Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI)
- Class of 1979
Page 1 of 336
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 336 of the 1979 volume:
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AATE RS DR N N SNTaeaL . N A ' 2 ARRN 18 86 . 124 . 154 218 . 316 A W AdVerticempntc Seniorlndex il T Activitiesis . iice S NN Graduation el BiowmWonldie Academiics il 0 R AT IRtroductioni e e s 4A.J.lfjx.1,,l4l e o10 - 1 ,. e Conclusion: 2 8 T 20 P VD m B Rv NSV 4 The Rockefeller Library. The large windows of the lower levels give an aquarium effect, evolving into cage slits by the third and fourth floors. On cold days, the broad inviting steps steam like the entrance to a dragon's lair. Through the revolving door, following the track of wet sand left by dripping feet on rainy days, past the circulation desk, by the elevators that click continu- ously, we reach the steps. Upstairs in the second floor reading room, pictures hang on the walls and people chat in small groups. Two or three students are asleep in chairs facing downtown Provi- dence. The carrels are occupied by books and coats, although coffee breaks, din- ner or the weather have pulled many studiers away. A muffled laugh and the clip-clop of clogs echo through the stacks. In the coffee lounge, students gripe and gesture wildly, a manic reac- tion to too much work. A coke can clanks as it is tossed into the trash. Three men march out, We're mad as hell and we're not going to take it any more! The door closes behind them. The austere, off-white exterior of the towering Sci- ences Library has provided all sorts of inspiration for the Brown community. Yes, some have been inspired to climb that towering building. One poor soul was so overwhelmed by that off-white exterior that he was in- spired to kneel down and pray outside. The elevator moves up and down those fourteen floors just as spirits rise and fall in the Sci-Li. There are the ups: elevator races a late hour regression, fits of laughter in the car- rels, floor jokes, rendezvous over coffee, and there are the downs as well. There are the exam pressures; stu- dents sense their futures are at stake as they study in the sterile stacks or suffocate in the intensity of A-level air. There are pre-meds, pre-engineers, all pre-pro- grammed to produce. Eventually, sleep-heavy eyelids overrule the weightiest organic chemistry tests. Despite nightmares about being caught up in the revolving doors, there is always a way out back to humanity and into the gale winds caused by those towering walls. Treves o o Y Vi Kacser Alperin Boulas Inside brick and ivy dorms have lived generations of roommates, classmates, enemies, friends, and lovers. The details may vary slightly, but some things are as constant as the buildings. Moving in: setting up the stereo before even making the bed; plugging in the plant lamps that will keep your tropical hibis- cus blooming amid Providence sleet; and covering walls with Indian bedspreads. Adjusting: learning that if you leave your mint dental floss in the communal bathroom, it will not stay there for more than three days; developing the muscles in your arm by pounding on the wall because Steve Stereo next door plays Aerosmith at 3 a.m.; or learning not to flinch when you meet someone of the opposite sex leaving the bathroom as you enter. Diversions: study breaks become an es- sential part of dorm life whether it's ordering ten pizzas, having donuts and cider with the freshmen unit nearby, or en- gaging in a prank. Coping: on Wriston Quad, learning to sleep with fifty people chanting outside the window can be as vital to success at college as is passing courses. The simple pleasures in life a pillow over your head and a sudden cloudburst that sends the rowdies away make coping easier. 1350 Dykaar Neuhaus Austin Every weekend night or, for the minority in orbit, every night you will see clusterings of smile-for-the-camera people as they drink, dance, drool do whatever it is that helps them to unwind. After a week of expanding their minds, many Brunonians prime themselves for going slightly out of their expanded minds and partying. Depending upon timing and inspiration, parties at Brown can take almost as many forms as there are people . . . There is always the anon- ymous, cattle herd atmosphere of the frat party. The sometimes bizarre, often raucous upper class party is always a good means for practicing cocktail party poses to be assumed in the life after Brown. During a year, there are also the freshman unit parties, freshman unit reunion parties, bon voyage parties, welcome back parties, into Grad School parties, flunked out of school parties, toga parties a breed new this year, parties in honor of the weather . . . Brown students are creative. One cannot neglect the small parties; wine, cheese, and conversation shared among close friends, gatherings which celebrate man as a social animal with less emphasis on animal than other affairs. Austin Austin Treves Treves The Ratty building sits like that heavy feeling at the pit of your stomach after a Ratty meal. Neither the details of the building nor the food make the Ratty and Verney-Wooley soft spots in the heart for the digestive tract, it is another matter; it is the socializing that the dining halls offer that evokes an occasional wistful sigh from those off meal contracts. The one-time neighbors you always meant to see, the sqphomore flame whose appeal burned out quickly, and the acquaintances who never quite crossed the boundary of friend all pass before you at the salad bar. In fact, your whole life could pass before you at the salad bar which is probably why some people go off meal contracts. There is another social quarter that is vital to the dining halls: the inter- actions of the workers as they prepare meals. At almost any hour, people toil in the depths of the Ratty: baking breads, frying chicken, cutting sand- wiches, washing dishes, stacking cereals all for the benefit of the over- achiever's palate. The holiday banquets initiated by these workers animate the Ratty, transforming a dull meal into a festive frenzy of special cheeses, breads, meats, and decorations. Credit: an addicting concept? Merely walk into one of the three non- descript snack bar buildings and they will unfold untold delights!? The Disco Gate, with its tall mirrors, round couches, large plants, and small tables, gives you pizza, sandwiches, and ice cream along with a feeling of hey, isn't that me sitting over there? ECDC is picnic city: all those burgers, chili dogs, and Fritos consumed on benches at rough wooden tables are the perfect setting for Monday night football munchies. The lights that dim provide great romantic moments for a heavy date over tacos. And, of course, the credit addiction also attacks those with a laid back, wholesome outlook on life, and for them, the Ivy Room has frozen yogurt, omelettes, and cheeses. The physical setting is not quite as natural as it could be; the occasional dog must compensate for a dearth of birds and pine trees, but the mellow cool of the clientele surely sets the proper atmosphere anyway. ftl' Ll S e v .;,Av;. 13sdey Faunce House. Its varied facade reflects the bustle within. This so very uneven building, with its multi- tude of doors, symbolizes the diver- sity it shelters. There is a door leading to something for everyone. Yet, for all of its differences, Faunce House is really a continuous whole. The Airport Lounge invites Blue Roomers to taste of its wares and peruse its magazines. People are drawn to the Post Office ostensibly to .collect their mail, sometimes return- ing hourly to catch an important letter or even a glimpse of a cross- campus friend. But who can resist being waylaid in the P.O. by the islands of interest therein: the jewelry stand a dream oasis of magnifi- cence?; the record man offering bargains impossible to refuse?; the causes Fast for a world harvest!, Divest! Vote! or even Buy a Liber diversions which often draw one into far corners of Faunce House corners beyond the Post Office itself. Although it is a seemingly static image, Faunce Houses's varied facade reflects a maze of varied interests. Sharpe Phelan Austin The much-needed cash now neatly crinkled in your back pocket thanks to the Student Union; the Band bopping up and down in time to their music as toothless hockey players face-off on the ice below; the Issues magazine in your bookbag; the familiar chaplains who dart across the green for vari- ous appointments; all these aspects of Brown life and more have called Faunce House a home. What the weathered building lacks in aesthetics, it compensates for in spirit, for in providing a headquarters for a broad range of student activities, Faunce House represents the spirit of a community of individuals that is Brown University. Although Faunce House will soon witness the curtain calls of many of its theater activ- ities when the new Theater-Arts Complex is completed, its empty chambers probably will not remain for long. Each year new groups such as the first aid and environmental pro- tection organizations nest themselves in Faunce House. As such, Faunce House will undoubtedly continue to represent the diverse activities of the Brown community as a whole. Drill Alperin Alperin Thayer Street: a world of books, money, cards, candy, ice cream, fro-gurt, flowers, shoes, clothes, film, and high prices. Most Brown students could not survive without this littered, gum-spattered, store flanked stretch of road. It offers not only necessities, but a temporary escape from formulas, formaldehyde, or french to touches of the real world. A trip to Thayer Street can do wonders for a discouraged soul. It can also wreak havoc on a diet or bank account. But who thinks of such details when tasting a fourth flavor of BR's ice cream, ordering another in a long string of drinks, sampling a Big Mac or buying that pair of pants that are sure to be three dollars less downtown? Only someone destined to retain a discouraged soul. Sometimes one can match stores with the various types who fre- quent Thayer Street. The bearded conservative in a trench coat must stop in at the smoke shop. The students with worry engraved on their foreheads just paid their bookstore bills. Smug-smiled people of all ages are either savoring ice cream from Jake's or thinking about dinner at Spat's. But even these types merge into the faceless flux of peak hour crowds that people the world of Thayer Street. Kacser ; canrris nain s Porus Porus 1 ,:-- - I-I Kacser Porus Inside the stone walls of tradition, rows of wooden desks are filled. The lecture commences. Vigorous note-taking is audible as pens and pencils bear down on table-tops. The professors voice fills the hall. Cryptic marks cover the blackboard in chalky white and blue. The scent of spearmint gum wafts out of one corner, and heads raise slightly as noses become aware. A hand rises tentatively, willing the professor to notice; ten seconds pass, and the hand slowly returns to the desk. One pair of red eyes droops, vision blurred, and begin to notice the creases in the clothes worn before, during, and after last evening's all-nighter. A window is open, and through it can be seen the springtime green. A guitar is being played near the new grass. The air is warm. The faintest of moans is heard from the day- dreamer inside, but the moan luckily merges with the sound of bells that signal the end of another hour. Are there any questions? The usual crowd forms around the lectern, chairs scrape, and voices are found again as the classroom rapidly empties. Boulas Kacser Lowen Phelan Lowen Berkowitz Brown sports ... Ivy League ... press advances . . . season approaches . . . pre-season training . . . one- two, one-two . . . training . . . coaching . . . let's move, people . .. one-two, one-two . . . THE season . . . in- tense workouts . . . press releases . . . The team looks good .. . tickets . .. press passes ... pre-game stretch- ing . .. athletes in thoroughbred poses . . . crowds . . . an- ticipation . . . competition . . . media . . . consignments . cheers . . . play by play . . . play to win . . . groans . . . losing . . . playing again . . . Brown sports . Ready: A team of individuals uniformed in school col- ors stand ready to compete, coached to excel. Action: a mass of aching, bruised bodies, tutored and supported by University staff and alumni take the field. One almost forgets those are student bodies: housing minds concerned with academics even over athletics. Such is the complex moving picture of Brown sports. End frame. Jock or athlete: to some it is a question of semantics; to others the terms reflect an attitude. This attitude can be degradation: dumb jock or respect: scholar-athlete. Considering that Brown athletes en- dure sessions in training, hours at Nautilaus, rushed meals, lost time, hurried studies, and still manage to compete in the classroom, proves that they deserve re- spect. There is more to the life of an athlete at Brown than muscles, skills, percision, or even a uniform. Berkowitz Berkowitz Berkowitz Berkowitz i a 14 Lowen Lowen Although Pembroke College is just a memory, Pembroke campus is alive and well. Alumnae Hall, the Gate, and Verney-Woolley draw people from across campus. Yet, as Pembroke is a few blocks away from main campus, it has a character of its own just as the suburban living of East Campus has a character of its own as well. The build- ings on Pembroke are as varied as the people who frequent them. Life on Pembroke means discovering the intimate library, the old dining hall in the bowels of Andrews, how to get from East to West Andrews, pianos in obscure lounges, that New Pembroke is not a jungle gym, and more. The advantages of Pembroke living are numerous. As the campus is a bit off the mainstream, it is slightly less frenetic than Wriston or West Quad. The fairly personal atmosphere of Verney-Woolley and the short walk to Meehan and Smith on chilly mornings make Pembroke most desirable. The only drawback in Pembroke living is that hint of isolation which can be especially telling on freshmen or upperclassmen who are not clustered near close friends. Thus, with all its advantages, Pembroke living can test one's mettle as well. Lowen A year at Brown University: a green world of books, buildings, and drizzle? Move aside the venerable ivy exterior and unearth vital detail of ground covered in nine months on College Hill. With ranges that point back to 1764 and for- ward at once, the terrain traveled in a year is varied. Continents of interest dominate, only to erode with time. Single years often appear as but satellites of the looming planet of a college career. Liber Brunensis seeks to include as many images and perceptions as possible to capture the special blend of timely and timeless ele- ments that constituted the Brown world, 1979. w' ' 1'!,'4;MW SO THIS IS i Anderson Kacser Anderson Boulas 20 R Nh ;;.: i; F . ; LT TP - P 11111 11 L5 ' . . : . x ? 4 LRSI LT ' ; L TRy e J ' 3!23;.,'54 '.'x i . J 1 LU K555 ; tZ?::numm i AL 22 5o 7 ;q ; l LU TN T QT P s S ST LR 51 Boulas Boulas I il v SRRy 1 it ll Hily i iy I AR et e s s . - 1 Ry gy Wiy ey l u ' 1y lm . QLTI OBy, vy, , ; I' e gyt g IHE W iy, n oy e i iy Il A o e g u SNEEERREREENINY o a N i BRI '; sgimninaennn a ' - 1 Tl Boulas Boulas 21 SO THIS IS Austin 1950Ey e - Boulas 24 Much attention is given every year to the effort made by such groups as the Orientation Week Com- mittee to make life at Brown interesting and benefi- cial to students. Not many are aware, however, of the time and creativity expended by the Housing Of- fice and its related branches at the University. Each year exciting and innovative contributions to the quality of the Brown experience are made in an ever- expanding project to upgrade and diversify Brown housing. The more unusual maintenance improvements in recent years include: 1 the installation of sophisti- cated dim lighting in most dorms; 2 the very latest in plumbing technology self-clogging shower drains; and 3 an incredible building material com- posed from a paper base, which can be molded, painted, and textured to simulate almost any kind of conventional material. This last product has been used extensively for interior wall construction in various forms in dorms throughout the University. Much emphasis has been placed on automatic equip- ment and self-perpetuating furnishings; besides the self-stopping drain mentioned above, dorms have been equipped with self-releasing windowshades, self-opening hot water faucets, and, on the East Campus, one of the most popular features car- peting with an amazing regenerative power to re- gurgitate lint. Not satisfied with supplying necessities, Housing has managed to provide for potential eventualities. For example, if a woman should ever feel the urge or need to use a urinal, her modesty need not be dis- turbed by having to seek one in a men's bathroom, since nearly all of the women's bathrooms are equip- ped with them. As for other creature comforts, and windowscreens are conveniently kept off in warm weather to encourage the visits of bees, flies, and, in late fall, cold-crazed wasps. Boulas SO THIS IS JORM LIFE . . . Castleman At times when four letters words are inappropriate, mutter housing to yourself. The array of expletives associated with that word will clutter your mind with- out embarrassing social consequences that follow succinct articulations of such hate. Slater had its reasons for muttering housing this year. They began the year doorless, ergo lockless, but not security-less. As a guard loomed twenty four hours a day to protect the people and property in Slater, housing gets points for trying to repent. And there's always overcrowding to flavor the notion of housing. Transfers in lounges. Oversized classes. Fox point follies. The University knew all those people were coming . . . Oh, well, housing. 5150 or Fight was UCS's answer to the housing problem. A noble effort, but with the coming pro- liferation of quadruples where once there were triples, it looks like or Fight might win. Who could forget the anxiety caused by the plight of Appleby? Poor Appleby. Lots of us called your cracked walls and smelly carpets home, and they wanted to change you. Seriously, Appleby needs a facelift, but the prospect of upending all its residents in the middle of the year was ridiculous. Thanks to dorm meetings, formation of the Appleby Council, and subsequent meetings with President Swearer, Deans Massey and Bechtel, and Housing's McCon- nell, Gallagher, and Hill, we realized that they were not against us. Dean Massey said, The primary thing is to make sure students don't suffer. And, beyond anxiety, this year students did not suffer. Actually, our flip tone does not do housing credit. Given financial and spatial constraints, they do a good job. As next year's overcrowding seems a reality, it would seem that faulting housing for all our ills is like treating symptoms instead of finding the cause. So, when speaking a socially acceptable expletive, mutter money instead of housing, it has broader implications. Somebody might slip you a dollar, too. Castleman 25 26 A BROWS , . AN MLL Alperin Imagine yourself in the middle of a really super dream of your favorite movie star, when suddenly you are awakened to the sound of 1-2-3-4, 1-2-3-4, coming from across the dimly lit room. It is only your Adonis-Like roommate, finishing his push-ups as he prepares for his morning jog, just as he used to do at good ol Michigan State. Since it's only 5 am, you turn over and return to Farah Fawcett or Robert Red- ford, depending on your particular persuasion. Two hours later you are awakened by the curses of the ex-Berkeleyite who is now at Camp Bruno because he disliked mashed yeast and alfalfa sprouts, and got so laid-back that he fell over. Ex-Berkeley is cursing because he can't find his English paper which is due in an hour and still has to be retyped. Little does he know that it's hidden under the Amherst sweatshirt and Smith directory. Once more you drift back to slumberland, but when the Grateful Dead come screaming out from the clock radio belonging to Hampshire College's latest failure, you decide to get up. One roommate is hard enough to contend with, but 14 are ridiculous. THIS, this is the life of the transfer student. From your first arrival at Brown you are conscious of the fact that everything everyone said about Providence was true. By the fourth day you can finally get around without a map but you have received the scorn of Sophomore girls who laugh and mouth the word Freshman to each other when you nervously ask where the Refectory is. You are humiliated by the fact that you asked WHO Big Mother was and are nervous to find yourself back in the Hi, what's your name, where are you from, what's your major and what were your SAT scores? routine. It can't be that bad, or can it? You are faced with the prospect of learning all the football and hockey songs and are humiliated about the time you yelled PENN! instead of BROWN! And of course it is your duty to go to the bookstore and buy Brown-labeled everything from ball point pens to underwear with the Brown insignia, natural- ly!. You rush to your 9:00 Section at 8:15 to make a good impression on your T.A., who shows up at 9:25, and don't forget about your getting lost in the stacks on the 13th floor of the Sci Li that is what it is called here, isn't it? twice in one day. Are we being too harsh on you, dear transfer stu- dent? Not really next year it will be your turn to laugh at all the large freshmen. C;h, by the way, have you found health services yet? . . . L Cullen Castleman Shakespeare wrote of salad days when one is green in judgement. Freshmen year marks the Brunian's salad days when you are green in Brown judgement. Counseling units can be seen as salad bowls, designed to keep that freshman green stuff intact. Sure, things get tossed around: roommate rifts, per- sonality problems, academic conflicts, or identity crises probably struck us all at one point freshman year. Somehow your leaves weathered the agitation. The success of a freshman salad depends a great deal upon the local chefs: resident counselors. De- pending upon their skills, these upperclassmen could show you a great deal: from how to be positive in the midst of impending doom to the joys of a single. Really enthusiastic, interested people could give you a bedrock base. Others, who would only float into the hall alternate weekends or when there was an ice cream break, could give units the cohesion of chicken wire. As dressing and spices are vital to a salad, so fresh- men are showered with varying amounts of study breaks, dinners, wine and cheese parties, cook-outs, lectures, and whatever else serves to keep the rough- age of freshman year from seeming bland and boring. m f;'f,y;a ,,,, KT ok T e ? - 3 e o o e e 0 1 o o LY e e A - o T e e 2 S S -s s e B e i B W e - e e e e e .. .... - Zimre e A 27 28 ium 2 A$:Qg e ey Cullen - o - N i llalr Having tearfully or triumphantly watched the sta- tion wagon with the BROWN UNIVERSITY sticker on the rear window drive off Mom, Dad, Grandma, Bro, Sis, and the family dog, the typical freshman is inclined to be excited and somewhat scared of his new camp. Luckily, there are all sorts of counselors who run around looking amused and amusing. They try to counter freshman blues and memorize fifty new names in a matter of minutes. Remember your own freshman week. Did people tell you it was going to be the best week of your life? As you discovered it wasn't, did you shudder with horror wondering how lousy the rest of Brown would be if this were the peak? Actually, those people who told you it was going to be fun weren't lying. If they were upperclassmen, they undoubtedly, had a great time during your freshman week. Minus academic constraints, they spent gleeful hours recementing old bonds, hearing how much their friends raked in over the summer, scouting new talent take that any way you like, or simply buying books before the exodus of fellow overachievers swamped Thayer Street. But for the freshmen . . . There were wonderful activities and really enthusiastic people in little white hats who tried to make adjusting easy for you. Yet, some aspects of the first flood of college life tended to drown your spirits no matter how hard various deans, professors, counselors and friendly upper- classmen tried to keep your psyche buoyant. Consider all the things you learned that first week: you dis- covered the limit to the number of faces, names, and home towns your brain could retain. You realized quickly that SAT's, activities, and other such creden- tials were taboo; everyone you met did the same mar- velous things you did to get here. So you put your laurels aside for private showings only. Somehow you survived. You might have even liked it. There was a lot of action: your first and, for some, last frat party, the first football game, your first en- counters with inspiring professors, and maybe even your first campus fling. Times of trial draw lonely people together. It seemed Cupid fired arrows drench- ed in lighter fluid the way torrid romances would flare up and then fade to naught in the first weeks of your Brown career. Even though you knew you'd probably never have another chance to meet so many people again, you were restless for classes to start. Maybe not to work, but at least to see what things were like. It took time to realize that you really had to work. Regardless, by the time the station wagon drove up again to wisk you away for a recess from camp, you were well-prepared to wow Mom, Dad, Grandma, Bro, and Sis with your savvy about the world of Brown. As for the family dog, well, he just liked the trees. Lowen uamoy A f , . Qm , e . , g l 4 : . u l . 30 Many Brown students think of Pembroke living as a self or lottery-imposed exile, to be visited only for midnight pizzas, p.e. sign-ups, and Career Development. It is, in a sense, a separate reality, not nearly as barren as people think and understood only by those who have known chastity beds and snowy hikes to Health Services and been thankful for the short walk to the pool or steamy tunnel to Verney Wool- ley. The lawns become sites of spring backgammon playing and yogurt eating. In V.W., there's the hip or irritating side where smoking is allowed and music drifts through conver- sations, and there's the peaceful or uncool side where the air is breatheable and people make their own music. On either side, the faces appear increasingly familiar, almost familylike, over the year. Now and then the sounds of rock and roll rever- berate around sedate Alumnae Hall, the site of a number of concerts, and the notes worm their way through closed win- dows and into busy minds. On Friday nights, a few flannel- nightgowned Andrews girls bring their coffee down to Fire- side, listen to the music, and look around at the people who came from Main or East campus to hear the same thing. There's the proximity of Thayer Street. There's Emery- Woolley's indoor walk to breakfast, and there are the sinks in huge Andrews rooms. Self-imposed exile? Maybe, but cer- tainly not bad, as exiles go . . . EAST CAMPUS East Campus is a land of contrasts, and it takes some ad- 7' A N'Q TS Q justment to really get to love and hate its preculiarities. p 3 ' Its inhabitants are mainly taken from the babes and senior citizens of the Brown undergraduates: freshmen are as- signed to Perkins or Appleby, where basement residents must pander to voyeurs, while seniors with good lottery numbers fight for Young Orchard, where they can pretend to live off-campus with Ma Brown as landlady. A new Appleby single could fit into an old Appleby closet, and Dyer and Sod houses are dwarfed by their Gargantuan neighbors. Despite the difference in living quality, however, all East Campusers share one legacy: the walk to Main Campus. Students who have never lived there gaze pity- I ingly at anyone who admits that he lives on East Campus. ettty They murmur consolations while they secretly gloat over E.: 7 - their Hope College or Wriston location. What they do not realize is that the trek is not all that long and that the place- - ment of East Campus away from the rest of Brown also 3 puts it right near some very exclusive options. The fire department, for instance, is close at hand and very accom- modatingly provides frequent assurance in the form of sirens to prove they are willing to help, night or day. Other services more generally appreciated include ECDC, T. E. Green gym, and the Steinart practice rooms. Athletes and lounge lizards can choose from a wide range of East Campus activities, including killer frisbee in long, narrow halls, ping-pong on three-legged tables, and sun- bathing by day or star-gazing by night on the Perkins roof. All in all, a place with character. I RN g OY A 1 R 'S i T : C d I W.WJI'L-W I BZ! 3 32 s L ETTE STEY Y TN It seems that most residents of Slater and Hope Col- lege become great sprinters as a result of convenience. Most of the training occurs at approximately 8:59 a.m., as residents explode out of front door and race away to classrooms. Having the convenience of classes seconds away, many residents with nine o'clock classes are not fully awake until 8:57. The necessity of sprinting occurs when residents underestimate the amount of seconds it will take to transport themselves to class. The con- venience of living on the Green, with classrooms, Uni- versity Hall, Faunce House and the post office seconds away is what comes to the mind of the average Brown student when comtemplating life on the Green. The actual inhabitant, however, realizes that conven- ience is not the only factor which distinguishes Slater and Hope from the other Brown dorms. Living on the Green, you do not possess the collegiate urbanity of Pembroke, Wriston, or West Quad. Rather, your neigh- bors are dignified and prestigious. University Hall, for example, is situated as the front door of Brown Univer- sity; king of College Hill. Within this awesome building are housed the offices of the President, deans and the registrar, the Administration and the Corporation. We are talking about the upper crust of the University. The status of the neighborhood permits only students of the upperclass in its dorms. Despite the prestigious atmosphere surrounding the GCreen, the area is by no means stagnant with tradition. The rectangle enclosed by the aged building: alwaye contains an agile frisbee player. On sunny days the backyard of the Main Green dorms is mobbed with young people. Living on the Green, you are breathing the air of the Universitys history, but you are also at the heart of today's activity; you could not feel more distinctly the aura of the Ivy League. Chernov Brown's illustrious graduate center is a four tower com- plex on north campus, which, contrary to its name, houses mostly sophomores and juniors. Although it is the newest, most modern dormitory on campus, certain students like to denigrate the grad center by comparing its architectural de- sign to that of the Alcatraz Prison. This criticism is, of course, entirely unfounded and should be ignored. The truth is that the grad center has many attractive and desirable features: these include the famous Grad Center Bar which sophomores and juniors can't get into, private suites which nobody can get into and the television lounge which nobody wants to get into. In addition, hall telephones pro- vide an excellent opportunity to get to know your suite- mates by listening in on their private conversations and the spiral staircase is lots of fun to run up and down. AmHZmO TP RO 33 Lowen uamo ZlGHEh a6 ol NN uaImo It begins in the spring, when the List appears: Off campus at last! I've waited for years! Goodbye to cinder-block, crowded loud hall . . . I'll get an apartment! Can't wait for the fall! The first hint of reality comes with the search. After weeks of hard looking, still no place to perch! Mysterious forces get all the good places; Only in Cranston do they have open spaces. Atlast, though, you find one. .. hurrah and Eurekal!! A dump, to be sure, but it can be made to look chig-a! With fall you return, hammer in hand i A home results, although one far from grand. Classes begin and you find a routine Revolving 'round chores, like to cook and clean. Going off the meal plan is a test of your mettle; The work makes your head spin, but your stomach will settle. Cooking wouldn't be half bad, could you just eat the dishes. This stands alone as my biggest of wishes, For as you rest with full tummy after the dinner, There sits a sinkful of prizes awaiting a winner! With each apartment cloud comes a black lining Called landlord, or worse by those less refining. Each one has a heart of gold, I am told But a greedy mind rules it like kingdoms of old. With all these hassles and shattered illusions, Some ask Is it worth it? Back to campus I'm movin'! Most of us seem to stick it out, though, With huge grins on our faces, not signs of woe! The reason's related to avoidance of classes; Seniors, you see, like to sit on their . . . er . . And when that alarm rings, the classroom it beckons . . . Sightoo far from campus, to even try, I reckons! SOCIAL DORMS - Donuts. Where are the donuts? I want apple and spice. We have a couple of things . . . Where ARE the DONUTS? ... to do tonight. First, we have to discuss our potluck inner. The above is a transcript from a Chapin House meeting. t the heart of every major policy meeting, be it in Chapin, Jorth Wayland, Sod House, or Diman, lie ten dozen Dun- in Donuts. . Lowen Besides getting members ill on Bavarian Creme, social dorms play other roles. They serve as alternative housing. Like fraternities, they offer social activities, but are coed. Social activities are divided into university-wide and in- house. Chapin and Diman parties are a popular substitute to the stigma of frat parties. In-house functions, such as Thanksgiving dinners, wine and cheese with the facul- ty, Halloween masquerades and study breaks allow dorm residents to meet in an atmosphere more relaxed than the normal Brown context. And they're always good for donuts. A 35 36 What broad generalizations can one make about the frater- nities at Brown? That they are one of the most controversial and, interestingly enough, indestructible institutions at Brown is a fact difficult to dispute. That they continually give Brunonians of all kinds things to talk about heatedly and amusingly is another. Most importantly, fraternities add a certain element to life at Brown that could never be equaled by any other institution. As a great many people can attest to, fraternities assuredly have their very generous share of drawbacks. Only a very select few allow themselves to find frat pranks such as dorm streaking amusing although in one instance the offending frat invited the stricken house to an apology party. Wall leerers frat members who sun themselves on their walls can be quite intimidating to even the most stout-hearted of indi- viduals. And, as many complain, the fraternities do get the best housing on Wriston Quad the result of a bargain made with President Wriston in the fifties. These disadvantages seem slight in comparison with many positive things that fraternities offer the Brown community. The BDH would have to become a weekly were it not for the frats. A good number of the local liquor establishments would fold without fraternity support. Unquestionably, the social life would be decidedly limited. Fraternities serve as the major community party-givers on campus. Their parties, especially in the past year, have been original and imaginative. Where else could you find toga parties, Mardi-Gras parties, disco parties, fall parties, tropical partiesparties to cele- brate every and any occasion with exotic drinks and good music to match. FRATERNITIES sneynapy . r r r r r of 2 nma Drill Drill Drill Open bars soon to be a thing of the past? offer students welcome breaks during the course of long weeks. They provide nice places for friends to get together to talk over a couple of beers. Brown fraternities are also responsible for a great deal of entertainment other than parties. Wall Ball is a sport unique to Brown, and if you keep out of line of the broken glass, it is a lot of fun to watch. Few events generate more ex- citement and rivalry than the Scut Races be- tween frats in the fall. In addition, many fraternities are involved in community activities. A number of them give parties for Providence orphan groups at Christ- mas, complete with Santa and gifts. Some frats work with the Big Brother program at Federal Hill. The members get together with the boys each week. As one frat brother commented, They have a ball. We do, too. Fraternities at Brown offer their members an alternative mode of campus living that is appealing and advantageous to them. Beau- tiful bars, weight rooms, game rooms, fancy lounges, and the short walk to the Ratty are second in the members' estimation to the bonds formed during the trials and triumphs, the pranks and pleasures of their four years together. sneynapn Drill 1na Drill Lowen 39 RATTY The basic activity in the Ratty is eating, but more popular ac- tivities also occur there. The Ratty is the place where the history of your social life can be traced by plotting a graph of the sec- tions and tables you have frequented. Not only does the Ratty of- fer social possibilities, but enormous employment opportunities as well. The Ratty is so large that if you weren't conditioned to get in line immediately, you would probably be distracted from your purpose. You can see just about anyone you want to there, ex- cept for those off-contract students who somehow survive with- out the daily routine of socializing. Choosing a table can be a dilemma, although in the course of a semester everyone seems to have learned to limit themselves to a particular quadrant or alcove. Sections of the Ratty become corners of the Universityreflections of student life: frats, third world, dorms, jocks, beautiful people, and intense students all have their niche. Some people just choose to sit where the viewing is best and linger over a cup of coffee. Dykaar unadyy unady Buchanan Alperin ueueyong Another Ratty experience is being employed there. Sometimes called paid partying, it is more relaxed than the working experience of the real world. The hardest part of a Ratty job is dealing with the frustrations provided by fellow students. Rat- ty workers can best tell stories of Ivy League students lacking in common sense. When putting away empty trays, at least one diner always insisted on hopping on one foot while the other foot tries to pluck another truck from a nearby row, balancing a tray loaded with empty dishes throughout. Does this person simply enjoy a challenge or does he merely not see the bare truck waiting to be filled at the end of the row? And then there are those, apparently of a different socio-economic status, who dare to ask the employee if he would mind exploring the downstairs caverns of the Ratty to satisfy a yearning for a bowl of Captain Crunch. One cannot forget our peers who seem to think there's valet service in the Ratty to pick up the trays and general debris they leave behind daily. This has been but a brief glimpse at the wide world of Ratty life in which the average Brown student spends about 15 of his waking college experience. 42 NN p VoV Ah, the carpeted, candlelit elegance of Verney- WoolleyPembroke's finest: Belly dancers jiggle with each Mediterranean buf- fet. Likewise, little balding men with violins and paunches act like strolling waiters each Valen- tine's Day, and an accordionist accompanies the eclectic menu of gefilte fish, glazed ham, chicken soup with matzo balls, and plum pudding at the Winter Holidays special dinner. Infra-red lights make the tomatoes look like they're bleeding, but are better than a sunlamp for turning the pale northern skin a delightful shade of pink. The music is varied: you can have a disco breakfast, punk lunch, and classical supper. Hard and soft rock spice up otherwise bland, unappetizing or downright revolting food combinations. Among freshmen Emery-Woolley residents there is a marked tendency to arrive for Sunday brunch clad only in slippers usually fuzzy, robes, jammy bot- toms, and The New York Times. Such is Verney- Woolley. uewsjse Lowen SNACK BARS 43 . 44 THAYER STREET DAYTIME If a little pink creature from Venus should decide to visit our planet, and find itself hovering over Thayer Street, at, say, noon, what would it find along this clogged artery of Providential capitalism? Matrons in rabbit coats and Gucci bags lunch at Le Papillon, Spats, Andreas, or grab a quick banana split at Jakes while dark-complexioned paunchy men in grey pin- striped three-piece suits talk taxcuts over martinis and pas- ta at Alfredo's; Students do theses on comparative marketing at Boar's Head, the deli, and Thayer Market while rebellious and or unwashed folk in Army jackets, POW bracelets, and hik- ing boots buy their food from Kneecap Natural Foods, in bulk; Youngsters play pinball and pick pockets at Games People Play while erstwhile students buy books at the Brown Bookstore, College Hill Books, or Scrooge and Mar- ley; Little boys ride a paper-mache horse at Alba-Runci Barbershop while getting their ears clipped and their crewcuts cultivated while ingenues and wealthy college women have their hair coiffed, frizzed, crimped, henna'd, or permed at Christiaan's; Glassy-eyed young people in khakis and jean jackets buy bongs, roachclips, and grosses of Ziz-Zags at Store 24 a misnomer, and fulfill late-night munchies at Baskin-Robbins, Dunkin Donuts, IHOP, or Subway junk-food heavens all; Preppies buy presents for their parents at the Ms. Shop, and outfit themselves at Berk's, Mark David I II, and Hillhouse Ltd., while bowlegged jocks buy new sneak- ers, tennis racquets and birthday cards for Mommy at Ashby Dean or all but the latter at Arthur Palmer; Booted and skirted young women stop into Spectrum India for the latest in gauze, pause to read the movie notices at the deserted Avon Repretory Theatre and join the line of suntanned students at College Hill Travel wait- ing for the next flight anywhere but north; And semiotics majors and philosophy concentrators debate over frozen yogurt and cappucino at Penguins. uewase Thompson L Thompson Thompson Thompson During the wintry months most Thayer Street evening action is, not surprisingly, indoors. The street itself is often deserted, the streetlamps illuminating only snow- trimmed sidewalks and an occasional slow car or rapidly walking human hunched into his down jacket. Many store- fronts are dark, but between them shine beacons like An- dreas and Spats, crowded and inviting, the half-empty cof- fee-smelling Dunkin Donuts, Rascal House with its enor- mous pies contemplating the black Continental parked outside, and the ever-useful but somewhat offensive Store 24. If Casablanca is playing at the Avon, a line of chilly students extends to the College Hill Bookstore where pre- venting frostbite and checking out the latest Doonesbury book both serve to pass the time until the line starts mov- ing into the theatre. At Alfredos, intimate lasagnas are shared over red and white tablecloths. In the fall and spring, however, the street becomes alive outside as well as in. A permanent group of semi-musical or artistic transients perch on the Hospital Trust wall, sandaled students stroll from Jake's to Penguins to Bas- kin-Robbins savoring their frozen munchies, both cars and skateboards are plentiful, and the local teenagers over- flow from Minerva's carrying subs and tape decks. Spats and Andreas flourish as always, and kids and dogs sit outside Store 24 watching the passers-by as they fade into the evening. 45 DIVERSIONS: OTHER PLACES TO GO Two things can be said about college students: they are universally addicted to old movies and they are universal- ly broke. As a result, third run, overrun cinemas can be found within walking distance of nearly every college cam- pus in the country. Most of these movie houses are shoddy and depressingly alike. They feature broken heating, a floor that sticks to your feet, and bad prints of old movies for a dollar. The Avon, located just off the Brown campus on Thayer Street, is a unique exception in that it offers sometimes broken heating, a floor that sticks to your feet, and variable prints of old and new movies for $2.25 double feature. While some students may claim to live at the Avon, the administration still denies having plans to house transfer students in the lobby next fall. Lowen Lowen Lowen Lowen To swim in the pool here is to enter a different world, a world of humid locker rooms, swim suits drying as they hang on padlocks, the smell of evaporating chlorine, the hiss of showers, and then the opening up of the liquid world of rippling light patterns on ceiling, of great aquamarine ex- panses of wetness in which to engage in prebirth fantasies, of total mind and body coordination. You push, you glide, you struggle, and then, exhausted, you leave the water and sink into the sharp dry wood-smelling heat of the sauna, melt- ing against walls so aromatic you can taste them. And leaving that environment for yet another, you step under the need- ling shower to feel strength returning to your limbs, and vitality entering your soul. Hours, infinite rejuvenating hours have passed, and when you see a clock, you grapple with the realization that a mere forty-five minutes have passed . . . 47 It was a lost night. The three of us decided to leave the familiarity of the dorm and head for Lupo's, in hopes of good times in the heart of downtown Providenceonly to find the three-dollar cover too steep after all, we do go to Brown. We wandered around seeing little action, and thinking we had ventured from the Hill for nothing, until one of us had an inspiration: To the Met! Asking a bus driver the way, we started off in search of Friendship Street. The route not very friendly, we were soon feeling lost. Near the overpass to 195 we decided we had strayed too far, until we heard the raucous thumping of blues echoing from what looked like an old gas station un- derneath the overpass. This is it? said one of us, not hiding disappointment. We decided to venture inside, in spite of the blatant slea- ziness. There was a hall with about five tables and a hun- dred people, most standing or drinking by a bar along the mirrored wall. The high paneled ceiling gave the place its old time image. Baseball posters lined the walls and a small TV sat over the bar. In the back were a pool table, pinball machine and a jukebox with Bo Diddley, Waylon and Wil- lie and Otis Redding. Although we did spy a few other campus types, the crowd was from the City. We stuck out, but the other pa- trons did not seem to mind. The Met was a friendly place . . . sort of. The band was surprisingly very good, and played a brand of traditional blues to feel at home with. The lead guitarist was especially good: dressed in a ruffled salva- tion army special, he sang the blues in the voice of Tom Watts. During one number he left the stage and sidled into the hall to do a solo. In the inconspicuous haven for the blues, the fifty-cent drafts and one-dollar cover seemed too good to be true. The trek to the Met became a ritual. 1H LT llllllllllllll::l T T IIIIIIIIIIIIIIII 1 Like seeing The Rocky Horror Picture Show, ordering Domino's pizza, and walking through the Van Wickle gates, eating at Silvertop is part of the Brunonian rites of passagea part of the Brown experience. Narrow and dim, friendly as only a road-stop dive can be and famous for blueberry muffins, Silvertop is a household word at Brown. As fate would have it, my initiation into the Silvertop rite landed in the middle of an untimely power failure. Lit on the outside by a pair of headlights, the diner's interior dimly greeted me with candlelight and its attendant quips. To my amused chagrin, the blueberry muffins were warming inside the cold oven. So, munching contentedly on a bran muffin, melting the butter on by the candle's flame, gulping milk, and watching the other Bruins filter in, I was inaugurated into the stream of Sil- vertop tradition. il I :I:;:Illlllllm 1T i gl S T L A T O N NEWPORT Sometimes you've just got to get away. You pile into a car at 2 a.m. with a bunch of study- tazed friends and head down to Newport for a party on the tocks The cliff walk hac an abrupt finality at night, with waves crashing against granite and slate, while the misty New England sky hangs above. You all gather on a low ledge, pass the beer and try to talk above the surf. On the way home you get lost, and ramble through the streets of Old Newport. Sometimes you go during the day. The cliff walks are totally different in sunlight. The water is cold, blue, the rocks grey, and in the distance you see ships heading for Narragansett. Behind you the marble story-book cottages loom with ostentation. The Mrs. Astor Home. The Vanderbilts' mausoleum and their pagoda teahouse. It beats the Sci-Li. i W i 1 1 I 1 7, 7 1! ! f ';'iw eyl 1 Wit i Chernou Chernou 1 BOSTON i Boston is for more extreme cases of study-fatigue. You travel there by bus, train or in a friend's car, and go trailing around the Hay Market, Faneuil Hall, Quincy Arcade, and the Government Center. You get tickets for the Hayden Planetarium's laser show, and plan to make it out to Harvard. At Boston Common you listen to the street minstrels, while little old Bostonian ladies with blue hair walk past with the utmost dignity. This is a city i where the letter r does not exist, and conversation overheard in the Common tells you this in an instant. Somewhere in the distance Hare Krishnas are preaching, while swarms of college students take a break from the city's many colleges. At Harvard you are stopped three times on the streets by Chernou people begging for coins, while Triumphs and Corvettes zoom 3 7 past on the streets. Professors with their heads in the ether walk past distractedly, and students plunge into book stores with a kind of dread written on their faces. The Green Line periodically floods Harvard Yard with masses of people, and traffic in front of the Coop is clogged as usual. After the laser show at Science Park, you decide to head for Providence, but the subways are filled with rushhour crowds. It takes you thirty extra minutes to get through the city and back to the bus or the train or your car. Eventually you're on your way. Then you see in the distance Hospital Trust's show- box tower and the beacon atop the Daily Planet. You're back to Brown, back to craziness, back to studies and behind in your work again. You console yourself with the Brown student's motto: The sooner I get behind, the more time I'll have to catch up. But at least you got away for a while. 49 50 FARILTIED FPARILIED PARTIES Drill PARTIES Neuhaus 2 i Wt th p-ldt-!dl I i nibind PARTIES 51 PARTIEDS PARTIES PARTIES Lowen Weeknight: Sick of working. Time to go quaff a beer and unwind. Hello, is Paul there? Yeah, I'll wait ... Paul, wanna go to the GCB? Yup, ten minutes. Bye. Same rou- tine. Arrive, leave the ID at the door and wander about in search of some TA from the recent past to sign us in. What a pain in the ass. Lousy system. Go in, get a beer. Same dis- cussions: sex and politics. I wonder if they're related. Put up a quarter, get our butts kicked at foozball. Play again for pride the lights go out halfway through because it's one o'clock. Go home to work? To sleep. Weekend: Bill? Who's playing at the Grad Center to- night? Thrills. Better than nothing, I guess. See you later. Same place, different routine. Pay the dollar, get your hand stamped. Interesting crowd more packed than usual. God, some nights it's suffocatingly dead here. New Wave band not your mainstream crowd. Quite a few un- familiar faces. Ah, yes, the regulars. Some of these faculty members spend more time here than I do. Look at him! He always had a strange look. I wouldn't trust him with a rifle near a tall building. Dance once or twice. Damn, it's hot out there. Where's my beer? Gone. Hmm, getting close to one o'clock. Another dance, then two more. Small talk in the bar. Bright girl. Very cute. Leaves with three friends. Great. Fantasies explode. Band stops. Reality intrudes. Time to go. What time you eating brunch tomorrow? Give guE el o Lowen 54 HEALTH SERVICES Good for what ails you. This epithet found on many a label in the days of traveling medicine shows may or may not be ap- propriate description of Brown's Health Services. It would cer- tainly be reassuring if this was the consensus, but the general feeling on campus towards Andrews House is not totally dissim- ilar to the national feeling for Richard Nixon: there are some who remain confident and loyal, but most are skeptical to say the least. It's not exactly that we think of the nurses as mal- evolent spirits who gleefully switch prescriptions on us, or that the doctors crossed their fingers while taking the Hip- pocratic Oath, or that everyone who's ever entered the infirmary has subsequently died. And not everything strange that goes on there is due to some fault in administration; it's just that in- teresting situations do tend to arise there from time to time: You are waiting to see Doctor X, and you browse through your medical file which the nurse gave you to take in with you. You find some marks scribbled through the boxes indicating Presumptive Evidence Found on the routine Gonorrhea test you had done six months ago. Visions of sterility and madness skitter frantically through your brain until you get into the doc- tor's office and she identifies the marks as her initials, not check marks. You are sitting in the waiting room when the rather pale student next to you on the couch turns light green, sways, and you suddenly find his head in your lap. You cannot move, and being afraid to break the hushed atmosphere by calling for help you sit placidly, humming softly, pretending that nothing has happened. Of course this sort of thing doesn't happen every time, and it is possible to have an actually pleasant experience there, or at least as pleasant as is possible when you are sick. For the most part the staff are sympathetic, and qualified, and several are active in such organizations as drug and alcohol discussion groups, Topics in Human Sexuality, Sarah Doyle, and various counseling programs. While some people do get the impression that all that ever happens there is that a nurse tells you to gargle with salt water, this isn't gquite true. One suggestion, however. If you have to get sick, it's best to do it at night, when you will avoid hour-long vigils in the waiting room, catching everything that your waiting room companions have; and evade bothering concerned receptionists who, occasionally ask you to please repeat your incredibly embarrassing symptoms a little louder. Lo TR DR UGS, o ,Wrzlrftll? : 4 SN DRUGS, AND I T4 MORE DRUGS When it comes to social problems of drug and alcohol addic- tion, Brown is no different from any other community; the neighbor who never emerges from his pot-scented room the professor whose career degenerates as his alcohol intake in- creases the frat buddy who gets totally ripped one time too many. These situations are familiar to all of us, and yet, we can't talk about them. Instead, we hide problems with statements like It doesn't happen here. Bruce Donovan, Dean of Chemical Dependencies, works to liberate community awareness and en- courage an environment of communication in these areas. One in ten people has a serious drinking problem. Add to those problem drinkers the significant others who are effected by the drinker's actions, and many lives are touched. A knowledge of the far reaching implications of chemical depen- 1 dicies motivates the programs that Dean Donovan coordinates. 1l Working with the Dean, are: Dwight Heath, Dr. and Mrs. Ro- i seel Johnson, and David Lewis. J Chemical dependencies are treated as community problems: Dean Donovan encourages groups that are comprised of faculty, staff, and students. Such groupings cut across age or economic barriers to touch the very human elements that can effect all of us. The Brown community is not unique in that we too must deal with the painful consequences of chemical dependencies to all concerned. Yet, through the work of the Dean of Chemical De- pendencies and his committees, maybe we will all be different in our educated, liberated perspective in discussing drinking, drugs, and the people they can come to control. 55 EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO KNOW . .. Not professing to be student therapists, Student-to-Student is a peer counseling group. In addition to our counseling ser- vices, we give out information and referrals. We are open to the student body every night from 8-11. Originally a contraceptive information group, Student-to-Student is now open to any stu- dent concern. Counselors are merely there to lend an empathetic ear to those who want an unbiased opinion. Training is varied: ranging from listening exercises to discussions with local help agencies. Chaplain David Ames oversees Student-to-Student and has provided very consistent attention. It seems to me that we have helped some people; so the group does serve a purpose on the Brown campus. I have been dis- Tortora turbed, however, at our campus image as a pre-therapist oriented Alpert group. It is so difficult to be the same age as our clientele and still convince them that we can be of help to them. The prevalent attitude today is that help must come from someone older, edu- cated, and professional. We have a difficult concept to sell. Stu- dent-to-Student has quite far to travel before we gain the student body's trust. - An insider's perspective on Student-to-Student 56 250 students signed up for first semester's Topics in Human Sexuality, a six-week program which covered topics ranging from birth control to alternative lifestyles. Over 100 students participated in Topics II, a shortened version offered second semester, covering different areas such as rape, abortion, and decision-making. Dick Dannenfelser, the originator and head of the program now in its tenth year, along with Carla Hansen, states that the focus of the course is to encourage people to develop useful and accepting attitudes concerning their own sexuality and that of others. The program provides a forum for discussion of such topics as growing up malefemale, sexual response and dys- function, same-sex relationships, communication, and meeting people. Dannenfelser reiterates that one of the purposes of our program is to get sex out of the closet, and into open discussion among peers of both sexes. One student writes that it was very assuring to realize that other people have the same doubts and fears about sex that I do but also to see how others differ from me at the same time. Topics is also about something Dannenfelser and Hansen call sexual unfolding. The following are some of the students responses as to what they consider sexual unfolding to have been for them: It is being aware of many different aspects of sexuality and being open to those that look at sexuality in a dif- ferent manner than you. To me, unfolding is the process of examining and accepting the sexual preferences, desires, drives that occur in each individual. It is locking closely at one's value system and letting it grow and mature along with the physical and psychological parts. . . . Getting in touch with yourself. Unfortunately, I am still not comfortable with my sexuality. I happen to feel that sexual unfolding is the ability to express which I, as a male, feel that our culture and society has denied me. . . . must love my body and mind in order for others to love me. Being free to hold your own opinions and choose your own lifestyle and understand your own sexuality. According to many of the students who took the course, Topics offered them a relaxed look at human sexuality and provided exposure to opinions of both sexes. One person writes I think that Topics reinforced my positive feelings about being a woman. As far as the topics themselves were con- cerned, student's responses varied: Good run-down on birth control. lI can understand and accept people who aren't heterosexual. It has made me more tolerant. The open ap- proach to homosexuality . . . was a good reinforcing clarifica- tion. Dannenfelser belives that information and attitudes picked up from friends, family, and even religious institutions . have often done damage to people's image of their own sexuality, and he hopes that through programs like Topics in Human Sexuality people can achieve confidence in themselves as whole persons and responsible and open sexual human beings. Lowen FAITHS Religion faith the code that ar- ranges one's spiritual identity, takes many forms here at Brown. Ranging from the orthodox to the agnostic, the varied faiths of the Brown community are yet another reflection of its diversity. Jews, Protes- tants, Catholics, and those not affiliated with an organized religion each comprise approximately a quarter of the student body. Within each quarter is a wealth of thought and tradition to be shared. On the exterior, religion at Brown is: going to mass in thanks for a sunny day; allotting Monday nights for Hebrew classes at Hillel; attending choir practices or church council meetings; or learning what an ecumenical service is all about. Although these factors are important, it is the interiors the thoughts and dy- namics of faith both for groups and in- dividuals that make for exciting ex- change in this diverse community. Whether it be a sharing between friends of different beliefs or a debate on a fine point of a common faith, one learns much about one's own convictions through value-clarifying discourse with others. The special, intimate moments of spiritual insight and fulfillment and the sense of community gained through one's worship are precious aspects of religious experience. Almost as precious are those challenging, enlightening exchanges of viewpoints that utilize the broad Brown Community. Brown's special character cannot help but expand and enrich one's own spiritual life. 59 Buchanan 5 w ok 05 NSE o n B ot o V1ZE o 5 v o . s . 3 Qu k , . 3 O Ry o . b, o S - ,ewm, ; OzH S AN 3 .,w?u.l e ALY . e TR v 60 A BROWN GLOSSARY: By Alfie Kohn INTRODUCTION Following the publication of 1 Have an Opening in 1987: On the Accessibility of College Deans, Alfie Kohn has just recently completed his newest chef d'ceuvre which is, par excellence, his coup de grace with respect to his alma mater. Entitled A Brown Glossary for Beginners and Morons. it provides help- ful descriptions of commonly-used buildings, orga- nizations, and other phenomena at the most presti- gious Ivy League school in Rhode Island. Kohn, who was graduated magna cum absurdum in 1979, grac- iously permitted Liber Brunensis to excerpt certain of the entries in his soon-to-be published masterpiece, providing he was able to write the introduction which precedes it. HOW TO USE THIS GLOSSARY Having completed the introduction, the reader will doubtless mumble to himself, Well, this certainly promises to be a bit of engaging reading, eh? But how exactly does one make use of thiswhat do you call it?glossary? Such a question, of course, is re- marably inane. One simply selects the word or words to be defined which will appear on the left side of the page and then reads the sentence s which follow s from left s to right s. This seems rather obvious to you and me, but then Brown these days is awarding B.A.s to people whose intellectual facilities are roughly comparable to those of a Water Pik. THE GIOSSARY ITSELF ADMISSIONthe process by which eager young high school seniors are transferred into eager young college freshmen. Touted as a blind selec- tion, there are some who think dyslexic might be more accurate. Intellectual curiosity and well- founded creativity are among the strict criteria for being admitted to Brownexceptions being made only for children of alumni, applicants from weal- thy families, minorities, people from odd parts of the country, and athletes of various kinds. ANNMARY BROWN MEMORIALa library used only once since its construction: to house Annmary Brown. Along with the John Hay and the John Carter Brown, a building of interest to at least as many persons as make use of the History of Egyptology department. BEERthe mainstay of a Brown students existence, along with a frisbee and the Coronamatic. BLUE ROOM-a place in which students can bask in the radiance of professors and breathe smoky air while completing the New York Times cross- word puzzle. Favorite dishes include ice cream with real ice, and Tabpreferred by Jewish women from New York. BROWN DAILY HERALDBrown's newspaper, whose shrewd editorial judgement, scrupulously accurate reporting, and all-around professionalism have given it the reputation it has today. CONCENTRATION, INDEPENDENTThose who are not happy with standard offerings can put together their own concentration, providing they don't mind employers smiling patiently and ask- ing, No, but seriously. What was your major? A typical Independent Concentration title: The World, God, Life, Science, and Man: A Multi- disciplinary, Trans-cultural, Meta-historical View of Freedom, Rebellion, Literature, and the Future. CONCENTRATION, STANDARD INTERDISCI- PLINARY-To save students the trouble of creative thinking, a number of new concentrations offer ready-made combinations of different disciplines. Examples: Pet Shops and Society, and Slavic Chemistry. DIPLOMAa piece of paper signifying the comple- tion of four years at Brown. It, along with a quar- ter, will get you one newspaper. DOMINO'Sa snack bar which inexplicably does not honor credit for contract holders. Its pizza is edible only in contrast to The Gate's see. DRUGSsomething used only by those few who travel in fast crowds, and virtually unknown to bright, normal, successful students. ECD.C. EAST CAMPUS DINING CENTER- one of the snack bars for those fortunate enough to be on meal contract. Each year, the credit allotted to each student is raised by ten cents while the prices are raised, on the average, by twenty. This snack bar stocks a complete line of tempting foods from potatoes fried in something vaguely remin- iscent of tar to the newest taste treat: artificial mock cheesecake flavored product in a cup ECDC is conveniently located in East Providence. FRATERNITY-any of several associations of male students who are generally earnest, scholarly types, genuinely committed to school service, and whose harmless fun over the year has included zany dog Fights, playful racial incidents, good natured sexual assaults, old fashioned property destruction. and merry harrassment. GATE, THEformerly, one of three snack bars on campus, offering pizza and ice cream Currently, a disco palace. GUT a course which requires practically no work, provides almost nothing in the way of education, and is consequently in great demand by Brown stu- dents. HONORS-something granted to those seniors whose thesis bibliozraphiee exceed ten 10 pages and who laugh loudly at the jokes made by their advisers. IVY ROOM THE an olternate dining facility dur ing the day and n allnatural? inack bar a night Afficionados recommend the wax bean juice, the frozen yopurt in your choice of one flavar and the celection of Petrl dich checce samples MADDOCK ALUMNI CENTERan ostentatiously decorated building which serves as home-away- from-home for ostentatious alumni. Maddock's rooms are dispalyed on campus tours as typical of the kind of place in which your child will prob- ably live. MYTHSex is best when experienced in the context of a warm and caring relationship, founded on genuine commitment and mutality. Fact: Sex is best whenever you can get it. NEW CURRICULUM-as any freshman or dean can tell you, it's only28coursesnodistributionre- quirementsSNCoptionalfailuresnotonexternal- transcript. It is rumored that the New Curricu- lum once denoted a broad philosophy of educa- tion rather than a series of specifications calcu- lated to lure potential applicants from the other Lvies. PARTY, BROWN-a gathering characterized by darkness, the pervasive stench of beer, and music loud enough to render conversation virtually im- possible. What little communication does take place generally consists of Shit, cooja believe that mid-term? and Hey, wanna go back to my room? PROVIDENCEa city known principally for its proximity to Pawtucket. RATTY, THEthe central dining hall at Brown, fa- mous for its international cuisine. Particulary de- lightful dishes include Beef Bourgeoisie and Veal Paramecium. Soft ice cream has drawn more appli- cants to Brown than the New Curriculum, and those who have tired of the standard fare can sample the more exotic chicken soup ripple or Lasagna fudge. There are few things in this University on which students can depend, but there is never any doubt that when sandwiches or ham- burgers are served, the tomatoes will be quartered instead of sliced. RISDthe affectionate acronym for the Really In- credibly Spacey Departments further down the hill. With students who are smashes at costume parties even when they make no effort to dress-up, it's no wonder that Brown is proud of its ties with our sister schoolJohnson and Wales. ROCK, THEthe major library on campus, named for Rocky, a Sylvester Stallone character who was rather disorganized and not very bright. Its new computerized system insures that books are lost more efficiently. SARAH DOYLE CENTER, THEdespite its pose as a gathering place for feminists, actually a train- ing school where girls are instructed in the arts of pleasing a man, readying themselves for mar- riage and housework, dressing attractively, and using their feminine charms. Miss Doyle, the Cen- ter's namesake, used to enjoy throwing large din- ner parties so she could put on frilly dress and sing I Enjoy Being a Girl. SEMIOTICSYour guess is probably as good as anyone's. SENIOR CLASS GIFT CAMPAIGN-A group of enterprising seniors each year inexplicably volun- teer to pester their classmates and convince them that the $30,000.00 each has just shelled out to Brown is not nearly enough. After graduation, the Brown Fund takes over, tracking down alumni no matter where they hide and trying to wheedle them into giving yet more money to such projects as reno- vating the Faculty Club, and building poster kiosks. The Brown Fund's slogan is: If we don't, who cares? SEX AT BROWN-see MYTHYS STEINART PRACTICE CENTER-a building which contains two less pianos than there are people who want to practice. Many of the pianos offer avant- grade sounds, such as two tones for each key. SHaNa oy N P Z Uo R TENURE-something generally granted to profes- sors who publish articles on narrow topics in arcane journals and, currently, to virtually all women and members of minority groups. Anyone particularly gifted in or committed to teaching is unlikely to receive it. U.C.SUNDERGRADUATES COUNCIL OF STU- DENTSafter the Cammarian Club was dis- mantled and replaced by the Student Caucus, it seemed reasonable to dismantle the Caucus and re- place it with the U.C.S. Once a hot bed of stu- dent activism, the U.C.S. currently devotes itself to such substantive projects as Winter Carnivals, Beautify Brown Days, and deciding on the color of the crepe paper used at the Campus Dance. WOMAN-what Brown students are instructed to call any female over the age of ten. ZTENUREalternate spelling of Tenure see 61 SaAdI Treves Treves 62 PAPER RECYCLING 4 Berkowitz Berkowitz Bruhaha Fall 1974 introduced or acclimated us to Barron's and other college guides. We applied to the U fifteen miles down the pike, and skimmed over to the more exotic schools. Stanford, Chicago . . . look that little group up at the top. Harvard, Yale, yeah, heard of all those except for, ah, Brown. Brown, mmm . . . Jes- us, six to one! Female to male? No, student body to Faculty. Mmm. It's in Massachusetts, no, wait Rhode Island. Tiny. When I had wooden jigsaw maps of the US., Rhode Island always got lost or eaten. I still have a couple of Texases. Yeah, no, I mean Brown is tiny. Less than seven thousand students in the whole University. Hey . . . Winter 1974-75. Likely? I'm likely to be accepted! I just heard! So I printed Likely on a t-shirt. What's with your Marlboro State Community College shirt? STUDIES: READING without required reading, there is enough to fill the day in newspapers, interesting books and the pitiful humor of fellow undergraduates. The general ruleread only what you buy and buy only what you can affordcant narrow it down enough, and then there is the library, adding more free goodies in a year . .. We have been reading for eighteen years, and we're very good at it. Is there one among you who does not frequently turn the page of a particularly des- sicative book, begin at the top, wake up at the bottom and realize that your head and closed eyes have been making faithful reading motions all that time? Anyone in the wordy sciences, especially economics, has a subconscious that is better-read a book in the normal way and then realize that you don't remem- ber a word of it that you should get out of that area and try Comparative Literature. GETTING IN: I was accepted into Brown early decision and I'm practicing the campus fashions. Most hopefuls waited until April, keeping up with their semester VIII schoolwork, nervously, as children try acting good in December. The rest is studying Bear Facts and packing stereos. Reading! Unlike going to class and writing papers, there can never be a finished! feeling to it. Even LECTURES Along with memorization and note-taking in the classroom is the Socratic response, which consists of for the lecturerinstant gratification. Abso- !uter. Yes Certainly Undoubtedly That is o This is true. Not a man of sense but must agree. I go along with that. Sho nuff can dig it. That is undeniably so Hear, hear. No shit! You're right. I have no argu- ment with this. Right on. PAPERS Papers are commonly returned with sp., awk. and nonsense in the margins and a short message of guarded encouragement, tilted to thirty degrees, at the end, followed by drawn with a flourish a single let- ter of the alphabet. If the paper was one bought from FBN Term Papers, Incs., the grader usually adds some comment about how the company might give a thought to updating their footnotes, or how mar- velously this paper FBN 12-118, right? has held up since it was first submitted to him back in 1966. NC. Not until you are out of school completely and ac- tually working among the volk will you realize what a privilege it was to spend four years at Brown among people who were not militantly anti-intellectual, who were generally able, and even willing to talk, on at least the level of the well-informed layman, on most subjects. Too bad you did such a lousy job of meeting them during your Freshman Week. A lot of fascin- ating humans, in your own class, are lost to you for- ever. That goes as well for the students above, you, the students behind you, the Corporation, the Faculty, the AdministrATION, and the staff. Editors note: you'll always have the bears. For copies of the complete Bruhaha, send inquiries to: 4462 East Seventh St., Tucson, Az. 85711. BRUBYEBYE 65 SPEAKING O T Students were milling on the Green, eating natural food from Big Mother, lying on the Henry Moore sculp- ture, and listening to jazz music. It was a hazy day, a sunlit Friday the thirteenth, and the air was tense. A rally for the divestiture of Brown University funds in South Africa was scheduled for 12:30. Backpacks and book bags lay scattered on the lawn. A podium was set up in front of University Hall. Brick- layers worked on another ugly new kiosk; a man rode a mower on the sidewalk past the booth providing the music; a girl wore a red headbanda symbol for divest- ment supporters. Corporation types and parents of freshmen walked around the Green, the former group in ties and three-piece suits: all had the general look of con- fusionas if to say What the heck is going on? Almost abruptly, although everyone had been anti- cipating it, shouts began to emanate from the hallowed womb of Faunce House. Armbands like tourniquets graced rallying students arms as they marched through the arch, clapping their hands and shouting DIVEST! and 75 Still Alive! Those who spoke offered slogans to the audience which were echoed in fervent response: Together we stand, we make our demands! Talk is cheap but we want action! What's the word? Divest! and the rhetorical Are we a happy group? The final words of the last speaker were We will be heard! and someone in the audience yelled, I hear you, Pedrol The speaker then told the audience to march, double file, past the John Hay Library, where the Corporation was meeting, and then to University Hally for more speech-making. The remaining students headed down the Hill shouting BROWN OUT! DIVEST! DIVEST! DIVEST! Alperin Alperin Fa BN CHE CK yoyN? PR Yo ma N T S Alperin S LU i 4 - e 68 PROVIDENCE WINTER A talented, though non-Bruninian American History scholar offers a novel frontier thesis. He hypothesizes that if the U.S. were discovered on the westcoast and settled eastward, New England would still be uninhabited. Providence winters lend credence to his theory. What can you say about Providence winters? That they're long, wet, dreary, occasionally white and anti-climactic compared to last year's blizzard that brought us the Army and four days off. Okay, Providence winters are boring, but, you ask, aren't Brown students supposed to be creative? Sure, but even the most imaginative winter sports enthusiast has a hard time hallu- cinating in in Providence. You can skid down college hill on frozen drizzle in car or shuttle bus and think Aspen. There's always ice skating at Meehanyou can't catch a cold there. And they've got a neat ice making machine in the Ivy room and . . . There's always a bus north. Tortora Tortora R - T e S Nk SRR TR eRa 69 uewaised c S E o w s V WINTER CARNIVAL With visions of ice sculpture, ski races, and mounds of snow dancing in their heads, the UCS valiantly tried to coordinate a sugarplum of a Winter-Weekend Brown's first. Somehow, the weather didn't want to cooperate and frosty festivities were but cold dreams. A few events like the Dating Game in Sayles and the West Quad Follies we were successful and attracted rather large turn- outs. As this was the first winter extravaganza, people didn't quite know what to expect, having only the orgies of Hanover, N.H. to compare it to. In the years to come Winter Weekend might grow into a lasting tradition if the weather cooperates. 4 MoLescrm GENUINE f SPRING FEVER Castleman N Windows open up, papers fly away, stereo speakers address the world, and people tend to forget where the libraries are: spring strikes. In Wriston Quad, there are new wall hang- ings. By wall hangings, we do not, of course, refer to Cezanne prints, but rather people out for sun and scenery on fraternity walls. The green gets greener except in Wriston where the process is reversed. Puppies pro- liferate and melt the most hardened grimace into a grin. After a confined winter, the athlete in all comes out from the cold and Brown sweats and shorts suddenly dominate the streets. Due to several months' neglect, limbs are stretched to the point where muscles remind you just how long they have been neglected. Manifestations of a phenomenon known as cabin fever are evident with the appearance of dozens of new couples that walk about the campus as single units. On the green, guitars, t-shirts, indian print skirts, and frisbees dominate the background. A warm wave of activism often strikes with friendly weather. Buchanan Buchanan IR W ey T, undl 72 Alperin SPRING WEEKEND Typical Providence weather did not dampen Spring Weekend spirits. Friday afternoon saw most of the student body bumping for beer and pushing for punch in the relocated Hegeman party in Sayles. The traditional Casino Night was forgone this year due to financial difficulties and problems with licensing. The Association of Fraternity Presidents sponsored a semi-formal dance in the Ratty instead. Other than a few high-heels stuck in the mud on the way over, the dance was a success. Inclimate weather brought concert-goers inside Meehan Saturday afternocon. Though Meehan suffered in comparison to Pembroke field, John Hall, Pousette-Dart and the At- lanta Rhythm Section pleased the crowd any- way. Rock and roll was followed by the borsch belt beat of the combo at the Ratty Saturday night. As usual, students were happily over- whelmed by the variety of decorations and good food. Alperin Buchanan CFINNAINCIAL ALD - Faced with $8000 in college fees and costs, most Brown students could not finance their education without some sort of aid, whether in loans, scholarships, or jobs arranged through financial aid. This is the lean era of the loan. Thanks to government legislation, just about any- one can take out a bank loan for higher education and many people do. Dealing in tangible terms, people leave Brown with debts that could finance anything from a Volkswagon to a middle-sized Mercedes. Filing for financial aid and waiting for results to come back from Princeton and the vatious committees is often a nerve-wracking experience that makes one wonder whether or not it's worth the effort. It usually . . . 76 Blackwood Blackwood .Ik N WORK Sweeping stairwells, checking out books, typing papers for the guy up- stairs, or catering for VIP's: one of these jobs might have kept your wallet chubby after you spent the money you made from cutting down to seven meals. The libraries insist upon ten hours - a week from their student employees - a demanding schedule. Yet there are those among us who hold down two or three jobs for up to forty hours a week. People do everything from freelance work for national magazines to directing traf- fic in Warwick to playing Brad Majors in Rocky Horror every other weekend. Despite the academic and social stres- ses caused by hours of work, the effort is necessary for the health of your wallet or student account with the bursar. o e breag fugf - Eatling Blackwood Blackwood Buchanan B TIME OFF Twenty Ratty meals a week; a nice hike from Appleby every morning; lovely Providence weather; a fight for a carrel on the fourteenth floor of the Sci-Li; and 8:00 class in Metcalfwhy would anyone want to leave Brown? In spite of these enticements, many students do decide to take a semester or more away from Brown, if only to appreciate Ratty eggs all the more when they return. Consider this you could spend a year mountaineering in the Alps, be a cab driver in New York City or work in a casino dealing black jack. If it all sounds far-fetched to you, it did not to the Brown students who have actually done these things during their time off from Brown. The newest term for taking a leave of absence from Brown is Stopping Out an adaption of the '60's trend dropping out, and in reality a misnomer considering that what many stop outs are doing is starting rather than stopping. It used to be that taking a leave of absence was in- dicative of some sort of failure, but that is no longer the case. Not only has it become relatively easy to take time off, but there are a number of people around who will ac- tively encourage you to do so. The options that Brown students have chosen in the past few years reflect everything from the commomplace to the truly bizarre. During the '75-76 school year, 80 Brown stu- dents chose to study abroad for either one semester or the entire year. That figure has risen to 162 for the 77-78 year. While everybody's favorite choices are France and England, Brown has also sent students to Africa, Egypt, Japan, Rus- sia, South America, Taiwan and even Nepal As Brown doesn't sponsor extensive programs of its own, most stu- dents go with other American university programs, or enroll directly in foreign universities. Study abroad, however, is only one of the many oppor- tunities taken advantage of by Brown students. stopping out. Many students take odd jobs or do volunteer work, but many others take time off with a very specific aim in mind. Brown stop outs in the past have done ranch work, surveyed land use, taught travelling gypsy children to read, lived on a Kibbutz, joined a circus, spent time in a Buddhist monastery and looked for and found America. The reasons given for taking time off vary as much as do the choices of what to do. Most common are a desire to do something new, a search for independence, boredom with the academic environment, a lack of goals and a sense of floundering, and a quest for practical experience. One student took time off to return to the hometown honey. Most of the reactions of those who have taken time off have been quite positivein addition to meeting new people and having interesting experiences, most felt they had a stronger sense of their own identity and of their expecta- tions and goals. The drawbacks seem to be temporary lone- liness, an adjustment to leaving a college environment, not graduating with your original class and the prospect of a rise in tuition by the time you return to Brown. Hoever, many people within the university are willing to help make your time off more successful and easier to arrange. Among those whose guidance have been especially helpful, are Dean Thomas, Dean Romer, Dean Hall, and Dean Bechtel. The College Venture program run through the Resource Center is also a an alternative for people considering time off. Originally run out of Northeastern University, the program was established to assist students taking leaves of absence from participating New England college in find- ing meaningful and interesting jobs. In general, most Brown students who have returned from stopping out have felt that they benefitted from their time off. The wide range of opportunities makes choosing difficult at times, but the concept of stopping out seems to offer an exciting alternative to normal study patterns at Brown. The advice given by most students who have re- turned from time off is simply this, Do it. Castleman 78 Chernov 4 RESUMED ED. Austin e The Resumed Undergraduate Educa- tion Association is a program designed especially for those older students who have been away from school for awhile. Resumed Ed students may attend on a part-time basis, thereby blending aca- demic life with real life. Considered a vital part of the student body, RUE is involved in all phases of campus ac- tivity. Members gather throughtout the year, sharing the riches of experience, and generally upholding the tradition that age is sage. 1 Austin 79 80 Alperin Alperin - 1 SARAH DOYE . A g WOM s S . . o STREET LEFT TO RIGHT: Kneeling; Jack Dorer, Phil Budzenski, First row; Rip Baird, Paul Laubach, Tom Nammack, Chris Bohrson, Mark Holmes, Bill Muller, Greg Jacobs, Jay Ryan, Lorenzo Majno, Second row; Tim Konieczny, Charley Biddle, Phil Eisenberg, Steve Billings, Dave Stevens, Werner Zurcher, Chris Hug, Paul Maglione, Steve Merriam, Crawford Brown, Larry Sorrel, Marty Silverman, Basil Williams, Mark McDonnell, Third row; Howdy Fefi, Paul Stickney, Mark Munroe, Lawrence Fox, Jim Kelly, Alpo Post, Scot Rowe, Steve Chapin, Brad Lingham, Mark Aikins, John Ander- sen, Dave Duncan, Kent Rapp, Rick Stockwell, Jim Sloan, Dr. Dan Harrop, Jim Delaney, Jed Kwartler. LEFT TO RIGHT: First row; Mike Audie, Ned Corcoran, Hank Conaty, Marty Pudlowski, John Egan, Kevin Carrabine, John McCabe, Dave Vachal- ek, Second row; Chip Alexander, Ted Tracy, John Rooney, Mark Wheeland, John Sinnott, Tim Bruno, Roger Amato, Tony Mancini, Pat Clark, Bob Kindler, Third row; Scott Kidgar, John Woodring, Chris Stenberg, Doug DeSimone, John Lee, Steve Dorsey, George Burkle, Charles Kimes, Colm Crownin. Not pictured: B. Buckley, B. Forster, R. Drye, J. Llewellyn, C. Margiotta, B. Alterman, M. Estrich, T. Dunn, P. Herzan, M. Farnham, B. Shorb, E. Shober, R. Settipane, R. R. Settipane, E. Ponko, D. Place, T. Pacitti, T. Misaki, R. Mettus, F. Mello, P. Lucey, M. Lancaster, J. Jamiel, C. Glid- den, G. Deitchman, R. Chapa, P. Chan, L. Carbone, P. Brunelli, C. Barsanti, J. Ahern. Nager LEFT TO RIGHT: First row; Dave O'Brien, John Fenton, Pat Donovan, Mark Holden, Mark Gherity, Chuck McCoy, Jim Crocker, John Rukavina, Don MacLeod, Al Shoer, Jeff Schneider, Second row; Chris Gibson, Kyle Simpson, Todd Krouhner, Tad Barrows, Danny Santanello, Carl Berkowitz, Mike Laycock, Mike Boltons, Ricky Scully, Tim Munoz, Mike Lapointe, Rick Meller, Lenny Ranalli, Dave Piscuskas. Lowen L A- j A L . LEFT TO RIGHT: Oliver Ndimbie, Russell Ellsworth, Mark Thurston, Jed Laderman, Lars Erickson, Peter Kretzmar, Mark LaBrande, Rich Pryor, Jeff Rosethal, George Elchner, Graham Sullivan, Andrew Gheto, Andrew Carpenter, Ronald Goldstein, Tim Good, Michael Cohen. 81 82 Theta Delta Chi Alperin LEFT TO RIGHT: First row; James A. Lawson, John Rudberg, Jonathan Horowitz, George Taffet, Second row; Albert Beland, Scott Dumont, Robert Pannel, Rick Villela, Craig Pattenaude, Marshall Obranic, Robert Mansfield, Joseph P. Hickey, Steven Brown, John LeClair, John Floyd, Michael Knight, Kevin Ryder, Third row; John Prassas, Peter Fleming, Charles Boucher, Matthew Magida, Peter Porcelli, John DeSantis, James Amaral, John Buddy Dyer, Steve Curtain, Stan Maximovich, Jack Huebschmann, Louis Gaffney, Fourth Row; William Poulos, Ian Maxtone-Graham, William Grodski, Barclay Schultz, Michael Cowell, Lawrence Berkman, Henry Cialone, Jeff Preble, Richard Friedman. il BRI EHEHAH LM il 1UH I ll -.- g l i l LEFT TO RIGHT: First row; Scott Benedict, Theodore Lucky, Wayne Samartino, Jeff Stolzer, John Walsh, Howard Silver, Second row: Charles Ef- fron, Peter Burrow, Richard Wiese, Jonathan Jaivin, David Durfee, Jack Ruh, Steven Scionti, Raul Vela, Steven Vandetti, Third row; Thomas Hemin- dinger, Alan Fiebelman, Pat DeGrouchy, Richard Dunn. Not Pictured: Roy Topik, Jerry Neveau, Ted Smith, Mick Simon, Howard McMillan, Robert Welch, Robert Berger. PBX ; c x E o LEFT TO RIGHT: Michael Walton, Clarence Featherson, Garland Dance, Donald Eversley President, Charles Wright National Vice President, Warren Wynn, James Kennedy. Not pictured: Fredrick Lee, Barry Lofton. g 2 - - LEET TO RIGHT: First row; Susan Romero, Patricia Zuber, Shawn Kennon. Second row; Pia Brown, Carol Stokes, Renee Morris, Wanda Nettles, Marlyn Lowe. 83 Lowen 84 Alperin APA LEFT TO RIGHT: Calvin A. Michael, Richard B. Moore, Eska R. Bly, Steven R. Jordan, Bernard F. Godley, Arthur D. Wright III, Michael E. McPher- son. Not pictured: Henry J. Pippins, Michael C. Frazier, David L. Collier. 3P A Y e e e Y PR LEFT TO RIGHT: Front row: Jeff Smith, Nolan Smith, Adam Kurzer, Jim Currie, Scott Merril, Will Bunch, Phil Diaz, Ricky Deutch, Rob Stum- berger, Dave Mueller, Jon Galef, Jetf Robinson, Second row; Dan Livingstone, Gary Siegel, Tom Hornick, Dave Livingstone, Dave Zabel, Josh Hauser, Tim Vara, Dave Liberatti, Glenn McDonald, Third row: Jon Drill, Gary Doodlesack, Sam Weigbreit, Brooks Benson, Tim Walker, Jeff Facter, John Shaw, Jeff Lang, Chuck Keller, John Queenan, Bill Scholtz, Bob Blake, Mark Gould Paul Delsan Carl na Drill z a nma 7 8 Abrty RIDWWn NYAXJ-'CD..Am INta 885owm - CONO a O PROFESSORS Harry D. Latimer, Political Science Hendrik J. Gerritsen, Physics Francois Hugot, French All Photos By Lowen Professor William Poole is unique in his ability to bring the real world applications of economics into a class of economic theory. Armed with the morning newspaper, he often demon- strates how the topic for the day explains the situation de- scribed in the Times. His position as staff advisor to the Bos- ton Federal Reserve and his frequent advisory trips to Wash- ington underscore this close tie between the theories he is teaching and actual policy decisions of our government. Upon completing Professor Poole's 122 course, students have a definite view of how the economy operates. He is never reluctant to express his opinion on the economy, the Con- gress, or the President. Known for the clarity but also the rapid pace of his lec- tures, Professor Poole demands a great deal from his students. This devotion is not one-sided, however. In addition to regular office hours, Professor Poole has also instituted special infor- mal discussion sessions, led by him, which allow the students to probe deeply into the issues of the course. A semester with Professor Poole tests endurance, but more importantly, it trains minds. In many ways, Professor Tom Gleason of the His- tory department fits the stereotype of an Ivy League college professor. He wears glasses. He carries a brief- case stuffed with papers and exam booklets. He sports tweed jackets with suede elbow patches. Yet, in one significant way, Professor Gleason is unlike any other professor: he's really a sophomore. He is not a freshman; he lacks the wide-eyed amaze- ment at finally finding himself at college after all those years in high school. He is not a junior; he doesn't work doggedly or single-mindedly enough. And he's certainly not a jaded, bored senior, eager to leave for the real world that exists outside the ivory tower that is Brown. We all know that Professor Gleason graduated years ago from a small college just north of Pawtuck- et. Yet, he truly is a sophomore, with all the exuber- ance and optimism that is found only between fresh- man incredulity and junior over-achieving. Even his humor fits the bill. One never forgets the man behind the scholar when learning with professor of English and Comparative Literature Sears Jay- ne. He is a true humanist, forever responding to the ideas and values he communicates. Mr. Jayne's sincerity can be disarming, but once students accept his personal involvement in what he is teaching in his desire to share what he has loved and sought they cannot help but join in his joy, excitement, and often pure wonder in beautiful works, ideas, and people. His lectures are dramatic, exciting and always unpredictable. Students re- spond with raucous laughter at Professor Jayne's French recita- tions of bad medieval poetry and with tearful, breathless awe at his brilliance, insight and tender humanity. Professor Jayne's gentle sincerity follows him out of the class- room, and he is a warm, accepting, and unaffectedly sentimental friend. He fears the aggressive pre-professionalism that is con- suming Brown students, and listens with a personal interest which extends far beyond the student-teacher relationship. One feels that Mr. Jayne has shown his students real values and com- mitments which are larger than any classroom. His compassion, his passionate contempt for human cruelty, or his affection for a lost dream or foolish hero cannot be forgotten. Learning with Professor Jayne, one can glimpse the fulfillment of his wish for his students: convert your self-pity to humor, convert the horror to hope. All Photos By Lowen Albert Douglas VanNostrand insists you call him Van. His whole style of teaching reflects informality. Sitting in the center of a group of students, he will ponder his text seriously, and look up over his reading glasses to literally gather discus- sion around him. He likes to think things through before he speaks, but he always talks or lectures as if to a group of friends over for a Saturday night discussion. Van helped pioneer a method of teaching writing which has received national press coverage, and which English I students will remember as Fundamentals of Writing. He has been busy in recent years expanding this method, using Brown as a lab- oratory to test it, in workshops and seminars. Economics Professor Mark Shupack is a very popular man at Brown University. Students have come to appre- ciate his witting and relaxed teaching style and his cheer- ful willingness to help anyone who might come to his door. Professor Schupack has also been noticed by the administration, and more and more of his time is being devoted to his position as associate dean of the faculty. In this capacity, Dr. Schupack works on forming a new Master of Business Economics program work which has lessened his teaching time. Nonetheless, he is never too busy to discuss energy policy, a computer project or your next economics paper. Professor Schupack seems to fit everything into his busy schedule, including time to care about the people at Brown. Princeton alum Thomas Mutch is concerned professionally with stratigraphy, planetary geo- logy, and the geology of the Northern Appa- lachians. Having recently led a group of twenty- four students, alumni, faculty, and friends to the summit of the 21,904 foot Mt. Devistan in the In- dian Himalayas, Tim Mutch is universally regard- ed as Brown's resident explorer. Professor Mutch sums up his experiences as the leader of the Leader Imaging Planning Science Team for NASA's Vik- ing project in a book he authored called The Mar- tian Landscape. These and other such experiences which have led Tim Mutch from the ice-glazed peaks of Antartica to'the plains of Mars,prove to be invaluable to his students, as his matter-of-fact style is punctuated with personal anecdotes perti- nent to course material. All Photos By Lowen Except Prof. Barnhill By B.D.H Professor, director, and actor Jim Barnhill always has something to say about the theatre, and as department chairman he plays an integral role in bringirig theatre to Brown. Wherever this pursuit leads him, Barnhill blends a definite stage presence with the quin- tessential image of a colorful, absentminded professor. In his voice and acting classes, Jim promotes a family atmosphere, insisting that his students share their feelings and get to know one another. Student thespians quickly learn that his bushy grey eyebrows har- bor certain encouraging intensity: don't be afraid to fall on your 'keester is a constant theme in TA 22-24. Barnhill's interest in the theatre is a vital one and his love for his field is evident. Anyone who has worked under his direction, or, attended his office hours, knows that his attitude of sharing and support extends far beyond class walls. Mr. Wilner, 'the facts of Baker verus Carr, please. A whimper is heard from the back of the room as Mr. Wilner frantically searches through 500 pages of xeroxed materials. All eyes are focused on him as he prepares to do intellectual battle with Professor Edward Beiser of the Politi- cal Science department. Beiser's socratic method has frightened many students in- to actually thinking. Query this, sports fans, the Professor begins, perched on tiptoe, arms and fingers outstretched. Why shouldn't Vince Lombardi have been a Supreme Court justice? It may seem off the point, but Beiser uses every- thing from ludicrous hypotheticals to Alice in Wonderland to make his point. Equipped with his ever-present can of soda, he leads the class through a complex maze of cosmic questions. He forces students to grapple with difficult issues that extend beyond the confines of his courses. Although many find him intimidating, most agree that his courses are worthwhile and rewarding. Thomas F. Banchoff, Professor of Mathematics, is con- demned forever to feel constrained by his mere three- dimensional universe, and in his fourth-dimension courses he invites us to share his fate. To his students some of whom swing their arms as if to dare this smiling sorcerer to make them feel trapped in 3-space, he shows a sectioned cardboard cross six connected squares and folds it into a cube. Fine. But the class, asked to form the cube in two dimensions, can only suggest bending the square into trapezoids to touch all the proper edges together. Banchoff, with a joke at the expense of the cubeless denizens of Flatland, displays an eight-cube cardboard model of the crucifix persuasion which he calls an unfolded tesseract, or 4-D cube. He dares the class to fold it up. Well, the class growls, we could, if we had enough di- mensions to work with. Gotcha. This is mathematics without numbers, and Banchoff is en- joying it as much as anybody. He inspires confidence and the subject begets enthusiasm, and the student, seized with the same perceptive madness that leads mathematicians to scrib- ble on tablecloths, periodically leaps forward and comman- deers part of the chalkboard: drawing, writing, looking for 2 way out of this 3-D prison that he never quite noticed before. Banchoff knows the feeling. His style is unforgettable. His face is legendary. His smile is loveable. His class is fun. He is, of course, Dean Barrett Hazeltine. This shy, unassuming man is one of the most popular professors at Brown. Engin 9, his best- known course, boasts the largest enrollment on campus. What is it about the Dean that is so appealing? Per- haps it is his incredibly genuine interest in students. Few things warm the heart as much as his friendly hello across the green or classroom. Many find it hard to be- lieve that the Dean never forgets a name or face, even of students briefly met. The most amazing and appealing thing about Dean Hazeltine is his total dedication to the students and to his profession. Classes are timed for the students' conven- ience, even if that means giving the same lecture three times in one day. Detailed lecture notes with extensive bibliographies are always available, as is the Dean. He can be found in his office every morning at 8:30 or earli- er, even on Saturdays. And the door is always open. When Dean Hazeltine asks, Is everybody O.K.? you know he really means it. All Photos By Drill Exept Prof. Beiser By Karnow,B.D.H 93 ! 1 5 S j Dressed in his usual sartorial splendor, a pointer poised gingerly atop his head, Pro- fessor Bill Wooten gives his annual poignent rendering of a hair cell to his Psych 1 stu- dents. In this instance, Professor Wooten manages to do what few others can: he nar- rows the perceived gap between instructor and student. The wry humor, interest in the subject, fascinating demonstrations, apparent and genuine regard for students and natty dres- sing that Professor Wooten brings to his classes, whether it be Psych 1 or Psych 27, has caused him to become one of the most popular professors at Brown. It almost seems as though not only is he known campus- wide, but also that he knows students camp- us-wide: acknowledging those he recognizes with a smile, nod or remark of some sort. He is one professor who, by his attention to the individual student, turns an impersonal academic setting into one that is close and familiar. o E - - . - 5 One of the most distinguished men in his department, Organic Chemistry Professor Leal- lyn B. Clapp is more than just another nice guy. Coming out of the South 37 years ago, Pro- fessor Clapp has helped to develop and build the fine reputation of Brown's Chem department. Although soft-spoken in lecture, Professor Clapp is able to cover enormous amounts of material at a time. This is partially due to his precision and efficient use of board space. Pro- fessor Clapp has been teaching chemistry long enough to make chemistry an ever-expanding field; teaching material has changed over the years. Yet, Professor Clapp has never seemed to tire of teaching. All Photos By Lowen Professor H. T. Banks is a high-spirited applied mathematician. Many of us have no trouble recalling the creed of AM 33734 stated emphatically by Dr. Banks on numerous occasions:Differential equa- tions are a lot like sex; you have to practice to become good. Dr. Banks indeed ensured that a student could master any subject matter presented through his patience and availability at virtually any time. Faster than a speeding bullet, Professor Banks pitches his lectures to the most hearty and inquisitive, though the straggler has no trouble in catching up after some old-fashioned hard work and several visits to office hours. Among his other notable traits are his Southern ac- cent, which at his rate of speed could never be classified as a drawl, writing on the blackboard with one hand while erasing with the other and an uncanny abilitiy to make you fill a ninety page notebook well before the end of the semester even though he's left out steps in the derivations! One can be sure of learning an unbelievable amount while having a great time in any of Professor Banks' courses. And the hard work has its rewards. Dr Banks and his wife throw terrific parties for the sur- vivors with the best punch in Providence. In Engineering, which is often thought to be a discipline solely concerned with numbers and equations, a human touch is provided by professors like Edward T. Kornhauser. Seme- sters after a course with him has been completed, he is still concerned about his students and their pursuits. Professor Kornhauser's perpetually open door is tangible evidence of his interest. Besides his research, he has teaching and counseling duties. Professor Kornhauser is currently in charge of the first course that an engineer takes at Brown. Understanding, support, and help are provided by him during this difficult transition per- iod. In following years, students will again encounter Pro- fessor Kornhauser in his specialities, electricity and magne- tism. He is also the advisor for the Five-Year Masters and Known to her students as Susanne, she has a pentra- ting stare delivered from behind glasses, and always a slightly cocked smile on her face a face framed in long straight hair. Her manner is direct, and her favorite sub- ject of debate is poetry. Having devised her own system of scanning poems, Professor Woods applies it to her favorite period of Eng- lish verse: the English Renaissance. She amazes students by comparing the Renaissance with California in the 1960's. She lectures in a precise style, but prefers stu- dents to make counterpoint and to argue with her. Direc- Honors Program. tor of the Honors English program, she shoulders re- sponsibility for a demanding schedule of guidance. Professor James W. Head, 111, a 1969 Brown Ph. D., centers his research around processes and evolution of planetary surfaces, Volcanology, and Appalachian stratigraphy. The exceptional organ- ization of his lectures blends well with his en- thusiasm for the subject matter. Many, if not all students regard Jim Head's easy-going personality an attribute to his performance in both the field and the classroom, in courses such as Mars, Moon, and the Earth, and Sedimentation and Stratigraphy. Had they been contemporaries, Professor Louis Lipsitt and Wil- liam Shakespeare might have argued a bit. Once Shakespeare wrote A rose by any other name would smell as sweet, Lipsitt would have attacked the bard's logic. You see, Professor Lipsitt has this theory about the way your name effects your line of work. He might tell you about it some day, just as he has enlightened all his students. The name theory works especially well in this case: Lips-itt. Spec- ialist reknowned for research in infantile sucking response, lips are it for this Professor from the Psychology department. Evidence of his research often appears in slides, graphs, and movies in the classroom. Evidence of a very wry sense of humor appears fre- quently in his classes, too. All Photos By Lowen 95 96 bROUWNING A Flon High school. Ah, high school. Swimming was so much easier then. You undoubtedly were a big fish in a little pond. You owned that pond, eh? Sure you did. Eventually you felt bored by the same old shores and looked to bigger waters. CYCLE 1 You rolled into Brown freshman year on a wave of academic and personal triumphs. You were excited and overwhelmed Brown wasn't a pond; it was an ocean bay. You knew you were made for swimming in waters like this in the challenge of new currents of thought. This was part of the salt water sea hard to swallow if you happend to choke. You needed time to adjust. You had to get your fins wet slowly. Until you adjusted, it seemed like schools of upperclassmen left you in their wakes. The freshman is not given credit for swimming. He needs water wings of counseling and encouragement. Even if he can swim, he's still just a freshman fish. He won't be respected til he's lived through a year's training. So you spend freshman year floating in different areas of Brown Bay. Occasionally diving in depth in an area or two, you tend for the most part to stay on the surface to acclimate yourself to new waters. CYCLE 2 Sophomore year. No more water wings! Yeah? Help. The sopho- more slump occurs because of difficulties found in swimming on your own making your own decisions, choices, and mistakes. The undertow of new areas might take you by surprise. Those who grow seasick often opt for the calmer water of time away from Brown. Yet, in that difficult stretch of sea, you learned a lot. you became aware of the other species of fish below the water's surface, deep in different departments. And they were a varied bunch, of course, not all were dangerous, but . . . There were the predators: the hard core fast moving pre-med barricudas, pre-law sharks, pre-engineer piranhas, pre-profes- sional eels all ready to sink their teeth in you, hungry for a grade point average meal. They were all farsighted, looking only to the bit green sea of money in the ocean beyond Brown. Holy kelp. But beat my flippers . . . There were also the sometimes bizarre, frequently flapping liberal arts fish. Pre-life, they were happy hacking porpoises that youd find in the depths of English, Comp. Lit. or Classics. . . . see what I care. Some were puffer fish overblown with brooding they frequented the philosophy, history, political science or even law and society corners of the bay. Occasionally, you'd see an exotic fish beautiful or grotesque. This being was on its way to complete an independent major that might have had nothing to do with the real world of the big sea, but took advantage of all sorts of areas of the undergraduate bay. With all these other fish to keep you buoyant, you passed the minnow stage of your Brown career imper- ceptibly. Slowly, you recognized the wasted effort in flapping around nervously, and settled into your own territory. Before you knew it, you were a junior. GVCEILE 3 Junior year you're at the peak of your undergrad- uate swimming form. ? You know the waters well. You've gauged what's expected. Stormy weather is just a part of the sea cycle. You adjust your studying strokes accordingly. Yes, by this time you've develop- ed into quite a fish. Having finally if not perman- ently chosen a jajor, you've developed the character- istics of any number of the sharks, barricudas, literae pedanticus, et cetera listed above. You find out just how far and how well you can swim. You might explore depths you've never fa- thomed before. Things would be perfect, save for the air bubbles from your senior chums. You fear leaving the Bay. By the end of your junior year, even though you swim full speed ahead, you know that you must exit soon. SEMI-AQUATICS MATOR CYCLE 4 Senior year. Rough waters. Tidal waves. Thoughts of the real world big ocean. But you gotta swim any- way. Fish gotta swim, birds gotta fly, right? Senior fish brave the straits: the whirlpools of LSAT's, MC- AT's, theses, interviews, or last chances to paddle those avant- garde waters that always intrigued you. Now you head for the BIG SEA. Oh, my god, there are whales out there. Don't worry, there are also a lot of wimp fish, too a new breed, developed in Cambridge. After four all too short years, the cycle is complete. The Brown fish must leave the Bay. As you swim off into the sunset and rough seas ahead, you're carried through everything by waves of knowledge you gathered at Brown. And just think off all the other fish you were able to rub gills with. Yes, when it's all done, and you're knots beyond Brown, you'll have a lot of great fish stories to treasure and tell. 97 INTERLUDE INTERMINABLE INCARCERATED S AR T TR T T IN BALANCE 0 3 - INSOMNIA? 101 . . . 1 'f -- INCOMMUNICADO 102 INERTIA 103 INGEST IN JEST INCOMING MAIL INCOMING MALE 107 FISHIN' 108 o H e i FISSION I 110 . g COME IN, CAPTAIN KIRK, COME IN . . . INTERESTED? INEVITABLE! 112 114 We all have our little idiosyncracies: the favorite carrel in the Rock with southern and social exposure, the brand of pens you use to write papers, or the fuzzy red slippers you wear to every test ever since you got double 800s on the PSAT's now you'll show more re- spect for fuzzy red slippers. Most of the time, well, we can keep these little quirks under control. But come the pressure of exams or intensive study stretch- es, and the hype of people upon people, and the loon in all of us surfaces for public perusal. Of course, under these times of pressure, people don't literally climb the walls, but did you ever sit next to someone who obviously doesn't deal with desks? Someone who'd obviously be infinitely more comfortable strewn out on the floor and doesnt quite know what to do with table and chair? It's kind of like sleeping with someone who tosses and turns all night. You feel sorry for your companion, but in your own frenetic state you wish he she would calm down so you can carry on with your own task be it sleep or study or both, depending on your concentration level. When the tension is so oppressive that it seems like all the air in Providence has been sucked away at least to Cranston, we gain spiritual resuscitation through complete regression. Whether it's a Wonder Woman poster, or a Kermit the Frog doll, or a tiny mail truck carrying the messages in the Rock, ele- ments of the ten year old subfrosh in all of us domin- ate when the pressure is on. As Hamlet said, Re- gression is all . . . Well, Shakespeare didn't quite write that, but he might have, had he read Freud. unady Forbes o uewapse 59q104 It's almost Halloween and the pressures of aca- demia have begun to mount: orz! presenta- tions for Voice and Dic- tion; a paper for Reli- Stu is past due by four days; publication deadlines must be met; dittos must be run off for journalism class. And to top it all off, my beautiful new Smith-Coronamatic Super 12 Coronet is busted: its g,j, i, and ? are jammed Ee$H94$! So, it's down the hall to a friendly I thought neighbor who kindly lends me her type- writer ugh, a manual for the weekend. It's when I knocked on her door at 2 am. with a great idea for a story that I guess I blew our budding friend- ship. Ah, college. Papers. Deadlines. Dittos. Who ever told us about the hallowed halls of Ivy left out the details of studying. In my high school, we didn't have a study hall, and I guess I never really learned how. My television set is running overtime and I fear, is jamming too. Television is as addicting as late night hot fudge sundaes at the Gate. So my body's going to pot, and my mind has been frazzled by microwaves: how to study? The Avon's got some super Wertmuller reruns; Brown Film Society is showing yet an- other Hitchcock movie; MTM and Norman Lear have devised a new sit-com; there are meetings and football games and a play in New York City I'm dying to see. It's a toss-up. I hate making decisions like this. I'll think about studying later. 115 EXAMINATIONS Lowen uamo 116 EXAM PRESSURE Sominex and No-Doz fight for custody of your writhing grey cells. O, if only Mrs. Olson would pop by for a perky surprise visitl Where have you gone, Joe DiMaggio? And Cora, dear wicked Cora, sells on- ly the best in the west . . . You're convinced that when they created Morning Thunder they had you in mind: The jolt it gives you during study breaks is enough to give even Frankenstein's monster a risel Okay, the Rock has room for six more: half a dozen mice scamper in, following a trail of raisin granola to B level, where English majors are battling for occupation of The Carrels against Comp. Lit, and Semiotics forces So you forgo the sterile grey warmth of a million books and five thousand plus bodies and consider the womb of your room. The thirteenth floor of the SciLi begins to look very inviting. You take your nylon backpack down Thayer Street to the forbidding grey tower. Mustering up enough courage to enter the concrete fortress, you swing around the compartment of the revolving door. Flashing your ID card at a doorguard, you look ahead of you and see IT for the first time: The Mob. Outside the elevators are all the students who couldn't get into the Rock. You panic; sixty-five people entered the SciLi while you caught your breath, and you now stand pressed in tightly against some stranger and the crowd is closing in. More arrivals you shut your eyes and pray . . . Too lateyou gasp, choking on a stranger's brown- and-white muffler, and your last thought is of the Van Wickle gates. There is not even room enough to crumble on the ground. uamo Lowen ABCNC 1117 118 DELTA PHI OBACCHUS: Why do fraternity members have such dubious reputations? Could it be the remnants of innocent pranks: the naked bodies left in stairwells; the toi- let seats ripped out of women's dorms; the window broken in the frenzy of a snowball fight or Wall Ball game; or the piano reduced to a million pieces on the sidewalk, having echoed but one last dissonant chord upon hitting the ground? Surely, these must not sound pleasant to the public especially if they heard the piano fall. But it is not just the activities of frat members that forms the frats poor image. It is the general atmosphere of, say, a frat party. There you are amidst a sea of writhing bodies: people attempt- ing to dance, but succeeding only in do- ing the bump with everyone else except their partner. If you can't move to dance, what do you do? Drink? Of course. Talk? Sure, if you're in your element competing with Earth, Wind, and Fire. Anyway, you might meet some- one; then, there'd be that gnawing ques- tion, What does he or she expect . . Add to the atmosphere any toothbrush carrying imports looking for a nice Brown male or men who enjoy snarling at freshman women and the picture is completeat least, the negative picture. Yet, frats have been vital this year. In the wake of Animal House, a tide of toga parties filled the scene. Bad man- ners are in fashion; belching loudly is but a form of homage to John Belushi. Jay Activist first arrived at Brown one morning in the fall of 76, during the strike of library, food services, and bookstore workers. By that afternoon he was carrying signs in front of the Rock, fiercely lining up to chant at egocentric students who wanted their scheduled library tours, and wearing his jean jacket with Cesar Chavez stick- er. He spent that night gathering signatures for seven pe- titions and writing angry letters to Congress. Several weeks later he was busted outside the Ratty for trying to stop deliveries, and that night he dreamed of Berkeley and Ken Kesey. He at first wanted to major in political science, but find- ing the department too bourgeois, he decided to do an inde- pendent concentration called Munitions and Youthful Rage. Entries in his journal express conflict between radi- cal democracy and Marxism: I truly despise my lack of integrity and wish someone would lock me in a room and say, 'Decide, you capitalist bastard! Intensely involved with SASC, he has twice proposed that the group take the Corporation hostage, and his fantasy life centers heavily around Lenin and Jimi Hendrix. His crew cut symbolizes his protest against the Vietnam war; he has had it since 1969. Remember the guy in high school who was on every team at least on the bench? Or the girl in every school club at least on the day yearbook pictures were shot? You thought you'd get away from that sort when you went to college, eh? Now you know better. With distorted visions of graduate grandeur dancing in his head, the campus personality is thriving in Providence. You see him in the Herald concerned about the rising cost of muffins in the Blue Room. Or he's in the middle of the Post Office with the information about natural beer cans. Turn around again and he's working the concession stand at a NORML symposium. That he's a T.A. in this case, Talking A--, in the Brewin Club, and that all his pro- fessors think he's a swill, er ah, swell guy go without say- ing. gBut we're not impressed. We were well-rounded in high school. That's how we got into Brown. We don't have time for that now. But Mr. Personality does get an annoying amount of exposure. Luckily, we have a refuge, one spot that the flailing campus personality doesn't often haunt: the classroom. 119 120 Engineering students are without a doubt the most misunderstood, maligned group on campus. Their bad reputation stems largely from three widespread myths, which we would like to clear up once and for all. Myth 1: All engineering majors wear coke bottle glasses, carry 27 self-sharpening pencils at all times, and wear boxer undershorts. Not true. What appears to the untrained eye to be coke bottle glasses is actually a discolored and congenital appendage of cartiledge. Certain engi- neers have been known to carry as few as three pencils, especially when showering. As far as boxer shorts go, some engineers are women, and everyone knows they don't make women's boxer shorts. Myth 2: Engineering students never have any fun on weekends. An unfounded charge. Lots of engineers can be seen every Friday night in the grad center lounge, watching television into the wee hours. They also play with all the elevator buttons in the sci-li. Myth 3: Engineering is boring. Most people get this impression from a cur- sory glanice at the textbooks but it's true you can't tell a book by its cover. Recent government studies show that two-thirds of the inside pages of those fat texts actually contain Irish limericks, lyrics to bawdy songs, and articles on How To Sneer At Humanities Grads Who Make Less Money Than You Do. Druggies, otherwise known as walk- ing pharmacies, do exist somewhere at Brown, though they are somewhat less visible than other groups. For example, druggies are rarely found in campus hangouts such as the library lounge, the disco Gate, and classes. The reason for the druggies low actually supine pro- file is that most of them are nocturnal; they generally wake up long after E hour is over and turn on their Grateful Dead albums just as you are getting ready to crawl into bed. Druggies are easily indentifiable by the fact that their voices tend to sound like records going at the wrong speed and they are wasted more often than the entrees at the Ratty. They are very rarely interested in food until very late at night. Have you ever wondered who buys the pimento egg sandwiches at Store 247 YOU SURE You ol e TO TRY SENIOR. YEAR Brown athletes are misrepresented. Simply, people tend to think: big on body, small on brains. Thus, athletes are subjected to misnomers like dumb jock, muscle mind and hulk head. Note the misconceptions people form. Jocks take only introductory courses. Not so. These individuals pursue whatever fields satisfy their intellectual curiousity, love of knowledge and practice schedules. Jocks don't think for themselves. Just because Coach says comes out of someone's mouth twen- NOoN - INTRODVCTORY CoEEE ty times in a conversation is no reason to deem him or her vacant. After all, maybe Coach knows. Jocks are well-treated by the University. Where do such notions arise? There is no proof for these statements. Still, when you're having trouble making ends meet, you're inclined to re- gret that you never really learned to block well. What, then, is a Brown jock? Someone who studies hard and plays to win. Someone who knows that the Nautilus is more than just a sub- marine. 122 AN Y fft': i A Wi 1 T 3 q o I . . .9 i e gy N B ! ! s' ie i a7 3t S E oy . ;? 'E Prelaw people are everywhere; sometimes it's hard to tell. You're talking with one of your mildly over- achieving friends and he lets something slip about today's Times. You let it pass. Then you see him leav- ing the Rock at 9:30 on a Saturday nightyou make a note to watch him more carefully. Then one day you decide to spring it on him; you slip habeas corpus into a conversation and watch him blossom forth with all the beauty and symmetry that is law. You've pierced his outer core and found a closet prelaw. Once you discern prelaw leanings, there are other characteristics to spot. Dewey eyes or heavy breathing at the mention of politics, the Supreme Court, or the monetary implications of malpractice suits are dead giveaways. People who bow to any bearded professors especially in the Poli Sci building are itching to join the Bar someday. Note study habits: prelaws study ef- ficiently. They highlight with engraved rulers. They take anally complete notes. They bring Tensor lamps to the Rock Why do you think they call em Ten- sors?. If you know people who fit this mold and are not prelaw, tell them they should be. By follow- ing your advice, one day they could make their families very proud, go to Bar conventions, and even amass a hell of a lot of money. The prelaws have a world of their own. All prelaws whether or not they've come out of the closet know the implications of being somewhere in Boston next year. If it's a bad week for your prelaw peer, as- sume there's an upcoming upper level Poli Sci exam, a Bio 6 quiz, or that Hart made a poor showing in Paper Chase the night before. There are two sorts of Premeds at Brown: the soft core and the hard core. The soft core premeds are outgoing, gregarious, people- people; the kind you'd picture in psychiatry or gynecology. They're smart, too, and will someday be first in their classes in law .or business school. The hard core premeds are plagued by concepts like life between exams, chem labs, and hours lost in frivolities like eating and sleeping. They'll be surgeons, re- searchers, or someone else's husband very soon. One cannot neglect Brown's special sev- en-year breed of future doctors: the Med- Scis. They're talented, gifted, and hated. While other premeds spend their time try- ing to prove they'll be good doctors some day, Med-Scis try to prove they're human even though they're already into Med School. Premeds are concerned people. They're concerned about their G.P.A. They're con- cerned about the mean on their Bio exams. They're concerned about keeping their favor- ite carrel in the library during exams. They're concerned about recommendations for Med School. They're concerned about the MCATs. They're concerned about getting into Med School. They're concerned about new AMA regulations. Oh, yeah, they're concerned about people, too; they want to be doctors. A typical Providence rain drizzles down upon the high cheekbones of the Gatsby type readjust- ing his horn-rimmed glasses. Luckily, the glasses have no lenses for the weather to fog. His top- siders squeak and his toes grow clammy as rain seeps down his bare ankles. The dignified plaid scarf around his neck suddenly catches a gust of wind and begins to flap like a duck in heat. He quickens his pace and enters the Rock. Some- how, the dignified plaid scarf looks less than dig- nified tangled in the revolving door. Embarrassed, but breathing, he saunters through the lobby with as much cool as he can muster. Sensing the effect of his panache, he smiles. Yet, the rain acted with the new starch he used to keep the collar of his alligator shirt stand- ing at attention. His neck starts to swell into a swarm of hives. The wool scarf comes off. The al- ligator sags. A passer-by tells him to change the nasty shirt. He leaves the library, walks to his little M.G. on the curb, drives an eighth of a mile and is home. Tossing the alligator on top of Bill Blass, Stan- ley Blacker, the Brooks Brothers, and several other people, he finds a pastel oxford. Calmer now, he begins to peel the saturated leather shoes off his naked feet. The shoes come off; the puppy near- by faints. Resuscitating the dog, he wonders Were things like this at Choate? It's hard to be a preppie. How many preppies does it take to change a light bulb? Two. One to mix the drinks and one to call the electrician. 124 128 In 1969, a fledgling Providence FM radio station stashed its Frank Sinatra records and began broad- casting rock and roll full time to the Brown and Rhode Island communities. Little did those first people realize that ten years later WBRU-FM would be the nation's wealthiest, most powerful college sta- tion. It's ironic, claimed former general mana- ger Eric Schultz, but most of the station alumni hardly recognize what they worked so hard to create. 1978-79 was a banner year for WBRU, marked in February by a month-long tenth anniversary cele- bration. A Decade of Rock and Roll included retro- spective looks at music and news, special live con- certs and commercial-free days. The tenth anni- versary blowout, held at Lupo's Heartbreak Hotel, filled the club to capacityand more, but we won't tellwith fans and well-wishers. Of course, said general manager Jon Klein, our presence in the community is always second prior- ity to our real purpose for existingto serve Brown students. WBRU-FM and WBRU-AM celebrating its own 45th birthday 'in 1979 together comprise one of the largest groups on campus. We're a giant workshop, added Klein, where well over 150 students learn, grow and give vent to any sort of wild ideas they might have. Because of such tremen- dous input, FM is still recognized for its innovative programming, and AM has become a true forum for the Brown Community. To put it another way, Schultz suggested, WB RU is a madhousea madhouse of people and ideas that shouldn't even exist, given the laws of business and nature. A long time Faunce House resident, WBRU has leased facilities on Benevolent Street for new studios and offices for the summer of 1979. 1978 and 1979 showed our potential for continued success and growth, Schultz asserted. I have a feeling that in ten years those of us who are here now will hardly recognize what we've worked so hard to create. Alperin Alperin Some people at Brown study hard, spend hours at the libraries, and are for some reason extremely excitable where grades and careers are concerned. As a reward for their strivings, Brown provides an honor society, degrees with distinction, and the opportunities to get the best jobs and attend the finest professional schools. Others among us, however, tend to sleep through our classes, spend long hours watching hockey games, and can only be aroused on the intergrity of Battlestar Galactica. For us, Brown provides the Brown Trivia Championship. Aside from getting the questions, which generally fall in the children's categories of sports, T.V., movies, ads, children's books and games, comic books, and Brown trivia the greatest question ever is generally conceded to have been: Describe the eight large photographs in the Ratty, a task which proved nearly impossible although we were given an hour to do it, the team names often provided part of the fun. Among the greats are: Perverted Pumper- nickel Coming Through The Rye, Sit on my Tongue and Let Me Guess Your Weight, With Friends Like Us, Who Needs Enemas, Sins of the Flesh, and the ever popular Sgt. Dewhurst's Dancing Vasectomy Clinic. In the spring 1976 contest, trivia afficionados will recall how after a close race, St. Thomas Aquinas beat out God, the Wrath of God, and Second Coming for eighth place. The two teams begun mostly by members of the class of 79 which FERI AN TRIVIA have won are the Mutants, who won last spring and the Suicidal Zippers, who hope to become the first team to win three years in a row in next fall's contest. The Genital Foods won this spring. Above all, however, trivia helps one cope. When getting back a Bio 1 exam, for instance, and seeing that you were wrong in assuming that Wolffian and Mullerian ducts were discovered by Wolff and Muller, it is pleasant to spec- ulate that Dr. Quevedo may not know that Hugh Beaumont and Barbara Billingsly were Ward and June on Leave It To Beaver, or that John Banner, Hogan's HeroesSgt. Schultz, was the World War II Marine Poster Boy. Fon The e 2 TENTH QJ f Nowv. 18 semizannual . 10 p-M.ApA.M. Ed Gould OU +ON - 3 -wb TRIVIA CONTEST RU AM. 570 129 130 I--.-..-... BRUIN CLUB Bruin Club members write letters, hover the campus, share their rooms, throw parties and smile a lot; all as a result of sharing Brown with prospective studetns. The campus tour is a favorite sport for many Bruins. Everyone has their own style; people who never knew they had any, discover it. The tour provides a forum for your comedy routine or a imeans for testing your diplo- matic abilities. Is the weather really as bad as they say? from the lady whose son wants to be a DOCTOR. Well, we do get to see the sunshine on occasion.. Do you really have to work as much as they say? from the genius in Hawaiin shirt and jeans on the curb. Well, we do get to see the sunshine on occasion. We even see the sunrise fairly often, too. Working with the Bruin Club makes one's Brown experience richer; learning what to tell the subfrosh and what they want to know inevitably draws one to a closer awareness of the University. l Boulas BCO Day is Brown Community Outreach's annual carnival for the handicapped and disadvantaged child- ren from the Providence area. Almost 300 kids joined in the fun this year, and each child was matched with a Brown student big brother or sister for the day. As usual, the combination of free food, games, crafts, clowns, and friendly faces made this year's BCO Day a great success. I Buchanan Buchanan Buchanan 132 BSA They keep you up on Blue Room chatter with newspaper deliveries. They keep you educated with bartending courses. They keep you awake with caf- feine in library coffee lounges. They keep you from crying on your birthday with the delivery of a cake from Aunt Minnie. They keep you sane by pro- viding transportation to get you out of Providence. They are, of course, Brown Student Agencies. Comprised of over 50 students, BSA seeks to pro- vide services and jobs for the Brown community. Boasting prices President Dave Ricci says you can't get anywhere else. BSA also gives real life business experience to all those involved in the over $100,000 operation. The BSA crew have sought to offer more ser- vices efficiently and at lower prices than ever be- fore this year. They lowered coffee lounge prices and somehow managed to keep other prices stable despite inflation. During Orientation Week, BSA gave you a wel- come packet no, it wasn't elves to er, ah acquaint you with the local merchants. Thus, although they provide services at competative prices, BSA works alongside Thayer Street business. Buchanan Buchanan et TR, i i Buchanan Buchanan SARAH DOYLE 1978-79 brought to the Sarah Doyle's Women's Center an influx of new faces and many exciting programs. Women scholars from Brown and other institutions were provided a variety of opportunities to present work they are doing in Women's Studies and other fields. Among the speakers the Center brought to campus were feminist literary critic Elaine Showalter and poet Olga Broumas. Other issues of interest to many women at Brown were raised and ex- plored, in the Feminism and Family series co-sponsored with the Resource Center and Hillel House, the Sisters program cosponsored with the Student-Alumni Relations Committee, gay-straight dialogues, and weekly Friday Forums, which included a panel on women and alcoholism and a discussion of the issues presented by Playboy magazine. For the first time, the Sarah Doyle Women's Center and several other groups cosponsored a two-week conference on Women's Issues in the Brown Curriculum, in April. In addition to colloquia by students and faculty members, the conference included panel discussions on the role of Wom- en's Studies at other institutions and their future at Brown. Another was SDC's cosponsorship of the Festival of Black Women in the Arts, with a gallery show of soft sculpture by Barbara Ward and a discussion with the Combahee Riv- er Collective, a black feminist collective from Boston. Most important for Sarah Doyle were the many new students who became involved in the Center's activities. For the sen- ior women leaving Brown, it is good to know that the work of the Center will continue. Buchanan 134 - ISSUES Petro A reprint of a controversial New Times investigative story early in the fall began Issues year. As in years past, the magazine kept within its basic format stressing aspects of the Brown and Providence communities left unarticu- lated elsewhere. Issues seeks to fill a vacuum in the range of campus pub- lications. In lieu of printing fast-breaking news stories or strictly entertainment pieces, the magazine instead provides a forum for analysis and commentary. It allows for im- portant overviews of trends and topics of concern. The staff tries to weave as varied a fabric of opinions as possible into their ideals of production. No strict editorial policy governs content other than good style and well-researched facts. In addition to encouraging critical insights and investi- gative reporting, Issues stresses creative endeavors. Graphic and photographic arts, poetry and fiction are all vital to the magazine's concept. As such, in addition to providing a critical alternative, Issues fills the void in creative pub- lications as well. Petro When it comes right down to it, the Brown Daily Herald does not get the respect it is due. 1 Believe it or not, the Herald or BDH as all but staff members call the paper is one of the better written, best photographed, and most professional college newspapers in the Ivy League, if not the nation. The staff is very small and very loyal. Brown is reputed to be the smallest college in the nation with a daily paper and the writers and editors many of whom spend upwards of 40 hours a week in the 195 Angell Street officesare proud of the fact. Financially, the Herald exists from advertising and sub- scription revenue alone. Unlike some of the other Ivy pap- ersand most other collegiate newspapers in the country the Herald receives no guaranteed grant from the Uni- versity. The burden of funding as $100,000 a year operation falls on the shoulders of but three or four hard-working business and advertising people. The paper has improved second semester in both quality and respectability. Outside of some criticism of the April 13th parody issue which some thought more obscene than funny, mail to the editor has applauded the objective reporting and often impressive investigative work of the paper. Sure, there are some complaints of sensationalism, but if students and administrators are not complaining about v sensationalism, they are complaining about boring news. The Herald can just never win. As for the future, the Herald exists only from day to day. But the paper has been run that way since 1891, and the end is nowhere in sight. LECTURES Hadsqov GoralskiBDH Hag sqoef 136 unady N FILM SOCIETY The Brown Film Society offers good no-stubs cinema to anyone interested in foreign films, retrospectives, silver- screen oldies, musicals, exam week es- capism, and just plain movie movies. Facilities range from the good but little known Cinematheque to the bad sound charactered but convenient Carmichael. The Film Bulletin keeps Brown up to date on the coming week's pasta, with blurbs written by such illustrious staffers as Universal Catalogue and Jack Very Stu- pid. From time to time, complaints are made that the Film Society shows a few too many arty films, but due to their success they cannot have gone over the edge yet. Alperin Alperin FiLM FESTIVAL Alperin Ao 138 140 I MODERN AND FOLK DANCING Treves Alperin sanail Castleman 141 BIG MOTHER Alperin Alperin 142 CHATTERTOCKS AND HIGH JINKS uamo owen Austin Alperin Lowen unadpy 143 144 CELEBRATION CHORUS It is a sultry day in September of 1975. A callow, dark- haired youth, bemused and bespectacled, descends the hill to a red wood-frame house at 54 College Street. There, at that worthy place, he will undergo his rite of passage out of ordinary existence into the heady aura of the Brown Chorus. The act is significant, for, in the ensuing four years, the chorus will be his ticket to a myr- iad of exciting experiences. In his later life he will muse with dewy eyes over the chorus' profound journeys into the spiritual and exalted realm of great music. But this lies ahead. Now his whole attention is ri- veted on the strange man in front of him with the crisp manner and sardonic mustache. The man plays some ; the youth, poor waif, attempts to How bravely he plies! The man moves to the next text, his manner inscrutable. He be less opaque in rehearsal, where his changing yds, his musical whims, his pleasure or displeasure 'moods, with what he hears will quickly be revealed. : audition v g Mtuds. The dnudghnyouth ls:ltv.unbles out of a pitying glance at his nervous suc- 3 ?e next day he will find his name posted on tha list of new personnel, with the time locale of the First rehearsal. Only dimly will he re. mlt there at that rehearsal, will the real adventure B e mwn-li WIND ENSEMBLE Lowen A Wind Ensemble, what's that? Oh, you mean recorders and things like that? You've got brass, woodwinds, and percussion, but where are the strings? We hear these questions every year. When I was a fresh- man, wasn't quite sure what I was getting into; it wasn't an orchestra, but it certainly wasn't a marching band, either. Clarinets, more sound; trombones, play out; the sarusa- phone can be louder. Sarusaphone? you ask; it's a hybrid of a saxaphone and a double reed vacuum cleaner. The first challenge of Wind Ensemble is climbing the stairs to the rehearsal room. But our director, assistant professor of music John Christie, doesn't let the challenge stop there. Iweall face the problems of making music: recreating the thoughts of a composer, making our minds meet, and pro- ducing a unified result. We can't always whistle the tune, but the result is no less satisfying than if we could. Every con- cert is a celebration. We made it through another one, but it's also the final statement of our efforts: the hours of t practice and rehearsal, preparation, and publicity work. If you enjoy our music, we're pleased, but we're really up there ; playing because we love it. Austin , - H Lowen Austin ,'- ORCHESTRA The Brown University Orchestra: A student orchestra? Perhaps. A community orchestra? More likely. Under the baton of Martin Fischer, we range in age from fifteen years to at least four times that much. Although the majority are Brown studentsboth undergraduates and graduatesour membership includes high school stu- dents, students from other colleges in Providence, and pro- fessors spouses. From Bach to Stravinsky, and many others in between, we play a broad range of music. We play as a symphony or- chestra and as chamber ensembles. We performed the Brahms Requiem with the Chorus, and the Grieg Piano Concerto with John Davis '79. We have accompanied great soloists like Rostropovich and Stern. We may not be the Boston Symphony, but we have fun and provide some cul- ture for the Brown community. After all, if we don't, who will? Austin uamon unsny 147 Buchanan CONCERTS Spring Weekend Blues Concert The Tubes Atlanta Rythym Section Poussette-Dart Band T A e o e e . REPLACE THIS PO eVt W' ag P W ey , 5 e 2 7z Z 7z v 7, 4 7 Z s 2, 7 7 7 9 B 157 ' LN YR b v i o + P a8 v - e N -, o N b Nelson Nelson uosjaN 161 162 The 1978 campaign began on an Indian summer Satu- day against Yale. It was slated to be a contest in which Brown's veteran offense would operate against an equally experienced Yale defense, while an uncertain Yale offense would seek to befuddle the inexperienced Bruin defense. Billed as the probable Ivy championship, the early prognostications proved incorrect. The game gave little indication of what could be expected from either side and perhaps foreshadowed the frustrations which would befall both teams as another champion- ship eluded their respective grasps. Brown's offense failed to function properly due to errors and objectionable play-calling, while Yale con- verted turnovers to its advantage. This pattern continued into the following weekend as Brown was defeated by an improved U.R.I. squad. Brown was defeating itself, and both opponents were extremely fortunate in this respect. The Bruins finally realized a modicum of their po- tential against Princeton, decisively defeating the Tigers 44-16. The offense jelled as co-captain Mark Whipple gave an indication of his talents as a quarterback. A two- year starter, he was reputed to have a fine football mind and a sound medium range arm. This game fulfilled these expectations and propelled him towards post-sea- son honors as an All-Ivy Honorable Mention. Brown continued its success the next weekend during a dismal downpour in Providence against a potent but underrated U. Penn team. The Bruin defense finally came of age and the offense played well enough to post a 14-0 victory. Important in this success was the play of the defensive secondary. Dick Galvin, Luke Gaffney, and Ron Brown were starters for their entire varsity careers and complimented each other well. Dick was the steady, hard hitting, unheralded cornerback; Luke was known for his athletic talents and for making the big play; and Ron's all-around ability and penchant for hard hits should serve him well in a possible profes- sional career. Michael Barnes, whose performance im- proved with his experience, manned the Bruin po- sition in the secondary competently and made a sub- stantive contribution. 87 . S gl The Cornell contest contraposed the Master versus the Pupil for Brown mentor John Anderson had served as an ancillary to Bob Blackman many years earlier. Youth prevailed as Brown triumphed over a resilient Cornell squad. Part of this success can be attributed to the stel- lar defensive tackle Mike Lancaster, whose contributions helped constrain Cornell's vaunted running attack. Playing an unfamiliar position and expected to shore up a talented but inexperienced defensive line, his selfless efforts earned him much deserved All-Ivy recognition. The last Saturday in October brought unbeaten Holy Continued On Page 166 Berkowitz Z3imoiag Berkowitz 163 Berkowitz Berkowit Cross to Brown Stadium in a regionally televised en- counter. Although considered the underdog, Brown showed what it was capable of doing against a worthy opponent, which served to silence detractors and con- found the book-making element. The resounding 31-25 victory had many stars, one of whom was defensive end Joe Llewellyn. A hard-nosed performer, he did not have the opportunity to play in prior seasons due to in- juries. His talents were quickly recognized this sea- son, and he proved to be an essential cog in the defensive machinery. The Harvard battle proved to be the most exciting game of the season. Played in Cambridge under steel- grey skies, Brown dramatically defeated the Crimson in in the waning moments of a classic battle. The offensive line again demonstrated why it was regarded as the fore- most unit in the Ivies by producing holes that provided Brown backs with unimpeded passage into the sec- ondary. Of paramount importance were center Mike Knight and right guard Bob Forster. Previously recog- nized as All-Ivy, Mike had mastered a difficult position and was able to provide blocking services usually not expected from a centera credit to him and his ability to work with his mates. Bob lived up to his reputation as one of the premier linemen in the East gaining post- season All-Ivy, All-New England and All-American honors as well as the attention of the N.F.L. Additional- ly, he earned scholastic honors and was awarded an N.C. A.A. post-graduate scholarship. Brown's quest for the Ivy Title was diminished by a heartbreaking loss to Dartmouth. The team played well and had much to be proud of, but had the mis- fortune of playing against a superior Dartmouth team wlm uamor x o i that made few mistakes. The season finale was in New York against Columbia at Baker Field. Despite early sluggishness, Brown rolled to an impressive 24-12 victory. Instrumental in this vic- tory and in the success of the Brown offense were Barry Blum and Marty DeFrancesco. Barry, despite injuries in antecedent seasons, gave notice of his speed and fine hands, and had a good season. Marty, a converted quarterback, gave witness to this athletic ability by successfully making the difficult transition to flanker and made a number of timely receptions. The game also marked the cessation of Co-Captain and lineback Neil Jacob's career at Brown. A steady performer, his presence was missed due to pre-ceason injury. However, he should be commended for his self- less interest in the team as illustrated by his attendance at practices and every game. The 1978 team was a successful one despite no cham- pionship. It withstood coaching changee, crippling in juries, and inexperience, and proved to be a credit to the University both on and off the field. Continued success can be expected from next year's team. CROSS COUNTRY L 7 MEN Brown's 1978 men's cross country season could liberally be termed a rebuilding year, but more conservatively it was dis- appointing, as the Bruins went without a win. Both terms are true things couldn't get much worse. The problem was not a lack of talent per sethere just weren't enough runners. Brown carries the smallest team in the Ivies and has no room for errors. Injuries, sickness, and occasional below-par performances all had devastat- ing effect. For back up men Coach Doug Terry had to dip into his talented track squad for non-distance runners. Quarter milers, half milers, and even a pole vaulter were used throughout the campaign. Still, the years to come look promising. Only two varsity run- ners, Captain Russ Ellsworth, and Rom Rueckert will graduate and neither were heavy scorers when the entire team was healthy though they scored often during the year anyway as reserves. Paul Schwartz '80 will be the lone senior on the team next year. Paul was the number two runner throughout the season. Other varsity runners returning will be: Tim Good, Brian Blue, Adam Gold- arb, Dave Galdemez, Osman Lake, Mike Haggert, and the team's top runner, Tom Ratcliffe. Tom carried virtually all the pressure into every meet and the experience should help him toward All-Ivy honors next year. While the rebuilding may take years, the potential is there, the training is excellent, and the outlook is good. WOMEN The 1978 women's cross country season opened with a few experienced returning run- ners. Out for the year with injuries were top 1977 top runner Susan Adams, Sherry and Terry Hecht, and co-captain Margaret Schenck. The team lost two seniors last year. Despite these absences, the season was a good one. Co-captain Missy Himelein, along with Margaret Chase and Carol Welch, led freshman Julie Shillinger, Nancy Lyons, Alice Brown and others to a 2-14 season. Coach Jon Hird called the record mis- leading. He described the year as a build- ing season: there was a great deal of work to do in terms of learning and not losing mor- ale . . . I feel that we were running better races at the end of the year . . . As a team, we matured well. i 7 167 MEN'S SOCCER Berkowitz Berkowitz Berkowitz Ever since Coach Cliff Stevenson came to Brown seventeen years ago, the University's soccer program has enjoyed fantastic success. To this rule, the 1978 team was no exception. After defeating nationally ranked Philadelphia Textile in their '78 debut, the Bruins went 9-1-1. This impressive record made Brown number one in New England. Yet, given the standard of success that Brown players and fans had expected, the season was not wholly satisfactory. The disappointments came in the last three days of the season. First, in a match that de- cided the Ivy League champions, Brown bowed to Columbia at Baker's Field. The booters bid to re- capture this coveted championship, after having held it from 1973-76, was spoiled in the first half of play when the Lions outscored the Bears by a 2-1 margin. Although our squad had many close chances, Columbia held on to their lead to foil Brown's bid for another Ivy Crown. Three days later, Brown faced archrivals from U. Conn., at Aldrich-Dexter field in the second round of the NCAA tournament. Earlier in the year, Brown had humiliated the Huskies on their home turf. Emotions were high-pitched at this post- season meeting in Providence. 10,000 people ar- rived to watch the game, only to see Brown lose. On that dismal November afternoon, with more than an inch of fresh snow atop the field, the Bruin season ended. Even so, the year had been a good one. As the class of the East, Brown was constantly pursued. After proving themselves worthy of national recognition in the previous year's NCAA semi- finals, Brown assumed the position in most games as the one to beat. Lowen Lowen uamoq Lowen comeback victory. Nearly breaking the school record, All-Ivy center forward Peter Van Beek was leading scorer. The fleet- footed forward from France had many game winning tallies, including a most dramatic goal against U. Conn. There were other great moments: All-Ivy goalie Paul Obermeyer's incredible performance against URI. Tri- captain, defender Steve Dickstein single handedly stripped Harvard's potent offensive attack. A deter- mined Eric Chilton at Cornell and a hustling Jeff Elliot at Yale were outstanding as well. For 1979, Coach Stevenson has a wealth of talent. All- Ivy, MVP, Captain Pat Weir, Tom Obrien, Tom Gert- ken, and Philip Moen are but a few of those who will try to uphold the tradition of excellence that is Brown soccer. L The daring pride of this year's club was displayed at . 2 : ; b ok 4 the Princeton game. After trailing 2-0, forward Paul 2L L W ! f i - Stevenson and tri-Captain Charles MacCabe turned ? i S, . what might have been a sorry defeat into a celebrated T : 169 WOMEN'S SOCCER Lowen uamo Despite injuries which hindered them at several im- portant games, the women's soccer team compiled a winning record of 7-3-3 under captains Isabel Eccles and Stephanie Sanders. Leading scorers Gail Maschka and Lisa Segbarth played the latter half of the season with knee problems. En route to a winning record, highlights of the 1978 season were a road trip to Can- ada and the Ivy League Tournament. Brown hosted the first soccer league tournament ever in the Ivies and perhaps even in the country. Coach Phil Pincince organized the event, and is now working toward other tournaments. The 1978 Ivies might have served as a step toward the national growth of women's soccer. The opening game between Dartmouth and Yale was probably the most dramatic of the tournament. The teams fought through almost a half hour of over- time. On the fourth set of sudden death kicks, Yale scored to win 2-1. Yale, however, did not reach the finals which matched Brown and Harvard. Brown's first loss of the regular season had come against Harvard. The final game of the Ivy tournament, played under the lights at Alrich Dexter field and attended by a sizeable crowd, was a close, well-played encountered. Despite many aggressive and narrowly missed attempts by the Bruins, Harvard became the first Ivy League Champion with a 3-0 win. Besides a second place finish in the Ivies, the team's players were recognized. Making all-Ivy first team were: Stephanie Sanders, Darcy Fernald, Lisa Seg- barth, and Gail Maschka. Yvonne Goldbsberry was named to the All-Ivy second team. Neuhaus ' FIELD HOCKEY With a 1-10-1 record, one might think there is little to say about the field hockey team. But the record is misleading. It does not reflect the team's youth: that there was one sen- Neuhaus ior co-captain Zoony Beer and four juniors co-captain Stephanie Ip, Robin Beil, Lynne Meldrum, and Sal- ly Solis-Cohen. The closey fought, heartbreaking losses to Dartmouth and Yale are not revealed in the rec- ord either. More importantly, per- haps, the record does not cite the good times and hard work that were a part of being this year's team. There were double practice ses- sions: up at 7:00, breakfast, run two miles, practice from 9-11:00, lunch, die til 1:00, run two more miles, practice from 2-4:30, relax? Coach Dale Philippi's gospel no pain, no gain kept them hustling. The yoga warm-up, the group Scarsdale diet, Verney-Wolley din- ners . . . sunset over A.D. field. This and more made the 78 field hockey season, despite the record, a positive experience for all. Tortora Neuhaus 172 Buchanan Buchanan ueueyong Buchanan VOLLEYBALL With a 5-8 record and a third place in the state tournament, the women's volleyball team had a positive season. Though not a tall, powerhouse group, this year's team worked well through finesse, tight play, speed, and agility. With a new coach, Cathy Yurasits, and the addition of long fought for facilities in Marvel Gym, the volleyball team presents a picture of promise. Freshmen like Susan Van Horn and Ann Edwards have potential to be outstanding. If the team could find a number one hitter, someone tall enough to spike the ball consistently, the Bruins could be real contenders in the future. The only real disappointment of this building season was being third in the States the team had placed second for the past two years.. Despite the disappointments, three players received All-Ivy Honorable mentions: Captain Lois Greisman, Susan Van Horn and Beth Strickland; Greisman and Strickland were also named State All- stars. With only Griesman, Marie Ssinegurski and Susan Olsen graduating, the young volleyball team will build into a force to be reckoned with. ME NS SWIMMING AND DIVING The best we've ever done is how Coach Ed Reed described the Brown men's swimming team's 4-7 season. Reed noted that the team was very competitive: a group of hard-working swimmers who per- formed well. There were many highlights to the season. The Bruins broke a twenty- six year hex in a landmark win over Penn. Many meets came down to the last man in the last relay; the Cornell meet ended in our favorDart- mouth, Navy and Cornell touched us out of the winning. Despite the loss of several team members including talented Chris Hug, the individual Bruins fared quite well. Junior Glenn Levin con- tinued to dominate Brown's pool. In claiming four more records bring- ing his Brown career total to eight, Levin toppled the 100 Free, 200 Free, and 100 Fly marks and anchored the record setting 400 Free Relay of Russ Hertzberg, Howard Fife, and Richard Rento. Levin was also the only Bruin to reach the ESIL finals. Hertzberg, a sophomore, bested the 50 Free mark while another sophomore, Mark Munroe, broke the 200 Breast record. Coach Reed cited the outrageous time drop in Tony Melo's .M. time at the ESIL's as an indication of the promise of this young team. Entering the competition with a best time of 4:19, Melo swam the con- solation qualifying heat in 4:13 and the finals in a remarkable 4:07. During the season, Jim Phelan and Bruce McCormack downed Freshman records: the 200 Fly and 200 Breast respectively. Thus, with only Co-captains Steve Chapin and Jay Ryan graduating and a.talented core of young swimmers returing, the Bruins will con- tinue to be very competitive in years ahead. Coach Reed sees next year's team as having the potential to realize Brown's first winning Ivy season. $ e e W b MASL nth B : W MEE Bay hem She W1 Wb hek sas an AK y T T e e aa aoa o ynm hAk Ban Ak Knm Castleman UBWI33SE: WOMEN'S SWIMMING 176 BloomB.D.H. With a 9-1 dual meet record and a third place in the Ivy League Championships, the women's swimming team posted their best season ever under Co-captains Gretchen Fricke and Anne Galliher. The only blemish on an otherwise spotless season was heartbreaking loss to Yale early in the season a loss which nevertheless drowned eight school records. After rigorous training sessions during Christmas vacation, Brown defeated Harvard for the first time ever. The 93-38 Bruin margin was thus especially rewarding. The Ivy League Championships saw sixty-five best times posted by Brown women in the seventy-nine events. Pam Heggie 200 and 500 free and Lori Pride 50, 100, and 200 Back were Brown's first Ivy League Champions. Brown qualified the largest group in history for the ATAW small college nationals at the University of Nevada-Reno. Brown finished tenth out of eighty teams thanks to: Lori Pride second:50, 100, and 200 Back, Pam Heggie fifth: 500 Free, sixth; 100 Breast, eigth: 200 Free, fifth: 200 Breast Carol Derby twelfth: 200 Back and Gretchen Fricke tenth: 1650 Free. Brown placed in all five relay events. As Brown finished tenth out of eighty teams, all ten school swimmers in the meet achieved All-American recogni- tion: Pride, Heggie, Derby, Fricke, Bowdring, Loman, Wendy Sherman, Robin Levat, Jeanne Hanson, and Kathy Ely. Bloom B.D.H. Bloom,B D.H WATE POLO T K - Placing first in the Ivies, first in New England, and second in the East behind Bucknell, the men's waterpolo team had an excellent year. Coach Ed Reed called this year's group the best team I've ever coached even though they failed to reach the NCAA's This was Brown's fourth year without a loss in New EnglandBrown's fourth Consecutive New England Championship. All East first team selections were Kent Rapp, Paul Schrier and Howie Pride. Honorable mention went to Bob Fields and Brad Levy. That the waterpolo team will lose only Senior Co- captains Fields and Peter Mattei point to another great season next year. Lowen Lowen 1727 e . I T 4 GYMNASTICS Before every meet, women's gymnastics coach Jackie Court has a habit of jotting down a predic- tion of the team's final score. This year, thanks to the dedication and consistency of all women on the team, Coach Court hit almost every prediction ac- curately. Everything vaulted into place for women's gym- nastics this year. In posting a 6-4 record, the gym- nasts notched Brown's first winning season ever in the sport. Admitttedly a person who appreciates an all-out effort, Coach Court has no complaints about this team. They all did what they were capable of do- ing. She was satisfied with their performances even though they might not have been. Self-satis- faction does not suit a sport in which one con- stantly strives to improve one's performance. Coach Court admitted that if it gets to the point where a gymnast is satisfied, she might as well hang up her peds. From the team's performance, it is obvious that no one hung up her peds. The gymnasts improved from a 79 point showing in the first meet of the season to 106 points by the last meet. Ann Smythe, an all-around performer, missed All-Ivy honors by four tenths of a point. Susie Brooks placed seventh in Ivy all-around compe- tition. Depth was provided by the addition of freshmen and good performances from returning gymnasts. Along with Smythe and Brooks, Senior captain Alice Huang, Kim Kee, Beth Merkin, Guri Giaever, Randa Heitman, Chiyo Imai and Jenny Evans worked to make the team the success it was. Next year, these women gymnasts might even surpass Coach Court's predictions. x 7 xx - Thompson Thompson Thompson 178 Four years ago, if you could hold a racket, women's squash could use you. Growing from a club to a varsity sport, the team had much to learn. In this the fourth year of varsity squash, the learning paid off. The team posted a solid 5-5 record amidst a tough schedule, and Cap- tain Adrienne Morphy, one of those women who learned to play four years ago, gained national honorable mention and earned All-Ivy recognition for the second year in a row. Everyone on this year's varsity team, ranked sixth na- tionally, learned to play squash at Brown. Enthusiasm, hard work, and a willingness to learn are qualities Coach Karen Melluci cites as keys to her players amazing progress. As only Morphy, Katha Didell, and Martha Stark- weather will graduate; Pam Lord who earned All-Ivy nom- ination, Kate Smith, Harriet Whiting, LiLi Todd, Perrin Tingley, and Hope Mead will fill the varsity slots next year. Women's squash has come a long way in four years. As Coach Melucci noted, it was not star talent, but sheer dedication and supportive spirit that put the women's squash team on the sporting map. And it looks like its go- ing to stay there. Diaz Diaz WOMEN'S SQUASH . Diaz S i p a N f z J o - v J $ l . . . Diaz WOMEN'S BASKETBALL If I uncover a yellowed 1978-79 women's basketball pic- ture fifty years from now, the win-loss record and team statistics will be scrawled on the back. The memories cap- tured in the team's smiles, however, need not be inked out to remain. I will remember the anticipation of preseason of blurry-eyed early morning jogs, lifting weights on the Nautilus, pick-up games, and sizing up the freshmen tal- ent: the long-legged speed and enthusiasm of Toni Lagos, the dribbling and shooting feats of Cindy Moorecroft, and the fall away jump shot of Jennifer Rubin. I will think of practices of waiting in the cold snow for the shuttle bus, of taped ankles, of wind sprints and suicides, the pain of heavy muscles straining to keep up and lungs gasping for air, of calloused feet and blisters, of drills run over and over, of shrill whistles that point out mistakes, of words of encouragement and of hot show- ers and fatigue. I will visualize the games, remembering the long bus- rides of away games which were sometimes filled with quiet reading, thoughts or naps, sometimes with swapping stories or jokes. I will vaguely hear the cheers from scream- ing spectators while the silence of nearempty bleachers will melt away. Memories of the queasiness before games and never knowing how the competition was going to be may also fade, but the satisfaction and elation of victories and the dissappointment and frustration of losing are not so easily forgotten. Reminiscing will also bring to mind antics and flashes of pride, hurt, or joviality that only this year's team will understand the thrill of a new assistant coach, Joan Howard, who could don a pinny and become one of us, play touch football and semi-professional basketball a- gainst paunchy firemen, and teach disco dancing in her spare time, memories of the Unknown Comic watching over the locker room, of the courage or naivete of hosting an eight team tournament of which we were clearly the underdogs, of too-small practice t-shirts, of MM power, of the mystery of Go Potatoes and Milky Possum, of Trish Wurtz making the All-Ivy honorable mention squad, of missing JoAnn, of playfully feuding with Dartmouth's team in the hotel elevator, and of descending voraciously on Steve's Ice Cream to end the season. It will be these memories that I will take away from the season and muse over fifty years from now. The pride and achievements shared, the good times had and the friendships made will be treasured and preserved for many seasons to come. Berkowitz Berkowitz Berkowitz Berkowitz Berkowitz Berkowitz Berkowitz MEN'S BASKETBALL 182 The 1978 - 1979 basketball season may, in later years, be viewed as the turning point in Brown's basketball fortunes. A disastrous 4 - 22 season the year before, and equally dis- mal campaigns the previous two seasons left Brown in the position of having nowhere to go but up. The departure of coach Gerry Alaimo, and the arrival of Joe Mullaney re- presented a desperately needed shot of new blood into the program. Mullaney, who while at Providence College ran up a career winning percentage of 74.29 that placed him among the most respected names in college coaching, had been coaching at Udine in Italy and previously in the pro- fessional ranks in the U.S. in both the N.B.A. and A.B.A. His return to college coaching and Providence received much publicity, including a full page article in Street and Smith's Basketball Preview Yearbook. His arrival at Brown resulted in an immediately evident sense of optimism with- in the program. Adding to this were the return of 64 Chuck Mack after a year's recuperation from a serious hit- and-run accident, and point guard Richie Friedman, who had chosen to sit out the previous two seasons. Mullaney chose to conduct wide-open tryouts and the result was a team of youth rather than of experience, con- sisting of two seniors, four juniors, and seven sophomores. Berkowitz Berkowitz Berkowitz erkowitz Berkowitz In retrospect the Bruin schedule was one filled with quality opponents; seven games against post-season tour- nament qualifiers, a game against 1 ranked Notre Dame at South Bend before 11,000 fans, Marquette, ranked 8 in the nation, and two games with vy League rival Penn, the first Ivy League team to reach the final four of the N.C.A A. tournament since 1965. The Ivy league in general exper- ienced a resurgence, as many teams boasted victories over perennial powers such as St. Johns, North Carolina, and Syracuse. Blessed with neither great size nor fleet feet, the Bruins played a patient, slowdown passing game and the results were impressive. After a slow start the Bruins got on track, defeating Fordham, and then a highly touted Yale squad at New Haven. An 11 point first half lead in the Marquette game shriveled to defeat, yet the Bruins swamped cross-town rival Providence College, the first time since 1959. The string of well played games established the Bruins as a team not to be taken lightly. Following a sober- ing loss to U.R.L. the Bruins defeated Columbia and Corn- ell, and found themselves in a tie with Penn on top of the Ivy League. The Bruins beat the spread at Notre Dame, then prepared for powerful Penn. Brown took an early lead but eventually succumbed to the quickness of the Quaker defense that later proved the downfall of tournament favor- ite North Carolina in the NCAA's. The Bruins rebounded to beat Princeton the next night but the loss to Penn seemed to take the wind out of Brown's sails. Wins over Cornell and Yale left the Bruins at a respectable 6-8 record in the league and with better luck in a pair of last second losses to Harvard and Dartmouth the record could have been re- versed. Berkowitz Berkowitz Berkowitz Berkowitz Berkowitz The Bruins showed flashes of individual excellence throughout the season. Peter Moss, Brown leader in both rebounding and scoring and a first team All-Ivy selection, was an impressive inside player. The Bruin's most con- sistent performer, Moss's great leaping ability, and love of the dunk provided many spectacular moments during the season. Richie Friedman playing point guard led the team in assists, and played with an uncanny court-sense that fit perfectly into the Mullaney offense. His ability to control game tempo kept the Bruins in many close con- tests. Chuck Mack's all- tournament performance in the Clemson tournament and his consistent shooting through- out the season demonstrated that he has regained much of the ability that made him one of the most highly rated sophomores in the Ivy League two seasons ago. Captain Andy Dolan, the only four year survivor in the class of '79, relegated in previous years primarily to rebounding and defensive roles, blossomed this year into a scorer as well. In Brown's final game against Penn he had nine re- bounds and thirteen first half points before breaking his ankle. Reflecting upon the season Captain Andy Dolan said It was a step in the right direction. It might take a year, maybe a year and a half, before we become true Ivy League contenders. With Joe Mullaney and fancy footed Ron Henigan at the controls it could be sooner. - e 7 WRESTLING 'f Injuries, illnesses, and a lack of depth hampered Brown wrestling this year, as the team finished with a 3-9 record. The young group comprised entirely of freshmen and sophomores demonstrated dedication and enthusiasm, according to Coach Joe Wirth. Un- fortunately, forfeits which do not reflect talent hurt the team in several weight classes. Coach Wirth and new Assistant Coach Jim Ut- quant have a good nucleus of talented wrestlers. Steve Brown, Bruce Hay, Bob Heller, Peter Porcelli, and Brian Leach put in fine efforts. Brown recovered from illness to post a 6-1-1 record. In his second season, Hay finished at 8-3-1. Heller nearly repeated last year's undefeated individual performance, finishing this regular season at 9-2-1. Leach led the entire team in pins. Coming on strong at the end of the year were soph- omore Peter Porcelli and freshman Mike Straussberg. They placed third and fourth respectively in the New England Division I championships. Good health and a wealth of freshman talent could cause some excitement in men's wrestling next year. Alperin 185 WOMEN'S HOCKEY Berkowitz Castleman 186 For the women's ice hockey team, the 1978-79 season began slowly then speeded up to an almost triumphant end. Practices early in October lured in the old rink rats and a few wide-eyed attentive freshmen. Right away there was better over-all talent than ever before. Sophomore Katharine Hazard donned the goalie pads for the first time and dazzled all with consistent kicks and saves. Two freshmen flashes, Amy Crafts and Pam Boone were sea- soned hockey skaters and shooters and led the scoring attempt together with Stuffie Sanders. Veterans Dora Herrara, Sue O'Reilly Curley, Colleen Doyle, and Jean- nie Cushman rounded the forward lines and hustled in some crucial goals. Meanwhile, the defense was well an- chored by seniors Maggie Thomas and Karen Senft. In- dividuals displayed improved stickhandling and skating, but the Pandas lacked competitive experience and con- trol. The 20-game results 6-12-2 did not match the talents of the team. Many potential victories were drop- ped by one or two goal losses, and the many injuries made it all the more frustrating. The main problem seemed to be the trust and experience of playing together as a single unit. Double practices over intercession spurred the spirits, psyche, and cohesion of the team. February was full of away challenges, long bus rides, hot fudge sundaes, beer rites, and incompleted papers. The real highpoint of the season was saved for the end. Brown, originator of ice hockey for women, celebrated the 15th anniversary season by hosting the Ivy League Championships. The Brown Pandas entered the contest in fifth slot, determined by the season record and Ivy League tallies. Everything came together and the Pandas trounced Princeton 3-1 and Harvard 4-2 to reach the finals. The fans and Pro- vidence media were behind the team, but concentration began to waver Holding the reigning Ivy League titlist for two periods, the Bruins lost to the Big Red of Cornell due to four goals in the last period. Brown did not leave the tournament, however, without due praise and laurels. Pandas were honored with All- Ivy selections: Amy Crafts and Pam Boone as forwards on first and second teams respectively, and Maggie Thoma: and Karen Senft earned defensive positions on the first and second berths. Captain Senft was also award- ed the annual Panda Cup trophy. All in all, it was an elating finish to a somewhat disappointing seacon. Berkowitz Berkowitz Berkowitz Berkowitz N i . r d . o 4 S s - f y t S O Berkowitz 3 g e it I e e T Y P EANEEE O EREE EEm U T 187 MEN'S HOCKEY With only three players missing from the team that was fourth in the ECAC last year, Brown's hoc- key team looked to be a tough contender under new head Coach Paul Schilling. Had the Bruins' season ended in mid-January with the sparkling 5-3 win over Providence College, they would have qualified for home-ice advantage in the ECAC and captured their second Ivy League title in three years. But it was not to be this year. A disappointing 6-2 home opener loss to a medio- cre St. Lawrence team preceded wins over Boston College, the 1978 National Tournament runner- 'up, and Cornell, perennial Ivy contender. Junior Rick Scully's hat trick at Colgate failed to hold off a 6-5 Raider overtime victory. Scully and junior center Jim Lawson propelled a 39 percent power-play machine as the Bruins upped their Ivy record to 4-0 with successive wins against Yale, Harvard, and Princeton. In the opener of the Old Colony Holiday Tourna- ment, freshman defenseman Darrell Petit's four point performance led the ice men to a promising 12-1 win over McGill. Yet, Brown was destined to continue their record of losing their own tourna- ment in dropping games to Vermont and eventual champion, Bowling Green. In a rare T.V. win, Brown, led by sophomore defenseman Kevin Lovitt, turned back Harvard. Then, after a great 5-3 win over Providence College, the Bruins dropped eight of their remaining eleven games. Starting with a disappointing overtime loss to Northeastern, a loss to previously winless Prince- ton, and concluding with two Ivy losses to Dart- mouth in their last three games, the varsity puck- sters completely reversed a half season 7-3 record and finished with an overall 11-14, ECAC 1-11, and an Ivy 6-4 record to finish out of the playoffs. The early promise of success was not realized. Coach Schilling realized that the team would have a fight for a playoff berth. The young pucksters have next season to wage another crusade. Four seniors who provided many exciting moments in Brown hockey graduate this year. Forward and co-captain Dave Roberts, second in team scoring, tallied the most goals 14 for the Bruins, and accu- mulated 104 points, 49 goals, and 44 career assits. Jim Bennett, fourth in point output, had 12 goals, 10 assists for a career total of 47 goals, 52 assists. Co-captain Mike Mastrullo amassed 14 goals, 76 assists in his four years and was the only player named All-Ivy this year. Although alternating with Holden, Laycock completed an exceptional career. In addition to receiving All-America, All-East, and All-Ivy honors as a junior, he leaves a school re- cord of 62 saves in one game Cornell 1978. Berkowitz Berkowitz 190 MEN'S TENNIS Austin 192 Austin A new coach and good young players saw the men's tennis team post a 5-8 season in a year of building. Coach Bill Cullen, the team's third in as many years, came from Swathmore Division 3 champs and will attract many players in the future. This year Brown beat Army for the first time in at least four years. Brown placed fifth in the New Englands, thanks to the efforts of number four singles player Stephen Buck Disgustis, a sophomore who reached the B division finals. Harold Shaaf, a freshman, played number one and is evidence of the team's youth. Sophomore Phil Diaz was number two, and John Harkevy, captain and only senior, played in the number three slot. Tom Ferguson at number five had the team's best singles record. Harkevy saw a better team emerge under the new coach than he had seen in a while. Singles games im- proved markedly, but doubles still floundered. Coach Cullen, a player and competitor himself, will un- doubtedly chip away the team's flaws in the years to come. Austin Austin WOMEN'S TENNIS Austin Austin The picture of women's tennis is a fragmented one, despite a 3-3 spring season. When fire took the life of Jodi Sandler, the team lost not only a top player, but the one person who seemed to want to play more than anyone else. The loss of Jodi put the spirit of the team in con- fusion. It was difficult to play with complete con- centration after the tragedy. Despite the turmoil, the women managed to rally their forces into some good efforts. A trip to Vir- ginia started the season. In the State Tour Tourna- ment, Nancy Niquist edged out Mara Rogers in singles. Adrienne Morphy and Nancy Stroker copped the doubles crown. In the Seven Sisters Tournament, a poor draw saw Brown players lose to top seeds in early rounds. Brown players lost close matches with eventual tour- nament winners in doubles and singles. As Captain Morphy and Nancy Czapeck are the only graduating seniors, the team will be strong next year. Nyquist and Rogers will return with consistent play at numbers one and two, respectively. MEN'S LACROSSE Berkowitz 194 Berkowitz Berkowitz Following a 6-4 1978 season, men's lacrosse was not expected to do much better this year. But they were 8-2 going into the last two games, and only illness hampered the last close matches. As John Meister, tri-captain, noted, there were no superstars on this team; the squad was a hard- working unit that began practice July 31 and endured rain, snow and 30 degree weather for the sport. People had to earn their position every prac- tice. Despite the competition for slots, Meister noted that the team was a together group. The new rule that took away the face-off and the new defensive strategy called for five de- fense-one midfield rather than three defense three midfield helped the Bruins a great deal, as the Bruins were never really strong in face-off action and their defense was enhanced as well. The team loses only five seniors. Next year's group looks strong. Among the players honored on this team were: Mark Farnham: MVP and Best Defensive; Jeff Hacker: Best Offensive; Rick Handleman: Leading Scorer; Jobey Harris: Most Improved and Mike Dubrowski: Con- tributed Most to the Sport. Although it was a loss, the last game saw a five minute standing ovation given to Brown's lax-men. This exciting and enthusiastic finale to the season bespeaks the surprising quality of the whole year's efforts. o Aorr R DALY S N g:';ut::? R LR LAY AR . A LA LY Berkowitz VRN T G Qfx'w WAl z ALY R B A v Berkowitz S 2 o 7 w 3 m 195 ! W ik WOMEN'S LACROSSE N it 7w ally Vuiginy - '?w St 196 Nager Berkowitz Women's lacrosse followed two years of high standard teams In reflection of that building that occurred in those two seasons, this years preseason took the team to England. This trip provided the team with memories and a knowledge in travelling light with no money. On the field, they learned the quickness of a quality check and tight man to man de- fense. The team fit Darwin's theory of evolution: coping with Ivy academics, studying on the road, and weekends away demanded survival of the fittest. The art of sleeping in overhead lug- gage racks and locating the optimal bus light angle had to be learned quickly. Save some black eyes, broken fingers and a few weak ankles, the team survived and new generations of players are bred better and bet- ter. ! Berkowitz , SOFTBALL Although they got off to a slow start, the women's softball team posted a winning 7-6 regular season record. Practices began in February, a month earlier than usual this year, with some major additions. Phil Pin- cince was designated Head Coach a move which freed Assistant Coach Gail Clock to continue with basket- ball and gave the softball team an extra month's practice with the transition. A new batting machine greeted this year's squad. With a new Head Coach and new equipment came a crop of talented fresh- men, as well. Only co-captain Becky Sandler, MVP Lois Greis- man, and Debbi Casman graduate this year. Co- captain Betsy Johnson 80 can return with talents like Gail Mashka 82, the team's leading hitter, batting well over .300. P 25 Buchanan Buchanan Buchanan 197 BASEBALL Despite a 7-22 season clouded by eleven rained-out games, baseball co-captain and pitcher Don Wright '79 has nothing but positive comments about his ex- periences on the team. He has never played on any ath- letic team as close-knit as this one; he has made lasting friends in his three years at AD field. Don and the team's other seniorsshortstop Mark Whipple, cen- terfielder Barry Blum, and third baseman, co-cap- tain John King have innumerable fond memories of practices, games and road trips. The four seniors also know the thrill of having played on a 19-12 team their sophomore yearBrown's finest ever. Certainly among this year's finest athletes was power hitter John King. King hit fourteen homers this season and batted 495 one of the best averages in college baseball. John even belted a couple 500 foot home runs or what Wright called house balls that bounced off the roofs on Taber Avenue. During his college career, King rewrote the Brown record books for hitting. Most of these record were set by Bill Almon, now with the San Diego Padres. As King has a great chance to be drafted by the pros, his team- mates look forward to watching him blast homers over national television. Being near the bottom of the spectator totem pole didn't bother the baseball team much. The chance to travel or just simply play ball made a fun and rewarding experience for the whole team. Berkowitz Berkowitz e i f 5 ., A WOMEN'S CREW l SAMGALIEA AR Women's crew weathered the rough waves of a building year. An 0-4 season and no showing in the EAWRC would seem to note some distance to tra- vel for the team in terms of competitive levels. But the rowers brave intense practices determinedly and work toward the teamwork that is not come by easily in this fairly young sport for women. A highpoint of the women's season came early when a new shell was christened. Margorie Smith do- nated the new boat. She along with her husband Stan have been major influences in Brown sports: they are responsible for the Smith Swimming Center. The Margorie Smith Regatta was held this year, but Brown was left in the wake of MIT. With the coach slated to arrive next fall and the grueling hours of practice the team invests, it is only a matter of time before women's crew turns the tide and rides a wave of major successes. Buchanan Buchanan 199 MEN'S CREW Berkowitz . et G I N S g e . v u i by st WS e e -y i O e : . e Berkowitz Having won the Syracuse championhips, the crew team travelled to the PanAm trials at press- time. A great deal of work crafted the prowess of this year's squad. Although crew is a spring sport, the oarsmen work all year. Rowing, running and recruiting start Orientation Week. Team members and coaches watch for big freshmen in September's unavoidable lines. This fall the varsity took the Head of the Charles, the biggest single-day regatta in the world with forty boats in each event. From that major victory, the men kept in shape through intra-squad competition. When spring arrived, the team was ready. They spent April vacation in California for the San Diego Crew Classic in which Brown placed fifth in a national field. Back in New England, the team didn't let a fluke loss to Boston Uni- versity or to Harvard daunt their enthusiasm. Brown set a home-course record against North- eastern and achieved a decisive 10.6 second vic- tory over Syracuse and Vesper Boat Club. After a fourth in the Eastern sprints, the men took time off for exams. May 31, when most under- grads had begun their summer vacations, the die-hard men of Brown headed for the Syracuse- open National Championships. As mentioned earlier, the trip was well worth their while. The rewards of the races themselves are in- comparable. The race is where you see how hard you can push yourself, according to Tom Phillips '79, four-year survivor at the oars. The culminations of weeks of practice comes, and you get a feeling in the boat that you can't ex- plain. The individual strengths unite toward a single goal. It's really hard when you're apart, but it's really easy when you're together. You can feel your collective efforts propelling you. Evidently, only someone who had participated in the oldest inter-collegiate sport can appreciate what this oarsman means. HI Z31mo1ag Berkowitz PRI 4, .1a ,;-h. i 201 MEN'S TRACK Three wins, two losses, and a seventh place in the Heptagonals mark this year's track season. In the Heps, Brown collected more points as a team than ever before. Co-captain David Peters remarked that numerous individuals were strong in their events but that depth was lacking. None- theless, the season was a good one. Even though he was often overshadowed by Olympic hopeful Colm Cronin, Peters was the team's outstanding scorer this year. Russell Ells- worth was another runner justifiably proud of his achievements. Though frequently behind Osmond Lake 81, Ellsworth had the third fas- test time in the Ivies for the half-mile this year. In fact, most of the seniors have held some school record in their years at Brown. Ellsworth cited co-captain and hurdler John DeSantis as having come a long way in his Brown career. The statistics do not tell the whole track story. The season is a long one: daily workouts begin before orientation week and run till late in May; practices may go through vacations. Yet, the Athenian maxim a sound mind in a sound body proves true in these twentieth century scholar- athletes, and many plan to join clubs after gradu- ation to stay in shape. During the past four years, the team has gone to Tennessee, Florida, and Bermuda as well as many places closer to Providence. Buses set the stage for endless debates; hotel rooms for game after game of backgammon. A closeness results that even Appleby can't match. 202 A Berkowitz 1 4 Berkowitz Y w o l Berkowitz Gould Gould WOMEN'S TRACK Four years ago, Ella Massar had to run with the men's track team. Two years ago, there was a fifteen-member women's track team. In this the second year as a full team, women's track made impressive strides. Posting a 2-3 regular dual meet record, Brown won the New Englands and placed second in the Ivies behind Princeton. All-Ivy, All-Eastern Anne Sullivan '82 quali- fied for the Nationals at 3000, 5000 and 10,000 meters. Making All-Ivy was Lorie Parker at 100 and 200 meters and Lisa Casenova at 400 inter- mediate hurdles. In addition to those mentioned, tracksters who qualified for the Easterns were: Massar, Judi Gracey, Trish Morrisey, Carol Welsh, and Missy Himelein. Coached by John Hird and Phil Hazard, women's track has a fast future. In this second full year, not a meet saw a team unhampered by illness. Given the talent of the young team; some depth could keep Brown the team to beat in years to come. 203 204 MEN'S VARSITY SCORES Overall: 9-1-15 2-3 L CLEMSON 1-2 L BOSTON UNIV. 4-0 W YALE 1-1 T atURL 3-2 W at Princeton 2-1 W UPENN 2-1 W SPRINGFIELD COLL. 0-1 L at Cornell 1-0 W At Univ. of Conn. 1-0 W UMASS 1-0 W at Harvard 4-1 W DARTMOUTH 1-2 L Columbia 3-1 W UVM 1st round of N.E 1-3 L UCONN 2nd round of N.E WOMEN'S VARSITY SOCCER Overall: 5-2-2 regular season BRI PRINCETON O HARVARD 2o TUFTS 4-0 W at Boston Univ. cHE Y CURRY COLLEGE 2B WY BOWDOIN COLLEGE 022 Harvard 0-2 L At U V.M. 5-0 W at Smith 3-3 i UMASS ot 5t T UCONN 1-0 W at Plymouth ot 1SIENET at Champlain IVY TOURNEY BRO . LISTL WN VISITO MEN'S CROSS5 COUNTRY Overall: 0-7 BC with UMASS BC:59, UMASS:18, BR: 641LX2 Yale with UConn Yale: 41, UConn: 19; BR: 44LX2 48-17 L HARVARD U.R.I. with P.C. U.R.L: 50, P.C.: 17, BR: 68LX2 68th IC4A's-van Cortlandt Park WOMEN'S CROSS COUNTRY Overall: 2-4 46-15 L Yale U.N.H. with Harvard U.N.H.: 35, Harvard: 22, BR: 821L.X2 A7STSRIEEUERAR 24-31 W P.C. 15-50 W HOLY CROSS COLLEGE 6th Ivy Championships WOMEN'S FIELD HOCKEY Overall: 1-1-10 1-2 L UPENN 1-2 1L SMITH 0-2 IC UMass 0-1 IL Colgate 0-6 s IANEETE 2-5 L Trinity Coll. 0-6 I8 UConn 1-3 IL DARTMOUTH 0-5 L Harvard 40 W BARRINGTON COLL. L var 1-1 i S. Ct. State WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL 5th Clark Invitational 1-3 L atRIC. 3-1 W at Southern Mass. 0-2 L At Yale with Sacred Heart 0-2 L at P.C. with UN.H. 2-3 L at Smith 1-3 L Fitchburg State Coll. 2-3 L UCONN 6th Ivy Tourney at Yale 2-1 W EASTERN CONN. with Bryant 2-1 UR.L 3rd R.I. State Tourney WOMEN'S VARSITY TENNIS Overall: 3-3 6-3 W SMITH 7-2 W SOUTHERN CONN. 1-8 L i Jhogae Ist State Tourney 0-9 L at Trinity 6-3 W BOSTON COLLEGE 10th New Englands 3-5 L at UConn. VARSITY FOOTBALL Overall: 6-3 0-21 I YALE 3-17 b R 44-16 W at Princeton 14-0 W UPENN 21-13 W at Cornell 31-25 19Y HOLY CROSS 21-31 I DARTMOUTH 24-12 W at Columbia MEN'S WATER POLO Overall: 14-7 23-1 W UMASS Pepperdine Tournament UCLA, CAL POLY4th,LX3 Harvard, NEIWPA Tournament Harv.: 20-4, MIT: 17-11WX2 MIT Open Tournament Fordham: 11-8, Army: 12-16W,L 23-3 W DARTMOUTH Chicago Tournament Pitt: 14-13W 7-9 L Loyola of Chicago 14-17 L Chicago Circle 15-14 W Indiana Yale NEIWPA Tournament So. Ct.: 15-4, MIT: 11-6, Yale: 17-9WX3 12-6 W TRINITY COLLEGE BROWN OPEN TOURNAMENT Army: 11-8, Bucknell: 14-18, Fordham: 6-3W, L, W 1st NEW ENGLAND CHAMP. 2nd Eastern Championships 205 MEN'S VARSITY SWIMMING MEN'S INDOOR TRACK Overall: 4-7 Overall: 4-4 48-65 L Yale 56-80 L Harvard Siken G NAVY 85-51 W Boston College 76-37 W Springfield Coll. U.R.I. with St. John's 81-32 W UCONN URL: 49, 5t John's 57 3479 L HARVARD UNIV. Brown: 56LX2 33-80 L Princeton Yale with Penn 61-52 W CORNELL Yale: 26, Penn 897 33-80 L Columbia Brown: 56W, L 7142 W UBENY 2nd Princeton Relays dime L RN Millrose Games 5360 L Dartmouth Collese Dartmouth with Columbia 1th EIST Dart.: 69, Columbia: 27, Brown: 74WX2 8th Heps at Dartmouth MEN'S VARSITY WRESTLING WOMEN'S VARSITY SWIMMING Overall: 3-8 Overall: 9-1 WOMEN'S VARSITY 23-14 W Lowell University 75-s6 W SOUTHERN CONN. SQUASH 18-20 L Amherst 63-68 L Yale 12-21 L BOSTON COLLEGE 9140 W URI Overall 4.5 10-24 L Plymouth State College 76-55 W Boston Univ. 6-1 W Tufts . Y o RTEDHL 93-36 w HARVARD aad L 11-36 L Worcester Poly Tech 87-42 W BOSTON COLLEGE 6th Howe Cup at Yale 30.6 W Trinity College 9140 W SMITH a1 I TRINITY 15-30 L Yale University 103-27 W S. MASS 0-7 L Yale 12-41 1 Harvard University 3rd Ivy Championship 7-0 W SMITH 235 W Coast Guard 83-39 W WELLESLEY 7-0 W UPENN 14-33 1 U Conn. 86-45 W Dartmouth 3-4 L DARTMOUTH 7th New Englands 10th AIAW-U. of Nevada 07 L PRINCETON 7-0 W WELLESLEY WOMEN'S VARSITY GYMNASTICS Overall: 6-4 14.4-79.9 L URL 96-47.55 W CENTRAL CONN. Mt. Holyoke with Bridgewater WX 2J 102.70-105.60 L Boston State 100.10-97.55 W UCONN. 106.85-112 L CONN. COLLEGE Rhode Island Coll. 100.10-61.30 W Coast Guard MEN'S VARSITY HOCKEY Overall: 11-14 2-6 4-2 7-5 5-6 4-2 2-1 8-3 7-4 5-2 7-3 5-3 5-6 5-7 4-3 4-6 5-7 6-3 0-5 3-9 1-2 L ST. LAWRENCE UNIV. BOSTON COLLEGE Cornell University Colgate University YALE UNIVERSITY HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRINCETON UNIVERSITY St. Louis University St. Louis University HOLIDAY INV. TOURNEMENT Brown-McGill: 12-1W Brown-Vermont: 2-4L Brown-Bowling Green: 1-6,L Harvard Providence College Northeastern University Boston University PROVIDENCE COLLEGE U.V.M. Princeton University Yale University CORNELL UNIVERSITY RENSSELAER POLY TECH Dartmouth College Univ. of New Hampshire DARTMOUTH COLLEGE PoEsst o F FI-FEI-'EF4EFFI-'EE WOMEN'S VARSITY ICE HOCKEY Overall: 4-11-2 1-5 4-7 5-1 4-4 1-3 0-11 2-9 4-3 10-1 7-10 1-10 0-2 5-4 2-5 2-2 4-5 2-8 2nd g BOSTON UNIVERSITY L Boston College W Wesleyan T HARVARD L Boston University IPEASET PREEBESTEONISTATE W DARTMOUTH W UPENN L PROVIDENCE COLLEGE L Colby L Yale W Cortland L Cornell T BOSTON COLLEGE L UConn L Providence College IVY CHAMPIONSHIPS MEN'S VARSITY BASKETBALL Overall: 8-18 56-58 . L BROWN TAP-OFF TOURNAMENT 55-74 L Northeastern, Univ. of New Hampshire Siena College and Brown 54-67 1L UR.L IPTAY TOURNAMENT Brown-Clemson: 57-737L, Brown-Neb.: 65-741 58-75 IC Davidson College 57-54 W Fordham University 64-63 W Yale University 49-57 I MARQUETTE UNIVERSITY 69-60 W PROVIDENCE COLLEGE 51-73 IC UR.L 67-59 12 COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 61-56 W CORNELL UNIVERSITY 53-80 IC Univ. of Notre Dame 60-72 L UPENN 52-49 w PRINCETON UNIVERSITY 51-62 IC Dartmouth College 57-76 I Harvard University 60-62 L Providence College 50-49 24 Cornell University 54-73 IL Columbia University 74-63 2 YALE UNIVERSITY 60-61 L HARVARD UNIVERSITY 50-52 IC DARTMOUTH COLLEGE 50-61 IC Princeton University 75-83 L UPenn WOMEN'S VARSITY BASKETBALL Overall: 6-11 66-41 W FITCHBURG 75-34 L BROWN INV. TOURNAMENT 42-56 I Kean College 60-44 W BOSTON COLLEGE 61-59 W SOUTHEASTERN MASS. 71-59 A WESTFIELD STATE 23-73 L Univ. of Conn. 29-52 i Providence College 47-58 L UPENN 53-56 L Manhattanville 44-54 IL Colgate at Manhattanville 58-51 W Boston State 6th Ivy Championship at Yale 35-67 I Yale 57-58 L DARTMOUTH 41-68 L Harvard 61-50 W CENTRAL CONNECTICUT 53-61 L BENTLEY 207 208 MEN'S TENNIS Overall: 5-8 2-7 L at Columbia 3-6 L at UPenn 6-3 W TUFTS 0-9 L NAVY 0-6 iL PRINCETON 6-3 W at MIT. 1v2-71, L YALE 3-6 L CORNELL 5-4 W ARMY 9-0 W at UR.L 1-8 I at Harvard 1-8 L at Dartmouth Sth New Englands 5-4 W at Prov. College MEN'S VARSITY LACROSSE WOMEN'S TENNIS Overall: 8-4 Overall: 2-3 23-3 W BOSTON COLLEGE 6-3 W UCONN 15-10 W at Hofstra 0-9 L at UPenn 11-12' . at Wash. Lee 0T YALE 14-7 W YALE 81N at UR.I. 12-13 1. at Harvard 4-5 L HARVARD 15-13 W UMASS 5th IvySeven Sisters 14-13 W UNH 8-6 W at Princeton 13-7 W UPENN 25-7 at UCONN 9-12 L at Dartmouth 10-12 1 CORNELL WOMEN'S VARSITY LACROSSE Overall: 6-7-2 5-4 W at UR.L 1-5 L UPENN 6-6 T TRINITY 2-11 L YALE 0-9 L HARVARD 8-7 W BOSTON COLLEGE 14-5s W BOWDOIN COLLEGE 5-5 T at Bridgewater 7th at New England's 23-4 W CONNECTICUT COLL. 7-6 W at Dartmouth USWLA Nat'l. Champ 9-8 W Towson State 2-23 L Penn State 6-10 L James Madison WOMEN'S VARSITY SOFTBALL Overall: 7-8 4-5 L BOSTON UNIV. 10 0-14 L UCONN 2-7 L at Fitchburg 10-2 W ARMY 3-2 W HARVARD 2-4 L at Prov. College 6th State Tourney 17-3 W at Smith 9-3 W SOUTHEASTERN MASS. 1-3 L at Barrington Coll. 18-6 W PLYMOUTH STATE 5-3 W PLYMOUTH STATE 6-3 W at R.I College 72800 i IRIG Cellase MEN'S GOLF Overall: 0-8 443-435 IC Boston 435 L Crllem 432 L Harvard L Columbia L ke 8th Army Invitational IR IC - ORRJL 7th Ivy Tourney 10th New Englands MEN'S VARSITY BASEBALL Overall: 7-22 EIBL 3.9 MEN'S TRACK Overall: 3-2 3-14 L at U. of Missouri 97-66 W Yale 3-8 L at Murray State 94-58 W COLUMBIA 9-11 L at Columbia 83-80 W UR. 9-15 L At UPenn 58-69 L Dartmouth 7-11 L at UPenn 65 L Harvard 15-9 W at Holy Cross o Penn Relays 6-9 L NAVY 7th HEPTAGONALS 6-7 IL at Prov. College 10 :- New Engalnds 12-11 W YALE '+ IC4A's 4-3 W YALE 4-15 L CORNELL 2-4 L ARMY 58 L ARMY WOMENS TRACK 5-12 L at UConn 3-5 L at UConn Overall: 1-2 7-4 W at Harvard 5361 L URL 0-6 1L at Harvard EOs Y ale 3-4 IL at Dartmouth 85-40 W PROV. COLL 53 L PROVIDENCE COLLEGE snd VY CHAME. 1941 PROVIDENCE COLLEGE . BRI 12-7 W at U.R.L st New Englands 5-3 W at UR.L 18th EAIAW Champ 3-12 L NORTHEASTERN 1-5 IL at Fairfield Univ. 8-16 L HOLY CROSS 12-10 W HOLY CROSS 1-4 L at Northeastern MEN'S CREW 1-8 L at Northeastern 1-10 I UMASS Overall: 3-2 at San Deigo Classic 5th BOSTON UNIV.COAST GUARD LW at Harvard L NORTHEASTERN W 575 at Syracuse W 5712 at EARC 4th 67-9 at IRA's st Pan American Games WOMEN'S CREW Overall: 0-4 MARJORIE B. SMITH REGATTA with M.L.T. BOSTON UNIV. at Mt. Holyoke 575 at Rutgers unadpy Drill Bision EATNCRRET: j - 2 1 1l 2 Berkowitz Berkowitz Nager Nager 212 Berkowitz 213 Blackwood Fitzpatrick B10310 214 Diaz Blackwood 215 216 217 Harry and Zeena Kassel Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Kennedy Mrs. and Mrs. Morton Kleiner Dr. and Mrs. Leon Kotloff Matt A. Krall John H. Lawrance, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. David B. Learner Mr. and Mrs. Roger E. Legault Dr. and Mrs. Sung Liao I-Chang Lin Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Logan Hillary S. Longmuir Mrs. William D. Mahoney Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. McNamara Mrs. Herta D. Melas Sue and Lloyd Miller Mrs. Moss Minter Mr. William D. Moreland, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald F. Obermeyer Mrs. Anne R. Okin Dr. Patrick D. O'Regan Dr. and Mrs. Stanley Ostrow Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Peltz Dr. and Mrs. Clement Philbrick Mrs. Cal Poulos Dr. and Mrs. Paul Prusky Irwin and Ellen Rennert Mr. Edgar Robinson Jerame Rosen Dr. and Mrs. Macey H. Rosenthal G. Andrew Roth Leona G. Palmer Gertrude Ryan Mrs. Anne Salvadore Mr. Romula Salinas Mr. and Mrs. Burton 1. Samors Alvin Sayer Inga Shepherd Mzr. and Mrs. Louis Shoer Nina Siegel Mr. and Mrs. James M. SloanlII Jane Smith Mr. and Mrs. Gordon E. Allen Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Alterman Viola and Milton Silberman PATRONS Mr. and Mrs. David Beaubien Dr. and Mrs. Albert 1. Bellin Sally S. Bergmans June Branche Dr. and Mrs. Geoffrey E. Brock Mr. and Mrs. Joseph V. Charyk Katy Chilton Mrs. Kemp Clark Mr. and Mrs. A. Colonnese Mr. and Mrs. Louis Conca Dr. and Mrs. Norman D. Corwin Mr. and Mrs. Frederic A. Crafts Mr. Richard H. Dana Dr. and Mrs. Eugene C. Dempsey Mr. and Mrs. Pobert N. Drucker Philip Ejnes Morton D. Elkind The Ellsons Mr. and Mrs. Robert Engle Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Erb Mr. and Mrs. Harris Fischer Mr. and Mrs. John F. Fox, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Glassman Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Gordon Mr. and Mrs. Roger Harrington Mr. and Mrs. R.A. Hansen Phyllis A. Haynes Mr. Julius Hertling W. Wylie Hopkins, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Crawford Hull Robert R. Hyman Md. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kosow Mr. and Mrs. Ira Jacobs Mr. Robert Jay Mr. and Mrs. Jennis Rolland Jones Mr. and Mrs. William Kanter Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Swig Elaine M. Thomas Mr. and Mrs. Donald W. Wyckoff Mr. and Mrs. Louis Todd Dr. and Mrs. Uno Uustal Mrs. D. Yankelovich Mr. Robert Vlasic Mrs. Joseph E. Wooley, Jr. 10A JANVHL In Appreciation Of Your Patronage BROWN UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE Best Wishes To The Class Of 79 Congratulations Class Of THE STUDENT UNION Big Mother Coffeehouse Concert Agency Cultural Activities Board 79 Film Society Lecture Board 221 - 0 EAST SIDE ,10TES THE COPY nggm Heartiest cou gor Your o Printing While-U-Wait We e ard To 529 el ENVELOPES + PROGRAMS LETTERHEADS - INVOICES RESUMES Xerox Coples 5C x COLLATING x FLYERS x STAPLING x POSTERS e 421-7878 BUSINESS CARDS PHOTO COPY REDUCTIONS 221 THAYER STREET wur staff is waiting to serve YOU with LOW COST and QUICK SEBVICG!j Tortas E Calzones 167 Benefit Providence, RI 351-6888 EAT SOMETHING DIFFERENT Eat-In, Take-Out, Catering Geoff's On Benefit 163 Benefit Street 2 751-2248 OUR SINCERE BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF '79... 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Closed Monday Dinner Sun Thurs 5spm 9pm Fri-Sat. 5 p.m.-11 p.m. 99 Hope Street, Providence, R.I. 02906 401 751-8890 z N g PANACHE o0 SERVING QUICHE, CASSEROLE, SALAD, AND DESSERT SPEEIATS THE VY ROOM : THE GATE - THE BLUE RCOM - EAST CAMPUS FREE PARKING FOR OUR CUSTOMERS NOW AVAIL- ABLE ON CANAL STREET 11:30 AM-1:00 AM, MON.- FRI. 6:00 PM-1:00 AM, SAT.-SUN. 125 NORTH MAIN STREET, PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND, 831-2660 CONGRATULATIONS GRADUATES ALE X ANDER'S restaurant THE HOUISE OF aiLIAL Y EC T IN TOWN 110 MATTHEW STREET PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND 1979 LIBER a CAMPUS yearbook Fall Delivery: more pages more color more coverage But Still $15.00 o o Pyt 228 THE CLASS OF 1978 in lights: an empty champagne bottle, a weathered blue program and brunensis smiles . . . one last week . . . disbelief party . . . relax . . . party i'm going to have to pace myself. to the beach, to newport, to boston, today. mansion party. barbecue. the campus blooms. the green transforms: tables, chairs, colored lanterns, dance floor: dusk candles in university hall anticipation atmosphere to inebriate foxtrots, jitterbugs, jive swishy gowns, svelte suits beautiful and handsome strobe-lit sayles: try to stand up midnight: what's the last line of the alma mater? . .. fleeting hours . . . sunshine sports tablecloths, white lanterns, liquor pops tickets? i couldn't get . . . alums, grads, and parents absorb crowd and music evening soars into star wars planes salute seventy-eight. see you tomorrow last minute sunburns for the kodachrome first meeting with cap and gown: arm in arm down the run to catch up. hill. run baccalaureate service sense of event relatives and friends line the green listening avocation advice lines for living cap and gown rest a few hours farewell concerts four years strike last notes - mesam wey T o e -l V. o 229 230 231 233 236 237 4 A u m mHlnuu M!w g k A .i lth l lln 8 3 W M M NWH T i H lm m 11' Ht HlHH mm wi HW Y b m m M Nl - MMWN L m D A Q m 5 l i nM : lm 'WUIMMlmmnuwmmnuHllllltlllHHim W nmn W il llllllllllllllll H l memuu Sl umlM J i l 1 1' 0 o . H v'H . M 7 w'w ol ! 240 van wickle gates open: rain enters. no yellow flags. drizzle coats caps and gowns: who cares? a last walk down the hill with friends caps straightened orators cheered those key latin words hurrah threatens church floor up the hill come hell or high water . . . honorary degrees . . . citations . . . benediction hug and head toward diploma into crowds into cars in deo speramus van wickle gates close. 241 LA T A5 ':,A 'Al. T i s e Wy X Nathaniel T. Abbott Keith W. Abell Michael Ackerman Nancy Fayne Ades Michael Adesman Economics A.B. Semiotics A.B. Classics A.B. Classics A.B. Biology A.B. Constance Ahlstrom Jack W. Aland Jr. Ellen Alberding Edward Albert Albert 1. Alexander Semiotics A.B. Psychology A.B. English A.B. Economics Sc.B. Biology Sc.B. Judith Allen Lynette Allison Bruce Alterman Howard Altman David W. Alvarez History A.B. Inter. Rel. French A.B. Philosophy A.B. Biology A B. History A.B. John A. Andersen, Jr. Jacob Andoh Elizabeth Andrews Ryan N. Anthony Arnold H. Antokol Economics A.B. Engineering Sc.B. Geological Sciences AB. Political Science A.B. Applied Math Sc.B. Engin B. Arik Benjamin Arno Stuart A. Aronson Susane Arteta Barbara Aspinall M Mech. Engineering Sc.B. Political Science A.B. Biology A.B. Inter. Relations A B. Economics A.B. x Lynn L. Atkinson Joshua M. Atz David Auty Biology Sc.B. M.D. Biology Sc.B. Computer Science Sc.B Herbert Avery Lisa Avery Marjorie A. Backman Psych.Music A.B. Linguistics A.B. American Civ. A.B. Reed R. Baer Tristram D. Bahnson Christina J. Baker Avi Baran David Barclay Eumpean History A.B. Bio-Physics Sc.B American Civ. A.B. Indep, Con. AB. Economics A.B. 0 Teresa A. Barnes Henry Barnston Matthew B. Bauer Fredrick Baumgarten Gayle J. Beck Inter. Relations A.B. Semiotics A.B. Inter. Relations A.B. Art History A.B. Indep. Psych. Education AB. PL i y 1R James A. Becker Todd Becker Janet Beer Betsy Behringer Elizabeth Colden Behrman Economics A.B. Philosophy A.B. Biology Sc.B. Biology A.B. ChemistryMath Sc.B. Albert A. Belardi Jr. Chris A. Belardi Christina Belew Jeffrey E. Bellin Paul M. Belsky Biology A.B. Biology A.B. Political Science Biology A.B Biology English A.B. French A.B. Bruce Bennett James S. Bennett Bradford Brooks Benson Daniel Benua Sarah Berger Applied MathEconomics Classics A.B. Classics A.B. Honors Engineering Sc.B History A.B. Sc.B. Johanna A. Bergmans Lawrence Berkman Carl Berkowitz Ken Berkowitz Nina C. Berler Civil Engineering Sc.B. Biology Biology A.B. Biology Sc.B. Org. Behavior A.B. 247 248 Jeffrey G. Berman Political Science A B. Eric Betuel English A.B. History A.B. Christopher G. Bird Music A.B. Michael Blakely Indep.Psych. A.B. Todd Robert Berman Charles J. Biddle Inter. Relations A B. Bernard Birnbaum Biology A.B. Robert B. Blakely Economics A.B. Stephanie L. Berry EnglishAmer. Lit. AB. Beverly M. Biller Biology A.B. Liz Birnbaum MathLinguistics A B. Gary Blank Applied Math Sc.B. Jerry Bessette MathEconomics A.B. Ellen B. Binder Semiotics A.B. Marilyn 1. Blackston Bio-Chemistry Sc.B. Debbie Block Psychology A.B. Victor B. Betesh Elec. Engineering Sc.B. Thomas E. Binet Engineering Sc.B. Economics A.B. William L. Blais History A.B. Joyce Marie Blue Ethics Political Philosophy A .B. m A Y A W. Barry Blum David Blumenthal Michael Bolton Alan Boom Carlye A. Booth I Political Science A.B. Bio-Chemistry A.B. Math. Economics A B. Biology A.B Chemistry A.B. I Elizabeth A. Bower Leota Branche John M. Braunstein Richard M. Breslow David Brickman Comp. Lit. A.B. SpanishIndep. Concen. Semiotics A.B. Honors MathComp. Science Sc.B. Studio Art A.B. RB! 249 David Bright European History History of Art A.B. Pia M. Brown Sociology of Mgmt. A.B. Brian J. Buckley Political Science A B. Deborah L. Brotman PsychSoc. of Ed. A.B. Donald S. Britton Organ. Behavior Management A.B. David G. Brock Bio-Engineering Sc.B. Judith L. Bronstein Independent Environ. Biology A.B. Ronald A. Brown SociologyMedicine Health A.B. Deborah D. Browne Human Biology A.B. Susan Buchsbaum English A.B. Terry Brown History A.B. Phillip S. Budzenski Alan Buff Biology A.B. HistoryEconomics A.B. Philip M. Budinger English A.B. Lawrence Budner Classics A.B. 250 Frank H. Buntin II Urban Studies A B. Barbara Butcher French A.B. Honors Virginia M. Byers Aquatic Bio. Sc.B. Honors Maurice M. Carey Jr. History A.B. Julie Burbank Math A B Jay Butera Semiotics A.B. Carolyn Cambor Biology A.B Ellen Carnaghan Pol. Sci. AB Economics A.B. Katherine Burton Eur. His.Russ. Studies A.B. f it Laurel Anne Butler Amer. Civilization A.B. Marc Cannizzo History A.B. Andrew Carpenter Comp. Science Sc.B. 7l Umberto Capuano Biology Sc.B. Anna M. Carreiro Port. Brazil. Studies A.B. Jane Carey Comp. Lit. A.B. o vf - Hl ; Johanna M. Carroll Eng. Amer. Lit. AB. Richard Carucci Randee L. Cassel Elizabeth Anne Castelli Econ.App. Math Sc.B. History A.B. EnglishAmer. Lit. AB Massoud Chaharbakhsh Alexander C. Chako Sita L. Charkrawarti Englithq:COn. A.B.Sc.B. Biology SEB! Mech. Engineering Sc.B. 252 Stephen Cavanaugh Semiotics A.B. Jane Otis Chace Soc. of Ed.French A.B. Ruben Chapa Political Science A B Fa AS Steven Chapin Karen Chaplin Nathaniel Chapman Christopher E. Charyk Teresa Cheeks Psychology Sc.B. Biology AB. History A.B. Psychology A.B. Materials Engineering Sc.B. David Cheney Tanya Chermak Seth A. Chernick Joel Chernov Barbara Chernow GeologyBiology Sc.B. Reli. Stu.Russian A.B. Computer Science Sc.B. History A.B. Economics A.B. Shawn Cherry Jonathan Chiel Eric Chilton Diane Chodowski Cynthia M. Chong Inter. Relations A.B. Law SocietyHistory A.B. Economics A.B. Biology Sc.B Biology Sc.B. Leon C. Chow Jane Chrestman Thomas G. Chu Mikki Ciombor Diane E. Citrino Biology Sc.B. Biology A.B. Bio-Chemistry A.B. Biology A.B. English A.B. Honors Ada H. Citron SemioticsTheater Arts Elizabeth Cody Comp. Lit. A.B. David Collier Psychology A B. . ; Andrew Scott Conway Inter. Relations Poly. Sci. A.B 'lw i Sl William G. Clarke Eng. Lit. Studio Art AB Florine L. Clark U.S. History A.B. Lisa Cobb English A.B. Douglas R. Clough Sociology A.B. David C. Cohen App. Math-Economics Sc.B. Joyce M. Cohen Independent A.B Debra A. Cohn History A.B. Joseph Colagiovanni PhilosophyPoly. Sci. AB Tony Colonnese Engineering Sc.B. James Conca Demot Bradshaw Conley GCeologyBiology Sc.B. English A.B. Kevin J. Connolly Biology A B David G. Cook Biology Sc.B. Frederick N. Cooper Lynn Coram EnglishAmer. Lit. A.B. Edward J. Corcoran Psychology Sc. B. English Lit. A.B. T 7T N Scott M. Corin Janice B. Corwin Paul D. Costas Danae Cotsis James W. Crocker Biology Sc. B. History Am. Civ. A.B. Philosophy A B Classics A B. Math-Econ. A B Colm C. Cronin Cynthia F. Crosby Ashton G. Cumberbatch Monica Currie David Currier l Econ.Org. Behavior A.B. Mech. Engineering Sc.B. Econ. Urban Studies Biology A.B. Math A.B. l A.B. Honors I 255 Jeanne B. Cushman Nancy E. Czapek Michael Dabrowski Mitchell Daffner Pamela Dakin Inter. RelationsHistory English A.B. Economics A.B. Comp. Science A.B. Anthropology A.B. AB. Mech. Engineering Sc.B. e i, a' i u Nathalie P. Dana John Dangl Jewelnel Davis John R. Davis Valerie K. Davis History A.B. Economics A.B. Religious Studies A.B. HistoryRussian A.B. Biology A.B. 3 Thomas H. Day Sara Hall Deadrick Elizabeth DeBruler Caroline Dechert Jane DeChristopher History A.B. Economics A.B. Theater ArtsSemiotics Comp. Lit. AB. Medical Anthro. A.B 256 Martin A. DeFrancesco James M. Delaney Joseph V. Della Morte Flora Del Presto Gian-Maria Delzanno Biology A.B. History A.B. Elec. Engineering Sc.B. English Amer. Lit. A.B. App. MathEcon. Sc.B Michael A. Dempsey Jeffrey 1. Denlinger John DeSantis Julie Deutsch Bronislaw K. Dichter Biology AB. History A.B. Economics A.B. History A.B. Physics Sc.B. 1 o Stephen Dickstein Katha C. Diddel Katherine E. Dietze History A.B. ChineseHistory A.B. Comp. Lit. A.B. Z' P V77 7 Vi7 Vo 7 L John J. DiRocco Jr. Yasmin A. Dixon Andrew Dolan Biology A.B. Modernization A.B. Economics A.B. A P Elizabeth G. Dolan Comp. Lit. AB. William Drobyski Political Science A.B. 1 Diane Miriam Douglas Semiotics A B. Honors Stephen M. Drouilhet Mech. Engineering Sc.B. u!f m MMNIW M:! 1 Melissa Douthart Amer. Civ. A.B. Randy Drye Psychology A.B. Mu Y T Colleen A. Doyle Psychology A.B. Cathy L. Dudman Biology Sc.B. . . i SRR M, 2 1 Fe Susan H. Draper English Lit. AB. 5 4 Ml Michael Dunn Art A.B. Philosophy A.B. Terrence Dunn Sharron E. Dupler Antonia Dupont Frances X. Durkin Kevin Dushay Inter. Relations History A.B. English Amer. Lit. Latin Amer. Studies Biology A.B. Poli. Sci. A.B. A.B. Honors Economics A.B. Joel Dworetzky Beth Dyer Douglas R. Dykaar Bruce C. Ebnother Isabel Eccles English A.B. Econ. Urban Studies A.B. Engineering Sc.B. Port, Brazilian Studies Latin American Studies A.B. A.B. Barbara H. Edgerton Lisa Christenson Edman Daniel R. Ehrenbard Elisabeth Elkind Jeffrey R. Elliott Linguistics A.B. Reli. Stu. A.B. Math A.B. Amer. Civ. AB. Eng. Economics A.B. Laurel A. Ellson Russ Ellsworth Matthew C. Emerson Susan H. Engle Raymond Entwistle Psycholinguistics A.B. Computer Science A.B. Anthropology A.B. Psychology Health Biology Sc.B. Society A.B 259 al Mark L. Epstein Karen E. Erb Lars C. Erickson Eric J. Evans Julie A. Evans Engineering Sc.B. Inter. Relations A.B. Psychology A.B. Physics Sc.B. Political Science A.B. i'ul Edward B. Ewing Julie Fairchild Catherine E. Fagiolo Robert Falb Richard J. Farynyk Theater Arts A.B. Bio-Chemistry A.B. MusicPsych. A.B. Political Science A.B. Mech. Engineering Sc.B. Organ. Behavior A.B. Robert D. Feder Mary Anne Federici Alan V. Feibelman Ellen L. Feil Amy E. Feiman Economics A.B. Biology A.B. Mech. Engineering Sc.B. Chemistry Sc.B. Psychology A.B. Julie Fenster Scott Fenton Kay Ferguson David H. Ferrara Hart Fessenden Independent Con. A.B. Engineering Sc.B. Biology A.B. Political Science A B. EnglishAmer. Lit. A.B. French Lit. A.B. 260 Donna Field Robert A. Fields Alan Fitch Ellen Fischer Eileen Flanagan Biology A.B. Classics A.B. Semiotics A.B. Law Society A.B. Independent Con. A.B. Kate J. Flanagan John M. Flanders Kathryn Fleischer Bryan C. Forley Daniel Forman Math A.B. MathPoly. Sci. A.B. Independent Con. A.B. Bio-Medical Ethics A.B. Religious Studies A.B. 261 Robert F. Forster Diane M. Forte Laura A. Foster Andrea A. Fox John P. Fracasso Economics A.B. Applied Math Sc.B. Biology Sc.B. Semiotics A.B. Semiotics A.B. Thomas C. Frame Arthur D. Frank Jr. L. Renee Franklin Ronald Frantz Amy L. Freedman Law In Society A.B. History A.B. Psychology Sc.B. Organ. Behavior A B. Human Biology A.B. Suzanne Fried Bonnie Lynn Friedman Craig Alan Friedman Laurie E. Freidman Richard Friedman Comparative Lit. A.B. Computer Science Sc.B. Applied Math Sc.B Classics A.B. Math.-Economics A.B. Anna M. Fromer Catherine Fuerst Frank P. Fuerst Political Science A.B. Comparative Lit. A.B. Mech. Engineering Sc.B. Lewis J. Fuiks Tamsin Furlaud Camile M. Fusco Political Science A.B. Independent Con. A.B. Classics A.B. John Gadon Luke Gaffney Joanne Gaines Anne Galliher Richard A. Galvin History A.B. Sociology A.B. Art A.B. Economics A.B. English A.B. Alon A. Garay Brevard Garrison Joanne Garston Nina J. Gasparello John A. Gausepohl Biology Sc.B. Geology Sc.B. English A.B. History Port. A.B Psychology A B. 263 Andrew L. Gedo Kenny Gee Andrew Gefen Theodore M. Georgeson John Gevertz Psychology Sc.B. Chemistry A.B. Economics A.B. International Rel. A.B. Biology A.B. Political Phil. A.B. Anthony Gianfrancesco Kirk N. Gianotas Emily Andrews Gibbs Christopher W. Gibson Psychology Sc.B. English Sc.B. French A B. Economics A.B. Lisa Gichner Economics A B. Bio-Chemistry A.B. 264 David M. Gilden Nancy Gillespie Theresa M. Gingras Andrew Glassman Barbara B. Glazer Political Science A.B. Econ.Inter. Rel. A.B. Bio-Chemistry A B. Psychology A.B Art A.B. Alan L. Glenn Ellen G. Gold Carol B. Goldberg Honey L. Goldberg Steven Goldberg Math.-Economics A.B. Biology Sc.B. Anthropology A.B. Inter. Econ. Rel. A.B. Applied Math Sc.B. Economics Sc.B. A. Benjamin Goldgar Amy Goldstein Larry Goldstein Ronald L. Goldstein Barbara Ann Goldweber English Lit. A.B. Amer. Civ. A.B. Bio-Chemistry Sc.B. History Pol. Sci. A.B. Studio Art A.B. T Iy Susan Goloskie Milena Gomez M. Carolyn Gonzales e Canr FIE Neil M. Goodman History A.B. Inter. Rel.Latin Sociology A.B. Computer Science Sc.B. American History A.B. Amer. Studies A.B. 265 s 266 Diane B. Gordon Philosophy A.B. Lori Jane Gottlieb Economics A.B. James R. Grantham Biology A.B. Steve Green Gary Gorden Applied Math Sc.B. B Edward W. Gould Political Science A B John Grassi Political Science A.B. Carolyn L. Greenberg International Rel. A.B. Peter H. Gorman Bio-Medical Eng. Sc.B. Jeffrey A. Graham English Amer. Lit. A B. Glenn R. Gray Inter. Rel.Econ. A.B. Deborah J. Greenberg Semiotics A.B. Ruth Gorski Geology Sc.B. Susan Graham Psychology A.B. Glenn Grayson American Civ. AB. A Jon Greenfield Economics A.B. Gregory G. Gosetti Sociology A.B. Paul Grandmont Lucey Geology A B Don Greeley Civil Engineering Sc B. Jonathan W. Greene Biology English Sc.B. y N F F Shelly E. Greenfield Biology A.B. Sabrina N. Griffith Urban Studies A.B. Peter C. Gref Economics A.B. Bill Grodski Economics A.B. Lois Greisman History A.B. Alan D. Grossman Bio-Chemistry A.B. S James C. Griffeth Elec. Engineering Sc.B. Helene G. Grosvenor Envir. Design A.B. Kathryn R. Griffin Econ. Orig. Behavior A.B. Laura D. Grover Art English A.B. 267 Richard Gumer Bradlee W. Gustavesen Paul S. Guthorn Kevin C. Guynn Robert A. Hadesman Biology A.B. Bio-Chemistry Sc.B. Engineering Sc.B. Bio-Medical Eng. Sc.B. Biology Sc.B. Martha Ann Hagan Karen R. Hall Michelena L. Hallie Douglas A. Halperin Kate Hamilton Carmiieriien, sl Eng. Amer. Lit. A.B. HistoryEnglish A.B. Math Sc.B. Studio Art A.B. Computer Science Sc.B. Aubrey F. Hammond Michelle Hankins Cindy Hansen David E. Hansen John B. Harkavy Econ.Poly. Sci. A.B. History A.B. Education Psych. A.B. Bio-Chemistry Sc.B. History A.B. 268 Mg Michael Harla James R. Harrell Jr. Carl D. Harrington Rochelle Harris Psychology A.B. Economics A.B. Applied Math Sc.B. Psychology A.B. AR 77 c John F. Hart Ellen Hartwell Ethan Haskel John Hassenfeld Applied Math Sc.B. History A.B. Bio-Chemistry Sc.B. Engineering A.B. Kathleen M. Healy Charles Hebson Bob Heckel History A.B. Civil Engineering Sc.B. HistoryArt History A.B. Leora R. Heckelman Kenneth R. Heilbrunn Joyce Hempstead Psychology Sc.B. English A.B. Linguistics A.B. David Hart Math A.B. Barbara A. Haynes Independent Con. A.B. Andrew Henderson Kerry Henrickson Eric Henry Rita E. Herman quert Herold Economics A.B. Biology A.B Political Science A.B. Psychology A.B. Engineering Sc.B. Steven L. Herring Kenneth L. Herts Paul Herzan Carolyn Hess Anne Heyrman International Rel. A.B. American Civ. EnglishAmer. Lit. A.B. International Rel. A.B. Classics A.B. Semiotics A.B. Economics A.B. Reli. Stu. A.B. Honors Michael F. Higginbotham HistoryClassics A.B. Jeryl L. Hillerman History A.B. Mary G. Hochman Political Science A.B. Anne R. Hogg History A.B. Debra J. Hilbert History A.B. Lisa R. Himmelstein Biology A.B. David Hochstim Urban Studies A.B. Louise Hohensee Spanish A.B. William Hildebrand Hist.Ren. Studies A.B. RTRERREERAR Juan Homero Hinojosa Math Physics Sc.B Ruth A. Hodges Comparative Lit. A.B. i Michael Holleran Human Envir. Stu. A.B. R Daniel G. Hill Art A.B. Jeff Hiris Soc.Psych. A.B. Michelle Hoffman Neuro. Science Sc.B. Lori-Linell C. Hollins Engineering Sc.B. Everett H. Hill Biology Sc.B. Richard Hirsh Applied Math Sc.B. George H. Hogeman Geology A.B. Ingrid A. Holm Psychology Sc.B. 2N 272 Mark S. Holmes Engineering Sc.B. Laurie F. Horowitz Biology A.B. Elizabeth Howlett Human Biology A.B. Robert Hutner Semiotics A.B Cary S. Honig Classics A.B. Paula H. Horrigan Fine Arts AB Alice H. Huang Bio-Physics Sc.B. Colette Hyman Amer. Civ. AB. Richard B. Hood Engineering Sc.B. Alan Houghton Mech. Engineering Sc.B. Carol A. Huckaba Applied Math Sc.B. Julie Ann Iselin Ren. Studies A.B. Elizabeth Hopkins Applied Math A.B. Kathryn J. Howarth English A.B. Honors R. Gordon Huckins Amer. History A B. Norma Jabbur Comparative Lit. A.B. Thomas Hornick Biology Sc.B. Pamela Ann Howland Applied Math Sc.B. Robert W. Hummel Elec. Engineering Sc.B. Charisse R. Jackson Psychology A.B. - o 1 ?kff;,' Maureen D. Jackson Psychology A.B. 8.2 I ,112 P Charles B. Jackson ClassicsPoly. Sci. A.B. Judith Jacoby American Lit. A.B. Sheryl Jacobs Psychology A.B. ! Tranice Jackson Biology A.B. R - H. Parker James European History A.B. Neil Jacob Economics A.B. Nichoalas Jansen Biology A.B. Philip N. Jacobs Computer Science Sc.B. Susan Jaworowski Comparative Lit. A.B. Music A.B. 273 4 Abby L. Jennis Cornelius J. Jansen Paul Jester Suzanne Johannet Sverker M. Johansson Am. History A.B. Bio-Chemistry Sc.B. Mech. Engineering Sc.B. Semiotics A.B. International Rel. A.B. I s M. Vaughan Johnson, Jr. David Jones Edward B. Jones Elizabeth M. Jones Peter B. Jones Applied Math A.B. Elec. Engineering Sc.B. Engineering A.B. Semiotics A.B. Labor Studies A.B. Nancy A. Josephson Chantal Joubert Robert H. Judd Christine L. Jusczyk Karen Kabnick Economics A.B. English AB Elec. Engineering Sc.B. Psychology A.B. Biology Sc.B. Daniel A. Kaizer David Kalla Warren B. Kanders Diana Ensor Math A.B. Biologies A.B. Mark B. Kantor Jill Kaplan Kenneth D. Karpay History A.B. Lit. Science A.B. Political Science A.B. Bonnie Katz Marcia F. Katz Jon Kaufman Linguistics M.A. Biology A.B. Biology Sc.B Independent A.B. History A B Glenn S. Kehlmann Brian Kelly Paula A. Kelly Human Biology A.B. Art A.B. Political Science A.B. Ronald Kaufman Inter. History A.B. Mary Ann Kennedy English A.B. Lisa Keamy Biology A.B. Brian Kenyon Donna Kiefer David Kim Karl E. Kim Kathleen M. Kim Sung M. Kim European History A.B. Engineering Sc.B. Sociology A.B. Biology A.B. Bio-Chemistry A.B. Suzie Y.R. Kim John W King Ira H. Kirschenbaum Madelyn M. Kleiner Kevin P. Kluge Bio-Chemistry A.B. Political Science A.B. Indep. Con. Sc.B. Honors Biology A.B. Eng.Semiotics A.B. 276 Andrew Knapp Neuro. Science Sc.B. Economics A B. Michael V. Knight Colin R. Knudsen Inter. Relations A.B. Alfie Kohn Independent Con. A.B Timothy A. Konieczny Political Science A.B. George N. Korean Semiotics A.B. - Robert M. Krausz Economics A.B. i David Kraus Biology Sc.B. Robert Krumenaker Env. Planning Sc.B. Karen Krygier Semiotics A.B. Robert M. Kotloff Religious Studies A.B. Roxanne Kousoulas Biology A.B. Amelia Kreitzer Inter. Relations A.B. Hun Guan B. Kua Economics A.B. Russell Kraines History A.B. Daniel Kreshtool Economics A B. Deborah Lynn Kurland Env. Economics A.B. Chris Krall English Amer. Lt. A.B. Peter E. Kretzmer App. MathEcon. Sc.B. Jed A. Kwartler Biology Sc.B. 2 Jo-Ann Kwong Damon Labarera Marc H. LaBranche Steph.en Lack Robert A Ladefian Biology A.B. Psychology A.B. Honors Mat. Engineering Sc.B. Classics AB. English AB. , e - - Paula Lambert Michael Lancaster Jon Land Susan Landess Julie Landsman Law Society Political Science A.B. English Amer. Lit. A.B. Biomed. Ethics A.B. English AB. History A.B. Lizanne Landsman John P. Langlois Geri D. Laster Pamela J. Laughlin Adrienne Lavine Inter. Relations A.B. Bio-Chemistry Sc.B. Applied Math Sc.B. Urban Studies A.B. Mech. Engineering Sc.B. 5 F F 5 John Lawrence James Lawson Tom Lawton Michael Laycock Biomed. Eng. Sc.B. Political Science A.B. Philosophy A.B. Economics A.B. Leslie Learner Economics A.B. Semiotics A.B. John R. LeClaire Georges Lederman Amer. History A.B. History A.B. Economics A.B. French A.B. Kitty Lee Theresa J. Lee Political Science History A.B. Economics A.B. Douglas A. Lee History A.B Toby Lees Psychology A.B. Gordon D. Lee History A.B. Jonathan D. Leffert Biology A.B. John H. Lee Human Biology Sc.B. Marc A. Legault Biology Sc.B. John M. Leong Alison W. Lehr Leslie Ann Leitner Betsy Lembeck Garry M. Leonard Biology A B. Env. Policy A.B. Am. Civ. A.B. Semiotics A B English A.B. Mitchell Ross Lester Suzie LeSueur Peggy Leung Dana Levenson Amy Leventer Human Biology A.B. Political Science A.B. Psychology A.B. History A.B. Agquatic Bio. Sc.B. Gina E. Levey Michael Levinger Richard Levy Anne Beals Lewis David Lewis Psychology A.B. Computer Science A.B. Biology A.B. English A.B. History A.B. 280 LA Donna Lewis Robin Lewis Michael Eric Lewitt James L. Liang Dave Liberati I ! Engineering Sc.B. Psychology Sc.B. Honors Comp. Lit., Apl. MathEcon. Sc.B. Health Care Dev. A.B i History A.B. Alice Rabi Lichtenstein Diane Lichtenstein Leslie Lichter Annette R. Lidawer Chuan-Fu Lin Semiotics A.B. Honors Classics A.B. Comp. Lit. A.B. Honors Political Science A .B. Elec. Engineering Sc.B. r - v A ER A A Lino S. Lipinsky Andrew W. Litt Mary Littlejohn Pol. Sci. Ethics Computer Science A.B. Aquatic Biology Sc.B Pol. Philosophy A.B. b David A. Livingstone Chiu Shun-Lo Caren A. Lobo Civ. Engineering Sc.B. Elec. Engineering Sc.B. Psychology A.B. Peter B. Loening Adriane Loeb Shawn M. Logan Michael R. Lombardo Shelly Longmuir Economics A.B. Inter. Relations A.B. Elec. Engineering Sc.B. MathEconomics A.B. English Honors, Semiotics A.B. Jacques Lord Michele Kane-Lord Tamar Lothan Steven Lossef John M. Lowe Geo. Physics Sc.B. Political Science A.B. Philosophy Bio-Chemistry A.B. Bio-Medical Ethics A.B. Latin Amer. Studies A.B. Economics A.B. Marlyn A. Lowe Peter Lowitt Paul Lucey Neil C. Ludman Catharine Ludwig Math, Econ. AB. History A.B. Geology Sc.B. Bio-Med. Ethics A B. Religious Studies, Philosophy A.B. Lisa M. Lukasiewicz Michael Lukasiewicz Deborah R. Lunder Grant Patrick Lussler Annette T. MacAdams Biology, Env. Engineering Sc.B. Classics Honors Int. Relations A.B. Art History Russian Studies A.B. Latin A.B. Am. Civ. A.B. Charles L. MacCabe Bennett Machtiger Kathy Maclsaac Christine Madsen Matthew B. Magida History A.B. Economics A.B. Biology A.B. Semiotics A.B. Engineering Sc.B. Psychology A.B. Maribeth Maher Mary C. Mahoney Steven Mairella Lorenzo Majno Scott Maker Phil.Psych. Ind. MathEnglish A.B. Int. Relations A.B. Engineering Sc.B. History AB. A.B. Honors 283 v 9 Ann Mandi Thomas Manley Susan E. Mann Ellen C. Mareneck Laurie Margolies Economics A.B. Biology Sc.B. Bio-Chemistry A.B. Comp. Lit. A.B. Bio-Med. Ethics A.B. 3 B B B Thomas J. Margotta Marie A. Marquez Robert Martin Stephen J. Martin Victoria Mason Geology A.B. Biology A.B. Bio-Chem. A.B. Physics A.B. Urban Studies A.B. Economics A.B. Studio Art A.B. Ella Massar Michael Mastrullo Harris Matarazzo Susan Matloff Peter G. Mattei Aqu. Biology Sc.B. Org. Beh. A.B. Political Science A.B. Italian Studies A.B. Economics A.B. Howard G. Maurer Stanley P. Maximovich Michele D. Mayer Karen D. Maynard Mary A. Mazzocco History A.B. Biology Sc.B. Psychology Sc.B. Linguistics Semiotics A.B. Classics A.B, 284 Marisa Mazzota Economics A.B. Robert McConnell English Am. Lit. A.B. Kevin McAndrews Economics A.B. Jack McCoy Engineering A.B. Neal D. McBurnett Comp. Science Sc.B. Anne A. McCullagh Biology A.B. y t 5 , 7 Kevin McCarl Sociology A.B. Jeanne McCulloch English A.B. Honors Martha McChesney Economics Inter. Relations A.B. Lauren A. McDonald Bio-Chemistry Sc.B. 285 286 Michael McDonald Civ. Engineering AB George R. McKendall Biology Sc.B. Keith Medley Psychology A.B. Dorothy J. McGill Biology A.B Joseph W. McNamara Economics A.B. John H. Meister Eng.Economics A.B. Amy R. McGinnis Linguistics English A.B. Marc C. McReynolds Mech. Engineering Sc.B. Michelle F. Mellea Chemistry Sc.B. Violet W. McGirth Economics Political Science A.B. Marcia I. McReynolds Elec. Engineering Sc.B. Andrew J. Melnick Appl. MathBio. Sc.B. Richard G. McKee, Jr. Semiotics A.B. Barbara A. Medeiros Psycho. Linguistics A.B. Belden Menkus Organ. Behavior A.B. Stephen C. Merriam Scott Merrill Scott D. Merritt Euro. History A.B. Political Science A.B. Economics A.B. Economics A.B. Steve B. Mesick Laurel S. Meyer Victoria J. Meyer PhysicsMath A.B. English and Ren. Appl. Math.Econ. Sc.B. Studies A.B. Honors Susan G. Michael Michael E. Migliori Anthony M. Miller Lincoln Miller Monica TepLy Mills Semiotics A.B. Biology A.B. Economics A.B. Honors English History A B. . Math. Econ.Urb. Studies e Dana Miller Lloyd B. Minor Mark R. Minter Warren Moberly Nancy Moffat Independent: Sci. in Biology Sc.B. Psychology A.B. Engineering Sc.B. English A.B. Soc. Policy A.B. 287 John Mollay Elizabeth Marie Monteiro Geoff Moore Lisa Moore Judith B. Moreau Geology A.B. Honors Bio-Chemistry A.B. Biology Sc.B Bio. Engineering Sc.B. Independent Con. A.B Felicia Moreland Amateka K. Morgan Adrienne A. Morphy Ann S. Morris ErenchiAiB! Geophysics Sc.B. Human Biology A.B. English A.B. Elisabeth Morris Biology Sc.B. 288 Neil Mufson Brian Muney Timothy F. Munoz George Murnaghan David Murray Comp. Lit. A.B. English A.B. Classics A.B. Economics A.B. English A.B. I Thomas E. Musselman Ruth Nagel Peter Nager Oliver Kimble Ndimbie David Nebiker Independent Con. A.B. Elec. Engineering Sc.B. Economics A.B. Biology Sc.B. Comp. Science Sc.B. Mathematics A.B. I i I Gilbert A. Neiger Kelly K. Nelson Wanda Nettles Gerard Neveu William Niederhut Math Psycholinguistics Engineering Sc.B. Applied Math A.B. Indust. Engineering A.B. American Civ. A.B. A.B. 1 Michele Ti Niven Andy Noble Kathleen Lewis Normile Devon O Brien Michael P. O'Connell Comp. Sci. AB. Applied Math Sc.B. Russian Studies A.B. Theater Arts A B. 289 Jeanne O'Connor Paul Obermeyer George J. Obranic Mike Offit Kello K. Oh History A.B. Economics A.B. Civ. Engineering Sc.B. Am. Civilization A.B. Psychology A.B. AN Nancy Ohlin Yuko Okamoto Steven A. Okin Linda Olding Michael M. Oleksak Russian Studies A.B Physics Sc.B.M.A. Economics A.B. Human Biology A.B. French Mathematics A.B. Int. Relations A.B. Steven Oliveira Susan H. Olson Peter M. Oppenheimer Ernest Osei-tutu Michael Oshima Political Science A.B. Bio-Chemistry Sc.B. Psychology A.B. Honors Biology Sc.B. English A.B. Mindy Oshrain Steven M. Ostrow Peter J. Panton English A.B. History Biology A.B Biophysics Sc.B. M.D.. Appl. MathBio. Sc.B. Katie Paris Audrey Mie Park Psychology Sc.B. 290 - s F 2 Durward W. Parkinson Sandra Parkinson Davina Parmet Robert P. Parson Lucille Parsons History A.B. Biology A.B. Comp. Lit. A.B. Honors Chemistry Sc.B. Org. Behavior A.B. I John R. Parziale Joseph W. Pasquariello Catherine E. Pasterczyk Arthur Pasternak Carol Patch Biolgy Sc.B. Engineering Sc.B. Applied Math Bio. Sc.B. Law Society A.B. English Am. Lit. AB. Mathematics A.B. 291 Eric Patel Anne Paulson Mary Ellen C. Pavlovksy Bette Anne Pearlin Jill Pearlman Ind. Env. Policy A.B. Comp. Science SC.B. Inter. Rel.Econ. A.B. Appl. Math.Ling. A B. Art History Am. Civilization AB. Hugh L. Pearson Thomas A.F. Pelham Scott D. Penn Casto Perez Valerie 1. Perkins Bio-med. Ethics A.B. Art AB. Bio-Med. Ethics A B. Elec. Engineering Sc.B. Biology A.B. Y E i 4 Steve 1. Perlmutter Raymond Perreault Curtis J. Perry Donald Perry Richard Allan Perry Engineering Sc.B. Mathematics Sc.B. Bio-Med.f Political Science A.B. History Eng. A.B. Studie Art A.B. 292 S David B. Peters John Peterson, Jr. Julie Petruzzelli Joy Phelan Thomas W. Phillips Applied MathEcon. Sc.B. Am. Civilization A.B. Bio-Chemistry Sc.B. Art History A.B. Eng. Lt. Classics A.B. Honors Sarah E. Phillips Thomas H. Phillips Michael Pimental Harlan A. Pinto David A. Piscuskas Art History A.B. Mathematics A.B. Biology A.B. Bio-Med. Ethics A.B. Art A.B. Jane Plapinger Cindy Platter Mimi Miriam Plevin Human Biology A.B. Bio-Med. Ethics A.B. Semiotics A.B. Evan Plynton Keith A. Polster Paul Popieniek Political Science A.B. Engineering Sc.B. Chemistry Sc.B. Robert C. Pordy Biology Sc B. M D, Jonathan M. Prusky Comp. Science A. B. Susan Porter Applied Math Scg. Richard E. Pryor II History A B. AS William Poulos Political Science AB. Ethics A B. Spencer L. Purinton History A B. Jeffrey Cole Preble Chemistry A B. Economics A B. David Rabiner Psychology A B. k Peter Predko Int. Relations, French A B. Judith Rose Rabinowicz Religious Studijes AB. DRINKS + HOT CHOCOLATE LAVER 800N 175 JACE FY SOHPS 189 OMELET 180 RECH RES 45 80 !Lu..;i 83:mmB o APIZZAR CHEESE Pt PPERON! WisHRn0M SAUSAGE PEFPER ORIDR HANBURGER ARCHOVIE SM ND LG 1B 08 008 40 915 78 180 18 140 218 140 212 40 215 - 3140 215 : !55 2485 3300 0215 - 3 185 I 23S 2 o 3 SUPER SPECAL 25 325 400 So . Wendy H. Radner Psychology A.B. Douglas E. Rautenkranz Org. Beh. Business Management A.B. Lalitha Ramachandran Richard Raskin Bio-Chemistry Sc.B. Dawn E. Raffel Semiotics A B. Thomas S. Redding III Art A.B. Biology A.B. Robert Resnick FrenchBiology A.B. Cynthia Reich Michael Rendel James B. Rennert Religious Studies A.B. Political Science Todd 1. Richman Robert Richmond Applied Math. Sc.B. Donald Richards Org. Beh. AB. Perry Richardson Anthro.Psych. Sc.B. Thomas Richmond Chemistry Sc.B. Charles Riedel Economics A.B. Robert S. Riddick Applied MathBio. Sc.B. John Bradford Ricker Studio Art A.B. Mark C. Richter Economics A.B. Julie Riesner David Riessen Brad Rinehart Rebecca T. Riorden Bruce Philip Rips English Psychology A.B. Am. Civilization A.B. History A.B. History A.B. American Lit. A.B. Honors Anthony T. Ritaccio Catharine A. Ritter Kenneth Rivkin Charles A. Rizzi David Robbins Classics A.B. Honors Mat. Engineering Sc.B. Political Science A.B. Bio-Chemistry Sc.B. English A.B. David Roberts Michelle M. Roberts Martha E. Robie Jeffrey M. Robinson Judith V. Robinson Psych. of Management A.B Bio-Chemistry A.B. Biology A.B. Math.Econ. A B. Psycholinguistics A.B. AA C l 'Munuui 7 Mark D. Robinson Phillip H. Robzyk Patricia Rocha Michael E. Rogers 3 5 Harry Romain Classics A.B. Bio-Chemistry Sc.B. Am. History A.B. Biology A B. Biology A.B. 296 Patrice Roney John C. Rose Dena R. Rosen Org. Beh. AB. Int. Pol. Economy A.B. Educational Psych. A.B. Eric S. Rosenfield Amy B. Ross Jennifer E. Ross Economics A B. Religious Studies A.B. Applied Math Sc.B. Ellen L. Rosen Political Science A.B. Mike Rossen Physics Sc.B. James J. Rosenberg Engineering Sc.B. Eric A. Roth Comp. Science Sc.B. 297 Joanna E.Roth Richard Roth Dan Rothman Jennifer R. Rousseau Linda A. Rowley Aquatic Bio. Sc.B. Geology Sc.B. Applied Math. A B. Psychology A.B. Anthropology 74 . Jonathan Royston Michael L. Rozansky David Rozenson Daniel Rubin Lisa R. Ruckdeschel Math. Econ. A.B. English AB. History A.B. Biology A.B. Org. Beh. Management A.B. History A.B. N Rachel Beth Rudman Tommy Rueckert James Ruggieri John Ruh Cheryl H. Rusten Art A.B. Mech. Engineering Sc.B. Political Science ScA.B Classics A.B. Am. Civilization A B. Amy Louise Ryan Mark J. Ryan Bio-Engineering A.B. Philosophy A.B. Kevin M. Ryder Martha J. Sack Bio-Physics A.B. Biology A.B. Religious Studies A.B. Susannah M. Ryan Evan Sacks Music A.B. 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Robert Shorb Urban Studies BA.B. Howard Silver Psychology Sc.B. Doublas B. Sharpe Human Biology Sc.B. Barbara Sherry Biology A.B. Deena J. Shoshkes Semiotics A.B. Ellen Silverman Urban Studies A.B. Judd L. Silverman Harriet E. Silverstein Lori E. Simon Brian Simpson Kyle Simpson Theater Arts Studio Art Semiotics Biology Sc.B. Political Science A.B. English A.B. History A.B. French A.B. Janet Sinsheimer Amy Sisley Jocelyn B. Sisson Kiu Siu Cathleen E. Sloan Chemistry Sc.B. Psychology Sc.B. Religious Studies A B. Mech. Engineering Sc.B. Comp. Lit. Biology A.B. Wendi E. Sloane Gregory D. Small Brian R. Smith Edward F. Smith III Jennifer G. Smith History A.B. Am. Civilization A.B. Engineering A.B. Human Sexuality Studio Art Biology Sc.B. Independent A.B. Mark Smith Martha Smith Nolan Smith Sonya Smith Sharon A. Smith Political Science A.B. Psycholinguistics A.B. Economics A.B. Inter. Relations A.B. History A.B. Economics A B. Timothy K. Smith Daniel Snyder Leslie M. Snyder Regina M. Snyder Samuel Solish History A.B. Geo. Sciences Sc.B. Am. LitEnglish A.B. Geology A.B. Biology Sc.B. Gina Sonder Robin Sortor Carl P. Sparrow Nancie P. Spector Stacey Leigh Spector Independent Con. A.B. Comp. Lit. A.B. Chemistry Sc.B. Psychology A.B. Honors History A.B. s Y B 1 o -l y Carolyn Spencer Elizabeth W. Spencer Robert Spier Lisbeth Spoll T. Stevens Spruth Women's Studies A.B. French Lit. A.B. French AB Pub. Policy Making Health Society A.B. Urban Studies A.B. Richard J. Squadron Marie Ssinegurski Heidi Stamas Applied MathEcon. Sc.B. Bio-Med. Engineering Sc.B. Renaissance Studies A.B. Sylvia Stambler Dagmar Stanec Lawrence R. Starin Economics A.B. Latin Am. Studies Biology, Portugal Brazil A.B. Applied Math. Sc B. Martha Starkweather Michael J. Stefani Paul S. Steif David A. Stein Pamela D. Stenning Human Biology A.B. Elec. Engineering Sc.B. Engineering Sc.B. History A.B. English A.B. f Joanne Stephansen Dan Stern Jeff Stevens Glenn E. Stewart Fred R. Stockton H Mat. 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Allard Thanks to Dave Lytel Harold Siden for occasional quips Special Thanks to; Dana Barg Martha Buckley Toni Dupont Diana Puglisi and a cast of . . . 317 318 AOZmwn X T Z Abbott, Nathaniel Tatum; Rt 1 Box 145, Lake Leelanau, MI 49653 Abell, Keith Wayne; 24 Seaman Road, Poughkeepsie, NY 12601 Abrams, Theresa Ann; 945 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10021 Aburn, Jr. George Spindler; 641 Sussex Rd, Towson, MD 21204 Ackerman, Michael; 256 Aqueduct Road, Cranston, R1 02910 Ades, Nancy Faye; 3700 Sedgewood Circle, Charlotte, NC 28211 Adesman, Michael Bart; 3596 Bedford Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11210 Adler, Gregg David; 501 East 87th St., New York, NY 10028 Aguet Jaime Cesar; 4244 Northwest 2 Terrace, Miami, FL 33126 Al-Sudairy, Faysal Bin Fah; PO Box 1745, Riyadh, Saddi Arabia Aland, Jr. Jack William; 3842 Cove Drive; Birmingham, AL 35213 Alberding, Ellen Shannon; 419 E. 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66 Teed Street, Huntington Station, NY 11746 Daffner, Mitchell Franklyn; 41 Cumberland Road, West Hartford, CT 06119 Dakin, Pamela Jane; 25 Rancheria Road, Kentfield, CA 94904 Dana, Nathalie Pepperelll; 180 East 95 Street, New York, NY 10028 Dangl, Jr. John Richard; 11 Shady Hill Road, Nashua, NH 03060 Davis, Amy Alandt; 5635 Sunset Lane, Indianapolis, IN 46208 Davis, Jewelnel; 57 Washburn Avenue, Freeport, NY 11520 Davis, John Richard; 75 Prospect Street, Providence, RI 02096 Davis, Leonard John; 37 Cottage Place, Englewood, NJ 07631 Davis, Valerie Kay; 10451 Briarhend, Apt. 6, Creve Coeur, MO 63141 Day, Thomas Hills; 158 Kent Street, Hughes, Canberra A.C.T., Australia 2605 Deadrick, Sara Hall; 394 Brushy Ridge Road, New Canaan, CT 06840 Dean, Kenneth; 10020 Colvin Run Road, Great Falls, VA 22066 Debruler, Elizabeth Sue; 326 Laurel Avenue, Libertyville, IL 60048 Dechert, Caroline; P.O. Box 636, Santa Fe, NM 87501 Dechristopher, Jane Fergus; 15 Creighton St., Providence, R1 02906 DeFrancesco, Martin Anthony; 240 West Third Street, Mt. Carmel, PA 17851 Degrouchy, Patrick Kelly; 1205 Mason Avenue, Drexel Hill, PA 19026 Delaney, James Mark; 195 North Main Street, Sharon, MA 02067 Della Morte, Joseph Vincent; Route 6-A, West Barnstable, MA 02668 Delpresto, Flora Vivian; 105 Avon Dr,, Essex Falls, NJ 07012 Delzanno, Gian-Maria Carlo; 9 Via Dello Birona, Monza-Milan, Italy Dempsey, Michael Anthony; 115 Leedom Drive, Media, PA 19063 Denlinger, Jeffrey Lynn; 3413 Deininger Road, York, PA 17402 Desantis, John Francis; 3221 Covington Lake Drive, Fort Wayne, IN 46804 Deutsch, Julie Debra; 17 Strauss Lane, Olympia Fields, IL 60461 Diaz, Ronald Paul Dichter, Bronislaw; 15 Foothill Lane, Smithtown, NY 11787 Dickstein, Stephen; 28 Park Lane, Westport, CT 06880 Diddel, Katha Carin; 408 East 85 Street, New York, NY 10028 Dietze, Katherine Elizabeth; 9 Point View Place, Mountain Lakes, NJ 07046 Dirocco, Jr. John James; 209 Holstein St., Apt. 4, Bridgeport, PA 19405 Dixon, Yasmin Anne; 107 Evans Street, Boston, MA 02124 Dobie, Dorcas Jean; 1007 Three Mile Drive, Grosse Pointe Park, MI 48230 Dolan, Andrew John; 910 Fifth Avenue, Troy, NY 12182 Dolan, Elizabeth Grace; 712 Harbor Road, Southport, CT 06490 Doodlesack, Gary Abbott; 34 Ashland Street, Medford, MA 02155 Douglas, Diane Miriam; 3525 North Third Street, Harrisburg, PA 17110 Douthart, Melissa Ann; Box 63W, Waquoit, MA 02536 Doyle, Colleen Ann; 13 Church Street, Hopkinton, MA 01748 Drain, Randall Terence; 2308 W. Cumberland Street, Philadelphia, PA 19132 Draper, Susan Halford; 12 Northstone Rd., Swampscott, MA 01907 Dresdale, Richard Conrad; 1107 Thornton Avenue, Plainfield, NJ 07060 Dreyfus, Peter Edward; 214 Buckminster Rd., Brookline, MA 02146 Drobyski, William Raymond; 105 Beach Rd , Bristol, R 02809 Drouilhet, Stephen Moffaitt; 32 Baskin Road, Lexington, MA 02173 Drucker, David Robert; 20 Sands Lane, Port Jefferson, NY 11777 Drye, Randall Gregory; Route 13 Woodland Estates, Sugar Tree Lane, Clarksville, TN 37040 Drysdale, Valerie Joyce; 162 Winthrop Avenue, Albany, NY 12203 Dunn, John Michael; 5714 West Hanover Street, Dallas, TX 75209 Dunn, Terrence Michael; 237 Morris Avenue, Mountain Lakes, NJ 07046 Dupler, Sharron Elizabeth; 98 Rockledge Road. Bronxville, NY 10708 Dupont, Antonia Chafee; 849 Pequot Avenue, New London, CT 06320 Durkin, Frances Xavier; The Farms Road, Bedford, NY 10506 Dushay, Kevin Maier; 109 Bristol Road, Fayetteville, NY 13066 Dworetzky, Joel Aaron; 19 Edgemont Circle, Scarsdale, NY 10583 Dworkin, Roberta Marie; 108-43 68 Avenue, Forest Hills, NY 11375 Dyer, Beth; 75 Brooklake Ra, Apt 31-B, Florham Park, NJ 07932 Dykarr, Douglas Raymond; 11 Overlook Road, Great Neck, NY 11020 Eccles, Isabel McCord; 12 Hidden Field Rd., Andover, MA 01810 Edgerton, Barbara Haugh; 14 Chapman Road, West Hampton, CT 06107 Edman, Lisa Christenson; Rua Rio De Janiero 60F294 01240 Higienopolis, Sao Paulo, Brasil 12 20000 Ehrenbard, Daniel Ross; Apartment 12-B, 239 Central Park West, New York, NY 10024 Eichner, Jr. George Howard; 717 Scarlett Drive, Towson, MD 21204 Eident, Peter Sloan; 123 Jericho Path, Falmouth, MA 02540 Elisman, Galina Yurievna; 42 Greaton Dr., Providence, RI 02906 Elkind, Flisabeth Hall; 26 Willow Street, Brooklyn, NY 11201 Elliott, Jeffrey Richard; 31 Fuller Place, Franklin, MA 02038 Ellson, Laurel Audrey; 246 Old Farms Rd., Simsbury, CT 06070 Ellsworth, Russell Lee; 19 Victoria Street, Springfield, MA 01104 Elvins, Elisabeth Wallace; 710 Pleasant Street, Belmont, MA 02178 Emerson, Matthew Charles; 63 Perkins Street, Stoneham, MA 02180 Engelland, Rose Elaine; 47 Mianus View Terrace, Cos Cob, CT 06807 Engle, Susan Hope; 100 Amherst Road, Cranston, RI 02920 Ennis, Wynne Simpson; Thistle Lane, Rye, NY 10580 Ensor, Paul Robert; PO'Box 1436, Hamilton 5, Bermuda Entwistle, Raymond; 189 Robinson Avenue, South Attleboro, MA 02703 Epperson, Steven Frank; 1605 East Olive Drive, Salt Lake City, UT 84117 Epstein, Mark Lawrence; 211 Sumac Road, Highland Park, IL 60035 Erb, Karen Estelle; 77 Magnolia Lane, East Hills, NY 11577 Erickson, Lars Carl; 238C Terry Rd., Route 1, Hillshorough, NC 27278 Estrich, Marc Howard; 100 Loring Ave., Apt. C-41, Salem, MA 01970 Evans, Eric Jay; 836 West Main Street, West Haven, CT 06516 Evans, Julie Ann; 4 Burning Tree Road, Franklin, MA 02038 Ewing, Edward Buchanan; 204 Westminster St., Fourth Floor, Providence, RI 02903 Fagiolo, Catherine Elizabeth; 63 Barmore Drive East, Stamford, CT 06905 Fairchild, Julia Fisher; 161 East Avenue, Saratoga Springs, NY 12866 Falb, Robert Jay; PO Box 7594, Phoenix, AZ 85011 Farrell, John Charles; 108 Friendly Road, Cranston, RI 02910 Farynyk, Richard John; 47 Upland Way, Barrington, RI 02806 Feder, Robert David; 215 Woodside Drive, Hewlett, NY 11557 Federici, Mary Anne; 811 Bradford Avenue, Westfield, NJ 07090 Feibelman, Alan Victor; 92-16 Whitney Ave., Elmhurst, NY 11373 Feil, Ellen Lee; 380 Pearl Street, Apt. 2, Burlington, VT 05401 Feiman, Amy FElizabeth; 112 Barton Road, White Plains, NY 10605 Fenster, Julie Rose; Apartment 4-A, 535 East 86 Street, New York, NY 10028 Fenton, Scott Errol; 721 Shore Acres Drive, Mamaroneck, NY 10543 Ferguson, Kay Leslie; 382 Central Park West, New York, NY 10025 Ferrara, David Herman; 129 Summit Drive, Cranston, RI 02020 Fessenden, Hart Wade; 1158 5th Avenue, New York, NY 10029 Field, Donna Jean; 20 Lena St., North Providence Fielding, Andrew Lee; 60 Longwood Avenue, Brookline, MA 02146 Fields, Robert Alan; 1092 Bass Point Road, Miami Springs, FL 33166 Fischer, Ellen Jane; Apartment 5-F, 1050 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10028 Fischer, Joel Stuart; 308 Winding Way, Merion, PA 19066 Pitch, Alan Peter; 292 Hartley Avenue, Princeton, NJ 08540 Flanagan, Eileen; 350 Round Hill Road, Tiburon, CA 94920 Flanagan, Katherine Jenning; 33 Beacon Hill Road, Port Washington, NY 11050 39 320 Flanders, John Mark; 52 Church Street, Windsor Locks, CT 06096 Fleischer, Kathryn Irene; 66 Brookdale Drive, Williamsville, N'Y 14221 Floyd, Barbara Patricia G.; 54 Rockdale St., Mattapan, MA 02126 Forley, Bryan George; 463 Coleridge Road, Rockville Centre, N'Y 11570 Forman, Daniel Edward; 32 Woodcut Lane, Roslyn Heights, NY 11577 Forster, Robert Franklin; 497 Rural Hill Road, Nashville, TN 37217 Forte, Diane Marie; 533 Admiral Street, Providence, R1 02908 Foster, Laura Ann; 687 Avenida Del Norte, Sarasota, FL 33581 Fox, Andrea Agnes; Cantitoe Street, Katonah, NY 10536 Fracasso, John Peter; 55 Munro Place, Winsted, CT 06098 Frame, Thomas Crawford; 1335 Liberty St., Franklin, PA 16323 Frank, Jr. Arthur Delbert; 678 Hanover Street, Fall River, MA 02720 Franklin, Lorna Renee; 1250 West Seven Mile Road, Detroit, M1 48203 Franklin, Mark Richard; 149 Woodland Circle, Downingtown, PA 19335 Frantz, Ronald David; 221 Pine Street, Minersville, PA 17954 Frazer, Jr. James Alexander; Meyersville Road, Green Village, NJ 07935 Freedman, Amy Louise; 43 Birchwood Park Drive, Jericho, NY 11753 Fried, Jonathan; 121 North Palm Drive, Beverly Hills, CA 90210 Fried, Suzanne Denise; 1464 Pitman Avenue, Palo Alto, CA 94301 Friedman, Bonnie Lynn; Taconic Trail, Harrison, NY 10528 Friedman, Craig Alan; 11 Ball Terrace, Maplewood, NJ 07040 Friedman, Laurie Ellen; So Jeffrey Place, New Hyde Park, NY 11040 Friedman, Loren Louis; Loren Friedman, 14 Cady St., Providence, RI 02903 Friedman, Richard Alan; Apartment 11-C, 3777 Independence Avenue, Bronx, NY 10463 Friedman, Wendy Lynn; Brookside Hotel, Stonykill Road, Kerhonkson, NY 12446 Frisby, Darrin Kevin; 913 Booker Drive, Seat Pleasant, MD 20027 Fromer, Anna Margo; 28 Merriweather Drive, Longmeadow, MA 01106 Fuerst, Catherine Nell; 1236 Country Club Road, Akron, OH 44313 Fuerst, Frank Parker; 1194 Winter Hunt Rd., McLean, VA 22102 Fuiks, Jr. Lewis John; 31 Pondview Road, Rye, NY 10580 Furlaud, Tamsin Elizabeth; 124 E. 92nd St.,, New York, NY 28083 Fusco, Camille Marie; Box 2535, Campus Gabert, Charla Ann; 2133 East Dr., St. Louis, MO 63131 Gadon, John Howard; 42 Oyster River Road, Durham, NH 03824 Gaffney, Luke Bartholomew; R.D. 2, Schnoor Road, Killingworth, CT 00417 Gaines, Joanne; 2567 Stoodleigh Drive, Rochester, MI 48063 Galliher, Anne Louise; 3 Richard Road, Simsbury, CT 06070 Gallop, Sabrina; 106 West 87th Street, New York, NY 10024 Galvin, Richard Anthony; 75 Bedlow Avenue, Newport, RI 02840 Garay, Alon A; 71-26 167 Street, Flushing, NY 11365 Garrison, Brevard Springs; 15435 Lakeside Drive, Plymouth, MI 48170 Garshman, Jennifer Robin; 6 Knollwood Drive, Worcester, MA 01609 Garston, Joanne Hope; 131 Oliver Road, New Haven, CT 06515 Gaskin, Edwin Leroy; 1601 Woodhill Court, No. Englewood, MD 20785 Gasparello, Nina Joan; 44 Cushing St., Hingham, MA 02043 Gaston, Paul Edwin; 43 Baldwin Farms, North Greenwich, CT 06830 Gausepohl, John Andrew; 10 Chatham Drive, Norwalk, CT 06854 Gedo, Andrew Lloyd; 736 Tenth Street, Wilmette, IL 60091 Gefen, Andrew Robert; 2 Forest Lane, Lawrence, NY 11559 Gens, Barry Charles; 41 Cutler Lane, Chestnut Hill, MA 02167 Georgeson, Theodore M.; 1252 Blairmore Ct., Grosse Point Woods, MI 48236 Gerdts, Nadine Laura; 260 Atlantic Street, Oradell, NJ 07649 Gernert, David Everett; Sand Spring Road, New Vernon, NJ 07976 Gevertz, John Neil; 34 Oxford Road, Scarsdale, NY 10583 Giancarlo, Charles Henry; 181 South Woodland Street, Englewood, NJ 7631 Gianfrancesco, Anthony; 260 Huxley Avenue, Providence, Rl 02008 Gianotas, Kyriakos Naoum; 1427 30 Dr. F., Astoria, NY 10472 Gibbs, Emily Andrews; 432 North Lincoln Street, Salem, OH 44460 Gibson, Christopher Watt; 283 Wayland Avenue, Providence, R1 02906 Gichner, Lisa Ann; 7707 Winterberry Place, Bethesda, MD 20034 Gilbane, Brian Dennis; 161 Fourth St., Providence, R1 02003 Gilden, David Martin; 167 Willard Street, New Haven, CT 06515 Gillespie, Nancy Sayles; 1010 Memorial Drive, Apt. 19A, Cambridge, MA 02138 Gilmore, Valita Kay; 5805 Longview Strect, S W., Massillon, OH 44646 Gingras, Theresa Marie; 37 Sayles Hill Road, Manville, R1 02838 Glassman, Andrew Richard; 41 Ellis Road, West Caldwell, NJ 07006 Glazer, Barbara Brody; 7230 Mason Dells Street; Dallas, TX 75230 Glenn, Alan Lyle; 350 Sheffield Avenue, Apartment 2F, Brooklyn, N'Y 11207 Glickman, Denise Fabiola; 1010 Memorial Dr., Apt. 4G, Cambridge, MA 02138 Glynn, Laura Christina; 75 Doublet Hill Road, Weston, MA 02193 Goff, John Vose; RFD 2 Gurnet Road, Brunswick, ME 04011 Gold, Ellen Gabrielle; 140 Dorchester Road, Scarsdale, NY 10538 Goldberg, Carol Beth; 11724 Kemp Mill Road, Silver Spring, MD 20902 Goldberg, Honey Lynn; 9040 Niles Center Road, Skokie, IL 60076 Goldberg, Steven Bernard; Apartment 321, 83-19 141 Street, Jamaica, NY 11435 Goldfarb, Andrew Mark; 603 Merrick Avenue, East Meadow, NY 11554 Goldgar, Arnold Benjamin; 914 East Eldorado Street, Appleton, WI 54911 Goldin, Amy Louise; 440 West End Avenue, New York, NY 10024 Goldstein, Amy Ellen; 29 Horseshoe Lane South, Henrietta, NY 14467 Goldstein, Laurence David; 29 Castle Rock, Branford, CT 06405 Goldstein, Ronald Lee; 1 Farragut Place, Huntington, NY 11743 Goldweber, Barbara Ann; 247 West Summit St., PO Box 261, Somerville, NJ 08876 Goloskie, Susan Lee; 61 Juniper Lane, Holden, MA 01520 Gomes, Donald; 220 Pleasant St., New Bedford, MA 02740 Gomez, Milena; Apartment 20-A, 177 East 75 Street, New York, NY 10021 Gonzales, Mary Carolyn; 137 Rochambeau Ave., Providence, Rl 02906 Goodale, Anne Leora; 26 Jonathan Circle, Windsor, CT 06095 Goodman, Neil Michael; 33 Gate Circle, Apt. 3C, Buffalo, NY 14209 Gordon, Diane Beth; Apt. 4-C 1200 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10029 Gordon, Gary Alan; 104 Lincoln Road, South Plainview, NY 11803 Gorey, Susan Helma; 4606 Tournay Road, Washington, DC 20016 Gorman, Peter Howard; 61 Iselin Drive, New Rochelle, NY 10804 Gosetti, Gregory John; 3473 East Allerton Avenue, Cudahy, WI 53110 Gottlieb, Lori Jane; 119 Scott Drive, Manchester, CT 06040 Gould, Edward Ward; 17 Maplewood Ave., Warwick, RI 02889 Graham, Jeffrey A.; Apartment 9-B, 888 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10021 Graham, Susan; 71 Manning Boulevard, Albany, NY 12203 Grantham, James Robertson; 330 White Oak Shade Road, New Canaan, CT 00840 Grassi, John Strickland; 140 Edgemere Drive, Rochester, NY 14612 Gray, Glenn Robert; 957 Saxony Drive, Highland Park, IL 60035 Grayson, Glenn Scott; 6770 Hawaii Kai Dr 1109, Honolulu, HI 96825 Greeley, Donald Folsom; 20 Livingston Circle, Needham, MA 02192 Greenberg, Carolyn Laurie; 14 Blake Street, Belmont, MA 02178 Greenberg, Deborah Jo; 1463 East 55 Place, Chicago, IL 60637 Greenberg, Gary Alan; 3469 Stetson Ave., San Diego, CA 92122 Greene, Jonathan William; Box 3157, Campus Greene, Roland Arthur; 414 S. Barrington Ave., Apt. 9, Los Angeles, CA 90049 Greenfield, Jon; 11267 Dona Lisa Drive, Studio City, CA 91604 Greenfield, Shelly Faith; 5 Wyngate Place, Great Neck, NY 11021 Gref, Peter Clarke; Old Clinton Road, Westbrook, CT 06498 Gregory, Jr., Hugh Hancock; 270 Convent Avenue, New York, NY 10031 Greisman, Lois Claire; Apartment 12-C, 315 West 70 Street, Nyew York, NY 10023 Griffeth, James Christopher; 101 Holly Mar Hill Road, Northford, CT 00472 Griffin, Kathryn Rourke; Three Stonehill Drive, Apartment 1-A, Stonecham, MA 02180 Griffith, Sabrina Nerisa; 710 Warwick Street, Brooklyn, NY 11207 Grigsby, Eric Jerome; 2120 Maplewood Drive, Knoxville, TN 37920 Grimes, Kevin Vincent; 52 Wheeler Avenue, Cranston, RI 02905 Grodski, William John; 805 Roanoke Avenue, Riverhead, NY 11201 Grossman, Alan Davis; 93 Sunset Hill Drive, Branford, CT 06405 Grosvenor, Helene Goodman; 126 Carroll Avenue, Newport, RI 02840 Grover, Laura Diane; 10 Kenneth Road, Upper Montclair, NJ 07043 Gumer, Richard Alan; 300 Winston Dr., Apt. 905, Cliffside Park, NJ 07010 Gunter, Delmena Mercedes; 5828 Eastern Avenue NE, Washington, DC 20011 Gustavesen, Bradlee Watts; 721 Namquid Drive, Warwick, R1 02888 Guthorn, Paul Seymour; 825 Rathjen Road, Brielle, NJ 08730 Gutowitz, Howard Andrew; 1282 Dye Krest Circle, Flint, MI 48504 Guynn, Kevin Craig; 8210 Gilbert Street, Philadelphia, PA 19150 Hadesman, Robert Allen; 4544 Ranch Lane Road, Bloomfield Hills, MI 48013 Hagan, Martha Ann; 351 Panorama Place, Boise, ID 83702 Hall, Karen Renee; 1055 Rosedale Avenue, New York, NY 10472 Hall-Brenkus, David Michael; 3651 Norwood Road, Shaker His., OH 44122 Hallie, Michelena Louise; 137 Highland Ave, Middletown, CT 06457 Hallmann, Patricia Ellen; 7060 Elmgrove Ave., Providence, RI 02906 Halperin, Douglas Andrew; 66 Rencelau Street, Springfield, MA 01118 Hamilton, Katherine; Barren Hill Road, Conshohocken, PA 19428 Hammond, Jr., Aubrey Frederick; Apartment 1, 76 Camp Street, Providence, R1 02906 Hankins, Michelle Anne; 3615 Chesapeake St. NW, Washington, DC 20008 Hansen, Cynthia Kay; 4624 Pike Drive, Metairie, LA 70003 Hansen, David Elliott; Barnes Hill, Sherman, CT 06784 Hantoot, Mark Steven; 26 Roma St., Bristol, RI 02809 Harkavy, John Brooks; 15 Split Rock Lane, New Rochelle, NY 10804 Harla, Michael Joseph; 1337 Norris Drive, Vineland, NJ 08360 Harlow, Renee Michele; 510 Hillcrest Rd., Ridgewood, NJ 07450 Harper, Alan Burnett; Box 2009, Campus Harrington, Carl Donald; North Road, RFD 2, Box 433, Dayville, CT 06241 Harris, Ann Lawrence Brees; 580 Amity Rd, Woodridge, CT 06525 Hart, David Gerard; 731 Sailfish Dr., Brandon, FL 33511 Hart, John Franklin; 50 Sable Avenue, North Dartmouth, MA 02747 Haskel, Ethan Jay; 12 Kanes Lane, Huntington, NY 11743 Hassenfeld, John Eliot; 5640 Hillsboro Road, Nashville, TN 37215 Hawkes, Calvert Tazewell; 18 Everett Avenue, Providence, RI 02906 Haynes, Barbara Annette; 163-15 130th Ave. Bldg. 1, Section A Apt 2D, Jamaica, NY 11434 Hazel, Kevin Paul Gerard; 675 Read Street, Seekonk, MA 02771 Healy, Kathleen Marie; 80 Shore Lane, Bay Shore, NY 11706 Hebson, Charles Stephen; 366 Beech Street, Kearny, NJ 07032 Heckel, Robert Edward; 8455 Squirrel Hill Drive, N E, Warren, OH 44484 Heckelman, Leora Ruth; 69 Kenaware Avenue, Delmar, NY 12054 Heilbrunn, Kenneth Ronald; 49 New Woods Road, Glen Cove, NY 11542 Hempstead, Joyce Elaine; 1474 Ten Rod Road, North Kingstown, RI 02852 Hendee, William Jack; 6 North Delaware Street, Stamford, NY 12167 Henderson, Andrew Walter; 956 North Erie Avenue, Lindenhurst, NY 11757 Henrickson, Kerry Henry; Route 1, Box 483, Ketchikan, AK 99901 Henry, Eric Barklie; 3713 Alton Place, NW, Washington, DC 20016 Hepner, Richard Henry; 931 Fell St., Ealtimore, MD 21231 Herman, Rita Ellen; 604 Elmgrove Avenue, Providence, RI 02906 Herold, Robert Werner; 66 Lake Rd., Far Hills, NJ 07931 Herring, Steven Lee; 9909 Finian Court, Vienna, VA 22180 Herts, Kenneth Louis; 76 Reed Drive, Roslyn, NY 11567 Hess, Carolyn; 3003 N. Mercer St Ext, New Castle, PA 16105 Heyrman, Anne Dewitt; 2955 Nassau Dr., Brookfield, WI 53005 Hibbert, Jean-Francois; 21 Wiltshire Drive, Worcester, MA 01609 Hicks, Karen Lynette; 917 Seventh Street, Charleston, WV 25302 Higginbotham, Francis; 4843 Inadale Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90043 Hilbert, Debra Joan; 14 Portage Road, West Hartford, CT 06117 Hildebrand, 11, William; 555 Chatham Court, Neenah, WI 54956 Hill, Daniel Graham; 24 Barnes Street, Providence, RI 02906 Hill, Everett Huntington; 604 Orchard Drive, Wilmington, DE 19803 Hilleman, Jeryl Lynn; 4107 Fields Drive, Lafayette Hill, PA 19444 Himmelstein, Lisa Ruth; 210 North Quaker Lane, West Hartford, CT 06119 Hinojosa, Juan Homero; Route 1-Box 35, Fidson Rd., Eagle Passw, TX 78852 Hiris, Jeffrey Richard; 758 Bonnie Drive, Baldwin, NY 11510 Hirsh, Jr., Richard Michael; 6E Jessica Dr., Stoughton, MA 02072 Hochman, Mary Gabriella; COKAZIS 861 W. Roxbury Pk., Chestnut- hill, MA 02167 Hochstim, David Stuart; 3717 Maplewood Ave., Dallas, TX 75205 Hodges, Katharine Elizabeth; 107 Ringwood Road, Rosemont, PA 12010 Hodges, Ruth Ann; 47 Brooks Hill Road, Wolcott, CT 06716 Hogeman, George Hamill; 131 North Broad Street, Norwich, NY 13815 Hogg, Anne Rutledge; 224 Rose Lane, Haverford, PA 19041 Hohensee, Louise Ann; 309 Pond Point Avenue, Milford, CT 06460 Holden, Maria Sheridan; 168 Chestnut Street, Albany, NY 12210 Holleran, Michael Edward; 193 Brown St., Providence, RI 02906 Hollins, Lori-Linell Colby; 15804 Invermere Street, Cleveland, OH 44128 Holloman, Sheryl Elise; 841 West Chalmers Place, Chicago, IL 60614 Holm, Ingrid Adele; 16746-37 Ave. NE, Seattle, WA 98155 Holmes, Mark Snyder; 13 Windward Hills, Talofofo, Guam, Marianas Islands Holmes, 111, Frederick; 7323 Masonville Drive, Annandale, VA 22003 Honig, Cary Steven; 48-23 Little Neck Parkway, Little Neck, NY 11362 Hood, Richard Blake; Foster Street, Marblehead, MA 01945 Hopkins, Elizabeth; Box 188, Route 198, Eastford, CT 06242 Horne, Janet Regina; 619 Edgewood Road, Pittsburgh, PA 15221 Hornick, Thomas Richard; 208 Goodale Road, Balitmore, MD 21212 Horowitz, Laurie Frances; 200 Pepperidge Road, Hewlett Harbor, N'Y 11557 Horrigan, Paula Hurley; 58 Old Road, Westport, CT 06880 Houghton, Alan Congdon; 27 Titus Lane, Cold Spring Harbor, NY 11724 Horwarth, Kathryn Jane; 118 Blueberry Avenue, East Greenwich, RI 02818 Howland, Pamela Ann; 2050 Lake Street, San Francisco, CA 94121 Howlett, Elizabeth; 83 President Ave., Providence, RI 02906 Huang, Alice Hsi; 3154 Patterson Drive, Bethlehem, PA 18017 Huckaba, Carol Ann; 434 Maris Rd., Springfield, PA 19064 Huckins, Robert Gordon; R.D., Putnam Pike, Chepachet, RI 02814 Hull, Peter; 205 Stoner Drive, West Hartford, CT. 06107 Hulley, Roger Marshall; 443 Dorchester Road, Ridgewood, NJ 07450 Hummel, Robert William; 21333 Masi Court, Grosse lle, MI 48138 Hutner, Robert Scott; 74 Park Drive, Springfield, MA 01106 Hyman, Colette Anne; 300 Central Park West, New York, NY 10024 Iselin, Julie Ann; 4 Hidden Creen Lane, Larchmont, NY 10538 Jabbur, Norma; 50 Marsdale St., Albany, NY 12208 Jackson, Charles Barrett; 17 Candlewood Lane, Madison, CT 06443 Jackson, Tranice Diazell; 253 Sumner Place, Staten Island, NY 10301 Jacob, Neil John; 9412 Wager Drive, Affton, MO 63123 Jacobs, Phillip Neal; 125 Seven Bridge Road, Little Silver, NJ 07739 Jacobs, Sheryl Robin; 73 Sutin Place, Spring Valley, NY 10977 Jacobson, David Adam; 254 E 68th St., Apt. 8A, New York, NY 10021 Jacoby, Judith Ann; 17501 Margate Street, Encino, CA 91316 James, Heyward Parker; 117 Neal Street, Portland, ME 04102 Jansen, Cornelius Jacobus; 2201 Paul Spring Road, Alexandria, VA 22307 Jansen, Nicholas Wayne; 2201 Paul Spring Road, Alexandria, VA 22307 Jaworowski, Susan Frances; 223 Weed Street, New Canaan, CT 06840 Jennis, Abby Lisa; 26 Clonavor Road, West Orange, NJ 07052 Jester, Paul J.; 40 Humiston Ave, Hamden, CT 06517 Jewett, John Frederick; 3910 Ardleigh Drive, Wilmington, DE 19807 Johannet, Suzanne; 107 Lakeview Avenue; Cambridge, MA 02138 Johansson, Sverker Matts; Eklunden Ostansjo, 69400, Hallsberg, Sweden Johnson, Jr., Morris Vaughan; 2875 Sands Rd., Lima, OH 45805 Jones, Christine Tolliver; CO Morris McVeigh, 450 Park Ave , New York, NY 10022 Jones, Edward Benham; 84 Apple Tree Lane, Wallingford, CT 06492 Jones, Elizabeth Mary; 401 Cedar Avenue, East Greenwich, RI 02818 Jones, Peter Blauvelt; 165 Elmgrove Avenue, Troy, NY 12180 Jorgensen, Dean S.; 245 Burgess Avenue, Westwood, MA 02090 Josephson, Nancy Alexandra; 333 East 60th St., Apt. 103, New York, NY 10021 Joubert, Chantal; Box 61, HCO, Dhahran Airport, Dhahran, Saudi Arabia Judd, Jr., Robert Harrison; 95 Maiden Lane, Bristol, CT 06010 Jusczyk, Christine Louise; 35 Welthian Ct., East Greenwich, R1 02818 Kaizer, Daniel Alan; 5527 Calhoun Avenue, Van Nuys, CA 91401 Kalla, David Aaron; 1728 Beechwood Boulevard, Pittsburgh, PA 15217 Kamins, David; 14 Cady Street, Providence, Ri 02903 Kanders, Warren Beatty; 2 Shepard Place, Convent Station, NJ 07961 Kane, Lisa Ruth; 817 Lake Ridge Drive, Tallahassee, FL 32301 Kane-Lord, Michele Risa; Rt. 1 Box 205, Lake Placid, FL 33852 Kantor, Mark Bennett; Box 727, 231 Qakdell Street, Bluefield, WV 24701 Kaplan, Jill; 170 Indian Tree Drive, Highland Park, IL 60035 Kaplan, Marjorie Ellen; 146 Central Park West, New York, NY 10023 Kaplan, Richard Bernard; Sky Meadow Farm, Purchase, NY 10 Karpay, Kenneth David; 4204 Woodmere Road, Tampa, FLA 33609 Katz, Bonnie Lynn; 258 South Stanwood, Columbus, OH 43209 Katz, Marcia Fay; 66 East Hill Drive, Cranston, RI 02920 Kaufman, Jonathan Joseph; 280 Fountain Road, Englewood, NJ 07631 Kaufman, Ronald Andrew; 19 Covlee Rd., Westport, CT 06880 Kazura, Alessandra Nina; 33 Partridge Road, Pittsfield, MA 01201 Keamy, Lisa Ann; 18275 Surrey Lane, Brookfield, WI 53005 Kehlmann, Glenn Scott; 4407 East 75 Street, Tulsa, OK 74316 Kelley, Jean Consuelo; Cond Caribe Ph, 20 Washington St., Santurce, PR 00907 Kelley, Robert James; 5 Atlantic Avenue, North Providence, R1 02904 Kelly, Paul Edward; 163 Baldwin Avenue, Syracuse, NY 13205 Kelly, Paula Anne; 77 Bluff Avenue, Cranston, Rl 02905 Kennedy, Mary Ann; 102 Westview Drive, Norwood, MA 02062 Kenney, Leslie MacDonald; 470 Potter Rd., NO Kingstown, R1 02852 Kenyon, Brian Joseph; 985 Ray Street, Fall River, MA 02720 Kerman, Richard Lyle; 400 East 58 Street, New York, NY 10022 Keifer, Donna Jean; 17401 Pontchartrain St., Detroit, M1 48203 Kim, David Kyongil; 2104 Starmount Lane, Lutherville, MD 21093 Kim, Karl Eujung; 1235 Warson Pines Drive, St. Louis, MO 63132 Kim, Kathleen Mekyung; 26 Romar Drive, Annapolis, MD 21403 Kim, Sung Mi; 230 Roxie Drive, Florence, AL 35630 Kim, Young Ran Suzie; P.O. Box 30455 Kimathi St., Embassy Of Korea, Nairobi, Kenya King, John William; 357 Prince Frederick St., King Of Prussia, PA 19406 King, Philip Travers; 71 Roger Williams Avenue, Rumford, RI 02916 King, Sarah Elaine; 19 Forest Street, Roxbury, MA 02119 Kirschenbaum, Ira Harvey; 869 Central Avenue, Far Rockaway, NY 11691 Kislevitz, David Luther; 7509 Marbury Rd., Bethesda, MD 20034 Klann, David Alfred; 136 Oakwood Drive, Peace Dale, R1 02879 Kleiner, Madelyn Merrill; 404 Beach 135 Street, Belle Harbor, NY 11694 Kluge, Kevin Paul; 816 Partridge Run, Point Pleasant, NJ 08742 Klupka, John Wilfred; 931 North First Street, New Hyde Park, NY 11040 Knapp, Andrew Gannett; 77 Raymond Street, Cambridge, MA 02140 Knauss, Karen Suzanne; 9 Northern Drive, Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458 Knight, Michael Vincent; 4142 Indianapolis Blvd., East Chicago, IN 46312 Knudsen, Colin Roderick; 1589 Matthews Ave., Vancouver, B.C., V6 2T1 CANADA Knutsen, Jr., John; 6 Patricia Drive, New City, NY 10956 Koenitzer, John Wadsworth; 19 Bellmore Drive, Pittsfield, MA 01201 Kohn, Alfred Morton; Five Island Avenue, Apartment 9H, Miami Beach, FL 33139 Konieczny, Timothy Avery; 405 Church Street, Oak Harbor, OH 43449 Korean, George Nicholas; North Drive, Ashaway, Rl 02804 Kotloff, Robert Mark; 269 Wiltshire Road, PHiladelphia, PA 19151 Kousoulas, Roxanne Demetra; 1203 Riverside Avenue, Somerset, MA 02726 Kraines, Russell Gordon; 14 Fairway Court, Narragansett, RI 02882 Krall, Christopher Matthew; 745 East 254 Street, Fuclid, OH 44132 Kramer, Joshua Neal; 83 Berkeley Court, Glentworth Street, London, NW 1, ENGLAND Krasnow, Jaye Elaine; 12-E Rolling Green Drive, Fall River, MA 02720 Kraus, David Robert; 45 Applewood Lane, Getzville, NY 14068 Kraus, Alexandra Tower; CO McKinsey Co., 40 Avenue George V, F-75, Paris 8E, FRANCE Krausz, Robert Manuel; 175 Teresa Avenue, Yonkers, NY 10704 Kravetz, Judith Gail; 1130 E. McDowell, B7, Phoenix, AZ 85006 Kreitzer, Amelia Edith; 408 East Illinois Road, Lake Forest, IL 60045 Kreshtool, Daniel Robert; 711 Coverly Road, Wilmington, DE 19802 Kretzmer, Peter Eugene; 13 Blue Hills Drive, Holmdel, NJ 07733 Kronenberg, Amy; 71-50 Parsons Boulevard, Flushing, NY 11365 Krop, Lori Susan; 635 Lynbrook Avenue, Tonawanda, NY 14150 Krumenaker, Robert; 600 Shore Rd., Apt. 6C, Long Beach, NY 11561 Krygier, Karen; 79 Hazorea Street, Kfar Shmaryahu, Israel Kurland, Deborah Lynn; 13 Garnet Terrace, Livingston, NJ 07039 Kwartler, Jed Aryeh; 233 Fairmount Road, Ridgewood, NJ 07450 Kwong, Jo-Ann; 53 Powhatan Path, Oakland, NJ 07436 Labarbera, Damon Gary; 7 Oxford Road, Rockville Centre, NY 11570 Labranche, Marc Henry; 9 Highland Avenue, Coventry, RI 02816 Lack, Stephen Paul; 315 Timberwilde Lane, Houston, TX 77024 Lada, Stephen Paul; 1600 S. Joyce St Arlington, VA 22202 Ladefian, Robert Alan; Rural Delivery 1, Chestnut Oak Road, Chepa- chet, R1 02814 Lambert, Paula Ann; 1351 Clement Street, St. Paul, MN 55118 Lancaster, Michael Francis; 17 Pocahontas Drive, Peabody, MA 01969 Land, Jon David; 113 Governor Bradford Dr., Barrington, RI 02806 Landess, Susan Elinor; 1637 Oxford Road, Charlottesville, VA 22903 Landsman, Julie; 124 Lafayette Lane, Cincinnati, OH 45220 Landsman, Lizanne; 54 Kings Court, Santurce, PR 00911 Langlois, John Philip; 652 Putnam Avenue, Greenville, Rl 02828 Langs, Bernard Alan; 425 East 58 Street, Apt. 8D, New York, NY 10022 Lasser, Jeffrey Saul; 28 Rosemary Avenue, Buffalo, NY 14216 Laster, Geraldine Diane; 52 Prospect Avenue, Hewlett, NY 11557 Laubach, Paul Andrew; 3738 Malibu Country Dr., Malibu, CA 20265 Laughlin, Pamela Janet; 69 Park Rd., Chelmsford, MA 01824 Lavine, Adrienne Gail; 372 Dodds Lane, Princeton, NJ 08540 Lawrence, Pamela Jane; 18 W. 90th St., New York, NY 10024 Lawrence, 111, John Heyer; 4216 Greenway, Baltimore, MD 21218 Lawson, James Andrew; 8282 Camino Herradura, E., Tucson, AZ 85715 Lawton, 1II, Thomas Oregon; 2 Hampton Grove, Allendale, SC 2981 Ey4l 322 Laycock, Michael Edgar; 122 Yonge Street, Barrie, Ontario, L4N 4C9 Canada Learner, Leslie Diane; 519 Haviland Road, Stamford, CT 06903 Leclaire, John Robert; Boston Road, Sutton, MA 01527 Lederman, Georges Gilbert; 145 East 84 Street, New York, NY 10028 Lee, Douglas Alan; 637 Old Lancaster Road, Bryn Mawr, PA 19010 Lee, Gordon Dumond; 152 Washington Avenue, Providence, RI 02905 Lee, John Henry; 6565 Ridgeview Circle, Dallas, TX 75240 Lee, Katherine; Four Trowbridge Place; Cambridge, MA 02138 Lee, Melvin Theodore; 131 Belmont Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11212 Lee, Theresa Jean; Apartment 2, 125 Colborne Road, Brighton, MA 02135 Leech, Ric; 128 Ivy Street, Providence, RI 02906 Lees, Madison Tobias; 279 Queens Lane, Palm Beach, FL 33480 Leffert, Jonathan David; 669 Maple Park Drive, St. Paul; MN 55118 Legault, Marc Alan; 139 Vermont Avenue, Somerset, MA 02726 Lehr, Alison Whitney; 5215 Pine Tree Drive, Miami Beach, FLA 33140 Leitner, Leslie Ann; 2415 Magnolia Road, Vineland, NJ 08360 Lembeck, Betsy Ellen; 696 Detamble Avenue, Highland Park, IL 60035 Leonard, Garry Martin; 8306 Shadowood, Broken Arrow, OK 74012 Leong, John Milton; 1551 Hawthorne Terrace, Berkeley, CA 94708 Lester, Mitchell Ross; 5 Kimhunter Road, Englewood Cliffs, NJ 07632 Lesueur, Susan Cashman; 7 Bay Colony Drive, Plymouth, MA 02360 Leung, Peggy; 19A Fung Fai Terrace, Third Floor, Happy Valley HONG KONG Levenson, Dana Robert; 21 South Lenox Street, Worcester, MA 01602 Leventer, Amy Ruth; 127 Waters Edge, Congers, NY 10920 Levesque, Mark Steven; 12 Heroux Boulevard, Cumberland, RI 02804 Levey, Gina Ellen; 693 Longview Road, South Orange, NJ 07079 Levin, Kathy Ellen; 3217 Old Court Road, Baltimore, MD 21208 Levin, Peter Scott; 707 North Linden Drive, Beverly Hills, CA 90210 Levinger, Michael James; 3656 Maplewood Street, Sioux City, IA 51104 Levinson, Jeffrey Glenn; 2873 East 39 Street, Tulsa, OK 74105 Levy, Richard Steven; 16 Hayloft Lane, Roslyn Heights, NY 11577 Lewis, Anne Beals; 1252 Pequot Road, Southport, CT 06490 Lewis, Claudia Johnson; 66 Pinewoods Avenue, Troy, NY 12180 Lewis, David Raymond; 108 Mavinev Green Dr., Corte Madeva, CA 94925 Lewis, Donna Marie; 12 Aldine Street, Providence, RI 02909 Lewis, Robin Jeanne; 9125 Keystone Ave., Skokie, IL 60076 Lewis, Stephanie Arlene; 1650 Harvard St. NW, Apt. 715, Washington, DC 20009 Lewitt, Michael Fric; 198 Dogwood Lane, Manhasset, NY 11030 Liang, James Lee; Box 60Of. Or., APO, San Francisco, CA 96263 Liberati, David Kevin; 1784 Guernsey Street, Bellaire, OH 43906 Lichtenstein, Alice Rabi; 21 Morven Place, Princeton, NJ 08540 Lichtenstein, Diane Marily; 55 Thornwood Lane, East Hills, NY 11577 Lidawer, Annette Rose; 24011 Greenlawn Avenue, Beachwood, OH 44122 Light, Gordon; 9406 West Broadview Drive, Miami Beach, FL 33154 Lin, Chuan-Fu; 24 Walker St., Westboro, MA 01581 Lipinsky, De Orlov Lino; PO Box AH, John Jay Homestead, Katonah, NY 10536 Litt, Andrew Wayne; 111 Tekening Drive, Tenafly, NJ 07670 Littlejohn, Mary Martha; 4960 Spring Rock Road, Birmingham, AL 35223 Livingstone, David Alan; 12916 Parkview Drive, Brecksville, OH 44141 Llewellyn, Joseph Henry; 5422 Milentz Avenue, Saint Louis, MO 63109 Lo, Chiu Shun; Flat No. 401, Block B, Lok Man Chuen, Kowloon, Hong Kong Lobo, Caren Artura; 217 Berkeley Place, Brooklyn, NY 11217 Locke, David Frank; Ten Adams Lane, Holbrook, MA 02343 Loeb, Ariane Helene; 111-30 75 RD, Forest Hills, NY, NY 11375 Loening, Peter Bernd; 65 Ryders Lane, Wilton, CT 06897 Logan, Shawn Michael; 357 Norwood Street, Sharon, MA 02067 Lohr, Alice-Diane Wilcox; 320 CPW Apt. 15F, New York, NY 49261 Lombardo, Michael Robert; 502 Spring Street, Manchester, CT 06040 Long, Jeffrey Thomas; 318 Lindenwood, Houston, TX 77024 Longmuir, Shelley Ann; RR3, Norwalk-Wilton Line, CT 06850 Lopes, Cheryl Eileen; 104 Woodbine Street, Providence, RI 02906 Lord, Jacques Passerat; 933 Coral Dr., Pebble Beach, CA 93953 Lossef, Steven Victor; 125-15 Cronston Avenue, Belle Harbor, NY 11694 Lothan, Tamar; 8554 Kedvale, Skokie, IL 60076 Louis, Adrian C.; Box 9181, Providence, RI 02940 Lowe, John Michael; Apartment 1, 7 Pasadena Road, Dorchester, MA 02121 Lowe, Marlyn Ann; 4516 Natural Bridge, St. Louis, MO 63115 Lowitt, Peter Carson; Squaw Valley RR 4, Ames, A 50010 Lucey, Paul Grandmont; 69 Huntington Drive, San Francisco, CA 94132 Ludman, Neil Charles; 74 Hunters Lane, Westbury, NY 11520 Ludwig, Catherine Louise; 112 Glenhill Drive, Scotia, NY 12302 Lukasiewicz, Lisa Marie; 26 Irons Avenue, Johnston, RI 02919 Lukasiewicz, Michael; Bennett Hill Road, SHaftsbury, VT 05262 Lunder, Deborah Ruth; 425 Great Pond Road, North Andover, MA 01845 Lundy, Teretha Denise; 8920 Northwest 10th Ave., Miami, FL 33150 Lussier, Grant Patrick; 84 Morewood Oaks, Port Washington, NY 11050 Lyons, Alan Michael; 73 Planatation Drive, Cranston, Ri 2920 Lyster, Mary Elizabeth; 108 Cole Ave,, Providence, RI 02906 MacAdams, Annette M. Tessie; 386 Lloyd Avenue, Providence, RI 02906 MacCabe, Charles Long; 6008 Musket Road, Fort Washington, PA 19034 Machtiger, Bennett Rand; 207 Tennyson Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15213 Macisaac, Kathleen Ann; 41 Bear Hill Road, Seekonk, MA 02771 Madden, James Lawrence; 823 Naylors Run Road, Havertown, PA 19083 Madsen, Christine Ryan; 1404 Linden Drive, Northbrook, IL 60062 Magida, Matthew Brian; 7 North Ridge Road, Westport, CT 06880 Magruder, Sarah Beall; 906 Cecil Road, Wilmington, DE 19807 Maher, Maribeth; CO Curtis Mathes Corp., One Curtis Mathes Pk. Way, Athens, TX 75751 Mahoney, Mary Catherine; 45 Avon Rd, Larchmont, NY 10538 Mahony, Rhona; 169 Mount Vernon Street, Dedham, MA 02026 Mairella, Steven; 54 Columbia Avenue, Nutley, NJ 07110 Majno, Lorenzo Carlo; 1558 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, MA 02138 Maker, Scott Thane; R. D. 1, Jonesboro, ME 04648 Mamani, Carlos Camilo; 127-01 109th Avenue, New York, NY 11420 Mandi, Ann; 76 Don Bob Road, Stamford, CT 06903 Manley, Thomas Albert; 20 Moulthrop Street, Ansonia, CT 06401 Mann, Cynthia Lou; 82 High Wood Road, West Hartford, CT 06117 Mann, Laura Dorothy; Knickerbocker Drive, Belle Mead, NJ 08502 Mann, Susan Elizabeth; 260 Furnace Dock Road, Peekskill, NY 10566 Mareneck, Ellen Catharine; 710 Longwood Drive, Lake Forest, IL. 60045 Margiotta, Charles Joseph; 463 Ingram Avenue, Staten Island, NY 10314 Margolies, Laurie Renelle; 3446 Steven Road, Baldwin, NY 11510 Margotta, Thomas James; 1762 Madison Avenue, Dunmore, PA 18509 Marks, Evan Mitchell; One Whitehall Rd., Poughkeepsie, NY 12603 Marquez, Marie Antoinette; 19 Erie Court, Jericho, NY 11753 Marshall, David Keith; 105 Cornell Avenue, Swarthmore, PA 19081 Martel, Priscilla Allison; Falls River Drive, Ivoryton, CT 06442 Martin, Robert Gray; 11914 Stonewood Lane, Rockville, MD 20852 Martin, Stephen James; 56 Rice Street, Pawtucket, RI 02861 Mason, Victoria Lynne; 7011 Ardleigh Street, Philadelphia, PA 19119 Massar, Ella; 30 Longview Road, Monrce, CT 06468 Massumi, Brian Jon; 8556 E. Bonnie Rose, Scottsdale, AZ 85253 Mastrullo, Michael; 3 Riveredge Road, Billerica, MA 01862 Matarazzo, Harris Starr; 1934 Southwest Vista Ave., Portland, OR 97201 Matloff, Susan Jill; 192-10 37 Avenue, Flushing, NY 11358 Mattei, Peter Gerard; 9954 Holliston Court, St. Louis, MO 63124 Maurer, Howard Glenn; 71 Parkwood Road, West Islip, NY 11795 Maximovich, Stanley Paul; 4737 North Knox Avenue, Chicago, IL 60630 May, Audrey Jane; 3621 Norriswood, Memphis, TN 38111 Mayer, Michele Denise; 161 Grove Street, Lincoln, RI 02865 Maynard, Karen Deming; 75 Peter Hans Rd., Carlisle, MA 01741 Mazonson, Martha Joan; 27 Glendale Rd., Marblehead, MA 01945 Mazzocco, Mary Anne; 16534 Buchet Drive, Granada Hills, CA 91344 Mazzotta, Marisa Joan; 145 Lincoln Street, Middletown, CT 06457 McAndrews, Kevin Francis; 14 Moss Ledge Road, Westport, CT 06880 McBurnett, Neal Davis; 5205 Mockingbird Rd., Greensboro, NC 27406 McCarl, Kevin Arlington; 244 McMillen Avenue, Beaver Falls, PA 15010 McChesney, Martha; Box 219, The Sea Ranch, CA 95497 McConnell, Robert Joseph; 166 Imperial Drive, Warwick, RI 02886 McCormick, Joseph Edward; 25 Edwards Avenue, Seekonk, MA 02771 McCullagh, Anne Aileen; 71 Irving Avenue, Providence, Ri 02906 McCulloch, Jeanne Robineau; Apartment 18-D, 770 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10021 McCusker, Jr., Raymond Joseph; 2 Vermont Avenue, Rumford, RI 02916 McDonald, Lauren Anne; 60 Nunda Boulevard, Rochester, NY 14610 McGill, Dorothy Jeannetta; 6718 North 15 Street, Philadelphia, PA 19126 McGinnis, Amy Rose; 1307 Greenwood Circle, Cary, NC 27511 McGirth, Violet Waltryce; 222 E. 93rd St., 21J, New York, NY 10028 McKee, Jr., Richard Gilpin; 59 Forest Street, Manchester, MA 01944 McKendall, George Raymond; 185 Freeman Parkway, Providence, RI 02906 McNamara, Joseph William; 14 Southwick Ct. North, Plainview, NY 11803 McReynolds, Marc Calvin; General Delivery, Kelseyville, CA 95451 Medeiros, Barbara Ann; 141-B Birch Swamp Road, Warren, RI 02885 Medley, Keith; 47 School St., Bloomfield, CT 06002 Meister, John Henry; 75 Crossway Drive, Deer Park, NY 11729 Mellea, Michelle Frances; 28 Hillcrest Road, Medfield, MA 02052 Meller, Richard Samuel; 4398 Okemos St., Okemos, M1 48864 Menkus, Jr., Belden Morris; P O Box 85, Middleville, NJ 07855 Mereu, Stephen; 59 Thorndale Rd., Slingerlands, NY 12159 Merriam, Stephen Charles; 1904 Clover Street, Rochester, NY 14618 Merrill, Scott Eldridge; 15 Jones Street, Dracut, MA 01826 Merritt, Scott David; 20 Buckingham Road, Norwood, MA 02062 Mesick, Stephen B.; Benlise Drive, Williamstown, MA 01267 Meyer, Laurel Shadman; 115 Dover Road, Wellesley, MA 02181 Meyer, Stephen Richard; 111 Everett Ave., Providence, RI 02006 Meyer, Victoria Jean; 18 High Street, Southborough, MA 01772 Michael, Calvin Austin; 12 Vernon Avenue, Mount Vernon, NY 10553 Michael, Susan Graham; 431 Parkview Drive, Wynnewood, PA 19096 Migliori, Michael Edward; 18 Applewood Road, Cranston, RI 02920 Migneault, Jeffrey Peter; 84 Smith Avenue, Greenville, RI 02828 Miller, Anthony Murray; 3150 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, IL 60657 Miller, Daniel; 10 West 9th Street, New York, NY 10011 Miller, Lincoln Paul; 26 Polo Road, Great Neck, NY 11023 Miller, Margaret Louise; Post Office Box 182, Wassaic, NY 12592 Mills, Monica Teply; 5210 South 18th Street, Omaha, NE 68107 Miner, Steven Roger; 1040 Ackerman Avenue, Syracuse, NY 13210 Minor, Lloyd Brooks; 10302 Charterhouse, Little Rock, AR 72207 Minot, Nicholas William; 69 Hickory Hill Road, Simsbury, CT 06070 Minter, Mark Roger; 2616 Geraldine St., Oklahoma City, OK 73107 Miskevich, Edward; 74 Larkspur Lane, Clifton, NJ 07013 Miszerak, Michael Thaddeus; 838 Kiehl Drive, Lemoyne, PA 17043 Moberly, Warren John; 7813 Farnsworth Street, Philadelphia, PA 19152 Moffat, Nancy Janes; 12869 Lacresta Dr., Los Altos Hills, CA 94022 Monteiro, Elizabeth Marie; 724 Williams Street, North Dighton, MA 02764 Moore, Geoffrey Elliott; 908 North Madison St., Rome, NY 13440 Moore, Lisa Jill; 5132 Cold Springs Lane, West Bloomfield, MI 48033 Moreau, Judith Benander; 55 Natick Ave., Cranston, RI 02920 Moreland, Jocelyn Felicia; 96 Wilson Avenue, Rowayton, CT 06853 Morgan, Amateka Kuaco; 2463 Belmont Avenue, New York, NY 10458 Morphy, Adrienne Alice; 845 Old Mill Road, Pasadena, CA 91108 Morris, Ann Streeter; 3022 Payne Street, Evanston, 1L 60201 Morris, Elisabeth Ann; 97 Trinity Pass, Stamford, CT 06903 Mufson, Neil; 93 Wildrose Drive, Andover, MA 01810 Mukai, Shizuo; 41 Kenilworth Road, Arlington, MA 02174 Mukau, Leslie; Box 5778, Campus Mulgrew, Robert Thomas; 339 Heathcote Road, Scarsdale, NY 10583 Muney, Brian William; 97 Winding Brook Road, New Rochelle, NY 10804 Munoz, Timothy Francis; 182 Lyons Road, Scarsdale, NY 10583 Murnaghan, George Andrews; 3914 Piney Grove Rd , Glyndon, MD 21071 Murray, David Kilvert; 9 East 96th St New York, NY 10028 Musselman, Thomas Edward; 244 Vittorio Court, Park Ridge, NJ 07656 Nagel, Ruth Elizabeth; 1115 Carlotta Rd., West, Jacksonville, FI 32211 Nager, Peter John; Apartment 11-F, 993 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10028 Ndimbie, Oliver Kimka; Apartment 3-D, 254 East 68 Street, New York, NY 10021 Nealon, Jr., James Dinneen; 7202 Heights Court, McLean, VA 22101 Neiger, Gilbert Andrew; 300 West 108th Street, New York, NY 10025 Nelson, Kelly Keefe; 54 Berta Place, Basking Ridge, NJ 07920 Nemirow, Ronald Harry; 130 South Jersey Street, Denver, CO 80222 Nemtzow, David M.; 2482 Horace Court, Bellmore, NY 11710 Nettles, Wanda Denise; 155 Darrington Street, SW., Washington, DC 20032 Neveu, Gerard Raymond; 2 Liberty Street, Nashua, NH 03060 Nicholson, James Arthur; 30 East 72 Street, New York, NY 10021 Niederhut, William Ernest; 2245 Syracuse Street, Denver, CO 80207 Niven, Michele Terese; 106 John St., Providence, Rl 02906 Normile, Kathleen Lewis; 26 Blackstone Blvd, Apt. 6, Providence, RI 02906 Novick, Andrew Stewart; 261 Broadficld Road, New Rochelle, NY 10804 O'Brien, Devon; One Sprucewood Lane, Westport, CT 06880 O'Connell, Michael Peter; 580 North Quidnessett Rd., North Kingstown, RI 02852 O'Connor, Jeanne Marie; 41 Harvard Drive, Woodbury, NY 11797 Obermeyer, Paul Richard; 9531 Sims, Las Casitas Apts. 64, El Paso, TX 79925 Obranic, George Joseph; 2712 Bayshore Gardens, Parkway, Bradenton, FL 33507 Offit, Michael Robert; 23 Fast 68th Street, New York, NY 10021 Oh, Kello Katie; 94-50 238 Street, Bellerose, NY 11426 Ohlin, Nancy; 9 Red Coat Lane, Lexington, MA 02173 Okamoto, Yuko; 267 Sugari-Cho, Owase-Shi, Mie-Ken 519-36, JAPAN Okin, Steven Allen; 75 Central Pk, West 67 St., New York, NY 10023 Olding, Linda Jean; 115 Chestnut Hill Road, Groton, CT 06340 Oleksak, Michael Matthew; 68 Llewellyn Drive, Westfield, MA 01085 Oliveira, Steven; 113-A Maple Road, Warren, RI 02885 Olson, Susan Hancock; Increase Miller Road, Katonah, NY 10536 Oppenheimer, Peter Mendes; 19 Chedworth Road, Scarsdale, N'Y 10583 Oroszlan, Judy Maria; 11411 Duryea Drive, Potomac, MD 20854 Ortiz, Sylvia; 2725 Manitou Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90031 Osborn, Carol Ann; 343 Colorado, Southwest, Huron, SD 57350 Osei-Tutu, Paul Ernest; P O Box 2227, Kumasi Ghana, West Africa Oshima, Michael Wayne; P.O. Box 544, Kealakekua, HI 96750 Oshrain, Mindy; 275 Maywood Drive, Rochester, NY 14618 Ostrow, Steven Mark; 1539 Coolidge Avenue, Baldwin, NY 11510 Paley, Sharon Lisa; 51 Stony Run, New Rochelle, NY 10804 Panton, Peter John; 1431 Jackson Avenue, River Forest, IL 60305 Paris, Katharine; Apartment 2-F, 76-15 35 Avenue, Jackson Heights, NY 11372 Park, Audrey Mie; 2010 501 Senanikom 1, Phaholyothin Rd., Bang- kok, Thailand Parkinson, Durward William; High Head, S. Harpswell, ME 04079 Parkinson, Sandra Jenniphe; 26 Coolidge Street, Hartford, CT 06106 Parmelee, David Charles; 1111 Wyoming Avenue, Forty Fort, PA 18704 Parmet, Davina; Apartment 6-A, 2 Grace Court, Brooklyn, NY 11201 Parson, Robert Paul; 14 Governor Bradford Road, Brewster, MA 02631 Parsons, Lucille Archambau; 31 Harley St, West Warrick, Ri 02893 Parziale, John Robert; 7 Trumbull Drive, Wallingford, CT 06492 Pasquariello, Joseph; 47 Sherwood Lane, Raynham, MA 02767 Pasterczyk, Catherine; 19687 Beachcliff Blvd., Rocky River, OH 44116 Pasternak, Arthur David; 139 Heacock Lane, Wyncote, PA 19095 Patch, Carol Alison; Box 1522, 47 St. George Street, Duxbury, MA 02332 Patel, Eric; 39 Oak Ridge Ave., Summit, NJ 07901 Pato, Carlos Manuel Neves; 161 Todt Hill Road, Staten Island, NY 10314 Patton, Robert Holbrook; 5945 Searl Terrace, NW, Washington, DC 20016 Pavlovsky, Mary Ellen; 301 Meredith Street, Perth Amboy, NJ 08861 Payne, Barton Andrew; 355 Bedford Center Road, Bedford Hills, N'Y 10507 Pearlin, Bette Ann; 51 Curry Road, Hamden, CT 06517 Pearlman, Jill Beth; 1301 Inverness Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15217 Pearson, Jr., Huey Lawrence; 1008 Wilson Drive, Ft. Wayne, IN 46806 Pelham, Thomas Anthony; 1023 Pacific Ave.,, Waukegan, IL 60085 Pellegrini, Mark Stanley; 26 Raymond Avenue, Salem, MA 01970 Pember, Willis Ogden; 448 South Atwood, Janesville, WI 53545 Penn, Scott Douglas; 26 Cumner St., Hyannis, MA 02601 Perez, Casto Julio; Calle Parz 9-5, Guigiie Edo Carabobo, Venezuela Perkins, Valerie Irene; 12 Grey Lane, Lynnfield, MA 01940 Perlmutter, Steve lan; Apartment 1-A, 192-10A 69 Avenue, Fresh Meadows, NY 11365 Perreault, Raymond Joseph; 564 Portland Avenue, Dover, NH 03820 Perry, Curtis John; 40 Wunnegin Circle, East Greenwich, RI 02818 Perry, Donald Kent; 3 Huntington Avenue, Scarsdale, NY 10583 Peters, David Bryan; 159 Glen Parkway, Hamden, CT 06517 Peters, Steven Sever; 5818 South Fulton Way, Englewood, CL 80110 Peterson, Jr., John Edward; 153 Chapel Street, Lincoln, RI 02865 Petruzzelli, Julie Ann; 12 Feldstone Place, West Caldwell, NJ 07006 Peyton, Howard Alexander; 106 Frost Ave., Rochester, NY 14620 Phelan, Joy Carol; 39 Brooks Hill Road, Wolcott, CT 06716 Philbrick, Anne Caroline; 10 Stone Manor Drive, Milford, CT 06460 ps, Thomas Waldron; 24 Gramercy Park So., New York, NY 10003 ps, Sarah Emily; Old Roaring Brook Road, Mount Kisco, NY 10549 Phillips, Thomas Hogeman; 4 Laurel Way, Madison, NJ 07940 Pimental, Michael; 76 Booth Avenue, Pawtucket, RI 02861 Pinto, Harlan Andrew; 57 Edge Park Road, White Plains, NY 10603 Piscuskas, David Allen; Box 63, Mount Hermon, MA 01354 Pitts, 111, Herman Canfield; Box 5959, Campus Plapinger, Jane Debra; 3417 Merle Drive, Baltimore, MD 21207 Platter, Cindy Deborah; 29 Michelle Lane; Randolph, MA 02368 Plevin, Miriam Gayle; 18300 Shaker Boulevard, Shaker Heights, OH 44120 Plynton, Evan Godfrey; 2482 Linden Boulevard, New York, NYY 11208 Podlipny, Andrew Marion; 247 Starr Street, Brooklyn, NY 11237 Podrasky, Linda Ann; 282 Bushy Hill Road, Simsbury, CT 06070 Polster, Keith Alan; 3276 Bremerton Rd., Pepper Pike, OH 44124 Popieniek, Paul Henry; 24 Bronson Avenue, Meriden, CT 06450 Pordy, Robert Craig; 1125 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10028 Porter, Susan Lee; 30 Coolidge Drive, Amherst, NY 14226 Potvin, Karen Lynn; R. D. 1, Box 352-A, Danielson, CT 06239 Poulos, William Harry; 118 Stewart Street, New Britain, CT 06053 Powe, Dorothy Helen; 1104 Prospect St, Ann Arbor, MI 18104 Preble, Jeffrey Cole; 40 Canady Lane, Madison, CT 06443 Predko, Peter Daniel; 2307 Pine Ridge Road, Schenectady, NY 12309 Prusky, Jonathan Marc; 336 Hidden River Road, Narberth, PA 19072 Pryor, 11, Richard Edward; 203 Greenmount Boulevard, Dayton, OH 45419 Purinton, Spencer Lewis; 36 Main Street, Byfield, MA 01922 Quinn, Sara Maria; 96 Andem St., Providence, RI 02908 Rabinowicz, Judith Rose; 14 Exmoor Road, Newton, MA 02159 Radner, Wendy Herman; 116 Douglas Road, Belmont, MA 02178 Raffel, Dawn Elizabeth; 9010 N. 70 St., MIlwaukee, WI 53223 Raiff, Robert Martin; 720 Milton Rd., Rye, NY 10580 Raim, Ellen; 39 Lagorce Circle, Miami, FL 33141 Rait, Douglas Samuel; 1100 Amherst Street, Buffalo, NY 14216 Ramachandran, Lalitha; 9 St. Marys Ave., Finchley, London N3, England Raskin, Richard Steven; 10847 Rondelay Drive, Saint Louis, MO 63141 Rautenkranz, Douglas Edward; 1490 Resort A-3, Baker, OR 97814 Read, Steven Edward; 10402 Hunt Country Lane, Vienna, VA 22180 Reich, Cynthia Fay; 1070 Huntingdon Road, Abington, PA 19001 Reis, David Gordon; 51 Burr Road, Maplewood, NJ 07040 Renda, Ernest Alf-ed; 3 Lamington Road, Whitehouse Station, NJ 08889 Rendel, Michael Terry; 3410 Olympia Avenue, Baltimore, MD 21215 Rennert, James Benjamin; 10746 Chalon Road, Los Angeles, CA 90024 Ressler, Richard Scott; 834 Glenridge Avenue, North Woodmere, NY 11581 Reynolds, Camillejan; 15 Belvedere St., CPO Box 1248, Kingston, NY 12401 Richards, Donald Gene; 4134 Sutro Ave, Los Angeles, CA 90008 Richardson, Perry Kimball; 4005 Sangamore Road, Bethesda, MD 20016 Richman, Todd Ira; 57 Auburndale Road, Marblehead, MA 01945 Richmond, Robert Arthur; 3601 Pinehurst Dr., Bakersfield, CA 93306 Richmond, Thomas Gerard; 56 Meadowstream Drive, Amherst, NY 14226 Richter, Mark Clement; 4300 Maisonneuve Ou 1101, Westmount- Montreal, Quebec, Canada HH3Z 1K8 Ricker, John Bradford; 94 Nanepashemet Street, Marblehead, M A 01945 Riddick, Robert Steven; 6147-31 Street, NW, Washington, DC 20015 Riedel, Charles Jess; 1758 Washington Circle, Stow, OH 44224 Riesner, Julia Ann; 54 James Road, Harrison, NY 10528 Riessen, David Lee; 60 Meadow Lane, Kenmore, NY 14223 Rinehart, Bradford Robert; 39 Laurel Lane, Center Valley, PA 18034 Riorden, Rebecca Thomas; 1477B Green River Road, Williamstown, MA 01267 Rips, Bruce Philip; 711 North 69 Street, Omaha, NB 68132 Ritaccio, Anthony Louis; 55 Saratoga Street, Lido Beach, NY 11561 Ritter, Catharine Ann; 475 Bennett Road, Hilton, NY 14468 Rivkin, Kenneth Alan; 473 Long Hill Drive, Short Hills, NJ 07078 Rizzi, Charles Andrew; Highland Road, Rye, NY 10580 Robbins, David Alan; 10322 N. Adams Ct., 22W, Mequon, WI 53092 Roberts, David Lawson; 23 Blue Mound Drive, Barrie, Ontario LAM 4BE Canada Roberts, Loran Willis; 40 Park St., Coventry, RI 02816 Roberts, Michelle Maura; 81 Spier Road, Scarsdale, NY 10583 Robertson, Scott Lynn; 15 Ryder Lane, Cumberland, RI 02864 Robie, Martha Elizabeth; 18 Green Street, Bath, ME 04530 Robinson, Andrew Mark; 49 Crawford Road, Harrison, NY 10528 Robinson, Jeffrey Michael; 3 Mill Lane, Armonk, NY 10504 Robinson, Judith Viola; 58 Greenwood Avenue, Warwick, RI 02886 Robinson, Mark David; Box 610, Ross Road, Danielson, CT 06239 Robzyk, Phillip Harry; 2258 East 59 Place, Brooklyn, NY 11234 Rocha, Patricia Kennedy; 29 Fairway Drive, Barrington, RI Rogers, Isabella; 3122 Wynfond Drive, Fairfax, VA 22030 Rogers, Michael Edson; 53 Grohmans Lane, Plainview, NY 11803 Roney, Rose Patrice; 28 Upyonda Way, Rumford, RI 02916 Rosario, Johnny Joe; 402 Maple, Junction City, KS 66441 Rose, Sara Townsend; Route $6 Box 385, Frederick, MD 21701 Rose, 111, John Carlyle; 145 Pinckney St., Apt. 703, Boston, MA 02114 Rosen, Dena Rachelle; 185 Prospect Ave., 90, Hackensack, NJ 07601 B 323 324 Rosen, Ellen Lynn; 3 Jason Lane, Mamaroneck, NY 10543 Rosenberg, James Jordan; 300 Winston Dr., Apt. 3021, Cliffside Park, NJ 07010 Rosenblum, Lisa Sue; 361 Warwick Avenue, Teaneck, NJ 07666 Rosenbluth, James Edward; 503 West Barry Avenue, Chicago, IL 60657 Rosenfeld, Eric Stuart; 1668 James Street, Merrick, NY 11566 Rosenthal, Sally Nathan; 2829 Link Road, Lynchburg, VA 24503 Ross, Jennifer E.; 20 Springtree Lane, Yardley, PA 19067 Roth, Eric Alexander; 34 Camore Street, Stamford, CT 06905 Roth, Joanna Elisabeth; 10 Fairview Drive, Bristol, RI 02809 Roth, Richard Abbey; 118 Split Oak Drive, East Norwich, NY 11732 Rothman, Daniel Harris; 1408 Amend Drive, Merrick, NY 11566 Rothschild, Jane Houghton; Laurel Hollow, Syosset, NY 11791 Rothstein, Laurie Susan; 7 Pitman St., Providence, Ri 02906 Rousseau, Jennifer Renee; 548 Hyde Park Place 1, Inglewood, CA 90302 Rowley, Linda Ann; 21 Edgar Nock Road, North Kingstown, R1 02852 Royston, Jonathan Whitney; Lomas Altas 91, Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico Rozansky, Michael Lee; 789 Pleasant Valley Way, West Orange, NJ 07052 Rozenson, David Alexander; 45 Krinizi St., Apt. 5, Ramat-Gan, Israel Rubin, Daniel Jay; 1122 Northwest 20 Drive, Gainesville, FL 32605 Ruckdeschel, Lisa Ruth; R.D. 3, Ballston Lake, NY 12019 Rudman, Rachel Beth; 83 Stony Hill Road, Amherst, MA 01002 Rueckert, Thomas Lange; 218 South Peterson AVe., Louisville, KY 40206 Ruggieri, James Anthony; 12 Michael Drive, Cranston, RI 02920 Ruggles, Mary Ann Daland; 128 Walden St., Concord, MA 01742 Ruh, John Frederick; 112 Clark Street, Orchard Park, NY 14127 Rusten, Henriette Cheryl; 413 Irving Drive, Wilmington, DE 19802 Ryan, Amy Louise; 46 Vista Avenue, Auburndale, MA 02166 Ryan, James Carey; 300 Community Dr., Manhasset, NY 11030 Ryan, Mark Joseph; Box 3753, Campus Ryder, Kevin Michael; 12 General Avenue, Shrewsbury, MA 01545 Sachs, Marjorie; 51 Belden Avenue, Dobbs Ferry, NY 10522 Sack, Martha Jane; 25 Burnside Road, Newton Highlands, MA 02161 Sacks, Evan Hilary; 73-22 171 Street, Flushing, NY 11366 Sacks, Jeffrey William; 1197 East 22 Street, Brooklyn, NY 11210 Sagalyn, Michael Ernest; 41 Peacock Farm Road, Lexington, MA 02173 Saillant, Jr., John Daniel; 129 Shaw Avenue, Cranston, RI 02905 Salinas, Beatriz Adriana; 2505 Convent, Laredo, TX 78040 Saltmarsh, Michelle Anne; 230 South Main St. 14, Providence, RI 02903 Salvadore, Mal Andrew; 83 Freedom Drive, Cranston, RI1 02920 Samors, Patricia Wendy; 172 Irving Avenue, Providence, RI 02906 Samson, Margaret Ellen; 25 Central Park West, New York, NY 10705 Sanchez, Esther Christina; 1415 Puls Street, Oceanside, CA 92054 Sanchez, Julio; 420 E. 148st, Apt. 2E, Bronx, NY 10455 Sand, David Jay; 709 Arlington Road, Narberth, PA 10072 Sander, Rebecca Leigh; 765 15th Street, Boulder, CO 80302 Sanders, William David; 233 Addison Place, Paramus, NJ 07652 Sandquist, Peter Dunham; 353 Belden Avenue, Chicago, IL 60614 Santer, Emily Miriam; Featherbed Lane, Haverford, PA 19041 Saravo, Jr., Alfred Vincent; 7 Carol Ann Circle, North Providence, RI 02911 Sarch, Susan Holly; 22 Manchester Drive, Spring Valley, NY 10977 Sasko, John; 218 North Chestnut Street, North Massapequa, NY 11758 Sauer, Richard Harold; 508 Carlton Road, Wyckoff, NJ 07481 Saunders, Delisa Kay; 3200 Edgewood Avenue, Richmond, VA 23222 Schachner, Mark Jay; 39 Fern Drive East, Jericho, NY 11753 Schaps, Lauren Beth; 540 Pinewood Drive, Glencoe, IL 60022 Scharfman, Daniel David; 11 Paddock Lane, Lexington, MA 02173 Schaubhut, Judith Gay; R D 3, 4 Pinewood Road, Poughkeepsie, NY 12603 Schell, Anita Louise; 342 Ruth Ridge Drive, Lancaster, PAS 17601 Schen, Cathy Richardson; 709 Oak Ave., Westfield, NJ 07000 Schiff, Leslie Ann; 20 East Cedar Street, Chicago, IL 60611 Schiff, Robert Frederick; 508 Woodside Road, Pittsburgh, PA 15221 Schiffman, Deborah Joseph; American Consulate Gen., Pres. Kennedy Platz, 28 Bremen, W. Germany Schiffres, Alan David; 3060 Clovermere Road, Wantagh, NY 11793 Schleinz, Michael Lawrence; 1833 Valle Vista, Pekin, IL 61554 Schlesinger, Richard Leese; 3741 Battersea Road, Miami, FL 33133 Schmerler, David; 1300 St. Charles Place, Apt. 310, Pembroke Pines, FL 33026 Schmidt, Paul Wayland Helm; Box 4684, Campus Schofield, Linda Doreen; 310 Apple Blossom Lane, Bay Village, OH 44140 Scholtz, William Henry; 245 Long Neck Pt. Rd., Darien, CT 06820 Schultz, Adam; 208-37 32 Avenue, Bayside, NY 11361 Schultz, Eric Baker; 257 Pearl Street, North Dighton, MA 02764 Schuman, Aaron Joel; 2002 Bordeaux Street, West Bloomfield, M1 48033 Schwartz, Jonathan Paul; 170 Collins Road, Newton, MA 02168 Schwartz, Ruth Anne; 4120 Echo Road, Bloomfield Hills, MI 48013 Schwartz, Stephen Alan; 1382 Marinette Road, Pacific Palisades, CA 90272 Schwartzman, Kenny; 90-22 153rd Avenue, Howard Beach, N'Y 11414 Scobey, Richard G.; 9 Lenox Place, Scarsdale, NY 10583 Scott, Neil William; 145 Oaklawn Avenue, Cranston, RI 02920 Sedano, Richard Philip; 872 Carroll Street, Brooklyn, NY 11215 Seeberger, Mary Margaret; 291 Circular Street, Tiffin, OH 44883 Seelen, Victoria Ann; 14 Maplewood Way, Pleasantville, NY 10570 Selker, Edwin Joseph; 4285 S.E. Stark, Portland, OR 97215 Selover, Cynthia Lee; 3575 Traver Road, Shaker Heights, OH 44122 Semba, Laura Louise; 1437 W. Minnehaha Pkwy., Minneapolis, MN 55409 Senft, Karen Olcott; 26 Halsey St., Providence, RI 02906 Serafin, Robyn Ann; 260 Brown 5t., Providence, RI 02906 Shafer, Mary Helen; 219 North Sprague Avenue, Kingston, PA 18704 Shannon, Peter Leo; 17 Avalon RD, Stoneham, MA 02180 Sharpe, Douglas Boyd; Pojac Point, North Kingstown, R1 02852 Shaw, Charles John; 12 Interlaken Avenue, New Rochelle, NY 10801 Sheiman, Judith Ami; 1212 East 22 Street, Brooklyn, NY 11210 Sheinaus, Robert Neil; 132 Wildwood Terrace, Watchung, NJ 07060 Sheldon, Cynthia Marie; 1419 14th Lane, Palm Beach Gardens, FL 33410 Shenker, Scott Joseph; 7210 Beechwood Road, Alexandria, VA 22307 Sherman, David Michael; 31 Thorne Place, Rye, NY 10580 Sherry, Barbara; Apartment 14-B, 80 First Avenue, New York, NY 10009 Shields, Edward Joseph; 8511 Chippewa Road, Philadelphia, PA 19128 Shippee, Arthur Bradford; Brookridge Drive, Greenwich, CT 06830 Shireling, Jennifer Adams; 8320 Calle Del Cielo, La Jolla, CA 92037 Shoer, Alan Mark; 29 Manton Road, Swampscott, MA 01907 Shorb, Jr., Robert Henry; 6908 Ridgewood Ave., Chevy Chase, MD 20015 Shoshkes, Deena Jill; 185 Mayhew Drive, South Orange, NJ 07079 Shpiner, Robert Benjamin; 816 Dedham Street, Newton, MA 02159 Shufro, Mark Bernard; 2 Crestwood Road, Westport, CT 06880 Siegel, Gary Wayne; 138 Mountain Rest Road, New Paltz, NY 12561 Silberg, Ellen Beth; 1310 15 Street, Miami Beach, FL 33139 Silva, Elizabeth Jean; 130 Evergreen Dr., Apt. 27, East Providence, RI 02014 Silver, Geoffrey Morgan; 121 Laurel Lane, Syosset, NY 11791 Silver, Howard Steven; 11 Royce Road, Framingham, MA 01701 Silverman, Ellen Randi; 18 Bonnie Drive, Westbury, NY 11590 Silverman, Judd Lear; 60 Town Woods Road, Old Lyme, Ct 06371 Silverstein, Harriet Ellen; 8 Loretta Drive, Syosset, NY 11791 Silzer, 111, Parker Waite; 2031 Redding Road, Fairfield, CT 06430 Simon, Lori Ellen; 8255 East Prairie Road, Skokie, IL 60076 Simpson, Brian David; 330 West Columbia Avenue, Warwick, R1 02888 Simpson, Charles Kyle; 8710 Mary Lee Lane; Annandale, VA 22003 Sinsheimer, Janet Suzanne; 2525 Blueberry Lane, Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Sisley, Amy Catherine; 1-504 111 Lafayette Dr., Syracuse, NY 13205 Sisson, Jocelyn Beth; 266 Greenwood Street, Newton Centre, MA 02159 Siu Kiu Chung; Apt. 501, Rua Treze De Maio, 164 Nova Iguaqu, Rio De Janeiro, BR 26000 Sloan, Cathleen Ellen; 24 Superior View Blvd., North Providence, RI 02011 Sloane, Wendi Elizabeth; 1842 Brookside Drive, Germantown, TN 38138 Small, Gregory David; 185 Ford Road, Woodbridge, CT 06525 Smith, Brian Richard; 2820 Middlebury Lane, Birmingham, MI 48010 Smith, David Stuart; 135-14 219 St., New York, NY 11413 Smith, Gregory Lynn; 225 Howland Rd., East Greenwich, RI 02818 Smith, Jennifer Gene; 34 East Main Street, Mendham, NJ 07945 Smith, Margaret Elizabeth; 1931 Rowley Ave., Madison, WI 53705 Smith, Marjorie Alexander; Box 605, Southport, CT 06490 Smith, Mark; Meadowyck, 106-B Village Round, Wescoesville, PA 18106 Smith, Martha Barton; 565 Gay Street, Westwood, MA 02090 Smith, Nolan Arthur; Kings Highway, Mickleton, NJ 08056 Smith, Sharon Ann; 118 Harmon Street, Hamden, CT 06517 Smith, Sharon Anne; Rocky Hill School, Ives Road, East Greenwich, R1 02818 Smith, Sonya Elizabeth; 1745 Hartford Turnpike, North Haven, CT 06473 Smith, Timothy Kellum; 131 East 6 Street, New York, NY 10021 Smith, III, Edward Farrelly; Creek House; Pembroke, Bermuda Snyder, Daniel Tibor; 6 South Brookwood Drive, Montclair, NJ 07042 Snyder, Leslie Margaret; 101 East Center Street, Nazareth, PA 18064 Snyder, Regina Marie; Manhan Road, Southampton, MA 01073 Solish, Samuel Paul; 26 Barlow Drive, North, Brooklyn, NY 11234 Sonder, Gina Felicia; 333 East 57 Street, New York, NY 10022 Sorcher, Leonard Joel; 2200 N. Central Road, Fort Lee, NJ 07024 Sortor, Robin; 5695 South Meadow Park Dr., Hales Corners, WI 53130 Southers, Erroll Gregory; 201 South Martine Avenue; Fanwood, NJ 07023 Sparrow, Carl Peter; 11 Leisurely Lane, Bellport, NY 11713 Spector, Nancie Ruth; 105 Wildwood Rd., Kings Point, NY 11024 Spector, Stacey Leigh; 89 Morris Lane, Scarsdale, NY 10583 Spencer, Carolyn Roberts; 18 Saddle Ridge Dr., West Hartford, CT 06117 Spencer, Elizabeth Weed; 30 Meadow Lane, Rochester, NY 14618 Spier, Robert Hodgson; Maplelinks-Girdle Road, East Aurora, NY 14052 Spoll, Lisbeth Ruth; 54 Glenwood Road, West Hartford, CT 06107 Spriggs, Juliana; 444 East 52nd Street, New York, NY 10022 Spruth, Thomas Stevens; 20 Oak Knoll Road, Mendham, NJ 07945 Squadron, Richard Jay; 4930 Goodridge Ave., Bronx, NY 10471 Ssinegurski, Marie; 27 Evans Drive, Simsbury, CT 06070 Stamas, Heidi Jane; 325 Evandale Rd., Scarsdale, NY 10583 Stambler, Silvia Susana; 20 Mayer Drive, Suffern, NY 10901 Stanec, Dagmar Maria; 15 Secor Road, Scarsdale, NY 10583 Staples, Richard James; 161 East Barber Street, Windsor, CT 06095 Stapleton, Claudia MacDona; 546 Hope St., Providence, RI 02906 Starin, Lawrence Robert; 7 Gerardine Place, Spring Valley, NY 10977 Starkweather, Martha Merry; One Nawthorne Road, Old Greenwich, CT 06870 Stefani, Michael John; Buckfield Lane, Greenwich, CT 06830 Steidl, Scott Meredith; 105 E. Frederick St., Rhinelander, W1 54501 Steif, Paul Seth; 2322 Redwood Road, Scotch Plains, NJ 07076 Stein, David Alan; 22 Somerset Drive, Yonkers, NY 10710 Steiwer, Peter Miller; Silvermine Avenue, Norwalk, CT 06850 Stenning, Pamela Diane; 324 East Main Road, Portsmouth, RI 02871 Stephansen, Joanne; PO Box 643, Greenwich, CT 06830 Stern, Daniel Andrew; 178 Wilmot Road, New Rochelle, NY 10804 Stevens, Jeffrey Alden; 300 Spencer Avenue, East Greenwich, RI 02818 Stewart, Glenn Edward; 59 Bradstreet Road, North Andover, MA 01845 Stockton, Frederick Richard; R.D. 2, North Washington Street, Belchertown, MA 01007 Stockwell, Richard Clayton; 26 Waterville Road, Farmington, CT 06032 Stoeckicht, Riccardo Frede; 381001 Rua 5 De Julho, Rio De Janeiro, Guanabara, Brazil Stokes, Carol Gail; 22 Bow Street Court, Stoneham, MA 02180 Stone, Angela Ray; 5381 Nakmoa, Dallas, TX 75209 Stone, Bradford Wind; 786 Hanover Street, Hanover, MA 02339 Stone, Karen Marie; 255 Elm Ave., Teaneck, NJ 07666 Streeter, Harold Francis; 5 Elmway St., Providence, Ri 02906 Strehlow, IT1, Paul Valentine; 407 West Hollyridge Cir., Peoria, IL 61614 Stross, Pamela Ann; 2194 S. Dayton Street, Denver, CO 80231 Stuart, Sara Batchelder; 66 Bank Street, New York, NY 10014 Suber, Kenneth David; 168 Guyot Avenue, Princeton, NJ 08540 Sung, Francis Ping-Cheung; Flat 1518 Block A, Ah Kung Ngam Rd., Shaukiwan, Hong Kong Sussman, Robert Gary; Apartment 2-F, 165 West 20 Street, New York, NY 10011 Swan, James Sweeney; 312 Cloverly Road, Grosse Pointe Farms, MI 48236 Swart, Garret Frederick; 7354 Steinbeck Ave., San Diego, CA 92122 Sweeney, James David; 1338 Karen Road, North Dighton, MA 02764 Sweigert, Karen Maureen; R.D. 1, Clinton, NY 13323 Sweney, John Elliott; Great Meadows Drive, Concord, MA 01742 Swig, Marjorie Ann; 3710 Washington Street, San Francisco, CA 94118 Symonds, Patricia Veronica; 61 Cooke St, Providence, RI 02006 Szewczyk, Andrew Francis; 9 Norman Avenue, Cumberland, R1 02864 Szporn, Karen Sue; 940 Carteret Avenue, Union, NJ 07083 Taffet, George Efrem; 135 Irma Drive, Oceanside, NY 11572 Talen, Julie; Box 535, Northfield, MN 55057 Talland, Claudia Sally D.; 443 S. Waiola Ave,, La Grange, IL 60525 Tannen, Melissa; 40 East 66 Street, New York, NY 10021 Tanzi, Elizabeth Maria; 36 Vale Avenue, Cranston, RI 02910 Taras, Martin Kevin; 3406 Klusner Avenue, Parma, OH 44134 Targan, David Mitchell; 2 Gloucester Place, Morristown, NJ 07960 Taub, William Herman; 47 Kingsboro Avenue, Gloversville, NY 12078 Tazuke, Hiroko; 10 Country Club Drive, Hillsborough, CA 94010 Tedeschi, Cynthia Mary; Ten Sunset Dr., Seekonk, MA 02771 Telsey, Aimee Manette; 64-20 99th Street, Rego Park, NY 11374 Thaden, John Joseph; 89 Benevolent St., Providence, RI 02906 Thalheimer, James J.; 1414 Cloverly Lane, Rydal, PA 19046 Theriault, Lorrie Jean; 3 Highland Court, Taunton, MA 02780 Thigpen, David Ernest; 2408 Oakmere Road, Wilmington, DE 19810 Thomas, Margaret Eva; Bellevue Ave., Corner Gordon St., Newport, R1 02840 Thomas, Reid Christopher; 5813 Perrine Road, Midland, MI 48640 Thompson, Alan Dale; 340 17 Street South, Wisconsin Rapids, WI 54494 Thompson Edward Cornileus; PO Box 44039, Chicago, IL 60665 Thompson, Glenn Williston; 1345 Highland Avenue, Plainfield, NJ 07060 Thompson, Kenneth Charles; 105-11 29th Avenue, East Elhurst, NY 11369 Thorsen, John Blaise; 22 Secluded Court, Cumberland, RI 02864 Timmins, James Stephen; 196 Hamilton Avenue, Quincy, MA 02171 Tin Lancelot Kwok-Leung; 603 Kam Wah House, Choi Hung Estate, Kowloon, Hong Kong Todd, Patricia Anne; 6 Black Watch Trail, Morristown, NJ 07960 Todesco, Bruce Davis; 169 W. Elmsood Dr., Chicago Heights, IL 60411 Toher, Margaret Ann; 28 Silo Hill, Riverside, CT 06878 Tomasso, Raymond Joseph; 81 Stamford Avenue, Providence, R1 02907 Tosh, Jr., Robert Harlin; 609 Belle Meade Boulevard, Nashville, TN 37205 Traceski, James Paul; 7 Highland Circle, Turners Falls, MA 01376 Tracy, Joseph Michael; 28 Frothingham Road, Worcester, MA 01605 Tracy, Marianne; 134 Don Avenue, Rumford, Rl 02916 Tranen, Tracey; 11-04 Vogel Terrace, Fair Lawn, NJ 07410 Trimble, Leslie Alice; 5 Linden Tree Road, Wilton, CT 06897 Trinidad, Rosa Elena; 465 Grand Street, Brooklyn, NY 11511 Troiano, Lawrence; 1406 Narragansdtt Blvd., Cranston, RI 02905 Troncelliti, Phyllis Doreen; 1419 Wynnewood Road, Ardmore, PA 19003 Trulli, Susan Carol; 23 Meadowbrook Drive, Ossining, NY 10562 Tsuyuki, Glenn Tadashi; 1033 South Concord Street, Los Angeles, CA 90023 Turino, Phillip Gerard; Deer Hill Road, Alpine, NJ 07620 Turnbull, 11, Thomas Reed; 400 Kensington, Apt. 105, Westmount, Quebec, Canada H3Y3A2 Turner, Katie Lynn; 1230 North 15 Street, Philadelphia, VA 19121 Tyler, Richard Bevan;4 929 Kdnsington Avenue, Plainfield, NJ 07060 Ullmann, Donald Miller; 1177 Wade Street, Highland Park, IL 60035 Unangst, Diane Roberta; 127 Commonwealth Avenue, New Provi- dence, NJ 07974 Uustal, Heikki; 880 Division Street, East Greenwich, RI 02818 Van Beek, Adriaan Peter; Chemin De La Source, Hameau De La Tuiler, 78860 St. Nom, Breteche, France Van Der Meer, Peter N. R.; 8213 Lilly Stone Drive, Bethesda, MD 20034 Van Voorhees, Abby Susan; 141 Combs Avenue, Woodmere, NY 11598 Vara, Timothy Joseph; 1025 Wood Lane Drive, Mayfield Village, OH 44143 Vavala, Bernard; 71 Peach Hill Rd., Darien, CT 06820 Vecchione, Donna Sue; 147 Seaman Avenue, Baldwin, NY 11510 Veilleux, Nanette Marie; 31 Eustis Parkway, Waterville, ME 04901 Vespucci, Richard David; 7261 Southwest 129 Street, Miami, FL 33156 Wade, Carolyn Yvonne; 1826 Parkway Terrace, Memphis, TN 38114 Wagner, Robin Marian; 8720 Southwest 48 Street, Miami, FL 33165 Wakeman, John Taylor; 18 Knollbrook Lane East, Painted Post, NY 14870 Waldman, III, Leonard; 1609 Barry Lane, Glenview, IL 60025 Walker, Wendy Dianne; 10 Old Carriage Way, Braintree, MA 02184 Wall, 111, Edward Flavin; 1011 Pleasant Street, Worcester, MA 01602 Wallerstein, Andrew Michael; 8145 Cadwalader Avenue, Elkins Park, PA 19117 Walsh, Stephen Joseph; 611 Abbotts Lane, Falls Church, VA 22046 Walter, Beverly Ann; 321 Rochambeau Ave., Providence, RI 02906 Wang, Kai-Yu; 7001 Buxton Terrace, Bethesda, MD 20034 Ward, Sybil Andrea; 164 Rutledge Road, Wethersfield, CT 06109 Warnath, Stephen Charles; 124 N. W. 30th, Corvallis, OR 97330 Wasley, Russell; 192-06 Radnor Road, Jamaica, NY 11423 Wasserman, Gail Camden; 180 Pennywise Lane, Glastonbury, CT 06033 Waters, Robert Craig; Route 8, Box 799-W, Beulah Road, Pensacola, FL 32506 Watson, Laura; 904 West Drive, Sheffield Lake, OH 44054 Watts, Frederick John; 406 Homestead Avenue, Mt. Vernon, NY 10553 Way, Mary Catherine; 3 Fraydun Place, Rye, NY 10580 Webb, Kevin Mark; 138 East Greenwich Avenue, Roosevelt, Ny 11575 Webber, Jordan Lee; 226 Fountain Street, New Haven, CT 06515 Wegbreit, Samuel; 2525 Parke Lane, Broomall, PA 19008 Wegner, Marion Cornelia; 929 King Street, Greenwich, CT 06830 Weinhouse, Beth Roberta; 10 Oxford Road, North Caldwell, NJ 07006 Weinstein, Marcia Beth; 50 Forest Avenue, Saratoga Springs, NY 12866 Weinstock, Hillard Samuel; 4402 Emerson Road, Wilmington, DE 19802 Weissman, Daniel Mark; 81 Manursing Way, Rye, NY 10580 Wells, Alan Hilary; 9 Ranch Lane, Closter, NJ 07624 Weremchuk, Mark; 351 Winter Street, Woonsocket, RI 02895 Wernig, Mary Louise; 21 Pleasant Street, Rumford, Ri 02916 Westerfield, Scott Daniel; 27391 Via Segundo, Mission Viejo, CA 92675 Whalen, James Joseph; 52 Keystone Drive, Warwick, RI 02886 Wharton, William Dale; 222 Grace Street, Elmhurst, IL 60126 Wheeler, Elizabeth Eustis; 2917 Garfield St. N.W., Washington, DC 20008 Whipple, Mark John; 2033 East Lamar Street, Phoenix, AZ 85016 White, Susan Taylor; 1015 34 Avenue Fast, Seattle, WA 98112 White, Thomas Walker; Thompson Rd., Walpole, NH 03608 Wiener, Carol Elaine; 7605 Woodthrush Drive, Dallas, TX 75230 Wiener, Jill Amy; 41 South Morris Lane, Scarsdale, NY 10583 Williams, Albert Wayne; 940 Oak Street, Roselle, NJ 07203 Williams, Mark Douglas; Rua Eng Pires Do Rio 250, Barra Da Tijuca 2C 20, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil Williams, Teri Ann; P.O. Box 102, Second Street, Indiantown, FL 33456 Wilson, Joy Beverly-Ann; Apartment I, 346 Midwood Street, Brooklyn, NY 11225 Wilson, Robert John; 21 Middlesex Road, Darien, CT 06820 Winograd, Wendy; 31 Stratford Road, West Hartford, CT 06117 Wolf, Janet Betty; 6648 Fifth Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15206 Wolf, Janet Carol; One Undercliff Terrace, West Orange, NJ 07052 Wolff, Joan Audrey; 5312 Shenandoah Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90056 Wolff, Samuel; 105 East Wolff Street, Dumas, AR 71639 Wolff, Timothy Kane; 7510 Forrestglen Street, San Antonio, TX 78209 Wolfson, Wendy Sue; 223 Ferndale Road, Scarsdale, NY 10583 Wolinski, Carol Ann; 514 Hillside Avenue, Hartford, CT 06106 Wolpert, Nancy Ruth; 162 Laurel Avenue, Providence, RI 02906 Wong, Chung Man; 57 Floral Street, Newton Highlands, MA 02161 Wong, Edward Raymond; Tashmoo Ave., Vineyard Haven, MA 02568 Wong, Rodney Zeman; 810 East Seminary Avenue, Towson, MD 21204 Woo, Margaret Y. K.; 173 Main St., Malden, MA 02148 Woodson, William Garrard; 5727-16th St. N.W., Washington, DC 20011 Woodward, Steven Hartwell; 152 Governor 5t., Providence, RI 02906 Wooley, Patrick Terence; 82 Kraft Lane, Levittown, PA 19055 Wortman, Marc Josef; 6407 Tone Drive, Bethesda, MD 20034 Wright, Donald Scott; 11904 Coronada Place, Kensington, MD 20795 Woaurster, Mark Winfred; 2015 Drury Lane, Shawnee Mission, KS 66208 Yan, Donna Wong; 161 Bentley Street, East Providence, RI 02914 Yashar, Beverly; 51 Westford Road, Providence, RI 02906 Yolles, Jennifer Cindy; 2 Soundview Court, Stony Brook, NY 11790 Youkilis, John Charles; 7218 Winding Way, Cincinnati, OH 45236 Zabel, David Brian; 47 Acron Road, Madison, CT 06443 Zabinski, John Edward; 422 Carsonia Avenue, Reading, PA 19606 Zager, Lori; 2701 Tyne Boulevard, Nashville, TN 37215 Zaklan, Nichola Lee; 2966 SW Bennington Dr., Portland, OR 97201 Zateslo, Theodore; 420 Sunset Way, North Palm Beach, FL 33408 Zeigler, Richard Morris; 405 Wildwood Lane, Muncie, IN 47304 Zelden, Karen Anne; 3518 Octavia Street, New Orleans, LA 70125 Zimbalist, Michael Aaron; 192 Plantation Dr., Creve Cocur, MO 63141 Ziobrowski, Stephen; 13 Bullard Avenue, Glens Falls, NY 12801 Zolfaghari, Taraneh; Amol Avenue 55-57, Tehran 16, Iran 325 326 e e 327 e ' lll z 328 l ! 2 ,,,,049 , Xx ,4 ,4 AENRAN o A QLN R and Delma TN S o . e E D YA, N Brown Universitye firet fall delivery yearbook, the 1979 Liber Brunensis was printed by Josten's American Yearbook Company of State College, Pennsylvania. pt time: roman Printing was by offcet lithography using 150 line screens for A black and white and color photographs, 1600 copies of volume 121 were printed. Eull color processing was b T D Brown Studios of Cranston, R.I. sing and printing was by T.DD Brown, Delma, Andy and Jeff. Senior portraits were by T.D. Brown Studios. Graduation Studios of N Y Black and white proces. candids were by Delma Studios. Paper stock is 80lb. matte finish Body copy ic 10pt. palatino. Headlines are 30 d SPECIFICATIONS - ,Iffl.lJf. S N- N 2
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