Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI)

 - Class of 1970

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Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1970 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 336 of the 1970 volume:

1970 : LIBER BRUNENSIS Brown University 112th edition Book 1 EDITORS' PREFACE A brief note on the box bit. The two volume approach is not arbitrary. Book I, the present volume, concerns itself with events and impres- sions of the year taken in a broad chronological order. The introduction affords a capsule view, which is elabo- rated throughout the spring, fall and winter sections that follow. Cur- riculum, for example, is considered seasonally, as are sports, the coed movement, and the problems we see on a continuing basis. The volume closes with a short section highlighting major changes in life at Brown in the past decade. Book Il, by contrast, focuses ex- clusively on individuals. In the opening sections we present profiles of ad- ministrators for their role in univer- sity decision making, faculty for their devotion to teaching, and note- worthy seniors not implying, of course, that other seniors are less worthy of note. Also included in this volume are the traditional fraternity, senior, and senior index sections. We are acutely aware that the 70 Liber is an issue-impression oriented yearbook, rather than the standard organization oriented book. Again, this is not arbitrary. We feel that what we have sacrificed in terms of repre- sentation we have more than made up for in terms of literary, thematic, and graphic flow. The reader, naturally, will judge for himself. CONTENTS Introduction Fight for Utopia Mainstays of Life Time out Collage The Two of Us A la Carte DECADE Those who have been on campus the last few years can sense it. There is a New Brown. It is not unique for institutions to develop and change. Past generations of Brunonians have also proclaimed new Browns. The difference lies in that almost every aspect of campus life has been radically altered in the past few years, not just the curriculum or the residential system or the social rules. Most of these changes, building up both outside and within the university, con- verged in the late sixties. Unlike other schools who sought to prevent or stall progress, our community met the chal- lenge of the future and within the past year transformed Brown into a potential leader in American higher education to- day. But leadership comes in inspiring others to follow your example, and although major changes have been approved, many have not been implemented. They stand on paper, indelible marks of a seemingly progressive academic community. The challenge comes in bringing them to life; but this is the task of the seventies. A girl steps into the hall in curlers and a bathrobe and says hi to her roommate's boyfriend without blushing. In what used to be a fraternity lounge, Coed College residents tell yet another bunch of the skeptical that they're getting to know each other as people instead of as Saturday night dates. Girls get mailboxes in the post office lobby, seats at Cam Club, and top billing in extracurricular activities. Girls stop explaining that theyre students at Pembroke, the women's affiliate which has all its classes with men students, and say simply, l go to Brown. And, inevitably, the university sits down in a presidential committee to take a look at the 78-year-old coordi- nate structure while Yale and Prince- ton go clamorously coed. Brown begins to pay less attention to the sex and more to the talent of its constitu- ents. Rents rise from $30 to $200. Fam- ilies suffer relocation to South Providence. The number of flats sub- let to students doubles in three years. Urban removal with tacit Brown ap- proval. Three times housing committees affirm that Brown is no longer a residential college. Fourteen percent of Brown's undergrads move off- campus. Local citizens thwart the U's attempt to build a parking garage in their midst. Enrollment rises by 1600 in a decade; projections call for 7000 stu- dents by the late seventies. Yet hous- ing spaces increase by only 600 since '61 with conditions as absurd as ever. During Commencement, one alumnus staying in the West Quad asked, Do students actually live in here all year long? Brown slowly faces up to a housing crisis in space and quality, and a breakdown in community relations. By the fall, the university approves a coed housing project, discards in loco parentis, discusses renovation in cur- rent dorms and plans for new resi- dences. It creates a community rela- tions board, halts the off-campus flow, and returns to the concept of a residential college. The $4.3 million Bryant purchase promises to mitigate land and housing shortage without harming the local community. Coed College Diman-Pi Lamb, one of the country's most progressive coed projects, and the lvy League's first, meets students desires to live in a mature and normal manner. With the prospect of campus-wide coed living and new apartment-type hous- ing for students, Brown has a chance to demonstrate its leadership in creat- ing an environment appropriate for an institution of higher learning. 7 Illlllllllllb 4 lt doesnt take long for most students to realize the abysmal lack of facilities at Brown. For instance, have you ever tried . . . finding a parking space seeing a Cornell game at Meehan watching a play or movie in Faunce House pit using library facilities for physics and bio simultaneously receiving immediate medical aid at Andrews House if you're a girl finding a small humanities course which interests you meeting members of your coordinate institution living in most university housing attending a class in Whitehall Nevermore, quoth the Raven. Brown has launched its $92 million capital funds drive to build long overdue projects and implement the liberated curriculum. On the docket are decade-old plans for Athletics, Performing Arts, Humanities, Geo- Math Sci. and Residential Centers. Even Political Science has been assured a few more professors. Sages have queried whether Brown, with lll other small private colleges, can outlast the decade. The Program for the Seventies hopes to insure the future of this venerable institution. Just to make sure Brown would survive the next few years, the Corporation raised tuition, room and board by $400. With two donations already totalling $4 mil- lion and the possibility of foundation grants for education, Brown may be back on the road from its annual million dollar deficits and meager facilities. While campus atmosphere and quality of education seem more important than spend- ing money on building, the Program for the Seventies promises to integrate both and solidify Brown's leadership in the field of education. During the summer of 1969, bill- boards and bumper stickers heralding the coming of a new era sprung up boldly across Providence Plantations. They promised a Bear Rebellion, and pictured Bruno scowling at the Nar- ragansett frigate. The campus was anxious and resolute, ready to avenge the humilia- tions of the past, waiting to experi- ence the feeling of power that comes with beating the odds. We were set with a sharp new formation and the best group of sophomores in years. 1l As the opening game ap- proached, the cynics of the Sixties became less visible. The alumni stopped dreaming about the Ironmen and took notice. The band re-learned the yellowed sheet music of the alma mater. In a season or two we would grab the lvy crown. No one was making any predictions, but the campus felt the time had come at last. Football would be an impetus for a re-birth of all Brown sports, symbolic of the entire change coming over Brown. People began to take pride. We were ready to touch the stars. Nothing less would do. 2 You couldnt even get near the doorway, no less hear Chancellor Tillinghast explain that Corporation members were too busy to spend time on campus speaking to students. So they got up and walked out. Then the Vice-President had to interpret what the President had said. There wasn't much to it. After all, it's pretty clear who governs the university. Ask anyone in UH and they'll tell you to ask someone else. Ask anyone in Cam Club and they'll refer you to their 27 committees. Ask faculty or Corporation members and they'll point to themselves. Ask most students and they'll simply shrug or deliver a torrent of complaints about their living conditions or courses. Along with the nationwide campus politici- zation of Spring '69 came the cry for partici- pation in governance. Students and faculty felt they couldn't do much worse than the James Bond intrigues of secret telegrams and building contracts in which administrators were engaged. They wanted a piece of the action. The anti-ROTC movement crystallized a much deeper call for restructuring the decision-making on campus, symbolized by the Corporation Room sit-in before the trustees. Committees were established and Professor Kuhn promised a totally new process by the fall. Standing on the threshold of revamping a 20-year old administrative set-up seemed exhilerating, especially in its recognition of students as young adults helping to fashion their own environment. Autumn brought a reshuffling of faculty committees and the inclusion of students on a multitude of advisory university commit- tees. The structure was beginning to loosen, even if it had not yet clarified the decision-making process nor faced the basic question of who should run Brown University. Lowenstein One man, hunched in the cold, looked out at us and talked to us, with us. He didnt dwell on unnecessary words as he spoke his thoughts softly into the mike. His face showed intense apprehension and profound confidence. He said it was cold. We couldnt feel it as we squeezed together on the Green, thinking similar thoughts, about man's capacity to experience the deepest sense of humanity and the harshest acts of cruelty. College was supposed to help resolve these conflicts by giving us an appreciation of man's academic accomplishments. But they seemed incon- gruous in the absurd world where a college degree is a passport to Hamburger Hill and the jungles of Sang My. Claiming that we would not suffer the indignity of human life any longer, we demonstrated our desire to redirect a country from war to peace. We stood with thousands in midnight vigils across America and at state house rallies. Canvassing, thinking, listening - we were both political and apolitical. Then there was Washington. In the non- violent tradition of Martin Luther King and Woodstock. Surging masses, sweeping forward with their frenzied cries for Peace, stretching across the Mall and rising upward with the Washington Monument. A stranger might have taken it for a religious pilgrimage; it was. 17 The Mad Hatter wishes you a Happy Un-Birthday! And the man from the Massachusetts draft board says: We expect to reach number 366 by the end of the year. Be proud to fight for your country as generations of Brunonians have, even if the Uni- versity once suspended itself to support a revolution against the government. As part of a tradition older than the United States, students and faculty at Brown helped lead the fall protests. They mobilized Rhode Island in October and trained the Washington marshalls in November. From the campus- wide forum on Vietnam in '67 to political campaigning in '68 to the moratoria of 69, the com- munity's yearning for peace and its awareness of world events is unparalleled in recent Brown his- tory. s g 4 7 e ;w v Q lhf, e Voorhees 4 O Rty P g .V. Y- -rhe squeamishness which makes culture something which one goes out and gets like a minimum daily vitamin requirement is being replaced at Brown by widespread participa- tion in theater, film and the visual arts. Student exhibits rotate in Faunce House. Omphaloskepsis sells student art. There has been a major modern dance program, as well as workshops in movement, photography and experimental staging techniques. Creative writing and theater arts majors have been introduced, and affairs such as the Novel Conference which brought Barth, Von- negut and Fiedler to Providence, or poetry readings by both faculty and visiting readers have packed lounges and auditoriums. There are more art movies than ever before; a Modes of Thought course deals with the history and develop- ment of the film form. Viewers pack Carmichael, Faunce House and the Cinematheque. Although all this may increase the bewilderment as to why there should be an 11-million dollar athletic com- plex in the offing instead of a per- forming arts center, interest, despite the lack of facilities, runs high. Wheth- er this isa mere corollary to the Flow- er Child Movement or represents in- stead a more enduring, more earnest new attitude towards creativity, re- mains to be seen. But it is impossible to deny the new life. Pomises about minority group equality had run on too long. Now was the time to stop the bullshit and come down hard. Stu- dents throughout the University helped create and coordinate recruiting for black students, a Black Studies program and equal employ- ment procedures. The University responded by accepting 11 black students in the Class of '73; the faculty resolved intensive staff recruiting ef- forts. Although many viewed the issue as a lowering of standards, those who matched their rhetoric with action were convinced that the change had been one of emphasis and responsibility. 21 Sayles Hall is usually quiet. So is the faculty. But anyone standing on the Green in the late afternoon on Tuesday, May 6, witnessed a procession not to be believed. Not ten, fifteen, or even fifty faculty members passing by, but a steady stream of 300 people climbing the steps to Sayles Hall. They moved along smoothly, relaxed by the warm weather and the smiles of their colleagues, carrying briefcases and class papers under their arms. Students gazed from the concrete walks and old lamposts. Even those who had been sunning themselves amidst 200 years of history from UH to Faunce House, rose for the occasion. They smiled - who had ever seen so many faculty together before their smiles covering the tense excitement they felt inside. Teachers, like pupils, felt that aura of adventure as they prepared to launch, or prevent, major changes in the institution they knew as Brown. 23 The line finally terminated and the great doors of Sayles swung shut as Professor Cornwell mounted the podium. Anticipation rustled throughout the hall. The stoic por- traits of past generation Brown mentors looked over their successors. University ad- ministrators and twenty-two students had taken their places too. Over an hour later, President Heffner rose to suspend Wednesday classes. The meeting was adjourned until 9 a.m. Alfred North Whitehead sounds a lot more eloquent than the Report of the Special Committee . . . and I can understand what he's saying! Who needs all this philosophy? It's the substantive proposals we should consider! Do you actually mean to tell me that this motion will abolish all distribution require- ments at Brown?! ' Did we just pass that? 24 SR So it went for three days. The students in ed reform and a handful of faculty got little sleep, but a few more people had read the report by Wed- nesday and Thursday. And quite a few turned out to rallies for support and news. The BDH covered it with two extras; WBRU-AM tuned in Wednesday afternoon; students jammed the Sayles hallway and balcony cheering over re- sults of critical votes. Of course, it took President Heffner's re- signation the next day to get it into the 7imes. But the ecstasy of being able to shout We did it first! overpowered the details. And while old-style final exams loomed ahead to remind us that May is not the best time for revolution, the campus was infused with a grandiose hope - that Brown was going to lead the way toward a new kind of college education in America. With spring came turbulence at Brown. Instead of frat ruckus, the seasonal warmth now brought cam- pus unrest. A struggle for power, a struggle for reason. A fight for tomorrow by severing the umbilical cord of yesterday. Yet it was peaceful - quiet as the Green grew beautiful under the rapidly blossoming elms. Much of the campus really couldnt give a damn about all the squabbling anyway. Spring always seems the same on College Hill. Spring infused hope. Enthusiasm for a new educa- tional system, the cry for a coed experience, anticipa- tion of winning teams, a belief in transforming Brown. 29 30 A semester of rallies and committees; a semester of impatience that had to be channelled in studied, careful ways; a semester of frustration with a faculty al- ways too busy until the last minute to listen to you; a semester of working for something we sometimes thought it useless even to hope for; a semester of a united student body, conscious of itself and deter- mined to act together. Continuing talks about the curriculum: at breakfast over the Newsletter, in the reading rooms at the Rock, with room- mates, with professors. Sure that we're doing a good thing, but some of us not too sure what it would result in: an easy way to get through Brown, an easier way to do what we've always been doing, a revolu- tionary approach to education. To those whose perspective was larger, it was an important step in initiating the cultural revolution of values Ira urged in his graduation speech. The Maeder Report in April and another burst of excitement. Cautious enthusiasm, a question about what it means to be first: did we have the courage to break from a system we knew was outmoded? More questions only students of future years could answer. Could we take the responsi- bility along with the freedom of the New Curriculum? Yes, we told ourselves, and Yes, we told the University. We told them by the work we had done for the curriculum. The Magaziner Report, and the endless talks and hours of thought behind what we did. We told them Yes by our perseverance. And then the faculty meeting and the response to it all. Close to 500 professors taking themselves seriously as teachers for the first time in a very long time. Tension, confusion, heat, no sleep, short tempers. Why hadnt they listened when we begged them to think all that out months ago? Politics and compromise permeated the three-day marathon. The rally on the second day and the excrutiating feeling of gleeful expectation. The close, close votes, and it was passed. .- - But what was passed, what was done last May? Two things were created: a new set of regulations for the undergraduate curriculum and a oneness among the student body that grew to make Brown itself into a community. Did people realize that this spirit had to be retained and enlarged in order for it all to be worthwhile? Did students as well as faculty realize the significance far beyond the Brown campus of instituting a curriculum based on a belief in the uniqueness and significance of the individual? The curriculum would demand more of everyone. Students will have to wean them- selves from a dependency on rules and re- quirements and make the important decisions about their own education. They will have to face questions that had been easy to avoid; questions about what motivates them and about the values of a college education. Professors must return to being teachers, not to the exclusion of research, but with an understanding and appreciation of Brown's commitment to undergraduate education. The administration must accept the princi- ples of the new curriculum as guidelines for every decision they make. From getting rid of the unnecessary red tape in the Registrar's office, to setting priorities in the budget, the administration must apply the principles it so strongly fought for. The success of the curriculum is a way off. We have begun, just begun. 35 36 Campus activism wasn't the usual trivia and politicking which had pervaded Brown. Rather it reflected the national polarization and politicizing of the last few years. Columbia and Chicago were part of the consciousness of every Brown student. The world outside campus gates often seemed more real to students than the halls of academia. The tube room for Huntley- Brinkley became the most popular campus nite spot. Moving off-campus, dropping meal con- tracts and cooking in your own room, campaigning for candidates or working in Washington - all were symbols of students seeking a real world at college. It wasn't surprising that students imbued with a spirit of questioning the status quo attacked what appeared unjust to them at Brown. Many felt that an institution for preserving in the community a succession of men duly qualified for discharging the offices of life with usefulness and reputation Brown Charter, 1764 should first set its own house in order. Other individuals and groups strove to radicalize Brown into a political battleground for society. They would overturn the univer- sity and make it a harbinger of the coming Revolution. By taking extreme positions and leaving little room for coherent dialogue, radicals tried to polarize a divided campus. 38 Such a situation developed in the ROTC issue, which served both as a legitimate threat to the university's standards and autonomy and as a vehicle for political action to rebuke the Pentagon. The new Cam Club asked UH for a clear stand on ROTC's future. A successful resurrection of Brown SDS signified the tense campus climate. On March 18, students rallied at Car- michael Auditorium as the faculty voted that ROTC would have to be- come extracurricular to remain at Brown. The majority of the campus ap- peared to support the resolution, al- though SDS and others called for complete abolition. President Heffner misunderstood the faculty and re- turned a telegram to Washington over spring vacation affirming the renewal of the ROTC contract. In protest, 200 students sat-in on the scheduled meeting of the Corporation's Advis- ory and Executive Committee hoping to discuss the problem. The students represented a coalition of abolitionists and those con- cerned with the failure of Brown's decision- making process so clearly evidenced in the confusion of the ROTC question for the past two years. After some exchange the trustees left without convening and President Heffner repudiated his telegram to the Navy. The formation of Students for Responsible Action evinced the absurdity of crisis politics when those students who claimed never to have been heard since they never bothered to speak asserted that Cam Club overstepped its mandate from the student body. On campuses everywhere, the basic ques- tion came to be whether the direction of the university belonged to those who held the reigns of authority, those who walked the treadmill for four years, or those who had an idea of what they were searching for and cared enough to act. Radical students at other lvy colleges used violent confrontation to polarize their campuses. Some important changes did result, but antagonisms and old structures persist. 40 Although there were opposing groups at Brown, confrontation became a continuing bargaining process because of relatively open lines of communication. The question arises whether in trying to keep cool, values were compromised that would not have been had Brown embraced an ethic of violence. We had issues, we had the polarization, we had the opportunity. In stopping short to assess ourselves, we took the more frustrating but possibly more lasting alternative of com- promise and consensus. Hopefully, history will bear us out in choosing the road less travelled. Already we had turned our efforts to the more significant issues of educational reform, and the unreality of the War loomed on the horizon as ROTC training continued into the summer rain. As an age of politicization abruptly brought its influence to the once quiet campus, Brown may have awakened to a crisis in governance but the conviction of working together has remained. There are issues and there are divisions; but there is still a chance for communication and community. Obsolete? Reactionary? That's what some like to call the Cammarian Club. Reactive is more accurate. Reactive, like any other student government or public bureaucracy. It attracts attention when the society around it becomes aroused enough to demand change, and falls into obscurity, inactivity, and even self-criticism when passion subsides. This is why, for the first time in recent memory, under the pressures of the upheaval of last spring, some real responsibility fell to the Cam Club. And basking in the spotlight of its new-found purpose, the Club became noticeably more liberal than its predecessors. Under John Salinger, it considerably expanded non-member participation, yet maintained a close rapport with University Hall. The proliferation of committees touched many areas of student life, and some skeptics even began asking each other, What happened at the meeting yesterday? This openness, however, boomeranged in the ROTC issue, when emotional rhetoric began to overshadow rational dialogue. One week SDS packed a meeting clamoring for immediate change and the next Students for Responsible Action pressured the Club into reversing its stand. But despite a batch of ineffectual resolutions, Cam Club at least provided a legitimate outlet for campus tensions. And Salinger's leadership in the ROTC sit-in, as well as the responsible attitude of other members like Susie Friedman, Lon Shinn, Jon Silberman, Joe Scali, Doug Hurley, Andy Eisenberg, and Josh Posner, helped maintain sanity in highly volatile controversy. 42 With fall came the inevitable calm after the storm. Paper reform had triumphed; most of the factional voices had diminished and disap- peared. Faced with the much more difficult problem of implementation, the Cam Club weekly meeting format practically collapsed under the weight of the government-by-committee ap- proach that spring had spawned. Sev- eral representatives decided not to seek re-election, and in a crisis of purpose, the Club discussed itself. Normalcy had returned. 43 Nineteen sixty-nine: crises and fast-breaking issues; student in- volvement; resistance to the deci- sions; widespread student doubt of the legitimacy of the Cam Club itself. The Brown Daily Herald faced the responsibility of explaining both the events and the processes behind the decisions to an awaken- ing university community. No won- der the BDH consistently had more copy than serious financial restric- tions would allow it to print. .. and no wonder editors Beverly Hodgson and Laura Hersh became probably the two most knowledge- able editors in BDH history. Kathy Maher, the third member of this impressive matriarchy, QB'd the sports staff. Page One headlines told only part of the story. The previous year's editorial policy had often resembled a Supreme Court opinion, with dissents and concur- ring-buts for major positions. The 1969 board promised - and delivered - a hard-hitting, liberal, and critical analysis of the university. There were still charges that the news itself was colored to fit editorial opinion; the words of one student summed up the view of many: The BDH is more responsible now. l read it every morning... but I still don't believe everything it says. But the days when the BDH served as a political pamphlet were over; the Herald had earned the respect of administration and students alike. WBRU-FIVI has established itself as a legitimate, licensed commercial sta- tion holding second position among the five Providence FM stations in audience listening ratings. Its switch to total progressive rock plus the effort it takes to stay on the air nineteen hours a day has won BRU recognition in Billboard magazine as one of the leading progressive rock stations in the country, college or otherwise. Though its affiliation with the ABC-FM news network and its adver- tising support give BRU a well-estab- lished air, the station has had to struggle to keep from sliding into the mediocrity of most college radio sta- tions, whose horizons usually stop at the campus gates. Ratings dont reflect the whole picture. They don't mention that the whole campus tunes in on 95.5 to study and relax, or that RISD sculp- tors create to piped-in BRU. 7 4 -rime was when you championed Pembroke as a coordinate college from your freshman flame to your senior fiance. In fact, you might have even come to Brown over Dartmouth or Yale because of the coed lure. And while early anti-Pembroke indoctrination might have stunted your enthusiasm, you still found adequate solace in hometown honeys, imports, and the few close friends you were able to make at the 'Broke. The Pembroke deans, understandably, were slow to warm to the coeducational ideal. For a long while they vetoed a generally desired coed housing project, suggesting that students dont have to live together to be happy. After all, said Dean Lowney, not all girls are Queen-of-the-May. The deans naively thought that Pembrokers were already appre- ciated as persons, not as objects. And the Brown administra- tion on the other side of the Bio-Med wall couldnt decide whether Pembroke had any endearing qualities to justify her continued separate-but-equal status. i E Only faint rumblings of discontent had threatened Pembroke's sanctity in the past. One vaguely recalls the Magrath Report and parietal liberalization, which in their day were sharp enough to crack the coordinate ice. These timid advances, however, hardly suf- ficed in the current era of instant gratifica- tion. Reform was vogue, and in the spring of '69 coeducation became the near universal cry. The whole lvy League fell from the ranks of the celibate. On the East Side, the petitions and polls of 'Brokers relegated the idea of Pembroke's separate identity to the dead- letter files. The myth of jn loco parentis died first. Two adjoining houses in the Wriston Quad, Pi Lamb and Diman, proved that chivalry yet lives at Brown by voting to disband for a year to make room for a coed housing project. The entrenched opposition was wisely mute, and coed living was at last allowed to become an experimental reality. 49 Pembroke's IDs were honored at the refec- tory for the first time, too, as the BDH quipped that one of the finest eateries on the Hill may begin admitting diners without reservations. The servings were small, how- ever, and the conversation strained. Old at- titudes died hard and as the novelty of coed dining wore off, only a few stalwart 'Brokers maintained their outposts at the Ratty. Working for coed dining and housing brought Brown and Pembroke closer together than ever before. And while the pilot projects sputtered and coeducation itself remained a yet-to-be-attained goal, a substantial start had at least been made. I could tell what kind of night it was going to be when I passed two Pennys sneaking out of Emery with their notebooks slightly protruding from their windbreakers. The girl at the desk loosed a smile when I inquired whether fate had left her in her room at that time. Silence answered the drone of the buzzer twice before I reached the door. The voice of innumerable Saturday nights past was accurate once again. Hell. I didn't want to see her anyway. : P X5 a i Two freshmen passed. At least they looked at each other with the confident bluster and excited fear that permeated my early freshman weeks. The face that had so enthralled me and had so long been forgotten traced itself quickly across my consciousness and vanished almost as rapidly as she had. The stronger memory of the intense pressure to score that had filled the West Quad remained, and I was thankful that the six of us were fortunate enough to escape to the Hegemans in November. I heard somewhere that the Quad was different now carpets, color, and chicks answering the phone. Obla-di, obla-da. Thayer Street. A main artery of life at Brown. A grimy melange in the heart of a fashionable East Side. A harsh contrast to the spring lyricism of the Green. At least the U has tried to clean up the visual pollution with its concrete science monstrosity and ticky-tacky bookstore. Midnight Cowboy beckoned at the Endless Cinema, and I stopped in the middle of my reflection. Stud! I pocketed my glasses and said it again. This time it rang truer. A white lettered message on black velvet shattered my reflection. Jon Voigt picks up with love starved women where Dustin Hoffman left off in The Graduate. I snickered. 1 thought of am Curious, Yellow, but I'm not sure why. My fascination turned slowly to mild irritation as my roaming eye picked up the next attraction. Last Sum- mer . . .love starved kids this time. Alienation is fun for a while. Then it gets boring. The Sheik floated by, jammed as usual. Between the beads a pair of eyes caught mine. They were brown and asking.The face they belonged to smiled, making it clear that she was alone. May- be she seemed too young. May- be I didn't want to hear her problems. Stud? Maybe. Not to- night. 54 Why do I always buy a book when I go by College Hill? I went in just to browse. I wondered what John Updike spent his Saturday nights doing. Or Richard Hofstadter. Or Shakespeare. Is that WBRU? guess they finally made it. A quality FM station. I thought briefly of control panels, turntables, station meetings and heeler sessions. Another freshman fantasy. In high school you can list a number of extracurricular activities. At Brown it's limited to one - that or just plain apathy. I didn't buy a book. There are too many unread books decorating my shelves anyway. They ought to outlaw Ladd's. Five bucks for an LP. No wonder they put the bank right next door. Wait call it a toss up. Arthur Palmer's is just as bad. 56 I wondered if Thayer and Waterman is still the Mecca of the streetmeet specialist. I wondered on second thought if there were any streetmeeters left in the class of '70. Laughter at masterful exploits used to rock the Quad on Sunday afternoons. Can it be any different now? Everyone tried streetmeeting once. How was it that BDH story ran? Choice delicacies for the discriminating Brownman''? We've become more serious now. Our hair is long. Wire has replaced tortoise shell. Army jackets have packed away the Brown blazers. We wear our loafers till they fall apart and then we go barefoot. If our draft numbers are bad, we forget three years of bull-sessions about jail and Canada and sign up with the national guard. And if we think the party's over, it is. 1?16 Rock is an experience in itself. It is a capsule of life at Brown in which all sorts of strange things happen. The frustrating rhythm of bare feet padding around the stacks looking for a carrel blends with the echoes of jocks run- ning in the stairwells, the high-pitched ping of the ele- vator signal, the annoying grinding of the stack light times, and the rush of air from the ventilators - either hot or cold, never comfortable - to produce a deafening level of noise. The casual browser if anyone can ever be said to browse casually - especially since they keep the pornography under lock and key comes across such animals as a history major brewing coffee in his carrel what else are those electrical outlets for?, a pink- sheeted trick-or-treater on Level 4 on Halloween night, grad students hogging every known book on a topic you need for a simple six-page paper, and about 74 sleeping beasts and beauties. The reading rooms are alive with activity. A pall of cigarette smoke enshrouds the bustle of people trying to find reserve books that dont exist, people desper- ately grubbing for a butt or a pencil or both, and a horny Brown man stealing up to the student assistant at the reserve desk. The finishing touch is provided by Brown's own Keystone Kops. Who else would check your ID even though they've seen you every day for four years and would search your piccolo case while ignoring that awkward bulge under your raincoat? .' ecmarens I Spring. You can sense It in the freshness of the air or In the zestful warmth You can see it in the color, the lemon ices, the barefeet and the first few sunning themselves on the College Green. Soon, without effort, you become involved in it - an afternoon of sailing or a game of frisbee, a peace rally, a speak-out, arguments over curricular reform. Or maybe just a nap over a pile of books you didn't want to read anyway. It's muscle stretching and mind stretching. It's the instant of awakening and being awake, when you finally ask yourself where you've been all this time. Spring Weekend. No longer simple, but produced and directed. Spring Weekend. Smokey Robinson, Lightfoot, Montoya, Joplin, Cox, Mann. At the concerts. Friday, the warm-up act is heckled, but as Smokey Robinson and the Miracles take over, a sea of Black moves forward, drown- ing the photographers' tripods. Saturday is much the same, with crowds everywhere. The Quad Show and Lightfoot share the masses and the sun, and Montoya's three encores prove that culture can draw. Then came Janis, and it is the freaks who push forward; but we're all on our feet mov- ing, we're all freaks this night. Sunday dawn brings Harvey Cox, but who can get up by 11 after spending the night with Janis? Mann does better; the Green might have been full on a sunny Sunday anyway, but a flute is a magnet - the Pied Piper's instrument. Spring Weekend. 61 For the Brown athlete, spring wears many faces. Con- ditioning in the snow is sud- denly replaced by the respite of a southern escape as final preparation for the upcoming season. Then it's back to Providence and slush, rain and mud. But the wind gives way to warm sunshine, and every- one can't wait to be out in it. Spring was good to Brown athletes in '69 - even great for some. The baseball team, under the first-year direction of Bill Livesey had its best season in a decade. Cliff's stickmen cleaned up by taking their first share of the lvy lacrosse title. The track and golf teams and the crew posted even seasons while the tennis team capped an other- wise dismal showing with a strong New England finish. Cliff Stevenson's phenomenal success in soccer makes it easy to forget just how good Brown's lacrosse team really is. They tied for the top spot in the lvies, one of the roughest leagues in the country, in a year in which half a dozen teams were in contention for the cham- pionship until the last week of the season. They took their fourth New England title in as many years and were listed seventh in the national Rothstein rank- ings. The Bruins were 10-4 in 1969, with lvy losses only to Princeton and by a single point to Cornell in the season's finale. The victories were impressive. One week made the season. Wednesday Brown set back favored Harvard 10-6. On Saturday the Bruins triumphed 10-3 over Yale, a team which went on to share lvy laurels with Brown. All-lvy nominee Bob Anthony tallied 48 points for Brown and made one-down defense his specialty. Co-captain Frank Scofield was good in the one-to-one situation while Bruce Pitt proved to be the core of the defensive effort. Goalie Roger Bollentin played even better than expected. Rick Buck, Bob Scalise, Mike Levy and John Buxton were steady workhorses of the attack and midfield. Co-captain Greg Elliot notched twenty points from his midfield slot and was asked to go to the North-South game in June. Altogether, a fine season. R A Ay r AN Y 67 68 The baseball team faced the longest diamond season in Brown history. They were the most successful ball team 16-13-1 in a decade and posted the most victories since 1925. Wins came in streaks for the Bruins. At the end of a seven-game skein which broke Brown's record for consecutive victories, they were strong contenders for the EIBL title. The team was relatively young, but they established themselves both with controlled pitching and a solid offense which did not give away one-run decisions - a Brown trademark in the past. Sophomore Bob Flanders and senior co-captain Dan Stewart led the Bruins in the hitting department while soph Bob Thorley pitched the most innings and still came up with the team's lowest ERA. The 69 season was an auspicious start for Coach Bill Livesey, and fans should be happy to know that he has the material to do even better. . s - L e Y e T e e gy GmEnFa o 8 4 ; ' - ' . H e 4+ d 44 - ;4 i 4 f . ' - - - - - - o . - p : I - For the tennis and golf teams, some outstanding individual performances lit up otherwise undistinguished sea- sons. The tennis team was 4-10 over- all, yet senior captain Spike Gonzales held his own as he met the top players in the East. Sophomore Don Smith could well go on to take Gonzales' place - he earned the number two singles berth in his first year of varsity play. The golfers had a great spring trip and were in excellent shape at the start of the season; then everyone else caught up. Senior co-captain Ted Oatis was outstanding in match play: he totaled the most wins of any Brown golfer in history, posting a 23-14 total over three years 8-5 in the lvy League. G e s After the Heptagonals at season's end Coach Ivan Fugua commented that his 1969 track team was the most dedicated group Ive ever had in my life. You could not find a better team for morale, spirit and determina- tion to do well. The Bruins put on their best showing at the Heps in years, not only in points, but here too in the number of individuals, partic- ularly the sophomores and juniors, who did well. Greg Ouellette was the team's high scorer and successfully defended his claim to the New England long jump title. Senior Sandy Stoddard surpassed his own javelin record while the mile relay quartet Steve Greene, Steve Robertson, Ev Schenk and Lee Thompson twice reduced the mini- mum time for their event. Each of the members of the mile relay team also placed individually. Their perfor- mances bode well for a better than 3-3 mark in 1970. 71 To see the Brown Yacht Club is to discover that lavishness is not essential to yachting. The clubhouse is an old construction trailer; the yachts are 11-foot dinghies; the waters are the upper Providence River. What is offered is sailing: windy days and calms, sunshine and drizzly fog; the opportunity to race, or just loaf around; to get wet in rough weather - or not. The last year has seen a successful change of sailing waters from the crowded Seekonk to the present site at Fox Point. In the future the club- house may no longer be on wheels; maybe the boats will be different. Yachting at Brown will probably never be lavish, but it will always be sailing. 72 Vic Michalson started with his greenest crew in a long time. It showed early when Columbia beat the favored Bruins in the Miami Regatta. Soon after, though, the team began to take shape with a victory over BU. Northeastern and Syracuse also fell as the necessary synchrony and rhythm grew. They got as close to Harvard as any Brown crew since 1966. Not a bad season for the varsity, if you forget about the Eastern Sprints. Coming years should see a signif- icant improvement in Brown rowing. The addition of the indoor tanks which Michalson himself designed to the boathouse has been completed. The horrible outdoor conditioning of winter should give way to a polished style developed under the roof. 4 : L 2o '. Pl pg 7 i 7 TR S W In spite of a field which looked like the Burma Road in early summer and the off-field attractions of rugger-huggers and kegs of beer, Brown's rugby club posted a combined spring-fall tally of 19-5-1. Not only was this the tenth season in a row the club has bettered .500, but they were also able to field four teams for the first time. The close of the spring was their high point with the Alumni Day victory at Aldrich-Dexter over Boston. Coming to Brown with a nearly unblemished record, the Bostonians were rash enough to claim the Eastern Rugby Union championship before playing Brown. This possibly accounted for the notable silence which fell among the loser's ranks as they left the field on the wrong end of a 12-6 decision. In the fall, wins against Dartmouth, Princeton and Harvard demonstrated Ivy superiority, while unbeaten Old Blue of New York had to be content with a 3-3 tie against the Bruins. 75 Billboards go up and spirits do too. Co-captain Dave Chenault learns the power of public relations. This would be the year of the soph sensations. Everyone heard about it- you couldn't help it. Many non-fans began to take an interest, checking out home- game schedules and picking up the names of a few key players. The alumni especially felt the pressure of the swelling Bear Rebellion and season ticket sales topped all previous totals. Even old Brown stadium came in for a facelifting. Gallons of paint coated the stadium seats in the lvy colors as we began to believe that slogans were synonomous with victories. Some hardened skeptics, though, had witnessed enough Brown football revivals to temper their hopes with levity. ... During the summer of 1969, the football coaches of seven of the world's eight most prestigious institu- tions of higher learning gathered with solemn demeanor. They had come to discuss the future of The League, that quintessential union of intellectual and physical prowess. They had heard ugly rumors that the smallest of them, Number Eight, but first in the hearts of old Brunonians, had embarked upon something called a Bear Rebel- lion to show the other seven that it was a power to be reckoned with. Now, being well-versed in Freudian psychology, the coaches realized that Number Eight's fragile ego must be handled gently lest it shatter. They resolved a ploy which, though it in- volved considerable sacrifice to them, would encourage Number Eight to return for more punishment in 1970. They would allow the Leo Nardine' Machine, as the barely rebellious ones like to call the team, to roll up the statistics but not the points for three periods of each game, then they would unmuzzle their own players and sweep to victory. This strategy seemed to go well initially. For the first five League games Number Eight snatched defeat from the jaws of victory each time. But the rebellion began to falter, and there was more talk of playing with smaller schools who wouldn't damage Number Eight's ego as much. The seven coaches knew they had to act quickly or face dissolution of The League. They decided by a six-to-one vote, Hahvahd dissenting that Number Eight's next opponent must sacrifice the game in the interest of League unity. After much consoling by the other coaches and a stiff shot of Bruinade, the Crimson walked gloomily onto the field that fateful November 15, prepared to suffer what no Cantab team had been asked to suffer in ten years defeat at the hands of Number Eight. The campus went animal, and the alumni were toasting, 'Today Harvard, tomorrow the world! The coaches congratulated themselves. Hahvahd had been humiliated some of the coaches quietly agreed that this may have been a Good Thing, but The League was safe Number Eight would be back next year for more lumps. 81 Freshman Week was upon us. The new arrivals: fresh crew for a newly refitted ship. But would it be dif- ferent? The old trappings were there: the confusion of new surroundings, the moving-in blues, the meetings with the deans, the purchasing of beanies, BDH subscriptions, and Libers, the rah-rah rallies. Yet it was different. Perhaps the Bear Rebellion spirits were alive? May- be, but there was a more significant difference. You didn't think about coededness; coededness was. And freshmen Pembrokers walked into the West Quad unescorted, looking for an aquaintance recently made... Is Bob in? ... No? We'll wait here for him guess. And the new curriculum was em- braced too. They stood in the rain to sign up for MT's, with Dean Kelly serving hot coffee...617 of them took all their courses SNC and 97 had at least one course without grades. The best class ever? Different any- way. Plagued by inexperience and injuries, the Brown soccer team still managed to compile a 9-4-2 log, with second place in New England and the lvy League. Bruce Munro and his Harvard gang, laden with names from far-away places, finally wrested the Ivy crown after six seasons in the hands of Cliff's kickers. Playing in the last games were five excellent seniors. Co-captain Fred Armenti pro- vided leadership both on the field and off, while overcom- ing a slow start to steady the squad in the last half of the season. Walt Scott-Craig pro- vided steady defense from his fullback post for the third season, exhibiting poise against some of the nation's most prolific scorers. On the front line, dynamic George King provided scoring thrust, while scrappy Bobby Young overcame a serious leg injury to contribute some big games to the Bruin effort. A chapter in Brown soccer history closed with the depar- ture of co-captain Herman Ssebazza, who for three years delighted the fans at A-D with his deft ball-handling and pass- ing. As opposing defensemen found their noses in the mud, staggered into each other, and tied themselves into pretzels, the dimunitive Ugandan moved the ball from foot to knee to shoulder and finally onto the foot of another Bruin forward. Junior goalie John Sanzo came into his own in the Amherst game, and provided top-notch net-minding for the remainder of the season. Soph Chip Young stepped into Don Smith and Pat Miglione's center-half shoes, and improved throughout the season to gain All-lvy mention. Joe Savarese, Tom Morrisey and Jon Fauver played solid soccer at halfback, while poised Dave Thurston and flashy Lee Thompson gave the team strength at forward. Along with Young, soph frontliners Jim Bender, dimunitive Rich Boski and rugged Brookes Morin gave Bruin fans hopes for a rosy future. Contributing further delight was stylish soph Jim Ohaus, who tied up All-America great Nick Alexandridis at Cornell. While 1969 closed out the DeJong- Migliore-Brewster-Ssebazza years with Herman's departure, the advent of the Ohaus-Young-Morin era is just dawn- ing, and the promise of more great Cliff Stevenson teams at Brunonia is near. ';'vi ok Ky 6' i f' - ;wW'ij, 2 e, $ Wh? .;t'. ,ff' ',,f' : 4 ,?' i Wwi M : J'f;f' . ot P st 4 Fa Pin, 9 2 ey B S - v ; X g 3 d . r Finally everything came to- gether, as previously unsung senior Chris Burgess and soph halfback Kurt Franke led the way to a 24-17 victory over haughty Harvard. Despite many chances to follow past scripts, Brown refused to lose. The anti-climax came a week later when hapless Co- lumbia invaded the shores of the Seekonk. An official disal- lowed a Bruin TD by mistake as Brown did everything possi- ble to assure the first upset against her in years. The record looked the same as in '68, but the method was different. The humiliation of the past gave way to frustra- tion. The theater of the absurd was replaced by Greek trag- edy. The soothsayers of the Sixties forsee quiet Despera- tion, while others, undaunted by the thwarted Rebellion, await the Revolution ahead. There is Providence in the fall with the Bruins. If it be not now, it well may be yet to come. P Ay B , Tiandt Tt o4 J :zn in'!qm'vnl-' ;-? : kiis,o' 91 We will definitely win at least five games, said co-captain Dave Chenault on the eve of opening day. Chenault had worked all summer promoting the Bear Rebellion and was merely voicing the expectations of most Brown fans. A shut-out over URI reinforced the optimism and the new era was on its way. The city of brotherly love was the scene of the next battle, though, and two fine teams were destroyed by injuries on the astro-turf of Franklin Field. Tough losses to Yale, Colgate and Cornell followed in the five frustrating Saturdays after the Penn debacle. Chenault and fellow co-captain Pat Foley led some fine individual performances. John Stone, Lou Shepp, John Thompson, Tony Renzi and Mark Lahey helped to anchor the defense. Gerry Hart, Bob Flanders, Greg Brown, Jim Lukens and Jay Bartley powered the offense, while tackle Jim Bruen showed All-lvy form. Game after game slipped away, as the trainers worked feverishly to patch up bodies, team coaches to patch up technique, and everyone worked to buoy the flagging spirit. '1lt's got to work, it's simply got to work . .. doesn't it? The plan was to canvas Rhode Island, to get support to end the war. But to get the petitions in the first place required organiza- tion, and lots of it. Phone calls, letters, millions of stamps. A little office in Faunce House became our home. In the excitement of the campaign, the non-violent campaign, everyone got to know everyone. It became fun. To work we had to believe. Believe that thou- sands of man hours would not be wasted and that Nixon would halt the war. Strange how belief renews itself. We believed in McCarthy and RFK and got Chicago. But the moratori- um was new, and blind confidence disarmed our logic. We might have expected the No- vember 3 television putdown; it was a cau- tious public we hoped to reach. Suppose no volunteers showed up? Suppose two thousand volunteers showed up and no drivers? Suppose no one signed the petition? If planning was the answer, there could be no doubt. Weeks of preparation went into charts, arrows, directives and a master map. A beautiful map, divided into 67 cells, multiple sub-cells, drivers routes, canvassers routes, and three colors. And recruits, hundreds more than the old flag pole rallies ever drew. In bed at four and up again at seven. Faunce House Arch became JFK International. Car after car drove in, each with a yellow number taped to its wind- shield, each picking up its crew for a canvas route. Eight hours, sixty-seven cars, one thousand volun- teers, and sixteen thousand signatures later it was over. The maps were shelved and the petitions sent off. We had done our part. Ay S z 7 ey s e v'etnan'.J But already there was a new spirit about the movement. Next month we were going national, and even larger plans for the November Moratorium had to be formulated. Besides, war protest is a warm weather phenom- enon, and there was not much time to spare. Young hoodlums! That is what four of us on our way to Washington were called by a lady on a New York City bus. It must have been our obviously hoodlum' appearance long hair, beards, beads, and blue jeans that triggered her righteous- ness. We could just imagine her reac- tion to the hundreds of thousands of our fellow peace creeps who were gathering that week in the capitol. 97 98 Our first run-in with the law oc- curred not twenty minutes after we arrived. As we were walking to Ameri- can University to find lodging for the night, a Washington police wagon ap- proached us from behind and pulled up along side. The cop glanced over, flashed a peace sign, and drove on. After a comfortable night on the floor, our first stop was at New Mobilization Headquarters. There we occupied ourselves with busy-work for a while, writing index cards for the initial list of New Mobe marshals. It was soon obvious that we would be more useful training marshals than listing them. So we left headquarters for the Marshal Training Center, lo- cated in the church just south of the Capitol. We worked about twenty hours a day and only half slept through the remaining four. Peanut butter and Kool-Aid provided by the Hog Farm commune was our sole food for the week. And since most of us were long on ideas and short on experience, the task of training hundreds of marshals for the weekend marches turned out to be more difficult than imagined. Marshalling on the March Against Death consisted of standing in the cold Washington rain and making sure the marchers didn't get hit by cars. Standing for eight hours wasn't very comfortable. One thing that kept you alert was seeing the marchers, each carrying a sign with the name of someone killed in Vietnam, walking past as if they hadnt walked the three miles from Arlington. You'd stand there reading the names, each time expecting to see the name of someone you had known. 99 100 Working a walkie-talkie along the march route proved frustrating because a few ama- teur radio operators had taken it upon themselves to disrupt communications. At least their redneck babble was enliven- ing: What vyaw-all think you're doing here? Who's pay- ing you? Russia? China? The Washington Monument was the focus of the slow moving crowds. Up close, near the stage, we had a good view of the backs of cameramen and their heavy equipment. Toward center-city, amidst the waves of marchers converging on the scene, the flag-flying, helmeted Weathermen started a scuffle with the marshals. The violence quickly dis- solved, however, as the tightly packed, peaceful throngs sim- ply ingested the radicals. Abbie Hoffman and Timothy Leary spoke their messages and Arlo Guth- rie, Pete Seeger, Peter, Paul and Mary, and the cast of Hair sang theirs. The massive ritual had elements of a reli- gious experience and turned strangers into laughing and dancing friends. As dusk appeared and the sun sank be- hind the Army helicopters, the cast of Hair capped the festival with Let the Sun Shine In. It began and ended in Woodstock style. Later we heard about the gassings at the Justice Department and DuPont Circle, which only further proved that the Moratorium was a vast chaos of personal confrontations. Each had his own niche in the flow, but all were one in abhorance of the war in Viet- nam. Washington was 500,000 indiv- iduals chanting. One, two, three, four, Tricky Dicky stop the war. 101 o i, Z rou,o, S st y .urwa Dekvya'ffle Ponthersi 7 4z Protiree,. 3 102 I knew it was going to be different even if I had been a white student changing only the scale of my life, moving from one level of society to another without entering a new social structure. But I wasn't white, so the social, educational, and cultural symbols were different, radically different. My new environment was more unreal, more staid, and more challenging than anything anyone at home could have prepared me for. There was nothing that acknowledged the presence of black people; I felt like an ambassador. Freshman adjustments at Brown were typically depersonalized; the ritual of it all was both irrelevant and confusing. First impressions remained throughout the years, though the fright, the awe, subsided gradually. I could adjust to the structures with time and some personal sacrifice. Much of white society, I realized from my university experiences, was superfluous to my existence and suffocating to my life. It would make no sense to challenge its approach toward me as an individual student without challenging the whole society's assumptions about black people and, sec- ondly, realizing that I would be defined first as a Negro and then as a freshman, sophomore or junior. 103 104 I was isolated in a white world unlike home. Neither Rhode Island nor its choice acres of lvy League were hostile to black people nor were they receptive. This was the single overwhelming impression I had as a black freshman. So instinctively my response was to seek out others with the same burden. For our class, 1970, these four years have been diffi- cult since there were only seven of us. But to laugh and jive, play ball and argue, or rap and room with Phil, Glen, Harold, Dan, Ernie, the other Phil or later on Seymour, was to escape the superficial and be real. By the end of freshman year we, and the comparatively few upperclassmen and black women, united to make these realities more lasting, a more important consideration for me than the institutional reforms we were able to achieve as a political force. .. . Q x,.'iu.!.mhhua,v gase 105 Black consciousness in me at the time was not political, it was personal - but unrefined and even undefined. The only change in three years that makes my Brown experience different from vyear to year was the development of this consciousness as a necessary element for psychological sur- vival at a white institution. The university has not changed; its attitude towards me remains the same. Most of the white students, my asso- ciates and friends, didn't pro- gress much in their attitudes toward blacks though a few personal relationships did develop. This is all that could be expected. The university is not an isolated citadel of liberal- ism but a reflection and per- petuator of its broader social and cultural context. Ulti- mately then, being at Brown for the last four years was no different than being in any structured part of the white world since all of society's major institutions share values and attitudes. 107 y 1 H e e o A The Bar-Kays - 110 In the beginning, University Christian Movement created Lippitt Hill Tutorial and EXTRA! And there was evening and there was morning one day. And UCM said: Let there be draft-counseling so our children do not get screwed by the military-industrial complex. And there was evening and there was morning a second day. On the third day, UCM initiated the Topics in Human Sexuality series to stunt Pembroke's population explosion and encourage more natural and well thought-out wish fulfillments. The fourth day dawned as UCM brought beautiful people together for Chaplains Colloquia and dialogue about our existence. A void was filled in intellectual stimuli and personal counseling. But there was still no place for people to meet. Let the coffee mess rise in the post office lobby. And there was evening a fifth day. The coffee mess begat the Big Mother in the old supply store with carpet, candles and conversation. And UCM saw that it was good. And there was night 10 pm until morning 6 am a sixth day and every day thereafter. On the seventh day, they all took off for New Hampshire to have a nice long rest. Brown blessed the seventh day and hallowed it because that in it UCM rested from all the work which they had made. And they deserved it. In the past, students often thought of Brown as a misplaced rural campus - secluded and self- contained. But lately they have realized that Brown is an urban university and have begun, in a small way, to realize their community respon- sibilities. Beyond the large picturesque homes, beyond Bryant College, there are small grocery stores - not nearly as WASPy, but practically as expensive as Thayer Market - and laundromats not new and shiny like Norge Cleaners, but always bustl- ing with housewives and children. There are apartments, often cold and drafty, the bathrooms lacking sinks, with rents inflated, to a great degree, by the influx of students. The newcomers to Fox Point typically are not those people involved in the Fox Point tutorial or the Ad Hoc Committee on University Housing and Expansion. They are looking for a place to live, not a cause to champion. Infringement into the neighborhood is viewed egotistically as the right to live off campus. Yet students living in Fox Point have learned something. They have destroyed negative stereotypes and created personal ties. Brown has realized that Fox Point is not a high crime area but a familial Portuguese neighborhood and some Fox Pointers now see Brown as an institution of people, not merely a low wage employer, a landlord in absentia, or an isolating wall. Teaching Portuguese immigrants and children to speak English, giving instruction to teenagers on how to type or drive a car, showing girls how to sew these are just a few of the activities of the Fox Point Com- munity School. This nearby neighbor- hood center is just one location where students from Brown Youth Guidance and from RISD are deeply involved with the community. In the more distant neighborhoods of South Provi- dence and Camp Street, BY Gers spend many hours trying to understand and help the members of the communities. BYG works on the Peace Corps principle: draw on the specialized interests and background of a volun- teer to place him where he can be most effective. Thus, tutorials are given in areas as diverse as the talents of the wvolunteers. Art, reading, modern dance, computer science, and gymnastics are all offered and there is an experimental course in human sex- uality taught for teenagers by a six- year bio-med student and a Pembroke graduate. The extent of the BYG involvement in the community is indicated by the turnout of over 400 youngsters and 200 students on the soccer-football BYG day. Balloons filled the air and the shared experiences proved the vitality of BYG. BYG's counterpart when it comes to community political issues is the Community Involvement Center. Throughout the year the Center has both nurtured ad hoc movements and housed some of the mare institution- alized organizations. The problems of draft counseling, grape boycotts, ecol- ogy, and university expansion have been faced under the auspices of the Center. While so many of today's institu- tions seem bent on destruction, BYG and the Community Involvement Cen- ter have done much to foster a con- structive approach. I keep telling myself to see it through their eyes. Men in rather pleasant, not too inspiring jobs. Entrenched and enjoying it. They just dont feel education with any fervor. Utopian visions may be pondered but never allowed to infect the mind. The spirit and substance of ed reform may never be achieved while we're at Brown. Neither the administration nor the faculty seems willing to revise the priority list which puts graduate education and edifice complexes above the everyday needs of the under- graduate. And then realize that they see quite a different Brown than the one I do. They see the buildings and the greens, the quiet chats, hands in pocket, diplomatic smiles. Careful nods and small grimaces never anything too extreme - disguising a lack of depth and feeling in polite rhetoric. 117 Take grades as a safeguard against this vicious permissiveness. Evaluation forms may or may not be part of the transcript depending on which dean you ask. A GISP is not a GISP if everyone is interested in the same topic. Independent concentration is a cop out. What the hell's going on here? The Brown I see does not frighten them; that would not be good form. But they do permit themselves un- easiness drowned in an evening bromo or bourbon. While 1 see some profs are sym- pathetic in their efforts to implement the curriculum, too many suffer from their own undergraduate experiences or fear threats to professional stan- dards and research time. Then again, the average under- graduate can be a rather mindless bore after twelve years of the American grade-regurgitation system. Faculty often find it a waste of time to instill a whisper of academia into occluded minds. 119 120 Perhaps they've been right all along. Maybe I am the fool. I and those who ponder and dream with me. We had better come to understand it is impossible to institutionalize a mood, in an institution of form. They never need fear or be uneasy; their forms are too illusory, deceptive, changing. Planned carefully that way to withstand direct assault. They may try and they may succeed at keeping us always confused and at a distance. Ending requirements without creating revitalized educa- tion is meaningless. The prognosis is that unless drastic action is taken by all those in attendance the babe shall soon expire, lamentably, by natural causes. SRS e Winning their last four dual meets, the Bruin wrestlers rallied to a 6-10-1 record. Plagued by lack of numbers, coach Mike Koval's team overcame forfeit troubles to save the season from complete disaster. Captain Rob Davidson, junior Serge Brunner and sophomore Frank Walsh contributed some outstanding performances along the way. Heavyweight Walsh excited Brown fans at Lyman Gym with his aggressive, challenging style. Against Coast Guard, Walsh came back from a 7-1 deficit to tie the score and pin his opponent in the final second of the match to win the meet for Brown by two points. Senior Barry Nathan ended a fine career in the middle weights, while juniors Ron Delo and Steve Batty came on strong in the late season to indicate a promising future, as did soph Mike Perna. Everything fell in but the ceiling. The lack of numbers and the depressing atmosphere of Colgate-Hoyt hurt. Individually, there were a few bright spots for coach Joe Watmough. Finishing with a 3-8 record, co-captains Steve Thomas and Marc Christman had some fine support from junior Cy Miller, senior transfer Ned Barnes and from Pete Czekanski in the long distances. Rich Davidson and Mike Mochizuki added points in the relays and freestyle events. The future could be bright, though, with freshmen like Eric Schrier and Lance Keigwin consistently breaking records while winning their events. The Yale coach was seen trying to drown himself while recalling his lack of foresight in recruiting Schrier. 125 A host of outstanding individual performances marked this year's winter track season. Co-captain Greg Ouellette won consistently in the long jump, breaking his own records with leaps of over 23 feet. Soph shot putter Doug Price built himself up to 240 pounds and increased his throws by over 10 feet to smash the school record of senior Bruce Wentworth whose own fine throws went almost unnoticed. Tim Cosgrove's sub-4:15 miles and Ev Schenk's speedy 1000-yard runs led a fine group of middle- distance runners. Bill Robbins paced the hurdlers and Bob Kingsland and Dorian Corliss headed a strong contingent in the pole vault. Coach Ed Flanagan's weight crew was ably supplemented by Marty Luftman, Brad Strand and Tim Disbrow. A generally poor performance in the Heptagonals was disappointing but recovery from injuries should make the spring forecast promising for Ivan Fuqua's team. Sitting for hours under the mercury arc lights of Meehan with little to watch save the early show of the zamboni, Brown students listened to the brassy sounds of the Brown Band, anticipating a ritual of self-assertion uncommon to the Ilvy towers of Brunonia. They waited patiently to erupt in a frenzy at the sparkling performance of a prima ballerina in the wrong milieu, whose surprisingly apt sobriquet is The Cat. They waited to watch in awe as characters called Zoo, Gator and NUMBER 2 gracefully darted about the icy, smooth stage. Directing the action was a leathery, but refined man, who somehow gave unity to the drama. The script called for Brown hockey, an epic which, in many ways, brings Brown together like nothing else. Jim Fullerton was a coach who cared about his team in many ways, not just on the field. Fighting against inferior facilities until Meehan was built, he has, since 1955, won the most with the least talent. He claims, nevertheless, that a coach is only as good as his players. During his eighth consecutive winning season, Jim Fullerton retired as hockey coach at Brown. One of his players, Al Soares '60, will replace him. Fullerton was always the complete gen- tleman; refined, but not aloof, he directed his teams with a sense of purpose higher than just winning. After an incredibly exciting 5-4 overtime loss to Cornell early in the season, Fullerton declined to put any superlative labels on the game. Sure it was a tough one to lose, he said right after the game, but Ive lost tough ones before, and I know that these boys will bounce back. He seemed like the totally detached pro- fessional, but the next time Brown faced off with the Aggies, another dimension was uncovered. Talking with scouts before the game, Fullerton was unable to finish an egg salad sandwich. Calm on the outside, he was tightly wound inside. Il health ended his career this season, but the tradition of Brown hockey he built will continue. The seniors who departed this season from the hockey team come as close as anything to a Brown sports legend. Their introduction at the last game at Meehan told the story: first came Mutt and Jeff, Don McGinnis and Curt Bennett. Bennett finished fourth on the all-time Brown scoring list, the offensive-defenseman who thrilled Brown fans for three years with ice-length rushes, moving with graceful power past two and three opposing players. McGinnis, The Cat, was a giantkiller par excellance, with acrobatic saves and a confident presence to hold the team together. Frank Sacheli leaves and there will be no more cries of Z0000 as he savagely slams an opponent into the boards or digs the puck out of a corner by sheer willpower and courage. Gary Peacock and Rich McLaughlin, with cool competence, provided the opposite media, but with equal effectiveness. Captain Bob Fleming, out for the early part of the season, returned to instill unity and technical precision in the squad talents which were best ap- preciated by the players themselves. On the ice the team finished the regular season 16-7-1, with big wins over Boston University, Harvard and PC. An overtime loss to Cornell had the fans at Meehan saddened, but satiated by the noble fight. A similarly tragic loss to Clarkson post-season at Potsdam ended ECAC hopes. Although an exemplary class of seniors departs, players like Connie Schmidt, John Bennett, Warren Radomsky, Dave McCay and Bill Coakley gave ample warning that there will be more good hockey to come. 130 131 On the East Side of Providence, a huge brown grizzly snarls angrily at motorists along Elmgrove Avenue. He is protecting a dignified anarchronism named Marvel Gymnasium, home of the Brown University basketball team. Coach Gerry Alaimo, however, works impatiently within, beginning to forge a bas- ketball dynasty at Brown. Although the athletic complex is still a dream, he works his charges relentlessly, hoping to overcome all handicaps, to create a winning tradition at Brown. Alaimo and his six players wound up with a 6-20 record an improvement over last year, but obviously only a start. Victories over Dartmouth, Cornell and Harvard were the high points of the season. This year's senior- less team and a good freshman squad coached by Leon Drury should add up to more happiness at Marvel next year for Alaimo's second season. With junior guard Russ Tyler and soph forward Arnie Berman leading the way, Brown made an excellent showing at various points during the winter. Berman led the team in scoring and rebounds while Tyler was a capable field general and, at times, a prolific scorer. Huge Bob Pratt provided rebounding strength at center, while forward Bill Kolk- meyer established a reputation as a defensive whiz. He guarded such stars as Jeff Petrie and Jim McMillan, holding both well below their season averages. Cocky Bill Kahn fired up the team at guard with his tenacious play, and powerful Oscar Colvin was a capable sixth man. At many points during the season, Colvin would come off the bench and fire in two or three quick baskets to become a favorite of the Marvel fans. The season ended on an exciting note, with three-and two-point losses to New England powers Providence College and URI. The battle could be interesting next winter when the bear will continue his fight with a determined Gerry Alaimo. But sitting and watching is not enough. As enjoyable as it may be to attend a hockey or basketball game, most of us find a need to engage in other forms of expression. Some turn to the active life, while others lean to the more contemplative pastimes of- fered by the arts. Waking up is so hard to do. WILLIAM RUFFER A 1 PETER FALK 137 Portrait of Judy Kooperman KATHY FARLEY 139 NICKY McCATTY 140 HENRY FARAH 142 Cultivation of the creative arts has about as many active opponents as anti-pollution reform. Likewise, it has about as much tangible support. Ever since we arrived here, we've been told that universities are repositories of culture. But the places weve found culture actually reposing - a mauso- leum, a converted garage, an undersize theater - seem to indicate that the arts have been viewed as less than star boarders. For a long while, we vaguely felt that the university must regard the performing arts as province of a col- lection of effete exhibitionists from progressive high schools whose main ambition was to sneak nude scenes past the deans. Then Brown gave honorary degrees to Bob Hope and Duke Ellington, and we wondered if we'd simply been aiming at the wrong marker with our interest in modern dance, film, Pinter, and opera. Some found the hardship condi- tions part of a reason for going elsewhere. Others stuck it out, lobbied for improvement, and tried to prove that masterpieces can be created in garrets. 143 When we arrived, the arts at Brown meant Sock and Buskin, music a la The Chattertocks and Bruinaires, and Spring Weekend displays. Since then, there's been an explosion of interest and ability - more art forms more often. Things have changed. It's not three weeks between SB productions, it's films tonight, modern dance tomor- row, a photo exhibit this week, a Production Workshop environment this weekend. It's not coat and tie concerts but electronic be-ins. The arts are on their way, on our way. We said so last year. Balloons and mammoth paper sculpture on the Green. Protest signs, a picket march. Fair treatment for the arts. New theaters and concert halls to match in quality the new labs and research facilities. Up the Arts. Some laughed and said of course Brown wants to be good to culture. Others dubbed the movement the politics of aesthetics, and figured it made mare sense than picketing Chase. Nobody rushed in with blueprints for a College Hill Lincoln Center, but at least the arts got good billing on the capital funds drive priorities. And a tangle of concrete forms on College St. promised to bring the art depart- ment out of its attic eyrie next year. Clearly, a lot of catch-up work remained to be done. Meanwhile, the arts were optimistically ad hoc. Hall- ways were stretched into backstage storage and costume areas, rehearsals piggybacked in the crowded theater, electronic music attacked the math building foundations. Photographers risked TB in the dank crypt of the Faunce House dark room. When artists lacked their own facilities they learned to look around campus and borrow others'. Robinson Hall became Charenton for Marat Sade. An old lecture hall on Angell St. became a Cinematheque. There was novelty. Nudes in plastic bubbles. An all-male cast for Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf. Unicycles in everything. A folk-rock Brownbrokers which may or may not have been the triumph of the generation gap genre but which broke the old mold. Poems in booklets and on broad- sheets, poets in the lounges. While modern dance and film brought in new courses and new faculty, some of the old arts dwindled. Part of the SB board started the year with a straw hat season that brought people back to the Hill all summer to see Sharon Coleman, Jeff Rosenblatt, Susan Juvelier, Robin Leder, Richard Gerace, Richard Ciccolella, and Richard Schwab in half a dozen plays. Back on the Faunce House boards, SB lost its steam. him rambled, Pits limped, Black Theatre needed more direction. The sched- ule was cut down. SB yielded pre-emin- ence to smaller, more individual efforts. We went to Trinity Square more. We hit both the Brown Orchestra and the R.I. Philharmonic. We found out about a thea- tre group at the Rubicon. We lost our shoes at happenings, our minds at environments, our eardrums at Professor Shapiro's elec- tronic music performances. We bought Ni- kons and looked at our rooms as composi- tions. Well, we said, it was an experi- ence. 148 It was - on both sides of the footlights. For some, like Jobeth Williams, Bob Bailey, Peter Schoeffer, Joy Javits, and Jon Berek, it was a way of life. For others, it was the flash of illumination that created a show, a mood, a new twist. Number them Griffith and Basile, John Beatty, and Shy Sen. Not everybody smelled greasepaint. There were those who trudged off daily, a rust-colored portfolio stopping the circulation in one arm, to a morning of Spots and Dots. They discovered earth sculpture, Willoughby Sharp, and their own definitions of beauty. They beat a path to Oakes and to RISD. Maybe a renaissance, maybe new flexibility from a new curriculum. And certainly a boost from new courses in film, writing, and drama. The arts at Brown have always been respectable - like a threadbare clergyman. It may be that they're starting to be respected as well. him ': a photo essay i..:wi As a member of the audience-in-residence which overlooks the stoop ball court which is, incidentally, an entrance to Coed College, I have a heightened awareness of the vestigal spirit of Pi Lamb. Thanks to a frequent ball through my window, cries of ace wafting sweetly through the air and a frat flag gracing my wall, I am subtlely reminded of the place where I dwell. But any resemblance to a fraternity either living or dead is purely coincidental. Although the spirit of stoops and hall hockey may live on, inference of a tightly-knit cohesive unit doesnt apply. The only unifying factor is a commitment to coed housing - a desire to see it expanded and a belief that it is probably the best living arrangement on campus. The home life of Coed College is comfortable, socially relaxing - heavy relief from the stultified arrangement. Dateless individuals stroll down to the tube room or lounge and join in cards and ping pong. Countless small and informal gatherings for hair- cutting, nightly poker games, seances, and pancake breakfasts on Sunday give people a chance to talk. The events themselves are of secondary importance. RIS 156 A group exists only as much as people want it, and many remain relatively outside dorm activities. People become less concerned with making impressions. Receiving visitors while under the hairdryer is normal; when people are allowed to mix freely, artificial vanity breaks down. It's a particularly big change for girls. Just the move from Pembroke to Brown. Pembroke used to mean eating and sleeping. Brown meant education, social life; in short, what mattered. For girls in the Coed College it is a peculiarly novel sense of being in the center of things. There is finally freedom from the five-block trek, the bell desk queue, the you have a caller call, the escorted ascent and the 1 a.m. eviction. This has probably all been said before. Coed College is a rather overworked topic of conversation, and the accompanying adjectives - natural, relaxed, informal - have grown trite. Articles will be written praising the first vy League coed dormitory to assure parents and alumni that everything is under control at Old Bruno. But Coed College is not a utopia, nor is it an escape from the world. It's just a very pleasant place to live. 159 Given the almost total lack of any convenience services for students as well as the widespread unemployment and depressed wage situation on campus, it was hoped that Brown Student Agencies would fill the void. Students began to look forward to the luxury of the New York Times delivered to the door and clean linen and towels weekly. With any growing organization, though, there are slight drawbacks. Some mornings the T7imes never comes and the sheets tend to be too short and often have more holes than material. Some people wish the food carts weren't as noisy or the refrigerators in such short supply. BSA offers a laundry service too, and its hiring of smiling 'Brokers frustrates many complaints. BSA does its best to substitute for mothers tender loving care with edible birthday cakes, life-sustaining exam-time fruit packages, room-service snacks at night. It also offers a host of other things - show tickets, discount records, a travel service, shoe repair, coffee in the Rock, Omphaloskepsis, and car rental to name but a few. Eric Natwig '69 managed this nascent capitalist experiment. Next year, BSA will dissolve to form a consumer co-op for the community, returning profits to the students and governed by a workers council. All power to the people! . an o a4 s W o oW - For fear of repercussions, no mayoral candidates attended the opening, in the spring of 1969, of New York's first musical hit without a costume designer. No such inhibitions prevented the candidates for the 1970 Cam Club presidency from attending the premiere of Oh! Cammarian! in the Airport Lounge of Faunce House. The show was staged by candidate Michael Tobey - who ostensibly was present for a candidates' debate. As Mr. Tobey began to speak, three young ladies from RISD unashamedly removed their garments and placed themselves in the forward part of the audience, giving the rear a lesson in anatomical design. The morning after, however, Mr. Tobey took cover in withdrawal. I'm pulling out to give Cam Club a chance. The Club doesn't need an asshole as president. To the people who had planned Oh! Cammarian! this was the naked truth. -rhe Faunce House Board of Gov- ernors has to cope with the perennial problem of satisfying the cultural needs of the campus. Because student attitudes toward entertainment con- stantly change and develop, the Board has to continually realign its programs to meet changing demands. FHBG has brought many distinguished lecturers to Brown, as well as special produc- tions such as a British student produc- tion of Twelfth Night, but if the magnitude of student response is taken as the main measure of assess- ment, the Board's most popular pre- sentation has always been the fifty- cent weekend movies in Faunce House Theater. Working within the limits of the existing facilities for any presenta- tion or production, FHBG has done much to supplement the cultural of- ferings of Providence. 163 164 Dammit, another commit- tee to join. Why the hell are the same people concerned with every problem that hits this campus? The same fifty kids - whether it's employ- ment, grapes, or expansion. Where is the rest of the con- cerned generation hibernat- ing? Or aren't they all too concerned? With or without Hershey the draft endangers us - no grad school or profession, no business, no husbands, no life. So they come out - 12,000 for two hours at a state house because it threatens them. Perhaps the morality of the war is questioned; perhaps we are in anguish over the ghettos and choking in the cities. You wouldn't know it at Brown. Fall trees and austere stone and brick facades cast long shadows on a quiet Green, empty but for a few dogs and passers-by. Anonymous faces traverse the campus grimac- ing at the setting sun and sharp winds. Bells mark an end to classes as they have for years, and students leave the ancient buildings for dorms, dinner and off-campus apartments. Imbued by the media, we are a questioning bunch - alert and able to solve the world's political problems as well as personal social dilemmas over meals. We confidently claim to know the answers, yet choose apathy to effect changes. A questioning involved generation? An invisible one. The evolution of the university, an observable transition occurring more force- fully now than at any other time in history, offers only irrelevancy to us. Dammit, there's another committee to join. 166 The clap of the textbook hitting the floor dissolves sensuous visions of a summer love, and attention is fo- cused once again on six pages of incomprehensible notes that is, they would have been incomprehensible had they not been illegible as well and a bright yellow blotch on your T-shirt from a fallen marking pen. It is that time of night and condition of the mind when thoughts move rapid- ly, lingering briefly on one idea, pass- ing another by quickly. Sometimes you find yourself wondering if it is all worth it - like why destroy yourself simply because some day you may want to go to grad school? Or is it that simple? In fact, have you ever wondered if anything is simple any more? Surely there must be something in those stacks of books and reams of notes that is simple . . . mustn't there? M' J ! No matter how wide you open the windows, or how many cups of black coffee you drink, or how jarring the music you turn on, much of an all-nighter is spent in reflection. There is a sense of being alone, a solitude that is all too rare today. Despite resolution to study and thoughts of a paper due in the morning, you slip into a mental limbo between the physical states of drowsiness and sleep. Then you snap awake in mid- morning with more garbled notes, a stiff neck, two missed classes, and a stained T-shirt, and you realize that it was all a dream, that such moments don't exist. But what if they did? DECADE Brown University 1960-1970 NEW FACILITIES SINCE 1959 . Barus and Holley . Parking Lot . Prince Engineering Lab . Student Activities Adjunct . Computer Lab . Parking Lot . Sciences Library . Bio-medical Research Addition . New roof for Colgate-Hoyt 10. Sharpe Refectory Redecoration 11. Wilson Hall Renovation 12. Graduate Center and bar 13. J. Walter Wilson Bio Lab OCONOOO R WN- Four distinct styles of leadership held the reigns of Brown in the Sixties. The president is a prime mover of the university, and the school often embodies his attitudes. The end of the decade saw three presidents in the space of twelve months. Barnaby Conrad Keeney ascended to the presidency in 1955 as an eminent humanities scholar and college administrator. He wielded a strong hand in university affairs and brought manifold increases in funds and facilities. After presiding over a climatic Bicentennial period, he stepped down in 1966 to become first chairman of the National Endowment for the Humanities. Ray Lorenzo Heffner, vice president and dean of faculties at Indiana, took office in the fall as the freshman president. Keeney's benevolent despotism gave way to Dr. Heffner's style of careful, but lengthy, committee deliberations. Although President Heffner left after only three years. for personal reasons, his brief tenure saw the realization of most major campus reforms. Merton Philip Stoltz, promoted in 1966 to Brown's third provost from his position as dean of the university, served as Acting President for 1969-70. He was even more seldom seen than his predecessor, but he successfully faced the few issues of a tranquil fall and winter. In March, the Presidential Selection Committee announced the election of Donald F. Hornig, professor of chemistry at Rochester, as a permanent successor and the fourteenth president of Brown University. Neither knowledge nor morals - that is, full education - can be acquired at the prescription of the student; they must be instilled by Faculty and Staff under the direction of the Corpora- tion in what is in some ways an authoritarian manner. We have revised our curriculum as frequently as any institution I know. You will have lost a good deal of your zip and freshness and gained a good deal of experience by your 25th reunion, which will make it harder for you to be sure that you are right unless you are complete idiots - and I know that some of you are. 'Apathy is when you are not excited about the same things I am. The only consideration of real im- portance in the development of the University is its quality, and quality is not achieved by sitting still . . . I would say that, next to a distinguished faculty, Pembroke College is Brown University's proudest possession. For these sentiments I shall, of course, be called a reactionary, if not a fossil; and whenever Brown moves to diversify its curriculum or expand its enrollment or apply for a federal grant, I shall be called a hypocrite. Student demands for greater relevance and for greater attention to individual needs and differences will inevitably add further to educational costs, and unless there is a massive reordering of priorities ... I have simply reached the conclusion that I do not enjoy being a university president and do not feel in the long run I can make my most effective contribution to higher education in that role. As a university president, I must strive to preserve and protect the autonomy and freedom of the university - a unique independence which can only be jeopardized by committing an insti- tution to a position on contemporary political issues. One area in which students will not make the design is in the matter of who becomes a member of the Brown faculty. They will have no decisions on appointments, promotions, tenure. This must continue to be based on judgement by peers. To thee our sympathy would we extend, Who with us common evils seek'st to mend; To give new life, new energy, fresh knowledge, To waken and invigorate the college, The hardest task before thee, all can see, Is to arouse the dormant faculty. In this thy aim thou hast the help of all, And to thy aid on all the gods we call. To thee, dear Prex, with future hopes elate, The LIBER now we fondly dedicate. -1890 Liber Brunensis N In his acceptance convocation, president designate Hornig observed that the campus had grown in size and beauty since his teaching days at Brown. He mentioned later that he was referring to the John D. Rockefeller Jr. Library, and surely few buildings have contributed more to student life. Some students, thinking of the Bio-Med Center, chuckled at his remarks. The brick fortress on Brown and Meeting marks Brown's re-entry into medicine since the early 1800s. Like the Rock, Barus-Holley and the new Pembroke dorms, the Bio-Med complex signified the auspiscious com- mencement of Brown's third century. Meehan Rink inaugurated the decade of construction by providing the finest college hockey facility and the worst auditorium in the East. The Bookstore-Office Building opened in the spring of 1970, and the List Art Center and Sciences Library are slated for completion in 1971. 173 NCAA semi-finalists, tops in the lvy League for six conse- cutive years, only one winning football squad in 10 years and an 0-20 hockey team all char- acterized Brown athletics in the Sixties. Although defeats outnumbered victories in many sports, the trend has been upward. Brown first acquired the coaches and then, slowly, the facilities Meehan Auditori- um, Hunter-Marston boat- house, new crew tanks. The Bear Rebellion brought in greater revenues and generally revived interest in Brown ath- letics as the decade closed. Promised since 1960, however, the athletic complex is still proposed. The Sixties most memorable moments were drawn from outstanding individual careers. Few students of the 1970Q's remember the last basketball game in 1962 when three-time All-lvy Mike Cingiser thrilled an SRO crowd at Marvel by breaking the school career scoring record. Bob Halls virtuoso performances on the gridiron gained more than 300 yards in total offense on each of two successive Saturdays. More recently, soccer greats Pat Migliore, Vic deJong, Ben Brewster and Herman Ssebazza joined hockey stars Bob Gaudreau, Wayne Small, Dennis Macks and Curt Bennett in providing the Bruins with their only Ivy championships until Brown won a share of the lacrosse title last spring in another minor sport. Debate is still raging as to whether the 1968 soccer squad which made it to Atlanta was really better than their undefeated and uninvited predecessors in 1967. Cliff Stevenson-coached teams gained national prominence during the decade while Vic Michalson's crew represented American colleges at the Henley Regatta only four years after he joined the Brown staff. For Jim Fullerton, winless teams gave way to a Coach of the Year citation in 1965, three years after the dedication of Meehan. Stevenson, Michalson and Fullerton established a winning tradition at Brown. It will be up to Len Jardine, Bill Livesey and Gerry Alaimo to establish that same tradition for their teams in the Seventies. Under severe and protracted physical exertion as well as punishment, one pledge collapsed and another lost conscious- ness. At Brown? Barely six years ago. Deke was shut down. Phi Gam, Phi Upsilon, Lambda Chi followed. Seventeen nationals drop to five. Swyndlestock, Toad Hall, Casements forsake greek letters. Frats meant status until the mid-sixties; even independent dorms had identity. Hope College published a prospectus and Olney hand-picked incoming members. Fraternities and their independent counterparts were the Brown way. Brownmen always claimed their frats were different. The DKE affair raised doubts, as did Swyndlestock's turkey- ringing in 1970. But hazing is gone; the ruses are vanishing. Robert Hill, director of housing, helped students create new kinds of living associations: coed and French houses, singles and off-campus apartments. Sure Brown's fraternities have adapted to the times by becoming social living units. Until recently, undergraduate history could be read in fraternity annals. And while the numbers havent dropped much, freshmen coming to a university without grades or parietals just don't seem disposed to living in places called fraternities. The rituals seem absent; the status nill. After 134 years, a decade brings greater change than a century. Hill Necessary but evil is the phrase by which Pembrokers are traditionally referred to by Brownmen. Equally ancient are the debates on whether Brokers are necessary but not evil, unnecessary but evil, or neither necessary nor evil. The answers to these questions vary according to the era considered. The maternal majority end up the same, Pembrokers. That's the only way to pin a Pembroker down. Picture the paunchy Pemby at forty, full of life and gone to seed . . . Peas in a pod - Pembrokers. Each pea is a little different ... And we Brownmen? Just pick the proper time; it's a lively harvest. Reap, for example, when the crop is fully mature. Reap when senior year simpers to a close, and each spent Pembroker drops willingly into a very domestic laundry basket. 1963 177 WHAT SORT OF MAN READ PLAYBOY? He was groomed to zoom. Smooth, and he knew it. Imitation Oxonians, dignified by tweeds and remaining properly circumspect through compulsory chapel and sit-down dinners. Executive material. Fact: Suave, social seeking chicks, like the one above, were imported from exotic places for the exotic annual Fiji Island Party which introduced them to the native island dress. Fact: Having neither secret handshake nor secret motto, the brothers of Delta Upsilon pride themselves in having the only non-secret fraternity on campus. Fact: Just leave him there . . . he already had more than his share. Maybe we ought to call his date. Naw, he can't stand her anyway . ..was a great game. Yeah, maybe we'll win the next one - if they don't throw us out of the League first. Let's cut out and get back to the house before the tinis are gone. Cool move. Source: 1961 Liber Brunensis uosuyor Dope rivals drink. Sex is called the new morality. Love is all you need, but the pill becomes essential. Doc Roswell Johnson, keeper of Brown's sanity for seven vyears, discovers the side-effects of oral contraception as he acquires national fame in the mid-sixties for dispensing pills to Brokers over 21. As the new frontier gives way to the sick sixties, more and more students criticize their country and their education. Towards the end of the decade, largely through the efforts of Ira Magaziner 69, the campus wakes up realizing it wasn't vitally alive. The sixties close on a search to overcome a hung-up world. Only Providence rain never seems to change. b L LN : - i 3 Al e oGRS A J v, .v o A o A T - L o F v, A awa ORI 0 i R AR TR e g, e OB 2 AR el Tl P T SHIP OF FOOLS HediandiStatE iy i S AN i et el Reioni PIaSticS i Oh! Advertising! ............. 118 Stoltz Eckelmann Unless you happened to be creating a crisis, you probably never met MERTON P. STOLTZ. He's been here for thirty years and, according to everybody in UH, knew every- thing there was to know about Brown. So when Ray Lorenzo Heffner said he didnt enjoy being a university president and went back to lowa, Merton Stoltz seemed a logical stand-in. From the start, he made it clear that he didn't intend to just fill a chair for the year while the Corporation found a new president. Except for an appearance at a Young Republican meeting, Stoltz was a stranger to students. Since he kept the duties of provost while serving as president, his schedule was killing. Yes, you could go to see him - providing you didn't mind waiting three weeks for an appointment. His rare public speeches were delivered slightly above a whisper. He obviously didn't like speeches or public appearances, and his answers to demands came in the form of typed statements, like office memos. Merton Stoltz worked hard. And he worked in his office. A company man, that's FDE as the dean of the College signs his memos. And he's got enough of them to write, for he handles everything from housing to curriculum while chairing and serving on a host of committees. A bureaucrat extraordinaire, Dean F. DONALD ECKELMANN is as cautious in his choice of words as in making a decision. He has learned a lot in two years, and there was a lot to learn coming from the geology department to the administration of a univer- sity in transition. Adopting student strategy, he has discovered it pays to plan ahead and rig things. He's got student interests at heart, but above all else he is a member of the President's staff. Dannenfelser Nobody thinks of DICK DANNENFELSER as an or- dained minister. He is that, yes, but he's also someone to go to when everything's im- possible and nobody seems to care. The assistant chaplain sees the seamy side of the happy college years - the kids who wonder what they're do- ing or why they're here. He knows all about the abortion and pill statistics, and he worries about it in ways that help. He seems to see his job as a matter of making things pos- sible - whether it's a seminar series on human sexuality, a problem with a relationship, or a way of getting out of Providence for a weekend re- treat. If he uses words like hassle a little too often, his effectiveness more than com- pensates for it. Pierrel Rogers Dean ROSEMARY PIERREL would really rather train her chinchillas in Hunter Lab than sit around justifying the exist- ence of Pembroke. Both are her job, and it often seems that she applies the sci- entific pragmatism of her position as a professor of psychology to her role as a dean. She slings one arm over the back of her swivel chair, lights one of the cigarettes she just stopped smoking, and gives it to you straight. She doesnt care what girls do, and she doesn't think Brown should be in the hotel and restaurant or babysitter business. But, it seems, other people do, and she plays along. He used to look straight Ilvy League: an ivy tower admission of- ficer in an ivy tower university. Now, his sleeves are rolled up, his tie is off, and ghetto schools are on the recruit- ing list. Last year admission director JAMES ROGERS swore that the ed reform students are going to read the applications if we get over 7000. Yet it's not all in jest. He has brought young alumni into the office and always has time to talk with undergrads in his casual style, even if they're not completely satisfied with his explanations of the gray areas of admissions decisions. Stevens There is a new task that Brown University has decided to confront long range planning. It seemed pretty foolhardy to expand to 7000 students without preparing for them with academic facilities or resi- dences. So MALCOLM STEVENS, vice president for administration since 1966, has been delegated the responsibility. He chairs the Campus Planning Committee, but most of his work is done behind the scenes. Last year he announced the Bryant purchase, one of Brown's largest land acquisitions. Hopefully, his honesty and forthrightness will be channeled into imagination and innovation as the scope of his job increases. Maeder PAUL F. MAEDER, associate pro- vost, was conspicuously present on the podium at opening convo in Sep- tember. He has remained influential in policy-making throughout the vyear. Intensely interested in all aspects of university operations, he sits on joint committees for campus planning and educational policy. When the engineer gets the best of him, few things can halt Professor Maeder's determination. He enjoys talking with students, but you have to stay at least one step ahead of him to see how much the wool is being pulled OVEr your eyes. et S Associate dean of the College, WIL- LIAM A. BROWN started his career in university governance as the original graduate student representative to the UCSA in 1967. Being a black political science graduate student in his thirties, he hardly seemed like a repre- sentative choice, and many students were skeptical about how his votes would be cast. Yet in Superboard's most glorious hour, the trial of 13 students charged with obstructing uni- versity functions at a sit-in protesting CIA recruiting, he strongly opposed drastic disciplinary action. Dean Brown is most valuable to the administration, though, because he has the respect of both black and white students, and in times of late night strategy sessions that is no mean feat. Even in peacetime, the waiting room to his office is nearly always occupied by students. When Ray Heffner was president and Merton Stoltz was provost, it was Ray and Stoltz. This vyear, it became Heffner and Mert when you talked to RONALD WOLK, vice president for university relations. Ron Wolk is a PR man. The best. He hadn't been here a week when the ROTC crisis broke. In the space of a month he picked up more names and games than most administrators learn in a year. And, as right hand man to the acting president and head of the com- mittee appointed to juggle the hot issue of community relations, he showed he knew what to do with them. Into an administration styled along the lines of Emily Post etiquette and sherry hours, he operated on a pace of curt incisiveness and cold beer. Excellent teaching is the most im- portant and most valuable quality that professors can offer undergraduates. Rare is the student who does not appreciate a spontaneous, well- delivered lecture, an intense seminar, a lengthy discussion at office hours or a visit to a professors home. Still more rare is the student who does not avail himself of these oppor- tunities with any of the fourteen teachers we honor here. Their compre- hensive outlook transcends the con- fines of departments and enables them to form a rapport with students which is much deeper than the subject mat- ter of an academic discipline. Banchoff Geometry to some means squares and triangles; to THOMAS BANCHOFF's students it raises thoughts of polyhedra and his movie of a rotating torus a doughnut to the uninitiated. But a course with Professor Banchoff conjures up other images to most students: a map to his home, a visit with his family or friends, or a Mobius strip he stole from the art department. Professor Banchoff's first flick has inspired responses in such media as modern dance, electronic music, and poetry. But his educa- tional interests reach beyond math, and Brown has given him the opportunity to work with the faculty of other departments both in a teaching capacity and in committee work. What Professor Banchoff values most about Brown, however, is its small size, which affords him the opportunity to do what he enjoys most just meeting people. Ahearn It's difficult for EDWARD J. AHEARN both to be a professor here and to do what interests him most. Being a professor takes too much time these days, particularly if you've spoken out on some of the important topics of campus concern. You've got to serve on the committees which have been set up to implement the changes for which you called. There are reports to fill out and letters to write. The kick of teaching comes from the interaction. Not teacher-to-pupil but person-to- person. Mr. Ahearn's classes are discussions, not lectures. He expects his students to speak to him both in and out of class and regrets not having all the out-of-class time he needs to hold extensive office hours. But when you believe that black students and faculty should be recruited you find yourself out on recruiting trips. And when you feel that grades are but a poor guide to a student's achievements you find yourself filling out numerous evaluation forms. Mr. Ahearn feels that these demands upon his time are necessary, but he'd much rather be with his students. 11 12 Morgan His forehead wrinkles up, his face looks perplexed, his eyes penetrate both you and inward to himself. Few people are more intense than GEORGE MORGAN. You feel his anguish and wait poised for an answer. A course with Professor Morgan is experi- encing the predicament of modern man in your own life. Beyond being part of every- thing you read, you confront the attitudes of others, their conceptions of man and of themselves. You learn to listen, not only to read or talk. Finding current course structures incom- patible with his beliefs, Professor Morgan originated the internationally-acclaimed Hu- man Studies major and began the inter- disciplinary University Course program, an impetus for curricular reform. He possesses an incomparable ability to integrate and synthesize. His students, who spend an evening at home with his family, have no doubt that he has found the same wholeness in his own life. He will not abdicate the responsibility of his humanity to a world of expedience; neither will he allow his students to do so. They must live the guestions now. Seldom has a new faculty member won the respect and admiration of so many in so short a time. Coming from Williams to Brown less than two vyears ago, ED BEISER has in- tegrated himself into the mainstream of uni- versity life without hesitating to confront the major controversies on campus. The immense popularity of his courses derives from the freshness which he brings to classical problems in political science. Ablaze with enthusiasm for his subject, he forces himself as well as his students to pursue theoretical positions to their furthest logical conclusion. Lectures are flavored with im- aginative examples, and class discussions jump between the entertaining and the profound. In his office he is candid yet affable - the inevitable line of students outside the door attests to his concern for the future lawyers of America. Researching topics in judicial role percep- tion, he stands on the frontier of behavior- oriented political science. Characteristically corduroyed, clever, and somewhat corneous - a thoroughly dynamic personality - Ed Beiser has proven to be a vital addition to his department and to the university in general. Beiser Ladd - Chaining his bicycle to the post in front of Maxcy or pausing to talk with a student, Professor JOHN LADD may frequently be seen arriving on campus early to finish com- posing a resolution to be presented to the faculty in the afternoon. But whatever the duty or hour, he is unalterably cheerful, robust and sparkling, the best evidence that he is a man acting on a well-reasoned phil- osophy of life. His outward expressions, personal and professional, do justice to the ideals of human dignity and individual free- dom he holds. The warmth and sincerity that Professor Ladd radiates are the qualities which enable him to teach through word and deed alike. The message is clear: social ethics are to be lived, not merely discussed. His written con- tributions to philosophy, too, show the wide range of his interests and abilities. His works range from the definitive study on the Navaho to many illuminating articles on law and morality. All thoughts are succinctly ex- pressed and reflect their author's keen and original mind. Professor John Ladd, ethicist and legal philosopher is justly esteemed by those who know him for his judgment, insight and experience. 14 Lopez-Morillas He chose embryology and developmental genetics as his field of teaching and research because of the fundamental questions they ask about the gene, its regulation and expres- sion - and the potential answers they have about life itself. He sees his discipline as a focal paint for biology in an age in which the popu- lation explosion threatens to outdistance man's ability to control it. DON KIMMEL is an enthusiastic advocate of Brown's new curriculum; his lectures in- evitably turn into discussions, his final exams into small seminars. He demands of his students with his probing, questioning ap- proach. You're forced to prepare and partici- pate and understand. The study of embryology does turn out to be a way of ordering the complex, over- lapping, rapidly-expanding field of biology, just as Dr. Kimmel claims it is. Dietrich JUAN LOPEZ-MORILLAS has the air of being not from the place but quite indisputably of it. His impeccable Old World cosmopolitanism, the isnt it so? which peppers his conversation in an approximation of nestce pas, his flawless dignity, and his command of the language and literature of half a dozen countries set him apart. So does his disinclination to indulge in the town meeting-style wrangles of the faculty. But Professor Lopez-Morillas, head of a comparative literature de- partment which was instrumental in making interdisciplinary studies academically respectable, is very much a part of Brown. With George Morgan he fought for the human studies concentration. His department was one of five specially funded by a $2.5-million grant-for-excellence. And while his voice is not heard often, it is heard at crucial moments, for gxample, in an eloguent plea to the faculty last May to rise to the challenge of curricular reform. He believes, quite simply, that each human being is unique and induplicable. He acts accordingly. There is no flashy dynamism or attractive eccentricity in the teaching style of WENDELL DEITRICH to make him notorious. There is, how- ever, a thoroughness and clarity which impresses those he teaches. His ability to stimulate students is usually pro- portional to their initial interest in the history of Christian thought and in- creases with their knowledge of the subject. Though very reserved and formal in manner, Professor Dietrich is some- times shockingly intense and candid. His straightforward, serious lectures on medieval Christianity or modern theology are frequently prefaced or concluded by pointed asides about recent developments on campus or in the nation. While he encourages student partici- pation, Professor Dietrich never low- ers his academic standards. He probes remarks and scrutinizes proposals, constantly demanding of his students the same seriousness and precision which characterizes his own work. His assistance to each student is individually tailored and is an expres- sion of sincere interest. When a stu- dent seeks aid in research, Professor Dietrich displays a bibliographical mastery which makes one wonder if there is any book even remotely con- nected to his field which he has not carefully studied. These solid but sub- tle qualities make Professor Dietrich a notable teacher and remind the stu- dent that there is more to education than drama. 15 You kill yourself for him and love every minute of it. Sure you resent him on occasion, but somehow all- nighters at the lab become a normal part of your life. Babbage sweatshirts, beards and breakfasts at Lloyd's be- come signs of the elite; Snoopy calendars and a taste for Dutch beer, status symbols. Computer science is a world of its own with values and a perspective of its own, and computer science at Brown is inextricably linked with Andy known only in the catalog as Professor VAN DAM. If anyone accuses computer science of being cold and impersonal, he's never come in contact with Andy's people. Andy and the organization breed this esprit de corps unknown at other universities or in the real world of business and industry. van Dam R RS St. Armand The general furniture was profuse, comfortable, antique and tattered. Many books and talismans lay scattered about, each a topic of intriguing tales. As the clock struck midnight, the guests who had been spread about the house assembled with holy reverence in the antechamber. Donned in tux, BARTON ST. ARMAND held a taper in hand as he slowly uttered the lines of The Raven. Students gathered about on the floor staring up into the remarkable character of his face. In the manner of my friend I was at once struck with his vast intellect which had incorporated reams of knowledge and transformed them into a sincere and personal love for his pupils. They say that freshmen to seniors at the University so desire to study with him that he teaches his gothicism seminar in two parts because he doesnt want to limit the class. He even coordinates the American Civ major. Truly he imparts his apprehension of all romantic modes as he teaches the meaning of Nature is a haunted house and art is a house that tries to be haunted. pES B.D. KARL: Beneath this genial exterior lies a heart of stone. FROM THE GALLERY: Dont believe it! No one ever misses the B.D. Karl show. That's why History 169 was moved from the warm confines of Wilson 302 to the large vacuum of Lower Manning. Even there it's SRO. Unusually witty and always inci- sive, Professor BARRY KARL is pre- eminently a teacher. He speaks direct- ly to students in terms of their own historical memories, traditional myths, and continuing problems in American history. His work require- ments are similarly integrative in na- ture. Term projects are eschewed in favor of short papers relating reading, lectures, and personal background. Barry Karl terms his unique view- paint perverse. What else can you call a history professor who reads from the scripts of 1944 movies and gives lectures on the significance of Ed Stratahan boys stories? And so what if he's a bad dresser? How many others in Brown's often stifling lecture sys- tem have the ability to be brilliant three times a week? 17 JAMES DEETZ would rather not go on tv. That's what he had to do in California; it was the only way to teach anthropology to 2000 students at once. So he likes his small class at Brown. Live and in person he senses a rapport with his students, maintain- ing that he can evaluate the total class sensibilities. That is one reason why Anthro 1 had over 500 students last semester. All the other reasons come from the same source - James Deetz. His goal is, Maximum information with minimum pain. He lectures with his hands. His constant movements all over the stage are amplified through his throat mike. He claims that his average of 8.9 puns per lecture - 8.3 of which evoke shudders, groans and hisses - is purely accidental. He wields his free, loose, humorous style to emphasize the important thing about anthropology: it exists not as a mere collection of data but to glean a true appreciation of the past. He aims at a better perspective. While working his site at Plymouth, he asks his students to realize that the Pilgrims dropped out too. James Deetz belongs in front of his students - live and in person. And they can easily adopt his own reason for being there, It's fun. I'm enjoying myself. It makes me a better person. One day we are all working in the studio and Bill says hey, why don't you bring food into every class and I say hey, better idea, why dont we have a Christmas party, so Bill walks up to MR. KOREN and says what's this I hear about a Christmas party at your place to which Mr. Koren, slightly taken aback but not real- ly fazed, says ok Tuesday night and draws a map to his house. I am told that Mr. Koren is a brilliant printmaker, and a New Yorker cartoonist, and author of a children's book Dont Talk to Strange Bears. A sketchy caricature of wire frames and a large mustache on the ceiling says am a walrus. The best thing about his class is that no one is hassled. Mr. Koren guides, he doesnt push. Standing back, focusing in on your work, really seeing things. Mr. Koren says that he doesn't have a philosophy of education; his students dont mind at all. Koren 3ejlod Every time DR. FRED POLLAK faces a freshman Physics 5-6 class, he finds that most are prospective phy- sics majors. Yet his greatest concern is to teach students, not just physics. And so he steps out from behind his desk and walks into laboratories, get- ting to know his students and drawing them into a greater depth of under- standing. Dr. Pollak describes his method of teaching as Socratic. Dont just copy the numbers off the dial. Why does it work that way? Search and dissect physical concepts for meaning, he says, and place them in an historical context of scientific development; study them as one would study poetry. He thinks we are building a tower of Babel, with everyone speaking a different language. And while he is somewhat pessimistic about solutions, he makes the problems, like those of the physics he teaches so well, sound interesting and challenging. BILLY: Man on the bicycle, with mustaches to match. Tha's cool. Dance is his bag. So's his knapsack, and almost his coats, down to his knees. Tha's cool. Life's his other bag. Take his sense of humor. She Loves his gypsy violinist doing the tango, and the Good Times dancing railroad trains and worshipping the boss. And you should catch the way he Exercizes with her arabesque croise balanced on his pinky. Tha's cool. But most superb is his laugh. When he saw the movie Zorba and the Greek said something funny most people laughed ... then Billy laughed . . . then the people really laughed, and applauded, and good ol Schwartzy yelled, Hey Siegenfeld, shut up. It's that distinctive . . . and loveable. But he's pure. He laughs and loves, lives and dances with poetry, with his heart. 20 Siegenfeld Griffith Basile AL BASILE is talkative and eloquent, a complex half of a complex writing team. He doesn't find writing easy: ''you have to tell the truth, be per- fectly honest with yourself and your reader, or it's a fake. Al is still experimenting, and hasnt decided if he wants to be a poet, playwright or novelist; and so far he has tried them all: three musical shows completed, a novel on the way, plus a constant flow of poetry. Al's fellow craftsman for three musicals has been BILL GRIF- FITH. Bill is a born and bred New Yorker, Al notes. The whole cultural center of New York is in him. He's seen zillions of plays and knows all there is about the Broadway musical theater. Bill's capable of much diversity - he started in high school as an accompanist, he's acted the role of My Fair Lady's Henry Higgins, and, at Brown, he's composed his first musical scores. He's going to law school to become a theatrical lawyer of course. Bill was also the musi- cal director of She Loves Me. e complement each other well, I have tremendous respect for him. Four years ago the Brown Debating Union was memberless and moneyless. Then RICHARD TRAINOR arrived. With characteristic diligence, Rick painstakingly cultivated various sources of support, often relying on funds from his own pocket. By match- ing his enthusiasm for a revival of forensics at Brown with his skill as a debater, Rick presided over the rapid metamorphosis of the Union into national prominence. Last year, large- ly through Rick's persistence, Brown was ranked tenth in the country. It was the interdisciplinary chal- lenge of American Civilization that attracted Rick as a concentrator. His remarkable success in American Civ has been characterized by the same crisp manner, clear thinking, and rich background that make him a standout debater. And while Brown may have eliminated grades, it certainly didn't inhibit the spirit and ability that Rick brings to his several pursuits. Phi Beta recognized this, as did several blue ribbon panels, and Rick is the class of 70's only Rhodes Scholar. Trainor When Pembroke's SGA dissolved and Cam Club went coed, many thought girls in student government would do nothing more than knit at the meetings. But these doubters were mistaken, for SUSIE FRIEDMAN's three years at Brown have left little time for sitting around. Ira provided the impetus for educa- tion reform and Susie supplied the motion. After transferring from Northwestern, she helped the move- ment grow from the Working Paper to passage. She is called on to speak with alumni groups, as well as college educators and students throughout the country. Her confident smile in time of crisis reveals a thorough joy of living. Major- ing in economics, she is vitally con- cerned with the processes of reform in national government. Her black scarf with its multicolored fringe attests to still another talent - even Susie Fried- man wields a mean knitting needle. Friedman Pembrokers are grinds, right? Wrong. CANDACE SLATER's GPA may put her among the first in her class, but it doesn't describe her, confine her. There are too many places to go, and too many people to meet - truly good people. So she spent last year abroad with the International Honors Program, visiting a dozen countries, living with various families, studying: all those good people. She's been Arts Editor of the BDH this year, and worked for the Record in the past. Being a teach- ing intern at Exeter gave her a chance to reach out too, as did attending the Breadloaf Writers Conference in Ver- mont. Writing, yes! Isn't writing the best way to communicate? Poems, like the one that is being published in the Wesleyan Alkahest, and stories too - a children's story accepted for publi- cation by McGraw-Hill. And next year, Candace? Slater Hodgson No, it's not her eyes that seem to penetrate you. Nor the bright red hair. It's that laugh. That little catchy laugh that everyone seems to pick up after just a few minutes with her. But that laugh has too much behind it: the satire and criticism of one of the most perceptive and original thinkers to grace the campus in a long time. BEV HODGSON started out quietly by writing scathing reviews for the Brown Daily Herald. She became editor; more powerful, more professional, but no less scathing. The printers complained that she was too much of a perfectionist. She is. Bev assumes an air of supreme confidence which she spices with enough jest to keep things flying fast and furious. You may have seen her working, relating to typewriter and paper at a pace and productivity you couldn't believe. After retiring from the BDH, an experience she doubts will ever be equalled, she served on the presidential Pembroke Committee. She is not so much a feminist as an individual in search of liberation from stifling mediocrity. Take heed. Things are not always what they seem. Bennett There is perhaps no one involved in student affairs at Brown who com- mands more respect than DAN THOMPSON. The most important members of an organization are not always the most flamboyant ones, but rather those like Dan who possess the humility and talent to provide gui- dance for their colleagues. Although Dan declined pleas to run for the Cam Club presidency in his junior year, he subsequently fulfilled an almost impossible role in student government both as an eloguent spokesman for the entire university community and as the most over- worked vice-president in Cam Club history. He learned the politics of curricu- lum reform in a matter of days and served as a major negotiator in the Afro-American Walkout, ROTC Ad- visory Committee, presidential selec- tion, and the equal employment coali- tion. He has been instrumental in the AAS, Transitional Year and Summer Programs. Dan is exceptionally soft- spoken, but when he has decided it is time to speak, everyone listens. Thompson CURT BENNETT is all motion. In the Garden a couple of years ago Brown was beating St. Lawrence by a goal. The Bruins were short a man and the pressure was intense. Curt got control of the puck and started down ice. Crossing the blue line he fended off the last defenseman with his left hand and shot with his right hand. An impossible shot. The goalie thought so. But the red light never lies. Seeing Curt perform is thrilling. He can be a whole hockey game, a news- reel of himself. As he projects himself weaving down the ice, you can feel the crowd chanting and screaming; you remember Curt and a few thou- sand fans leaping at the sight of yet another goal. Drafted as a sophomore by the St. Louis Blues, the super-star enjoys an assist as much as a goal. He's a team man who would rather play tough opposition, since he feels it's more fun when you know you have to win. Curt, when a freshman, once asked his roommate, Don McGinnis, Do you think ll make the team? To which the sage replied, Youve got nothing to worry about. Salinger LAURA HERSH shattered the Pembroke mold early. First the BDH, then hard work for ed reform. She has a sharp understanding of the processes of the university and a particular concern for the individual student caught in its administrative web. She is deeply concerned with the personal rights of college students and lived the mature life she strove to bring about at Brown by her many activities. Her sense of justice and priorities served as superb models for the two classes of BDH freshmen that trained under her. Her ebullient and com- passionate personality helped many a BDH staff member stick through the rigor of her closest friend's board. By her sincere human concerns, you'd never guess Laura spent long hours in the psych labs augmenting her interest in behavioral psychology. She plans to teach after college. Always having been interested in learning, Laura wishes she were entering Brown now because the possibilities are so much greater for a truly individual education. The tough act to follow routine didn't bother him too much. JOHN SALINGER's contribution to Brown, though less spectacular than that of his predecessor, was of substantial value. His role as campus leader and more importantly as campus peacemaker was a behind-the-scenes operation that only those intimately involved in each crisis can fully appreciate. Out of concern for the war he personally initiated both the Vietnam Lecture Series in 1968 and the Vietnam Moratorium Committee. His participation allowed needed change to oceur swiftly but without the violent disruptions that have plagued many umversmes His contribution in electing Brown's new president was crucial. And yet when things went wrong - especially amidst mounting criticism of Cam Club, John accepted blame and responsibility with a grace not normally associated with campus politicians. He quickly outgrew the naive concept of student power for a realization of the growing complexities of campus problems. He brought coffee to Cam Club, mailboxes to the members, and shared his sense of humor with those who shared his problems. ysiaH Religion, to be meaningful, must express itself in all spheres of life, not the least of which is the political sphere. Political action, to be meaningful, must be grounded in moral responsibility. PETER LAARMAN's involve- ment in Brown University has been marked by these two realizations. Although rarely in the limelight, Peter has consistently played significant roles in Brown's most important issues. As UCM president during his junior year, he strongly promoted the interests of the poor and minority groups, most notably in the campaign for Project Equality. From that time on, Peter served on the Equal Opportu- nity Committee, which has attacked problems such as the covert discrimination practiced against minority groups by construction unions and university hiring. He skillfully blends a deeply rooted social concern with reason. It has been his insistence upon total factual preparation and refusal to seek center stage that has distinguished him as a leader at Brown. uewJeet Her earlier theatrical experience prepared JOBETH WILLIAMS for the object-of-every-red-blooded- American-male's-affection roles she received in musical comedy in Sock and Buskin and Brownbrokers. First, the lead in Nell as a freshman and then sophomore year, the girl in Pal Joey and Good Times. Jobeth trod the familiar path carved by genera- tions of Pembroke actresses who won the hearts of Brown men. She was popular with audiences and secure in her own mind's world - but only temporarily. Jobeth was, is too greedy for gut experience to let her- self slip into a Rodgers and Hammer- stein dream world, and so she took it upon herself to find meaningful work in the performing arts. A screaming Maenad in The Bacchae, Goneril in Lear, a mummy in the Ghost Sonata and Electra in Orestes. Jobeth is a rarity in the acting world. She has not been satisfied with the patterns which have been set down for her and has taken up the challenge of ever more demanding roles. Her struggles within the theatri- cal medium are personal and intense, and for audiences and friends alike, they are always invigorating. 28 Williams His ability to remain rational and penetrate the superficial aspects of an issue by asking piercing questions, makes him a most effec- tive leader in times of crisis as well as calm. As Coordinator of the Afro-American Society, PHIL LORD is guided by the balanced per- spective of a profound and genuine religious consciousness and a deep sense of social re- sponsibility, initially to black peaple. Apart from the political sphere of campus reforms and Afro affairs, Phil, a physics major interested in electronics, reads extensively in religious and philosophical thought. Conse- quently he takes a philosophical approach to his own conduct, evaluating his actions and relationships with a keen sense of his purposes and goals. His contact with people has a warmth atypical in campus leaders of Phil's stature. Lord BZZBQass HERMAN SSEBAZZA left Uganda for the United States with no intention of playing soccer at Brown. He had been playing all his life, kicking tennis balls until he was big enough to kick the real ball. He played with the real ball at Brown and made the real All-America team. But he quietly recalls that he had no ardent desire for such fame; he played simply because he enjoyed it. He was shocked by some of the things he's seen in America. Football for instance - the violence frightened him, until he grew accus- tomed to it. The racial situation dismayed him, too. l never knew I was black until I came to America. He has identified with black problems here and has worked to alleviate them. Herman has seen the best and worst of two worlds. He sees no simple answers to any of the problems, but. knows, that when he returns to Uganda he has a lot of work to do. . 50 ool e 4 n pi .44 Yy e RINIO 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. - 8. 2 R. Washington J. Webb D. Breuer R. Forbes P. Covey J. Williams D. Jones C. Knapp M. Chester S. Mitchell P. Barnett G. Normile K. Marshall . Gregutt Garbose Andelson Rosenberg Smith Gross Smucker Furuya Greene Littlefield Spicer Formidoni W. Alpert sYomME0ODrwo ALPHA DELTA PHlI Many thoughts, serious, funny and ridiculous come to mind about the past year at AD. First there was the Infamous Housing Battle, in which the wily AD's managed to overwhelm, through sheer force of numbers, the power of the Housing Office. Ah, victory was sweet! Then came intramural sports, the idea was not winning or losing but how many routines we could successfully execute in the allotted time. Obviously, we were champs. The Grim Reaper, D.J., Chas, the Token Jock, and many more: sports heros all. To complement our physical attributes, we indulged in a wide range of spiritual activities, led by Brian Jones and Santa Claus Spicer. There were literary works in great profusion by Strobe, Squirrel nee Mole, Fresh Garbose and the Unheralded Brer. Cino's incredible routines, Von Zink's twisted ver- bosity and Fuji's pool playing, Gilbert and Gringo and Henry's beautiful Rufus all added to the anarchy and dieversity of the non-House. The champagne partied as well as the spontaneous and unregistered get-togethers' provided great cultural and physical outlets for AD's and others. The serious dedication and wit of our elusive President added a touch of order to the whole incredible year. Here, Here! . .. There, There! 33 BETA THETA PI Beta started the year off on a sound basis, with a well- planned budget and a strong pledge class. Unfortunately, neither could be philosophically justified, and Beta settled back into its traditional ways. Dog joined the Tunes oer the Boar, Lurch faded to New Brunswick, and Beta went through three presidents in one month. Sundt traded a trailer for a shamrock, and Sandy's bachelor pad was always S.R.O. The great O.M. became Melmoth, while ZBA did his wandering in the Clean Machine. Psychedelic music and atrocious tweeds made further headway, but despite Ski's plea that the house keep in tune with the times, most Betas were content with living for today, via the pool table, color tube, and those good Narries. Manning sang the Crystal Blues, Ron Rico reached for a full grasp of his native tongue, and Bert resurrected his trombone. Clearly, it aint the old Beta house. 1. Z.Antonio 11. G. Sandel 2. S. Garver 12. C. Eastwood 3. B. Palmer 13. P. Meyer 4, M. Niedner 14. T. Dresser 5. C.Brown 15. J. Reise 6. D. McLaughlin 16. T.O'Meara 7. E. Szymanoski 17. E. Wilson 8. T.Caldamone 18. M. Byers 9. T.Garrity 19. D. Sundt 10. A. Potter 20. B. Orrico 35 K J. Lucas B. Pucci J. Duncan S. Mitchell W. Shears A. Oakley K. Weiner J. Wright S. McGurn Marilyn J. Delany . Richard . Lamont . Hook . Miller . Ranger . Rekas . Stanford R. Bush Chang J. Mittleman D. Sollenberger D. Williams D. Gillespie J. Barylick C. Dunn S. Doyen R. Butcher D. Stein T. Martin T. Weaver J. Fechheimer K. McKinney B. Burundi G. Tanaka S. Schottmiller 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. Links L. Fuertes G. Hay J. Hawes Eng alo 29 30 PR s CASEMENTS And in winter, under my greatcoat, I wrapped myself in swathes of news- paper, and did not shed them until the earth awoke, for good, in April. The Times Literary Supplement was admirably adapted to this purpose, of a neverfailing toughness and imper- meability. Even farts made no impres- sion on it. I cant help it, gas escapes from my fundament on the least pretext, it's hard not to mention it now and then, however great my distaste. One day I counted them. Three hundred and fifteen farts in nineteen hours, or an average of over sixteen farts an hour. After all it's not excessive. Four farts every fifteen minutes. It's nothing. Not even one fart every four minutes. It's unbeliev- able. Damn it, I hardly fart at all, I should never have mentioned it. S. Beckett 37 53 sl sa The Delta Phi Omega house of fraternality has survived another vyear replete with piles, chez Elmo's, meaningful relationships. St. EImo's Hall's walls haven't been the same since the opening of the G- Center bar. H-Coming Weekend saw us capture the Float Award for the second straight year. And Donner was Queen. There were multitudinous University jocks in football, soccer, track, swimming, hockey, baseball, lax, and crew. Cheerleaders were led by Batt, and intra- mural squads took the big, golden, delicious under the mentorship of the wily Fungo. Duke and Joke took pleasant trips. D-Poo had its share of Bruin Clubbers and Keymen; Laz was on the Board; Rubes, Bic, and Chirp were class officers. Matt and Mr. Mustard were the main photog men. A diver- sity of bags. But the scene remained much the same with Bermuda and X-mas weekends, bridge and tube teams, road shows, Chance and K-K-K-Katie's teams. The Lodge carries on, chang- ing, we hope, for the better. 38 PN R. Lane Bacon . Evangelista Cannon Walker Leslie . Synakowski . Weaver Clancy Devine Junker Tripp Yanches Kirk . Martens Brais . Thurston . Henderson . Osten . McRoberts Babcock Purcell . Puffer Donahue Clifford Buek Plump Supko Schrick Cole Jacobsen Thomas Sparrow Taylor Cole Lally Gentile McDonald Pollack Moritz Kane McEvoy Difranco Connery Nadel Carver Greene Oatis Holloway Day Gregory. Beers Castner Boesch Thayer Abraham o AROTO TR DDA MIDADMO S IO PN ODAPO IENONOEDWOOTRONHCEDO DT ,,,,, 15 2 ot i 2 o 4 ?g DELTA TAU Delt returned this Fall exceptionally strong with its forty plus pledges. But things haven't really changed, as 'stop and shop' Stoney continues his sprees despite football. Notes still dreams about going to class, while Vuke thinks of Minnesota. A.T. has rejuvenated with the sophs and Shu continues his forensic follies with the I.F.C. Wedding bells found Tucker + Debbie, with Ralu and dirty Linda, and Roger and D. Scott soon to follow. Fuf worries about med. school and captainships. The country club con- tinues, with Rhoda Burger and R.A. Apple making the rounds constantly. Bubs, Nick, and Stump have discovered some local talent, and the ever-present 'O. Rourke can be heard on any given night. Mini-Brigading continues, as the hoag shows forever pursue Mitts and H. Pablo. Au-Au is in luv, and Rupe, Rock, Trash, and Wildman prepare for lacrosse with sandwiches as the training meal. Doc, Armen, and R.W. re- main. Zeke's back after being out to lunch while Chateau and Mas have moved high up on Parkis street. Academics is also of prime importance to us Delts. LRI RI SN S F. David N. Taft B. Hayes M. Lonski S. Dowdle M. Babcock D. DiMicco D. Price K. Franke J. Thompson J. Stone J. Gronefeld J. Shannon F. Walsh K. Cleere R. Scofield D. Holmstead B. Rose D. Singewald M. Dolan D. Trickey M. Buchly J. Lynch A. Walker G. Asaff P. Sorensen T. Misuraca J. DeDonato P. Bash B. Steele A. Dresdale J. Shulak J. Eaton J. Sussbauer M. Lahey T. DiNoto F. Armente F. Murnighan A. Cathcart B. Peterson A. Shahinian D. Rogers S. White R. Emery K. Wilde M. Adams M. Jacobs J. Holod J. Zogg G. Hart P. Muscato S. Halpern S. Hopping 41 - -x il 2 3. 4. 59 6. 7 8. . 0. D. LeShay C. Williams S. Brown A. Balucci R. Tyler F. Besosa J. Paris G. Strauss J. Jones M. Plansky E. Hunt J. Linsly B. Young V. Chao D. Spiro M. Danner Q. Cromwell T. Butler B. Dulgarian D. Augenblick R. Boskey J. Riley D. Mountain B. Buchanan D. Hendrickson J. Kaplan L. Falcon J. Savarese D. MacAdams J. Scott F. Foster J. McGlynn R. Hammitt J. Ouderkirk C. Clinch H. Peck G. Mountain B. Goldwasser B. Smith A. Zimmerman 42. 43. 44, 45, 46. P. Szura J. Fauver D. Andus B. Morin C. Young R. Vazzio KAPPA DELTA UPSILON The brothers of KDU returned from the summer for another year of good ole frat life. To guarantee the success of all activities, President Mountain ran the house meetings with iron-fisted control. Most suc- cessful of the brothers were King Cobra Vic and Jerry Prince Python Linsly, who ran their own personal Satur- day night dating service; Min- nesota Mike opened his pool hall to any passing sucker. While Fox and Rotch kept the house flame burning brightly, Jeff headed the Community Involvement Project and Ro spread the light through the International Office. Lance Cannon and Troy Savage, alias Duke and Swede, desiring to destroy their image as social butterflies, teamed with Jim the Greek and Coc to lead State to the Mud Bowl crown. Chock's KauKau Kitchen and Betty's Penthouse Palace were frequent stops for Jim, and his friends Sundance and Butch. Meanwhile T. Alt tried Nuts but preferred Beaver. Hitherto a veritable bastion of sartorial conservatism, as evidenced by their strictly lvy appearance in last vear's fashion forecast, Phi Delt is now the vanguard at Brown of the new mod wave in expressive attire and accessories which is taking the nation's campuses by storm. Whether it is a late night dinner date in the fashionable Federal Hill district, an evening of danc- ing at Sayles Hall the East Coast's premier rock AN N T PHIDELTABETA emporium, or lunching at Feeney's Brown's see and be seen palace of culinary delights hi-tempo creativi- ty is the watchword. The fashion conscious Phi Delt can be seen excitingly turned out in a multitude of multihued avant garde styles at functions from New- port to the New York System lounge. It's a look that's definitely whats happening in today's fashions. Nagata Erwin Harbison Tillson Campbell Walkerman Baker Campagna Mahler Mell Spiegelman Morse Werner Gaskins Greene Boriotti 1. P. Klinkow 2. J.Leal 3. J. Hammett 4. C. McDonald 5, A. Olney 6. R. Avery 7. S. Munch 8. T. Espinosa 9. N. Swanberg 10. S. Cahill 11. T. Petty 12. D. Gabe 13. C. Styles 14. C. Smullyan 15. S. Reuman 16. D. Avery 17. S. Curran 18. D. Leff 19. B. Purvis 20. W. Olson 21. C. Ulicky 22. B. Pourciau 23. D. Warlick 24. U. Lachler 25, S. Crary 26. L. Jones 27 T. Chatellier S. EG R. D. A. St . R. M. I M. EN M. R. St T i g Finn 45, R. Horton 46. J. Constantine 47. H. Ketcham 45 46 15 P. Lambert 2. K. Condon 3. R. Lazarick 4. J. Spears 5. J. Guyuax 6. R. Barlow 7. S.McLane 8. A. Shers 9. K. Reader 10. J. Reinke 11. G. Costlow 122 T. Plunkett 13. T. Lansdall 14. P. Feinstein 15. B. Schneider 16. J. Gaudiosi 17. J. Mullen 18. B. Hoenig 19. S. Aitken 20. S. Robinson 220 B. Brown 225 B. Pratt 23. L. Thalhimer 24, G. Armstrong 25, L. Roedersheimer 26. R. Waters 271 P. Pine 28. L.Lod 29. T. Totaled 30. M. Bedard 3P J. Stankovic 32. W. Darnell 33. Manny 34. C. Dovey 35. G. Morse 36. L. Liquori 37. E.Horton As one of the few remaining national fraternities left on campus, Phi Psi ranks as one of the most unified houses at Brown. Although not one of the larger houses, we have found a unique strength in our diversified membership. Last year saw our intramural forces capture both the Lanpher and Swain Cups, a first in university intramural history. This fall, lead by senior president Clayt Dovey, we successfully defended our touch football title. The volleyball champion- ship also remained in our grasp with the aid of half the varsity basketball team. On a more somber note, though, the men of our fraternity mourned the loss of Brother Stephen E. Newsom who was killed in a motorcyecle accident in France this past summer. We now look to the future to provide a variety of treats with the recent initiation of a typically multifarious and spirited pledge class. PHI KAPPA PSI N R A L 0 Between University ultimatums and the on- slaughts of Destructo Man, it seemed as if the sanctity of the pine-paneled womb would not survive 1970. However, the enlightened presi- dency of the local laundry magnate and his karate-trained enforcer made possible another dazzling season of Swyg routines, Tungi descended from the Cloud Room Bar long enough to initiate seventeen new members, while the Gronk engineered giant beer cans and a new bar. Jail Bowl Barnes directed two victories over Pen State, while Krieds and the Mad Hawaiian pushed intramural teams to unprecedented levels of achievement. While the Spunker and three of our bad boys amazed the gridiron fans, Big Billy was called on to dominate the lvy League boards. Socially, Earl amused and titilated the cock- tail crowd, while Thursday Happy Hours stretched into long weekends. At last, the class of '70 had to leave old Brunonia, but will carry forth the spirit of St. Scholastica. Let chaste havoc reign.. .n d SIS SR G. Randolph F. Williamson J. Maddock J. Brenn J. Vesce Billings Craig Tate Zink Fullerton Phinney Henderson Bullock Kriedman Maslowski Aguoyo Fellows Brennen Tranter Groenke . Magat Barnes Soifer Phillips Fitzgibbon Giso Hatfield Hill Roberts Sinnott Rynar Sedey P. McCarthy S. Terni W. Soriano M. Ehrlich S. Wagner S. Campbell R. Davis stsepomMtGErsHntEa0nNE0HDH00 49 SN DI .E:.ik. THETA DELTA CHI This season the lodge realized traditional, as well as many contemporary aspirations. Once referred to by a transient dean as a crazy blend of jocks and intellectuals, the brotherhood of Theta Delta Chi in 1969-1970 truly did contrive to live the image. Blessed with the return of Fast Egg, the house entertained the influence of the old guard, Krenz et al; and as usual it had its share of fine athletes including captains Herman, Davidson, Christman, Cosgrove, Ouellette, and Robertson. Conversely, there was Shibs who embodies the intellectual fulfillment of the future for the frater- nity. The new era. Crews ranged in length from Pizza Pete to Tona- wanda; and striving to retain its hard core apathy reputation, tube and cards prevailed as most popular pastimes, right Mitch? The characteristically colorful social season was high- lighted by the annual spring production, hats off to Pete and dean and Especially Chief, voted outstand- ing fozzard. The lounge was haunted by an occasional wolf or rhinoceros, not to mention Ralph, O'D, or Dr. Zarkoff. Lastly we dedicate the year to our president most honorable, who does indeed have tradition on his mind. 1. D. Clifford 19. M. Christman 2 R. Whikehart 20. B. Liddecoet 3. M. Tywalk 21. J. Kennedy 4. W. Toll 223 P. Lu 5. J.Bender 23. C. Miller 6. R. Del 24. P, Czekanski 7. G. Corwin 25. M. Olender 8. T. Disbrow 26. T.Shibano 9. J. Robbings 27. H.Swirsky 10. E. Schenk 28. D. Greene N CRShilltz 29. S. Van Ness 12. W. Muechiniger 30. R. Davidson 13. C. Sullivan 31. D. Noonan 14. B. Marble 32. T.Cosgrove 15. J. Doherty 33. P.Coop 16. J. Mitchem 34. C. Keitel 17. V. Barbera 35. L. Tummino 18. D. Rollins 51 52 TOAD HALL One full year of liberation from national ties has passed! Freed from such a restricting affiliation, the mind of TH is in the process of moving left and consequently all has gone to pot. The resident fellow has moved off-campus but his constitution is still around. As ever, Mini's spirit looms greater than his presence. Capt. Fols, Gates, Golly Gee, and Joe A. bid sad farewell to the gridiron with mixed emations. My real name is Don but just call me Beatle. The wayward French scholar has just returned to the pleasure of the local chiquitas. Llama, Dr. DooBullett and Meese are the names and perversion's the game. Moustache Mahoney, Junior Barnes and Sundown managed to keep things high in their sphere. Word's out that Verbs will publish his college love stories soon. F. Scott Greene has met his match. Smart money says Tricky Dick is in San Fran. The omni- present stalwarts of the Right, the Duck and the Dog, with their talents in logic and debate, will surely go far. Brunonia, Adieu. 15 P. Harper 16. C. Monk 2. D. Pascoe 17. D. Ferrell 3: D. Owens 18. J. Newton 4. A. Uois 19. P. Eagan 5. B. Flanders 20. D. Ferriter 6. D. Dube 21. M. Donahue 2 P. Gray 222, N. Madera 8. J. Carroll 23. B. Brewer g. K. McGrath 24. J. Nicholson 10. A. Arnold 25U Cox 11. V. Evans 26. B. Gill 12. B. Warren 208 D. Schreiner 13. C. Burgess 28. J. Colby 14. J. Lydic 208 N. Albertson i J5 EliEi 30. R. Gracely Gl T 8. ek S o $ 3? 41 QA, ;?n L n l.-:. mouv Jw .,u q,.v. JURAE amvg,o Seltileis. Swas! ffu,?g.wzey, N 8 qlgig;zfu FNCNN 1r, i H . m,45numh.-x,arvi 54 ZETA PSI 1. D.Herron 10. L.Chan 19. R. Bostian 2. W. Hoikala V. . Eewii 20. S. Schmitt 3. A.Chlebus PGV EY 21. J. Mastroianni 4. P.von Oeyen 13. T. Mornberg 22. S. Sabin 5. G.Chase 14. R. Herrick 23. A.Snider 6. W. McNeely 15. J. Eisbrenner 24. D. Feiner 7. J. Goodwillie 16. R. Power 25. C.Wharton 8. T.Hirt 17. H. Heyman 26. T. Doody 9. R. Cohen 18. D. Pratzon IT HAPPENED LIKE THIS: Oscar Upstart gave the gavel to Jimbo, who hopped a hole. He lifted his stein and he drank. The fuzz began to bust-in, and they dug-in just peachy. 'Ah scmitt!'' they screamed as they fell into a trench or was it a pit?. Bulll said Jim. 'We gave them a chance and a chase. Like the rape of the Sabine women. Again we fight without a yawn. I'm allergic to trees, said Rooti. No vey dat is true, came a spooky but hurt reply. Val entered. Bust her in the chops, came a hooting cry. What please? Let her off scott free. It's no colonel sin. Val cried so hard they couldnt even get a sob in. So, they decided to touch her pat zones. Cohen, cohen, gone. She didn't want to get PTVD. Tune in next year: is Ajax stronger than dirty, will the computer log on to show the Tuna has an extra fin? Maybe next year you'll make it, eh Hoiks? 56 KAROL L. ADAM A.B. Political Science CHARLES A. ADLER A.B. Physics J. RALPH AGUAYO Sc. B. Physics DEAN D. ALEXANDER A.B. Psychology PATRICIA B. ALLEN A.B. Political Science PETER K. ALLEN A.B. Mathematics-Eco. WILLIAM A. ANDERSON A.B. Psychology ROBERT W. ANTHONY A.B. Anthropology ZACHARY B. ANTONIO A.B. History YARDENA F. ARAR A.B. French ALLAN P. ARMBRUSTER A.B. Psychology FRED R. ARMENTI A.B. Psychology GEORGE J. ARMSTRONG A.B. Political Science SUSAN A. ATWOOD A.B. Psychology ANDRE R. AUBUCHON A.B. History honors RICHARD M. AUERBACH A.B. Chemistry DANA F. AVERY A.B. R. BRUCE AVERY A.B. History DONALD S. BAILLIE II A.B. Political Science PATRICIA A. BARALD A.B.-M.A. English RICHARD E. BARLOW Sc.B. Chemistry ROBERT D. BARNES A.B. Educational Reform TUCKER K. BARNHART Sc.B. Geophysics WILLIAM L. BARR A.B. English WM. H. BARRINGER A.B. Political Sci. honors G.F. BARROWCLOUGH Sc.B. Engineering ANTHONY J. BARTON A.B. Applied Mathematics ALFRED C. BASILE A.B. Creative Writing JOHN L. BEATTY A.B. English ROBERT M. BEDARD A.B. Biology DAVID F. BEDNARCZYK Sc.B. Engineering R. JERALD BEERS A.B. Political Science ROBERT W. BELL A.B. English CURT A. BENNETT A.B. Russian Studies JONATHAN S. BEREK A.B. Theatre Arts JEFFREY G. BERGART Sc.B. Applied Mathematics 58 ELAINE C. BERLINSKY A.B. Biology JAMES J. BERMAN A.B. Human Biology JEAN C. BESSETTE A.B. Human Biology LEE B.M. BIGGART A.B. American Civilization WILSON V. BINGER Sc.B. Engineering WILLIAM L. BIPPUS, JR. A.B. Classics JOAN L. BISCHOFF A.B. American Civilization THOMAS N. BISHOP Sc.B. Applied Mathematics RICHARD B. BLAZAR A.B. Palitical Science ROBERT A. BLOODGOOD Sc.B. Biology P.F. BLOOMHARDT A.B. History STUART L. BOE A.B. Biology ARLENE F. BOOP HENRY R. BOUCHER GEORGE W. BRALY DAVID J. BREAULT A.B. Biology Sc.B. Engineering A.B. Engineering Sc.B. Engineering ROBERT F. BOOTH KEVIN F. BOWEN CHRISTINE L. BRAUN JAMES P. BRENNAN Sc. B. Engineering A.B. Psychology A.B. Mathematics A.B. English e 5 AT, N.G. BRENNAN A.B. Anthropology PRESTON G. BRINE Sc.B. Engineering DAVID R. BROADWAY A.B. American Civilization NEIL L. BROCKWEHL A.B. American Civilization ANN L. BROMBERG Sc.B. Physics WARD G. BRONSON A.B. Philosophy RICKI BRONSTEIN A.B. Human Studies hon. DAVID J. BROSELL A.B. Psychology HARRIS B. BROWN A.B. English PETER N. BROWN A.B. Social Change ROLLYN A. BROWN A.B. History honors JAMES G. BRUEN A.B. Political Science FREDERICK R. BUCK A.B. Political Science STEPHEN L. BUCK A.B. Psychology 61 CHRISTOPHER BULL Sc.B. Chemistry STEPHEN D. BURGARD A.B. History C.N. BURGESS A.B. Political Science THOMAS C. BURNE A.B. Engineering-Eco. RICHARD S. BUSH A.B. Economics ROBERT N. CABRAL A.B. Psychology EDWARD C. CAHA Sc.B. Biology DAVID A. CAMERON A.B. English W. EARL CARLILE M.N. CARMICHAEL WILLIAM T. CARR A.B. Economics CAROLYN L. CARTER THOMAS W. CARTER A.B. Economics DAVID H. CASHMAN ALLEN G. CASTNER A.B. Political Science TOMMY G. CAYTON A.B. Psychology honors HERBERT A. CHALEK A.B. Psychology HERBERT S. CHASE, JR. A.B. Biology honors JEFFREY L. CHASE A.B. International Relations THOMAS M. CHEEK A.B. Linguistics DAVID I. CHENAULT A.B. Sociology MALCOLM P. CHESTER A.B. Political Science GEORGE L. CHIMENTO A.B. History JOHN A. CHOCK A.B. Anthropology MARC W. CHRISTMAN A.B. Anthropology MICHAEL J. CHURGIN A.B.-M.A. Political Science B. KENNETH CLARK, JR. A.B. French JAMES E. CLARK A.B. History ROBERT A. CLIFFORD A.B. Classics ARTHUR P. CLIPPINGER A.B. History honors R.E. COCHRAN A.B. Psychology BENJAMIN J. COHEN Sc.B. Mathematics honors STEPHEN R. COHEN A.B. International Rel. RICHARD P. COLE A.B. Psychology STEPHAN W. COLE A.B. English A. THOMAS COLLINS A.B. Biology CAROLE L. COLLINS A.B. French CHERYL C. CONNQORS A.B. Classics PETER B. COOP A.B. American Civilization THOMAS W. CORDDRY A.B. English LAURENCE S. COSTIN A.B.-Sc.B. Engineering JOSEPH A. COX A.B. Economics STEVEN C. COXE A.B. Sociology IAN C. CRAWFORD A.B. History-Political Sci. WILLIAM F. CRONIN A.B. Eng. Am. Literature M.N. CROOKSTON A.B. Chinese Studies 65 66 ANNE R. CROSS A.B. Anthropology CATHRYN J. CUMMINGS A.B. American Civilization G.Z. CUMMINGS A.B. Psychology ALAN P. CUSICK, JR. A.B. Palitical Science MARTHA A. CUTLER A.B. Spanish ANTHONY S. CUVI A.B. Psychology DAVID J. CYNAMON A.B. International Rel. PETER C. CZEKANSKI Sc.B. Engineering 7 3 ' e 2 e .'. Pt 5 v y AR A . o X o - E 4 7 rr - 4 ' Iy y y L : B K AR b g g JAMES E. DAIL Sc.B. Engineering CHRISTINE DAMARJIAN A.B. English MARION J. DANCY A.B. Applied Mathematics RONNIE DANE A.B. Political Science NEIL D. DANIELS A.B.-M.A. History honors SALLY DAVENPORT A.B. Political Science MARIANNE DAVID A.B. Psychology RICHARD T. DAVIDSON A.B. English R.S. DAVIDSON, JR. A.B. English DAVID L. DAVIES A.B. History SPENCER W. DAVIS A.B.-Sc.B. Engineering LAURIE N. DAVISON A.B. Anthropology S.F. DIGNAZIO, Il A.B. Intern'l Relations JOSEPH A. DIMARTINO A.B. Engineering-Eco. SUSAN G. DINORSCIA A.B. Religious Studies MICHAEL P. DOLAN A.B. Psychology MILAN R. DOPIRAK A.B. Human Biology ERNEST T. DORAZIO Sc.B. Engineering ROBERT L. DOSSEY A.B. American Civilization SUSAN A. DOUCETTE A.B. Spanish JOHN B. DEGRAZIA Sc.B. Engineering HUGH J. DELEHANTY A.B. Space and Time KATHRYN H. EBERSTADT A.B. Human Studies MICHAEL EDWARDS A.B. Economics PEGGY L. EGGER A.B. History JEAN F. EHRENKRANZ A.B.-M.A. Linguistics F.W. EHRHARDT Sc.B. Engineering W. DAVID ELLIOTT Sc.B. Applied Mathematics NANCY K. DOUGLASS A.B. Comparative Literature CLAYTON C. DOVEY A.B. Political Science JEANNE M. DOW A.B.Art A.S. DOXIADIS Sc.B. Engineering D. MICHAEL DUGGAN Sc.B. Chemistry honors IOAURELIA H. DUNCAN A.B. Psychology WILLIAM R.DUNCAN A.B. Modern Poljtical Org. ANN D. EARP A.B. Mathematics-Eco. 69 70 JEFFREY P. EMRICH A.B. Political Science RONDI E. ERICKSEN A.B. Internl Rel. honars TROY J. ERWIN A.B. Political Science STANLEY I. ESIKOFF A.B. Palitical Science JAMES R. ETCHELLS A.B. American Civilization GEORGE L. FARELLA A.B. Applied Mathematics PAUL G. FARRELL A.B. Political Science SABINA FAUST A.B. English A.B. Psychology honors GEORGE C. ELLIS A.B. Physics JEANNE O. ELLIS ROGER A. EMERY Sc.B. Engineering-Eco. JAMES A. FELLOWS A.B. History honors KATE E. FLEISHER A.B. History JOHN A. FLEISHMAN A.B. Sociology WILLIAM P, FOLEY A.B. Political Science DAVID FOLSOM-JONES A.B. International Relations HELENA FORMAL A.B. Biology ANTHONY FOSSA A.B. Economics FREDERICK L. FOWLER A.B. Economics DAVID M. FOX A.B. International Relations JANET W. FOX A.B. American Civilization STEVEN D. FRAADE A.B. Religious Studies RANDALL H. FRASER A.B. Psychology SANDRA L. GABRILOVE A.B. Anthropology hon. ROBERT W. GAHAGAN A.B. English JOHN D. GANNON A.B. Mathematics-Eco. JOHN G. GANTZ, JR. A.B. Economics L.L. GARBER, JR. A.B. Art JEFFREY E. GARMONG Sc.B. Engineering NANCY C. GARRISON A.B. Political Sci. hon. THOMAS J. GARRITY A.B. Classics 2 SUSAN Y. FRIEDMAN A.B. Economics ANDREW N. FRUCHT A.B. Mathematics-Eco. R.F. FULLERTON A.B. Mathematics-Eco. RICHARD R. FUNK A.B. Music honors PAUL S. GAUTHIER Sc. B. Physics honors MARGARET E. GENOVESE A.B. Anthropology RONALD N. GERMAIN Sc.B.-M.S. Biology honors NANCY GIDWITZ A.B. Art History SUSAN GIDWITZ A.B. Biology WILLIAM J. GILBANE A.B. Political Science ROBERT M. GILL, JR. A.B. History ELIZABETH A. GLASGOW A.B. English LINDA C. GLOECKLER Sc.B. Applied Mathematics 73 SUSAN W. GODSELL A.B. Internl Relations SUSAN GOLDSTEIN A.B. French D. NEIL GOMBERG A.B. Anthropology CHARLES F. GOREY A.B. Religious Studies C.PETER GOTTERT A.B.-Sc.B. Engineering ROY K. GOTTFRIED A.B.-M.A. English honors MARSHALL A. GOULD A.B. English EUGENIE L. GOULET A.B. Linguistics STEPHEN T. GREENE A.B. American Civilization STEVEN T. GREENE A.B. International Relations ULRICH F. GREILICH A.B. International Relations JAMES D. GRIFFIN M.M.S. Medical Science WILLIAM R. GRIFFITH A.B. Political Science RICHARD M. GROSE A.B. Biology LIZABETH A. GROWER A.B. English JEAN M. GRZEBIEN A.B. English KRISTIN GUNDERSON A.B. American Civilization BARBARA L. HAINES A.B. English JOHN R. HAMMETT A.B. Economics DAVID G. HANCOCK A.B. History RONALD V. HANOIAN Sc.B. Engineering STEPHEN E. HANSELL A.B. Psychology BRYAN M. HANSEN A.B. History 75 JOSEPH H. HARITONIDIS RICHARD J. HARRINGTON J. ERIK HART Sc.B. Applied Mathematics MARK A. HARRIS A.B. Independent Major Sc.B. Engineering DAVID C. HARMON M.M.S. Biology PATRICIA E. HARTLEY A.B. Anthropology ROBERT S. HARTMAN RAYMOND C. HAWKINS, Il A.B. History honors A.B. Psychology honors NANCY M. HARVEY JOHN W. HAYN A.B. French honors A.B.-Sc.B. Engineering CAROL L. HECKERMAN A.B. American Civilization HAROLD A. HENDERSON A.B. Engineering WYMAN H. HERENDEEN A.B.-M.A. English honors LAURA E. HERSH A.B. Psychology haonors KENNETH S. HERSHON A.B. Chemistry honors DELOS E. HIBNER A.B. History ROGER G. HICKS A.B. Biology PAUL D. HIGLEY Sc.B. Engineering MARIANNE HIRSCH A.B.-M.A. Comp. Lit. hons. EDW. C. HIRSCHLAND A.B.-M.A. Classics-Ling. hon. STEVEN L. HOCHSTADT A.B. Mathematics BARRY R. HODGE A.B. Economics JOHN D. HODGES A.B. Math.-Eco. honors BEVERLY J. HODGSON A.B. English honors DONNA S. HOFFMAN A.B. Human Biology CATHERINE L. HOFFMEIER A.B. Art 77 G. HOLLINGSWORTH A.B. Intern'l Relations J. DAVID HOLMESTED A.B. History RONALD C. HOOVER A.B. Mathematics-Eco. MARY E. HOPKINS A.B. Political Science RICHARD H. HORNIK A.B. Political Sci. honors BRUCE A. HORWITZ Sc.B. Physics RICHARD T. HOUSTON A.B. Political Sci. honors DOUGLAS R. HOWARD Sc.B. Biology 78 JEAN E. HOWARD A.B. English honors KANG S. HUANG A.B. Intern'l Rel.-Pol. Sci. THOMAS W. HUGILL A.B. History WILLIAM E. HUNT A.B. Psychology WILLIAM H. HUTSON A.B. Marine Science ANNE C. HYDE A.B. Internl Relations ERIC A. JOHNSON A.B. Political Science GEORGIANA JOHNSON A.B. Biology TARMO K. JAAGUS A.B. Economics RICHARD J. JAFFEE Sc.B. Engineering NANCY C. JAHN A.B. Anthropology SEYMOUR W. JAMES, JR. A.B. Economics JOY D. JAVITS A.B. Theatre Arts SHEILA T. JENSON A.B. Art History DOUGLAS F. JOHN A.B. Political Science AMY E. JOHNSEN A.B. English CAROL B. JONES A.B. Latin honors ELIZABETH S. JUDSON A.B. French PETER W. JUSCZYK A.B. Psychology TRUDY J. KAEHLER A.B. American Civilization PETER J. KAHN A.B. French honors SUZANNE A. KALBACH A.B. English honors-Fr. WILLIAM J. KANE A.B. English HARVEY A. KANTOR A.B. Political Science JEFFREY J. KAPLAN A.B. Political Science WILLIAM H. KAPLAN A.B. Political Science ROBERT J. KEENOY A.B. English MICHAEL A. KELLY A.B. Geology MARK F. KEMMERLE A.B.-M.A. English honors 80 i Al 1 r!n b L 1 Y I 4 R 7 . i C.B. KENDE JAFFA KESSLER ROBERT C. KINGSLAND JONATHAN S. KLEIN A.B.-M.A. French honors A.B. English A.B. Anthropology A.B. Music ROBERT M. KERRIGAN GEORGE A. KING PAUL H. KIRSHEN PETER D. KLINKOW A.B. History Sc.B. Chemistry Sc.B. Engineering A.B. Political Science JOHN J. KLOBY A.B. Biology honors WALTER S. KOBALKA A.B. History PETER KRAMER A.B. Classics M. RONALD KREIDMAN A.B. English BRAD S. KREVOR A.B. English honors RUSSELL W. KREY A.B. Anthropology GREGORY R. KUHN A.B. Political Science SUSAN G. KULAGA A.B. Sociology PETER G. LAARMAN A.B. English honors ROGER J. LAFAUCI A.B. Political Science EDWARD V. LALLY A.B. English SUSAN C. LAMONT A.B. Art F. GIFFORD LANDEN A.B.-Sc.B. Engineering-Eco. RICHARD B. LANDERS A.B. Internl Relations RANDALL H. LANE A.B. Political Science DOUGLAS R. LANGDON A.B. American Civilization BONNIE S. LANGILLE A.B. Psychology JAMES M. LARSON Sc.B. Biology KIMBERLEE A. LARSON A.B. Psychology C.A. LAUGHLIN A.B. Biology DALE R. LAWRENCE A.B. English MICHAEL B. LEACH A.B. Psychology JOHN A. LEAL A.B. Linguistics SUSAN M. LEBACH A.B. German Cjvil. hon. 83 84 DALE W. LEE A.B. American Civilization GEORGE I. LEE A.B. History JAMES R. LEITH A.B. History GERALDINE A. LEMOI A.B. Biology RONALD S. LEFEVER Sc.B. Engineering NANCY P. LEHMANN A.B. French RODERICK LEONG A.B. History JANET LEVARIE A.B. English honors ALAN M. LEVINE A.B.-M.A. Class. hon.-Bio. MARK E. LEVINE Sc.B. Chemistry honors MARGOT LIEBLING A.B. Political Science JANICE L. LINDSAY Sc.B. Biology THOMAS E. LINKLATER A.B. English ALPHONSE L. LIQUORI, JR. A.B. Political Science e GREGORY R. LLOYD Sc.B. Physics MARJORIE LOMENZO A.B. Chemistry PHILIP M. LORD Sc.B. Physics JOHN M. LOVE Sc.B. Physics ERIC LUND RICHARD B. LUPO NORMAN MACBETH, Il IVA'S. MACLENNAN A.B. Relig. Studies hon. A.B. Psychology A.B. Economics A.B. Economics honors K.J.V. LUNDQUIST HAROLD V.LYONS, JR. ALICE A. MACEK DIMITRA MACRIS A.B. Biology A.B. Economics A.B. American Civilization A.B. Human Studies CAROL E. MAEDER A.B. Anthropology WESLEY A. MAGAT A.B. Math.-Eco. honors HARRY A. MAGNES A.B. Biology KATHLEEN MAHER A.B. Molecular Biology MARK E. MAHLER A.B. English honors CHARLES J. MAHONEY A.B. English MARILYNN E. MAIR A.B. English RUTH MALEWITZ Sc.B. Applied Mathematics LEWIS H. MAMMEL, JR. Sc.B. Physics GEORGE E. MANLEY, JR. A.B. Psychology MARY MANSUR A.B. Russian honors ROBERT W. MARBLE A.B. History LEE T. MARI BRUCE M. MARKLE A.B. Chemistry A.B. Biology ROGER MARK CATHY L. MARRINER Sc.B. Engineering A.B. Art W.E. MARSDEN, JR. A.B. Political Science HARRY MARTENS, Il A.B. Economics A LESLIE A. MARTIN A.B. Biology B.R. MARZETTA A.B. Psychology CHARLES P. MASSARE A.B. Political Science STEVEN J. MASSARSKY A.B. Political Science JOHN H. McALEER A.B. Geol.-Physics-Math. ANNE L. McCAFFREY A.B. English S.W. McCLELLAND Sc.B. Geology DANIEL J. McKAY A.B. Anthropology JANICE M. McKAY A.B. Art E.L. McLAUGHLIN A.B. English R.R. McLAUGHLIN A.B. Political Science PETER D. McMENAMIN A.B. Eco. hon.-Urb.St. PATRICIA B. MAULDIN A.B. English MARK D. MAYER A.B. Political Sci. honors THOMAS R. McMILLAN A.B. Relig. Studies hon. MICHAEL J. McTIGHE A.B. Relig. Studies hon. LYNN A. MEADER A.B. American Civilization JAMES M. MELIUS A.B.-M.M.S. Medical Sci. BERNARD J. MENDILLO A.B. English M. ROBERT MENT M.M.S. Medical Science B. ROBERT MEYER A.B. Relig. Studies hon. KATHRYN MEYER A.B. Relig. Studies PAUL A. MEYERS M.M.S. Medical Science DONALD L. MICHELINIE Sc.B. Physics KENNETH R. MILLER Sc.B. Biology honors SUSAN P. MILLS A.B. Biology BRUCE E. MIRBACH A.B. English JOAN E. MITCHELL A.B. Psychology 89 SEAN R. MITCHELL A.B. English THOMAS A. MOMBERG A.B. Music TERRY J. MOORE A.B. Classics honors CATHERINE G. MORAN A.B. Archaeology STEPHEN E. MORAN A.B. Psychology JONATHAN MIORLEY A.B. Biology WILLIAM A. MORRISON A.B. Psychology STEVEN R. MORROW A.B. Philosophy GLENN F. MORSE Sc.B.-A.B. Engineering STEPHEN P. MORSE A.B. English RAPHAEL I. MOSTEL A.B. Music honors DAVID G. MOUNTAIN Sc.B. Physics RICHARD A. MUCKLE A.B. Philosophy RICHARD G. MURPHY A.B. History MICHAEL L. MURRAY A.B. Psychology DOROTHEA MUSGRAVE A.B. Anthropology MATTHEW K. MYERS A.B.-Sc.B. Engineering-Eco. DAVID H. MYERSON Sc.B. Biology THOMAS S. NATALE A.B. Psychology BARRY M. NATHAN A.B. Bio-Medical Science LANCE A. NEUMANN Sc.B. Engineering SUSAN J. NEWBERGER A.B. Political Science WALTER C. NEWCOMB A.B. Economics CATHERINE B. NICHOLSON A.B. Art CHARLES F. NOEL A.B. Economics FREDERICK P. NOTHNAGE L A.B.-Sc.B. Physics 91 MARK M. NUNLIST Sc.B. Engineering MARJORIE A.S. ODA A.B. Biology RAUL V. ODIO A.B. Intern'l Relations JAMES M. O'DONNELL A.B. English honors ELLEN T. OGINTZ A.B. Sociology LUDWIG B. OLBRICH A.B. History WILLIAM B. OLNEY A.B. Biology ERIC A.J. OLSON Sc.B. Engineering THOMAS J. O'MEARA A.B. Political Sci. ANN L. OPPENHEIMER A.B. Psychology GLENN S. ORTON Sc.B. Physics RICHARD W. OSMAN A.B. Special Combination 5 f GREGORY OUELLETTE WILLIAM E. PADEN, JR. C.G.PARTINGTON, JR. GARY D. PEACOCK A.B. Biology A.B. History A.B. Philosophy A.B. History CLAUDIA D. OWEN JAMES M. PAGOS JOHN K. PATBERG MARTHA C. PEIXOTO A.B. Biology A.B.-Sc.B. Engineering A.B. Applied Mathematics A.B. Comp. Lit. honors MYUNGSUN PACK BRIAN E. PALMER HOWARD A. PATZ NANCY K. PERCESEPE A.B. French honors A.B. American Civilization A.B. Political Science A.B. Psychology DAVID A. PHILBRICK A.B. Physics ANNE A. PHILLIPS A.B. English honors C.A. PIERSTORFF A.B. Music CHRISTINE A. PILECKI A.B. Biology SUELLA PIPAL A.B. Internl Relations BRUCE R. PITT A.B. Human Biology 94 JEFFREY R. PETERS A.B. Pol. Sci. honors ERICS. PETERSEN A.B. History KAREN R. PEZZA A.B. Mathematics-Eco. LYNETTE M. PELANZ A.B. Art TIMOTHY N. PLATT A.B. Anthropology JAMES N. PLOTKIN A.B. English R.W. POLATTY A.B. Polijtical Science WARREN A. POTAS Sc.B.-A.B. Physics MARGO F. POTRZEBA A.B. Sociology KEITH A. POWERS A.B. Political Science MARK POZEFSKY Sc.B. Applied Mathematics KENNETH E. PRAGER Sc.B. Applied Mathematics WILLIAM C. PRICE A.B. Political Science NANCY E. PRIEST A.B.-M.A. Classics honors DAVID B. PUFFER A.B. Political Science JON R. PURNELL A.B. History PATRICIA S. RADEZ A.B. Political Science J. PATERSON RAE A.B. Mathematics-Economics JUDITH N. RAPPOPORT CLIFFORD M. RENSHAW A.B. Political Science A.B. Art History honors ALISON J. RAY ANTHONY A. RENZI A.B. American Civilization Sc.B. Engineering JOYCE E. REBACK JOHN P. REOPELL A.B. English honors A.B. Applied Mathematics LLOYD E. REICH BARBARA J. REVKIN Sc.B. Applied Math. hon. A.B. Art DAVID G. RICHENTHAL A.B. History CAROL J. RICHMOND A.B. Biology JACK D. RICKLY Sc.B. Chemistry MELISSA J. RIEDE A.B. Applied Mathematics ALAN E. RIFFER A.B. Sociology PHILIP M. RITTER A.B. Philosophy RAE M. ROBERTS A.B. American Civilization STEVEN S. ROBERTSON Sc.B. Physics J. MICHAEL ROBSON A.B. History honors PAULINE F. ROGERS A.B. Sociology honors DEBORAH A. ROITMAN A.B. Political Science JOHN B. ROSE A.B. Electrical Engineering RENEE B. ROSE A.B. Anthropology honors ROBERT D. ROSENBERG A.B. Mathematics JAMES J. ROSS A.B. Political Science JAMIE R. ROSS A.B. Latin honors 97 JOHN A. ROWE A.B. English EDWARD J. ROY A.B. Psychology ROBERT V. ROZELLE A.B. American Civilization F. THOMAS RYAN A.B. Psychology FRANK J. SACHELI A.B. Art JOHN J. SADO A.B. Political Sci. honors SARAH J. SAGER A.B. English honors THOMAS E. SALAMY Sc.B. Chemistry F.R. ROTHSTEIN A.B. American Civilization P.A. ROTHSTEIN A.B. Psychaology honors RICHARD J. SCHAINKER A.B. Political Science JAMES D. SCHANTZ A.B. Economics DANIEL J. SCHATZ A.B. Engineering R.M. SCHERMERHORN A.B. English MARYANNE SCHLOEMER A.B. Electrical Engineering G.R. SCHLOTTERER A.B. Psychology honors JOHN J. SALINGER A.B. Intern'l Relations hon. GEORGE C. SANDEL A.B. Psychology CHARLOTTE D. SANGER A.B. American Civilization H.R. SASTOQUE A.B. Electrical Engineering JOAN B. SAVITSKY A.B. Physics DONALD H. SAYRE A.B. Human Studies hons. JOSEPH G. SCALI A.B. History SUZANNE E. SCHAFFNER A.B. Psychology 99 100 STEPHEN R. SCHMITT Sc.B. Engineering JOEL C. SCHOCHET A.B. Political Science PETER A. SCHOEFFER A.B. Political Science RICHARD R. SCHOMP A.B. Philosophy STEVEN A. SCHONFELD Sc.B. Chemistry honors DAVID E. SCHREINER A.B. Political Science M.L. SCHROEDER A.B. Psychology JAMES A. SCHULAK A.B. Human Biology ROBERT D. SCHWARTZ A.B. Psychology F.C. SCHWERTFEGER A.B. 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Mathematics-Eco. JEAN M. SOLBOS A.B. History honors M.L. SOLLITTO A.B. Psychology LAFE E. SOLOMON A.B. Economics ROGER L. SOREY A.B. Geology PAUL A. SOUZA A.B. American Civilization JOHN W. SPENCER A.B. Philosophy MELVIN K. SPIGELMAN A.B. Engineering PETER C. SPRAGUE A.B. English TAPPEY B. SQUIRES A.B. Intern'l Relations HERMAN K. SSEBAZZA Sc.B. Engineering JOHN A. STANKQVIC Sc.B. Engineering 103 104 ROBERT O. STEIN Sc.B. Geology JOHN H. STONE A.B.-Sc.B. Engineering V.B. STRAUSS, JR. A.B. Political Science FREDRIC A.STROM A.B. American Civilization DANIEL N. SUNDT, JR. Sc.B. Electrical Engineering ALLEN M. SUSSMAN A.B. Biology CHRISTINE C. SWECK A.B. English honors SHARON C. SWEET A.B. American Civilization ROBERT J. STARZAK Sc.B. Engineering DANIEL E. STEIN Sc.B. Applied Mathematics DAVID A. SWERDLOFF A.B. English honors LARRY T. TAKUMI A.B. History honors GRAHAM Y. TANAKA A.B.-Sc.B. Engineering FREDERICK J. TANSILL A.B. English honors DAVID M. TARDY A.B. Economics MICHAEL L. TERRIN A.B. Biology ANN K. THACHER A.B. Independent Major PAUL S. THALER A.B. Biology CHARLES B. THOMAS, IlI A.B. History GEOFFREY C. THOMAS A.B. Intern'l Rels. honors STEPHEN L. THOMAS A.B. History ERIC C. THOMPSON Sc.B. Engineering WILLIAM B. THOMPSON Sc.B. Engineering KATHERINE F. TOMKINS A.B. Sociology BARBARA J. TRAVER A.B. Amer. Civ. honors MARK TRUEBLOOD A.B.-Sc.B. Physics JOY S. TRUMAN A.B. Human Biology PATRICIA A. TRUMAN A.B. Psychology RALPH P. TUCCI A.B. Mathematics JAMES G. TULLER A.B. German L.R. TUMMINO A.B. Political Science ELAINE M. TUNAITIS A.B. Molecular Biology FRANK W. TOMPA Sc.B. Applied Mathematics M.L. TOOTHMAN Sc.B.-A.B. Math.-Ec. hon. WILLIAM L. TOWLER Sc.B. Applied Mathematics RICHARD H. TRAINOR A.B. Amer. Civ. honors WM. E. TURRENTINE JAMES E. VANEPP, JR. Sc.B. Applied Mathematics Sc.B. Chemistry MICHAEL C. TYLWALK R.C. VAN NOSTRAND A.B. Political Science Sc.B. Applied Mathematics MARK N. USDANE M.J. VEAUDRY A.B. Political Sci. honors A.B. English V.B. VANDERWICKEN DOUGLASW. VELTRE Sc.B. Engineering A.B. Anthropology L.D. VERBANO A.B. Psychology GLEN J. VIDA A.B. Political Science JULIA B. VIETOR A.B. Art JEAN S. VIGELAND A.B. Comp. Literature 107 GREGORY B. WALDRON MARGARET J. WALTER A.B. Political Science A.B. Spanish PETER A.S. WAWRO PATRICIA R. VLAMYNCK DAVID C. VOYMAS A.B. English A.B. Psychology STEPHEN S. VOORHEES ROGER E. WAKEFIELD ROBERT A. WALK A.B. History A.B.-Sc.B. Engineering Sc.B. Engineering JOEL C. WEBSTER GREG. H. WERTHESSEN Sc.B. Engineering PAUL T. WEINBERG A.B. Human Stud. honors L.M. WEISSMAN A.B. Applied Mathematics FRANK B. WENTWORTH A.B. History Sc.B. Engineering ALAN I. WEST Sc.B. Engineering ROGER L. WEST Sc.B. Physics CYNTHIA K. WHITE A.B. Human Studies D. SCOTT WHITE A.B. Political Science JON. S. WHITLOCK A.B. English honors DAVID P. WHITMAN A.B. History STEVEN E. WILBUR A.B. Internl Relations WADE M. WILKS A.B. Applied Mathematics DONALD R. WILLIAMS Sc.B. Chemistry honors JOBETH WILLIAMS A.B. English SUSAN C. WILLIAMS A.B. Sociology 109 F.S. WILLIAMSON A.B. Engineering JILL A. WINTERS A.B. German DALE R. WINZER A.B. Economics HELEN J. WOLFE A.B. Urban Studies PAULA T. YANO A.B. Molecular Biology ROBERT J. YOUNG A.B. Pol. Sci. honors ROBERT G. ZAPFFE A.B. Economics BARRY L. ZARUM A.B. Biology PAUL L. ZIMMERING A.B. Political Science ROBERT M. ZIRIN Sc.B. Engineering C.M. ZOCCA A.B. Political Science STEVEN M. ZUCKER Sc.B. Applied Math. hons NANCY ZUPANEC A.B. American Civilization PETER D. ZWARG Sc.B. Engineering ABBOTT, MICHAEL D., 114 Maple Rd:, Longmeadow, Mass. ACKROYD, MRS. NICKY S, 17 Kingston Ave., Providence, R.I. ADAM, KAROL L., 106 Nevada Cir., Oak Ridge, Tenn. ADAMS, ROE R., IlI, 212 0ld Billerica Rd., Bedford, Mass. ADLER, LHARLES A., 293 Cenfer St., Raynhom, Mass. AGUAYO, J. RALPH 24 New Mill Rd., Smnhiown N.Y. ALBRIGHT, JOHN B., 380 Mountain Rd., Unlon City, NJ ALDRICH, RICHARD S, 1 Beekmun Pl., Apt. 154, New, York, N.Y. ALEXANDER DEAN D., 49 Miamis. 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BAKER STEWART A, 1391 Tuulmun Rd., Orange, Conn. BANUS, CHRISTOPHER T., 31 High St., Topsfield, Mass. - BARALD, PATRICIA A., 22 Belcrest Rd., West Hartford, Conn. BARGAR CYNTIIIA M., 29 Sessions St., Provndence, R.l. BARLOW, RICHARD E., 619 Broadland Rd. N.W., Atlanta, Ga. BARNES, EDGAR R., 1122 Wheatland Ave., LuncusIer, Pa. BARNES ROBERT D., 1642 Orchard Hill Rd., Cheshire, Conn. BARNHART, TUCKER K., 204 Angell St., Providence, R.I. BARR WILLIAM L., 1051 Meadow Ln., Lake Forest, Ill. BARRINGER, WILLIAM H., 411 Crownview Dr., Alexandria,-Vo. -BARROWCLOUGH, GEORGE F., 35 Ran- dall Ave., Somerset, Mass. BARSTOW, HOWARD T., 83 Pembroke St., Newfon, Mass. BARTON, ANTHONY J., 248 Butfonwood Ave., Peekskill, N.Y. BASILE, ' ALFRED C 307 Kenoza Ave., HaVerhill, Massy; BEATTY, JOHN L., Box 781, Claremonf, Cal. BECKETT SARAH K., 68 Westland Ave West Harfford Conn, BEDARD, RO!ERTM 291 South Wash- ington St No. Attleboro, Mass BEDNARCZYK DAVID F., 44 Janelle St Lewiston, Me. BEERS, R, JERALD, Box I98, Hazen Bravlle.. Rd., Belyidere, N.J. BELL, GREGORY S., 82 Walden St., New Bedford, Mass. BELL, ROBERT W,, 2217 Via Guadalana, Palos Verdes Est, Cal. BENNETT, CURT A., 188 Shaw Ave., Cranston, R.I.- BENSON, ERIC B., General Delnvery, Stinson Beach, Cal. BEREK, JONATHAN S., 1620 Norfh Nye, Fremont Neb. BERGART, JEFFREY G.;-75 Bouider Rd., Newton Cemre, Mass. BERLINSKY, ELAINE C., 277 Potters Ave., Providence, R.I. BERMAN; JAMES Ji, 572 Westmoreland Ave.; ngstun, Po BES- SETTE, JEAN..Ci; 1704 New. Hamilton Stl Mobile; Alabama. BIGGART LEE B. 81 BenefitSt,,-Providence, Rel.. BINGER, WILSON V., 287 Quaker St., Chnppaquu, Y. BINNING, ROBERT C., JR., 3473 Tall Timber. Tr., Dayton, Ohio. BIPPUS, WILLIAM L., JR., 21 Stoner Dr.,West Hartford, Conn.. BISCHOFF, JOAN L., 120 North Rd., Kingston, R.I. BISHOP, -THOMAS 'N., 5 Greystone 'Rd., West Hartford, Conn. BLAZAR, RICHARD B., 67 Sheffield Rd., Newtonville, Mass: 'BLOODGOOD, ROBERT A., 535 Park Ave., Worcester, Mass. BLOOMHARDT, PAUL F., Brownell Rd., Williston, Vi, BOE, STUART L., 7337 S.E. 86th St., Portland, Ore. BOOP, ARLENE F., 311 :Martin Ln., Wallingford, Pa, BOOTH, ROBERT F., 4628 Villa Green Dr., Nashville, Tenn. BOUCHER, HENRY R., 9 Whife St., Pawftcket, R.I. BOUDREAU, CARL Mi, Carey'Ln., Litfle Compton, R.I. BOWEN, KEVIN E 1Z:Lantern Ln., Warwick, R.I. BOWES, MARIE D., 5256 North-Itinois St.;-Indianapolis, Ind. BOYDEN, WAYNE E., West Mountain Rd., Bernardston, Mass. BOYLE, DONALD G., 10401 Grosvenor Pl., RonkvuIIe, Md. BRADEN, WILLIAM P., 113 Union St., Schenectady, N.Y. BRALY, GEORGE W., 723 South Center, Ada, Okla. BRANIGAN EDWARD R., 2567 White Oaks Dr, Beloit, Wisc. BRAUN, CHRISTINE L., 4612 Norbeck Rd Rockville, Md. BREAULT, DAVID J., 373 0ld Post Rd,, N. Attleboro, Mass. BRENNAN, JAMES P., 1600 Dahlia St., Denver, Colo. BRENNAN, 'NOEL-ANNE GI, 288 Nidntic River Rd.; Warerford Conn. BRIGHTON GARY- P., 120 Hamilton Dr., Snyder, N.Y. BRINE, PRESTON G., 180 Elm St., Hanson, Mass BROADWAY DAVID R. 325 Wabash Ave., Kenmore N.Y. BROCKWEML NEIL L., Hills-Rd:, Loudonvulle, N.Y. BROMBERG, ANN L., 5 Rebecca Rd., Canton, Mass. BRONSON WARD G 25 Sweetbriar Rd., Summit, N.J. BRONSTEIN RICKI 60 Crosswuy, Scarsdale, N.Ys BROSELL DAVID J., 137 Prospect St., Providence, RA. BROWN HARRIS B 18935 Mmrlund Defrow, Mlch BROWN PETER N., 539 E. Wesley Rd., N.E., Atwama Ga. BROWN, ROLLYN A., 2302 S.E. 57th, Por?land Ore. BRUEN, JAMES G., 38 Curley Dr., Hudson, Mass. BUCK FREDERICK R., 201 Rldgemede Rd., BnIIlmore, Md. BUC STEFHEN L., 43 Donna Ave., Pn'rsfield Mass. BULL, CHRISTOPHER, 1313 Bojes Rd., East Aurora, NY. BURGARD, STEPHEN D., 7 Carver St., Provincetown, Mass. BURGESS, CHRISTOPHER N., 5003 North Woodbum Sf,, Witwnukee, Wisc. BURKE, PAUL E., 939 Coast Blvd., Apt. 19-C La-Jolla;Cal.-BURNE, THOMAS C., 46 Sycamore Dr., Roslyn, N.Y. BURNHAM, STEPHEN e7 23 Indian Hill Rd,, Winchester, Mass. BURNS, RUSSELL W., 119 Sharrow Vule Rd., Cherry Hill, N.J. BUSH, RICIIAIID S., 1012 Fawn Dr., Tupelo, M'ss CABRAL, ROBERT N, 21 George St., Cranston R CAIIA EDWARD C., 713 Midland Bivd., Unlon, N.J. CAMERON DAVID A., 136 Chio Ave Frovsdence, R.I. CARLII.E W. EARL, 284 Aurora Cir., Memphns, Tenn. CARLSON; RDBERTW Blueberry Hill Rd., Wes'on Conn, CARMEL MRS, DEBORAHB 49 Lancaster 51', onvndence, R.1. CARMICIIAEI. MALCOLM N., 2885 Hastings Rd., Blr- mmghum, Alc. CARR, CRAIG L., 14775 S.W. Uplunds Dr., Lake Oswegc, Ore. RR, WIL- LIAM T., 73 Coolidge Rd., Worcester Mass:. CARTER, CAROLYN L., 246 Rayvine Forest Dr., Lake Biuff, Iil. CARTER, THOMAS 'W., 1125 Circle Dr., Eim Grove, Wisc. CASHMAN, DAVID H., 1238 Lukemonf Dr., Pittsburg, Pa, CASSEBAUM, MARY E., 250 Booth Ave., Englewond N.J. CASTNER, ALLEN G., R.D., Pittstown, N.J. YTON, TOMMY G., 4567 Iris St., West Palm Beuch Fla. CHALEK HERBERT A., 350 Woodbine St., Cranston, R.1. CHASE, HERBERT S., 24 North Wood Ln., Woodmere, NY CHASE, JEFFREY L., 236 Cenfral Park Rd Plalnwew, N.Y. CHEEK, THOMAS M., 1294 0ld Johnson Ferry-Rd., Atlanta; Ga; CIIENAUI.T DAVIDI Rt. 2, Box 19, Trinity Mountam Ala. CHENG, EVELYN X Harbor Acres, Harbor Rd. ds Pomf N.Y. CHESTER, MALCOLM P., 1130 N, Greenboy Rd., Lake Forest, 11 CIIIMENTO GEORGE L., 59 Im St., Wesferlyl R.l. CHISHOLM, EDDY E., 170 Adams Pt. Rd., Burrmg?on, R.1. CHRIS MARC W., 656 Treichler Terr, No, Tonawanda, N.Y. CHURGIN, MICHAEL J., 238 70 116 Rd., Elmont, N.Y. CLARK, BERNARD K., JR., Box 181, East Hampton, N.Y. CI.AIIK JAMES E., Apt. 604, 4501 Arlmgtnn Blvd., Arlmgfnn Va. CI.IFFORD ROBERT A., 212 Vernon 5t., Norwood, Mass. CLIPPINGER, ARTHUR P., 104 Santa Fe Dr., Box 183 Baldwin ley, Kan. COCHRAN RANDOLPH E., 73 Hagan st Providence, R.I. COHEN, BENJAMIN 1., 48 Stefson St., New Bedford, Mass, COHEN, STEPHEN R., 183 18 Dalny Rd., Warwick, R.l. COLE, STEPHAN W., 18595 parkland Dr., CAROLE L., 4 Ellis St., Rumford, R.I. COMLEY, NANCY, R.l. CONNORS, CHERYL C., 39 Cedar Cove Rd., Jackson Blvd., Nashville, Tenn. Jamaica, N.Y. COLE, RICHARD P., 132 Gillooly-Dr., Shaker Hewgfns coLL INS 10 Owings Stone Rd Barrington, Swansea, Mass. COONEY, JUHN e ik COOP, PETER B., 159 High St., Bristol, R.I. CORDDRY, THOMAS W., 19 Ridge Rd., Severna Park, Md. COSTON, LAURENCE S., 2648 East 4th St., Tucson, Ariz.. COVEY, JUDITH A., 535B Pineview Lane North, Minneapolis, Minn. COX, JOSEPH A., 2349 Green Forest Dr., Decatur, Ga. COXE, STEVEN C., 2209 Hillside Rd, Arden; Wllmungfun, Del. CRAMER, SARA S., R.D, Landenberg, Pa, CRAWFORD, 1AN C., 10 Concord Dr., Burlingfon; o, CRONIN, WILLIAM.F., 677 Howe:St., Manchester, N.H. CROOKSTON, MARY ANN N., 4075 Gramercy Ave, Ogden, Utah. CROSS, ANNE R., 210 Eim Rd., Princefon, N.J. CUMMINGS, CATHRYN J., Stone Ridge Ln., Greenfield, Mass. CUM- MINGS, GERMAINE Z., 7 Burke S5t., South, Boston, Mass. CUNNINGHAM, RICHARD P., 8 Dallas St., South Dartmouth, Mass. CUSICK, ALAN P., JR., 702 Industrial Bank Bldg., Providence, R.l. CUTLER, MARTHA A., 105 Abbotf Rd., Wellesley Hills, Mass, CUVI, ANTHONY S., Campos Elyseos 403 601, Mexico 5 D. F., Mexico. CYNAMON, DAVID I, 75 Kinderkamack Rd., Montvale, N.J. CZEKANSKI, PETER C., 377 Broadway, Pawtucket, R.1. DAHM, C. ROBERT, 2996 Hermance Dr., N.E., Atlanta, Ga. DAIL, JAMES E., 1234 Cranston St., Cranston, R.I. DAMARJIAN, CHRISTINE, 22 Haliburton Rd., Rumford, R.l. DANA, SUSAN D., 49 Dresden Ave., Gardiner, Me. DANCY, MARION J,, 206 NavajoRd.; Pitts- burgh, Pa. DANE, RONNIE, 165 Ivy St., Brookline, Mass. DANIELS, NEIL D., 2437 Madison Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio. DAVENPORT, SALLY, 190 Garfield. Rd.,. Concord, Mass. : DAVID, MARIANNE; 130 Sheridan Rd., Highland Park, Ill. DAVIDSON, RICHARD T., 1100 Grandview. Blvd., Lancaster, Pa. DAVIDSON, ROBERT S., 49 Brookmoor Rd., Avon, Conn. DAVIES, DAY I L., Old Town St., Box 27, Hadlyme, Conn. DAVIS, SPENCER W., 4 Bruce Rd., Con- cord, Mass. DAVISON, LAURIE N., 124 West 79th ST New Ycrk NY. EBOER MARTINUS C., Pole 111, Rockland Rd., No. Scituate, R.J. DEGRAZIA JOHN B., 36 Great Oak Lane, Pleasantville, N.Y. DELEHANTY, HUGH J., 65 Newbert Ave., S. Weymoufh, Mass. DEMATTOS, SUSAN E., Anawan St., Rehoboth, Mass. DIGNAZ10, S. FREDERICK, 39 George St., Providence, R. I. DIMARTIND, JOSEPH A., 47 Brookdale Dr., West Warwick, Rils DINORSCIA, SUSAN G., 936 Baldwin Rd., Woodbridge, Conn. DINOTO, ANTHONY F., 279 S. Ellwood Ave., Baltimore, Md. DIPRETE, RONALD A., 77 Laconio Rd., Cransfon, R.l. DOLAN, MICHAEL P., 205 Main St., Matawan, N.J. DOPIRAK, MILAN R., 517 Hope St., Providence, R.l. DORAZIO, ERNEST T., 125 East St., Plainville, Conn. DOSSEY, ROBERT L., 176 Williams St., Providence; R.l. DOUCETTE, SUSAN A., 41 Cedar St., Wakefield, Mass. DOUGLASS NANCY K., Neuilly-Sur-Seine, 54.-Ave. Sainte Foy Paris, France. DOVEY, CLAY- TON C 1840 Minno Dr Johnstown, Pa. DOW, JEANNE M. MRS., Box 113, East Corimh, Me. DOXIADIS APOSTCLOS S., 5 Diadochou Pavlou St., Filothei, Athens, Greece: DREW, EDWIN F., 35 Aguwum Rd., Eost Providence, R.J: DUGGAN, D. MICHAEL, 325 Main St., New Canaun, Conn. DUNCAN, IOAURELIA H., 100 Midland Ave.,Montcfair, N:J. DUNCAN, WILLIAM R., 4 Berkeley Pl., Cranford, N.J,; EARP, MRS. ANN D., 27 Forest St., Apf. 4, Cambridge, Mass. EBERSTADT, KATHRYN H., 1326 Chefwynd Ave., Plainfield, N.J. EDWARDS, MICHAEL, 14 Depot St., Norwood; N:Y. EGAN, NANCY 0 1114 Middle Rd., Martinsville, N.J. EGGER, PEGGY L., 7047 Brooklane Rd., Chesterland, Ghio. EHRENKRANZ, JEAN F., 12 Crest Circle, South Orange, N.J. EHRHARDY, FREDERICK W., 201, Wynnewood Dr., Absecon, 'N.J. ELLIOTT, W, DAVID, 25 Wilson Ave., Braintree, Mass: ELLIS, GEORGE C., 180 East End Ave., Apf, 22B, New York, N.Y. ELLIS, JEANNE 0., 30 Lovejoy Rd., Andover, Mass,. EMERSON, ARTHUR B., 22 Barnes St , Providence, R.I. EMERY, ROGER A 15596 Hanover, Allen Park, Mich. EMRICH, JEFFREY P., 1621 Judson Ave:; Evansfon, Ill. ERICK- SEN, RONDI E., 54 Pine Hill Rd., Framingham' Mass. ERWIN TROY.d:, 5310 Locust Ave., Bethesda, Md. ESIKOFF, STANLEY I., 5:East 14th St., New York, N.Y. ETCHELLS, JAMESR., 132 Porkside Ave.;: Pawtucket, R.I. FARELLA, GEORGE L., 204 Drexel St., Springfield, Mass. FARRELL, LEE D., 377 Oak St., Westwood, Mass. FARRELL, PAUL G., 115 Greenwood Ave., Rumford, R.I. FAUST, SABINA, 130 Clay St., Pawtucket, R.I: FELLDWS JAMES A., 235 Broudwuy, Tacoma, Wash. FELMAN MARK R., B Pefer Rd Hicksville, NY FISIIER, MARGERY A., 74 Windsor Rd., Kensmgton Conn. FLE ISHER, KATE B 2925 Stanton Ave., Silver Sprmg, Md. FLEISHMAN JOHN A., 122 Lancaster St., Providence, R.l. FLEMING, ROBERT J., 485 Lynd Ave., Port Credit, Ont., Canada, FOLEY, WILLIAM P., 1208 So. Pms burgh st., Connellsyille, Pa, FOLSOM,-JONES. DAVID, 1750 E. Ockjand Park Bivd., Lauderdale, Fla., FORMAL, HELENA, 32 Edgehill Rd., Provudence, R.l. FOSSA, AN TIIQNY 134. DePasquale Ave., Providence, R, . FOWLER, FREDERICK L., 1137 Millington Rd., Schenectady, N.Y. FOX, DAVID M., 212 Lawnacre Dr. 2 Crunsmn, R.l. FOX, JANET W., 8-0akmount Cvr 7 Lexmgton, Mass. FRAADE STEVEN D., 660 Fort Washingtan Ave., New York, N.Y. FRASER, RANDALL H., Box 164 Piedmont, PQ Can. FREEMAN, JOHN S., 101 lvy Ct., Williamsburg, Va., FRIEDMAN DANIDA R., 680 RIdQeWOY White Plains, N.Y. FRIEDMAN, SUSAN Y., 772 Norgc!e Rd., Wes?fleld N.J. FRUCHY, ANDREW N., 2119 Paul Spring Rd., Alexundrlc Va. FUI.I.ERI'ON RICHARD F., 2 Park Holm Newport, 'R.l. FUN K, RICHARD II 2008 Birchwood Ln., Topeko, Kan. GABRILOVE SANDRA L., 25 Ecost Bd?h st., New York, Y. GAGNON, DENISE A, w122 Audubon Rd., Wurwwk R.l. GAHAGAN, ERT W., 31 Gedney Cir., White Plains, N.Y. GANNON, JOHN D., 10 MacArthur Dr., Worwick, R.I, GANTZ JOHN G., JR., Langhorre Ln., R.F.D. :t2 Greenwnch Conn. GARBER, LAW- RENCE, R, 6 Clovelly' Rd., Pittsburah, Pa, GARDNER, JEFFREY 0ld Pound Rd., Antrim, N.H, GARMONG JEFFREY E., 936 Garfield St., Hobart, Ind. GARRISON, NANCY C., 13408 Clifton Dr., lever Spring, Md. GARRITY, THOMAS 1., 410 Calvert Rd., North Bruns- wick, N.J. GAUTHIER, PAUL S., 39 Bluommgdule Ave., Paw!ucket R.I. GENOVESE MAR- GARET E., 162 Washington 51, Wellesley Hills, Mass. GERMAIN, RONALD N., 12 Patricia Ln., Whne Plains, N.Y. GIDW TZ NANCY, 970 'Sheridan Rd., Highland Park, 1. GIDWITZ, SUSAN 405 Sherldun Rd., H'ghland Park, I1l. GILBANE, WILLIAM J., 3I7 Laurel Ave., Providence, R.l, GILL, ROBERT M., JR., 1017 N. Patrick Henry Dr., Arlington, Va. GLAS- GOw, ELIZA!ETH A., 3700 Mornson Sf 'N.W., Washington, D.C. GLOECKLER, LINDA C., 6814 Wemberly Way, McLean, Va. GODSELL SUSAN W., 25 Echo Hill Rd., Amherst, Mass. GOLAS, WILLIAM V., JR., 30 Bedlow Ave., Newport R.I. GOLDENBERG, ROBIN 1., 1 Jeff Ln., New City, N.Y. GOLDSTEIN SUSAN, 50 Western Promenade, Cruns'on R.I. GOMBEIIG D. NEIL, 42 East Barrows St., Cumberland, R.1. GONZALEZ, NICHOLAS J., 189 36 45 Rd., FIushmg, N.Y. GOODWILLIE, 'JAMES M., 101 Huntington Rd Garden CI'V, N.Y., GORDON, CLYDE B., JR., 210 Stoner Dr. West Hurtfcrd Conn. GORDON LARRY M., 3601 Vermont St., Apt. 16 Lon 104 Sfeg.'ens Rd., Grosse Pointe, Beach, Calif, GOREY, CHARLES F., Mich, GOT'IERT Mussapequu, N.Y. GOTTFRIED, ROY K., 37 Hill- . PETER, 10 Oxford Bl crest Ave., Yonkers, N.Y. GOULD, MARSHALL A., 55 Prescatt St., Clinton, Mass. GOULET, EUGENIE l. 2410 Greenleaf Blvd Elkhart, Ind. GREENE, STEPHEN L2 8 Greene St., Box 352, SIc?erslee R.l. GREENE, STEVEN T 22 Keene sr Provrdence R.L. GREILICH ULRICH F., 43 Adelaide Ave., Px sfeld Mass. GRIFFIN, JAMES D., 3 North William St Homer, N.Y. GRIFFITH, WILLIAM R, 527 Pafchester, Housfon, Tex. GROSE, RICHARD M., 4004 Woodiawn Rd:;, Chevy Chase, Md. GROWER, LIZABETH A., 45 Clover sr Mlddle1own, Conn. GRZEBIEN, JEAN M., 505 Lloyd Ave., Providence, R.l. HAEMER, GARY L., 9 Glen Holfow, West Hortford, Conn. HAMMETT, JOHN R., 1408 Alvarado Ave., Burlingame, Cal. HANCOCK DAVID G., 5 Burnett iy Provrdence R.I. HANOIAN, RBNALDV 2532 Paw- tucket Ave E. Provldence R.I. HANSELL STEPHEN E., 10 Deepwood Lune, South Nor- walk, Conn. HANSEN, BRYAN M., 858 East Clecr, St. Paul, Minn. HARITONIDIS, JOSEPH H., 21 Tuyefcu 5 Psychrko Athens, Greece. HARMON, DAVID C., CMR Box 4944, APO New York, N, HARRINGTON, RICHARD J., 94 James St., East Provrdence, R.I. HARR RIS, MARK A., 48 Heather Dr., Atherton, Cal. HARRISON, EVANGELINE M., 600 W. 36th St., Bolhmore Md. HART J. ERIK, 21 erhcrrns Rd., North Reading, Mass. HARTLEY, PATRI- CIA E., Marine Corps Base, Quantico, Va. HARTMAN ROBERT S., 1638 Rldqeway Dr., Hewlerr N.Y., HARVEY, NANCY M., 66 Midian Ave, Windsor, Conn HASKIN, N 645 S, Rundolphvrllekd Prsccmway N.J. HAUSSMANN, MRS. CHANTAL, 18 Hrghland Ave., Lexington, Mass. HAWK INS, RAYMOND C., II, 44 Hendricks St., Central Falls, R.I. N N W., 2466 Nicholson Dr., DuHus Tex. HECKERMAN, MRS, CAROL L., 1004 Spruce Dr., Ann Arbor Mich. HENDERSON, HAROI.DA 816 Hlllmp Dr., Clarks Summn Pa. HERENDEEN, WYMAN H., 94 Long Hill Rd., Briarcliff, N.Y. HERSEY, JOSEPH D., JR., 169 Village St., Mllhs, Mass. HERSH, LAURA E 6709 Lormg Ct., Befhesdo, Md. HERSH ON, KENNETH S., 88 Villoge Rd., Manhasset, N.Y. HIBNER, DELOS E., 400 North Third St., Dubois, Pa. -HICKS, ROGER 6 120 Lynnwood Dr., Roches?er, NY. HIGLEY, PAUL D., 25 Orchard Ln., Woylcnd Mass. HIRSCH, MARlANNE 47 Fosdyke St., Provrdence, Rl HIRSCHLAND, EDWARD C.. 1 Dorset Rd., Great Neck, N.Y. HOCHSTADT STEVEN L., 262 Rushmore Ave Carle Ploce N.Y. HODGE BARRY R, 58 Mount Hope Ave., Swansea, Muss HODGES, JOHN' D., 4501 Hcrrper Dr., Mesqurfe Tex. HODGKINS MRS. CAROL T., 1216 West 69 St., Kansas Cify, Mo, NDDGSON BEVERLY J., 159 Hopewor?h Ave,, Brrs?ol R.I. HOFFMAN, DONNA S., 140 Bobbin Mlll Medea, Pa. HOFFMEIER, CATHERINE L., 4712 Casfor Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. HOLLINGSWORTH GORDON, 1216 Manticello Rd., chcye e, Cal: HOLMESTED J DAVID, 42 Hampton Gardens, Pte. Claire, Quebec, Can.. HOOVER, RONALD C., 3610 S.E. 49th Ave., Portland,. Ore; -HOPKINS; MARY. E., 409 Hillcrest Rd., York, Pa: HORNIK, RICHARD H., P.0. Box 1063, Sanford, N.C, HORVITZ, LESLIE A., 20 Alfred Stone Rd., Providence, R.!. HORWITZ, BRUCE A., 15 Bedford Rd., PuwfuckEf R.I: HOUSTON, RICHARD T., 98 Glenbrook Dr., Cheshire, Conn. HOWARD DOUGLAS R., 38 Parker. Rd., Wakefield, Mass, HOWARD, JEAN E., R.F.D. 2, Houlton, Me. HUANG, KANG 87 100 LaSalie St., New York N.Y. HUGILL, THOMAS W, 103 West Belcrest Rd., Bel Air, Md HUNT, WILLIAM E., 17 Fox Ridge Rd., Armonk N.Y. HURST ROBERT L., 74 John St., Provi- dence, R.1. IlUl'SON RONALD S., 198 Camp St., Provxdence R.I. HUTSON WILLIAM H., 93 Rensselaer, Rd., Essex Fells, N.J. HYDE, ANNE C., 848 Nicole1 Blvd., Menashu, Wlsc JAAGUS, TARMO K., 327 Netherington Dr., Broomall, Pa. JAFFEE, RICHARD J., 109 Morn- ingside Rd., Worcester, Mass. JAHN, NANCY C., 995 Marion Ave., Highland Park, IIl. JAMES, SEYMOUR W., JR., 15 Hansom Pl., Roosevelt, N.Y. JAVITS, JOY D., 911 Park Ave., New:York; N.Y. JOHN, DOUGLAS F., 1311 Titania Ln., McLean, Va. JOHNSEN, AMY E., P.0. Box 1500, Twin Cities Airport, Minn. JOHNSON, ERIC A., 20 Edgewood Rd., Shrews- bury, Mass. JOHNSON, MRS. GEORGIANA, 251 Providence St., Woonsocket, R.l. JONES, CAROL B., 4 Garfield St., Natick, Moss. JUDSON, BETSY S,, 35 Sayles St., Box 572, Alfred, NY JURRIST, LAWRENCE E., 9E Sunnybrook Dr., Oceanside, N.Y. JUSCZYK, PETER W., 35 Welrhiun Ct., East Greenwich, R.I. KAEHLER, TRUDY J., 164 Gallows Hill Rd., Westfield, N.J. KAHN, PETER J, 33 Blackthorn Ln., White Plains, N.Y. KALBACH, SUZANNE A., Old Gulph Harriton Rds., Bryn Mawr, Pa. KANE, WILLIAM J., 1 Bores Ave., Warcester, Mass. KANTOR, HARVEY A., 31 Rochester Rd., Newton, Mass. KAO, WILLIAM Y., 5004 Orleans Ct., Kensington, Md. KAPLAN, JEFFREY J., 283 Benefit St., Providence, R.l. KAPLAN, WILLIAM H., 201 Sessions St., Providence, R.I. KEENOY, ROBERT J., 22 White Oak Dr., North Caldwell, N.J. KELLY, MICHAEL A., 1150E 27.So. 51, Salt Lake City, Utah. KEMMERLE MARK F., 34 Elmwood Pl., Athens, Chio. KENDE, CHRISTOPHER, B., 25 East ., York, NY KERRIGAN ROBERT M., 280 Collins Ave., Mt, Vernon, N.Y. KESSLER JAFFA 107 Eieventh St., Providence, R.l. KING, GEORGE A., 29 Greystone Rd., West Hurtford Conn KINGSIAND, ROBERT C., 502 Mcmor Dr., Columbna, Mo. . KIRS! PAUL H., 166 Neshube Rd., Newton, Mass. KLEIN, ELLEN, 11 Milford Ave., Stratford, Conn. KLEIN, JONATHAN S., 5 Montvale Rd., Worcester, Mass. KLINKOW, PETER D., 817 Don- gan Ave., Scotia, N.Y. KLOBY, JOHN J., 126 Point O Woods Dr., Toms River, N.J. KOBALKA, WALTER S., 4182 West 63rd St Cleveland, Ohio. KRAMER, PETER, 21 Elm- grove Ave., Provrdence R.I. KREIDMAN, M. RONALD, 204 Wesi Hudson Ave. , Englewcod N.J. KREVOR, BRAD S., 14 Stuart Dr. East, Glen Cove, N.Y. KREY, RUSSELL W., 156 Jasper Ave., Teaneck, N.J. KRUGER, JANICE B, 20 East 9th St., Apt. 25-F, New York, N.Y. KUHN, GREGORY R., 517 Hope St., Providence, R.I. KULAGA, SUSAN G., 43 Second St., Pawtucket, R.l. LAARMAN, PETER G., R.R.1, Oostburg, Wisc. LaFAUCI, ROGER J., 238 Park Ave., Arlington, Mass. LALLY, EDWARD V., 12 Gibbons St., Melrose, Mass. LAM- BERT, PHELPS L Rural Route 1, Henderson, Ky. LAMONT, MRS. SUSAN C., 741 Wiliow St., Crunford N.J. 'LANDEN, F. GIF ORD, Wales Rd., Brrmfneld Mass. LANDERS, RICHARD B., 108 48 67 Dr., Forest Hills, N.Y. LANE RANDALL H., 133 Springbrook Tr., Sparta, N.J: LANGILLE, BONNIE S. MRS., 6 Thomas ST Middlebury, Vi, LARSON, JAMES M., 15 Sunnyside Rd., Scotia, N.Y. LARSON, KIMBERLEE A., M.D. 25, 17 Dogwood Hills Rd., Newburgh, N.Y. LATTIN NEIL E, 85 Reeve Rd. Rockville Center, N.Y. LAUER, FRANKLIN P., 131. Cadiz, San Clememe, Cal. LAUGHLIN, CATHERINE A., 102 Brife Ave, Scarsdule, N.Y. LAWRENCE, DALE R., 3109 San Vlcenfe Dallas, Tex, LAWRENCE, KIRKLAND W., USAIWCWENG APO, N.Y. LEACH, MICHAEL B., 39 Creston Way, Providence, R.l. LEAL, JOHN A, 88 Plymouth St., Norwich, N.Y. LEBACH, SUSAN M., 10 George St., Andover, Muss LEE, DALE W., 45-215 Waikclua Rd., Kaneohe, H.I. LEE, GEORGE I - gomery Ave., Bronx; N.Y. LEFEVER, RONALD S., 210 Elsenhower Blvd., Luncasfer, Pa. LEFF, MARK H., 7313 Broxburn Ct., Bethesdu Md. LEHMANN, NANCY P., 245 Beech Hill Rd., Wynnewood, Pa. LEITH, JAMES R. 16205 Oakhill Rd., E. Clevelund Ohio. LEMOI, GERALDINE A., 81 Sowams Rd., Barrington, R.I. LEONE, LAUREL U., 1045 McGregor Way, Palo Alto, Cal. LEONG, RODERICK 742 15th Ave., San Francisco, Cal, LEVARIE, JANET, 624 Thrrcf 35 Brookryn, N.Y. I.EVENSON RANDAL P 660 Pleasant St., Frammghum, Mass. LEVINE, ALAN M., 908 Meadow Ln., Schenectady, N.Y. LEVINE, MARK E., 15 Thatcher. Sf. Brocklme, Moss. LIBELING, MARGOT, 102-10 63 Rd., Forest Hills, N.Y. LINDSAY, JANICE L., 2111 Jackson Sf., Sioux Cny, lowa. I.INKLA'I'ER THOMAS EY 5706 N.E. 35th Pl., Portland, Ore. LIQUORI, ALPHONSE L., JR.; 122 Nassau Dr Albertson, N.Y. LLOYD, GREGORY R., 513 Redwood St., Harrisburg, Pu LOMENZO, MRS. MARJORIE K 91 Park 51 5 Provrdence, R.1. LORD, PHILIP M., 308 Cumberland St., Brooklyn, N.Y: I.OVE JOHN M., 15 Pumpkin Hill, Westport, Conn. LUKENS, JAMES W., 697 Emerson Ave., Hamilfon, Ohio. LUND, ERIC, 230 Kings Hwy., North Haven, Conn. LUNDQUIST KIPTON J. V., 4805 Sunnyside Rd Edrna, Minn. LUPO, RICHARD B., 67 Summer Ave., Readmg Mass. I.YONS HAROLD V., JR., 8284 Pinecreek Dr Cherry Grove Ohio, MacBETH, NORMAN, Balmvnlle Rd., Newburgh, N.Y. MACEK, ALICEA 1928 Hurfe Rd., Jenkintown, Pa. MacI.ENNAN IVAS., 580 Watchung Rd., Bound Brook N.J. MACRIS, DIMITRA, P.0. Box 808, Sharon, Pa. MAEDER, CAROL E., 45 Ber- wick Pl., Rumford, R.I. MAGAT, WESLEY A., 112 So. Spring Valley Rd., Wilmington, Del, MAGNES, HARRY A., 266 Forest Rd., South Orange, N.J. MAGUIRE, MRS. JEANNE Z., co0 Dr Frank Ziobrowski, 765 Garfield St., Chambersburg, Pa. MAHER, KATHLEEN, 265 Sonora Pl., Claremont, Cal. MAHLER, MARK E., 1796 Lamberts Mill Rd., Westfield, N.J. MAHONEY, CHARLES J., 3075 Chadbourne Rd., Shaker Heights, Ohio. MAIR, MARILYN E. E., 215 North Garfield St., Kennett Square, Pa. MALEWITZ, RUTH, 4814 Braesvalley, Houston, Tex. MAMMEL, LEWIS H., JR., 317 Cenfral Ave., New Providence, N.J. MANLEY, GEORGE E., 20 Moulthrop St., Ansomu, Conn. MANNING WAYNE B., 804 Newman Ave., Seekunk Muss MANSUR, MARY Farmers Row, Groton, Muss MARBLE ROBERT W., 102 Pitman Rd., Athol, Mass, MARGOUUS, BRUCE M., 78 Eastland Ave., Rochester, N.Y. MARI, LEE T, 130 Prospect Ave., West Haven, Conn. MARK, ROGER, 7 Summer St., Worren, R.I. MARKLE, BRUCE M., 1 Eafon Rd., Wenham, Mass. MARRINER, CATHY L., Sherwood Dr., Southport, Conn. MARSDEN, WILLARD E., JR., 359 Williston Way, Pawtucket, R.l.. MAR- TENS, HARRY, 6408 Highland Dr., Chevy Chase Md. MARTIN, LESLIE A., 35 Christie Hill Rd., Darien, Conn. MARZETTA, BARBARA R., 19029 Threshmg RIS Gurthersburg, Md. MASSARE, CHARLES P., 862 Union St., Brooklyn, N.Y. MASSARSKY, STEVEN J., 10 Colum- bia Terr., Weehawken, N.J. MASTROIANNI, JOHN F., 14 Carstensen Rd., Sccrsdale, N.Y. MATTHEWS, DAVID C., P.0. Box 941, Newburgh, N.Y. MAULDIN, PATRICIA B., 4225 Thirty- seventh St., N.W., Wushlngron, D.C. MAYER, MARK D., 725 Devonshrre St., Pittsburgh, Pa. MCcALEER, JOHN H 2623 Stirrup Ln., Aiexundrru, Vu McCAFFREY, ANNE L., 93 Wilcox Ave., Puwrucket Rl McCLELLAND, STEVEN W., Greenville, 22 GuyencourT Rd., Wilming- ton, Del. McEI.WEE, ROSS S., 2817 Belvedere Ave., Churlotte, N.C. McGEE, JAMES A., 4814 Kaye, Memphis, Tenn. McGINNIS, DONALD M., 79 Gray Ave., Toronto, Ont., Can. McKAY, DANIEL J., 78 East Madison St., East Islip, N.Y. McKAY, JANICE M., 4612 Sawyer St., New Bedford, Mass. McLAUGHLIN, EUGENE L., 12 Hillcrest Rd., Canton, Mass. McLAUGHLIN, RICHARD R., 60 Eldridge St., Cranston, R.l. McMENAMIN, PETER D., 219 Bay Ave., Hicksville, N.Y. McMILLAN, THOMAS R., 813 Walker St., League City, Tex. McTIGHE, MICHAEL J., 1369 Nicholson St., N.W., Washington, D.C. MEADER, LYNN A., 79 Warwick Neck Ave., Warwick, R.I. MEADOWS, MICHAEL E., 5603 Parkston Rd., Wash- ington, D.C. MEDAS, JANE E., 6 Audrey Ci., Coventry, R.I. MELIUS, JAMES M., R.F.D, Copake Falls, N.Y. MENDILLO, BERNARD J., 642 Smith St., Providence, R.I. MENT, M. ROBERT, 225 Hewlett Neck Rd., Woodmere, N.Y. MEYER, B. ROBERT, 58 Charlesfield St Providence, R.I. MEYER, MRS. KATHRYN B., 58 Charlesfield St., Provrdence R.I. MIC HAI.ID PAUL R., 101 Lockwood St., West Warwick, R.I. MICHELINIE, DONALD L, 621 McClay Ave., Lewisburg, Pa. MICHIE, ELSIE B., 504 Thomas St., Stroudsburg, Pa. MILI.BRANDT, WOLF- GANG W., 2017 Imperial St., Salt Lake City, Utah. MILLER, KENNETH R., 442 Orchard $t., Rahway, N.J. MILLS, MRS. SUSAN P., 110 Park St., Malone, N.Y. MIRBACH, BRUCE E., 1848 Paul Ave., Bethlehem, Pa. MITCHELL, JOAN E., 10 East End Ave., New York, N.Y. MITCHELL, SEAN R., 2922 Eric Ln., Dallas, Tex, MOMBERG, THOMAS A., 379 Fairfield. Cir., Memphis, Tenn. MONEY, STUART E. 75 Benefit St., Providence, R.I. MOORE, TERRY J., 64 Charlesfield St., Providence, R.l. MORAN, CATHERINE G., 5 Melrose Rd., Auburn, N.Y. MORAN, STEPHEN E., 152 Sagamore Rd., Cranston, R.I. MORLEY, JONATHAN, 68 High Point Rd., Westport, Conn. MORRISON, WILLIAM A., 4141 Barbarossa Ave., Miami; Fla. MORROW, STEVEN R., 411 Weadley Rd., King of Prussia, Pa. MORSE, GLENN F., 2278 Westlake Ct., Oceanside, N.Y. MORSE, STEPHEN P., 24 Chesterton Rd., Wellesley, Mass. MORTON, KEITH E., 6 Maple Ct.,, Reading, Pa. MOSTEL, RAPHAEL 1., 285 Aycrigg Ave., Passaic, N.J. MOUNTAIN DAVID' 6., 31 Bird St,, Needham, Mass. MUCKLE, RICHARD A, 459 Acirerson Blvd., Brrghtwafers, NY MUENCHINGER, WILLIAM C., 105 Beamis Ave, Cumberldnd, R.I. MURPHY, RICHARD G., 2224 Fair Oaks Rd., Decatur, Go. MURRAY, MICHAEL L., 1384 Beecher St., S.W., Atlanfa, Go. MURRAY, STEPHEN T., 196 Devonshire Dr., Rochester N.Y. MUSGRAVE DOROTHEA 2460 James Sf Ann Arbor Mich. MYERS, MATTHEW, K., Limekiln Rd., West Redding, Conn MYERS, STEPHAN G., 3406 Elegig Dr, Houston, Tex. MYERSON, DAVID H. . 4 Birchwood Terr., Nanuet, N.Y. MYSI.IK THOMAS L,, 48 Howiand Ave., River Edge, N.J. NASCHKE, JUDITH A., 10 Hart St., Burhngton Mass. NATALE, THOMAS S., 37 Royal Ave., Provrdence, R.I. NATHAN, BARRY M., 45 Peter Ln., New Hyde Park, N.Y. NENCKA, FRANK L, 706 Hope St., Bristol, R.l..NEUMANN, LANCE A., 73 Bishop Ln., qulson Conn, NEWBERGER SUSAN 214 Cedar Ave:, Highland Park, Il: NEWCOMB WALTER C., 54 Crest Rd., Fairport, N.Y. NICHOLSON, CATHERINE B., 34 River St., New Canacn Conn. NICHOLSON, LESTER E., Jr., Route 5, Laurel, Miss. NOEL, CHARLES E., co IBM Corn, 1 Maritime kl.,-San Francrscu Cal. NOTHNAGEL FREDERICK P., 1330 Glendale. Pl.; Union, N.J. NUNI.IST MARK M., Toppmg Ln, R.D. 3 Chagrin Folls Ohio ounnorzrsn JUNE A., 4100 Cathedral Ave., 'N.W., Washington, D.C. ODA, MARJORIE S., 1088 Wurholo St Honolulu, H.1. ODIO RAUL V., A.P.D.0. 623, Scn Jose, C.R. 0 DONNElL JAMES M, 4801 Post Rd Pelham Munor N.Y. OGINTZ, ELLEN T., 588 Haddon Ln., East Meadow N:Ys OLBRICH, LUDWIGB Hutchinson Pkwy., thchf'eld Conn. OLNEY, WII.I.IAM B., 334 Guy Park Ave, Ams?erdam, N.Y. OLSON, C. I.ORENCE 3420 Ofis, Warren, MlCh OLSON, ERIC A. J., 12 Wyoming Dr., Hun'rmgton Sta,, N.Y. OMEARA THOMAS J., 102 Pell Meadow Dr. G Falrfeld Conn, OPPENHEIMER, ANN L., 1142 Sheridan Rd., Hughlund Park, Ill. ORTON, GLENN S., 109 MacArthur Rd., Swunsec Mass. OSMAN, RICHARD W., 64 South Fmrvu:w iy, Macungre Pa. OUELLETTE GREGORY K., 321 Onset Ave., Buzzurds Buy, Mass. OWEN, CLAUDIA D., Star Route 42, Box 88, Evergreen, Colo. OYSLER, CHARLES R., 7801 Concord Hills B Cmcmnah, Ohio. PAAL, DOUGI.AS H., Har- wich Rd Brewster, Mass. PACK, MYUNGSUN 6825 Clover Ln., Upper Darby, Pa. PADEN WILLIAM E JR., 733 Crescent Pkwy Westfreld N.J. PAGOS JAMES M., 7 Winsor St., Ludlow, Moss PALMER, BRIAN E., 5820 Kellogg Ave., Edrnu, Minn. PARTINGTON CHARLES 6., 46 Buttonwood Rd., Essex Fells, N.J. PATBERG, JOHN K., 736 Willow St., Crunfprd, N.J. PATZ, HOWARD A., 3307 So. 104th Ave,, Omaha, Neb. PEACOCK, GARY D., 23 Findlay Crescent, Fori Erie, Ont., Can. PEIXOTO, MARTA C., Rua Senador Vergueiro 185-1102, Rio de Janeiro, Brozil. PELL, CHRISTOPHER T. H., Ledge Rd., Newporf, R.l. PERCESEPE, NANCY K., 372 Somerville Pl., Yonkers, N.Y, PETERS, JEFFERY R., 664 Valerie Rd., Newtown Square, Pa. PETERSEN, ERIC S., 6 North Twin Circle Ct., Yardley, Po. PEZZA, KAREN R., 39 Lantern Ln., Cranston, R.I. PFLANZ, LYNETTE M., 2101 West- fall Rd., Rochester, N.Y. PHELPS, KEVIN T., 255 Raymond St., Rockville Centre, N.Y. PHILBRICK, DAVID A., B3 Mesa Ct., Atherton, Cal. PHILLIPS, ANNE A., TOS DEV GP USACSC, APO, New York, N.Y. PIERSTORFF, MRS. CAROL A., 216 Hope St., Providence, R.l. PILECKI, CHRISTINE A., 1511 Colwell Rd., Conshohocken, Po. PIPAL, SUELLA, 12 Cove Ridge Ln., Old Greenwich, Conn. PITT, BRUCE R., 12 Nora Ln., Plainview, N.Y. PLAGER, JACK L., 271 Ross Ave,, Hackensack, N.J. PLATT, TIMOTHY N., 842 Summit Ave., St. Paul, Minn. PLOTKIN, JAMES N., 125 Kennondale Ln., Richmond, Va. POLATTY, R. W, Rose Bud Ln., Roswell, Ga. POTAS, WARREN A., 308 North Stockton Ave., Wenongh, N.J. POTRZEBA, MARGO F., 302 Thayer St., Providence, R.I. POWERS, KEITH A., 21 Greeley St., So. Portland, Me. POZEFSKY, MARK, 37 Wincrest Dr., Glens Falls, N.Y. PRAGER, KEN- NETH E., 14 Ridge'Rd:, Farmingdale, N.Y. PRICE, WILLIAM C., 58 Hilton Rd.,, Mount Holly, N.J. PRIEST, NANCY E., 906 West Wabash Ave., Crawfordsville, Ind. PUFFER, DAVID B., 5 Edgehill Rd., Winchester, Mass. -PURNELL, JON R., 38 Earle St., Norwood, Mass. RADEZ, PATRICIA S., 1335 Roinbow Dr., San Matfeo, Cal. RAE, J. PATERSON, 408 High 5t., Cronford, N.J. RAMMELKAMP, DAVID A., 416 Linden Ave., Albion, Mich. RAPPOPORT, JUDITH N., 185 McClellan St., Bronx, N.Y. RAY, ALISON J., 912 Forest Rd., Lancaster, Pa. RAYMOND, VALERIE M., 102 Butternut Rd., Briarcliff Manor, N.Y. REBACK, JOYCE E., 501 Wingate Rd., Huntingdon Valley, Pa. REICH, LLOYD E., 40 East 9th.St., Apt. 14M, New York, N.Y. RENSHAW, CLIFFORD M., 301 Cornell Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. RENZI, ANTHONY A., R.D. 1, Hooversville, Pa. REOPELL, JOHN P., 818 Eddy St., Provi- dence, R.l. REVKIN, BARBARA J., 104 Wilcox Ave., Pawtucket, R.l. RICHENTHAL, DAVID G., 1111 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. RICHMOND, CAROL J., 79 Vaill Rd., Water- town, Conn. RICKLY, JACK D., 1623 Peace Pl., Columbus, Ohio. RICKS, MARY F., 10 Underhill Rd, Ossining, N.Y. RIEDE, MELISSA J., 7340 St. Clair St., Apf. C, Indianapolis, ind. RIFFER, ALAN E., 21853 Cromwell Ave., Fairview Park, Ohio. RITTER, PHILIP M., 1627 Dupmory Dr., St. Louis, Mo. ROBERTS, RAE M.,. 601 Tucson Dr., Lexington, Ky. ROBERTSON, CARY, 150 Camp St., Providence, R.I. ROBERTSON, STEVEN S., 15 David Scott Dr., Wayne, N.J. ROBINSON, EUGENIA J., Laurel Hill Post Rd., Matunuck, R.l. ROBSON, J. MICHAEL, 263 Benefit St., Providence, R.I. ROGERS, PAULINE F., 6 Edward Ct., Tenafly, N.J. ROITMAN, DEBORAH A., 310 Grotto Ave., Providence, R.I. ROSE, JOHN B., P.0. Box 156, Water Mill, N.Y. ROSE, RENEE B., 1 Highland Ave., Rowayton, Conn. ROSENBERG,-ROBERT D, 24 Scarborough Rd., Pawtucket, R.I. ROSS, JAMES J., 36 Park Ln., Essex Fells, N.J. ROSS, JAMIE R., 265 White St., Raoynham, Mass. ROTHSTEIN, FRANCES R., 5350 Thirty-second St., .N.W., Washington, D.C. ROTHSTEIN, PATRICIA A., 49 Delaware Ave., Freeport, N.Y. ROWE, JOHN- A., 2 Ocean Ln., Palm Beach, Fla. ROWE, LAURA L., 127 Laurel Crest Rd., Madison, Conn. ROY, EDWARD J., 167 Doyle Ave, Provi- dence, R.I. ROZELLE, ROBERT V., 5330-Palomar Ln., Dallas, Tex. RUFFER, WILLIAM C., R.R. 32, Box 154, Terre Haute, Ind. RYAN, F. THOMAS, 1355 Salway S.W. Ave., North Canton, Ohio. SACHELI, FRANK J., 112.Murray St.. Fort Erie, Ont., Can. SADO, JOHN J., 110 High St., Pawtucket, R.l. SALAMY, THOMAS E., 39 East George St., Providence, R.1. SALINGER, JOHN J., 2601 Section Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio: SANDEL, GEORGE C,,. 3644 Ter- willeger Blvd., Tulsa, Okla.-SANGER, CHARLOTTE D., 506 Woodlawn Rd., Baltimore, Md. SASTOQUE, HUMBERTO, Acacias, Columbia. SAVITSKY, JOAN B., 19 Nufmeg Ln., Stam- ford, Conn. SAYRE, DONALD- H., 2706 Sulgrave Rd., Shaker Heights, Ohio. SCALL, JOSEPH G., 26 Horton Ave., Middletown, N.Y, SCHAEFER, MONICA A., 9 Northway, Harts- dale, N.Y. SCHAFFNER, SUZANNEE., 2935 Van Aken Blvd., Cleveland, Ohio. SCHAINKER, RICHARD J., 7333 Balson Ave., University City, Mo. SCHANTZ, JAMES D., 225 . First St., Lewiston, N.Y. SCHATZ, DANIEL J., 122 Josephine St., Syracuse, N.Y. SCHAUFFLER, WIL- LIAM M., 524 Carnot Rd., Coraapolis, Pa.--SCHERMERHORN, RICHARD M., 2824 So. Colum- bia Pl., Tulsa, Okla. SCHLOEMER, MARYANNE, 9 King St,, Norwalk, Conn. SCHLOTTERER, GEORGE.R.;.115 Waterman St.; Providence, R.l. SCHMITT, STEPHEN R., 29 Harding Ave., Hatboro, Pa. SCHOCHET, JOEL C., 1019 Stafford Rd., Valley Streom, N.Y. SCHOEFFER, PETER-A.:V:,.419 East 57th St., New York City, N.Y. SCHOMP, RICHARD R., 235 Drake Rd., Cherry Hill, N.J. SCHONFELD, STEVEN A, 544 Claybourne Rd., Rochester, N.Y. SCHREINER, DAVID E., 21641 Avalon Dr.,- Rocky -River, Ohio. SCHROEDER, MARTHA L., Box 122, snuff Mill -Rd., R.D. 2, Horkessin, Del: SCHULAK; JAMES A., 4334 Olcott Ave., East Chicago, Ind. SCHWARTZ, ROBERT D., 2 Forest Pl., Larchmont, N.Y. SCHWERTFEGER, FREDERICK, 586 South Prospect Ave,, Bergenfield, N.J. SCOTT-CRAIG, WALTER K:, 2 Chase Rd., Hanover, N.H: SEDEY, ROBERT G., 26523 Mozur Dr., Palos Verdes Pen., Cal. SELTER, MYRON H., 736 Bryant Sf., Woodmere, N.Y. SEN SHYAMOLI, 577 Angell St., Providence, R.I. SHAIKH, FARIDA M., Pakistan High Commission, 5 Pesiaron Stonor, Kuala, Lumpur, Malaysia.. SHANKLAND, GEORGE T., 270 Fleming Rd., Cincinnoti, Ohio, SHAPIRO, RICH- ARD J., 75 Lauriston. $t;, Providence, R.l. SHARP, RICHARD T., 109 Guilford Rd., Syrd- cuse, N.Y. SHATTUCK, GARDINER H., 12 Wildwood Cir., Wellesley, Mass. SHEA, CHARLES A., Raeder Ave., Nuangolu, Po.. SHEETS, JOHN E., 7 Bridle Ln., St. Louis, Mo, SHEETS, ROBERT M., 7 Bridle Ln., St. Louis, Mo. SHINN, ROBERT A., Park Ave., Beverly, N.J. SHIPPEE, ROBERT W., Brookridge Dr., Greenwich, Conn. SIEGENFELD, WILLIAM L., 197 Mulberry Ln., Larchmont, N.Y. SILBERMANN, JONATHAN J., 955 Walton Ave., New York, M.Y. SILVESTRI, RONALD C., 54 Ten Hills Rd., Somerville, Mass SIMPSON, ROBERT L., 182 Bowen St., Apt. 2, Providence, R.I. ALAN C. SINGLETERRY, 7100 Wilson Ln., Bethesda, Md. SINGLETON, ROBERT W., 121 Summit Ave., Providence, R.I. SINGLETON, SUSAN D, 292 Pearl St., Waokefield, Mass. SINGSEN, MRS. JUDITH K., 194 Angell St., Providence, R.I. SINNOTT, J. WILLIAM, 12 Trysting Pl., North Scituate, Mass. SIPE, JOHN E., 1931 Van Antwerp, Grosse Pointe, Mich. SISTO, JANE C., 155 Hickory Ln,, Closter, N.J. SLATER, CANDACE A., 71 Locust St., Floral Park, N.Y. SLAVIT, MICHEL R., 292 Morris Ave., Provi- dence, R.I. SMILEY, GAIL J., 147 Roby Dr., Rachester, N.Y. SMITH, MRS. ANNE M., 3 Azalea Ct., Barrington, R.I. SMITH, CAROL L., 45 Abigail St.,, Ea. Greenwich, R.l. SMITH, GERALD E., 111 Waverly St., Providence, R.I. SMITH, RICHARD E., 6849 Burns 5t., Apt. C4, Forest Hills, N.Y. SNYDER, MARC A., 1 Milburn St., Rockville Centre, N.Y. SODERLUND, STEPHEN C., 9 Mowry Ave., E. Providence, R.I. SOIFER, MARK, 16 No. Fred- ericksburg Ave., Margate, N.J, SOLBOS, JEAN M., Weigold Rd., Tolland, Conn. Sollitta, MICHAEL L., 236 Centre St., Rumford, R.I. SOLOMON, LAFE E., 11 Terrace Dr., Helena, Ark. SOREY, ROGER L., 12619 South 29th St., Omaha, Neb. SOUZA, PAUL A., 83 Van Winkle 5t., Dorchester, Mass. SPENCER, JOHN W., 201 Clark Ln., Camillus, N.Y. SPIGELMAN, MEL- VIN K., 101 Douglas Ave., Providence, R.I. SPRAGUE, PETER C., 193 Pinewood Rd., Harts- dale, N.Y. SQUIRES, TAPPEY B., 1115 St. Stephens Rd., Alexandria, Va. SSEBAZZA, HERMAN K., .0. Box 1035, Kisubi, Mawugulu, Buganda, Uganda. STANKOVIC, JOHN A,, 61 45 84 Pl., Rego Park, N.Y. STARZAK, ROBERT J., 229 Tiffany St., Aftleboro, Mass. STEIN, DANIEL E., 511 North 5t., Burlington, Vi. STEIN, ROBERT 0., 355 Lenox Ave., Uniondale, N.Y STONE, JOHN H., 4123 Nebraska Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C. STRAUSS, VICTOR B., Drake Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio. STROM, FREDRIC A., P.0. Box 1905, Johannes- burg, So. Africa. SUNDT, DANIEL N., 15 Monterry Dr., Newark, Del. SUSSMAN, ALLEN M., 358 Kneeland Ave., Yonkers, N.Y. SWECK, CHRISTINE C., 75 West Main St., No. Kingston, R.l. SWEET, SHARON C., 80 Forbes St., Riverside, R.I. SWERDLOFF, DAVID A., 963 Park- side Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. TAKUMI, LARRY T, 909 McCully St., Honolulu, H.l. TANAKA, GRAHAM Y., 120 Warwick Pl., So. Pasadena, Cal. TANSILL, FREDERICK J., 2740 Cortland Pl., N.W., Washington, D.C. TARDY, DAVID M., 12 Fay Park Dr., North Syracuse, N.Y. TERRIN, MICHAEL L., 470 East 17 St., Brooklyn, N.Y. TERRY, NATHANIEL S., 113 Free St., Hingham, Mass. THALER, PAUL S., 1369 Millwood Ln., North Merrick, N.Y. THOMAS, CHARLES- B., 505 Wickersham St., Ft. Benning, Ga. THOMAS, DAVID L., Stony Brook Nature Ct, North St., Norfolk, Mass. THOMAS, GEOFFREY C., 360 South Mountain Rd., New City, N.Y. THOMAS, PAMELA L., Newell Dr., R.D. 2, Cumberland, R.l. THOMAS, SHEILA L., 2004 Cedar Lake Blvd., Minneapolis, Minn. THOMAS, STEPHEN L., 5514 East Liberty, Fresno, Cal. THOMPSON, CHARLES W., 2015 Broad St., Cranston, R.l. THOMPSON, DANIEL J., Box E, Veterans Hospital, Tuskegee, Ala. THOMPSON, ERIC C., 16 Longbow Rd., Lynnfield, Mass. THOMPSON, WILLIAM B., 707 North Oakhurst Dr., Beverly Hills, Cal. TOMKINS, KATHERINE F., R.F.D., Mendham, N.J. TOMPA, FRANK W., 13 Ock Pl., Bergen- field, N.J. TOOTHMAN, MICHAEL L., 253 Park St., Morgantown, W. Va. TOWLER, WIL- LIAM L., 89 Orchard Rd., Chatham, N.J. TRAINOR, RICHARD H., 333 Hinchman Ave., Hod- donfield, N.J. TRAVER, BARBARA J., 6306 N. Thirty-first St., Arlington, Va. TRUEBLOOD, MARK, 7876 Pinemeadow Ln., Cincinnati, Ohio. TRUMAN, MRS. JOY S., 77 Candlewood Rd., Groton, Conn. TRUMAN, PATRICIA A., Woodstock Hill, Woodstock, Conn. TUCCI, RALPH P., 64 Chapin Ave., Providence, R.l. TULLER, JAMES G., R.D. 1, Box 227, Flemingfon, N.J. TUMMINO, LAWRENCE R., 316 Chancellor St., Johnstown, Po. TUNAITIS, ELAINE M., 30 Bradfield St., Rochester, N.Y. TURRENTINE, WILLIAM E., 934 Birchwood Ln., Sche- nectady, N.Y. TWIBLE, LESLIE E., 315 Hope St., Providence, R.I. TYLWALK, MICHAEL C., 66 Simson St., Tonawanda, N.Y. UJLAKI, PETER S., 230 Jay 5t., Brooklyn, N.Y. USDANE, MARK N., 700 7th Street, S.W., Washington, D.C. VANDERWICKEN, VIRGINIA, 801 Eleventh St., Grundy-Center, lowa. VAN EPP, JAMES E., JR., 105 Delview Dr., Windybush, Wilming- ton, Del. VANNI, JOAN A., 382 Brook St., Providence, R.I. VAN NOSTRAND, R. CRAIG, 7 South Park Dr., Tenafly, N.J. VANTASSEL, KIRK L., 515 Fowler Ave., Pelham, N.Y. VEAUDRY, MARGARET J., 7 Edgehill Ave., Lincoln, R.I. VELTRE, DOUGLAS W., 249 Passaic Ave., West Caldwell, N.J. VERBANO, LAWRENCE D., 722 Goucher.st., Johnstown, Pa. VERRECCHIA, ROBERT E., 12 Montague St., Providence, R.I. VIDA, GLEN J., 612 Jackson Ave., Elizabeth, N.J. VIETOR, MRS, JULIA B., 566 Paradise Ave., Middletown, R.1. VIGE- LAND, MRS, JEAN S., 389 Angell St, Providence, R.I. VLAMYNCK, PATRICIA R., 645 River Dr., East Paterson, N.J, VOORHEES, STEPHEN S. 6811 51st N.E., Seattle, Wash. VOYMAS, DAVID C., 389 Angell St., Providence, R.I. VUKELICH, JOHN E, 818 4th St., South, Virginia, Minn. WAGAR, LOIS A., 829 Ashland Dr., Mt. Pleasant, Mich. WAKEFIELD, ROGER E., 26 Sunset Dr., Northboro, Mass. WALACH, STEPHEN, 519 Walcott St., Pawtucket, R.l. WALDRON, GREGORY B., 20 Potten Ave., Oceanside, N.Y. WALK, ROBERT A., 2 Quarry Ln., Irvington, N.Y. WALLER, SUSAN 5., co Mobil Oil Hellas, P.0. Box 163, Athens, Greece. WALTER, MARGARET J., 91 Highland St., Holliston, Mass. WARD, RANDALL L., 7445 Sa. Prairie Ave., Chicago, 1. WAWRO, PETER A. S., 44 Walbridge Rd., West Hartford, Conn. WEBSTER, JOEL C., 14 William St., Homer, N.Y. WEED, CAROLYN, co 4-C, Cananeag, Sonora, Mex. WEINBERG, PAUL T., 76 Prospect Ave, Sea Cliff, N.Y. WEISSMAN, LAUR- ENCE M., 200 E, 17th St., Brookiyn, N.Y. WENTWORTH, FRANK B., 106 Cheney Ln., East Hartford, Conn. WERTHESSEN, GREGORY H., 87 Mason St., Rehoboth, Mass. WEST, ALAN 1., 152 Haggetts Pond Rd., Andover, Moss. WEST, ROGER L., 63 Shirley St., Warwick, R.I. WHITAKER, DAVID M., 100 Diamond Hill Rd., Warwick, R.l. WHITE, CYNTHIA K., 2011 Glen Dr., Alexandria, Va. WHITE, D. SCOTT, 1409 Woodway Dr., Hurst, Tex. WHITLOCK, JONATHAN S., 2009 Bradley Rd., Rockford, ll. WHITMAN, DAVID P., 199 Don Ave., Rum- ford, R.I. WILBUR, STEVEN E., 25 Columbia St. Brockfon, Mass. WILKS, WADE M., 67 Highland St., Woonsocket, R.I. WILLARD, MRS. BRIANNE B., 384 Hope St., Providence, R.I. WILLIAMS, DONALD R., 76 Cross Rd., Basking Ridge, N.J. WILLIAMS, JOBETH, 7353 Stan- wick Dr., Houston, Tex. WILLIAMS, M. PHILLIP, 1362 Edgar Ave., Springfield, Ohio. WILLIAMS, SUSAN C., Apt. 22A, 1040 North Lake Shore Dr., Chicago, Ill. WILLIAMSON, FREDERICK S., 74 White Sands Pl., Kailug, H.I. WILSON, JOHN H., Apt. 18-B, 401 East 89th St., New York, N.Y. WINTERS, JILL A., 44 Estates Dr., Orinda, Cal. WINZER, DALE R., Box 27, Vernon, N.J. WISEMAN SUSAN K., 35 Hampshire Rd., Portsmouth, N.H. WOLFE, HELEN J., 30 Lowrence Pkwy., Tenafly, N.J, WURZEL, DAVID L., 7837 Kent Rd., Alex- andria, Va, YANO, PAULA T, 762A Pohukaina St., Honolulu, H.l. YOUNE, ROBERT J., 288 Harvard Ave., Rockville Center, N.Y. ZAPFFE, ROBERT G., 2717 Walnut Rd., Norman, Okla. ZARUM, BARRY L., 9 Mayflower Dr., Cranston, R.l. ZIMMERING, PAUL L., 1144 East 57th St., Brooklyn, N.Y. ZINK, DARRELL M., 1903 Kingstree Ct., Rochester, Mich. ZIRIN, ROBERT M., 7 Carlton Rd., Marblehead, Mass. ZOCCA, CHRISTOPHER M., 30 Chest- nut 5t., Nutley, N.J. ZUCKER, STEVEN M., 94-05 222 St., Queens Village, N.Y. ZUPANEC, ungcv,f 6'116 Pomeroy Ave., Pittsfield Moss. ZWARG, PETER D., 215 Mountwell Ave., Haddonfield, N.J. ACTIVITIES: Afro-American Society: Pres., Philip Lord; Sec., Beverly Woodard; Treas., Monte Bailey. A.l.E.S.E.C.: Pres., Mike Toothman; V. Pres., David Baldauf; Sec., Roberta Cohon; Treas., Larry Wei. Alpha Phi Omega: Pres., James Burris; V. Pres.,, Gordon Hollingsworth; Sec., Lance Newmann. Ameri- can Field Service: Pres., Brian Plunkett; V.Pres., Jeff Ouderkirk; Sec., Sue Kahler; Treas., Jane Cordry. Association for Computing Machinery: Pres., Dan Bergeron; V. Pres., Frank Tompa. Art Club: Pres., Peter Kaufman. Bridge Club: Pres., John Saxe. Brown Band: Pres., William Schauffler; V. Pres., Andy Eisenberg; Sec., Bob Paynter. Brown Broadcasting: Gen. Mngr., Jim Shantz. Brown Campus Fund: Pres., Scot Spicer; V. Pres., Pat Gerber. Brown Student Agencies: Pres., Eric Natwig; Sec., Jay Fellows; Treas., Wesley Magat. Brown Student Theater: Pres., Brad Krever; V. Pres., John Beatty. Brownbrokers: Pres. W. Griffith; Sec., Brad Krevor. Cammarian Club: Pres., John Salinger; V.Pres., Dan Thompson; Sec., Josh Posner; Treas., Tom Bishop. Cheerleaders: Pres., Rick Buck; V. Pres., Alan Castner; Sec., Randy Lane. Chess Club: Pres., Paul Gauthier; Sec., Tom Perella; Treas., Ed Friedman. Brown-Pembroke Chorus: Pres., Robert Galkiewicz; V. Pres., Michael Toothman. Christian Fellowship: Pres., Ed Allen; V. Pres., Philip Lord; Sec., Debra Blackwell; Treas., Paula Yano. Christian Science: Pres., Paul Schopf; V. Pres., Caadance Towne; Sec-Treas., Roger Vogt. Class of 1970: Pres., Steve Massarsky; V. Pres., Curt Bennett; Sec., Bill Duncan; Treas., Susan Singleton. Class of 1971: Pres., Clark Williams; V. Pres., Michael Rubel; Sec., Barry Kusinitz; Treas., Steve Bickel. Class of 1972: Pres., Alan Sparrow; V. Pres., Carleton Clinch; Sec., Cathy Anderson; Treas., Pat Myskowski. Class of 1973: Pres., Rick Raobertson; V. Pres., Scott Harris; Sec., Connie Mouslie; Treas., Debbie Bowen. Classics Club: Pres., John Freeman; V. Pres., Richard Aldrich; Sec., Carol Jones; Treas., David Thomas. Community Involvement Center: Pres., Dave Solo- mon: V. Pres., Paul Burke; Sec., Becky Harrison. Debating Club: Pres., Rick Trainor; V. Pres., Rob Stern; Sec., Ted Hirt; Treas., Bill McNeely. Dolphins: Pres., Bill Mosberg; V. Pres., Dick Sollenberger; Sec., Kim Meyers; Treas., George Reaney. Episcopal Col- lege Church: Pres., Mary Ann Crookston; V. Pres., Anne Brewer; Sec., Susan Hee; Treas., Harry Water. Evanescent Publishing Co., Pres., Bob Binning; Sec., Rich Auerback. Faunce House Board of Governors: Pres., Mike Robson; V. Pres., Jim Friedman; Sec., Richard Forde; Treas., David Bloom. Film Society: Pres., Paul Bloomhardt; V. Pres., Chris Bene; Sec., Michael Terrin; Treas., Grant Golen. Flying Club: Pres., Peter Van Dyke; Treas., Charles Craig. Folk Dance Club: Pres., Robert Kasper; V. Pres., Craig Johns; Sec., David Cox; Treas., Nancy Classer. French Club: Pres., Peter Kahn; V. Pres., Katherine Zinsser; Sec., Anne Moreau; Treas., Earl Carlyle. German Club: Pres., Janet Carson; V. Pres., Michael Kilgore; Sec., Sue Lehback; Treas., Jim Tuller. Graduate Student Council: Pres., Peter Schudly; V. Pres.-Treas., Don Smith; Sec., Bonnie Wheeler. Brown Daily Herald: Editor, Beverly Hodgson; Bus. Mngr., Anthony Barton; Man. Ed., Laura Hersh; Ex. Ed., Douglas Paal. Hellcoal Press: Pres., David Bloom; V. Pres., Stewart Baker; Sec., Mary Halliday; Treas., Leslie Horvitz. Hillel Foundation: Pres., Eli Hir- scheld; V. Pres., Mark Levine; Sec., Elisse Walter. Institute of Electricity and Electronics: Pres., Thomas Berry; V. Pres., Ed Lamagna; Sec., Ted Oatis; Treas., Ron Lefever. Jabberwocks: Pres., Douglas Langdon; V. Pres., Jim Balow; Sec., Gene Nelson; Treas., Tom Mosberg. John Hay Society: Pres., Jon Purnell; Sec., Charles Parting; Treas., Thomas McMillan. Brown Jug: Pres., Peter Sprague; V. Pres., Peter Ujlaki; Sec., Hugh Delehanty; Treas., Stephen Murry. Karate Club: Pres., Donald Smith; V. Pres., John Sopka; Sec., John Sipe. Brown Key: Pres., Al Levine; V. Pres., Steve Cole; Sec., Rick Buck; Treas., Dave Holmsted. Liber Brunensis: Ed-in-Chief, Rick Petersen; Mngr. Ed., Bruce Horwitz; Mngr. Ed., Matt Myers; Ex. Ed., Kathy Maher; Bus. Mngr., Bill Sinnott. Meiklejohn Society: Pres., Michael Churgin; V. Pres., Stephen Walach; Sec., Andrew Chlebus. National Student Association: Co-ord., Stephen Cowell. Orchestra: Bus. Mngr., Robert Ruedesueli. Outing Club: Pres., Bill Towler; V. Pres., Bill Thompson; Sec., Cathy Laughin; Treas., Dabney White. Photo Club: Pres., Matthew Myers; V. Pres., David Winter; Sec.-Treas., Nancy Pat Pope. Premedical Society: Pres., Joseph Mullen; V. Pres., James Schulak; Sec., Sandra Fin- berg; Treas., Jerome Zeldis. Production Workshop: Pres., Andrew Arnault; Sec., Joan Vanni; Treas., Paul Burke. Radio Club: Pres., Michael Murphy; V. Pres., Ed Lazowska; Sec., Donald Stanford; Treas., George Shankland. Res Publica: Ch. Ed., Joseph Scali; Mngr. Ed., M. Churgin; Bus. Mngr., Marvin Homonoff. Rifle Club: Pres., Roger West; V. Pres., Terry Whitehouse. Rugby Club: Pres., David Zucconi; V. Pres., Bob Sedey; Sec., John Brandt; Treas., Jerry Linsley. Science Fiction Club: Pres., Williams Smith. Ski Team Club: Pres., Richard Miles; V. Pres., Tom Dresser. Sock and Buskin: Pres., Robert Bailey; Sec., Joan Vanni; Treas., Brad Krevor. Soaring Club: Pres., Vincent Simmon; V. Pres., Jonn Wile; Treas., Jeff Kelman. Students for Democratic Society: Jerrold Freiwirth. Sport Car Club: Pres., Ted Morse; Treas., Jeff Kelman. Students for Responsible Action: Pres., Robert Lynch. Squash Club: Pres., Richard Aldrich; V. Pres., Dick Cauman; Sec., Mark Mayer. Turorial Program: Pres., Ron Rosenbaum. Universal Blood Service: Pres., John Unperhill. Yacht Club: Pres., John McAleer; V. Pres., Richard Harrington; Sec., Edward Lazowska; Treas., Ronald Hanoian. Young Republicans: Pres., William Olson; V. Pres., John Hayn; Sec., Chris Ulicky; Treas., Bark Doyle. Young Socialist Alliance: Pres., Bruce Clark; V. Pres., Betsy Glasgow; Treas., Rudy Zeller. Brown Youth Gui- dance: V. Pres., Paul Weinberg; Sec-Treas., Larry Gordon. Brun Mael: Ed., Betsy Glasgow; Bus. Mngr., Debbie Roitman. Record: Ed., Alison Ray; Bus. Mngr., Liz Grower. PDQ's: Bus. Mngr., Laura Leff. Chattertocks: Bus. Mngr., Ellen Cohen. Athletic Recreation Association: Pres., Barrie Atkin; Treas., Kim Witsman. Pembroke Social Organization: Pres., Patty Allen; Treas., Karen Liggett. Pembroke Council: Pres., Barb Hamaty; Treas., Pam Watson. Ch al. IN MEMORIAM Capt. William G. Norberg, USA '65 June 7, 1966 21.t. Thomas R. Temple, USMC '65 October 19, 1966 Capt. John B. Sherman, USMC '62 March 25, 1966 LLt. Michael J. Carley, USMC '62 February 27, 1967 Lt. Frederic R. Chesebrough, USA '64 March 16, 1967 I.CDR Laurent N. Dion, USN 51 August 17, 1967 171.t. Kenneth A. Berube, USMC 65 August 11, 1967 Lance Corporal Robert T. Steinsieck, Jr. USMC '68 December 2, 1967 17Lt. Francis M. Driscoll, USAF '64 February 29, 1968 Capt. Edward W. Connelly, Jr. l.jSMCR '65 May b, 1968 Major H. Sherman Lonergan, USMC '52 February 23, 1969 Lt. jg Francis E. Horahan, USN '66 February 18, 1969 17Lt. Charles W. Pigott, USMC '66 May 18, 1969 WELL DONE AND GOOD LUCK! STEVENS STUDIOS A Complete Photographic Service While Brown's liberal community anguished them- selves over the fate of Fox Point at the hands of the predator, Farview Corporation, another University decision was wreaking havoc on the economy of the Point. The establishment of the Grad Center Bar had considerably lessened the number of Brownmen trekking to Manny's to slake a thirst. Kenny Oliveria claimed that it had gotten so bad that his usual 9 to 5 crowd had thinned down to less than 60. SULZBERGER-ROLFE inc. REALTORS 654 Madison Ave. New York, N.Y. 10021 838-2000 Sponsors of the Providence East Side Urban Renewal Project ok Electric Home Heating is today s big news in Total-Electric Living! NARRAGANSETT ELEGTRIC Electric System RHODE ISLAND BUS CORPORATION Serving Brown University for all Activities 375 Promenade Street Providence, Rhode Island 861-5000 Now In Our 18th Year! FAMOUS NAME MENS SHOES . . . For Business Dress Sport The BEST for LESS DExter 1-3541 136 Westminster St. Providence, R.I. Southeast Floridas Growing- So's the Brown University Club of Palm Beach County JOIN THEE RAFFIA. THEYRE WANTED MEN Soft-spoken. Well-mannered. But extremely danger- ous.Usually seen in 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. 123 Ms, INC. Gifts For All Occasions 278 THAYER STREET Tel 421.6093 FRONTIER STORE Riding and Ranch Wear Lee's Levis and Boots 90 WEYBOSSET STREET PROVIDENCE 3, R.L. COLLEGE LAUNDERERS and CLEANSERS, Inc. 223-A THAYER STREET BELLE LESTER THE BROWN UNIVERSITY DINING HALLS e the ivy room the coffee lounge e caterer to fraternities e caterer to dormitories WM. DANDRETA COMPANY INDUSTRIAL COMMUNICATIONS ELECTRONICS - AUDIO-VISUAL Amplifying Controlling Metering Timing Recording 28 Wolcott St. Providence, R.1. 02908 Tel. 861-2800 EASTERN SCIENTIFIC CO. David Brodsky '59 Elliott Brodsky '64 PLANTLAND Construction, Inc. GENERAL CONTRACTORS Excavators o Site Development e Rental Equipment 741 Willett Ave., East Providence 433-11 ? 1 e For three generations we've done our best many of the buildings on the Brown campus. One of our O e greatest rewards has been working with so many Brown men throughout the years. We congratulate you,the new . leaders, as you begin to take your places in the world. Gilbane Building Company Providence New York Boston Tom Gilbane '33 Bill Gilbane '33 PROVIDENCE GAS COMPANY e TE 1-8800 oriss-winGAS NARRAGANSETT LUMBER CO. Hardwoods Softwoods Maple Flooring s 550 JEFFERSON BLVD. WARWICK 739-4000 Proposed Science Library under construction LANS WAREHOUSE COMPANY at Wayland Square Complete Moving Service Modern Storage Qur 65th Year The thoughts expressed below came to Parker from a man who knows the power of a pen. People such as he and there seem to be many challenge and inspire Parker to make its products the best that can be found anywhere. Reflectons on da A Parker pen is a superior writing instrument that encompasses all the years of experience, technical know-how and research it took to produce it. A Parker is the classic styling that encases its mechanical innovations. A Parker is a quality pen selling for well above ordinary products. In return, it lays down the smoothest line of ink ever put on paper. But that is not all that a Parker is: A Parker is an extension of your own thoughts. It is your point of view given life, substance and meaning by putting it down on paper. A Parker is a warm and human personal touch in the communication between human beings. It is witness to great events in the world and it records the signatures that make those events official. A Parker is the instrument of great ideas in literature, music, architecture, scienceany field of endeavor where man's thoughts are important. A Parker is a way for the uneducated to learn, the downtrodden to aspire, the inventors to invent, and the world to shake hands. A Parker can make friends, declare wars, plan the future and record the past. Farker pen... It can bring countries and individuals closer together. It can make children laugh and old men remember. A Parker is the sweet joy of possession. Men collect diamonds and old coins and honorary degrees. But a Parker is an intimate possession. A Parker is alive, warm, responsive and stimulating. It is an ally in the development of new thoughts; a way to keep from forgetting them. It can make writing a school composition or paying the bills rather a pleasure than a chore. It is freedom from the flat, cold, impersonal communication of the machine and computer age. A way to express personality with feeling. Like a voice or a touch. It writes like you. It is your voice in visual form. Your emphasis. Your feelings. Your personal style coming through bright and clear. If a Parker is only a superbly engineered writing instrument for which millions are willing to pay a premium price, then this Earth is only a roundish ball 24,902.44 miles in circumference. A Parker pen is freedom of expression at your fingertips. It can be one of the most important possessions you have. Or just an old pal in your pocket. Either way, a Parker is more than a pen. THE PARKER PEN COMPANY JANESVILLE - WISCONSIN : U:S - A OUTLET THE OUTLET COMPANY OF RHODE ISLAND Providence + Garden City + Pawtucket Eat at PAPA'S LUNCH corner of Brown and George Streets Best Pizza on the Hill THE BROWN UNIVERSITY STORE To The Class of 1970: 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. PERFECT PICTURES WE'LL TAKE THE CAMERA BACK! UNITED CAMERA, INC. 297 ELMWOOQOD AVE. 467-5600 Tilden- Thurber 292 Westminister Mall Providence, Rhode Island 02903 421-8400 Wayland Square Midland Mall Newport Watch Hill William H. Thurber, President THE Comp LIBRARY of HOLLISTON BINDING MATERIALS BOOKS LIVE LONGER IN HOLLISTON BINDINGS THE HOLLISTON MILLS, INC. Executive Offices: NORWOOD, MASSACHUSETTS Sales Offices: NEW YORK OAK BROOK Chicago UPPER DARBY Philadelphia CLAYTON St. Louisy MILWAUKEE GARDEN GROVE Los Angeles SAN FRANCISCO Serving the University PHILIP RENZI SON, INC. Electrical Contractors Overhead Line Construction Commercial Industrial 100 Glen Road Cranston, R.T. 401 467-6200 Branch Offices N.Y.,N.H., Vt., Mass., Florida Bahamas ROWE AUTOMATIC SALES, INC. 51 South Union Street Pawtucket, R.I. We would like to extend our hearty con- gratulations to the Economics Department for preventing the creation of a small coffee lounge in the basement of Robinson hall. These rowdy long-haired youths with their loud music and incessant chatter would dis- rupt the entire academic environment of the building, particularly at 2 a.m. Besides, look at all the other places you can get a cup of coffee on College Hill . . . EILEEN DARLING'S RESTAURANT Town 'n Country Motel Esquire Motel Opening in September, 1969 the Ramada Inn The finest in food and lodging in a country atmosphere Just three miles from the University. JUNCTIONS OF ROUTE 6 AND 114A SEEKONK, MASS. With the arrival of Ol Gerry Alaimo and the advent of the 10-round basketball game we knew that the Brown basketball team would be exceptional this year. In their endless search to find suitable oppon- ents, they traveled to Tulsa, Oklahoma to take on Oral Roberts University. If you've forgotten, ORU is best known for its medical science department which features such courses as elementry faith healing and a seminar on God's plan for the Universe and how it reveals plans for curing of the common cold. ORU was proud of the fact that it was playing Brown and ran ads in all the papers. One read, ORU will play Brown University of the Ivy League tonite, come out and watch this match with the mighty foes from the East. After the loss, Coach Alaimo conceded that Oral Roberts had reached the ranks of big time' basketball along with the Ivy League, but admitted that he might not be in the best position to judge if it had reached major league ranks. After electing Ray L. Heffner thirteenth president of Brown, you'd think the Corporation would learn something. No, it went right ahead and announced Brown's fourteenth president on Friday, March 13th! While you might not agree with her, you must admire Bev Hodgson for standing by what she feels. Last year she decided that the 1969 Liber didn't fulfill its putative mission as a calendar of events and informed the Brown community of this belief. She put her money where her mouth is by forfeiting a four-dollar deposit she made on the Liber - she never picked it up. When Yale was threatened with expulsion from the NCAA after one of its basketball players had played in an unsanctioned tournament, the New York 7imes reported that the entire lvy League stood behind the Elis. Further down in the story it enumerated the lvy League schools in support: Harvard, Princeton, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Pennsyl- vania, and Williams. In an exclusive interview with the Liber after a Coed College sherry hour, Cam Club president John Salinger disclosed that he felt his greatest achievement at Brown was the high jump record he set in his freshman year. Although the jump shattered a record of 30 years' standing, it was surpassed this year by a member of the class of '73. Bemoaning the fate of his short-lived reign as champion high jumper, Mr. Salinger ruefully remarked, I should have stuck to track. Distributors of: WRAPPING 7 PRINTING PACKAGING AND SPECIALTY PAPERS Manufacturers of: CONTAINERS AND CARTONS MAIN OFFFICE 30 FREIGHT STREET, PAWTUCKET, RHODE ISLAND Telephone: 722-8800 BRANCHES: BROCKTON, MASS. WORCESTER, MASS. RESIDENT SALESMEN: CONCORD, N. H. PORTLAND, MAINE MANCHESTER AND HUDSON CO. Building Materials except lumber 300 STATION STREET CRANSTON, R.l. 02910 401 467-8817 Serving All of Rhode Island and Nearby Massachusetts Since 1878 HARRIS LUMBER CO., INC. Hardware - Paints - Industrial Supplies Corner Atwells and Harrison Avenues Providence, R.l. 421-4750 LLOYD'S king size sandwiches'' 119 WATERMAN STREET Corner of Brook TE 1-9242 lllll e et ittt e N LTI i AUTO SHOW VOLVO, SAAB, TRIUMPH Always Lots of Used Sports Cars Sales Service - Parts - Body Shop Despite recent artistic revival at Brown, nothing has come close to the combination vaudeville- existential drama presented weekly in the Corpora- tion Room when one of the committees meets. This longest running Brown production in the theater of the absurd genre added many new acts this year to the time-worn UCSA routines. Pembroke Study Committee and Deans Housing Committee received critical acclaim, with the Educational Policy Commit- tee and its 17 baby committees a close runner-up. Few people at Brown have been as perceptive as Coaches Fullerton and Jardine in understanding the nuances of the curriculum, and few are as adroit in explaining it. In the January Alumni Monthly, Mr. Fullerton is quoted as saying, 'As a former teacher, I'm for the new curriculum 100 per cent. I think we're going to better prepare the boy for his vocation by letting him concentrate on the things in which he is most interested. However, 1'm pleased that Brown decided to keep the language requirement. This is a discipline course and we've still got to have a few of them around. As usual, the Brown football team provided us with an extensive number of laughs. The first of them was that the Bear Rebellion bumper stickers faded and lost their color after a couple of weeks. Or when the Boston Herald-Traveler did a page spread on Brian Marini as the local boy who made good right before the Penn game. Few will ever forget Stoney's famous 88-yard touchdown run fol- lowed by this 88-yard walk back. Another highlight was the addition of one-game Chris and two-point Robbie to give Brown one of the most fearsome trio of QB's in college football. IMPORTANT LOCATIONS in PROVIDENCE Chamber of Commerce - 10 DORRANCE STREET For Industrial Information Rhode Island Bar Association - 17 EXCHANGE ST. For an Instant Lawyer Better Business Bureau - 248 WEYBOSSET STREET For advice on Ethics Printers Service Supply, Inc. - 231 Douglas Avenue For Sharp Camera Proofs and Type 4 SERVICES UNDER ONE ROOF Compliments of E. W. BURMAN, INC, General Contractors 754 Branch Avenue Providence, R. I. OZ6l 40 SSV 10 dHL In conjunction with Brown's attempt to insure the quality of the student living environment, the university can proudly boast a central lounge for every floor of its existing residences, known as the bathroom. The assumption that the communal bathroom should be the central meeting place in dormitory-type buildings reeks of the absurd - a bath- room just isn't the most con- ducive place to make friends and influence people - yet few stu- dents would deny the impor- tance of the bathroom or its location in currently bringing people together in dorm com- plexes. Meet you in the john! Brown had major coverage in the New York Times four con- secutive days during the week of March 8. This natural phenom- enon is not expected to be dupli- cated for another 54 years. G. H. WALKER 4 CO. Members of the New York Stock Exchange 840 HOSPITAL TRUST BUILDING UN 1-4000 Established 1836 PHILLIPS LEAD SUPPLY CO. Wholesalers of Plumbing and Heating Supplies 231 South Main Street Providence 3, R. I. Satar, THE SHEPARD COMPANY Salutes The Class of 1970 Office: 942-1700 RUGGIERI BROS., INC. LINOLEUM e BROADLOOM FORMICA e TILE 24 Midway Road Garden City Cranston, R.I. 02920 Furnishers Clothiers Importers Providence HARVEY LAPIDES '46 St. Louis PHILIP LAPIDES '50 NEW ENGLAND TENNIS CAMP Cheshire, Connecticut Boys and Girls, 12 to 16 yearsold Custom Yearbooks For All New Englan unique creative distinctive and on time WOODLAND PUBLISHING CO., INC. 600 Pleasant Street, Watertown, Ma 02172 ED DREW ORCHESTRAS 150 Carolina Avenue 781-3110 F. Donald Eckelmann, dean of the College, delivered the best lines some claimed it came with the job. Among them were: It pays to do your homework and rig things on how he solved the coed housing issue. 1f 1 were in your place I wouldnt under- stand it either explaining an adinistrative decision to a student. Nobody's going to go out and rape the Plantations House people on commuters and sexual mores at Brown. and Some people have more imagination than others reprimanding another committee member. Telephone 467-8818 A. C. BEALS COMPANY, INC. BUILDERS 155 BAKER STREET PROVIDENCE, R. 1. 02905 A. C. Beals, Pres. BROWN UNIVERSITY PRINTING SERVICES THE CABINET 68 Waterman Street The Albert A. and Vera G. List Art Center Architect: Philip Johnson Coordinating Architects: Samuel Glaser 8 Partners - Now being constructed on College Hill by Dimeo Construction Company is an important addition to the educational facilities of Brown University. It also exemplifies the versatility of Dimeo construction skills which are increasingly in evidence today in buildings of many types throughout New England: hospitals, libraries, educational structures, churches, banks, of- fice buildings, apartments, and shopping centers. All this versatility has a single basis: pride in workmanship . . . the fostering principle of Dimeo since 1931. E DIMEO CONSTRUCTION COMPANY 75 Chapman Street, Providence, R.1. 02901 The Brown University Club of Philadelphia ALLEN'S TOWEL LINEN SUPPLY INC. Since 1906 Complete Towel and Linen Service 580 High Street Central Falls, Rhode Island 222 GE 4-0551 HOMESTEAD BAKING CO. Quality Bakers Specializing in Bread and Rolls 145 N. BROADWAY EAST PROVIDENCE To the Graduating Class of 1970: There are one-story intellects, two-story intellects, and three-story intellects with skylights. All fact collectors, who have no aim beyond their facts, are one-story men. Two-story men compare, reason, generalize, using the labors of the fact collectors as well as their own. Three-story men idealize, imagine, predict; their best illumination comes from above, through the skylight. - Oliver Wendell Holmes The Prudential Drilling Funds 90 Broad Street New York, N.Y. 10004 FLYNN TOWEL a LINEN SUPPLY INC. 2224 Pawtucket Ave. East Providence, R.I. 434-9000 COMPLIMENTS OF RARE INDUSTRIES, INC. COMPLIMENTS OF BROWN CLUB of RHODE ISLAND state office supply OFFICE FURNITURE STATIONERS - PRINTERS OFFICE MACHINES 7 ALLENS AVENUE, PROVIDENCE 321-0100 Lifer Brunensis Liber Brunensis Publications PROGRAM forthe SEVENTIES A0 BROWN UNIVERSITY Box 1827 - Brown University : Providence, Rhode Island 02912 - 401-863-2351 Brown is in the business of education. And it is becoming a very expensive business, In order to maintain this business Brown has to maintain its standards and its solvency or perish as an essentially private institution. This year Brown dipped into its endowment to the tune of one million dollars and raised the annual ante required of students to nearly four thousand dollars. These actions portend a return to education-for-the-rich-only and restrictions on the teaching quality Brown will be able to achieve. The crisis is immediate and growing. The Universitys Program for the Seventies?, the official fund raising campaign, has begun, and the Student Development Council, an undergraduate counterpart, has appeared, But to expect significant financial support to arise from the undergraduate quarter is unrealistic and unreasonable; real support can only come, as it has in the past, from alumni and friends of Brown. As individuals, we realize the financial difficulties of the times, but as students we must turn again to the alumni to ask for support for Brown. For their support, our warmest thanks, 1970 Managing Board Liber Brunensis Publications Senior Week Attraction The Dramatic Society of Brown University Presents YOU NEVER CAN TELL by GEORGE BERNARD SHAW AT THE COLONIAL THEATRE THURSDAY EVENING, MAY 14, 1914 The Cast VA ENTINE e S TN Didi Shecter 9 ORI AN eI ot oo oo o oo cono 0600000050 0000066006050060000 Carol Goddard m BEN N YD arethysis T o L O K e e Bev Hodgson m PRI C AN BN D oot hy s oy ot e e e Bruce Mann 6 MRS. CLANDON, an authoress from Mederia . . . ... ...........co0 ... Kathy Maher 5 GLORIA CLANDON, her oldest daughter . .............c.0.00ooutoenn Nancy Gidwitz 6 MBRECRANMPIIGN ainichivacht builderssem s e s e Bob Shippee 2 MR. M'COMAS, Mrs. Clandon's sOliCitor . . ... ... .. coettoumentoeeeeonns, Pete Zwarg 15 WILLIAM, headwaiter at the Marine Hotel . .. ............... .. .......... Bill Sinnott 7 ASSISIANTHWAIE R S T T T George Billings 3 BEOHUN Sl BarriStersi s s ook et e e St Chuck Wolf 1 GENERAENEUSANZET ST I Dick Wolfson 8 AN S LN 6600 600000 000060000000060600600050000000000000 Larry Wei 14 Management SEHPESIGNIN S T Rick Petersen 12 NG S e s e s e cee s an e doaobosbon dos ooB00b000 0000000060000 Matt Myers 10 SN S AYNPASUTeY oo ccoooco0006000500000000000000G60600000000600 Ken Weiner 13 SPECIAIREREECTSE - et e SRR o i s Bruce Horwitz 11 1970 LIBER BRUNENSIS PUBLICATIONS Eric S. Petersen, Editor-in-Chief Bruce A. Horwitz, Managing Editor Matthew K. Myers, Managing Editor Kathleen Maher, Executive Editor J. William Sinnott, Business Manager Kenneth S. Weiner, Associate Editor Diane P. Shecter, Associate Editor Peter D. Zwarg, Photography Director Nancy Gidwitz, Layout Director Carol S. Goddard, Art Director Robert W. Shippee, Sales Manager George H. Billings, Advertising Manager Lawrence C. Wei, Production Manager. ESSAYS: Introduction: Ken Weiner, Cur- riculum Spring: Susie Friedman. Thayer Street: Rick Petersen. Sports: Kathy Maher, Chuck Wolf. Blacks: Dan Thompson. Mora- torium: Bernie Mendillo, Roy McGrann. Arts: Bev Hodgson. Curriculum Fall: Jim Erlich- man. him: Bruce Horwitz. Liber shorts: Bruce Mann. Cover design: Carol Goddard. CONTRIBUTORS: Jon Bigelow, Stan Baum- blatt, Herb Chase, Candace Slater, Jack Mec- Aleer, Louis Peck, Charlie Redihan, Mike Robson, Larry Wei, Jim Rowley, Jan Wein- stein. PROFILES: Bev Hodgson, Rick Sharp, Dick Grose, Eric Lund, Joan Savitsky, Bernie Men- dillo, Jeff Stout, Joy Javits, Lon Shinn, Bob Bailey, Laura Hersh, Barbara Reisman, Joyce Reback, Dan Thompson. PHOTOGRAPHY: Ed Konig, Peter Czukor, Paul Felton, Carol Bingham, Terry Plockman, Tom Cayton, Bob Bigelow, Darrell Davidson, Dick Sollenberger, Nick McCatty, Dave O'Hara, Harry Martens, Dick Wolfson, John Horneff, Kevin Grier, Al Hammond. CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS: Lloyd Keigwin, Roger Hicks, Steve Cole, John Patberg, Alan Birnbaum, John Barstow, Greg Lloyd. LAYOUT: Tom Mark, Neil Pierman, Sue Crooks, Al Hammond. SALES AND ADVERTISING: Mark Roberts, Dave Golden, Bob Booth, Connie Dickerson, Joan Mitchell, Jay Maddock, Charlie Craig, Rick Speece, Robert Zink. THANKS TO: Mr. Roger Sullivan and Mr. Don Doyle, Woodland Publishing Company; Mr. Allen Ollove and Mr. Egon Haas, Stevens Studios; Mr. William Surprenant and Mrs. Ruth Asser, Student Activities Office; Mr. Hugh Townley, Art Department: Crazy Fin- gers Clare on the typewriter; Alumni Office. SPECIAL PUBLICATIONS: 7970 Fraternities at Brown, Compiler, Nancy Gidwitz; 7973 Class Album,; 1973 Bear Facts, Editor, Ken Weiner.


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

Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 1

1967

Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 1

1968

Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

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Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1971 Edition, Page 1

1971

Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 1

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Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 1

1973


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