senior Class Council, Library Worker, Brown Charities Drive Executive Board, Liber Brunensis Business Manager, Intramurals, Squash Club. Address: 96 Homestead Avenue, Albany, New York. SUMNER, D. NATHAN. A.B. American Civilization. Born: September 6, 1941. Prepared at Mackenzie High School, Detroit, Michigan. Dean's List, NROTC, Meiklejohn Society, Freshman Track, Rugby. Address: 622 Hope Street, Providence, Rhode Island. SWARTZ, RICHARD S. Address: 19 Highland Avenue, Lexington, Massachusetts. SWEENY, DOUGLAS M. A.B. Mathematics. Born: August 23, 1945. Prepared at Briarcliff High School. Delta Phi Omega House Manager, Corresponding Secretary, Vice-President, Cheerleader, Freshman Tennis. Address: Central Drive, Briarcliff Manor, New York. SWEET, STEPHEN E. A.B. Human Biology Honors. Born: September 20, 1945. Prepared at Classical High School. Dean's List, Class Council, Cammarian Club, Brown Youth Guidance, Freshman Dorm Officer, Alpha Pi Lambda. Address: 199 Isabella Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. SWIFT, E. CLINTON JR. A.B. History. Born: September 8, 1945. Prepared at The Haverford School. Dean's List, Freshman, Sophomore, Junior, Senior Class Councils Co-Chairman, Spring Weekend Committee, Olney House President, Social Chairman, Buxton House Secretary- Treasurer, Brown Charities Drive Steering Committee, Bruin Club On-Campus and Off- Campus Head, Pre-Law Society Treasurer, Intramurals. Address: 227 Curwen Road, Rosemont, Pennsylvania. SZEGDA, MICHAEL A. Address: 2337 South Law Street, Allen- town, Pennsylvania. TAFT, PETER M. A.B. Biology. Born: June 16, 1945. Prepared at Waggener High School, Louisville, Kentucky. Brown Youth Guidance, Swimming, Rugby. Address: 1629 Spotswood Drive, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. TAJRA, HARRY W. A.B. Russian and French Literature. Born: April 18, 1945. Prepared at Central Falls High School. French Club President. Address: 98 Rand Street, Central Falls, Rhode Island. TANSKI, JOSEPH C. Address: 102 Reese Avenue, North Syracuse, New York. TAYLOR, DAVID L. A.B. Economics. Born: February 1, 1945. Prepared at Belmont High School. Sophomore Class Council, Stites House Bridge Team, Freshman Sailing. Address: 240 Rut- ledge Road, Belmont, Massachusetts. TAYLOR, FREDERICK JR. A.B. Economics. Born: January 21, 1946. Prepared at Pennsbury High School, Yardley, Pennsylvania. WBRU Chief Announcer, Treasurer, Promotion and Publicity Director, Inter-House Council, Young Republicans, Intramurals. Address: 304 Balfour Drive, Winter Park, Florida. TER- RELL, EDWARD S. Address: 1 South Street, Cranston, Rhode Island. 296 R. L. SULLIVAN S. F. SULLIVAN S. M. SUMBERG D. M. SWEENY S.E. SWEET ECESWIETRIRS M. A. SZEGDA, JR. P. M. TAFT - H. W. TAJRA J. C. TANSKI D. L. TAYLOR F. S. TAYLOR, JR. CGRERTESCH C. A. THAYER R. P. THUMMEL J. M. TOSCANO D. R. W. TRELOAR, JR. R. B. TRUE J. TURK H. P. TURNER W. M. TRACEY D. TURNER i BRI 72 298 TESCH, CHARLES F. Address: 3N527 Oakdale Drive, Bensenville, Illinois. THAYER, CARLYLE A. A.B. Political Science. Born: November 5, 1945. Prepared at Antilles, San Juan, Puerto Rico. NROTC, Brunavians, NROTC Drill Team, Newman Club, Sophomore Class Council, Student Peace Union Executive Board, Students for a Democratic Society Treasurer, Americans for Reappraisal of Far Eastern Policy Chairman, Forum for Civil Liberties President, International Relations Club, Alpha Pi Lambda. Address: Military Reservation, Hudson Road RR 3, Sudbury, Massachusetts. THUMMEL, RANDOLPH P Sc.B. Chemistry. Born: September 20, 1945. Prepared at Montclair Academy. Phi Kappa Psi Corresponding Secretary, Treasurer, Intramural Hockey. Address: 72 Holton Lane, Essex Fells, New Jersey. TOSCANO, JOSEPH M. A.B. Human Biology. Born: May 14, 1945. Prepared at Westerly High School. Dean's List, Phi Gamma Delta Historian, Rush- ing Chairman, Social Chairman, Newman Club, Italian Club, Intramurals. Address: 37 Riverview Avenue, Westerly, Rhode Island. TRACEY, DENNIS M. Sc.B. Mechanical En- gineering Honors. Born: July 7, 1945. Prepared at Saint Raphael Academy, Pawtucket. Rhode Island. Dean's List, Brown Engineering Society, Plantations House Committee Ath- letic Chairman, Secretary-Treasurer, Intramurals, Intramural Council. Address: 1187 New- man Avenue, Seekonk, Massachusetts. TRELOAR, RICHARD W. JR. A.B. Political Sci- ence. Born: January 10, 1946. Prepared at Lyman Hall High School. AFROTC, Intramu- rals, Zeta Psi. Address: 108 Ridgecrest Road, Wallingford, Connecticut. TRUE, ROGER B. Address: 49 Hartford Street, Natick, Massachusetts. TRUMBULL, LEVI S. JR. Address: 1 Ambar Place, Bernardsville, New Jersey. TUCK, LAURENCE C. Address: 14 North Wash- ington Street, Port Washington, New York. TURCO, EDWARD F. A.B. Anthropology. Born: March 23, 1945. Prepared at Cranston High School West. Address: 76 Stadden Street, Provideance, Rhode Island. TURK, JONATHAN. Address: 7 Tarrywile Lake Drive, Danbury, Connecticut. TURNER, H. PETER. A.B. Classics. Born: June 30, 1945. Prepared at Providence Country Day School. Freshman Baseball. Address: 15 Grotto Avenue, Provi- dence, Rhode Island. TURNER, WILLIAM D. A.B. Economics. Born: March 17, 1945. Prepared at Homewood-Flossmoor High School. Cammarian Club, Class Council, Brown Youth Guidance, Lambda Sigma Nu Social Chairman, Freshman Baseball, Intramurals. Address: 504 Fitch Road, Chicago Heights, Illinois. ULLMAN, SANFORD. A.B.-M.M.S. Born: November 23, 1945. Prepared at Friends Seminary. Dean's List, Class Vice-President and Secretary-Treasurer, Proctor, Brown Key, Meiklejohn Society, Hockey Manager. Ad- dress: 133 Nassau Avenue, Atlantic Beach, New York. UMANOFF, DAN F. Address: 169 Seaman Avenue, Rockville Centre, New York. UPHOUSE, HARRY G. I1l. A.B. Econom- ics. Born: December 17, 1945. Prepared at Harriton High School. Phi Kappa Psi, Soccer. Address: 1133 Woodbine Avenue, Penn Valley, Narberth, Pennsylvania. VALASHINAS, THOMAS J. A.B. American Literature. Born: October 1, 1944. Psi Upsilon. Address: Box 88, Kirkwood, New York. VanBLARCOM, JAMES R. Address: 216 St. Nicholas Avenue, Englewood, New Jersey. VanWIE, DONALD G. Sc.B. Biology Honors. Born: May 11, 1945. Prepared at Tenafly High School. Dean's List, Phi Delta Beta. Address: 255 Churchill Road, Tenafly, New Jersey. VASKAS, ALAN V. A B. History. Born: February 13, 1946. Prepared at Nashua High School. Production Workshop, Brownbrokers, Brown Youth Guidance, Freshman Class Council, Delta Upsilon. Address: 11 New Street, Nashua, New Hampshire. VERNAGLIA, JOHN E. Address: 131 Olympia Avenue, North Providence, Rhode Island. VERRI, RONALD J. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: May 6, 1945. Prepared at Classical High School. Tau Beta Pi Association President, Brown Engineering Society, Dean's List, American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Intramurals. Address: 126 Cold Brook Road, Warwick, Rhode Island. VIAULT, RAYMOND G. A.B. Economics. Born: September 19, 1944. Prepared at The Lawrenceville School, Lawrenceville, New Jer- sey. Goddard House President, Secretary-Treasurer. Address: 32 Middle Neck Road, Roslyn, New York. S. ULLMAN D. F. UMANOFF H. G. UPHOUSE III T.J. VALASHINAS J. R. VanBLARCOM D. G. VanWIE A. V. VASKAS J. E. VERNAGLIA R. J. VERRI R. G. VIAULT M. H. VIGEVENO GIHIVIEES T. F. VIRR S J. P. VonROSENSTIEIL . C. VISHER R. H. WADLE VIGEVENO, MITCHELL H. A.B. International Relations. Born: January 12, 1945. Pre- pared at Loomis School Windsor, Connecticut. Dean's List, French Club, Cammarian Club, Inter-Fraternity Council Treasurer, AFROTC, Arnold Air Society Treasurer, Delta Phi Rushing Chairman, Freshman Track, Intramural Hockey. Address: Grand Park Avenue, Scarsdale, New York. VILES, GEORGE H. II. A.B. American Literature. Born: April 5, 1943. Prepared at Lawrenceville School. Lacrosse, Delta Upsilon, Chapel Board, Program 66 Sabatical Participant, Julia Craig Baldwin Work Fellowship. Address: Paris Hill, South Paris, Maine. VIRR, THOMAS F. Address: 12307 McCullough, Austin, Texas. VISHER, S. CHANDLER. A.B. International Relations. Born: October 20, 1945. Prepared at Annandale High School. Inter-House Council Social Chairman, Open Mind Presi- dent. Address: 4312 Casileor Road, Falls Church, Virginia. VonDORP, ROLF H. A.B. Political Science. Born: April 19, 1945. Prepared at Lowell High School. Address: 634 Green View Road, La Habra, California. VonROSENSTIEL, J. PAUL. A.B. Engineering. Born: April 19, 1945. Prepared at Abington Senior High School. Intramurals, Soccer. Address: 1432 Frog Hollow Road, Rydal, Pennsylvania. WADLE, ROBERT H. A.B.- M.M.S. Biology. Born: April 6, 1945. Prepared at Union High School. Address: 2221 Balmoral Avenue, Union, New Jersey. WALBURGH, C. ERIC. A.B. Classics. Born: Feb- ruary 17, 1945. Prepared at Pulaski Academy and Central. Delta Phi Omega, Classics Club, Northern Student Movement Tutorial, Rugby. Address: 7391 Bridge Street, Pulaski, New York. WALD, LANCE A. Address: 2323 East 17th South, Salt Lake City, Utah. WARD, THOMAS K. ScB. Civil Engineering. Born: October 30, 1945. Prepared at Radnor High School. Civil Engineering Society Vice-President, Brown Engineering Society, Lambda Chi Alpha Social Chairman, Football. Address: 1760 Asbury Avenue, Ocean City, New Jer- sey. WASHBURN, DONALD J. A.B. History Honors. Born: June 3, 1945. Prepared at Homewood-Flossmoor. Dean's List, Brown Youth Guidance, Intramurals. Address: 18201 Sacramento, Homewood, Illinois. WATT, A. JAMES. A.B. Biology. Born: April 4, 1945. Prepared at Charles F. Brush High School. Dean's List, Theta Delta Chi Rushing Chair- man, President, and Undergraduate Lieutenant Governor of New England Region, Intra- murals, Cross Country, Freshman Track Captain, Varsity Track. Address: 1736 South Belvoir Boulevard, Cleveland, Ohio. WAYNE, DANIEL G. Address: Box 56, Pelnam, New York. WEBBER, THOMAS G. Address: 1722 Forest Hill Drive, Vienna, West Virginia. WEGMANN, C. LUCAS. Address: Usser Allmend 4, Switzerland. WEINSTOCK, NEAL S. A.B. Classics. Born: August 22, 1945. Prepared at Midwood High School. Delta Tau Delta, Football. Address: 947 East 27th Street, Brooklyn, New York. WEISS, DONALD S. A.B. Sociology. Born: November 23, 1944. Prepared at The Lawrenceville School. Dean's List, Liber Brunensis, Yacht Club, Cheerleaders, Swyndlestock, Freshman Hockey. Address: 50 Chestnut Drive, Roslyn Harbor, New York. WELCH, ROBERT S. II. A.B. Philosophy. Born: March 25, 1944. Prepared at Memorial High School. Delta Kappa Epsilon. Address: 75 North Street, Middleboro, Massachusetts. WELKY, LEE A. A.B. Classics. Born: March 18, 1945. Prepared at St. John's Preparatory. Classics Club, Newman Club, Delta Phi Omega, Hockey. Address: 35 Elizabeth Circle, Framingham, Massachusetts. WELLS, JAMES W. JR. Address: 369 Willard Road, Aurora, Ohio. WENTZ, WILLIAM H. A.B. Political Science. Born: February 26, 1945. Prepared at Lampeter-Strasburg High School. Dean's List, Brown Daily Herald Assistant Sports Editor, Tower Club Vice-President, Secretary, Social Chairman. Address: 180 Hillcrest Avenue, Strasburg, Pennsylvania. WHIPPLE, RICHARD G. A.B. English Literature. Born: January 6, 1945. Prepared at Academy High School. Brown Youth Guidance, Brown Key, Lambda Chi Alpha Presi- dent, Wrestling Co-Captain. Address: 4104 McClelland Avenue, Erie, Pennsylvania. WHITE, JOHN II. A.B. Classics. Born: October 16, 1944. Prepared at Swampscott High School, Moses Brown School. Lambda Chi Alpha Pledge Trainer, Track, Hockey. Ad- dress: 60 South Prospect Drive, Coral Gables, Florida. WHITEHEAD, RICHARD H. Address: Cherry Street, Guilford, Connecticut. WHORF, ROBERT H. A.B. American Lit- crature. Born: August 22, 1945. Prepared at Needham High School. Inter-Fraternity Coun- cil, Theta Delta Chi, Freshman and Junior Varsity Hockey. Address: 528 Great Plain Avenue, Needham, Massachusetts. WHYTE, COLLIN D. Address: 1275 Northeast 94th Street, Miami, Florida. WIDELITZ, JOEL J. A.B. Human Biology. Born: October 11, 1945. Prepared at Scarsdale High School. Dean's List, Alpha Pi Lambda President, Brown Youth Guidance, Class of 1967 Council, Liber Brunensis, Intramurals. Address: 40 Meadow Road, Scarsdale, New York. WILDER, HAROLD B. II. Address: 436 Boyd Street, Cleve- land, Ohio. WILE, DAVID S. Sc.B. Applied Mathematics Honors. Born: December 4, 1945. Prepared at Charles F. Brush High School. Dean's List, Inter-House Council, Math Club, Student Tutoring Service, Intramurals. Address: 1444 Grenleigh Drive, Cleveland, Ohio. WELCH, JR. L. A. WELKY T. K. WARD D.J. WASHBURN ATJoWATT, IR. N. S. B. WILDER III D.S. WILE W. H. WENTZ R. G. WHIPPLE R. H. WHORF - WEINSTOCK R. .J. WIDELITZ H. S. J. WILEY WILEY, STEPHEN J. A.B. Economics. Born: May 5, 1945. Prepared at Ridgewood High School. Brown Key Society President, Bruin Club Vice-President, Sophomore and Jun- ior Class Councils, Kappa Sigma Treasurer, Baseball Co-Captain. Address: 106 Fox Hedge Road, Saddle River, New Jersey. WILKINSON, MICHAEL E. A. A.B. Economics. Born: April 19, 1945. Prepared at Columbia High School. IvyAir Airways Founder, emy- A. Records Founder, House President, Social Chairman, Inter-House Council, Brown- brokers. Address: 505 Summit Avenue, Maplewood, New Jersey. WILKINSON, STEPHEN J. Address: 3218 Potterton Drive, Falls Church, Virginia. WILLEY, JAMES D. Address: 7 Woodland Avenue, Ilion, New York. WILLIAMSON, JOHN M. A.B. Economics. Born: December 27, 1945. Prepared at Walt Whitman High School. Providence Youth Guidance, Delta Tau Delta, Track, Football, Intramurals. Address: Camel Hollow Road, Huntington, New York. WINTER, ROBERT S. IIl. Address: 68 Benevolent Street, Providence, Rhode Island. WISCHKOWSKY, GEORGE B. Address: 4154 Normandy, Dallas, Texas. WISE, EDWARD W. Address: 234 Morris Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. WISEMAN, ED- WARD L. JR. Address: 246 Power Street, Providence, Rhode Island. WISHON, A. EMORY III. A.B. Economics. Born: July 27, 1945. Prepared at Fresno High School. Dean's List, Brown Youth Guidance, Northern Student Movement, Brown-Pembroke Chris- tian Fellowship, Delta Phi Omega, Golf. Address: 225 Harvard Avenue, Fresno, California. WITMEYER, JOHN D. A.B. International Relations. Born: September 10, 1945. Prepared at William Nottingham High School. Phi Kappa Psi Vice-President, Social Chairman, President Governing Committee, Rush Committee, Track, Intramurals. Address: 819 Os- trom Avenue, Syracuse, New York. WOHLEGEMUTH, JOEL L. Address: 52 Adelphi Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. WOOTERS, GARRY J. Address: 157 Parkside Avenue, Braintree, Massachusetts. WRIGHT, JAMES A. A.B. English and Art. Born: August 6, 1945. Prepared at L. A. Webber High School. Address: 99 Eagle Street, Lyndonville, New York. YOKEN, ROBERT A. A.B. Political Science. Born: August 6, 1946. Prepared at Hope High School. Dean's List, International Relations Club, Math Club, Psychology Club, Intramurals. Address: 60 Blackstone Boulevard, Providence, Rhode Island. YOUNG, CARL J. Address: 95 Pine Grove Terrace, Newark, New Jersey. YOUNT, ERNEST H. III. A.B. Classics. Prepared at R. J. Reynolds High School. Francis Wayland Latin Prize, Sphinx Club, Episcopal Church Vestry Senior Warden, Sophomore Class Cabinet, Lambda Sigma Nu Historian, Tennis. Address: 2800 Greenwich Road, Winston-Salem, North Carolina. ZESKIND, HOWARD E. A.B. Political Science. Born: August 13, 1945. Prepared at Baltimore City College. Brown Key Society, Kappa Sigma, Lacrosse Captain. Address: 7500 Lisburne Road, Baltimore, Maryland. ZIMMERMAN, GERALD N. A.B. Psychology. Born: September 11, 1945. Prepared at North Shore High School. Yacht Club, Sailing Team, Sigma Nu, Soccer. Address: 311 Carpenter Avenue, Sea Cliff, New York. ZIMMER- MAN, PETER E. A.B. Russian Studies Honors. Born: March 29, 1945. Prepared at James Hillhouse High School. Dean's List, Freshman and Sophomore Class Councils, Cam- marian Club, Russian Club, Northern Student Movement, Brown Youth Guidance, Meikle- john Society, Alpha Pi Lambda, Intramurals. Address: 73 Benton Street, New Haven, Connecticut. ZOGBY, REAGAN J. Sc.B. Physics. Born: September 6, 1945. Prepared at New Hartford High School. Freshman Lacrosse. Address: 35 Evalon Road, New Hartford, New York. ZOLLER, DAVID R. Address: 1121 Arlington Boulevard, Arlington, Virginia. M. E. A. WILKINSON J. D. WILLEY J. D. WITMEYER J. L. WOHLGEMUTH H. E. ZESKIND G. N. ZIMMERMANN P. E. ZIMMERMANN R. J. ZOGBY J. M. WILLIAMSON R. S. WINTER III G. B. WISCHKOWSKY E. L. WISEMAN, JR. A. E. WISHON, 111 G. J. WOOTERS J. A. WRIGHT R. A. YOKEN C.J. YOUNG E. H. YOUNT III 303 BEGINNING is a good Anglo-Saxon word for com- mencement, but commencement is so much more for- mal, and anyway commencement has a Latin root. But perhaps beginning would be a better term, not because it is more suitable but because it points out an essential question. If this ceremony is a beginning, what is the relevance of the preceding years? Commencement is a good word for orators. They would be lost without discussion of the beautiful world we are entering, the marvelous life read careers to be begun, but Brown does not have a commencement speaker. We must get too good an education to need one. And so we do not get to consider good things. We just commence something different from what we had at Brown. Is the use of the word commencement an admission of weakness? Are colleges admitting that they are di- vorced from life? Are they acknowledging that they are only a more or less required prerequisite for something more important? Perhaps we have a confession. The University could be implicitly confessing its own unim- portance; it could be conceding that there is more to existence than exams and papers and the difference between a C+ and a B-. Maybe Brown is admitting even more. Isn't it admitting its irrelevance? But then the University has more than just an aca- demic role. It also inculcates values, the values of soci- ety as defined by someone who remains undefined. It also enforces values. Those who get caught acting under a different sense of values may begin but they may not commence. And guards have surprised stu- dents not only Spring Weekend but also the night of the campus dance. So commencement is a ceremonial beginning by defi- nition, but should it not be the time to consider the meaning of the undergraduate years? And is it not in- dicative that commencement is mandatory? 304 COMMENCEMENT TIIILIL IMPRESSIONS This year's Liber managing board decided to go outside of its closed circle and invite contributions from a half-dozen people who more than likely had different impressions of Brown. We solicited the opinions of a Brown senior, Scott Sanders, and a Pembroke senior, Sue Collins; Paul Choquette 60, a recent graduate who excelled in football at Brown and is now legislative counsel to Governor Chafee; J. Walter Wilson 18, who has been at Brown since 1914 as student and professor of biology; Walter Cady '95, a retired faculty member who still serves various institutions as a con- sultant; and Robert Schulze, a graduate of the University of Michigan who has spent the last twelve years at Brown. SEATED ALONE, atop a traintwisted crate containing ev- erything you own, in the middle of a waxed rectangular box of a room, on an unnumbered hallway with perpendicular walls, dim lights, up stairs with shredded railings, worn steps. Dusk. And you want to know. Down Thayer Street you catch glimpses of foreignness, smell fumes seeping out of hidden ruts of lives; on Westmin- ster you watch a policeman chat with his friend who is over- parked right in front of the conversation, listen to their voices, learn the way their thoughts run, hesitate, halt, re- verse, run again over worldly business. And then the worldly business of watching men carry under their arms manicured leather pouches of papers they have never quite deciphered, taking them up self-service elevators to the eighteenth floor of a drab gray building, depositing them by their right elbow upon the polished black table, wondering, when they won- der, just why and who they are. Across the mind briefly, the ragged flight of a swallow once watched, sailing summers ago, off Nantucket; then, the flight past, the greyness of the building, weather, symbols return. Yes, worldly, the discov- ery that men do stand on street corners to cavalier two-way rides to appealing, mechanical, illegitimacies; that alcohol burns not only in lamps, but also in the incandescent frivoli- ties of forgotten evenings. And so many shreds of variegated seaweed floating on the surface of this place that it appears to outsiders as something of a cess pool. And to some insiders it seems insulated, a nice slice of isolation, a temporary interruption of living for the sake of learning. Pages for such pass drily. When they turn, they yellow in their hands, fray, crack, dissolve into a neat pile of carefully-remembered information in the check- erboard hallways of quite categorized, quite orderly, quite dead minds. After four years such as these emerge desiccated old men, never dreaming of red tigers. And then those who walk so many nights into the synthe- sis of sunset that they recognize every melted-yellow building by its dissolving shape, have seen the city in enough moods to tell the time of day by listening to the breathing of pave- ment and sidewalk and factory, have learned the different textures of this Hill-world by running fingers along its cor- rugations. Such as this one senses his world without devour- ing or destroying or fleeing it. Yet for his vagueness and dreams acceptance is not easy. Then the one whose play is exercise in sunshine. The one, whirling, twirling, a spiral of animal fatigue about his inner core of youthful playfulness. A bicycle to the park, wheels wet in the lake edge, tire tracks between here and there all dizzy, weaving, working a way through the traffic of an in- different city, an impersonal city filled with persons. One stops on the yellow-banded corner, a frail red-headed girl, and holds a smaller sister by the strap of her crisp blue pinafore, moist chocolate on her lips. As you cycle past she waves. Older girls, learners, sisters of a sort down Brown Street, share your mental and emotional meanderings. Any more order than a meander would seem too strict. Long hair, short skirts, faces, faces, eyes both studious and curious. With them walks along brick street with tattered edges, worn bricks, lazy wonderings why, maple leaves to kick toward the gutter, or to pick up and spin for blocks around your finger. The first night, alone, you touched the uncertain throb of an idea on the page before you. Beginning with that night others marked your exit from life, without ever knowing quite who you are or where and how you live. Different worlds, you come to see, yours inhabited by an irascible, voracious, neurotic imagination which itself spins the world out of what it finds and creates. A nebulous web it is, into and out of which you weave your days, through which you ceaselessly intersperse new impressions, living, or revivified by the mind. Minds seeking together to discover understandings hidden in separate lives. He who walks in, places his notes on the worn beige table beside his left elbow, starts to speak and bears you drifting, excited, childishly fresh, to new concep- tions of yourself and of life. Across his mind as he talks migrate fancies and notions related and unrelated to his words. He seeks living relations, connections, subterranean associations of all that he sees, reads, hears, feels. After his voice stops, you leave, still floating, trying to discover for yourself the subterrancan ties that must link the computer laboratory with the language buildings, the dormitories with the administration, your self as it skips up steps by the lower green with his or hers as they cut their ways angularly across the upper. Green for the three months we are not here, brown in the spring and fall, grey all winter. All winter the sluggish, stag- nant backwater of half-melted snow that records five irregu- lar holes where a mittened hand entered and retreated. Four years you try to fathom the climate of country, city, and people. People, mostly, the crystal residue of having lived and learned anywhere. There are those who strut in the broad uneven sunlight of a college world, and those who follow their beards and boots after dreams, then those who chase black-and-yellow butterflies drunkenly across powdered grass, and the fraudulent saints who seem to be saints and the real saints who are, then the ones who pursue their noses rigidly through stony pages, and those who are themselves butterflies pursued and never caught and finally not even desired to be caught but only stuck on a pin, squirming. And then there are those who sit alone in cob-webbed cor- ners and watch. As you watch them all walking sleepily, criss-crossing the central green place around which we all gather, you begin thinking of possibilities. Potentialities criss-crossing. Where in the universe will they all build their own solar systems of concerns and loves and ambitions? Will they spend their life perceiving affinities? And will they understand the demand that those affinities make for the tearing-down of differences? Kicking, your legs dangling over the hard edge of brick steps in the early sunshine, shadows dancing up from the grass to meet your heels as they click against the stone you sit upon, wondering. Morning. And still you want to know. Scott Sanders IN THE BEGINNING the Van Wickle gates swung in and the words were I now pronounce Brown University officially open. The September campus filled with sun-bronzed, care- free students making and renewing acquaintances. Meeting at the famed Blue Room, the text-book store, or on Thayer Street they reminisced about Europe, summer school, hard labor, or Jones' Beach. But summer had gone and books with unbroken bindings indicated the recent return to educa- tion. Repressing academia as much as possible, many looked toward the first football weekend. Pembrokers waited for phone calls, but Wheaton and Vernon Court were more im- portant. Came Saturday afternoons. As minutes ticked by, spirits dampened but concealed themselves conveniently in hip pockets and overcoats of sadder-bud-wiser enthusiasts. Winning seasons were rare, so Saturday nights were often dedicated to the drinking of the sacred vine and performing of the sacrificial dances in order that Mercury might look more favorably upon the Brown Iron Men. The air chilled and racoon coats of varying quality ap- peared on campus. Leaves turned and Art 21ers gathered them and gathered them and gathered them. Experimental beards were grown. Some stayed, most didnt. The social system was attacked, the BDH was attacked, the left-wingers were attacked, the right-wingers were attacked, and, in the Hay, some Pembrokers were attacked. Belle knew everyone and everything. Leary and Rockwell attracted attention and controversy. Toy Sun's vanished. And turkey fricassee wasn't served for a long time. After the first snowfall, everything changed. All activity was weather-oriented. Traying at Moses Brown was the in thing. The favorite sport was hockey and half the thrill was surviving the hour before the game. Evenings at the libraries assumed prominence on social and academic calendars. Reserve reading shelves emptied and carrels filled as papers and hour exams whirled and collided. Beds seemed more uncomfortable, meals tasted worse, roommates were unbearable, and the days just weren't long enough. But one by one, assignments were crossed off syllabuses and the dorms emptied as the Christ- mas half-fare deadline approached. The new year brought a phenomenon called reading period which altered the metabolism of the entire campus. The drug-stores ran out of No-Doz. The bookstore ran out of felt-tip pens and hi-liters, and the Bic pens began to run out. Finally. Typewriters clinked 'til dawn and easy-erase paper was a staple. Monarch and Cliff's Notes new releases were added to prodigious paperback collections. Sufficient sleep was rare. A diabolical aspect was assumed by profes- sors faces as students eyes reflected tempus fugit. The survivors reluctantly filled out more IBM cards. Some of Brown debated but finally decided that they'd rather stay than be 1-A. And thus, the pattern of first semester was resumed. In February and March, Providence was more damp and cold and grey than usual. Parking ticket collections grew and academic claustrophobia was rampant. Everyone longed for springit was always just around the corner. Where? Pawtucket? The April 1st BDH symbolized the beginning of spring's inevitable follies. Affirming the arrival of the vernal equinox at good ole Brunonia, the Annual Wriston Quad Bac- chanalia-minus-crew-races offered something and usually too much for everyone. Come was the time of sandals and riots and Newport. Blue-Room dwellers transported them- selves to the Green and continued their Socratic-like dia- logues amongst the dedicated sun-worshippers and varsity Frisby players. Daring skateboarders whizzed down George Street hill or the sidewalk behind UH. Pembrokers took con- vocation cuts to sun-bathe on dorm roofs. Or, communing with Nature, artists sketched, writers wrote, and biology, chemistry and physics majors opened the lab windows. Early in the evenings faint guitar music drifted through the campus while inside the dorms pre-study bridge games multiplied. And, at the end of the day, weary from concentrated hours 307 at the library, Brown men and Pembrokers sought the refuge of A-D field and Andrews Terrace to relieve their aesthetic frustrations. But June approached. Seniors worried about comps and underclassmen repeated the patterns of first-semester exam tension. Then, just as everything seemed insurmountable, the year came to an end. The campus packed up shouting about how great it was to be leaving and knowing that 48 hours later they would be regretful. Andthe Van Wickle gates swung out. Sue Collins MY EARLIEST impressions of Brown were, of course, those I gathered as a boy. My first contacts with the school were football games I attended at New Haven and in Providence on Thanksgiving Day. Perhaps my memory is colored by the Thanksgiving Dinner after the game, but these early memo- ries of Brown are of a fighting, though underdog team, sup- ported by enthusiastic crowds. I frankly dont think I would have had the interest I later had in Brown except for these early favorable remembrances from the football field. I deeply regret the passing of the Thanksgiving game, though I can understand the reasons for it. All my recollections of my freshman year are based on non-academic events, reflecting my disinterest in matters having to do with the classroom. The first such event was the annual flag rush with the sophomores, which culminated sev- eral weeks of harassment by second year students and their Vigilance Committee. All the frustration of having to wear beanies and recite songs on request was made up for on that one day. We were the first class to snatch the flag from the top of the greased pole in a number of years and we marched back to the campus, resplendent in our mud uni- forms. It is a wonder that no one was ever seriously hurt during those scrimmages. It was a tradition that served to unify the class, however, and I was sorry to see it end. We had a number of riots during my freshman year which every graduate will remember. One was precipitated by Pro- vidence College's first hockey victory over Brown. A horn blowing parade arrived on campus to announce this fact and was greeted with rocks and other missiles. After this subject of our wrath had disappeared, we turned our attention to Pembroke. Our other riots related to snow. If my memory is correct, I had 17 windows broken in my room during the winter. Other recollections of my first year center around the all- too-infrequent social functions, fraternity rushing and its at- tendant anxieties, local girls met sitting on the wall in front of Hegeman, etc. The intellectual side of my freshman life could be described as confused. I had no firm guidance as to study habits or courses to take, except what I picked up throuph student scuttlebut. With the exception of a French teacher, I developed no meaningful relationships with the faculty. By the time I was a senior, I had come to appreciate Brown's greatest assctits faculty. During my junior year, the late Dr. Gail Noyes had taken an interest in me and encouraged me to break out of a C mold My prade point average during my last two years rose exactly one point and most of the credit poes to Dr. Noyes. He later convinced me to take a crack at Harvard Law School and his counsel was vindicated. I treasure the Brown Bear he presented me at graduation, which had been in his family for many years. By this time in my college career, my old high school reserva- tions about teachers had disappeared, and the experience of getting to know my professors is perhaps the overriding im- pression I have of Brown People in the administration were not always quite so friendly usually for good reasons, ex- cept for Dean Durgin, whom many of my contemporaries look on as the man who kept them in school during difficult times. Brown's size not only makes possible faculty contact, but permits you to know a large percentage of your classmates as well. By the time I was a senior I was philosophical about their nonchalance towards football, though the two at- tempted pep rallies, with the football team outnumbering those in attendance, still are remembered. I have always envied the spirit at Dartmouth and the resultant great desire of their football teams. Today's student seems much more serious and under much more pressure than students during any time. Most of the present involvement of college students in the great is- sues of the day is good, but I can't help but be nostalgic for the good old days? when college might not have been as meaningful but was more fun. Continued failure in the major sports has given all associated with Brown, students and alumni, a feeling of frustration and inferiority. Two or three successful gridiron seasons could do much to cure some of the ills of student life at Brown. Looking back on my earlier memories, as affected by later matriculation at Harvard Law School and 312 years practic- ing law, I have come to realize that Brown was the right school for me. At a larger school, I might never have met a Dr. Noyes, and would still be seeking a C level. Much as I hate to admit it, Brown songs do affect me and this affection I wouldn't trade for all prestige and better facilities of the other Ivies. In short, if I had to do it over again, I wouldn't hesitate though I probably couldn't get in. Paul Choquette STUDENTS of today are not like those of The Good Old Days. And they never were! As a matter of fact, students have always been much the same-cven in the earliest universities of the Middle Ages. This stems from their youth and the first real escape from the family mores. Some are like a hawk, that can be raised as a fledgling in a cage. As it matures, it goes wild and if not given its freedom to soar in the skies may thrash itself to death on the bars of its cage. Others are like a skunk which as an infant and juvenile makes a fine pet, but, as it ap- proaches maturity, its scent glands develop and it makes it- self extremely objectionable if not given its freedom. A hawk can be trained to falconrywith a hood over its eyes, and a skunk can be made fit for society by a simple operation. I suspect students would resent either. There are, of course, unique features of every generation of young people but on the whole they are true to type. Our students today, I am certain, feel themselves unique in the boldness with which they attack the administration. They may not realize that students at Brown forced the resignation of one of its finest presidents in 1827. It was President Messer who changed the name of the College of Rhode Island to Brown University in 1804 and set out to make it a univer- sity. Among other things he established a medical school in 1811 which was the third in New Englandpreceded only by Harvard and Dartmouth. It lasted until 1827 and counts among its few alumni some of the leaders of medicine in their generation. Students were given more freedom than was customary in those days and they responded with more elaborate student pranks which eventually turned into riots with acts of vandalism. They became so serious that Presi- dent Messer resigned. He was followed by President Way- land, a man of entirely different character, a giant among educational reformers but a stern disciplinarian. In spite of the resentment of the students and the rebellion of all but three of one senior class, he maintained his course and for a quarter of a century held the students in a net of restrictions such as they had never known before. I have been asked to compare the students of today with those who came to Brown with me in 1914. This is really an irrational challenge because I see modern students every day and they reveal their innermost thoughts to me in the Brown Duaily Herald, while I look back to the students of my class in a perspective of 50 years and many generations of stu- dents. Furthermore, there are enough of my classmates still around to look forward to a substantial reunion for our 50th year, and some of them might not agree with what I say. At the outset, I must emphasize that I like students, and always have. This is why I have stayed here all these years rather than surrendering to the lure of the research institute which the primary objective of my life would tempt me to do. I wonder how many undergraduates of today or yester- day understand that this is true of most of their teachers, who work tirelessly for what they consider the best interests of their students. It is not possible to characterize the student body as a whole because each student is an individual and in youth individual variation is most extreme. Babies are much alike and so are old men. Most of all it is dangerous to categorize the student body as a whole on the basis of its most vocifer- ous members, as the public press for obvious reasons tends to do. It all depends upon how you define your terms whether the epithet neurotic exhibitionist, applied to these self-appointed spokesmen by a distinguished alumnus, is justi- fied. We have always had a few. I doubt if the proportion is greater now than then, but with increase in size of the stu- dent body there are more of them, and, united, they have gained strength and assumed dominance in many aspects of college life. The behavior of a young man when he leaves home, or a young woman for that matter, is a sure reflection of his home life and upbringing. If he has been well brought up, he has learned two thingspersonal responsibility and re- spect for authority. He has learned that the very existence of society depends upon certain patterns of behavior which are defined in rules and laws and ingrained in conventions and tradition. Furthermore, he has learned that, because these sometimes conflict with the desires of individuals, someone has to have the authority to enforce them, and to hold the individual responsible for his own acts. If this were not so, the result would be anarchy. It is the rare individualist in- deed who would dispense with authority for everyone and throw himself into a free-for-all among his fellows acting as they individually please. Some students and even some faculty members who boldly flaunt their resentment against society as Activists do so in the name of Academic Freedom. Instead of as- suming responsibility for their own acts, they fall back upon the University to defend themthe University that is the establishment which was built on the very grounds of matu- rity and integrity that are being challenged. I have read and reread, as a typical example of the voice of the present-day student, the editorial in the Brown Daily Herald of February 2, 1967 entitled Responsibility Short- age to try to discover what it means. As I take it the only responsibility that is recognized is responsibility to ones self. But thus narrowed, it deprives a person of the privilege of speaking for the group. It is indeed a characteristic of im- maturity. The threat is that if the changes desired are not forthcoming from the administration the editors will reply by more childish acts, even tantrums, worse than those which have graced the pages of former issues of the BDH. This is what is commonly called immaturity. I have been quoted in the press as saying that when I came to college it was in- stilled in us that we were Brown Men; somewhere along the way students became college boys; and today they seem and act like school children. I have puzzled about this change and can suggest many reasons for it but shall not undertake to explain it now. So much for the vocal minority. All this does not apply to the large majority. As I have known them personally and intimately, students have been highly motivated in academic matters in preparing themselves to be physicians and profes- sional scientists. They have already taken their place as re- sponsible members of societythe Establishment if you pleaseand are preparing themselves to be its leaders in the future. Everyone who knows these young people has faith in the future of our society, which must endure, if for nothing else, to provide protection and security for the individualists 309 in our midst. As I look back, then, albeit through my rose-colored glasses, I have the impression that in my student days we were more mature than many of the students of today. There were not so many of us and most of us had come with a seriousness of purpose. Many of us were privileged to come to college at great sacrifice on the part of our families, in- cluding our brothers and sisters who perforce must be left at home. Some of us had already contributed to the support of the family before we came to college, and many if not most of us worked to earn part or even all of our expenses. We learned the lesson of civic responsibility early. We were not angels by any means, certainly no worse and no better than young people have always been and probably I almost said hopefully always will be. But I know of no case where one of my classmates would have thought of shirking responsibility for anything he said or did, right or wrong. Finally, the students are much smarter today than in my student days. They are better trained and know a lot more. They have much more to learn. I continue to learn a lot from my students, which is as it should be. We are a com- pany of scholars, and I am certain that there are now in the student body enough students who consider themselves Brown Menand gentlemento assure an even greater Brown in the future. -J. Walter Wilson EXCEPT for the Spanish War and the free-silver episode in which President Andrews was involved, the decade at the turn of the century was not very exciting, either internation- ally or nationally. Yet I doubt whether American students would have shown much activity in public affairs even if there had been stirrings in the world comparable with those of today. Still, one can't be certain about this, for in all generations there are students ready to explode when the trigger is pulled. Although the Nineties produced no Charles Evans Hughes or John Hay, many of our graduates were destined for dis- tinguished careers in various fields, including activities in administration or teaching at Brown. The temper of the students was indicated by their dress, which was quite conventional. It was a period when high poke collars were gradually giving way to turn-downs or to collars with triangular flaps. On the street, the campus, and at summer hotels could be seen young men of the variety known as dudes. In the Brown Liber for 1895 is this grind on one member of the class: I want to be a dudy, and with the dudies stand, A cuff inside my necktie, a cane within my hand. A goodly fraction of the students wore moustaches. Fraternity spirit was strong, and in some cases at least it was admirable. It is no exaggeration to say that for the selection of courses and for general advice and guidance during my freshman and sophomore years I owed more to some of the upper-classmen in my fraternity than to any other influence. The upper-classmen showed a brotherly in- terest in the younger members which had a profound effect. I still believe in the value of college fraternities, and also in the intermingling of the classes in general, rather than in keeping the freshmen somewhat segregated. In the 1904 Liber is an article by Prof. Bronson on The New Brown. He noted an increase in the social life, and quoted from a scholar at Cambridge University two and a half centuries ago: to scorn delights and live laborious days, and hoped the ideal would not change to to shirk hard work and live luxurious days. During my days at Brown President Andrews was at the height of his popularity. Even the Libers had nothing but praise for him. For example, the 1895 Liber has this: To the faculty as a whole, the Liber Board would humbly and respectfully pay a sincere tribute for its efficiency, its sym- pathy, and its friendship. To Bennie, our noble President, our friend, our counsellor, our teacher, our refuge in trouble, our comrade, we cannot adequately express our love and respect. To him we owe our prosperity; for him, we are ready to act; by him, we stand to a man, come what may. The modern life of the University began with Bennie. The size of the faculty and of the student body increased greatly. The number of graduate students rose from three to 101. Wisdom, courage, integrity, human sympathythese were the qualities that endeared him to his students during his whole career at Brown. His course in ethics had a large attendance. For some of us one of the memorable features of college lite was the Glee, Banjo, and Mandolin Clubs, which en- joyed an almost independent existence. Independent, that is. save for faculty approval of concert schedules or when a first tenor was imported from some other college. At one period the violinist of the mandolin club and also a member of the glee club was John D. Rockefeller 97. The banjo and glee clubs engaged local coaches. As to the glee club selections, I have always been sort of glad that I was in college when the club could sing We meet again tonight, boys, instead of something by Palestrina. As an example of Class Days in the Nineties I'll say a little about our celebration in 1895. In the evening the cam- pus was illuminated with candles in Chinese paper lanterns. Affter that was over the class marched down the hill to the banguet at Tillinghast's restaurant. Fach man carried a Ro- man candle, which he fired indiscriminately in all directions. One fiery ball went up Macurda's sleeve. and he stopped off at Dr. Day's office to have his arm dressed, but soon turned up at the banquet. Just to show that '95 was not all dudes, I'll say .that it was a rather wet and disorderly affair. Truex had written a class poem beginning with the words My Comrades. When he, who had stayed sober, was called upon to read his poem, as soon as he had completed the first two words someone was inspired to start singing the old song Comrades and in a few seconds the class poem was drowned out forever. Then somebody brought in a rumor that the juniors were marching up Westminster Street. So then it became the duty of loyal ninety-fivers to smash up some chairs for weapons. When we poured out into the street there was no one in sight. Then we marched back up the hill and on to the athletic field on Thayer Street later Andrews Field for the annual class baseball game. Sliding bases in dress suits at 4 a.m. brought our Class Day to a picturesque close. All through college 95 had been accused of lack of class spirit, but we ended our career with both spirit and spirits. I still have a chair-leg as a reminder. Walter Cady WHEN 1 had a chance to come to Brown in 1955, the aca- demic marketplace appeared and indeed was less re- splendent to the young or incipient Ph.D. than it is today. I was winding up my graduate work at Michigan, and grateful for the two non-lucrative job offers I gotone from a Big Ten school, the other from Brown. Even had the other one been grander, I'm sure I would have chosen Brown, for I had long had an image perhaps a stereotype, possibly an illusion of the kind of academic community I wanted to belong to. It was to have been a very good and, I confess, prestigeful school, but not so distinguished that one would have to be a seminal thinker or a prolific researcher in order to have a chance to stay; a small school, not so small that one inevita- bly had to rub psyches with all the rest of the faculty and know whose kids had measles, but certainly a much smaller and more intimate place than either Michigan or Columbia had been; finally, I think I sought an old school, yet one not unreceptive to new ideas and change. It seemed to me then that Brown would satisfy this image about as well as any college or university possibly could. I am now a dozen years older, not much wiser, but rather considerably more familiar with the so-called reality of things. And although it may simply be a sign of failure of maturation, a symptom of encroaching middle-aged resigna- tionalas, so reputable an organ as the BDH has charged that T have fallen prey to a psychology of complacence, a philosophy of let us suffer togetherI must confess that it seems to me now as it did in 1955. Brown is about as good a university as one could have hoped to have been associated with these past twelve years. It so happens, of course, that these were almost precisely the Keeney years at Brown. Given the dominant role he played in the life of the University, my impressions of Brown over this period are very much intermingled with my impres- sions of this wonderfully able and frustratingly complex man. I think that in large and revealing measure, what he was, Brown wasor perhaps I should say, what Brown was, he was. Keeney was ambitious and impatient and prideful, though in a restrained, not a blatant, way. He was concerned about the stature and reputation of the school, but reluctant to employ gimmicks to enhance it. He wanted it to be a bal- anced university, did not always succeed in achieving bal- ance, yet achieved it remarkably well in a time when the temptation to imbalance, over-extension, too rapid growth was luring many a president at many a university. He some- times over-reacted to setbacks and disappointments; he had a low boiling point; he sometimes bore grudges, and yet his capacity for empathy, for forgiveness, and for renewal was exceedingly large. He had a manner that was, paradoxically, both forbidding and casual, both awesome and warm. He was not at all the simple, somewhat rough-hewn character that first impression suggestedand that he, indeed, often sought to suggest-but neither could he bring himself to sustain a quality of polish, grace, and sophistication. Al- though he was no stranger to culture and learning, he be- haved at times rather boorishly, though hardly ever unself- consciously so. He had a wonderful and saving reluctance to let things get too well- or nicely-organized; he feared organ- ization charts and what they forebode; he ran, quite inten- tionally, an informal, unneat ship. He had a remarkable ability to laugh at his own jokes and his own mistakes. When he erred, he tended to err rather grandly, too. Yet there were times when it was difficult to distinguish error from accomplishment. He took pride in both the hockey team and the chamber soloists, yet could be found more often at Meehan than at a Sayles concert. Essentially, he was a conservative man, and yet he was surprisingly receptive to innovation, and he had a deep strain of liberalism which came through at most but not all moments of crisis. He was essentially a pragmatic man, though he respected idealism and allowed it to inform more than a few of his decisions. He operated in a very personal way, and his responses were generally more sensitive to men than to ideas. He was a man very difficult to be indifferent about. He evoked in most people feelings which were both strong and mixed, compounding affection and disappoint- ment, respect and frustration, warmth and distance. In sum, Keeney was a vital man, and always a highly complex and remarkably human one. And although he was a person of great attractiveness and accomplishment, some who knew him lamented that he was not more perfect, that he was not even better than he was, that he was no giant in the earth. Only rarely did we stop to ponder if he was not, in fact, a better man than most of us deserved. My metaphor, I'm afraid, has gotten over-drawn and over- personalized. But no matter how ineptly, it does summarize some of my impressions of Brown since I came here in 1955. This year we have entered a new era, and I am glad for that and very hopeful. Yet there is not much about the past twelve years at Brown that I would changefor fear that in changing, I would make them less human, less exciting, less fulfilling than they truly were. Robert O. Schulze 311 advertisers ';' - - Artist's sketch of proposed Geological Sciences Building LANS WAREHOUSE COMPANY at Wayland Square Complete Moving Service Modern Storage Qur 61st Year E. P. ANTHONY INC. Apothecary Shop ANGELL and THAYER STREETS Since 1895 Beg225 Hagiares THE SHEPARD COMPANY Salutes The Class of 1967 Headquarters in the East for Foreign Sports Cars JAGUAR VOLKSWAGEN PORSHE ALFA-ROMEO LANCIA TRIUMPH FIAT Sales and Service e Koy Coreign farshd f Rhode Jsland CORNER OF PINE 4 BROAD ST8. PROVIDENCE, R. I The Farmers Almanac is about the closest thing we know to the Editors' Notebook. Both are full of facts, mostly ob- scure ones. Both have devoted followers. Both are com- pletely reliable. Both appear once a year. The only signifi- cant difference is that the Editors' Notebook contains no tide tables or lunar charts. We hope that everyone will read this notebook last since your reading of the book will probably end with it. During Freshman Week, a returning sophomore went back to check out his old room in the West Quad. The new occupants of the room were sitting around drinking beer and talking, as freshmen will, about sex. The sophomore told one of them that if sex was what he wanted all that he had to do was to walk up to the corner of Waterman and Prospect, where an amazing nymphomaniac was always waiting. She was rather tall, he said, and could always be found standing on the corner; her name was Carrie Tower. The freshman went out to find the girl, waited on the corner for an hour, was disappointed, and found out the true story only after suffering the hilarity of his roommates. We would like to praise especially the janitor who remem- bers to open the Van Wickle gates inward for opening con- vocation and outward for commencement. HOAGUE hog n. etymology uncertain; possibly from the Hoagan Award presented annually by the Kappa chapter of the Beta Theta Pi fraternity to that brother's homecom- 315 RHODE ISLAND BUS CORPORATION Serving Brown University for all Activities 375 Promenade Street Providence, Rhode Island 861-5000 ALLEN'S TOWEL LINEN SUPPLY INC. Since 1906 Complete Towel and Linen Service 40 Arnold Street Providence 6, Rhode Island 421-6026 DEPARTMENT STOREDJ, Welcomes you to shop both its main and annex stores in downtown Providence MAnning 1-9239 MAnning 1-7280 SMITH'S RESTAURANT Italian-American Cuisine 391 ATWELLS AVENUE PROVIDENCE 9, R. I. 316 ing date most voluptuously endowed; originally from hog, : an unclean animal. 1. a female of questionable virtue who inhabits the environs of Brown University; 2. by extension, any female of questionable virtue. Synonyms: prostitute, whore, hoague. All mean immoral woman; prostitute implies a strict professional; whore carries the additional connota- tion of semi-professional; hoague is a much broader term and includes approximately 479 of all females between the ages of 16 and 23. If Fred Rappoport didn't exist, we would have to invent him. We know that none of you noticed that WBRU inaugu- rated a daily special at 6:15 pm featuring all the days press releases from the University. It was the first show ever to receive a negative Trendex rating: not only did no one listen to the show, but 200 people in the Providence area threw their radios out their windows. The middle-aged woman who walked into the Nina Simone concert telling her husband that Nina Simone was another Ella Fitzgerald was probably a little disappointed. For some reason everybody thousht was perfectly valid at the time, the editors of the Liber decided that the book needed a style guide, and a style guide was decreed. Every- body got along fine without it until one day in March the enterprising photography editor read the guide and wrote the following letter to the copy editor: Covers for L ; 1967 LIBER BRUNENSIS 4 4 By KINGSCRAFT 8 KINGSPORT PRESS, INC. Kingsport, Tennessee e e R . Compliments of THE WARWICK POULTRY CO. ' i1l L 714 Leland Avenue 1 Warwick, Rhode Tsland 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. Mike I read Liberstyle and regret only one thing: that you omitted any reference to the use of the colon. Colons, as we all know, are wonderful creatures: they can be used instead of a dash G. H. WALKER CO. when more subtlety is needed and are especially useful in complex sentences where the second clause is the logical outcome of the first or serves as the basis for the first. As an example: It was Members of fhe New York no wonder that student feeling ran high: the deans had expelled the class presidents for no reason, and the janitors refused to cooperate in S'l'OCk EXChange keeping the lavatories clean. The colon is furthermore ideally suited to hori- zontal lists, which I find dull but which seem to crop up now and then. Please be good to my friend the colon. 840 HOSPITAL TRUST BUILDING Tom UN 1-4000 For artistic reasons the Liber avoids group pictures. The men of Everett House really wanted one. Always glad to oblige, the editor-in-chief sent a photographer to take the picturebut told him not to use any film. The only reason that we could get all the Pembroke senior class officers together for a picture is that they were all studying in the Rock at 9 on a Saturday morning. 318 7 Brown University again expands into new curricula. This is a tribute to the far-sighted vision of dedicated administrators and loyal alumni. Gilbane is proud to be helping make this latest mile- stone in Brown's program of progress a reality. Brown has made many out- standing achievements in the field of education. We have witnessed many changes during our sixty-seven years of service to the University. We are ex- tremely pleased that our capabilities in modern university construction have been utilized so often. Many members of our full-time staff of over two hundred super- visory construction experts have close ties with Brown. These experts, plus the most modern, efficient equipment, give Gilbane Building Company the versatility to handle all types of construction anywhere, anytime. BUILDING COMPANY Providence New York Boston Rx for expansion i Brown University Bio-Medical Center 2 six-story bldgs. ; Architect-Engineer: Shepley, Bulfinch, Richardson Abbott IMPORTANT LOCATIONS in PROVIDENCE MS, INC. Gifts For All Occasions 278 THAYER STREET Chamber of Commerce - 10 DORRANCE STREET For Industrial Information Rhode Island Bar Association - Cheshire, Connecticut Boys and Girls, 12to 16 yearsold 17 EXCHANGE ST. For an Instant Lawyer Better Business Bureau - 248 WEYBOSSET STREET For advice on Ethics Printers Service Supply, Inc. - 231 Douglas Avenue For Sharp Camera Proofs and Type 4 SERVICES UNDER ONE ROOF N AVAVISTLY i i f i k A i AT RV ,Wg' -'::-,,,,f 1 A e B e e 2 il i d At B QT: 12 ? ,'5 -0 e . - . m b e BT TR L S . it r Y b A it - 3 50 - , - 3 3 L i S E I P e o, g Al N Builders of the Graduate Center E. TURGEON CONSTRUCTION CO., INC. 32 Custom House Street Providence, R.I. Perhaps the Magrath Committee could have learned more about students mores if it had abandoned surveys and sim- ply stood outside the Beta gate to count the young ladies leaving Wriston Ouad at 8:30 on Sunday mornings. Would Kingman Brewster dance with a bulldog? One Brown student was faced with the problem of taking three exams in two days. He pulled through the double- header on the first day all right. But then he had to do all the reading for the third course before the final the next afternoon. After staying up most of the night, able to read about half of one book and comprehending even less, he decided that his only salvation lay in fading the exam. Having already eaten a breakfast of moldy toast and hard- ened Swiss cheese, he decided, along with his roommates, that the best ticket to Andrews House would be to induce vomiting. The fellow started off with a bottle of coke laced with the tobacco from four cigarettes. That didn't work, so he added two cigarettes and drank some more. His roommate thought that the tobacco wasn't strong enough, so he volunteered some tobacco that he had picked up in Africa. Still no go. This potion was followed by half a pint of mineral oil. That didn't make him sick either. Just for good measure he swal- lowed a can of beer. Then he switched to solid food and made himself a peanut butter and tobacco sandwich. Now he was getting somewhere. A roommate heated up some tap N 15, nl ' LB TEL W BB ' Frensns vaarnss the WAYLAND MANOR HOTEL Restaurant and Cocktail Lounge 500 ANGELL STREET AT WAYLAND SQUARE Tel. 421-6293 FRONTIER STORE Riding and Ranch Wear Lees Levis and Boots 90 WEYBOSSET STREET PROVIDENCE 3, R.I JOIN THE RAFFIA. THEYRE WANTED MEN Soft-spoken. Well-mannered. But extremely danger- ous.Usually seenin the company of beautiful women. Prefer conservative dress, fine imported colognes. Specifically, Raffia, from which they take their name, Raffia Cologne and After-Shave, Lime or Bay Rum. 1967 HUNTLEY, LTD. water and poured 20 tablespoons of salt into it. Our man got about two-thirds of the way through chugging a quart of the salt water before he blew magnificently over the porch rail- ing. Another roommate, who had been watching and encour- aging all along, suddenly found himself dashing to the head and blowing lunch in what was described as a gesture of sympathy. Only one problem now. Our boy had practically purged his system, and he felt all better. So he started going through the same menu again. Right before the salt water, he got into a friend's car and drove over to Andrews House. Chug- ging about a pint of the brew, he walked into the infirmary at 1:00. The nurse took one look at his complexion and bulg- ing cheeks and sent him hurriedly off to the nearest room, basin in hand, where he spent the remainder of the after- noon. Mission accomplished. Have you ever noticed that the West Wing of Faunce House floats about six inches off the ground? It must be because of all the heads bouncing off the ceiling. One of Bruno U's off-campus dwellers ran out of flour in the middle of preparing a recipe for the Pillsbury Grand National Bakeoff. Undaunted, he picked up a measuring cup and borrowed some from the kitchen of Pembroke's dining hall. BCK 1965: The science of contraception never quite catches up to faith in contraception. 323 TE0s Shomieanl O A WELL DRESSED MAN The Hillhouse label has been the mark of a well dressed man for over a decade and a half., That's because time- tested, traditional Hillhouse quality never goes out of style. billbouse lto 135 THAYER STREET I DISTINCTIVE MEN'S APPAREL Community Research Associates, an independent study agency, released results of a survey taken among students in Philo 141. The results follow: original papers: 6 papers turned-in once before: 23 twice before: 37 three times before: 4 four times before: 10 five times before: 1 You had to see it to believe it. Refectory coffee is bad, but we just can't see carrying a jar of instant coffee into the refectory and asking to borrow a cup of boiling waterand doing this daily at 4:32 p.m. is just out of the question. A legend in his own time: the Yuban Kid. Would Kingman Brewster eat with freshmen in the refec- tory? The photographer who accompanied the six-year med stu- dents to Rhode Island Hospital wasn't really prepared for a talk illustrated with color slides of an inflamed rectum. What the hell is going on in Wilson Hall? Nutty scoops from Stan Griffith: Education at Brown is conducted in an atmosphere of fear. 10725,66 The University has a paternalistic, take-what-you- can-get attitude. 10,25,66 COLLEGE LAUNDERERS and CLEANSERS, Inc. 223-A THAYER STREET BELLE LESTER Where the smile is only surpassed by the service. EVERY DAY MORE FAMILIES HEAT WITH GAS PROVIDENCE GAS COMPANY xv 2;$,$wa OUR CONGRATULATIONS ON YOUR GRADUATION FROM BROWN'S FAVORITE IMPORTED CAR DEALER THE AUTO SHOW 1241 FALL RIVER AVENUE SEEKONK, MASSACHUSETTS AUTHORIZED DEALERS FOR TRIUMPH, SUNBEAM, RENAUILL VOILNVO AND GRIFHITH SALES SERVICE - PARTS - BODY SHOP 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 of PROVIDENCE Tailored to the college crowd with the VERY LATEST LOOKS at the RIGHT PRICE! Open o Peerless Charge Account Pay ! Monthly for 3 months without a Service Charge E Mark Banin L. CLOTHIER HABERDASHER 217 THAYER STREET 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 Pewter Mugs 219 Thayer St. at Waterman GA 1-2545 SULZBERGER-ROLFE inc EDWARD SULZBERGER, President Best Wishes Class of '67 DIMEO CONSTRUCTION COMPANY PROVIDENCE PAPER COMPANY ESTABLISHED 1883 160 DORRANCE STREET PROVIDENCE 1, RHODE ISLAND POST OFFICE BOX 819 Industrial Papers Printing Papers Office Equipment and Supplies After six years of reasoned protest, the Liber demon- strated its familiarity with student power and forcibly re- moved the student court sign from the directory in the Thea- ter Wing of Faunce House. What's wrong with a quiet campus anyway? Early in the year we received a letter from a company which calls itself the downtown studio with the know-how; the text of the letter follows: EditorAdvisor School Yearbook If you are looking for a new, unusual feature to add to your yearbook's uniqueness and sentimen- tal appeal, we believe that we have the answer. A phonograph record that is an integral part of your publication. Why a phonograph record? Because a phono- graph record will span the years and bring a lump to the throat of the old grad who can recall and relive the tender memories of those wonderful golden school days preserved on a record of this kind by a simple flick of a phonograph switch. Here they are, once again: the Glee Club singing the Alma Mater, the class advisor's parting words of wisdom, that side-splitting scene from the Sen- ior dramatic production, the resounding cheers of e SBo0s N 278 PAKK AVENLIE SGI Tt NEW YORK, N. Y. 10003 K OUR OFFICIAL YEARBOOK PHOTOGRAPHER just the place . . . for two or two hundred, a favored dining place with generations of Brown men. Take your favorite person there soon and start your own tradition. HUMMOCKS SEAFOOD Repstaurant 245 Allens Ave. Prov.461-6000 2. 'v-': PRIME RIB ROOM NEPTUNE ROOM CAFE MIDNIGHT HILLSIDE MOTOR LODGE ROULESEZFANDES 2 Miles from Providence 101 NEW LONDON AVENUE CRANSTON 10, R. I. UNITED GUARANTEES YOU'LL TAKE PERFECT PICTURES or WE'LL TAKE THE CAMERA BACKI UNITED CAMERA, INC. 297 ELMWOOD AVE. 467-5600 the crowd at the Big Game, the school prexy wishing the graduates godspeed, the Marching Band swinging across the athletic field, the Pep Rally around the bonfire, the clock in the Tower tolling the warm spring n'ight, and, oh, so many more priceless things that would have faded away with the years had they not been preserved in this way. Records can be had in any size, speed, or type you desire. Most important of all, the cost is so extremely low that you just cannot afford to not make such a feature part of your current year- book. Thanks for letting us tell you all about it. If you are interested and want more information, just drop us a note and we'll send you all details if you'll tell us about how many records and what size you will need. We'd love to hear from you. The name of the recording company is best left unsaid. The medium is the message. A Brown student not noted for his academic prowess walked into an astronomy hour exam, smiled at Professor Smiley who smiled back and checked off a name on a list, took a test booklet, and wrote the exam. A week later Pro- fessor Smiley reported to his class that he had picked off the 329 330 MANCHESTER and HUDSON CO. 300 STATION STREET CRANSTON, R. L HO 7-8815 Telephone HOpkins 7-8818 A.C. BEALS COMPANY, INC. BUILDERS 15656 BAKER SIREET POV DENLE S A. C. Beals, Pres. and Treas. CONTRACTO Elhtbon Pk o 285 Pitman Street Providence, Rhode Island 02906 JAckson 1-6000 impostor and that the culprit had only days to live. The Astrophantom is thinking of making another attempt to audit a test next year. How many able people are forever lost to campus publica- tions because they start with the Brown Daily Herald? In keeping with their desperate efforts to improve admin- istration sartorial savvy, the brothers of Beta Theta Pi pre- sented Ray L. Heffner with a club tie and Robert O. Schulze with a pair of over-the-calf socks. Have you heard the one about the time a sidewalk fell into Pembroke Hall? NARRAGANSETT LUMBER CO. Hardwoods - Softwoods Maple Flooring ?3 550 JEFFERSON BLVD. WARWICK 739-4000 Classified ad in the BDH: Husband wanted for scintillating, attractive Pembroke senior; Must be Graduate Student or senior, 510 or over. Apply 212 Miller. Reply to classified ad in BDH: Dear 212 Miller: MARRIAGE OUT! Perhaps other arrangements can be made. Try our trainee programEarn while you learn. Apply BPS Last year we reported the tale of the enterprising gentle- man who used the tissue paper receptacle in a lavatory as a GE 4-0551 HOMESTEAD BAKING CO. Quality Bakers Specializing in Bread and Rolls 145 N. BROADWAY EAST PROVIDENCE THE BROWN UNIVERSITY STORE Ewl'liz, 2D j 2 T . , 7 Y OF6 spERAMSS To the Class of 1967: We have appreciated your patronage during the past four years, and hope to see you in our new bookstore whenever you are back on campus. reference source during an exam. Well, it happened again, presumably with different paper. The Magic Fifty, also known as the Magic Forty, meta- morphosed into the Magic 31 Plus Three Fillers. Why fraternities? Call Olney House. Ask for anyone on the second floor. He's not in. Ask the phone answerer to take a message. NO MESSAGES. Thud. And how about the Pembroker who thinks that the Wris- ton Quad is a Pembroke dorm? Brown's spread in Playboy last September reestablished our reputation as the tweed center of the Ivy League. Picture caption in the Providence Journal: SPRING WEEKEND AT BROWN UNIVERSITY: A Brown junior takes time out from athletic and cultural events to buy a balloon for his date. Like her philosophical mentor, the Duke of Windsor, Laurel Limpus sacrificed her throne for love. Who but a Liber photographer would climb out on a swaying fire escape ladder in a seventy-mile-an-hour gale to take a picture of a Pembroker standing above him on the fire escape grating? 332 LLOYD'S king size sandwiches' 119 WATERMAN STREET Corner of Brook TE 1-9242 HARVEY. Furnishers Clothiers - Importers HARVEY LAPIDES '46 St. Louis PHILIP LAPIDES '50 Providence X X X XD o P O,QQQQQ;Q 0 SS32 s e e e A X XD X - O - - e a a A e X XD X K QQW de$a$ U NSz o ony S e L a0 Compete. Sooner or later the formal educational process must end and you will enter a society that does not forgive the unskilled or the untrained. Make certain this happens only when you are as thoroughly prepared as possible to compete. From a commencement address by Ceorge Parker, President THE PARKER PEN COMPANY JANESVILLE - WISCONSIN - U-S-A 334 A vitally concerned Providence anti-vivisectionist wrote a letter to the Providence Journal about the campus police. She saw Rosie, Homer Wilbur's version of Mighty Manfred the Wonder Dog, getting into a campus police station wagon and thought that Brown's finest were dognapping another victim for Pierrel to experiment on. The whole episode just proves what vicious minds can do to true love. Pembroke sports. If that stupid idiot down the hall isn't a Tom Sawyer, what is he doing at Brown? Perhaps you failed to notice the amazing similarity of the front page of the BDH issue reporting the dean's decision to permit Pembrokers to live off-campus and that of the hoax issue that led to the resignation of three editors. That isnt very funny, is it? A well known professor came to the point in his course where he thought it best to assign a term paper. He ad- dressed the class of 120 in approximately these words: I know most of you are arty and intellectual types, but for the rest of you and he looked up to a section of the room where at least a dozen hockey players were seated, there has been in this class a strong temptation to copy term papers. I don't have a good memory for everything, but I remember just about every paper that's been handed in to meand I've readin my eight years here. So, I want to Compliments of Eastern Scientific Corporation Herold, Wilson Gerald Members New York Stock Exchange 14 Wall Street New York, N.Y. 10005 Worth 4-8870 Rector 2-3300 THE BROWN UNIVERSITY DINING HALLS e the ivy room the coffee lounge e caterer to fraternities o caterer to dormitories COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND ED DREW ORCHESTRAS 150 Carolina Avenue 781-3110 CLASS OF 1967 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 Now In Our 16th Year! FAMOUS NAME MENS SHOES . . . For Business Dress Sport The BEST for LESS DExter 1-3541 136 Westminster St. Providence, R.I. BROWN UNIVERSITY PRINTING SERVICES THE CABINET 68 Waterman Street 337 make a deal with you. You can copy a paper thats been written for this course before; if.I read it, don't recognize it, and hand it back with a grade, and then you come to me with the original and prove that you indeed copied the pa- per, then you get an automatic A. But if I recognize the paper, then it's an automatic E, and you fail the course. The members of the class didn't know whether to laugh or applaud. After gulping down what was left of his Blue Room coffee, the professor continued. Have any of you heard the story of Hungry Nolan? Well, Hungry Nolan was a ninth-rate jock here at Brown a few years back. What little work he did for History 163 was simply atrocious, and I gave him an E. Well, he came around crying to me day after day after day begging me to Compliments of ans Launderers Cleaners NEWPORT, R.I. OUTLET THE OUTLET COMPANY Office: 942-1700 OF RHODE ISLAND RUGGIERI BROS., INC. Providence + Garden City + Pawtucket LINOLEUM e BROADLOOM FORMICA e AND TILE 338 24 Midway Road Garden City Vi Cranston, R.1. 02920 In the main student dining hall at Brown University, the finest thing next to good food is Syracuse China. gy CCORPORATION SYRACUSE, NEW YORK BARTLETT Compliments of ROCKFORD BOLT AND STEEL CO. TREE EXPERTS 127 Mill Street m Rockford, Illinois p Tom Gaffney 67 - Executive Vice-President B A n T L E T T b . e 5.5 PIERCE v $ Nk fa 5XABLI5NED;,- N TR S S. S. PIERCE ' Importers C Grocers Since 1831 over 60 years of America's Pacesetter for First Quality Foods : ; SCIENTIFIC TREE CARE and Convenient Service change the grade. I finally gave in, and he got a D. But I also made a deal with him. I told him that unless he did B work in 164, he'd get an E for the course. So he really started working. He got friends of his to write up weekly book reviews on books they had read, and he handed them all in on time. His term paper was well-written, too. But on about page three, I said to myself, This sounds familiar. 1 think T know what the rest of the paper is going to say. And sure enough, it turned out to be a paper that had been handed in to me three years before. But I figuredwhat the hellit was a B paper then, it's a B paper now. The professor, of course, is Forrest McDonald. We're go- ing to miss that man very, very much. Established 1836 PHILLIPS LEAD a SUPPLY CO. Wholesalers of Plumbing and Heating Supplies 231 South Main Street Providence 3, R. L. COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND EASTERBROOKS INC Al0fef anal Qalfaum,nf Suppg'e:f BEEF, PROVISIONS AND DRESSED POULTRY 293 CANAL STREET PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND 02903 Telephone DExter 1-3131 340 Electronic Progress THE JOURNAL VCOLUME X NUMBERS 3 4 4 - PUDUSAED BY RAYTHEON COMPANY FALLJWINTER 1 Of the Acoustical Society of America United States Patent Office B PEOPLE AT o RAYTHEON'S SPECIAL EM .,...s.a .Q; wCOA SUBMARINE ImEE TRANSACTIONS ON S ' G N AL k SONICS AND ; ULTRASONICS - Proceedmgs Machine and Tool - DO THE THINGS Sublorana Sonic Underwater Long Range Aid to Navigation Employing Cross- EVERYBODY . . READS ABOUT IN ONE PLACE OR ANOTHER Sub-Bottom Profiling With a Replica Correlation Receiver DIGITAL ELECTRONICS WITH ENGINEERING APPLICATIONS RAYTHEON COMPANY SUBMARINE SIGNAL DIVISION PUBLICATIONS OF THE PAST YEAR WITH CONTRIBUTIONS BY SUBMARINE SIGNAL DIVISION AUTHORS Thomas P. Sifferlen Vartan Varlanian PORTSMOUTH, RHODE ISLAND P.0.BOX 360 02871 TELEPHONE 847-8000 PHOIOGRRAPTY Paul Bloomhardt 70 Steve Cole 70 George Ellis 70 Matt Myers 70 John Nelson '67 Glenn Tonnesen 69 Bruce MclIntosh '67 Joe Parsons '68 Gene Mattison '69 Tom Johnson 67 Stuart Crump 67 Jim Ackroyd '67 Lyle Fain '67 ADVERIISING James A. Kovac '68 Wesley P. Kozinn 68 Robert S. Sherman '69 Roger H. Sherman '69 Craig R. Van Nostrand 70 Robert W. Shippee 70 Margaret Genovese 70 SPECIAL PUBLICATIONS 1970 Bear Facts and Album, Michael 342 LITERARY Stephen P. Nugent '69 Glenn Stokes '67 Gordon Strauss 69 Kathleen Kennedy 69 Philip A. Helgerson '67 Sheldon Repp '69 Michael J. Hughes '69 John Rizzo '69 Richard J. Arneson 67 Andrew M. Razin 67 Kevin Seaman '69 Andrew Stanhope '69 LAYOUT Susan P. Kahn '68 Leigh Dickerson '68 Jonathan C. Ahearn '69 Eric S. Petersen '70 Thomas M. Cheek '70 Peter D. McMenamin 70 Ann F. Davis 70 Priscilla A. Griffiths '70 Danida R. Friedman 70 Lawrence L. Garber 70 Jonathan S. Whitlock 70 Nancy C. Jahn '70 Deborah C. Hinckley 69 PEMBROKE SALES SALES Karen Burr '67 Lynn Strickling '67 Caryl Carpenter '68 John G. Walsh '69 Paul H. Ellenbogen '69 Thomas N. Herzog 68 Robert S. Sherman 69 Russell A. Ekeblad 68 Guillermo E. Bahamon 69 Joseph L. Fava, Jr. 69 Michael E. McMahon 69 John N. Anglim 68 Thomas A. Mennell '68 Jeffrey F. Hitz 67 Richard Biehl 69 Christopher P. Bruhl 69 Jeffrey C. Carter 69 Edward C. Northwood '69 Todd D. Bailey 69 J. William Sinnett 70 PRODUCTION 1970 Class Stephen J. Bentz 68 DiLorenzo 69, Rushing 1967 and Fraternities at Brown 1967, Bruce 1. Noble 67 Cullen W. Coates, Jr. 68 John F. Wilkinson, Jr. 69 Daniel Stone 69 Cover by Joan Gardner 67 ACKNOWILEDGEMENTS The editors would like to extend their thanks to the following people: Mr. William 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 Mr. Eric Brown Mrs. William A. Ridge The Admissions Office, the Alumni Monthly, the Brown Daily Herald Miss Kathryn A. Shibley, consultant LIBER BRUNENSIS Clarke E. Cochran 67, Editor-in-Chief S. Hayden Anderson 67, Managing Editor Steven M. Sumberg 67, Business Manager Bruce I. Noble '67, Executive Editor Karen Robinson 67, Executive Editor Glen A. Ramsay '65, Associate Editor Grant R. Miller 68, Associate Editor Thomas L. Earp 68, Photography Editor Ronald F. Gaines '69, Layout Editor Michael Dilorenzo 69, Copy Editor John E. Kwoka, Jr. 67, Production Manager John F. Kelsey, I1I '69, Sales Manager Mary Wylie '67, Pembroke Sales Manager Thomas N. Herzog 68, Advertising Manager Jeffrey A. Jones '68, Advertising Manager ABOUT THE BOOK More than two dozen Liber photographers consumed more than 4,000 feet of Plus-X and Tri-X in taking more than 10,000 pictures for the 1967 Liber. Cameras used by the staff ranged from Rolleiflexes, Topcons, Pentaxes, Petris, Nikons and Minoltas down to one lowly Instamatic. Strobe lights included one Ultrablitz, one Spiratone, and a host of Honeywells when they were working. Somehow the staff consumed, imbibed or - poured out nearly a hundred gallons of Dektol, fifty gallons of Microdol, and twenty gallons of Acufine, not to mention the NHS fixer and the Permawash, Pakosol, and Photo-Flo. About six thousand sheets of Kodak Polycontrast paper were used; Crazy Arthur had a field day. Of the 10,000 pictures taken, fewer than 2500 found their way onto sheets of Polycontrast. Of the 2500 printed, only 500 can be found in this volume. Among the 2000 that were rejected, five were eaten, 257 were sold, 15 were never intended for publication, and the rest were used to make the film 7, a Woman. This book was printed in offset lithography on Wm. J. Keller's 80-1b. Patrician paper stock. Typeface for the bulk of the body copy is 10 point Times Roman; the senior section is 6 point Times Roman; the introductory section is 12 point Times Roman; the headings are 30 point Craw Modern, and the innocuous page numbers are 24 point Melior. Covers were manufactured by Kingsport Press of Kingsport, Tennessee, using their dark brown Cordova Grain material with a black over- tone rub. Senior photographs were by Delma Studios of New York. Less technically speaking, the book was printed in ink, on paper, by Wm. J. Keller Inc. of Buffalo, New York. INDEX Activism Administration Advertisements AFROTC Alpha Delta Phi Alpha Phi Omega Alpha Pi Lambda Archibald House Band Baseball Basketball Beta Theta Pi Bridge Club Bronson House Brownbrokers Brown Charities Drive Brown Daily Herald Brown Jug Brown Key Brown Youth Guidance Bruinaires Bruin Club Brun Mael Cammarian Club Campus Action Council Caswell Hall Chamber Soloists Chattertocks Chess Club 112-113 28-39 314-341 123 144-145 103 146-147 183 100-101 224-225 208-209 148-149 105 179 92 115 . 76-77 89 74 116-117 98 110 81 70-71 94 184 96 99 105 Christian Science Organization . 121 Class of 1967 Class of 1968 Class of 1969 Class of 1970 Classics Club Commencement Convocation Choir Crew Cross Country Course Analysis Bulletin Delta Phi Omega Delta Tau Delta Delta Upsilon Diman House Editors Notebook Engineering Society Episcopal College Church Everett House Faculty FHBG Football French Club Freshman Sports Freshman Week German Club Glee Club Golf GISP Herald Review Hillel Hockey Homecoming Impressions . Inter-Fraternity Council Inter-House Council 250-251 249 248 247 108 304-305 102 226227 207 78 . 150-151 152-153 154-155 . 7y 314-341 108 121 182 40-55 75 202-206 106 237-241 246 106 Y 228 109 79 120 210-214 130-132 306-311 174 175 International Relations Club Jabberwocks Jameson House Kappa Sigma Lacrosse Lambda Chi Alpha Lambda Sigma Nu Lecturers Liber Brunensis Publications Meiklejohn Society Mead House Modern Dance NROTC NSM Off-Campus Olney House Orchestra Outing Club Pembroke Classes Pembroke Dorms PDQ's Pembroke Record PSO P Pembroke Sports Phi Beta Kappa Phi Delta Beta Phi Gamma Delta Phi Kappa Psi Poland House . Pre-Medical Society Production Workshop Resident Fellows Res Publica . Rugby Senior Section Sigma Xi J Six-Year Medical Sciences Program Ski Club Soccer Sock and Buskin Sphinx Club Spring Weekend . . Squash Club Students Swimming Swyndlestock Taliesin Tau Beta Pi Tennis Tertulia Theta Delta Chi Tower Club TrackRiZ iy University Christian Movement ; Volstead Weekend WBRU Winter Weekend Wrestling Yacht Club Young Democrats . . . Young Republicans . . Zeta Psi 111 98 178 156-157 220-222 . 158-159 160-161 62-65 82-85 129 180 102 122 114 185-187 176 05 103 244-245 162-163 164-165 . 166-167 ..... 181 108 e B 192-193 . 78 230-231 252-303 1227 66-67 236 196-201 90-91 117 . 138-141 236 56-61 215 168-169 89 128 223 106 170-171 124-125 218-219 118-119 133 86-88 136-137 216-217 229 . 104 104 172-173
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