Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI)
- Class of 1972
Page 1 of 308
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 308 of the 1972 volume:
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R z 3 N S - W5 e AT uy, NZ7 R 278 Brown University 114th edition L - -l Vo e e T o e - - - - I ':'rx;i: R, L R l!fiA - 2 14 Read it while you can This preface is one of the tew pieces of writing you will see in this book. The next two hundred pages are almost exclusively photography. Pho- tographs which speak to us and, we hope, to you. Since our physical surroundings set a stage tor our lives here, we open with a look at College Hill from the rural campus of 1860 to the present. Alter considering 1971-72 through the Bryant acquisition, the merger, and a personal state- ment about our lives, we return to the campus for a glimpse of what we think the campus should look like by the year 2000 Music has become one of the most lively arts at Brown, and since previous Libers have focused on drama, studio, and film, we have turned to music. Coincidentally, after we had planned the essdy, musicians began lobbying publicly for adequate staffing and facilities, Through committees and student activities, students have been involved with running the Universily more than ever before. Regardless of whether such participation has brought reforms, we have a responsibility to include student or ganizations at a time when traditional aclivilies have replaced the politicized ad hoc action of earlier years. After thinking and researching for a long time, we found we could reprint the sports copy ver- batim from any of a century of Libers and Her- alds, and it would sound just like 1972 Rather than echoing the traditional 'wait till next year' cheer, we let the action speak for itself. We have not included separate sections on Black students or coed dorms because both no longer stand out as novel exceptions in the uni- versity. Black students do not form the tightly knit community which first conceived the Afro- American Society but participate in campus life more as individuals than as a political group. A final note, our profiles and commentaries were selected by the managing board after much dis- cussion with other people in the university. Many people believe that yearbooks are fos- sils. Worse, they should be discarded as unreli- able extracts of their experience at a university. We tend to agreewhich is why we have tried to differ from the past so radically. We hope our views are more consonant with those of the uni- versity community than has been true in previous volumes. Don't it always seem to go that you don't know what you've got till it's gone. intro the hill 1 16 Brown must be the first 30 university to have a sub- urb. bryant or the east campus 30 That Brown is coed is 44 taken for granted. merger 44 heffalumps 60 T, And 60 Brown will remain dis- 80 the people who The feast consisted prin- 100 If we can't help each 122 Dante reserved the low- 186 Those rare people 204 said Brown was a womb linctive if it remains a cipally of Musicke, other here, then there est part of hell for those for whom there is with a view were wrong campus. which . . . did even ra- isn't too much hope for who, in a moral crisis, no gap between So it came to pass. vish and stupifie all anywhere else. refused to take a stand. commitment and those strangers that ever action. heard the like. future campus commentary musicke student activities sports commentary 1968-1972 profiles et al seniors ads 80 98 100 122 148 184 186 204 239 298 the hill sty SATLES AT e i agent. 1A - A - ? 2 e;'v i o g o S g 4 . v e o Gorebe B X 2 Ly e ', Trolley No. 3 climbing College Hill, 1896. 17 A L42. A Y ; B A 19 Back campus, view from Green to Hope Street, late 1860s. UH from College Street, ca. 1875. 21 2 They paved paradise And put up a parking lot With a pink hotel, a boutique And a swinging hot spot. Dontit always seem to go That you don't know what you've got Till'it's gone? They paved paradise And put up a parking lot. They ook all the trees And put them in a tree museum, And they charged all the people A dollar and a half just to see em. Dontit always seem to go That you don't know what you've got Till it's gone? They paved paradise And put up a parking lot. Joni Mitchell Big Yellow Taxi s A Zl ook s oanin PEARCE HOU ST PAHINAL AT HOL S .;74: Ll S o : T A - 26 i imm s SR I bryant or the east campus Once upon a time it was Bryant Col- lege. Before that the first families of Rhode Island lived there. Now nearly four hundred sophomores trudge out there two, three, or even four times a day. Brown must be the first university to have a suburb. Not many of the east campus resi- dents are overly ecstatic about living in the outback, though most are happier than they were initially. They com- plained of small rooms with built-in furniture, noisy courtyards, and long walks. But sometimes bitching seemed to be done more because it was ex- pected than because of intolerable con- ditions. As life styles adjusted to the new dorms, the students who did not leave attempted a renewal of spirit. Gardner managed to pull together and throw a dance, while Appleby renamed itseli Ripley Hall after an assistant biomed professor threatened with denial of te- nure. 30 s, B i, 7 HE S Some feeling of community grew among the sophomores that was nos- lalgically reminiscent of the West Quad in its masculine days. Double rooms, long corridors, and communal bath- rooms generated a camaraderie not possible and probably not desirable in older, more closed dorms. The persis- tent sense of isolation which discou- raged midnight visits to the main cam- pus provided further stimulus for unity. 35 It is often hard to re- member that there are people on the east cam- pus. The name itself is rather pretentious, as though Brown is trying to shed its mythical semi- versity image by making believe it has satellite campuses. But no name can disguise the sterility that the administration imposed by not planning for the Bryant acquisition and relocating classes, de- partments, and student activities there. Playing touch football or frisbee is samehow not quite the same on hard- top. Living in a fish bowl and looking up from your bed at people passing by on the sidewalk are cer- lainly different, but hardly things the admission of- fice would boast of as part of the Brown experience. SRS S o t0n 37 e iy, WG E There is life in the co-ops. Dignified old manses splashed with bright colors, they have a natural spirit of their own-something about people working together, sharing chores, disappointments, and joys. Eating communally off the sciences library construction sign ot stoopsitting to catch an evening breeze are part of a countercultural alternative for the forty residents of Milhouse and Carberry House. 41 43 Pembroke. What is itWhat was il? Pembroke College maintains its identity as a separate college with its own campus, stales the last Pembroke catalouge. But Brokers long considered the separation illusory. The real merger had oc- curred well before the official one of July 1971 in the minds of most Brown students. Pembroke is only an area of campus now, Even there, only two female dorms are leftthe rest are coed or all-male, Bell desks and post office boxes are gone; pay phones have replaced switchboards. Overnight cards linger as freshman memories. The old male strongholds have changed. Wriston hallways are reilected in full-length mirrors. Bath- rooms sport shelves over the urinals. Flowered cur- fains in Caswell windows surprise upperclassmen. The West Quad, now coed, still bursts with freshmen. No quieter than in past years, the old zoo's endless corridors echo from mixed doubles hall hockey and distaff frisbee. False fire alarms shatter sleep as they always have, and the odors of cooking in the rooms pervade the quad. Life at Brown tends to be casual and spontaneous. Coed intramurals draw enthusiasm. Potluck suppers, pancake breakfasts, and doughnut parties evince a spiritin coed living. Some of the old rules remaineven coed dorms with coed floors have 1o vote on parietals. But the past four years have seen the merging of admission, financial aid, placement, and housing offices. While the question of more adequate counseling and special services for women has not been resolved, Jacquelyn Mattfeld, the new dean, claims women's affairs are high on her priority list. It's a far cry from single-sex, formal sit-down dinners to levis and hot-plates in just five years. merger 45 46 s 49 50 Subfrosh tours are coed, and the Pig Book and Beast Book are united. A fraction of the old red tape has died with the merged deanery; parallel bureaucracies no longer confuse students as much. That Brown is coed is taken for granted. It is not a big exciting ideathe naturainess of one uni- versity is rarely thought of. 7 54 Whal is leit of coordinate Pembroke status? A geographical area. Some stane steps near Meeting Street. Buildings. Alumnae Clubs, Upperclassmen still call women Brokers the name has stuck and no one seems to object. But more important than rem- nants of Pembroke College in Brown Universily is that an administrative act finally acknowledged what students had long known, thal Brown is one community of both men and women. BB AN ks 57 I sit in a bus that stands in shadows. I am so alone, so separated from the world, that you may not be here with me. I am a speclator but I find no game played here. I am a camera and my shutter will not close. I can see it all and I have no choice. The people I see see me not. Perhaps they see each other but I cannot tell for sure. Lovers embrace, force awkward phrases that stick to their tongues and leave a foul taste. But something must be said. They wince and end their embrace. Their muscles tighten like twisted ropes. The man walks away without looking back. She stands without moving more like a drawn bow than a statue. She runs to get away and passes from sight. I see her no more. This bus station holds them all. All of the comings and goings. To some I just want to say forget about the fight the boredom the words that passed each other in the night. But no words are really spoken here. 61 A 1 A A 62 Of course some people are neither coming nor going. They're just here, the station their world, saying no to them granting no permission unlocking no doors gray and cold and movement that goes nowhere. The faces pierce me and I am wounded. Young faces and old faces that are always male faces but shadows of men. Got any spare change? Bodies that rub against tile walls find no warmth. An old man masturbates into a urinal and with him we are all lost. 64 The bus jerks into motion and I remember that I'm headed back to Providence. I can't quite say that I'm headed home. These four years have confused my grasp of that notion. Yet I wish I were headed home back to something maybe rest or warmth or something. I wish I were going home. But I'm headed toward Brown. Papers and tests that fail to excite me await completion. Help me relax. Just hold me for a while. I'm all twisted up inside like a knot. Hey blue-eyed lady I can see your happy smile. Hey blue-eyed lady I can feel your easy style. Hey blue-eyed lady will you walk with me a mile and listen to my loneliness for just a little while? 63 When you were a child did you have any fears? Did you play about them? I mean like the time an accident happened just up the block. Sirens and reds and all of that. Did you play about that accident the next day? Other things too. Did you play about having no parents and falling down endless staircases and going to the hospital? Fantasies and fears dreams of the night and day dreams: I have not outgrown them. They remain with me. Peek-a-boo! I see you! Can you hear your mother say that to you? I think I can. It is the first and most important game that I ever played. It's a coming and a going a coming and a going. And every time my hands hide the world from sight I fear that mother will disappear and never return. The game's thrill is the suspense I feel wondering if she will indeed be gone and the relief felt upon discovering she is still there. I play peek-a-boo quite often these days when the one I love leaves for Boston. I look out of the window. New York City. I see a man in a shop scraping MERRY XMAS from the inside of the showcase. The holiday is over. I know that now. Next to me a woman reads to her grandchild abouta teeny tiny woman in a teeny tiny house. Looking out the window she says: Aren't those buildings interesting? They look like a pile of junk says the child. From the mouths of babes. 71 Looking at this child I feel old. Her bones are so thin and small. Her innocence so fragile and delicate. sing a song of song my a slaughter and a lie four-and-ninety innocents rubbed out at my lai children's song What awaits this child? What joys and what sorrows comprise her future? fascism creeps in on little cat's feet And this grandmother beside her, what has she been through and where has she been? graffiti answers with the wisdom of the centuries: descartes: i think, therefore i am camus: i rebel, therefore we exist hamlet: to be or not to be sinatra: do be do be do And inside I roar with laughter. But this laughter soon becomes what a friend of mine calls the chuckle of the absurd. Sometimes one must laugh and then chuckle at the absurdity of it all. Knowing that one cannot chuckle for too long without choking, I turn to the child. silentio one johannes reminds me that when the child must be weaned the mother blackens her breast for the breast must not look delicious when the child must not have it. happy is the babe who has stronger food in readiness hephalumps however they are spelled never die within us in the way we imagine nor do Piglets nor Owls nor dreams of better days nor fears of separation Once again I cannot help being struck by her youth. those of my friends who found no compelling reason to remain children grew old there is a children's story about Christopher Robin and Pooh in which Christopher Robin must explain to Pooh that he will not see him so often anymore for it is time to grow up and be older 75 76 Read on Dear Grandmother! The book intrigues me! For if I close my eyes I become a babe once more. And yet I am headed back to Brown. When this bus gets to Providence I must stop thinking like this. There will be no time for such luxuries. But what about this grandmother this child and me? Is there hope for us in Providence? If the breast has been blackened, is there stronger food in readiness? We drift. Can we swim against the tide? We swim. Is there a shore to reach? What of my friends at Brown? Do wicked gods decide the fates of my friends? I sound a note of despair. The note is solemn and respectful in its sorrow yet screaming in its protest against suffering and death. I recall the suicide of a friend. n leaving the mansion and walking into cool moist air friends running frantically someone is hurt people gather around the cluster of trees in the middle distance it might be too late already could it be him? another suicide attempt? dark-eyed woman, where are you? don't ask me but she asks: is it Doug? i don't know but then we both found out despair hanging swaying from the end of a belt a car's headlights shining on a tree a broken limb Spirit's words sing clearly: dark-eyed woman on a hot summer night dark-eyed woman are you burning tonight? dark-eyed woman won't you step in the light and tell me dark-eyed woman are you burning tonight tonight? dark-eyed woman it's a quarter to four i hear your voice like a child at my door dark-eyed woman, can you and i can we and the others make a new pact with death? can we who remember the person behind the traits move on? coming and going. We come and go all the time. And the people who said that Brown was a womb with a view were wrong. So it came to pass. Our childhood has been rudely interrupted by comings and goings we never expected. future campus Creen to RISD To Downtown Providence EXTENSION OF GREEN BY HUMANITIES CENTER Wriston Quad Housing George Street Local Traffic FaaT CAMPLIS GREEN PEMBROKE GREEN i Center for Music Brown Pembroke Brown Permbroke A-D Malls Manning Street A BE B . Math ATHLETICS Seiences - Overall Plan of Brown in 2000 What will Brown look like in twenty- five years? While the answer is anyone's guessfrom science library style towers to vast parking lotsthe Liber presents its view of what the future campus should be. None of the ideas represented here are by any means definite plans. Our assumptions: 1 Brown will con- tinue to exist, especially as a school de- voted to undergraduate or graduate aca- demic study; 2 the college boom is over and enrollment will not soar in the next quarter century except for continuing ed- ucation programs; 3 grad and married students, faculty and local residents want to live on campus too, and Brown needs to add 2000-2500 livable housing spaces; and 4 to heighten our sense of the absurd we will make $ no object, though we won't expend it lavishly. The main thrust of the future campus, as we see it, is the integrating of various parts of the university through green spaces, pedestrian malls, and strategically located paths linking the campus visually as well as physically. Our future campus is foremost concerned with bringing the university together around the main Green as Brown becomes larger and more diversified. Major areas need intensive develop- ment to satisfy pressing academic needs while leaving room for future expansion. The following pages show sketches of these areas, which are situated on or near newly-created greens. The smaller but no less mandatory improvementsa student union, several campus cinemas, music practice rooms and swimming pools in residences, etcwe assume to be com- pleted and left to the observer's imagina- tion. Bicycles and electric shuttle buggies re- place cars at least on College Hill. Four large conveniently located below-grade parking lots for daily commuters, student storage, and commercial use eliminate the need for many streets running through campus. Most of Thayer becomes a pedestrian walkway alas, streetmeat- ingl. Shopping and housing would link Brown to Fox Point. The campus and downtown will be drawn closer by vari- ous urban renewal and cultural projects and decent transportation linking Provi- dence to eastern seaboard cities. The plan emphasizes visual connec- tions as the way to combat the increasing separation of the campus, while develop- ing the outlying areas such as Pembroke and the east campus. These plans may even seem reactionary, going back a few decades when dorms had tennis courts across the street and green space seemed unlimited. It's easier to conjure up a Buck Rogers style university-of-the-future by substituting gadgetry for meeting real human needs see next page, but the im- plications of this Archigram-type fu- turistics study would destroy the closely knit residential college as we know it. Utilizing current spaceroofs, levels, sunken floors, environmental sculptures and fountainsdensity can be consider- ably increased without sacrificing scale. A careful look at the campus shows that Brown's scale is closer to six than to four stories. Well-designed buildings six to eight stories high would hardly be incon- gruous. Innovation does not always re- quire novel technological solutions but in this case a return to our natural surround- ings by a careful juxtaposition of stimu- lating urban spaces and the landscape, an interplay largely absent from the current campus. Brown will remain distinctive if it re- mains a campus, Given the university's size and needs as we see them, it has am- ple room for a harmonious expansion within its current borders for several dec- ades. 85 M IL8YTd HLIM $3780Y1 SI4OdS HIAOL Synthetic air-supported bubbles 7 5 have beenblown uptoagargantuan scale at minimal cost. A series of inflatable domes now cover Aldrich-Dexter field creating all-weather athletics and dwarfing Meehan Auditorium. The skin of the structure is maintained by replacing worn or defective plastic sections. Modular housing, with pre-con- 8 O structed apartments assembled on-site like building blocks, offers a residential excitement rarely equalled. Even with such innovative housing, though, Brown remains a residential college whose faculty commutes daily from suburbia and whose students stay on campus for most of the year, flying home mainly for vacations. 8 5 The physical campus begins to dis- solve with rapid transit from Faunce House to major eastern cities. A consortium of NE colleges form a single campus' where students can take courses al different schools on alternate days. The residential college disintegrates, and the idea of courses is radically altered by ex- treme student mobility. QToh THE FAkGz 5 ExPRESS T l HfTp! 1 mwi F i i ey i v i TR 5 1 2 j;a 0 s S IT'S UP TO YOU SN Since you can travel to other 9 O schools for certain facilities, Brown no longer duplicates highly com- plex academic buildings. Rather, the camp- us becomes a plug-in college with open spaces and utility cores where temporary structuressuch as classrooms and the- aterscan be built when needed and smal- ler lab-type structures simply transported to other schools when desired. 985 0 NYC IN AN HOUR OR LESS. BUILD ONLY WHAT, WHERE, AND Buy a hovercraft dorm room 9 5 equipped with video-sensual sys- tems and computer terminals. Use your multi-purpose screen to retrieve any material ever printed, to utilize cable and commercial media, or to write by voice and edit by hypertext. Drive to the college of your choice and plug yourself into an exist- ing core platform with living and dining rooms. b IS NOW FOR ALL AGES. THE GAMPUS IS A MOVEABLE FEAST. University is no longer an adolescent affair but a con- stant intermixing of urbanized professional life and campus academia. Everyone becomes a student, resulting in an age mix of campus communities which brings a new vitality and direct connection with the outside world. The campus is a voluntary experience rather than socially required four-year prison. The College Green would exiend from the flagpole to the West Quad, opening up the center of the campus and bringing the West and Wriston Quads, the Grad Center, and Bryant closer to the Green and the Rock. The Green's traditional quadrangular effecl is en- hanced by retaining old houses on Brown Street and by building a needed Humanities Center into the sloping hillside across the street from Rhode Island Hall and lining a George Street path to the Rock. The steep gradient would enable additional stories and below-grade parking while keeping the open spaces and 4-5 story scale of the center cam- pus. 7 N Vg The physical merger of Brown and Pembroke would be consummated by a mid-block grass mallnot an as- phalt sidewalkfrom Lincoln Field to Meeting Street 1r. In addition to visual connection to the main cam- pus, the link would be established by set-back balconied housing uppetr right, a major green area, social sci- ence, psychology, and medical facili- ties, and the extension of Thayer Street shopping and cafe-style restau- rants to the mall where Angell and Olive Streets formerly were, with a below-grade parking entrance off Thayer Street lower left. The crucial addition of a rehearsal, practice and performing Center for Music would be located near hous- ing, shopping, parking, and outdoor space on the SW corner of Thayer and Meeting Streets. Original plans for the Medical School covered the entire area be- tween Brown and Pembroke with 10- to over 16-story towers rising from concrete plazas. For a start, the model below was to have been completed already. The sketch at the right, how- ever, could accommodate sufficient academic space with room for expan- sion with the exception of a hospital. The proposed Medical School plan occupying a major portion of the cen- tral campus would, of course, destroy any linkages between Brown, Pem- broke, and A-D field. 90 iy . b 92 Unlike most other disciplines, the sciences require elaborate laboratory and research space to function. An appropriate location is near the new library; however, the exiension of such overbearing rationalistic design would be avoided. A Math-Sciences Center with multi- purpose classroom, computer, and administra- tive space r would provide needed space for several decades offering room for subsequent expansion toward Barus-Holley. The complex, perhaps with interiors as above, would streng- then various paths connections, maintain the scale of the neighborhood, and increase green space with a Manning Street mall leading to a large green by Prince lab lower right and Barus-Holley. 5 : Ity Z I nrf 74 Efl Lo e n, i v H..n A N z A L - it 2 . : i P Q g A TE e T Ny - 4 7 7 1, Y f4 , G The development of the East Cam- pus and of additional housing is a primary task of the coming decades. This revitalization of Charles Field Street shown from Thayer to Hope would createatree-lined mall leading from the corner of the West Quad to a large green on the East Campus. Set among housing, cafes and shops, a Performing Arts Center for drama, dance, film, t-v and media lower far left would connect Charles Field to the sciences block and the East Campus to Thayer Streel. While residential, recreational, and com- mercial life would dominate this area, academic functions such as student activities, classrooms, departments almost all of the beautiful old houses remain, study and practice facilities and performing arts would give life to the southeastern section of the cam- pus. Traditional style four-story housing with a sunken first floor lines the street, and mixed occupancy modular housing with shops on the first floors facing Brook Street and Fox Point rise above spanning Charles Field to Power Streets r. Recreational space includingtennisand basketball courts, pool, and green areas link each of the eight major housing units. 95 96 A central focus of the new campus is attention to the residential environ- ment, with patios and balconies pro- viding light, air and views to commu- nity-oriented co-ops and apartment units. Triplex student apartments r and modular housing previous page seem suited to these goals. More radi- cal housing solutions such as foam, inflatable, and similar nonstruc- tures might provide additional alter- natives. Housing serves as the most effec- tive link between areas of the campus and would be located between Brown and Pembroke, Brown and the East Campus, and Pembroke and A-D. Nevertheless, major residential areas allowing larger spaces for recreation and flexible planning would continue to occupy the northern Pembroke and southern BrownjEast Campus ends of the university. The emphasis is on getting back to grass and trees, to outdoor recreation, and to a diver- sified, functional and more beautiful residential habitat. -q : i l bedroom . living Il bedroom kitchen- T I am sorry to hear that your first year of teaching is presenting you with so much difficulty. 1 am not surprised, however. The fact that you are beginning is a con- LETTER tributing factor. As your experience grows, you will discover ways of meet- TO A ing some of the problems, and as stu- RECENT GRADUATE dents occasionally let you know just as you have been letting me know that your teaching has been important to them, you will develop more confidence in what you are doing. Your troubles are not due only to inex- perience, though, nor to any intrinsic lack of ability. It seems to me that they stem largely from the situation in which we find ourselves. Despite the recent tide of criticism of the dominant mode of living and its institutions, not much basic change has taken place so far. By and large we continue to pursue only isolated interests power, efficiency, knowledge, security, prestigeand neg- lect the needs and fulfillments of whole human beings. These values and the structures in which they are enshrined are a constant obstacle to efforts at fun- damental renewal. At the same time, while our young persons have become increasingly a- wakened to our ills, the fact that earlier expectations of quick socio-political F solutions have been disappointed has given rise to disillusionment and cynicism for many. Others go from experiment to experiment among the thousand move- ments, practices, and cults that promise liberation from inner and outer con- straints, heightened consciousness and true meaning. Many of these promises are like mir- ages luring persons without water in a desert. Many have validity. But whether valid or not, their multitude causes enor- mous confusion. The difficulty for a per- son to discover who he or she is to be and to what to be committed becomes much greater. To add to the problems, the so desir- able awakening that has been taking place has its reverse side. Far more than for you and your friends, who graduated within the past 5 years, essential words and ideas have lost much of their po- tency for those who graduate now. Au- thenticity, spontaneity, community have been thrown about too often or too cheaply, and it takes great effort to make these notions fresh and alive again. Despite all this, the picture is not so bleak. Desirable changes in human life often come about in quiet, inconspicuous ways. There is a stirring among young and old that gives grounds for hope. The basic soundness and integrity of many of the students I meet help me not to lose heart in the face of ossifications and complementary chaos. Perhaps those who would build a new kind of life will have learned from experiences of the last few years that they have often unconsciously accepted some of the assumptions of the culture against which they protestedthat easy and instant solutions can be found for all human problems, that means and techniques may be given precedence over ends, and that the newest-and- latest is always desirable. A difficult patience is necessary for all of us. It is on the far side of the patience that is a disguise for the mentality of status quo and non-caring. It is a patience entwined with what Camus called re- bellion. Such an attitude is built, not on the shallow optimism so prevalent until recently, whose obverse is despair, but on trust rooted in experience. This doesn't mean justification of trust by the majority of events, but by ex- periences, whether frequent or rare, that testify to human possibility: genuine caring, real listening, taking a stand with quiet courage. George Morgan 99 E This feast consisted principally of Musicke, which was both vocall and instrumental, so good, so delec- table, so rare, so admirable, so superexcellent, that it did even ravish and stupifie all those strangers that ever heard the like. Thomas Coryate, 1608 100 SN 103 105 Creating music is often as frustrating as it is fullilling. It de- mands both an intellectual excitement and a visceral reaction. A musician must communicate, making what is meaningful tor him meaningtul for others, People need to create to absorb and be absorbed by something. Sounds of a stereo or a practicing flutist drift through open windows and mingle with those of Chopin or chopsticks from a lounge piano. A solitary guitarist on the green transforms the day and is a concert in himself. People wander into rehearsals and spill into the aisles for concerts. They line up for rush seats at Symphony Hall or become en- grossed in midnight jam sessions, But music is not simply for musicians. If it were, music would not be such a pervasive presence on campus listening tastes vary- Beelhoven may be stacked on top of the Stones. A clarinetist may feel as comfortable playing a blues riff as he does a Mozart concerto. Many concert musicians cannol fathom acid rock, and rock buffs often have litlle use for anything written more than five years ago. But most people respond in some way. 107 108 109 110 Sometimes the existence of music at Brown seems paradoxical. Many high schools have better practice and performance facilities. The administration has never outgrown the attitude that the performing arts are simply hobbies. In the search for quantiliable knowledge, Brown has forgotten that life has a qual- ity which must be expressed and appreciated, Last fall several hundred students and musical in- struments gathered outside Ul demanding more practice space. The response they got was the usudl empty rhetoric, varied only by some weak kazoo plaving. Enrollment in music courses has quadrupled in the last three years. The orchestra has been joined by the wind ensemble and the chorus as major performing organizations. Fascinating work is being done by smaller groups such as the New Music Ensemble and Brown Opera Workshop. Even the marching band is approaching musicianship. Yet UH still does not consider music a discipline worth funding com- mensurate with its needs and popularity. ' NEED PIANS Cr 113 114 Music demaonstration, Nov. 15, 1971 Yet somehow music persists al Brown. Sometimes it even flourishes, Guest conducting his own music, Vac- lwa Nelhybel coaxed and bullied sounds from the wind ensemble thal no one thought possible. The wind ensemble itself did not exist before John Christie came last vear. The orchestra seldom disappoints its audiences. Music can be spontaneous, or it can be exactingly rehearsed and directed. It must always be felt Music bestows 4 mode of expression that is unattainable in other areas of thought and activity, For many people, music remains the saving gracethe only opportunity for creativity in an otherwise constricting existence. PSS B o s FJW.'Q,...L Lt P e 117 119 arts - N QJ ey Ce - 0 nl Q - 3 2 Ee 0 o e1e s i .m oo t r A ..l 175 U 124 127 brown daily herald 128 wbru ! Cam Club ive Cam Club is dead. Long I CaucCus e 133 A Gaurus Tarol 'Round about '93 as I remember it, but I must warn you my memory ain't that good, a group of them rich students began gettin' togethersecret-likeat some place down- town, don't recollect where, t' eat lobsters. Y know, those funny lookin' croostaysha or whatever y' call 'em, that hides in their shells, impervious to what goes on about 'em. They used to meet somewhere and 'ventually began to represent, since they were the cream of society's crop, our interests to the college masters. Every year or so theyd talk about disbanding, or changing themselves, or whatever you talk about when you need something to do. But you know how the saying goes: a lobster can't change its shell. Well this kinda goes on the same way for years, though the more deans that comes to Brown, the more they rely on this here secret society to tell them what students are up to. So finally students decide they're gonna elect the mem- bers themselves, which they do. 'Cept for the girls, 'cause the girls got their own lobster club called Pembroke council which occasionally weeps about social rules in them dorms. All goes well for a while 'cause we know what's impor- tant is football games, and maybe fraternily parlies or mixers, and o'course SPRING WEEKEND, not class dues or campus politics. mean what did we have to worry about with Papa Keeney to chastise us, our dorms 'n homework all assigned, and plenty o' freedom to do most anything we want, so we thought then. Yall know the BDH bitches too much anyway. Then this bunch of students comes along down 'round 65 and says hey, why do we have all these dorm rules? we ain't a bunch of children. But slill worse, why we fightin' over there in 'Nam if we're a Great Society and why is there poverty and why aren't I learning about this in college? I mean them's fightin' words. So a bunch of these lobster midwives got together and slarted giving birth to all these committees: committees against the war, for a new curriculum, for a new social sys- tem, for a coed university and so on. They didn't stop at their own groups, but merged them all together in com- munist cells like the Campus Action Council and the Afro Society and the Cam Club which ate Pembroke council. Ya gotta watch them Jews and Blacks; at least there ain't many in University Hall, yet. When these didn't work by themselves, they slarted calling rallies and walkouts and strikes and moratoria any- thing to get out of class workl and dens of sincoed dorms! They broke apart that whole ordered system when everybody was happy and knew his place. They confused everything. Finally, they did the worst of all. They killed the lobsters. Yessir l ain't kiddin'. They just swept away them 77 years of history and when they was gone, only a trace was lefta few were told to negotiate pretty fancy language for a university senate, like Brown was the U-nited Slates or something. This bunch took themselves more serious than Clam Club, but they was no real politicians. They were afeared of the faculty and quietly begged the profs to pay attention to their clever plans. Well, everybody knows the faculty don't even trust and listen to themselves, so how they gonna be- lieve students, 'specially when the profs had just created their own lobsters called the FPG who weren't ready lo be broiled vet. They were jealous, but they was also a little scared, so they got another committee appoinled to look into the problem. Meanwhile, the students kinda found they liked getting along without the official lobsters; sure some thought a lot of bad policies were lel by and reforms hurt. Bul students learn to get used to despairing about Brown and simply hope for the Messiah. It was easier that way, and you could blame everything on the lack of a charismatic leader. U Hall tried to scare student leaders away by turning them into student deans two presidents in a row quil. Legends grew up 'round this time about this renegade Ira and all that he did for Cam Club, but those who was witnes- ses knowed his secret was ad hoc, outside-the-system, pres- sure. Thank God it's still a well-guarded secret. Anyway to get back to our story, last fall students elected this here caucus, so they called it, to hold the fort while the governance committee got lost for a year in the eco- nomics building. But the caucus had too many and incom- petenl people on it and was sometimes more of a show than either the old lobsters, the faculty, or their committees. These cooped up gov't solons finally produced a report which nobody read calling for a council which nobody wanted to be on to deal with issues that nobody cared about anymore, and everybody thought it was a great idea, at least those ten percent who voted. The faculty, pre- occupied with rubber-stamping the Donald F. Hornig Me- morial Medical School, put the question off for a while. Anyway, all this quibbling seems strange to me, specially when students say there's so much they gotta do to make the university better. 1 don't wanna sound like I'm siding with these damn young rebels y'know, but if this here caucus is goin' through all this trouble with none t'show for it, well then least they oughta do is call themselves Cam Club. o n S O O m G T oh O v e 137 Peoplestop stealing from yourself and stop stealing from your brothers and sisters. If we can't get it together here, in our own community, then how far have we come? If we can't help each other here, then there isn't too much hope for anywhere else. It's up to you. we accept.. FoOD COVP 139 140 Topics in Human Sexuality lectures afro society If the purpose of the Afro, here at Brown, is to increase awareness of racial problems and stimulate interest in cop- ing with or overcoming them then the Afro here at Brown is failing. A feeling that I can't waste time with this organi- zation or niggers are jive resulted from most meetings. The glamor of being Black and militantly political faded after awhile and few upperclassmen are will- ing now to participate or work for the Afro. . . . Perhaps community activities should replace Afro for a period and be partici- pated in by all freshmen at the least. When or if resumed Afro meetings would be more relevant politically be- cause participation usually stimulates greater interest. . . . columnist in UWEZO, Afro Society newsletter adie Hawkins Day Liberation wv 21970 February 29 pajun UMOIQ JO UIWIOM gay liberation Freedom to be and meet other people as people. Recognition and ac- ceptance as a discrete social force with interests, concerns, demands, and fights. Without theatrics, Gay Lib brings human beings together and provides common ground for encounter and action. 145 band - cheerleaders 147 149 155 158 161 163 167 169 171 173 174 i E, SRERRSERE V o - s i 179 g B i o 181 summary BASEBALL overall: 14-14-2 EIBL: 5-72 BROWN OPPONENT 5 at Florida Presbyterian 5 at St Leo 3 atSt Leo 2 at Stetson 2 at Florida State 1 at Florida State 1 at Florida State 1 at Florida State 1 at Florida State 1 at Florida State 3 rARMY 4 'CORNELL 2 CORNELL 2 NORTHEASTERN 10 innings 8 at Dartmouth 0 rat Dartmouth 2 at Harvard 6 2 3 5 4 5 4 2 4 2 2 4 2 - . CWNOWWUWMIVONNNUWOOONORNWUOUBIUL 2D HOLY CROSS YALE YALE at U.R.I. at U.R.I. at Princeton 14 innings tie at Columbia 12 innings at Columbia 8 innings NAVY 10 innings PENN PENN tie PROVIDENCE COLLEGE PROVIDENCE COLLEGE Freshman Baseball: 12-2-0 BROWN OPPONENT 7 at Northeastern 26 QUONSET 2 at Holy Cross 6 CONNECTICUT 12 LASALLE ACADEMY 1 HARVARD 17 at Yale' EAST PROVIDENCE H.S. ATTLEBORO H.S. RHODE ISLAND JR. COLLEGE at Worcester Academy at Quonset DURFEE H.S. DURFEE H.S. - NOOOOM- NAAWNO-O ANEWOLX LACROSSE overall; 11-3 BROWN 11 ADELPHI 12 at Univ. of Baltimore 9 at Univ. of Maryland 11 at Johns Hopkins 14 PENNSYLVANIA 10 at Princeton 17: . YALE 11 at Harvard 16 at Dartmouth 19 at Connecticut 4 CORNELL 8 MASSACHUSETTS 25 HOLY CROSS 8 at Cornell N.C.A.A. Quarterfinals league: 5-1 OPPONENT 7 5 CobANOWUBIWUUIDWIN Y Freshman Lacrosse: 9-1 BROWN OPPONENT 4 at Farmingdale C.C. 9 11 YALE 4 21 at Princeton 5 7 ANDOVER ACADEMY 1 11 at Tabor Academy 2 9 HARVARD 5 14 at Dartmouth 6 11 at Connecticut 1 15 MASSACHUSETTS 9 18 MASS. LACROSSE CLUB 4 GOLF: 7-3 BROWN OPPONENT 400 M.I.T.JHOLY CROSS 436412 4 at Providence College 3 3 atP.C. vs. URL 4 393 YALEHOLY CROSS 399392 4 at Wesleyan 3 4 at Wesleyan vs. Connecticut 3 389 AMHERST 397 396 BOSTON COLLEGE 411 400 atE.I.G.A. at Yale 5th Place of 20 teams 394 HARVARD 404 380 at Dartmouth 373 TENNIS: 7-6 BROWN OPPONENT 0 at Navy 9 3 at Penn 6 1 HARVARD 8 9 at Providence College 0 7 YALE 2 2 at Princeton 7 0 at Columbia 9 7 WESLEYAN 2 9 ARMY 0 8 CORNELL 2 7 UR.L 2 4th place at New England Championships; held at Williams field of 32 1st18 Harvard 16 Williams 14 Dartmouth 13 Brown 8 at Massachusetts 1 4 at Dartmouth 5 OUT-DOOR TRACK: 3-0-0 BROWN OPPONENT 4th place at Boston College Relays 3rd440 Relay 4thSprint Relay 3rdDistance Medley 4thLong Jump 1stDiscus 3rdHigh Jump 4thTriple Jump 2ndShot Put at Penn Relays 87 at U.R.L 67 95 at Dartmouth 59 88 HOLY CROSS 66 8th place at HEPS at Penn 1stShot Put 1st440-yard Run 3rd-One-Mile Run 4thPole Vault 4th880-yard Run 4th place at New Englands 4thLong Jump 1st-Shot Put 4thOne-Mile Run 2nd440 Dash 1st440 Intermediate Hurdles 2ndDiscus at IC4A's at Pennsylvania 2ndShot Put CREW BROWN OPPONENT 2nd at Miami Fla. Regatta field of 6 at Boston Univ 3.9 Varsity 4.5 Jayvee :40.2 Third Varsity 5 0 N .7 First Freshmen .5 Second Freshmen Walter J. Stein Cup at Cambridge with Harvard Rutgers 2nd Varsity 1st Jayvees 2nd First Freshmen 2nd Second Freshmen 2nd Third Varsity with MIT, Northeastern, BU 3rd Fourth Varsity Fours with MIT plus Harvard and Rutgers NORTHEASTERN COLUMBIA 2nd Varsity Jayveescancelled 2nd First Freshmen 2nd Second Freshmen 2nd Third Varsity with Coast Guard 8 Northeastern 1st Fourth Varsity Four Robert S. Holding Cup at Syracuse with Syracuse Neooo s dN PRS Lo N RN 6:31.8 Varsity 6:35.9 6:31.8 Jr. Varsity 6:37.6 6:53.5 Third Varsity Syracusef Cornell 6:49.83rd 6:51 First Freshmen 6:49.1 1st Second Freshmen 2nd Eastern Sprint Championships at Worcester, Mass. 4th Varsity, elimination heat Penn 1st 2nd Varsity, consolation heat Northeastern 1st st Jayvees Navy 2nd 1st Frosh, elimination heat Wisconsin 2nd 1st Frosh, finals DV EY at Cambridge Intercollegiate Regatta vs. Harvard, Brown has 2 teams 1st, 2nd Varsity 3rd, 4th 2nd, 3rd Second Varsity 1st 2nd, 3rd Third Varsity 1st 2nd, 3rd Freshmen 1st I.R.A. Regatta at Syracuse 2nd Varsity, preliminary heat Penn 1st Varsity, repechage heat o Princeton 2nd 4th Varsity, national champs ! Cornell 1st 3rd Varsity Fours, prelim Navy 1st 2nd Varsity Fours, rep echage Stanford 1st 6th Varsity Fours, national champs 7-12 place 5th Jr. Varsity, national champs Navy 1st 3rd Frosh. Eight, prelim Syracuse 1st 2nd Frosh Eight, Champs 7-10 place FOOTBALL Overall: 0-9 league: 0-9 BROWN OPPONENT 21 U.R.L 34 16 at Penn 17 10 YALE 117 7 DARTMOUTH 10 32 at Colgate 42 21 at Princeton 49 7 at Cornell 21 19 HARVARD 24 6 COLUMBIA 24 Freshman Football: 1-4-0 BROWN OPPONENT 28 YALE 32 0 at Boston College 42 55 at Holy Cross 6 7 UR.L 23 24 at Harvard 40 SOCCER overall: 6-5-2 league: 2-3-2 BROWN OPPONENT 5 U.R.L 3 5 B.U. 0 1 . at Penn 6 0 YALE tie 0 2 at Springfield k 7 DARTMOUTH 2 2 CONNECTICUT 0 0 at Army 1 4 TRINITY 1 2 at Princeton 2 1 at Cornell p 1 HARVARD 4 6 COLUMBIA e N.C.A.A. Soccer Tournament vs. Bridgeport at Brown vs. Harvard at Harvard F w - Freshman Soccer: 5-1-1 BROWN OPPONENT YALE DARTMOUTH WEST ESSEX HIGH N.J. CONNECTICUT NAOW - 2 at Boston University ot 1 2 at Springfield il 2 at Harvard tie 2 CROSS COUNTRY: 0-6 BROWN OPPONENT 43 YALE 17 47 at Harvard 15 50 at Dartmouth 15 Triangular meet at Providence College: 50 P.C. 15 32 U.R.L 23 Triangular meet final score: 67 U.R..59, P.C.15 75 at Fordham also with Lafayette 2733 9th Place at HEP'S in N.Y. lvy League Army Navy 16th at New Englands field of 38 BASKETBALL overall: 10-16 League: 6-8 BROWN OPPONENT 83 at Maryland 100 61 at Providence College 81 72 YALE 68 84 at U.R.I 102 70 at Yale 73 56 at Ohio State 62 65 at Xavier 90 1st Place at Hall of Fame Tourney, Springfield field of 8 104 American International College 50 83 Assumption 74 70 Morris Harvey 69 77 COLUMBIA 72 101 CORNELL 88 81 GEORGE WASH. 69 72 at Furman 86 89 at Cornell 73 78 at Columbia 72 69 GREEK NATIONAL TEAM exh. 62 94 DARTMOUTH 88 72 HARVARD 78 66 at Penn ; 90 75 at Princeton 91 78 at Harvard 80 79 at Dartmouth 82 56 PRINCETON 80 33 PENNSYLVANIA kY4 72 U.R.L 77 61 PROVIDENCE COLLEGE 72 Freshman Basketball: 18-2 BROWN OPPONENT 109 at Providence College 84 119 YALE 85 115 at Quonset 53 108 at U.R.I 56 115 at Yale 83 107 HOLY CROSS 86 124 QUONSET 38 94 JOHNSON WALES 80 86 at Worcester Academy 77 84 at Rhode Island Jr. College 56 109 DARTMOUTH 85 84 HARVARD 65 96 at Boston College 101 71 at St. Thomas More School Conn 64 93 at Harvard 81 71 at Dartmouth 74 98 CONNECTICUT 79 115 MASSACHUSETTS 100 83 U.R.L 66 110 PROVIDENCE COLLEGE 91 HOCKEY 9-11-1 Overall: 10-12-1 League: 6-5-1 BROWN OPPONENT at St. Louis University at St. Louis University ot BOSTON UNIVERSITY BOSTON UNIVERSITY CORNELL at Boston College at R.P.I. PRINCETON U.S. OLYMPIC TEAM exh. St. Lawrence University Boston College at Harvard at Yale PENNSYLVANIA DARTMOUTH ST. NICK'S HOCKEY CLUB exh. at Providence College at Pennsylvania YALE ot at Army ot at Princeton ot PROVIDENCE COLLEGE NORTHEASTERN at Dartmouth tie HARVARD at Cornell ON AN WWANOUOVOAAN-WWNDOO 2O OUIW PWHENWNNWWUNWWWWORW-UAUWWAWGD Freshman Hockey: 6-2-0 BROWN OPPONENT Chicago Minor Hawks Erie Lions BOSTON UNIVERSITY BOSTON STATE at Boston College HARVARD MT. ST. CHARLES SCHOOL at Harvard at Yale DARTMOUTH ALUMNI at Providence College NEW PREP ACADEMY YALE PENNSYLVANIA CRANSTON HOCKEY CLUB CRANSTON HOCKEY CLUB NORTHEASTERN Y WNWANWLOUANNANDW2 - - ABONDDO AN WAWNOTWODD SWIMMING 5-4-0 BROWN OPPONENT 10th place at Penn State Relays field of 13 86 at U.S. Coast Guard Acad. Relays 82 36 SPRINGFIELD 77 49 at Connecticut 64 35 at Harvard 78 72 COLUMBIA 41 86 BABSON 25 52 at M.L.T. 61 69 TUFTS 40 68 at Coast Guard Academy 45 7th place at New Englands WRESTLING: 0-10-0 BROWN OPPONENT 5 YALE 40 3rd place at Wesleyan, Triple Meet 0 Columbia 45 3 UR.LL 36 18 Wesleyan 21 9 at Harvard 42 24 at Dartmouth 30 6 PENNSYLVANIA 36 9 at Springfield with Seton Hall 31 15 at Cornell 30 6 PRINCETON 33 at New England'sFrank Walsh, semifinals 2nd, 3rd, Freshman Tourney of New England INDOOR TRACK: 3-7-0 BROWN OPPONENT 52 B.U. 57 29 at Northeastern 80 52 MASSACHUSETTS 57 at U.S. Track Field Federation held at Dartmouth ... placings: 1st One-Mile Relay 1st One-Mile Run New England's only 3rd 16 Ib. Shot Put 3rd 2-Mile Relay, section Il 3rd 5th Open 1,000-yard Run at Millrose Games, N.Y.C. 2nd Shot Put 19 at Yale with Pennsylvania 4188 ral COLUMBIA 37 33 HOLY CROSS with BOSTON COLL. 3648 41 at Dartmouth 77 46 at Connecticut 63 at HEPS at Cornell 1st Shot Put 4th Long Jump 3rd in Ivies 1 C4A's at Princeton 1st Shot Put All data from Brown sports infor- mation office. We apologize to those groups not listed. IN WHOSE INTERESTS by Daniel Cummings The university is a political being, torn by divergent and often opposing needs and desires. The problems of university governance, then, are problems all insti- tutions encounterwhere to draw lines, how to set goals, what can be considered acceptable and progressive. Obviously, the problem is complicated by the di- verse nature of the university community and by the divergent interests of the four major groupings within the university: students, faculty, trustees, and adminis- tration. Even if all had the same objec- tives in mind, there would still be dis- putes as to how to attain them. In this contradictory setting, it has not been the practice to adhere faithfully to any one set of ideas or principles of gov- ernance. However, above this tangle of emotion and intellect one concept should pre- vail whenever university decisions are being made: the university exists for its students; and the best interests of the students should be the yardstick of any policy. To students, this point is obvious. Yet the decision-makers have not always used this guideline. Too often, students have been treated as a colony, acted upon rather than for. This is not to imply that student life here has been altogether depressing or that proper decisions are not made. Yet in the balance, the experi- ence of students in the last four years has shown that the decision-makers are not responsive to students in several large areas of concern, particularly in housing, campus planning, educational reform and personal counseling. It should come as no surprise to non- students that the concept of student powerthe principle that students should have at least a voice and often the power to decide by themselveshas be- come such an integral part of university life. Students, like most people in similar situations, do not desire the added re- sponsibility of running the university while simultaneously trying to further their education. But the importance of student needs and the relative difficulty of fulfilling them in the university en- vironment has forced students to take matters into their own hands, to attempt to overturn bad decisions and to ensure that new ones will be favorable. S O o S N s b L e The whole focus of what has been loosely termed student power, then, has not been to assume control of the uni- versity but rather to ensure that those who have been hired or delegated to make policy are responsive to the real needs of students. The last four years at Brown have pro- duced many examples of this insensiti- vity and neglect. Campus planning and housing questions have been a particu- larly sore area for students. In 1969 and 1970, a coeducational housing plan was delayed and bitterly fought by the ad- ministration and Corporation despite stu- dent acceptance of the proposal. Al- though students have the greatest in- terest in housing and dining alternatives, not until 1971 was any attempt made to formally include students in decision- making in the areas of living arrange- ments or dorm construction. Even now, students do not meet formally with Cor- poration committees on housing and planning, those groups which ultimately have the real power to decide policy. Educational reform has been another area where plans and decisions have fallen short of student expectation. No- body denies that Brown's progressive educational position is its greatest strength, but there is still an acute need for improvement. The student-initiated movement for smaller classes, whether upperclass seminars or freshman Modes of Thought courses, has received little tangible support from administrators or faculty. Evaluation options, interdisci- plinary programs, and academic counsel- ing have suffered from disregard or inac- tion. It is no wonder that the incom- pleted program of educational reform has been an impetus for student power movements. As Brown changes gradually from a college to a university, the importance of student power in a necessarily political university must not be lost or ignored. Already this university is passing beyond the human scale. Decisions are being made on the basis of mathematical for- mulas; educational prestige is rapidly be- coming the summum bonum; and a sim- ple numerical increase of students s making each individual seem less im- portant. Even maore in the future thanin the past will it be necessary for students to be conscious of who is making the de- cisions that affect them, and if need be, organize to counter those decisions to make them reflect the needs and desires of students. S S A 185 Spri r Maeder Committee Education 1968-1972 Black Walkout, December 1968 Corporation Room Anti-ROTC Sit-in, April 1969 189 e .hVHV O - O oz z A Moratoria 1969, 70 194 VIDENCE, R. I, TUESDAY, MAY 5, 197 Price Ten Cen Students Vote to 1 tb Strike After Massive Nighttime Rally On Green Students Ask Brown RSN e N L Take Anti-war Stand L Sixteen student leaders lashed out against the Faculty meeting rally, May 1970 P 193 Hornig Convocation 1970-1 Commoner, Earth Day Aprit 22, 1970 Diman House room-switch, Fall 1971 PEMBROKE DEAD AT 78 Pierrel Galletti 201 6961 puadaapA Sundg cycles lamentations commencement bio-med for art read the '68 Up Your Arts demonstration sign and Hornig blows his kazoo and the war goes on to the Corporation Room to protest ROTC and begin a phase out which phases in to 1972's old New Curriculum with the same old problems as Afro still waits for the promises to be filled because who needs guidelines if your heart's in the right place like a medical school growing from a 6-yr. program which began in earnest in '68 though half that class left because it was hardly humane the way UH treated the young faculty during the tenure crisis posponing decisions as in the merger and women's equality so we move from coed housing to apartments Cambodia to Kent State Gene to George and Nixon to Nixon with our lottery numbers we all leave from the Green on another election year and we must decide now what did it mean what can we do The lack of direction and the cor- responding disintegration of com- munity are turning reform back to a personal rather than an institutional level. For three years Brown has held the potential to be not only a leader in higher education, but more im- portant, a vibrant place to work and study. The reforms are passed, and Brown still stands on that thresh- hold. For a while it seemed students and UH could work together, but the past few years have shown an in- separable gulf between the decision- makers and the needs of the campus. Some improvements will doubt- less be made, though most will be by individual students and faculty de- spite official policies. That Brown is relatively superior to most other universities is unquestionnable. The tragedy is Brown will never realize its potential. It must be rough on those who have invested so much in this place to hear students condemn it to me- diocrity. But those few outstanding people who make Brown bearable now will be needed even more in the next few years to inspire students. Two years ago students genuinely regretted they were attending Brown too soon to take advantage of the new university being built on re- cently-won reforms. Now, many are glad they are leaving just in time. 203 Two years ago he promised intellectual leadership 'a President should speak out he said Heard anything since then? yveah the first five installments of Hornig's History of Brown how to get from Olduvai Gorge to Francis Wayland in a single convo while the curriculum dies and a fifth of your young faculty is fired Claiming committee and caucus members were student elitists he refused to talk with or listen to them which would be offensive except he treats professors the same way Guess thats what happens when vou live in Washington DC too long and view campus affairs as selfish interest-group lobbies or go to Michigan or Formosa to issue major policy papers Profs write us to say hes Kkilling the faculty we can't print what mosl students say Few administrators have ever lost campus confidence so quickly Brown is still waiting for a president 205 206 When you make a sugges- tion to Jacquelyn Mattield, new dean of academic affairs and associate provost, nine times oul of ten she replies, ood lets da il Camiie from Sarah lawrence with impeccable credentials, her responses impart personal trustand honesty. In less than a year she has gained the wholehearted support of al- most all who have met her, although she has thus far appeared hesitant to buck first floor UH and push re- form. She may bring Brown together again if she stays here long, but the sands are running out on the new cur- riculum. Llong skirts, rose- colored teardrop slasses, and a sexy smile, Nancy Tampio binee L0 e T otherwise dull cam- pus planning com- mittee meetings. An administrative assis- tant to the vice presi- dent living on the bay with her pet owl Archimedes and bas sel hound Benjamin, she has yet to be af- fected by the inanity of Brown politics. Despite initial intentions, Acting Dean Thomas Ban- choff soon relinquished his self-proclaimed role as student advocale in UH'' in order to expell pets from dorms and reporters from faculty meetings. A brilliant professor whose optimism can be contagious, he has decided 10 leave the ill-conceived office of student affairs to return to teaching, where he is needed most. Walking into the chap- Sl Bliee ad e the new rabbi, Rick Marker, you feel a lot bet- tel, evern wWhep B thought you were feeling good. His tangle of long hair, his suit and bow tie that somehow look com- fortable, and the glimmer of humor in his eyes, give a sense of trust and secu- rity. A deans office can only be effective if the entire staff has a sense of the prob- lems that are critical to students and an appreciation of individual dilemmas. Thelma Sweetl righl has been with the Board of Counselors far eleven years, and her willingness to help is apparent to all who step into the dean of freshman's of fice. Virginia Taylor below goes out of her way 0 assure thal students gel the al- tention they seek without imposing a structure on personal needs. Rhett Jones shuns flambovance in favor of quietly persuasive logic, Hiis approach to the study of multi-racial societies is even and deliberate, A teaching associate and unusually re- sponsive person, Rhells concern ex cites interest in others. His straightfor ward sincerity avoids whal could easily be polemic. In lecture or seminar his manner is relaxed and engaging. His understand- ing of English history is as personal as it is prolessional. David Underdown s one of the foremost Tudor-Stuart Eng- lish historians, but what truly distin- guishes him is his ability to excite stu- dents with the wonders and intricacies of a past age. Donald Blough was known for his L 5D research long before most people had heard of it As chairman of the Campus Planning Committee, his un. derstanding of students and their needs has been tested and proven His obser. vations and anecdotes enliven classes, and students can sense his interest. 211 e B e T TS0 A 22 He listens intently, and you know you'ie close to the point when he starts breakine into an excited smile Jim Hanson responds to students as people with ideas that are worth encouraging. Tall, relaxed, an expert on Latin Ameri- can economic development, he is one of those people you run into at odd hours in odd places and can talk with, Last year's tenure crisis cenlered on a personality rather than a prin- ciple. Students respond to Duncan Smith as one whose philosophy of social concern they share and res- pect. His innovative contributions to the German civilization program and the curriculum have left an in- delible impression. Hands gesturing frantically, Peter Evans is o physical lec- turer. His course on the sociology of industry has generated such enthusiasm that its enroliment has doubled annually. An immensely active person with faith in students, ae - fuses to bow to graduate and professional school pressures by giving grades, Giles Milhaven's forehead gets taut, his elfin eyes look away, and fora moment he s almost not there, Then he tries to catch you off guard. He quit the Jesuit order, married, and came to Brown to teach Christian ethics. No teacher spends more time writing thoughtiul responses to students papers. Art is something thal most people have a natural, if generally only passing, dppreciation of. Kermit Champa teaches some of the most popular art history courses, particularly on impres- sionism. An able art historian and a youthfully exciting teacher, he is a na. tural complement to the freshness of his subjecl. 215 When Graham Smith first came to Brown, students wondered if it took a Ph.D. to run the projector in Bio 1. Now he gives half the lectures. Hip sun- classes, cherubic face, and cluttered of- fice, heis being forced to leave because of the department's orientation. He takes with him Brown's ecology pro- gram and the affection of his students. The warmly accented hello! often heard by students passing through Wayland Arch belongs unmistakably to lqse Amor y Vazquez. Pepi, as his friends call him, championed student INterests in a landmark report urging better student union facilities. Professor of Hispanic Studies, he is known to Most as a gracious head resident fellow. 216 218 Red shoes, bicycle, and bubbling laugh, Eileen Rudden is alive. Punting with a crossword puzzle or working for Women ot Brown United her humor femains. Her efforts for merger and equal admissions have contributed to the beginnings of a new status for wo. men at Brown. In giant strides which mock even a hint of laziness, Bruce Mann moves physically and intellectually with bur ning intensity. Delving into his colonial puritan past for a four-year master's in history, Bruce also excels as wind en- semble concertmaster and tennis pro. e s iperestell 1 evepdiinne 0 nated by much, and absorbed by a se- lect few. Arnie Berman has broken all the school basketball records you can think of and collected honors from All-lvy to Rhode Island Jewish Athlete of the Year. One of the top scorers in the nation, strict self discipline permeates his Am Civ studies and his horse racing mania off the court, Running a university by telephone is no simple task. Ken Weiner's deft agita- tion through the university committee structure and the BDH reflects an eliec tive concern for university governance and the quality of campus residential life. Following up a hot tip or cooking a gourmel meal, his interest is alive and entire. Jean Braucher's journalism spans campus news and Boston Globe eal- ure writing. Her direct, no-nonsense . manner keeps her mistrustful of pro- . mises and platitudes, and she has en- dured more faculty lmeetings in the ,. . ' . . ,. .. h past three years than mosl professors. R 0 0 909900009 prefers lo live, not discuss, an equal societal role for women. i 221 An organizer's success depends less on his efforts than on people's willing- ness to be organized. In this period of anti-organizationalism, it is to Steve Co- well's credit that he has been successiul in getting people together on a multi- tude of issues, from ed reform to founding the co-ops. Patch Simon knows that the perform- ing arts are an integral part of the line arts in general, and that as modes of ex- pression they are without equal. Her ef- e L e e theatre at Brown have gone without fanfare but have helped improve cam- pus cultural life. 223 Through his community service acli- vities and his reorganization of the freshmen counseling program, Rick Johnson has worked quietly to hu- manize the impact ol the institutional university on the individual His interest in music parallels and complements his concern for peopleboth require a special sensitivity. 224 Near midnight a story broke and Dan Cummings, mild-mannered editor of the BDH, threw out the layouts and re- did the morning edition, setting the headlines himself. Dan has the uncanny ability to know when and how much to copiomise itk He piinier:, bis friends and fellow editors, resolving problems before they become crises, Bent quietly over her guitar or domi- nating the stage as Bertolt Brecht's Mother Courage, Penny Bienenfeld Rossiter is an amalgam of different people. She brings to each role a unique strength of interpretation and character. What impresses most is her voice, which whether singing or crying, whispering or laughing is distinctly pre- sent. Jeff Stout is one of those rare people for whom there is no gap between commitment and action. Chairman of the strike steering committee, editor of Issues, conscience of Cam Club and university presidents, philosopher and friend, he acts and responds with com- passion for people and their ideas. L al. 29.6 Afro-American Soc.: Pres. Rick Robinson, V.P. Gene Irvin, Sec. Taylor Brown, Treas. Ray McDonald; Alpha Phi Omega: Pres leff Schreck VP Chris shaw, Treas Fete Marion; Arch- ery: Pres Jeft Miller, vV B, Mike Hart: A.LES.E.C.;: Pres. Wil- iy oo VB Rl e Todd Ward; American Field Service: Pres. Pete Dworkin, V.P. Ellen Gruenberg: Asian American Students Assoc.: Pres. Phil Lu, P. Linda Chem, Sec. Brian Shimamura, Treas. Joe Wong; A.RA.: Arlene Gorton, Muriel Gill, Janet Lutz, Elena Smith; Big Mother Coffee House: Manager Ronald Kandel; Band: Pres Barbara Jeremiah, Bus. Mer leff Harper, Sec. Chris Curcio; Bridge Club: Pres. John Saxe, V.P. Thomas Riley; BDH: Ed. Daniel Cummings, Man. Id. Jon Bigelow, Jean Braucher Ixec Ed Kenneth Weiner, Arts Ed Jon Loesberg, Assoc Ed Steve Kralt, Bus. Mgr. Robert Freedman, Assoc. Bus. Magr Jelf labak BSA: Pres Richard Eakin, V.P. Cathy Boemker, Sec. Debbie Bonnet: Bruin Club: Pres. Alan Breur, Bus Mo Babert Die Sec. Steve Jones; Brown Assoc. Coop Housing: Steve Cowell, Steve Robinson: Bail Fund: Richard Muckle: Caucus: Pres. Curt Blessing, V.P. Ken Marshall. 5ec Bill Royal, Treas. 5cotl Harris Chamber Chorus: Pres. Jeanne Kleinman, Treas. David Ferster; Chat- tertocks: Karen Edwards, Meg Turner: Cheerleaders: Pres. Terry Plochman, V.P. Dan Synakowski, Sec. Ronald Mann; Chess: Pres. Tony Rall, V.P. Richard Geer, Sec. Jeff Miller, Treas. Dave Zinberg: Cineaste: Pres. Charles Goetsch, V.P. Nancy Harlow, Sec. Diana Chasan, Treas land Grant Chorus: Pres. George Howard, V.P. John Saunders, Chris Peterson: Christian Science Org.: Pres. Charles Johnson, VP lell Miller: Christian Fellowship: Pres Jerry Walker, V.P.Mark Gallagher, Sec BrendaByrd, Treas Willlam Longy Classics: Pres. Narj Ciccarello, V.P. John Moser, Treas. Ron Markoff; Conference on Environment: Eric Hertfelder, M. Hastabocka: Comm. Defend Angela Davis: Faculty Ad. Judy Weiss: Dolphins: Pres. Richard Jager, V.P. Art Franklin, Treas. Richard Rosen: Episcopal College Chruch: Pres. Dope sl bV E AlERe il T e L T B Les Llovd: Faunce House Board of Governors: Chmn, Steve Smith, JoAnne Kacillas; French Club: Pres. Deb Ropal, V.P. Rich Riendeau, Sec. Diane Rogers, Treas. Josef Mittleman; Hlin 50 B e Laan Lollen LV 51 5L Elyine fied 8tove Fnompson, VP A1t Dyer; Folk Dance: Pres. Vicky Williams, Treas, Bill Hochleiser: Gay Liberation: Pres. lethie Jiesstein VP I Moser Sec lohn Klopacz; Grad Student Council: Chmn. Ed Lamagna, V.Chmn. Gregory Schoonmaker, Sec. Fred Ehrhardt, Treas. Carol Kemmler: German Club: Advisor William Swann: Hillel: Pres. im e s e Bl L Roy Mensch: John Hay Soc.: Pres. Bob Mandel, V.P. Tom Witt: India Student Assoc.: Pres. A.D. Bndhiraja, Sec. 5.P. Rawal: Ishmael Magazine: Jay Goary: 1 of 3 F's: Pres. Richard Sisson: Jabberwocks: Pres. Gee McCorry, Treas. Jeff Schwartz; Jericho Soc.: Pres. Scott Harris; Brown Key: Pres. Scot Spicer: Karate: Pres. Frank Domurat, VP, Robert Murray, Sec.Treas. Willlam Golden: Liber 72: Chmn. Ken Weiner, Exec. Ed. Bruce Mann, Man. Ed. Tom Mark, Bus. Mgr. . Richards: Literary Board: Jon Klimo: Married Couples: Pres. Joan Mclane: Mother Earth Foods: Peter Champion, Pam Lockwood, Barb Ehrlich; New University Conference: Pres. William Fried: Opera Work- shop: Pres. John Saunders, Treas., Chris Peterson; Or- chestra: Cond. Martin Fischer; Outing Club: Pres. Rick Al- e 5 ol BB il Coodn dicis B Koper: Photo: Pres. J. Ouderkirk, V.P. Don Gordon; Prod. Wor- ashop: Pres. Matt Walton, V.P. John House, Sec. Sue Jacobs, Treas. Eleanor Ringle; Prod. Wk. Black Theatre: Ramona Carmicle, Karlton Chapman; Pre Med.: Pres. Jerome Zeldis, V.P. Tom Furth, Sec. J. Kalaskowski, Treas. Clark Briggs: Pre Law: Pres. Oliver Cromwell: Program Council: Chmn. Scott Harris; R.LP.I.LR.G.: Pres. Rick Johnson, V.P. Lisa Koteen, Sec. Keith Winnard, Treas. J. Cummins; Radio: Pres. . Hhoinpson v P Briee Bibeock, Sec Pele Flabivo Treas Don Stanford: Rifle: Mgr. J. Sankulli; Rugby: Capt. David Novack, Co-capt. B. Goldwasser, Sec. W. Boothman, Treas, Joe DiCola; Ski Team: Co-capts. Tom Billings, Vince Atencio; Soaring: Pres. William Winkler, V.P. Brian Clark; Sock and Buskin: Shaun Curran, Eleanor Ringel, Constance Kulik: Student Mobilization Comm.: Bruce Dorpalen, Pat Detemple; Squash: Adv. William Sprout; Together: Aram A. Arabian Jr.: University Blood Service: Peter Marion; UCM: Pres. Jeff Stout, Sec. Ann Hoff, Treas. Mary Moore; West Coast Club: Pres. . Jacobson, V.P. 5cott Bogue, Sec. Scot Spicer, Treas. Rich Lunnon: Women of Brown United: Debbie Awd, Debbie Blackwell, Eileen Rudden, Connie Wolfe: Water Polo: Pres. Bob Thompson, V.P, John Colnon, Sec. Larry Rosenburg; Wind Ensemble: Pres. Ed Guiliano, V.P. Robert Berens, Sec. Karen Kirby; WBRU: Mgr. Larry Moss, Carl Chalek, Morris Shore, Brad Penney, Alan Wei- ner, Bette Schultz; BYG: Pres. Stan Baumblatt, Sec. Carol Cohen, Treas. John Nicholson, Trans Dir. J. Ticehurst; Yacht: Comm. Uzsie White, Co. Comm. George Billings, Treas. Art Deacon, Young American for Freedom: Pres Alan Jolis, V.P. Terence Carle, Sec. Charles Floto, Treas. Joe Dilorenzo: Young Republicans: Pres. Jim Dyer, V.P. Ernest Evans, Sec. George Pilloton, Treas. Frank Morgan, Young Socialist Alliance: Toby Emmerich COMMITTEE MEMBERS 1971-72 Campus Planning: Mary Moore, Jeffrey Moeller, Ste- ven Rattner; alternates: Kevin Lichter, Brian Burns, Lynn Higgins,. Community Relations: Stephen Cowell, Brian Hankowsky, Christopher Tow, Stanley Spinola; alternates, Daniel Beagan, Earl Schwarz, Scott Sammis. Dining: Alan Betson, Robert Kopleman, Daniel Dickenson, Scott Camlin. Library: Todd Peterson, Antonia Levine: alternate, James Holdstein. UCSA: Jane Desmond, Ray MacDonald, Barbara Hurst, Gene Colice, Richard Joslin; alternates, Curtis Scott, Scott Sammis, Edward Murphy. Athletic Advisory: Michael Meyers, John Davey, Robert Wieck. Admissions and Finan- cial Aid: Mike Mochizuki, Paul Pitel, Sandy Darity, Toby Emmerich; alternates, Candy Doehlert, Richard Widmer, Dudley Seaton, Bobbe Hirsh. Educational Policy: Donald Delson, Daniel Cooper, Mary Hutchins, Bruce Lilliston; al- ternate, Gary Egloff. EPC Advisory Committees: Depart- mental CoursesSteven Brody, Mark Haffenreffer, Michael Feldman; alternates, Thomas Marino, Robert Jennett; Extra- departmental CoursesNancy Schampan, Andrew Coburn, Lisa Greenman; alternates, Andrew Miller, Peter Dworkin, Danicl Wagenberg: Freshman YearGeoffrey Stewart, Stanley Baumblatt, Cathy Shufro; alternates, David Stark, Cathy Tenkate, Mark Ginsberg, Michael Kornbloom: Con- centrationsElaine Schnitt, Holly Osborn, Ann Usitalo; alternates, Rolf Urla, Steven Zieftf. 229 L e x z 1 4 L h , 'W: PHI DELTA BETA 5 DELTA PHI OMEGA PHI KAPPA PSI TOAD HALL 235 ZETA PSI 236 SWYNDLESTOCK Z O H- N o - s e laeal o A a o A 4 1972 240 R. LEE AITKEN AB Classics KENNETH L. AMYLON AB Anthropology NICHOLAS W. ALBERTSON AB American Civilization MICHAEL D. AMYLON AB Biology ANTHONY ALLISON AB JANET E. ANDERSEN AB Mathematics DONALD I. ABRAMS AB Molecular Biology LOIS I. ABROMITIS AB History ANNE E. ADAMS AB History SUSAN J. ADAMS AB Psychology PAUL S. ALPERT AB Religious Studies JEAN L. ANDERSON AB American Civilization WILLIAM D. ALPERT AB American Civilization KATHRYN M. ANDERSON AB American Civilization BRUCE A. ALTER AB Psychology RULON C. ANDERSON AB Religious Studies DAVID J. ANDREWS AB Sociology JOYCE L. ANDRIKS AB Engineering GARY W. ANDROPHY SCB Engineering SUSAN ANTONIO AB Spanish MRS. KATHERINE Z. ARMINGTON AB English American Literature WILLIAM F. ARMITAGE SCB Engineering JOHN L. ARNOLD SCB Engineering GLENN W. ASAFF SCB Engineering HILARY M. ASHER SCB Engineering VINCENT R. ATENCIO AB Psychology 241 242 DAVID A. ATWOOD AB Anthropology WARREN E. AVIS AB Independent Major D. MARK BABCOCK AB Geological Sciences GARY G. BABCOCK AB Human Studies PAUL A. BACKALENICK AB Psychology STEPHEN M. BACON AB Political Science DAVID L. BALDAUF AB SCB Applied Mathematics VALERIE BALDWIN MMS Bio-Medical Sciences GEORGE A. BALLE VINCENT T. BARBERA SCB Engineering CHARLES R. BAREHAM MMS Bio-Medical Sciences RAY D. BARNES SCB Engineering JOHN M. BARR AB Classics SHERI H. BARKAN AB Anthropology SUSAN H. BARNES AB Urban Studies JOHN C. BARSTOW AB Applied Mathematics JAY M. BARTLEY AB HERBERT J. BELLUCCI SCB Engineering JAMES C. BENDER AB International Relations LINDA A. BAUMANN AB Russian Studies SUSAN E. BECKLEY AB Art JOAN M. BELIVEAU AB American Civilization ARYLN R. BELL SCB Applied Mathematics BETH P. BELL AB Religious Studies CHRIS J. BENENATI AB App Math-Psychology JOHN G. BENNETT AB Economics EMILIE A. BENOIT AB Political Science ROBERT A. BERGMAN AB History MICHAEL H. BERKOWITZ AB Psychology ARNOLD L. BERMAN AB American Civilization LINDA S. BERMAN AB Human Studies DAVID J. BERNSTEIN AB App MathPsychology 243 ROBERT A. BIANCHI AB Philosophy PENNY BIENENFELD ROSSITER AB Theater Arts JONATHAN L. BIGELOW AB History ROBERT W. BIGELOW AB Classics POLLY E. BIJUR AB Religious Studies GEORGE H. BILLINGS AB Engl Am Literature DONNA C. BIRD AB Human Studies PHILLIP S. BLACKERBY AB Econemics DEBORAH J. BLACKWELL AB Engl Am Literature KAYE R. BLATMAN AB Psychology CHARLES L. BLOTTIN AB Economics MARK S. BLUMENKRANZ MMS Bio-Medical Sciences STEVEN L. BLUMLEIN AB SCB Engineering STEVEN D. BOND AB Biology 244 RICHARD S. BOSKEY AB American Civilization EDWARD L. BOSTWICK AB History TATIANA C. BOUTENNEFF AB Psychology CHRISTINE S. BOWMAN AB Engl Am Literature JOHN D. BOYD AB Engl Am Literature RICHARD J. BOYLAND SCB Engineering MELISSA C. BRADFORD AB Theater Arts WAYNE A. BRAFFMAN AB Economics GEORGE F. BRAIS SCB Applied Mathematics JEAN BRAUCHER AB Engl Am Literature CAROL S. BRAUN AB American Civilization JONATHAN BRENN AB Economics THOMAS R. BRENNEMAN AB Economics DAVID E. BREUER SCB Engineering CLARK A. BRIGGS SCB Chemistry 245 246 STEVEN L. BROWN AB Psychology WILLIAM M. BROWN SCB Engineering THOMAS S. BRYSON AB History MARK L. BUCHLY AB Biology RICHARD L. BUCKLEY AB SCB Engineering RICHARD W. BULLOCK AB Economics ROBIN BURNS W. PAUL BUSH AB Economics DENNIS L. BUTCHER AB Independent Major SCOTT R. BRIGGS AB SCB Engineering LYNDON C. BRINDLEY AB Psychology RICHARD C. BROER AB Political Science GEORGE B. BROTHERS AB Biology BETTY M. BROWN AB History CLIFFORD M. BROWN AB DANIEL E. BROWN AB Biology JAMES D. BUTLER AB Political Science JANE BUTTOLPH SCB Applied Mathematics BONITA A. BYRD AB History ANTHONY A. CALDAMON MMS Bio-Medical Sciences RICHARD V. CAMPAGNA AB Political Science ALAN B. CAMPELL AB International Relations ali BARBARA J. BUTERA AB Psychology DONALD A. CAMPBELL SCB Applied Mathematics GEORGE R. CANNING AB History PETER J. CANNON AB Psychology CHRISTY CARPENTER AB History ANTHONY R. CARTER AB Engl Am Literature CHRISTIN A. CARTER SCB Applied Mathematics LINDA M. CASINGHINO SCB Applied Mathematics 247 ROBERT M. CASTELLAN MMS Bio-Medical Sciences ALAN D. CATHCART AB Engl Am Literature VINCENT S. CHAO AB Literatures THOMAS W. CHATELLIER AB Sociology ANNE C. CHRISTIE AB Engl Am Literature GEORGE CHUDOLIJ AB Biology SARAH N. CHURCH AB Economics DEBORAH CIGOLLE AB KEVIN J. CLEERE H. CARLETON CLINCH AB American Civilization WILLIAM J. COAKLEY AB Economics ANDREW F. COBURN AB Human Studies JOSEPH G. COCCARO AB Psychology 248 CAROL S. COHEN AB Engineering ELLEN G. COHEN AB ROBERT A. COHEN AB Psychology RICHARD A. COHN AB Human Biology JAMES T. COLBY AB Economics GAYLYNN M. COLDWELL AB Psychology ROBERT H. COLE AB SCB Engineering MICHAEL D. COLEMAN AB REID W. COLEMAN MMS Bio-Medical Sciences GENE L. COLICE AB Human Biology MICHAEL B. COLLINS AB Molecular Biology THOMAS F. COLLORA AB Independent Program STEVEN A. COLWELL SCB Biology ALISON S. CONANT AB American Civilization JAMES P. CONLEY AB Political Science MARK W. CONNAR AB International Relations 249 250 W. HUDSON CONNERY AB History LAURA E. CONRAD SCB Physics THOMAS M. COOKMAN AB Classics DOUGLAS F. COOLEY AB Engineering RHONDA A. COOPERSTEIN AB Human Biology ALBERT T. CORBETT AB Psychology JANE CORDDRY AB Psychology DORIAN F. CORLISS AB Economics REBECCA P. CORNWALL AB Human Biology LAWRENCE C. COSTA SCB Chemistry ROBERT G. COVETT AB Psychology dr CHARLES S. CRAIG AB Engl Am Literature TODD R. CRAUN AB Engl Am Literature STEPHEN L. COWELL AB Independent Major STEVEN H. CRAMER AB History NANCY L. CRAWFORD AB Political Science DAVID K. CRIMMIN AB Political Science O. DEAN CROMWELL AB History LENARD H. CROSSMAN DANIEL A, CUMMINGS AB History JAMES P. CUNNINGHAM AB American Civilization CHRISTINE A. CURCIO AB Biology SHAUN B. CURRAN AB Theater Arts JENNIFER DALEY AB Human Studies THOMAS K. DANNER AB JEFFREY T. DARNALL AB Biology WAYNE C. DARNELL SCB Chemistry JOHN N. DATESH AB History DARRELL D. DAVIDSON AB SCB Chemistry WILLIAM A. DAVIES SCB Engineering SANDRA J. DAVIS AB ALFRED F. DECUIR AB MathematicsEconomics 25 252 JOSEPH A. DEDONATO AB Economics RAYMOND J. DEVER AB SCB Engineering VICTOR G. DEGRUTTOLA AB Physics JOHN B. DEVINE AB American Civilization JOHN L. DELANY AB REBECCA S. DEWAR AB Art MAROANN S. DERMATEOSIAN AB Psychology MRS. JOY D. DICKERMAN AB Asian History Tt A o DONALD A. DEROLF MMS Bio-Medical Sciences VINCENT C. DICOLA AB Biology LYNNE F. DERUS AB Linguistics ROBERT A. DIFRANCO AB Art LLEWELLYN H. DIGGS JOAN E. DILLON AB Anthropology AB Urban Studies PENNY C. DIXON GREGORY G. DOENCH AB German Civilization AB Human Studies V0 O s DANIEL R. DIMICCO SCB Engineering JOSEPH B. DOHERTY AB FRANCIS M. DOMURAT MMS Bio-Medical Sciences MARK H. DONAHUE AB Anthropology MICHAEL B. DONELAN AB American Civilization STEPHEN D. DONOVAN AB Psychology JEFFREY S. DORE AB Psychology JOSEPH F. DOUGHERTY AB American Civilization D. BARTON DOYLE AB History ARTHUR R. DRESDALE AB Engl Am Literature GOLDE G. DUDELL AB Biology DENISE M. DUENSING AB Art 253 254 JAMES R. DUFFY AB Economics ROBERT E. DULGARIAN AB SCB Physics CHRISTOPHER A. DUNN AB International Relations FAITH E. DUNN AB Psychology 2 MARK . DWYER AB Human Biology DENNIS C. DYER SCB Engineering JONATHAN L. ELION MMS Bio-Medical Sciences ROBERT J. ENRIGHT AB German RICHARD A. EPSTEIN AB Biology CHRISTINE A. ERISMAN SCB Applied Mathematics CURTIS A. ERMER AB SCB Engineering PAUL T. ESPINOSA AB Anthropology FRANCES A. DYKSTRA AB Political Science ERNEST H. EVANS AB International Relations STEVEN M. FARBER MMS Bio-Medical Sciences oA GERALD M. EATON AB Geological Sciences ROBERT P. ELFERING AB MathematicsPhysics ERIC M. FERROUILLET AB Economics SUSAN T. FERST AB History MEG FIDLER AB Anthropology SANDRA J. FINBERG AB Art THOMAS R. FINN AB American Civilization ROBERT W. FISK SUSAN FARRELL SCB Engineering CRAIG S. FAUSEL AB JONATHAN G. FAUVER AB American Civilization JEAN FECHHEIMER AB Psychology DAVID FEINER MMS Bio-Medical Sciences PETER A. FEINSTEIN MMS Bio-Medical Sciences JAIME FENTERSEIFFER SCB Engineering WILLIAM W. FERGUSON SCB Biology DOUGLASS H. FERRELL AB Economics RICHARD J. FERRITER AB 2565 JOHN H. FLASCHEN AB Chemistry MIKE FLYNN AB ROBERT T. FORBES SCB Engineering ROGER N. FORMIDONI AB Classics FREDERIC C. FOSTER AB Engl Am Literature RICHARD B. FOSTER AB Biology GARY E. FOX AB History ARTHUR M. FRANKLIN SCB Engineering JANE S. FRASER AB Engl Am Literature WENDY R. FREDERICKS AB Human Biology ROBERT J. FREEDMAN AB Economics JAMES N. FRIEDMAN AB SCB Engineering THOMAS W. FURTH AB History KEITH W. FURUYA JOHN M. GAIONI AB Psychology MARK E. GALLAGHER AB American Civilization 256 MAUREEN P. GALLAGHER AB History SCOTT A. GARVER AB Independent Major JOSEPH B. GAUDIOSI AB Psychology JONATHAN GELL MMS Bio-Medical Sciences JOHN J. GENTILE AB Anthropology WILLIAM N. GEORGIS MMS Bio-Medical Sciences RUSSELL W. GIANNETTA SCB Physics JAMES H. GIBBS AB Art MICHAEL C. GILLESPIE AB Engl Am Literature RITA E. GILLOOLY AB Sociology STEPHEN A. GLASSMAN AB Art History JOHN R. GLEASON AB Mathematical Economics CAROL S. GODDARD AB Art L. KARL GOEDECKE SCB Engineering GRANT S. GOLDEN AB Engl Am Literature WILLIAM A. GOLDEN AB Biology CHARLES D. GOLDFINE AB English ROSE H. GOLDMAN AB Biology 259 258 BARRY E. GOLDWASSER AB History WENDY K. GOLDWYN AB Engl Am Literature BONNIE C. GOOD AB Art SARAH E. GOODIN AB LAURA D. GOODMAN AB French JAMES F. GOODWIN AB Classics VIRGINIA B. GORDAN AB American Civilization WILLIAM C. GRAHAM MMS Bio-Medical Sciences JILL GRANT AB Engl Am Literature ROBERT M. GRANT SCB Engineering WALTER J. GREENBERG AB Independent Major FREDERICK H. GREENE AB Psychology THOMAS . GREENE AB Economics MELISSA GREENSPAN AB Psychology MARTHA M. GREENWOOD AB Psychology THOMAS A. GREGG SCB Engineering DENYS M. GRETZKO WSKI AB French WILLIAM V. GRICKIS AB Engl Am Literature ELLEN B. GRIFFITH PEGGY E. GRIMES AB Art JAMES W. GRONEFELD AB Political Science PHILLIP V. GRONVOLD AB Religious Studies CHARLES E. GROSS JR. AB Philosophy EDWARD F. GUILIANO AB Engl Am Literature MARCO N. GULOTTA SCB Engineering LARRY P. HAGEMAN AB Psychology BARBARA M. HAINES AB Anthropology DONNA L. HALL AB Political Science JAMES C. HALL SCB Engineering SAMUEL W. HALPERN AB Human Studies MARGARET J. HAMER AB American Civilization JOYCE D. HAMMOND AB Anthropology EVELYN S. HANLON AB RUTH H. HANNO AB Human Biology AMANDA HANSEN AB Art 259 HARRIET C. HANZEL AB Engl Am Literature CHRISTOPHER R. HARDEE SCB Biology MICHAEL J. HARLA AB Molecular Biology PAUL E. HARPER AB International Relations GARY L. HARRIS AB Political Science JONATHAN N. HARRIS AB American Civilization JANE HAWES MARTIN AB Biology ROBERT R. HAYES AB Engl Am Literature LINDA R. HAYWARD AB Linguistics HILDING HEDBERG AB History MAX A. HECKARD SCB Applied Mathematics EDWARD J. HENNESSEY AB PHYLLIS A. HENRICI AB Engl Am Literature WAYNE T. HENRY AB History JUDITH E. HENSHAW AB Human Studies MICHAEL R. HEPWORTH AB Philosophy 260 CARL J. HERMAN AB Urban Studies KATHRYN J. HERROD MMS Bio-Medical Sciences HARVEY P. HEYMANN AB Human Biology JOANNE K. HILFERTY AB Sociology DAVID A. HILL AB Sociology THEODORE C. HIRT AB History GERTRUDE HODES AB FrenchRussian BRUCE B. HOENIG AB Anthropology SHELLIE R. HOFFER AB Psychology WILLIAM E. HOIKALA AB Psychology JAMES C. HOLCOMB AB BEVERLY L. HOLLOWAY AB Human Biology EDWIN C. HOLMER AB History JOHN M. HOLOD AB History ELIZABETH L. HORMEL AB Art History 2671 262 DEANNE D. HORN AB German Civilization MRS. SUSAN S. HORNER AB Independent Major ANDREW C. HOWARD AB Religious Studies JAMES J. HUGHES AB Economics MARY E. HUTZLER AB French EUGENE E. IRVIN AB Political Science BETH E. IRVING AB Religious Studies NANCY L JACKSON AB Theater Arts MARK D. JACOBS AB Biology SUSU JACOBS AB Theater Arts BEVERLY W. JAMES AB Engl Am Literature JOHN L. JAWORSKI AB Sociology CHARLES R. JOHNSON AB Engineering Economics ROBERT G. JAMES AB Political Science GILBERT E. JOHANSEN AB SCB Engineering DIANE E. JOHNSON AB French MRS. PATRICIA JOHNSON AB Human Studies ROBERT C. JOONDEPH AB History THOMAS C. JUNKER AB History RICHARD A. JOHNSON AB Independent Major SUSAN G. JOHNSON AB Psychology DANETTE D. JONES AB Independent Major LAWRENCE A. JONES AB Political Science ROBERT H. JONES AB STEVEN A. JUSCZYK AB Engl Am Literature SUSAN . KALER AB Psychology STEVEN P. KANIG AB Biology CHERYL M. KAPEC AB Classics LINDA A. KASPARSON AB Music EMELY S. KATZ AB Classics JOAN D. KATZ AB Political Science CHRISTIAN P. KEITEL AB Applied Mathematics 263 PARDON R. KENNEY MMS Bio-Medical Sciences JONATHAN M. KERTZER AB Music CHARLES A. KESSLER MMS Bio-Medical Sciences HENRY H. KETCHAM AB Sociology ROBERT E. KIMURA SCB Applied Mathematics JULIE M. KING AB Engl Am Literature RALPH B. KINNAIRD AB Sociology KAREN M. KIRBY SCB Applied Mathematics PAMELA . KISPERT AB Biology HELEN P. KLEMCHUK AB Psychology 264 JON KLIMO AB Independent Major JOHN J. KLOPACZ AB Classics LAUREN KNIGHT DIANE G. KELL AB Engl Am Literature FRANCES J. KELSICK AB Human Biology GARY P. KENNEDY AB Mathematics WILLIAM L KOCH AB History EDWARD F. KOENIG AB Creative Writing ANDREW M. LANTER AB Engl Am Literature ERIC LAUPOT AB International Relations JOHN LAX AB History WILLIAM L. KOLKMEYER AB Economics LINDA P. KOO STEVEN W. KRAFT AB Political Science JAMES R. LABONTE AB Linguistics ULRICH LACHLER AB International Relations DAVID F. LAMONT AB Engineering Economics IVAN N. LANDES AB Economics ANNE M. LANG AB Human Biology MICHAEL K. LAZAROFF AB History EDWARD D. LAZOWSKA AB Independent Major JAMES R. LECKY AB History CARLTON LEES AB Economics 265 KAREN L. LEGGETT WILLIAM J. LEIDY SCB Physics L. E. LEONE AB Human Biology ROBERT F. LEROY AB Human Biology DOUGLAS W. LESHAY SCB Geology RUSSELL P. LESLIE AB Psychology ROBERT J. LEVINE AB History PETER A. LEWITT MMS Bio-Medical Sciences WILLIAM T. LIDDICOET AB Engl Am Literature JOEL LIEBERMAN AB Psychology STEPHEN G. LIOCE AB Political Science DEBORAH . LISKER AB Economics TIMOTHY R. LISTER AB Engl Am Literature 266 JANE A. LITTELL AB History DOUGLAS R. LITTLEFIELD AB BRENDA M. LOCKHART AB Anthropology SARAH M. LLOYD AB Anthropology RONALD P. LOCKE AB Political Science JONATHAN LOESBERG AB Engl Am Literature RUTH C. LOEW AB Linguistics JOHN P. LONERGAN AB History MICHAEL W. LONSKI AB Psychology JOANNE M. LORENZ AB Human Biology STEVEN R. LOWENSTEIN AB Biology PHILIP Y. LU AB SCB Geology CATHERINE M. LUBINSKI AB Psychology ROBERT S. LUDWIG AB Mathematics Economics MARTIN J. LUFTMAN AB Biology KURT A. LUNDSTROM AB Physics 267 RICHARD L. LUNNON AB Psychology BRADFORD D. LUSSIER AB Engl Am Literature JONATHAN S. LYNTON AB Engl Am Literature FRANCIS G. MAAZ AB Economics PAUL L. MADDOCK JR. AB Engl Am Literature JUSTIN D. MAHON AB SCB Engineering ROBERT G. MAIR AB Psychology STEPHEN L. MAJESKI AB History PATRICK J. MALONE AB International Relations ROBERT M. MANDEL AB International Relations BRUCE H. MANN AB MA History CAROL A. MARBLE AB Engl Am Literature ERIC P. MARCUS AB MathematicsEconomics MICHAEL A. MARINO AB Psychology RICHARD A. MARSLAND AB Art GUY W. MARSZALEK AB Mathematics 268 LIZBETH J. MARTIN AB Psyc hulugy THOMAS E. MARTIN AB History BRUCE D. MASON AB Economics SARAH E. MASON AB Human Biology WAYNE R. MATHEWS AB Political Science JEFF N. MAUSNER AB Independent Major ANNE C. MAZONSON AB Music JAMES V. MCARDLE SCB Chemistry DAVID J. MCCAY AB Economics SCOTT MCCLEARY AB Political Science GEORGE M. MCCORRY AB Political Science CHARLES C. MCDONALD AB Biology JOAN M. MCDONALD AB Psychology 269 M. KEVIN MCEVOY AB Geological Sciences JAMES C. MCGLYNN AB Engl Am Literature SUMMERS M. MCGURN AB Psychology KIRK A. MCKINNEY AB Philosophy ALEXANDER T. MCMAHON AB WILLIAM F. MCNEELY SCB Engineering DAVID M. MENDELSOHN AB GARY D. MERZ SCB Engineering JOHN H. METHVIN AB Independent Major SARAH E. METZ AB Political Science ALAN F. MEYERS AB RICHARD A. MIGNONE AB Economics IVAN W. MILLER AB Psychology JAY R. MILLER AB Political Science JOLYON MILLER LINDA L. MILLER AB Classics STEVEN G. MILLER AB Psychology CAROL MILLICAN 270 THOMAS L. MISURACA AB American Civilization STEVEN S. MITCHELL AB International Relations JOSEF MITTLEMANN AB Independent Major MIKE M. MO CHIZUKI AB Independent Major TERRENCE MOLLOY AB Economics GALE A. MONDRY AB Independent Program GARY D. MOONEY SCB Engineering MAURICE MOORE MICHAEL J. MOORE SCB Applied Mathematics MARY B. MORAN AB Art JAMES W. MORGAN AB Creative Writing RAYMOND T. MORIYASU AB GREGORY S. MOUNTAIN AB Geological Sciences BARBARA G. MULHOLLAND AB Engl Am Literature JOSEPH P. MULLEN AB Psychology SCOTT A. MUNCH AB Psychology 27 -t d RICHARD B. NOONAN JOHN M. NICKLAS JOHN P. NICHOLSON DONALD J. NENNO 11 STUART A. NAQUIN AB American Civilization SCB Biology AB Urban Studies MMS Bio-Medical AB Anthropology Sciences DOROTHY D. NOREN AB Biology GLENN R. NORMILE AB History DAVID J. NOVACK AB American Civilization CRAIG F. NOVAK AB American Civilization BRUCE W. NUGENT AB C. MICHAEL ODENWALDER AB Economics F. KEVIN MURNIGHAN AB American Civilization PETER P. MUSCATO AB American Civilization PATRICIA L. MYSKOWSKI KEVIN F. OGRADY MMS Bio-Medical AB Independent Major Sciences KATHLEEN H, OHARA ERIC C. NADEL MMS Bio-Medical Sciences AB Political Science 272 LINDA PAPERMASTER SCB Applied Mathematics JOHN M. PARIS AB Economics DONALD J. PASCOE AB Economics WILLIAM D. PASSERO AB Economics a DAVID R. PATTERSON AB Economics JOHN W. PEARSON AB Human Biology JAMES G. OHAUS AB MARK F. OLENDER AB SCB Engineering HOLLY C. OSBORNE SCB Applied Mathematics JAMES F. OUDERKIRK AB Engl Am Literature BRUCE L. OWENS AB Political Science DAVID R. OWENS AB RICHARD W. PAD GETT AB JAMES G. PAGE AB Economics BARBARA K. PAIGE AB Psychology JEFFREY T. PAINE AB 273 274 WILLIAM W. PENDLEBURY AB Biology DAISY M. PERRY AB Human Biology BRADFORD A. PENNEY AB History BROOKE A. PETERSON AB History DENNIS G. PERCHER AB CHRISTINE M. PETERSON AB Biology MARY E. PEREIRA AB History WILLIAM R. PETTINGELL SCB Engineering PETER L. PERL AB American Civilization PETER PEYSER MICHAEL J. PERNA AB History PAUL A. PITEL AB ELIZABETH A. POPLIN AB Biology JEFFREY L. POTE AB Asian Civilization MARGARET A. POWER ROBERT C. POWER AB History JANICE M. PLATT CARL M. PLOCHMAN DAVID H. PLUMP AB Psychology AB Psychology AB Engineering ROBERT L. POMERANTZ BARBARA P. POOLE NANCY P. POPE AB Creative Writing AB Spanish DAVID J. PRATZON SCB Engineering SHARON M. PRENTICE AB Anthropology ANDREW N. PRICE AB Economics DOUGLAS A. PRICE AB Human Biology ZYLPHA K. PRYOR AB WILLIAM J. PURCELL AB Psychology 275 STUART R. PURNELL AB Psychology BRUCE J. PURVIS AB Biology ROGER C. QUINN AB Political Science ROBERT A. RABBINO AB Classics CLARE L. RABINOW AB Applied Mathematics P. WAYNE RADOMSKY AB Psychology RICHARD W. RADOMSKY AB Urban Studies FREDERICK S. RADWAY AB Engl Am Literature KAAREN L. RAGLAND AB American Civilization STEPHANIE L. RANAGHAN AB French GUY D. RANDOLPH AB Philosophy STEPHEN A. RANEY AB Creative Writing MARSHALL R. RANSOM AB Anthropology GREGORY A. RASMUSSEN AB History PETER S. REICHERTZ AB History JEFFREY A. REISE SCB Biology 276 CARL REMICK AB Engl Am Literature COURTNEY REN AB Music ROBERT D. RENZA SCB Engineering LOUIS M. REYCROFT Il AB Economics JAMES F. RIANOSHEK AB Engl Am Literature ELAINE A. RICH AB Independent Major W. BECKMAN RICH AB Philosophy R. PAUL RICHARD AB LUCY E. RICHARDSON AB Art JEFFREY O. RILEY AB Biology THOMAS E. RILEY MMS Bio-Medical Sciences ELEANOR M. RINGEL AB Theater Arts DAVID . RITTENBERG AB Engl Am Literature ROGER S. RITTMASTER AB Independent Major LT DUANE E. ROBINSON F. DANA ROBINSON AB History GAYLLIS H. ROBINSON AB History STEPHEN ROBINSON AB Anthropology STEVEN N. ROBINSON AB Economics SUSAN C. ROGERS AB Anthropology PAUL G. ROHRDANZ AB Independent Major WILLIAM J. ROLAND I1 AB Economics JOHN A. ROMAGNA AB History LAWRENCE A. ROSENBERG SCB Engineering PAUL M. ROSENBERG AB History DANIEL A. ROSS AB Human Studies JULIA C. ROSS AB Psychology ROBERT J. ROTHBAUM AB Engl Am Literature STEVEN A. ROTHSTEIN AB Independent Major JOHN S. ROUSE AB Theater Arts JAMES C. ROWLEY AB History LEONARD M. RUBIN AB Mathematics EILEEN M. RUDDEN AB American Civilization 278 MRS. JUDITH A. RUSSELL AB Psychology JAMES E. RYNAR AB Political Science COLEMAN R. SACHS AB American Civilization LINDA S. SAGASER AB Asian Studies CAROL L. ST. DIERRE MMS Bio-Medical Sciences BONNIE R. SAKS MMS Bio-Medical Sciences HAROLD F. SANDFORD SCB Chemistry MOLLIE A. SANDOCK AB Human Studies CLIFTON J. SAPER AB Psychology LISA J. SARASOHN AB Biology JOHN H. SAXE AB Geological Sciences JILL R. SCHAEFFER AB American Civilization E. J. SCHERZER AB Independent Studies DAVID M. SCHIER AB Political Science LEONARD A. SCHLESINGER AB American Civilization MARYANN C. SCHMADEL AB Mathematics 279 280 JAMES K. SCHMIDT SCB Applied Mathematics MICHAEL 1. SCHMUTTE AB Economics BARBARA L. SCHNEIDER AB Mathematics- Economics LYNN A. SCHOCH AB Theater Arts STEPHEN G. SCHOTTMILLER AB Theater Arts KARL SCHRICK AB Mathematics- Economics DAVID J. SCOTT AB History GLENN M. W. SCOTT AB Political Science JOSEPH SCOTT AB American Civilization KATHLEEN M. SCOTT AB Human Biology ANN R. SEELYE AB Psychology DEBORAH C. SEGAL AB Classics VIVIAN B. SELL AB German ROBERT B. SHANKS AB Independent Major JOHN A. SHANNON AB History EDWARD W. SHEETS AB Political Science TERESA W. SHELLEY AB Spanish DOUGLAS A. SHEPORD AB MARION E. SHERRY AB German A. SHERS AB Political Science VIRGINIA SHERWOOD AB MORRIS M. SHORE AB Psychology JAMES N. SHUMACKER AB Religious Studies DAVID L. SIEGFRIED AB Political Science LINDA SILVERMAN PATRICIA SIMON AB Comparative Literature PETER J. SIMON SCB Engineering P. DOUGLAS SISK AB Engl Am Literature RICHARD K. SISSON SCB Engineering JAMES D. SMEE SCB Engineering 281 GARY H. SOCKUT SCB Applied Mathematics RICHARD D. SOLLENBERGER MMS Bio-Medical Sciences E PAUL SORENSEN AB SCB Engineering LAUREN M. SOUTHWICK AB Chemistry ALAN C. SPARROW AB Psychology 282 ABIGAIL L. SMITH AB Biology JOHN M. SPERGER AB Economics MARILYN A. SPERLING AB Psychology DAVID R. SPETH AB Chemistry DEBORAH A. SPICER AB Applied Mathematics ALFRED M. SMITH AB CYNTHIA L. SMITH AB Engl Am Literature CARLA T. SMITH AB Art DEBORAH A. SMITH AB Engl Am Literature CLINTON L. SMULLYAN AB Economics ALFRED C. SNIDER AB Ancient Civilization SCOT L. SPICER DOUGLAS E. SPIRO AB American Civilization SUSAN B. STAMM AB French DONALD L. STANFORD AB International Relations ROSEANNETTE STARR AB Independent Major DONNA STARRAK AB Art W. B. STEELE DAVID A. STEIN MARK A. STEINBERG GAIL F. STERN AB Independent Major SHARON G. STERN DOROTHEA K. STIEFF AB Art G. WILLIAM STOUT AB JEFFREY L. STOUT AB Religious Studies 283 MARGARET M. STROOCK AB Political Science WENDY STROTHMAN AB Russian Studies TIMOTHY L. STROTMAN AB Mathematics GEOFFREY V. SUPKO AB JEFFREY L. SUTTON AB Political Science HENRY R. SWIRSKY AB Mathematics-Economics DANIEL G. SYNAKO WSKI AB History PETER W. SZURA AB Political Science JEFFREY S. TABAK AB Urban Studies CHARLOTTE W. TAFT AB Independent Major EDWARD P. TAFT AB Geological Sciences DAVID E. TANNER AB American Civilization G. TRUETT TATE AB Political Science 284 LEE A. THOMPSON AB SCB Engineering TIMOTHY J. THURLOW AB American Civilization LARS I. TOLLEFSON AB Political Science MONTE A. TREASURE AB Engineering RICHARD C. TRICKEY AB Engl Am Literature SCOTT A. TRIPP AB Political Science WILLIAM G. TUCKER AB Economics STEPHEN D. TUMBAS AB Russian Studies MARTHA M. TUNE AB History LAURA T. TWEET AB American Civilization FRANZ T. TYSON AB Mathematics ANDREW H. UDIS AB Engl Am Literature STOWE H. TATTERSALL AB History CRAIG C. TAYLOR SCB Physics MARGARET E. TAYLOR AB History JOHN W. THOMPSON SCB Engineering 285 FRANK A. VALENTE AB Molecular Biology CRAIG A. VAN COLLIE AB Anthropology STEPHEN W. VAN NESS AB Art ADOLPH E. VEZZA AB Psychology PHILIP A. VITON AB Applied Mathematics Economics ROGER C. VOGT SCB Engineering RALPH A. VUONO AB Economics AVRAM A. WAGENBERG AB Anthropology ALLIN V. WALKER AB Human Studies STEPHEN R. WALKERMAN AB SCB Engineering 286 ROBERT L. WALLACE AB Independent Major CARLTON L. WALLIS JR. AB Chemistry FRANK O. WALSH AB Economics JOHN E. UNDERHILL AB Mathematics THOMAS M. VAIL SCB Applied Mathematics CHRISTOPHER D. ULICKY AB Independent Major FREDERICK A. WANG AB NANCY Y. WANG SCB Applied Mathematics NANCY A. WEISMAN AB Independent Major D. L. WELCH AB Art M. CHRISTINE WENCKER SCB Applied Mathematics A. THOMAS WARD AB Independent Major HERVEY A. WARD I AB Psychology RICHARD C. WATERS SCB Applied Mathematics LUCILE K. WAWZONEK SCB Biology DAVID R. WEAVER AB Economics HAROLD H. WEBBER AB Engineering ALAN L. WEINER AB Urban Studies KENNETH S. WEINER AB Human Studies STEVEN J. WEINSTEIN AB Engineering MICHAEL P. WERNER SCB Applied Mathematics JOAN M. WERNIG AB Psychology EVERETT O. WHITE Il AB Economics MARCIA V. WHITE MMS Bio-Medical Sciences 287 288 MARYANN WILSON AB Political Science CHARLES B. WOLF AB History JAMES H. WINKLER AB Human Studies CONSTANCE D. WOLFE AB Psychology WILLIAM A. WINN AB American Civ JOHN R. WOLFE STEPHEN B. WHITMAN AB American Civilization ROBERT D. WIECK AB History JAMES M. WILLIAMS AB History LANCE M. WILLIAMS AB Engl Am Literature LESLIE J. WINNER KIMBERLY WITSMAN AB Psychology AB American Civ BERTRICE Y. WOOD WILLARD N. WOLLBERT AB Religious Studies AB History THOMAS A. WITT AB Psychology JOHN C. WRIGHT SCB Engineering SUSAN A. YELAVICH AB Art SELMA R. YOLLES AB Art CHARLES S. YOUNG AB JOAN ZAHORJAN SCB Applied Mathematics JEROME B. ZELDIS AB Molecular Biology ANDREW H. ZIMMERMANN AB ROBERT B. ZINK AB Economics MARCIA A. ZUCKER AB American Civilization 289 senior Index Seniorsarelistedinthepreceding section according to theiracademic status last spring. 1his, some sty dents who are no longer at Brown were listed. Further, some women who married since last spring are listed by maiden name. They can be found in this Index, however, under their married name. DONALD I ABRAMS 3901 Crenville Road University Hts Ohio 44118 LOIS I ABROMITIS 191 Valley Rd Middletown R I 02840 WILLIAM E ACHILLES 111 324 W North St Geneva N Y 14496 ANNE D ADAMS 1327 Sycamore Ave Brunswick Ga 31520 SUSAN J ADAMS 109 Montclair Ave Montclair N 07042 GENE AGATSTEIN 254 Northwoods Road Manhassot N'Y 11030 R LEE AITKEN 88 Mackey Ave Port Washington N Y 11050 NICHOLAS W ALBERTSON 8 Clover Lane Westport Conn 06880 R ANTHONY ALLISON 636 Poinsetta Drive Satellite Beach Fla 32935 PAUL S ALPERT 6 Fairhave Road Newton Centre Mass 02159 WILLIAM D ALPERT 43 Adler Circle Galveston Texas 77550 BRUCE A ALTER 62 Elmgrove St Providence R I KENNETH L AMYLON Chopmist Hill Rd N Scituate R 1 02857 MICHAEL D AMYLON Route 1 Box 60 North Scituate R 1 02857 JANET E ANDERSEN R D 2 Montfort Road Wappingers Falls N 'Y 12590 JEAN L ANDERSON 334 Wolcott Hill Road Wethersfield Conn 06109 KATHRYN M ANDERSON 49 Patience Court Warwick Rhode Island 02888 RULON C ANDERSON 19750 Westover Rocky River Ohio 44116 DAVID J ANDREWS 121 Donelson St Providence R 1 02908 JOYCE L ANDRIKS 45 Pratt St East Hartford Conn 06118 GARY W ANDROPHY 107 Eldridge St Waterbury Conn 06704 DAVID H ANDRUS JR 361 Brentwood Drive Youngsyown NY 14174 SUSAN ANTONIO 13 Sandord Ave Cumberland R I 02864 MRS KATHERINE Z ARMINGTON 378 A Benefit St Providence R WILLIAM F ARMITAGE JR 12 Doreen Road Trenton N J 08690 ANDREW L ARNAULT 423 Coleman Rd Middletown Conn JOHN L ARNOLD 36 Paget Road Madison Wisc 53704 GLENN W ASAFF 16 Gail Road Weston Mass 02193 HILARY M ASHER 739 Lincoln Way East Mishawaka Ind 46544 VINCENT R ATENGIO 4115 South Fox St Englewood Colo 80110 DAVID A ATWOOD 133 Wilson Ave Rumford R 102916 WARREN E AVIS 2701 Park Drive Shaker Hts Ohio 44120 D MARK BABCOCK 88 Durham St Marietta Ga 30060 GARY G BABCOCK 8080 Batavia-Strafford In Batavia N Y 14020 PAUL A BACKALENICK 373 Greens Farms Road Westport Conn 06880 STEPHEN M BACON 165 Duck Hole Road Madison Conn 06443 DAVID L BALDAUF 1519 Cornell Ave Trenton N J 08619 MRS VALERIE P BALDWIN 23 E Manning Providence R I GEORGE A BALLE 10319 Rosser Road Dallas Texas 75229 VINCENT T BARBERA 77 Hope St Apt 14 Providence R CHARLES R BAREHAM 259 Jamestown St Gowanda N Y 14070 SHERI H BARKAN Tedesco Point Tupelo Road Swampscott Mass 01907 RAY D BARNES 213 N Ardmore Ave Dayton Ohio 45417 SUSAN H BARNES 21 George St Providence R 1 02906 WILLIAM B BARNETT 514 Morgan Creek Road Chapel Hill N C 27514 JOHN M BARR 2068 Ravenwood Ave Dayton Ohio 45406 JOHN C BARSTOW 86 Livingston Circle Needham Mass 02192 JAY M BARTLEY 4202 Windsor Dr Huntington Beach Calit 92648 SUSAN E BECKLEY 5 Marshall Rd Winchester Mass 01890 JON H BEDRICK 27 Alger Place New London Conn 06320 NANCY J BEERY 225 East Swissvale Ave Pittsburgh Pa 15218 JOAN M BELIVEAU 236 Hardenburgh Ave Demarest N J 07627 ARLYN R BELL 8444 E Bonnie Rose Scottsdale Arizona 85253 BETH P BELL 188 Weaver Street Larchmont N'Y 10538 HERBERT J BELUCCI 2 Chaffee Ave Albertson N'Y 11507 JAMES C BENDER 31 Rainier Road Fanwood N J 07023 CHRIS J BENENATI 2118 Seaford Ave Seaford N'Y 11783 JOHN G BENNETT 188 Shaw Ave Cranston R 102905 STEPHEN A BENNETT 1922 Glenridge Drive Indianapolis Ind 46218 EMILIE A BENOIT Anawan Cliffs Narragansett R 1 02882 PAUL R BENOIT 328 Illinois St Central Falls R 1 02863 MRS DEBORAH B BERGANTZ 147 Benefit St Apt No. 30 Providence R 102903 ROBERT A BERGMAN 27905 San Nicholas Palos Verdes Calif 90274 MICHAEL H BERKOWITZ 4 Ramapo Circle Harrison N Y 10528 ARNOLD L BERMAN 128 Lawrence Drive Short Hills N J 07078 LINDA S BERMAN 685 North Wade Ave Washington Pennsylvania 15301 PETER G BERMAN 164 Quinobequin Road Waban Mass 02168 DAVID J BERNSTEIN 28 Ridge Drive Livingston N J 07039 290 ROBERT A BIANCHI 10 Plymouth Ave Belmont Mass 02178 JONATHAN L BIGELOW 15 Sylvan Road Darien Conn 06820 LINDA L BIGELOW 4102 Chestnut Place Alexandria Virginia 22311 ROBERT W BIGELOW 98 Two Pounds Rd Falmouth Mass 02540 POLLY E BIJUR 502 Orienta Ave Mamaroneck N Y 10543 GEORGE H BILLINGS P O Box 735 Falmouth Mass 02541 DONNA C BIRD 2270 Madison Road Cincinnati Ohio 45208 DAVID M BIRDZELL 412 North St Greenwich Conn 06830 PHILLIP S BLACKERBY 2323 N Central No. 306 Phoenix Arizona 85004 DEBORAH J BLACKWELL 11605 Parkedge Dr Rockville Md 20852 KAYE R BLATMAN 4 Grenwolde Dr Great Neck N Y 11024 WENDY K BLOOM 44 Jacob St Seekonk Mass 02771 CHARLES L BLOTTIN 4989 Garfield St La Mesa Calif 92041 MARK S BLUMENKRANZ Apt 19-8 104-20 Queens Blvd Forest Hills N'Y 11375 STEVEN L BLUMLEIN 33 Walnut St San Francisco Calif 94118 ELAINE V BOCCUMINI 35 Northfield Ave Dobbs Ferry N'Y 10522 PHILLIP N BOND 1513 West 39th St Norfolk Va 23508 STEVEN D BOND 10914 Oakwood St Silver Sprig Md 20901 RICHARD S BOSKEY 32 Midwood Road Rockville Centre N 'Y 11570 BEDWARD L BOSTWICK 1137 Granada St Casper Wyoming 82601 TATIANA C BOUTENEFF 18 Fenimore Road Scarsdale N'Y 10583 CHRISTINE S BOWMAN 5201 Huisache St Bellaire Texas 77401 JOHN D BOYD 5518 Haverford Ave Indianapolis Ind 46220 LANSON M BOYER JR 711 Roxbury Court Mantic Ct RICHARD J BOYLAND 7505 Sebago Road Bethesda Md 20034 MELISSA C BRADFORD 253 Oakwood Road Charleston West Va 25314 GEORGE F BRAIS 7 Colonial Drive Lincoln R 102865 JEAN BRAUCHER 40 Temple St Belmont Mass 02178 CAROL S BRAUN Box 616 Pacific Palisades Calif 90272 FLINT BRAYTON Davis Hill Road Weston Conn 06880 JONATHAN BRENN 93 Baltusrol Way Springfield N 07081 THOMAS R BRENNEMAN 153 Hartford St Natick Mass 01760 DAVID E BREUER 54 Ridge Road Glen Rock N J 07452 CLARK A BRIGGS 293 Roses Mill Road Milford Conn 06460 LYNDON C BRINDLEY 204 Louise Drive Morrisville Pa 19067 RICHARD C BROER 1168 Locust Way Crants Pass Ore 97526 GEORGE B BROTHERS JR 4921 Inadale Ave Los Angeles Calif 90043 BETTY BROWN 975 E 179th St New York N 'Y 10460 CLIFFORD M BROWN 1339 Opal St San Diego Calif 92109 DANIEL E BROWN 415 Huguenot Ave Union N J 07083 JAMES B BROWN 1461 Romona Ave Salt Lake City Utah 84105 SCOTT BROWN 34 Yorktowne Drive Englishtown N J 07726 STEVEN L BROWN 2511 Fernleaf Court Atlanta Ga 30318 WILLIAM M BROWN 5451 Ohio River Road Huntington West Va 25702 THOMAS S BRYSON 72 Cole St Pawtucket R 1 02860 MARK L BUCHLY 8702 Maywood Ave Silver Spring Md 20910 RICHARD L BUCKLEY 4 Schultz Road Kirkwood Mo 63122 RICHARD W BULLOCK 39 Brenton Ave Providence R I 02906 MRS ANNE M BURG 256 Washington St Middletown Ct 06457 W PAUL BUSH 1000 S Main St Findlay Ohio 45840 DENNIS L BUTCHER 420 Irma Ave Kent Ohio 44240 BARBARA J BUTERA 43 Linwood Ave Ardmore Pa 19003 JAMES D BUTLER Box 088 R R 2 Morrow Ohio 45152 BONITA A BYRD 301 N Cleveland Ave Wilmington Del 19805 ANDREW CABRERA 201 Main St Youngstown N Y 14174 ANDREW M CAIRNS Mill St RFD 1 Springville N'Y 14141 ANTHONY A CALDAMONE 87 Texas Ave Providence R 102904 RICHARD V CAMPAGNA 2102 Avenue I Brooklyn NY 11210 ALAN B CAMPELL 4408 Courtland Drive Metairie La 70002 DONALD A CAMPBELL 7 Waterside Lane West Hartford Conn 06107 H STEVEN CAMPBELL Box 61 Pt Lookout N Y 11569 GEORGE R CANNING 30 Wyckoff Ave Wyckoff N J 07481 PETER CANNON 10 Silverbrook Road Westport Conn 06880 TERENCE G CARLE Longyear Lane Shokan N'Y 12481 CHRISTY CARPENTER 4701 Woodway Lane N W Washington D C 20016 JOHN C CARROLL 4137 North 25th St Arlington Va 22207 ANTHONY R CARTER 1125 Circle Drive ElIm Grove Wisc 53122 CHRISTIN A CARTER 604 Dallam Road Neward Delaware 19711 LINDA M CASINGHINO 214 Walnut Hill Ave Manchester N H 03104 ROBERT M CASTELLAN 709 Pine Ridge Road Media Pa 19063 ALAN D CATHCART R D 1 Olanta Pa 16863 MARK L CHALEM 2228 Madison Place Evanston Il 60202 VINCENT S CHAO 11 Ben Chuong Duong Saigon SV N THOMAS W CHATELLIER 770 Sixth Ave River Edge N J 0766 I ANNE C CHRISTIE Box 3522 Greenville Wilmington Del 19807 GEORGE CHUDOLI 856 Hope St Providence R 102906 SARAH N CHURCH Route L Box 14 Lenox Mass 01240 MARJORIE B CHURGIN 4911 Flanders Ave Kensington Md 20795 STEPHEN P CIESLUK 160 North Main St So Hadley Falls Mass 01075 BRUCE A CLARK 29 Pleasant St No Reading Mass 01864 CAROL T CLEVELAND 12021 Tall Oaks Houston Texas 77024 H CARLETON CLINCH 743 W Saddle Rive Rd Ho Ho Kus N J 07423 ROBERT C CLYMAN 158 Fox Meadow Rd Scarsdale N Y 10583 WILLIAM J COAKLEY 92 State St Canton N'Y 13617 ANDREW F COBURN 305 Treasure Boat Way Siesta Key Sarasota Fla 33581 JOSEPH G COCCARO 171 Greenleaf Ave Staten Island N'Y 10310 CAROL S COHEN 8523 Milford Ave Silver Spring Md 20910 ELLEN G COHEN 5 Sutherland Court Baltimore Md 12208 LAUREN B COHEN 157 Dayton Springfield Ma 01118 ROBERT A COHEN 62 Sheffield Rd Newton Mass 02160 ROBERT L COHEN 115 Upton Ave Providence R I 02906 RICHARD A COHN 5350 Denwood Ave Memphis Tenn 38117 JAMES T COLBY 87 Main St Peterborough N H 03458 GAYLYNN M COLDWELL 4134 Wendell Orchard Lake Mich 48033 ROBERT H COLE 1 Picardy Lane St Louis Mo 63124 F CRAIG COLEMAN 5935 Andover Road Indianapolis Ind 46220 MICHAEL D COLEMAN 177 Dexter St Cumberland R 1 02864 REID W COLEMAN 44 Wendt Ave Larchmont N Y 10538 GENE L COLICE 3787 Franklin Ave Seaford N Y 11783 LEONARD E COLLINS 1004 Burnside Road Sharon Hill Pa 19079 MICHAEL B COLLINS 71 Concord Ave Oceanside N 'Y 11572 STEVEN A COLWELL 605 Benson Place Westfield N 07090 KENNETH COMERFORD 7 Metropolitan Oval Bronx N Y 10462 KEVIN E CONDON 72 Minerva Ave Dumberland R 02864 JAMES P CONLEY 21227 Ellen Dr Fairview Park Ohio 44126 MARK W CONNAR 721 13th Ave Bethlehem Pa 18018 PATRICIA S CONNER W HUDSON CONNERY 461 Fairview Road Fox Chapel Pa 15238 LAURA E CONRAD 106 Warburton St Fall River Mass 02720 THOMAS M COOKMAN 189 Chestnut St Englewood N J 07631 DOUGLAS F COOLEY 01734 S W Riverdale Rd Portland Ore 97219 RHONDA A COOPERSTEIN 10 Hillsboro Drive West Hartford Conn 06107 JUDITH R COOPERMAN 9106 Brierly Road Chevy Chase Md 20015 ALBERT T CORBETT 212 Hanover Place Neward Del 19711 THOMAS R CORCORAN 457 William St Stoneham Mass 02180 DORIAN F CORLISS 1564 Myers Lane Medford Ore 97501 REBECCA P CORNWALL 156 Park St Easthampton Mass 01027 LAWRENCE C COSTA 121 Briggs St Taunton Mass 02780 GARY L COSTLOW R D Sidman Pa 15995 ROBERT G COVETT 30 Greentfield St Brockton Mass 02401 STEPHEN L COWELL 21 Bogert Place Westwood N 07675 CHARLES S CRAIG 1025 North Glenhurst Birmingham Mich 48009 STEVEN H CRAMER 2499 So Colorado Blvd Apt 402 Denver Colo 80222 TODD R CRAUN 1003 Beachside Lane Huron Ohio 44839 NANCY L CRAWFORD 34 14 Curtis Drive Apt 603 Hillcrest Heights Md 20023 DAVID K CRIMMIN 28 So Williams St Bradford Mass 01832 O DEAN CROMWELL 82 14 Dorothy Ave Parma Ohio 44129 DANIEL A CUMMINGS 914 Forest Road La Grange Park 111 60525 JAMES P CUNNINGHAM 1354 Pawtucket Ave Rumford R 102916 CHRISTINE A CURCIO 49 Monaon Drive Huntington Station N'Y 11746 SHAUN B CURRAN 9204 Belwood Court Alexandria Va 22309 EUGENE F DAHL 137 A East Drive N Massapequa N Y 11758 JENNIFER DALEY 30 Mayfair Drive Longmeadow Mass 01106 THOMAS K DANNER 5819 Stonelick Road Batavia Ohio 45103 DONALD F D ANTUONO Pound Hill Road R F D 3 Woonsockey R 02895 JEFFREY T DARNALL 301 Riverview Rd Swarthmore Pa 19081 WAYNE C DARNELL 7920 Woodruff Road Cincinnati Ohio 45230 JOHN N DATESH 741 Pinoak Road Pittsburgh Pa 15243 DARRELL D DAVIDSON 5615 Yolanda Circle Dallas Texas 75229 WILLIAM A DAVIES 130 Norwood Ave Malverne N 'Y 11565 SANDRA J DAVIS 1841 Lee Road Cleveland Heights Ohio 44118 THOMAS R DAY 31 Kirklees Road Pittsford N Y 14534 MRS MARY R DEAL 283 George St Providence R 102906 ALFRED F DECUIR 76 Park Ave Maplewood N Y 07040 JOSEPH A DE DONATO 64 Broadway Massapequa Park N'Y 11762 VICTOR G DEGRUTTOLA 1128 Main St Wakefield Mass 01880 JOHN L DELANY 172 Arbolado Drive Walnut Creek Calif 94598 MAROANN S DERMATEOSIAN 27 Academy Lane Bellport NY 11713 DONALD A DEROLF 4124 Marietta Dr Binghamton N'Y 13903 LYNNE F DERUS 3431 North Hills Drive Apt 203 Austin Texas 7873 I RAYMOND J DEVER 18 Awashawaugh Road Park Ridge N 07656 JOHN B DEVINE 24 West Rocks Road Norwalk Conn 06851 REBECCA S DEWAR 4404 Avon Dr Colonial Hills Harrisburg Pa 17112 PETER G DEWDNEY 60 Mill Road Durham N H 03824 VINCENT C DICOLA 508 Woodward Road North Providence R 102904 ROBERT A DI FRANCO 27 Lincoln Ave Livingston N 07039 LLEWELLYN H DIGGS 2206 South Lynn St Urbana 111 61801 JOAN E DILLON 836 W 7 Terrace Kansas City Mo 64114 DANIEL R DI MICCO 30 Willetts Road Mt Kisco N Y 10549 TIMOTHY W DISBROW 80 Fedcral City Road Trenton N 09638 PENNY C DIXON 917 Maple Ave Rockville Md 20851 CHRISTINA L DODGE + Stanwich Lane Greenwich Conn 06830 GREGORY G DOENCH 932 Enright Ave Cincinniati Ohio 45205 JOSEPH B DOHERTY JR I 1 Locke St Andover Mass 01810 FRANCIS M DOMURAT 21 Dale St South Hadley Mass 01075 MARK B DONAHUE 16 Myopia Hill Road Winchester Mass 01890 MICHAEL B DONELAN 4519 Rynex Drive Alexandria Va 22312 STEPHEN D DONOVAN 151 Cottage Street Norwood Mass 02062 THOMAS P DODDY 107 Fleetwood Terrace Will'amsville N'Y 14221 FEFFREY S DORE 33 Birchcroft Road Canton Mass 02021 JOSEPH F DOUGHERTY 5 Pickett Road Lutherville Md 21093 STEPHEN F DOWDLE 1012 Ramona Road Wilmette I1l 6009 I SERGE DOYEN P O Box 263 Fishers Island N Y 06390 D BARTON DOYLE 1225 Wright Drive Huntingdon Valley Pa 19006 ARTHUR R DRESDALE 3 Pheasant Lane Scotch Plains N J 07076 GOLDE G DUDELL 67-40 Yellowstone Blvd Forest Hills N'Y 1375 DENISE M DUENSING 1710 Lake Drive Independence Mo 64055 JAMES R DUFFY 51 Delwood Road Warwick R 1 02889 ROBERT E DULGARIAN 106 Church Hill Drive Cranston R 1 02920 FAITH EDUNN 4117 Dunnell Lane Kensington Md 20795 MARK DWYER 240 West Water St Lock Haven Pa 17745 DENNIS C DYER Box 122 lakeside Trail Highland Mills N'Y 10930 GERALD M EATON Bloody Brook Road Amherst N H 0303 1 ALVIN M EHRLICH 6540 Bradley Blvd Bethesda Md 20034 ROBERT P ELFERING 232 Mills Court Lake Forest I1l 60045 JONATHAN L ELION 47 Greenwood St Sherborn Mass 01770 ELIZABETH B ELLIS 9102 Volunteer Drive Alexandria Va 22309 TOBY E EMMERICH 11 Hildreth Ave Huntington N Y 11743 ELIZABETH A ENGEN 297 Doyle Ave Providence R I 02906 ROBERT J ENRIGHT 104 Brightwood Ave Pearl River N Y 10965 RICHARD A EPSTEIN 4 Terhune Drive Westport Conn 06880 ; CHRISTINE A ERISMAN 926 Buchanan Ave Lancaster Penna 17603 CURTIS A ERMER 240 Highland Road Andover Mass 01810 PAUL T ESPINOSA 34 13 Marmac N E Albuquerque N M 87106 ANTHONY EVANGELISTA 829 Carlton Drive Campbell Ohio 44405 ERNEST H EVANS 5016 Scarsdale Road Washington D C M STEVEN FARBER 224 Oakland Ave Providence R I 02908 CRAIG S FAUSEL 110 Sutin Place Spring Valley N Y 10977 JONATHAN G FAUVER Box 57 Plymouth N H 03264 JEAN FECHHEIMER 1 14 So Broadleigh Road Columbus Ohio 43209 DAVID FEINER 245 South Manning Blvd Albany N Y 12208 PETER A FEINSTEIN 81 Neptune Ave Woodmere N Y ITEQB PAUL D FELTON Lookoul Hill Essex Ct 06426 : ROSS W FENTON C O Continental Oil Co 9 Rockefe York N'Y 22901 WILLIAM W FERGUSON 119 Dogwood Lane San Antonio Texas 78213 DOUGLASS H FERRELL 13301 N Wauwatosa Road Mequon Wisc 53092 RICHARD J FERRITER 233 Atlantic Ave Hull Mass 02045 ERIC M FERROUILLETT 613 North Rocheblave S New Orleans La 70119 SCOTT FERSHLEISER 134 8th St Hicksville N Y 11801 ller Plaza New SUSAN T FERST 1901 Kennedy Blvd Apt 2718 Philadelphia Pa 19103 MEG FIDLER 23 Churchill Road Port Chester N Y 10573 SANDRA J FINBERG 2 200 Highland Avenue Providence R I 02906 THOMAS R FINN 1064 Nicholas Ave Schenectady N'Y 12309 ROBERT W FISK 631 Union Ave Middlesex N 08846 WARD B FLAD 7214 Tippecanoe Road Canfield Ohio 44406 JOHN H FLASCHEN 195 Puinam Road New Canaan Conn 06840 MRS JANE M FLEURY 27 Covell St Providence R 1 02909 ROBERT T FORBES 116 Jciferson Ave River Edge N J 07661 ROGER N FORMIDONI 926 Bellevue Ave Trenton N J 08618 FREDERIC C FOSTER 34 Benefit St Apt 6 Providence R RICHARD B FOSTER 257 Oaklawn Ave Cranston R 1 02920 GARY E FOX 758 Roseld Ave West Deal N J 07712 KURT D FRANKE 167 East Main St Amelia Ohio 45102 ARTHUR M FRANKLIN 15 Miller St Caldwell N J 07006 JANE S FRASER Larrywaug Stockbridge Mass 01262 WENDY R FREDERICKS 2414 Diana Road Baltimore Md 21209 ROBERT J FREEDMAN 116 Fosdkye St Providence R 1 02906 RICK R GASKINS 6838 E Latham St Scottsdale Az 85257 JOSEPH B GAUDIOSI 152 East Farm St Waterbury Conn 06704 CAROLYN GAUTHIER 99 Lloyd Ave Providence R I 02906 THOMAS E GAVIN 10440 South Kenton Oak Lawn 11l 60453 RICHARD P GEER Rte 3 Box 13 Pocomoke City Md 21851 JONATHAN GELL 9060 Palisade Ave North Bergen N J 07047 ANDREW J GELLER 179 E 70th St New York N Y 10021 JOHN J GENTILE JR Boy Scout Drive Westerly R 1 02891 WILLIAM N GEORGIS 1122 N Grove Ave Oak Park 111 60302 RUSSELL W GIANNETTA 34 Greenlodge St Canton Mass 02021 JAMES H GIBBS White Birch Lane Barrington R 1 02806 MICHAEL C GILLESPIE 535 South 2nd Ave Mount Vernon N Y 10550 RITA E GILLOOLY 117 Carfield Ave Hyde Park Mass 02136 STEPHEN A GLASSMAN 3615 Anton Farms Road Baltimore Md 21208 JOHN R GLEASON 750 Country Drive Barrington Il 60010 CAROL S GODDARD 2418 S Olive Ave West Palm Beach Fla 33401 L KARL GOEDECKE West Road Canton Center Conn 06020 GRANT S GOLDEN 198 Ruskin Road Amherst N Y 14226 WILLIAM A GOLDEN 21 Hodder Lane Framingham Mass 01701 CHARLES D GOLDFINE 338 Gaskill St Woonsocket R 1 02895 ROSE H GOLDMAN 2335 Meridan Ave Miami Beach Fla 33140 WENDY K GOLDWYN 436 Waban Ave Waban Mass 02168 BONNIE C GODD 2322 Stockbridge Road Akron Ohio 44313 SARAH E GODDIN 97 Tamalpais Rd Berkeley Calif 94708 LAURA D GOODMAN 45 Amherst Road Cranston R 102920 JAMES F GOODWIN 32 Marlborough Road North Haven Conn 06473 VIRGINIA B GORDAN 113 East 78th St New York N'Y 10021 MRS LESLIE L GOTTERT 215 Main St Houston Texas 77002 WILLIAM C GRAHAM 137 Lancaster St Albany N Y JILL GRANT 105 Ivy Lane San Antonio Texas 78209 ROBERT M GRANT 21 EImgrove Ave Providence R 1 02912 KENNETH STUART GARY JR 526 Pleasant St Somerset Mass 02726 WALTER J GREENBERG 2280 South St Paul Denver Colo 80210 FREDERICK H GREENE 39 George St Providence R 1 02906 MRS OLIVIA O GREENE 395 Benefit St Apt 7 Providence R 1 02906 STEPHEN C GREENE 5 Pinetree Drive RFD 3 Plainville Mass 02762 THOMAS J GREENE 325 Cape Hatteras Corpus Christi Texas 78412 MELISSA GREENSPAN 163-36 17 Ave Whitestone N Y 11357 MARTHA M GREENWOOD Mill Pond La Old Lyme Conn 06371 THOMAS A GREGG 110 Millview Drive Pittsburgh Pa 15238 NOEL P GREIS 59 Banbury Lane Holden Mass 01520 DENYS M GRETZKOWSKI 15 Kaywood Lane Cherry Hill N J 08034 WILLIAM V GRICKIS JR 18 Lynwood Drive Cheshire Conn 06410 PEGGY E GRIMES 1417 Upland Drive Houston Texas 77043 JAMES W GRONEFELD 5509 Fenwick Ave Norwood Ohio 45212 PHILLIP V GRONVOLD 645 Downer Ave El Cajon Calif 92020 KENNETH B GROOMS 75 Georgia St Dorchester Mass 02121 CHARLES E GROSS JR 7 Moses Brown St Providence R 102906 EDWARD F GUILIANO 9 Princeton Drive Dix Hills N'Y 11746 MARCO N GULOTTA 1 Joseph St Providence R 1 02904 KRISTIN GUNDERSON 4324 Granada St Alexandria Va 22309 JOSEPH C GUYAUX 322 East Tenth Ave Tartetum Pa 15084 LARRY P HAGEMAN 8120 Deerpath Dr Youngstown Ohio 44512 BONNIE T HAGER BARBARA M HAINES 6225 Thomas Ave Richfield Minn 55423 JAMES M HAIRSTON JR 835 Gearing Ave Pittsburgh Pa 15210 DONNA L HALL 19 Cadwell Road Bloomfield Conn 06002 JAMES C HALL 789 Via Del Monte Palos Verdes Est Calif 90274 SAMUEL W HALPERN 46 Barney Hill Road Wayland Mass 01778 MARGARET J HAMER 3028 Dogwood St N W Washington D C 20015 JOYCE D HAMMOND 718 East Washington St Greencastle Ind 46135 EVELYN S HANLON 10322 K Malcolm Circle Cockeysville Md 21030 RUTH H HANNO 649 Sussex Road Wynnewood Pa 19096 ANANDA HANSEN 139 West Springfield Ave Chestnut Hill Philadelphia Pa 19118 HARRIET C HANZEL 69 Overhill Road Providence R 02906 CHRISTOPHER R HARDEE 7543 Sugar-Bush Tr Hudson Ohio 44236 MICHAEL J HARLA 1337 Norris Drive Vineland N J 08360 PAUL E HARPER 21 Elmwood Road Baltimore Md 21210 GARY L HARRIS 700 Lincoln St Linden N 07036 JANE A HAWES 35 Church St Westminster Mass 01473 ROBERT R HAYES 45 Whalen St No Babylon N Y 11703 LINDA R HAYWARD Beaver Dam Road Colts Neck N J 07722 HILDING HEDBERG 4 Greenwood Lane Slingerldnds NY 12159 PETER E HEIDT 226 Gano St Apt No. 21 Providence R I BRUCE A HENDERSON 591 Passaic Ave Nutley N J 07110 EDWARD J HENNESSEY 2719 Tyler St Long Beach Calif 90810 PHYLLIS A HENRICI 45 lves St Hamden Conn 06518 WAYNE T HENRY 6261 Lake Shore Dr So Seattle Wash 98118 JUDITH E HENSHAW 11 Newell Road Wakefield Mass 01880 MICHAEL R HEPWORTH 412 Del Monte Tacoma Wash 98466 CARL HERMAN 22 Tracey Terrace Cherry Hill N J 08034 KATHRYN JANE HERROD 35 Churchill Ave Masscna N Y 13662 HARVEY P HEYMANN 835 Jefferson Blvd Warwick R 102886 JOANNE K HILFERTY 66 Dudley St Arlington Mass 02174 HUGHLINGS J HIMWICH 284 Brook St Providence R 1 02906 THEODORE C HIRT 44 Barrett Ave Stamford Conn 06905 GEORGE E HODGKINS BRUCE B HOENIG Harrison Union Aves Harrison N'Y 10528 SHELLIE R HOFFER 24 Cherry Road Framingham Mass 01701 WILLIAM E HOIKALA Shore Acres Road South Dartmouth Mass JAMES C HOLCOMB 3501 A Janet Amarillo Texas PETER L HOLDEN 18 Middle 5t Georgelown Mass BEVERLY HOLLOWAY 1100 E 113 St Cleveland Ohio 44108 EDWIN C HOLMER 78 Bittersweet Lane New Canaan Conn 06840 JOHN M HOLOD 26 Roosevelt St South River N J 08882 JENNIFER C HOP 126 Jencks St Fall River Mass 02723 THOMAS C HORAN 87 Nobscot Road Weston Mass 02193 DEANNE D HORN Apt 5-3A 100 Memorial Dr Cambridge Mass 02142 MRS SUSAN S HORNER 54 Halsey St Providence R I 02906 LEONARD H HOROVITZ 65 Sargent Ave Providence R 1 02906 RICHARD K HORTON Storm King School Cornwall On Hudson N Y 12520 ANDREW C HOWARD 32 Standish Circle Wellesley Hills Mass 02181 JOHN R HOYER Box 35A RFD 3 John Mowry Rd Smithfield R 102917 JAMES J HUGHES 44 Greenville Ave Jersey City N J 07305 J SCOTT HUNTER 4600 Sharon View Rd Charlotte N C 28211 G DOUGLAS HURLEY 1000 Hobbs Drive Silver Spring Md 20904 ROBERT L HURST 367 Benefit St Providence R 1 02903 MARY E HUTZLER 183 Brown St Providence R 102906 BETH E IRVING 88 Sumier St Providence R 1 02907 SIRI M JACKMAN 8 Colf Course Road Succasunna N J NANCY L JACKSON 30 Rip Road Hanover N H 03755 MARK D JACOBS 135 Beacon Hill Drive Dobbs Ferry N'Y 10522 LAURIE A JACOBSON Windward Ave White Plains N Y 10605 BEVERLY W JAMES 1139 Cedar Blvd Pittsburgh Penna 15228 ROBERT G JAMES 35 Sea View Ave Swansea Mass 02777 JOHN L JAWORSKI 32 Greenway Road Salem Mass 01970 GILBERT E JOHANSEN 17 Robin Hill Rd Scarsdale N Y 10583 CHARLES R JOHNSON 2054 Wyndham Road Akron Ohio 44313 DIANE E P JOHNSON 2139 Gamble Road Scotch Plains N J 07090 MRS PATRICIA S JOHNSON Onc Westgate Rd Attleboro Mass RICHARD A JOHNSON 13 Croton St Melville N'Y 11746 SUSAN G JOHNSON 35 Brookmant Drive Wilbraham Mass 01095 DANETTE D JONES 274 Walker Ave Memphis Tenn 38126 GERALD P JONES 3561 Bayard Drive Cincinnati Ohio 45208 JEFFREY A JONES 1244 Catawba St Kingsport Tenn 37660 LAWRENCE A JONES 188 Carter Road Princeton N J 08540 ROBERT H JONES 1333 South Ogden Drive Los Angeles Calif 90019 ROBERT C JOONDEPH 4 Overbrook Rd Upper Saddle River N J 07458 MRS ROBERTA G JOSLIN 4 Mulberry Road Bristol R 1 02809 THOMAS C JUNKER 95 Maywood Ave Rochester N'Y 14618 STEVEN A JUSCZYK 35 Welthian Court East Greenwich R 1 02818 RAYMOND S KAGELS 65 Burnett St P O Box 2657 Providence R 1 02907 SUSAN KALER 171 Oak St East Hartford Conn 06118 STEVEN P KANIG 889 Baldwin Drive Westbury N'Y 11590 MATTHEW M KANTROWITZ 300 Collingwood Ave Brooklawn Park Fairfield Conn 06604 CHERYL M KAPEC 2300 William and Mary Dr Alexandria Va 22308 LINDA A KASPARSON 65 Scarlette St West Boylston Mass 01583 EMELY S KATZ 279 W Elm St Brockton Mass 02401 WILLIAM C KAVAN 143 Meadbrook Road Garden City N'Y 11530 CHRISTIAN P KEITEL Blackberry Lane Morristown N 07960 DIANE G KELL 4561-43 Randolph Rd Charlotte N C 28211 FRANCES J KELSICK 638 Commonwealth Ave Bronx N Y 10472 BARBARA KENNEDY 10 Oakhurst Road Scituate Mass 02066 GARY P KENNEDY 503 Morris Place Shillington Pa 19607 PARDON R KENNEY 44 Birch Road Andover Mass 01810 FEFFREY C KERNER 5 Casho Mill Road Andover Mass 01810 JONATHAN M KERTZER 4705 Henry Hudson Pkwy Apt 10-D Riverdale N'Y 10471 CHARLES A KESSLER 3533 Mountain Park Dr I Birmingham Ala 35213 HENRY H KETCHAM 11l 1157 Federal Ave East Seattle Wash 98102 ROBERT J KILDUFF 42 Rome Ave Providence R 102908 JULIE M KING 135 Gloucester St Arlington Mass 02174 RALPH B KINNAIRD 915 Westerfield Drive Wilmette 111 60091 MICHAEL KINNAMON 2230 Lakeline Circle Salt Lake City Utah KAREN M KIRBY 181 Tullamore Rd Garden City N'Y 11530 PAMELA J KISPERT 5 Sterling Drive Dover Mass 02030 JON V KLIMO 14 Hazard Ave Providence R 1 02906 HELEN P KLEMCHUK 148 Upland Road Yorktown N Y 10598 CHARLES W KNAPP 9800 Mc Knight Road CJO Ammet Pittsburgh Pa EDWIN B KNIGHTS 5153 Echo Road Bloomfield Hills Mi 48013 WILLIAM L KOCH 6660 Tupelo Lane Cincinnati Ohio 45243 EDWARD F KOENIG 103 Elmwood Drive Scotia N'Y 12302 WILLIAM L KOLKMEYER 604 Enright Ave Cincinnati Ohio 45205 LINDA P KOO 12230 Westview Drive Upper Marlboro Md 20870 LEWIS A KORNHAUSER 12110 Little Creek Dr Potomac Md 20854 LEWIS S KOSTINER 756 Franklin St Westbury N Y 11590 STEVEN W KRAFT 645 Bierys Bridge Road Bethlehem Pa 18017 PATANA KUANPOONPOL 76 Sukumwit 64 Bangkok Thailand KENNETH K KUGEL JR 1261 Hollywood Blvd Corwnsville Md 21032 JAMES R LABONTE 16 Littlefield 5t Pawtucket R 02861 ULRICH LACHLER 84 Regensburg Niefangweg 19 Germany DAVID F LAMONT 11 May Terrace Pittsfield Mass 01201 IVAN N LANDES Casilla 5210 Guayaquil Ecuador ANNE M LANG 3636 West 89th St Leawood Kan 66206 CARROLL D LANSDELL 317 Beechwood Road Ridgewood N J 07450 ANDREW M LANTER 120 Highland St Woonsocket R 1 02895 ERIC LAUPOT 4 Pryer Lane Larchmont N Y 10538 RUSSELL D LAWRENCE 13671 N E 103 St Miami Shores FI JOHN LAX 300 Central Park West New York N Y 10024 MICHAEL K LAZAROFF 17 Vouga Lane 5t Louis Mo 63131 EDWARD D LAZOWSKA 6404 Crane Terrace Bethesda Md 20034 JAMES R LECKY 830 North Washington St Wheaton 1ll 60187 KAREN L LEGGETT 3166 Silver Lake Blvd Cuyahoga Falls Ohio 44224 JOHN W LEIDY JR 42 Hershey Road Wayne N J 07470 ROBERT F LERQY 20 Prescott Road Ho Ho Kus N J 07423 DOUGLAS W LESHAY 1600 Grand Ave Apt U-1 Baldwin N Y 11510 RUSSELL P LESLIE 37 Furnace Brook Drive Peekskill N'Y 10566 ROBERT J LEVINE 54 Jones Road Englewood N J 07631 PETER A LEWITT 41 Selden Hill Drive West Hartford Conn 06107 WILLIAM T LIDDICOET 2250 Stockton Loop Kirtland AFB N M 87118 JOEL LIEBERMAN 1602 King St South Charleston W Va 25303 MRS CLAIRE LINDBERG 24 Ridgeland Dr R D No 2 Cumberland R 1 02864 STEPHEN G LIOCE 105 Rangeley Road Cranston R 102920 JOAN A LIPTON 521 Rutland Ave Teaneck N J 07666 DEBORAH J LISKER 303 Laurel Ave Providence R 1 02906 TIMOTHY R LISTER 60 Mill Lane Huntington N Y 11743 JANE A LITTELL 71 Huron Dr Chatham N J 07928 DOUGLAS R LITTLEFIELD 65 Hamilton Lane Watertown Conn 06795 THOMAS A LITTLER 8019 Ellicott Rd West Falls N Y 14170 SARAH M LLOYD 3500 Woodside Rd Alexandria Va 22310 CATHERINE H LOCHNER 3179 Chadbourne Road Shaker Heights Ohio 44120 RONALD P LOCKE 2528 Oswego Ave Baltimore Md 21215 BRENDA M LOCKHART 405 Portland Ave 5t Paul Minn 55102 JONATHAN LOESBERG 5 Ascol Ridge Great Neck N Y 11021 RUTH C LOEW 1509 Valencia Road Schenectady N'Y 12309 JOHN P LONERGAN 3420 Hays Court South Bend Ind 46614 CHARLES A LONG 20 Exeter 5t Providence R I 02906 MICHAEL W LONSKI 19 Homestead Ave Staten Island N Y 10302 JOANNE M LORENZ Glenlore Kelvedon Hatch Brentwood Essex England SPENCER LOWELL 35 Rose Avenue Patchogue N'Y 11722 STEVEN R LOWENSTEIN 4701 Willard Ave Chevy Chase Md 20015 PHILIP Y M LU 30 Linford Road Great Neck N'Y 11021 CATHERINE M LUBINSKI 4469 So Gary Ave Tulsa Okla 74105 JOHN J LUCAS JR 724 Linden Road Hershey Pa 17033 ROBERT S LUDWIG 13106 Valleywood Drive Wheaton Md 20906 MARTIN J LUFTMAN 75 Taft Ave Providence R 102906 KURT A LUNDSTROM 1658 Avenida Ursa Tucson Ariz 85710 BRADFORD D LUSSIER R R 2 Harkney Hill Road Coventry R 1 02816 JONATHAN S LYNTON 200 East 71st St New York N 'Y 10021 FRANCIS G MAAZ 235 Capron Farm Drive Warwick R 102886 JANET A MABEE 142 E Emerson St Melrose Mass 02167 MRS JOHNETTE R MAC CALLA 95 Governor St Providence R 102912 PAUL L MADDOCK JR 545 Northlake Trail Palm Beach Fla 33480 KENNETH I MAGEL 1113 Grinnell Road Green Acres Wilmington Del 19803 WILLIAM C MAGUIRE 6 Cedarcroft Rd Madison Ct 06443 JUSTIN D MAHON 4 Rutgers Terrace Fair Lawn N J 07410 ROBERT G MAIR 215 North Garfield St Kennett Square Pa 19348 STEPHEN L MAJESKI 23 Wooding Road Yalesville Conn 06492 ROBERT M MANDEL 67 Beals Street Brookline Mass 02146 BRUCE H MANN 136 Downer Ave Hingham Mass 02043 PETER J MANSFIELD 22 Mandigo Place Newburgh N'Y 12550 ARTHUR MANZI 68 Westborough St Worcester Mass 01604 CAROL A MARBLE 98 The Kingsway Toronto 21 Ontario ERIC P MARCUS 96 Fernwood Road Summit N J 07901 LEE T MARI 130 Prospect Ave West Haven Conn 06516 MICHAEL A MARINO 20 Declaware Ave Staten Island N Y 10304 RICHARD A MARSLAND 4 Downes Ave Pawtuckel R 02861 GUY W MARSZALEK 7 Brown St Warren R 02885 LIZBETH J MARTIN 2300 East Clendale Ave Milwaukee Wisc 53211 THOMAS E MARTIN 2300 Fast Glendale Ave Milwaukee Wisc 53211 POLYNA A MASAITIS 95 Pearl Street Brockton Mass 02401 BRUCE D MASON 9 Hornbeam Hill Road Chelmsford Mass 01824 SARAH E MASON West Branch Rd Westport Conn 06880 WAYNE R MATHEWS 25 Harwich Road Brockton Mass 02401 JEFFREY N MAUSNER 345 South Forest Denver Colo 80222 ANNE C MAZONSON 27 Glendale Rd Marblehead Mass 01945 JAMES V MCARDLE 29 Beach St Millbury Mass 01527 PATRICK M MCCARTHY Browne Hall R I College Providence R I 02908 DAVID J MCCAY 7653-91 Avenue Edmonton Alberta Canada GEORGE M MCCORRY 30 Rutland Ave Kearny N J 07032 D SCOTT MC CULLOUGH 93 Club Road Riverside Conn 06878 CHARLES C MC DONALD 4195 Parkview Drive Salt Lake City Utah 84117 JOAN M MC DONALD 237 Chapmans Ave Warwick R 1 02886 ROBERT MCDONALD JR 501 Boal St Cincinnati Ohio 45210 THOMAS MCDONALD 166 Linden Drive Cohasset Mass 02025 FREDERICK L MC ELROY 4506 Virginia Ave Louisville Ky 40211 M KEVIN MCEVOY 2506 Delaware Ave Wilmington Del 19806 FRANCIS E MCFADDEN 231 South Jenkins St. Alexandria Va 22304 JAMES C MCGLYNN 16 Forest St Montclair N J 07042 ' SUMMERS M MCGURN 5229 Duvall Dr Westmoreland Hills Md 20016 KIRK A MCKINNEY 250 West 77th St Indianapolis Ind 46260 DANIEL T MC LAUGHLIN 288 Bellevue St West Roxbury Mass 02132 ALEXANDER T MCMAHON 1101 Sourwood Circle Chapel Hill N C 27514 WILLIAM F MC NEELY 333 Halle Drive Euclid Ohio 44132 ELIZABETH A MCVEY 2016 Central Ave Wilmette Ill 60091 DAVID M MENDELSOHN 304 Forest Ave Cincinnati Ohio 45215 GARY D MERZ 12716 South 83rd Court Palos Park I 60464 ALAN F MEYERS 244 Seaside Ave Milford Conn 06460 RICHARD A MIGNONE Box 216 North Falmouth Ma 02556 IVAN W MILLER 416 South Lincoln Hinsdale 111 60521 JAY R MILLER 400 Devine Road San Antonio Texas 78212 LINDA L MILLER 28 Thornhill Rd Lutherville Md 21093 STEPHEN G MILLER 18 Bonnie Briar Road White Plains N Y 10607 THOMAS L MISURACA 21218 Statler Blvd St Clair Shores Mich 48081 STEVEN MITCHELL 290 Bayberry Drive Hewlett Harbor N Y 11557 JOSEF MITTLEMANN 113 14 72 Road Forest Hills N Y 11375 MIKE M MOCHIZUKI 9217 Shaver Drive El Paso Texas 79925 C TERRENCE MOLLOY 801 S Chester Road Swarthmore Pa 19081 EDWARD D MOLLOY Plains Rd U R I Kingston R 1 02881 GALE D MOONEY 222 Benner St Philadelphia Pa 19111 CHRISTOPHER H MOORE 115 South Main St West Hartford Conn 06107 MICHAEL MOORE Oak Hill Drive Amherst N J 03031 MARY B MORAN 116 Homeland Ave Baltimore Md 21212 JAMES W MORGAN 350 Benefit St Providence R 1 02903 RAYMOND T MORIYASU 3318 Makini St Honolulu Hawaii 96815 STEVEN R MORROW 411 Weadley Rd King of Prussia Pa 19406 WILLIAM H MOSBERG 107 St Johns Rd Baltimore Md 21210 WILLIAM C MOSKOSKY JR 132 Dahlia St Warwick R 102888 GREGORY S MOUNTAIN 5211 Hampden Lane Bethesda Md 20014 BARBARA G MULHOLLAND 215 Schoolhouse Drive Linwood N J 08221 JOSEPH P MULLEN 103 Waite Ave Cranston R 102905 KATHRYN R MULLINS 28 Bridlewood Rd Northbrook Il 60092 ROBERT B MULTHAUP 403 Hollow Drive Houston Tex 77024 SCOTT A MUNCH 148 Paris Ave Audubon N J 08106 CHRISTOPHER V MURANO 229 Briarcliffe Road De Witt N Y 13214 F KEVIN MURNIGHAN 1000 South Delphia Park Ridge Il 60068 MICHAEL E MURPHY 58 Edgewood Ave Methuen Mass 01844 291 PETER P MUSCATO 23 Drakes Lane Irvington N J 07111 PATRICIA L MYSKOWSKI 6213 Stoneham Road Bethesda Md 20034 ERIC C NADEL 1245 East 27th St Brooklyn N Y 11210 STUART A NAQUIN 2 Gittings Ave Baltimore Md 21212 DONALD J NENNO 11 490 Mc Kinley Parkway Buffalo N Y 14220 JO ANN S NEUSNER 23 Miles Standish Drive West Hartford Conn 06107 JOHN P NICHOLSON 7 East High Road Port Washington N Y 11050 JOHN NICKLAS 209 Roycroft Ave Pittsburgh Pa 15234 RICHARD B NOONAN 20 Standish Circle Wellesley Mass 0218 DOROTHY D NOREN 20 Harvard Rd Fair Haven N J 07701 GLENN R NORMILE Norfolk Naval Shipyard Quarters I Portsmouth Va 23709 ROGER W NORTON 66 z Ninth Ave Neward N 07107 DAVID J NOVACK 84 Ravona St Clifton N J 07012 CRAIG F NOVAK 5 Dale Road Huntington N Y 11743 BRUCE W NUGENT 1424 Audubon Road Vincennes Ind 47591 C MICHAEL ODENWALDER 1258 Oakwood Drive Memphis Tenn 38116 KEVIN F O GRADY 543 St Claire Palo Alto Calif 94306 KATHLEEN H OHARA 5545 Haleola St Honolulu Hawaii 96821 JAMES G OHAUS 226 Baker Ave Westfield N J 07090 MARK F OLENDER 255 08 West End Drive Great Neck N Y 11020 HOLLY C OSBORNE 5503 24th Ave Hillcrest Hts Md 20031 JAMES F OUDERKIRK 233 S E Penter Lane Newport Ore 97365 BRUCE L OWENS 763 Northgate Drive Uniondale N Y 11553 DAVID R OWENS 4 Hollins Ave Baltimore Md 21210 RICHARD W PADGETT 415 Lofton Road N W Atlanta Ga 30309 JAMES G PAGE Autumn Lane Carlisle Mass 01741 BARBARA K PAIGE 1541 Cleveland Ave Wyomissing Pa 19610 JEFFREY T PAINE 701 Benuenue Ave Los Altos Calif 94022 DESIRE G PALMER LINDA Y PAPERMASTER 3815 Joppa Ave St Louis Park Minn 55416 JOHN M PARIS 2003 Lindberg Court New Albany Ind 47150 ROBERT G PARMENTER 472 King St Franklin Mass 02038 DONALD PASCOE 404 Old Bridge Road Crand Blanc Mich 48439 WILLIAM D PASSERO 2 Upland Court South Norwalk Conn 06854 DAVID R PATTERSON 82 Aldershot Crescent Willowdale Ontario Canada JOHN W PEARSON 250 Crown Ave Floral Park N Y 11001 WILLIAM W PENDLEBURY 57 Rock Ave Pawtucket R 02861 BRADFORD A PENNEY 82 Laurel Ave Providence R 1 02906 DENNIS G PERCHER 70 Forest Drive Jericho N Y 11753 MARY E PEREIRA 16 Redwood Drive Cumberland R 1 02864 MICHAEL J PERNA 102 Sowans Road Barrington R 1 02806 BROOKE A PETERSON 1120 So 79th St Omaha Neb 68124 CHRISTINE M PETERSON 21 Lake Ave Melrose Mass 02176 WILLIAM R PETTINGELL 519 Hawyard Mill Road West Concord Mass 01742 CHARLES E PETTY 1438 Aven Drive Columbus Ohio 43227 STEPHEN H PHILBRICK 35 Rhode Island Ave Providence R 1 02906 JANET M PHILLIPS 77 Hope St Providence R I STEPHEN C PHILLIPS 3931 Crawford Ave Coconut Grove Fla PAUL A PITEL 14 Hillwood Ave Edison N J 08817 JANICE PLATT 20 Dorchester Drive Port Chester N Y 10578 CARL M PLOCHMAN 332 Elder Lane Winnetka Il 60093 DAVID H PLUMP 8544 Concord Hills Cir Cincinnati Ohio 45243 ROBERT L POMERANTZ 2515 Edge Hill Road Huntingdon Valley Pa 19006 MRS BARBARA P POOLE 841 Hope St Providence R 1 02906 ELIZABETH A POPLIN 30 Voss Terrace Newton Mass 02159 JEFFREY L POTE Fiske Hill Road Sturbridge Mass 01566 WILLIAM C POTTER 15 Ingersoll Rd Wellesley Mass MARGARET A POWER 11 Willow Ave Somerville Mass 02144 ROBERT C POWER P O Box 402 Bedford Village N Y 10506 BETH D POWNING Box 122 Hampton Ct 06247 DAVID J PRATZON 989 North Farms Road Wallingford Conn 06492 SHARON M PRENTICE 6119 W Highland Phoenix Ariz 85033 ANDREW N PRICE 35 Woodland Drive Pleasantville N 'Y 10570 DOUGLAS A PRICE Rt 2 Box 229H Lake Placid Fla 33852 ZYLPHA K PRYOR 105 Ridgefield St Hartford Ct 06112 WILLIAM J PURCELL 4737 Baldwin Manor Road Pittsburgh Pa 15227 STUART R PURNELL 41 Tevis Place Palo Alto Calif 94301 BRUCE J PURVIS 995 South Glenhurst St Birmingham Mich 48009 ROGER C QUINN 431 Woodford St Portland Me 04103 ROBERT A RABBINO 33 69 162 St Flushing N Y 11358 CLARE L RABINOW 6920 Selkirk Drive Bethesda Md 20034 P WAYNE RADOMSKY 11 EIm Court-Box 90 Sherwood Park Alberta Canada R WARREN RADOMSKY 11 EIm Court Sherwood Park Alberta Canada JEFFREY A REISE 120 Turnpike Ave Portsmouth R 1 02871 ROBIN C REKAS 139 Fowler Road Northbridge Mass 01534 COURTNEY REN P O Box 328 Old Westbury N'Y 11598 ROBERT G RENCH 57 Preston St Providence R 102906 ROBERT D RENZA 63 Crescent Ave Cranston R 02910 SCOTT C REUMAN 78 Catalpa Lane Wilton Conn 06897 LOUIS M REYCROFT Il 17 Mohawk Drive Northborough Mass 01532 JAMES F RIANOSHEK 6556 N Minnetonka Chicago Ill 60646 ELAINE RICH 1109 Schindler Dr Silver Spring Md 20903 W BECKMAN RICH 402 West lowa At Urbana 11l 61801 R PAUL RICHARD 9107 Washington Ave Upper Marlboro Md 20870 ANNE M RICHARDSON 153 Governor St Providence R 1 02906 LUCY E RICHARDSON 310 Cloverway Alexandria Va 22314 JEFFREY O RILEY 3950 N Lake Rd Brockport N Y 14420 THOMAS E RILEY 1451 Sierra Drive Arroyo Grande Calif 93420 ELEANOR M RINGEL 3707 Randall Mill Rd NW Atlanta Ga 30327 DAVID J RITTENBERG 3 Gadsden St Charleston S C 29401 ROGER S RITTMASTER 114 Galbreath Drive Princeton N J 08540 JAMES G ROBERTS 1197 Sunset View Drive Akron Ohio 44313 F DANA ROBINSON 287 Pilgrim Birmingham Mich 48009 STEVEN N ROBINSON 65 Silver Hill Road Sudbury Mass 01776 STEPHEN ROBINSON 102 Chandler Ave Pawtucket R 102860 SUSAN C ROGERS 24 Harrison Ave Northampton Mass 01060 PAUL G ROHRDANZ 33 Chauncey Lane Orchard Park N Y 14127 WILLIAM J ROLAND 11 460 Blackstone Blvd Providence R 1 02906 JOHN A ROMAGNA 16 Salem Lane Port Washington N Y 11050 MARK J ROSEN 3 Shore Drive Great Neck N Y 11021 LAWRENCE A ROSENBERG 18 Shepard Ave Swampscott Ma 01907 LEON H ROSENBERG 311 Thayer St Providence R 102906 PAUL M ROSENBERG 619 Evanswood Place Cincinnati Ohio 45220 BETSY R ROSENSTEIN 22 Hazard Ave Providence R 1 02906 DANIEL A ROSS 7 Black Birch Lane Scarsdale N Y 10583 292 JULIA C ROSS R D No. 4 Ligonier Pa 15658 ORIN A ROSSETT 78 55 Park Drive East Flushing N Y 11367 MRS PENNY B ROSSITER 505 N Lake Shore Dr Apt 2412 Chicago 11 60611 RICHARD A ROTH 25 Sherwood Drive Plainview N Y 11803 ROBERT J ROTHBAUM 2214 Boston Court Indianapolis Ind 46208 STEVEN A ROTHSTEIN 66 Sheldrake Road Scarsdale N Y 10583 JOHN S ROUSE 16 Ponce De Leon Terr SW Tacoma Wash 98499 JAMES C ROWLEY 10 Circle Court Rochester N Y 14617 LEONARD M RUBIN 61 Sprague Ave Warwick R 1 02889 EILEEN M RUDDEN 136 Columbia Ave Nutley N J 07110 MRS JUDITH A RUSSELL 130 Transit St Providence R 102906 JAMES E RYNAR 29 Cliffside Drive Livingston N J 07039 COLEMAN R SACHS 293 Blachstone Blvd Providence R 1 02906 DAN L SACKETT 1422 Nantucket Drive Houston Texas 77027 LINDA S SAGASER 56 Chestnut St Andover Mass 01810 JIMMY M SAIKU 4214 Ruthelma Ave Palo Alto Calif 94306 BONNIE R SAKS 3909 Sugar Loaf Lane Skokie 111 60076 HAROLD F SANFORD 1710 Reeveston Rd Richmond Ind 47374 MOLLIE A SANDOCK 235 S Esther St South Bend Ind 46617 CLIFTON J SAPER 117 Forest Ave Orono Maine 04473 LISA JO SARASOHN 67 Lambert Lane New Rochelle N'Y 10604 JOHN C SAUNDERS Box 377 Goldens Bridge N'Y 10526 JOHN H SAXE 1777 Washington St Braintree Mass 02185 JIL R SCHAEFFER 2782 Forest Hill Road Germantown Tenn 38138 MRS MARGOT B SCHEVILL 17 Keene St Providence R I DAVID M SCHIER 419 Birchwood Ave Deerfield 111 60015 MARY ANN C SCHMADEL 6414 Hollins Drive Bethesda Md 20034 JAMES K SCHMIDT 6719 Revere Ave Waumatosa Wisc 53123 MICHAEL T SCHUMTTE 6036 Flyer Drive Cincinnati Ohio 45211 BARBARA L SCHNEIDER 535 East 86 St New York N 'Y 10028 BRUCE E SCHNEIDER 357 Yorkshire Way Rosemont Pa 19010 LYNN A SCHOCH 16 Parkwood Blvd Poughkeepsie N Y 12603 STEPHEN G SCHOTTMILLER 8300 Woodview Drive Cincinnati Ohio 45231 KARL SCHRICK 11l Box 248 Brookside N J 07926 ANNEMARIE SCHWARZKOPF RD 4 Frosty Hills rive Danville Pa 17821 DAVID J SCOTT 6166 South Adams Drive Littleton Colo 80121 KATHLEEN M SCOTT 7 Crawford Place Middletown N Y 10940 GLENN MCKINLEY W SCOTT 6211 Orion Road Louisville Ky 40222 ANN R SEELYE Penllyn Pike Penllyn Pa 19422 DEBORAH C SEGAL 23 Georgian Lane Williamsville N'Y 14221 VIVIAN SELL 65-41 Saunders St Rego Park N Y 11374 ROBERT B SHANKS 220 Carrsbrook Rd Charlottesville Va 22901 JOHN A SHANNON 240 Eighth St Providence R 1 02906 EDWARD W SHEETS 3025 Northshore Dr Albany Oregon 97321 R MICHAEL SHEPP Route 4 Box 224 Keyser West Va 26726 MARION E SHERRY 171 Tanners Pond Road Garden City N 'Y 11530 VIRGINIA SHERWOOD P O Box 58 Winchester Grn Winchester Center Conn 06094 THOMAS T SHIBANO 416 Liholiho St Wailuku Hawaii 96793 ROBERT S SHOFFNER 1339 Eustis St St Paul Minn 55108 MORRIS M SHORE 60 Shirley Blvd Cranston R 1 02910 JAMES N SHUMACKER 6834 North Pennsylvania Indianapolis Ind 46220 DAVID L SIEGFRIED 27 West Lincoln Circle Red Bank NJ 07701 LORIN J SILVERMAN 173-38 Croydon Road Jamaica N Y 11432 PATRICIA SIMON 11 Loring Ave Providence R 1 02906 PETER J SIMON 201402 Scottsdale Blvd Shaker Heights Ohio 44122 ASHLEY L SIMPSON P O Box 295 Lake Placid Fla 33852 DONALD L SINGEWALD 600 Brookwood Road Baltimore Md 21229 P DOUGLAS SISK 2723 Meadowlark Lane Colorado Springs Colo 80909 RICHARD K SISSON 250 Cedar St Newington Conn 06111 NANCY H SLEATOR 98 Mount Royal Ave Aberdeen Md 21001 JAMES D SMEE 329 Clair Dr Upper St Clair Pa 15241 ABIGAIL L SMITH Laneway Farm Taunton Mass 02780 ALFRED M SMITH 833 Omar Road West Palm Beach Fla 33405 BRIAN D SMITH 1 Ocean Lane Drive Key Biscayne Fla 33149 CARLA T SMITH 2 Heather Lane Hampton N H 03842 CYNTHIA L SMITH 836 Westover Kansas City Mo 64113 DEBORAH A SMITH 4632 Reservoir Rd Washington D C HALE M SMITH 222 Independence Ave Freeport N Y 11520 CLINTON I SMULLYAN JR 10 East 70th St New York N Y 10021 ALFRED C SNIDER 1021 Donna Beth West Covina Calif 91791 GARY H SOCKUT 4 Craigmoor Road West Hartford Conn 06107 RICHARD D SOLLENBERGER 52 Old Wood Road Avon Conn 06001 E PAUL SORENSEN 51 Craig Court Fairfield Ct CONNER C SOULES 7733 28th Ave N E Seattle Wash 98115 LAUREN M SOUTHWICK 482 Broad St No. 46 Forestville Conn 06010 ALAN C SPARROW 5 Walden Ave Cheadle Cheshire England JOHN M SPERGER 1279 Wunderland Road Roslyn Pa 19001 MARILYN A SPERLING 827 Rail Fence Road Orange Ct 06477 DAVID R SPETH 2439 Peachtree Lane Northbrook 11l 60062 DEBORAH A SPICER 2728 Flint Ridge Dr Colorado Springs Clol 80907 SCOT L SPICER 6455 La Jolla Blvd La Jolla Calif 92037 DOUGLAS E SPIRO 4504 Oak Park Road Raleigh N C 27609 THOMAS M SPOTTS 413 North Hamlin Ave Park Ridge Il 60068 SUSAN B STAMM 1503 Huntington Drive Glenview Il 60025 DONALD L STANFORD Estate Elizabeth P O Box 1629 St Thomas U S Virgin Isld ROSEANNETTE STARR Tourtellot Hill Road Chepachet R 102814 DAVID A STEIN 139 Cushing Road Warwick R 102888 CHARLES K STEPHENSON 1275 London Drive Columbus Ohio 43221 GAIL F STERN 22 S 33 Ave Longport N 08403 DOROTHEA K STIEFF 102 Castlewood Road Balitmare Md 21210 G WILLIAM STOUT 4478 Venus St New Orleans La 70122 JEFFREY L STOUT 103 Nancy Lane Trenton N 08638 CAROL L ST PIERRE 6 Marois Ave Gorham N H 03581 BRADLEY N STRAND 5240 North Kenwood Ave Indianapolis Ind 46208 CHRISTOPHER A STRONG 27 Nicholson Crescent Middletown R 06612 MARGARET M STROOCK 714 West 19th Casper Wyo 82601 WENDY STROTHMAN 613 Ocean Drive Key Biscayne Fla 33149 TIMOTHY L STROTMAN 1007 South Cleveland Ave Park Ridge Il 60068 GEOFFREY V SUPKO 136 Harding St Nedfield Mass 02052 JEFFREY L SUTTON 262 Carden City Drive Cranston R 1 02920 HENRY R SWIRSKY 56 Holbrooke Road White Plains N Y 10605 DANIEL G SYNAKOWSKI 223 Washington Blvd Fayetteville N Y 13066 PETER W SZURA 120 North Vireo Drive McKees Rocks Pa 15136 JEFFREY S TABAK 31 Pickett Court Malverne N 'Y 11565 ; CHARLOTTE W TAFT 126 Roxbury Road Stamford Conn 06902 EDWARD P TAFT 10 Brook Road Tanafly NJ 07670 PAUL L TARIOT 10 Winsor Way Weston Mass 02193 G TRUETT TATE 5110 E Rosewood Tucson Ariz 85711 STOWE H TATTERSALL 206 Russell Road Princeton N J 08540 CRAIG C TAYLOR 9 Graham Ave Cortland N'Y 13045 MARGARET E TAYLOR 1133 Cedar St Lapeer Mich 48446 CHARLES G THALHIMER JR 10 Bridgeway Road Richmond Va 23226 JOHN W THOMPSON 286 Iven Ave Apt 28 Radnor Pa 190-87 JOHN W THOMPSON 1808 East 64th South D Indianapolis Ind 46220 LEE A THOMPSON 26 Miller Lane Riverside Conn 06878 TIMOTHY J THURLOW 321 Vista Drive Bloomington Il 61701 LESLIE M TIERSTEIN 1029 Fairview Place Hillside N J 07205 JOSEPH R TIMKO 1442 State Highway 33 Trenton N J 08690 LARS I TOLLEFSON 127 Thistledown Drive Rochester N 'Y 14617 MARTIN J TRACY 205 Wilson Ave Rumford R 102916 RICHARD C TRICKEY 3915 Orchard Hill Drive Bloomfield Hills Mich 48013 SCOTT A TRIPP 333 Carleton Drive Cheshire Conn 06410 WILLIAM G TUCKER CJO General Motors Del Peru S A Lima Peru WILLIAM P TUKEY JR 10 Norchester Drive Princeton Junction N STEPHEN D TUMBAS 39591 Robert Lane Elyria Ohio 44035 MARTHA M TUNE P O Box 2497 Teheran Iran LAURA TTWEET R F D 1 Box 10 Tolland Conn 06084 FRANZ T TYSON 3002 Kingston St Dallas Texas 75211 ANDREW H UDIS 105 Albany Street Fall River Mass 02720 CHRISTOPHER D ULICKY 4555 Broadale Road Cleveland Ohio 44109 GLENN T UMETSU 238 Puiwa Road Honolulu Hawaii 96817 JOHN E UNDERHILL 70 Conklin Ave Hillsdale N J 07642 THOMAS M VAIL Clover Hill Road Poughkeepsie N'Y 12603 FRANK A VALENTE 232 South St West Haven Conn 06516 CRAIG A VANCOLLIE 14 Comstock Lane Wilton Conn 06897 STEPHEN W VANNESS 542 S Alabama St Brazil Ind 47834 JAMES J VESCE JR 14 Highland Drive No Caldwell N J 07006 ADOLPH E VEZZA 73 Wood Haven Road Pawtucket R 102861 PHILIP A VITON Via Caroncini 47 Rome 00197 Italy ROGER C VOGT 1624 Highland Ave Wilmette 111 60091 RALPH A YUONO 711 Meyer Ave Lyndhurst N 07071 STEVEN H WAGNER 749 Oak Road Barrington 111 60010 ALLIN V WALKER 3805 Blue Ridge Road Raleigh N C 27609 STEPHEN R WALKERMAN 41 East Terrace Ave Lakewood N Y 14750 ROBERT L WALLACE 73 Townsend Ave Boothbay Harbor Me 04538 ROBERT 5 WALLACH Box 669 Warrenton Va 22186 CARLTON L WALLIS JR 4847 Gwynne Road Memphis Tenn 38117 FRANK O WALSH 33719 Edmonton Farmington Mich 48024 FREDERICK A WANG Bedford Road Lincoln Mass 01773 NANCY Y WANG 641 Ridge Road Hamden Conn 06517 ARTHUR THOMAS WARD I11 4 Blythewood Road Baltimore Md 21210 HERVEY A WARD 11l Boston Post Road Amherst N H 03031 PETER M WARREN 835 Clarkson Ave Brooklyn N Y 11203 RICHARD C WATERS 1153 Grove St Framingham Mass 01701 RICHARD J WATERS 11230 Exeter Road Garfield Hts Ohio 44125 LUCILE K WANZONEK 2014 Ridgeway Drive lowa City lowa 52240 DAVID R WEAVER 22329 Bartlett Dr Rocky River Ohio 44116 ROBERT M WEAVER 4348 91st Ave S E Mercer Island Wa 98040 HAROLD H WEBBER 41 Woodside Drive Greenwich Conn 06830 THOMAS G WEBBER 1722 Forest Hill Dr Vienna W Va 26101 KENNETH S WEINER 68 Liberty St Monticello N Y 12701 JAN S WEINSTEIN 180 Hazel Ave Glencoe Ill 60022 STEVEN J WEINSTEIN 28 Gerald Road Milton Mass 02186 NANCY A WEISMAN 33 Woodcrest Drive St Louis Mo 63124 M CHRISTINE WENCKER 13028 42nd Ave N E Seattle Wash 98125 MICHAEL P WERNER R D 1 Box 59 Scotia N Y 12302 JOAN WERNIG 21 Pleasant St Rumford R 1 02916 GARY R WESTMORELAND 320 Russlyn Drive West Palm Beach Fla 33405 CHRISTOPHER WHARTON 83 Ridge Road Glen Rock N J 07452 RICHARD E WHIKEHART 31550 Cate Neck N Y 11021 EVERETT O WHITE 11l 55 Brook St West Barrington R 1 02890 MARCIA V WHITE 158 Imperial Ave Westport Conn 06880 STEPHEN B WHITMAN 199 Don Ave East Providence R 1 02916 DALE WHITTINGTON 3822 Hughes Road Rt 2 Dickinson Texas 77358 ROBERT D WIECK 130 St Jude Circle Florence Ky 41042 RAMONA G WILKINS 1113 Forest Ave New York N Y 10456 JAMES M WILLIAMS 2700 Virginia Ave NW Apt 802 Washington D C 20037 MARGARET V WILLIAMS 2316 Northwest 27th Oklahoma City Okla 73107 MARY-ANN WILSON 1161 Ash St Winnetka 11l 60093 JONATHAN P WINER 56 Wood St Nashua N H 03060 JAMES H WINKLER 5114 SF 35th Ave Portland Ore 97202 WILLIAM P WILKLER 420 East 51st St New York N Y 10022 WILLIAM A WINN 53 Louise Rod Belmont Mass 02178 LESLIE WINNER 260 Midland Dr Asheville North Car 28804 KIMBERLY WITSMAN Colony Court Zionsville Ind. 46077 THOMAS A WITT 3280 East Ave Rochester N Y 14618 CHARLES B WOLF 210 Twin Oaks Terrace Westfield N J 07090 CONSTANCE D WOLFE 335 South Shore Drive Sarasota Fla 33580 JOHN R WOLFE 6 Yorkshire Terrace Elnora N Y 12065 BERTRICE Y WOOD 1833 Rangewood Court Plainfield N J 07060 WILLARD N WOOLBERT 71 Alene Road Ambler Pa 19002 JOHN C WRIGHT 53 Briarwood Road West Hartford Conn 06107 SUSAN A YELAVICH 1 Lakewood Ave Cedar Grove N J 07009 SELMA R YOLLES 1815 Gardiner Lane Apt A-3 Louisville Ky 40205 CHARLES S YOUNG 8 Pond Edge Road Westport Conn 06880 JOAN ZAHORJAN 14 Timberlake Drive Orchard Park N Y 14127 JEROME B ZELDIS 44 Furrow Lane Levittown N Y 11756 ANDREW H ZIMMERMANN 311 Carpenter Ave Sea Cliff N Y 11579 ROBERT B ZINK 975 Crescent Lane Grosse Pointe Mich 48236 MARCIA A ZUCKER 669 Kincaid St Highland Park 11l 60035 PATRONS Class of 1973 Arnold and Ruth Riley Class of 1974 Class of 1975 Stevens Studios Gunther Lillian Baumblatt 11 Harlow 5t Lionel and Lucille Classman Bangor, Maine Ellwood Leonard Sulzberger-Rolfe, Inc. Carl Plochman r. 645 Madison Ave. Robert B. Ridder New York, New York The Associated Alumni of Brown University Meet and work with other alumni and alumnae in Brown Club activities Identify and attract prospective Brown men and women through the National Alumni 5chools Continue your education on and off campus through academic programs offered to alumni BECOME INVOLVED BE ACTIVISTS AS ALUMNI HELP ESTABLISH AND SHAPE PRIORITIES CALL OR WRITE ALUMNI HOUSE 159 George Street 401863-2116 Now In a month In a year In 5 years In 10 years 293 The Albert A. and Vera G. List Art Center Architect Philip Johnson Coordinating Architects. Samuel Glaser Partners 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. DIMEO CONSTRUCTION COMPANY 75 Chapman Street, Providence, R.1. 02901 294 LLOYD'S king size sandwiches' 119 waterman street corner of brook te 1-9242 o 4 y ,-;laiidrey and nero G . - F congratulations CLASS ollS72 RUGGIERI BROS. INC. 295 296 We stress not planned obsolescence but planned permanence. Product durability and design continuity, as represented by the classic Parker 51 pen, are characteristics Parker extends to the nearly-300 different writing instruments made for people around the world. This emphasis on value has helped Parker become maker of the world's most wanted pens. Uik PARKER PEN COMPANY BEST WISHES from the management and staff of the BILTMORE HOTEL and MOTOR INN eleven dorrance street, providence, ri 02902 401-421-920 a brown tradition . . . THE BLUE ROOM in faunce house 8 am 4:30 pm weekdays THEIVY ROOM in sharpe refectory luncheon: 11:30 am1:45 pm dinners: 5:30 6:15 pm snacks: 7:30-midnight THE GATE in alumnae hall, pembroke campus 11 ammidnight weekdays 5 pmmidnight sunday closed saturdays e L g iidnt 1 .. i ? - : I ' 2 B A THE CLASS OF 1972 The university is the sea committees-are thewwaller peoplegdnnst$uerve are the fish. The ngfx mJttoes the bruce mann j' . g Eir b ; H ; john richards tom mark : 1 F 3 terry plochman photography words nao. 1 1 4 bryant: steve rattner, merger: marge neifeld, : : lisa greenman mike selva heffalumps: jeff stout, future campus: ken kenneth s weiner chalrman ; barb morris ken manning weiner, musicke: bruce mann, caucus: ken B i edlAtor brad buff george vila weiner, profiles: stan baumblatt, george can- thomas e matk W ama e john bonacum peggy mc kearney ning louis peck, steve rattner, jeff stout, carl m plochman photography ditecion jay fleitman barry fellman chuck wolf, and the staff john r richards business manager arty tosenthal ad koenig nancy d schampan associate editor T Imame thanks to: cathy e stone layout editor william surprenant and ruth asser, sao; allen paul d felton sports photographer russ bailey marta gutman ollove and staff of stevens studios; james kel- charles m dunn sales director susi barnes john horneff ley, dean of freshmen; uosis juodvalkis, publi- carol bingham uosis juodvalkis cations office; brown daily herald; the resi- bob daly jeff ouderkirk dents of 61 charlesfield street; and especially darrell davidson john rosenberg to jim findley and kib roulette of bradbury, staff john gleason beth tanner sayles, o'neill, inc. DR L brown daily herald, brown alumni monthly, jan ' student caucus, univ. archives debbgl be.WGH !irLda thtman pix: buff 142, J25; daly 205; felton 6, 148, 153, 218, 207, glassman 89; glea- bear faCtS, CIaSS a'l bu m martha faigen john stern son 62, 79; greenman 123; gutman 60, 69, 77; juodvalkis 8, 19, 29, 47, 57, s 0 ' Mo iy i it et b anerds st 2o i w5 special publications I it ivided we fall d 300 1 f 38 CE Tt LV b ety Bt et ! gt dRRhRe Mmr.knnra mnww m.mu w i i 4 ey e L L T e i i y.a $x Tty .m.m ....nww. G e mmmml.!mn i :.;. it mompmsnm a 151 I mn..... M RTINS ety e I sttt N.m a R Hpbri e sl FLITY ,.m A i P i ; i : Mm gt ik nwum..,.. T e SR e porty . h e sy rn.mmu,. M s i hwm tfmwmm. Ty g E.um.m..mimignh R gl T i i e e P r il et i T i i Ty i L P et e u..mx IR qu .m.n ..Mmmmmq. it 2 mw Tig i Iy 3 2. Taiy 3 T e e T T atetaes f . :!'3 T S i e SRR t 23
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