Brown University Womens College - Brun Mael Yearbook (Providence, RI)
- Class of 1963
Page 1 of 186
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 186 of the 1963 volume:
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. I MQW LMAMM 'll F S . 41, ,, TQ 4 'Y 15 1 , 1 K 4 '5 Dr 1 Y 1::ng.'. - ' -2 W5 Al ? - Ii 0 . V r 31, uf f zqlivx' H ' 112936, 1- '-. fi gl A -.11 ' f 1'.: ' iffy X , ,, .fin V iff' gi' rg tvf 4... .4 .,..L' .,...,,..4 ,-..,...-,.., .4 1- fr ' x - Ill! ' . , '- ' -5 f . , ' 'y K . Ll A ,: -! 1,-f FM, A . 1 'I X :I-',,?4'- ff. 11.1 ,V X A Q ' Q , HK. . 42. , ' ' ' -' C 5 2, X!! 'T-L 7' .mffx 'H uf' ' 1 v. I ,-5,',,,' , - ..-firm v.-,f,,,.Lf....,Q: , -. Q-1' J. Vff' fl 'fi xv, . . Q, -r A ,,, ' :P '. ,X w, - .f L 4.5 1 f '- fi :Q-'N ?ri,,:4::Jm . 1,2 X 1,1-N .1:'H - ' ,l,V N-v-:til I,,' vw, 1' X ' f' ffl 5 JC I g.,- -., ' 'ml' WA 55' ' '-PM fl-2 sf. 'w-f- 1. ,. f s - 'T' , 2f.?f23'2', V, ' 14'-14.1. '- 1 .fu 11:-.,,,, - 7- fgg-xp . 1544. . ., '.' IA -,ga ,. , ., I ,f , V W w , l. 1-L I. . I nl- .,bL v5 'L'54: '1--' ., . ..1.-T. Q , '- '- .ww w .r av U' . 1-' .:, ' 'Y'-Lf? I '- f '-I - -. Q , -,,,,, -xx 1 Nu..- .- , 4? QL, . 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Q . 5 .A ' Y , , - 'H -- ' . ,R I' f F. t ' s ' , -' - . ' 5 4' Q . -- .v ' .- . ,f :A 'ji ff! fl! lr 'Q s- A A fjjfgf. A .b Y rr- + , --ge'f':.af-'f .A-'Y-.uw Lg., '13, .. - i -- 1 .if-ki' A '-' ' K .-'9i'9,iff!f' if I A' -,:'fif4'r. :Av ,. ,453 , A , YR . ' f'- 3'-Qwfxf-1' ia-E' Wi -, ff' Mn., M.. x f 1 ? ' W 1 5 ' 1 A fi ww, I .4-f ' ww N 'ff'-'las 15,425 ,f ,--mv K 13:35 iflzi 5 in ,,,QV,i:A,-UN ya, :,.:Lgn:' 3 'fa-V 'f2.,7'. ., U M Q L , .4 .M if , r.3wf?f?f' 'fQ4,A.- . . ,, ,,AFv.,QV-I .V , TF.. ' x A Q Q vig. X N T15 Vi X N A LX 11259 0 Z 2 J,.--ic-E:- E. ESRB ff- f u A f 1 l 7' S Y X . it ..-...-...... 'f 1' ' ' at-X ' ALBERTA FRANCES BROWN Dean ofAclmission The clean gloves and the tour of the Quad are con- stants in an introduction to Pembroke. So is the nervous stomach. So is the graciousness and serenity of Dean Brown. For her reassuring interest in Pembroke and in young people, we and the fretful applicant are al- ways grateful. con- vous Dean and : al- ? z ' I Q I 1 i K . ,.-.,. J ,M ,,,,L, , ,.VL. .- N V. V W Arm A' 1 N .. - The last of the corrasable bond is in the typewriter, but the last page is not yet in mind. There are cigarettes, but no matches. That always happens. And it always happens that some revelation, easily worth a B-p1uS in cold, hard grades, is held back out of cowardice, or misstated out of recklessness. Or remains intuition, no more digestible than tomorrow's fried eggs and grape jelly. As a matter of fact, how can he or 'I care now? AS a matter of fact, like the boy at Yale who began every paragraph after page twenty with t'Are you still read- ing, Sir'?H But it can't be done here. And it's not just the malice of the old man, itis the grad student trailing him like a pilot fish. A match-'Get A High School Di- ploma In Your Spare Time At Home. Get Rich.'I light this last and most tasteless cigarette to scholarship. May its ash be long and white. It was study that ru- ined Milton's eyes. . ty P9Wl'iler, b : are cigarettes, lil And it always Jflll 21 B.p1uS in f cowardice, or ins intuition, ng eggs x and grape :are now? Ag 3 ho began every r you still read- ind it's not just student trailing High School Di- e. Get Rich.'I e to scholarship. s study that ru- 1. 2-1' Q-af' -Q., ' 'a 4. - .lf ., h ZVX A K of I f. 'sr G we , ,ff A A-:swf 'H ' 'me . ,A ' ' V, h . A s' Q W 1: 1 if y l , y to if A , ' Q 4 ' 1 F QW. Black coffee hot! Black coffee cold Black coffee in the pot! Nine days old You put cream in it, and you have mud. Called regular coffee, but still mud. Even when you have been up late enough to hear the milk train come in from Boston, you can make such fine distinctions. Still, the ten o'clock cof- fee is necessary, especially in the Blue Room which is not particularly blue and is called the Coffee Lounge. This is a misnomer, because it is not really coffee that brings people in here. People meet their roommates here. They give and get information here. They have even been known to get pinned here. There is the oh ing him out, w staving oil leadi the man in my 1 tions, but not gc to George is L: Guess who I s to say something at least. Aemall Na There is the old man. No grad student. People sound- ing him out, while he exchanges in-jokes with them, staving oh' leading questions about hour exams. George, the man in my life, is very good at asking leading ques- tions, but not good enough. The mean-looking one next to George is Last Year's. At lunch, someone will say 4'Guess who I saw in the Blue Room, and I will have to say something unpleasant about him. Call him a heel, at least. Actually, he has a perfect right to be in here, l r f if even if he is a heel: the Blue Room is for every- body to cultivate George, to see the old man outside of class, and to see people they havenlt seen since break- fast or since ten olclock yesterday. So they all come in with their umbrellas and newspapers and bookbags. An hour later, the eleven o'clock shift comes in. Some of the ten o'clock group stays. The cups and straws pile up on the table. For all that cream, this stuff is pretty dark at the bot- tom. I used to drink it black, but then, I used to try to tell time by the clocks in Faunce House. Tell time by the number of cups you can drink. George shows up around ten-fifteen. On Saturday night, at his discretion. ,- . .. -f VM- , f . , ,ir ,.v I s 1' 4 ' I n f .1 V f , 1 -N, . I 4 P Make the most of the academic day. Budget your time. But now that the old man has his paper, I can sit and watch time ily: that red sec- ond hand in a tailspin, and the minute hand creeping slyly paS'f twelve, en route to the half-hour mark. As if it knew some people reason that at ten thirty-one, an entire hour is shot, so there are twenty-nine minutes that may as well be wasted. That could make you feel victimized. Now on Carrie Tower, the watchword is Love is strong as deathf' and if you agree that death is always connected with time, while love is not, you must agree that that's a rather neat saying to put O11 21 clock tower, especially this tower, which is not exactly on Eastern Standard Time. Anyway, people go out there to play football, or they bring Being and Nothingness or their three-hour loans from the Hay, and pretend to read. 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M .W N .5 , I 11 i- -Q .' ' .- AI .-F I A n ,' ' 'v ' 4. . ' ef. , I is-I. .,. ,.., ' N ' -- , - . iff V , ' , f 'V Tax , . No talk today. It rains. Not cats and dogs, but it rains, and that forces you into privacy, whether you like it or not. People go turtle-fashion under their umbrellas, or retreat as far as possible into the upturned collars of their raincoats. They complain good-naturedly, as they complain about a friendly dunking in a swimming pool, for the rain has its benign influences, washing away the crust of sleep and making faces clean. Clean, after mining the stacks of the Hay or the laby- rinth of Andrews, without the benefit of candle or canary. And the mouth waters at the briny, mineral smell of gardens and greenhouses. At night, shining streamers cross the wet sidewalks, dark and pol- ished glass. The lamps on the green wear a hazy nimbus. Two um- brellas close with a snap, as the turtle sniffs appreciatively and says, If winter comes . . . Second turtle: That's Shelley? bd' si ,,.,-. L I Q H x 1 3 l H I r N 1 I V N 1 u Q' L lu- If you can't get the elevator, you have to walk down, and that can be aggravating if you live on the fourth floor. As a matter of fact, the thing's stuck again, and 1 am supposed to go down to the second floor and give it a kick, so that it will go up to four and pick up the group. Will it stop at two on its way back, no it won't, so better to go on downstairs and get in line for the brussels sprouts. This is the Year of the Brussels Sprouts. Last year was Anno Yellow Beans, year before last was Anno Yellow Squash. Cheap, see. And much less artistic than the ori- ental custom of naming years after dragons or celestial plums. Then there's Creole meat pie, and Autumn sal- ad, which shows the western love for euphemism out full-force. i' i x Q Ex. But not by bread alone. This is the reasoning behind dress dinner and the Pembroke napkins that get put into Scrapbooks. Once. Anyway, everyone falls silent when the bell rings for grace. Everyone but a talkative soul who suddenly finds herself with an audience of six hun- dred, and breaks off nervously in mid-sentence. After all, better tell seven friends later on, when the broad- cast will be jammed by the rattle of dishes and the talk of Franny and Zooey, the weekend, and the bomb. These things demand and get equal time, weaving over- head in a fugal monotone: Franny, blasted, Saturday, rowdy, one more A-B-C down the drain, one more megaton bomb, no more crew races. There are seconds on Brussels sprouts. Best wishes. Some linger over coffee, feet on the trestle as the wait- ress empties the ashtrays and clears her throat. She is ignored in favor of the better part of institutional din- ing. Somebody else went up to the second floor to kick the elevator back down to the basement, so I got a ride all the way, with five stops. Now it is exam time, and there is the siren call of bridge. This is such a hand CWhen will you ever get cards like this again? One void and a singleton ace, and your partner opened one no trumpb that it can't be passed up. And having made the slam, a seven hundred rubber seems possible on One More Hand. This should not suggest that we aren't serious people. Contrary to rumor, we spend little time in tray-sliding and other forms of Whimsy. There isn't that much snow. As for the seasonal cult of the Road Runner car- toon, that is as constructive as the yearly flooding of the Nile, or the sacrificial lamb. This is the time of the Road Runner, that fourth horseman and sign of Armageddon. A time for sober reflection and, hopefully, total recall. Thinking upon the Road Runner, I got four postcards today at new rates. Sharpened my pencils, cleaned off my desk, told George I would see him sometime in the indefinite future, and wrote to everyone to tell them not to expect mail from me. Then I got a new jar of instant coffee. You know you canft accomplish anything until you're- ready. Napoleon went off to Moscow without making any arrangements for a winter campaign, and by that sad example I mean to make it clear that you aren't in business this time of year without your post- cards and whatnot. So much for the groundwork. As for the studying itself, by midnight I will have read . . . George on the phone, out of his mind in the Hay . . . by this time tomorrow, I will have read War and Peace. When duty whispers low, somebody always needs a fourth or a cup of coffee. 9 ' 'A S. gf 3 ---. . 4,-... , ' ht too except that my ride leaves at four, after the Bridge all afternoon. And all mg , , ' hat will happen, because George always driver's last exam. No tellmg, though, w likes to take All his friends, and George's VW is not a Volkswagen bus. I know he is taking the entire house this time, because he called last night and said, You kis do you? You can rent skis up there? Which means at don't Want to take your s , . ' ' ' ks for trouble. least six friends all with skis. I keep telling him he just as time. Being an import we all think of from time to Face it: going away is something ' mmer. Going to Boston or New York or for a change, or going home for the su Newport--just for the day. Going away for the last time. Or going away like Huck Finn. After all, it does good, and itis easy, If you have a little money, there are all those charter flights to Europe, which don't cost much unless you donit have much anyway. You know: first class with red-coated waiter, thousands of stewardesses, and a sommelier with a friendly smile on his rosy face. All for only . . . Chicago is fogged in. You don't even take off. CYes, the TWA building is nice, but Mother is tearing her hair at some other airportj And then there is the fast, friendly, cour- ' hich also goes to Westerly, Kings- d b e all clean train to New York, w teous, an a ov ton, Old Saybrook, New London, Norwalk, Bridgeport, et alliis. Rolling south- ward with a bag of dirty laundry and a carload of round-faced Yalies with maroon ' of not going ties, I start thinking of flying again, of staying put when I get there, or at all. I ..:..,,-,. . in-A Y , ,...., ,fl-. ,--1 .M S Z. 'fl . ,y rn.. -'f B --.--f'.-was 4 - ,dawn H - ,., , . W , . T ,Q ,-,. 1, ,rs V9 L ..,,f'T-,if 33 f51,sfe,a . - . ..4-. fu ,, - 4, , ,,- x, f ' A -'-. .1 ,grid ni , ,fy R 5-5' xv -f '- .1 f' - - . M7 .- . H :gg , LH - 3 'L V ,5- ' , A - :C -,,,,,,,.v.,,,.f,f ,f,,rff--jr, , ,gag ,ith 1 Y: If-V, -in -1 '- '4 4 'cf'-.., ' .IQ-',.1f 'Fl isis 'xy Q J1:'f . 'T ffl' 3 ' V. ' ' if jg-,j ilu, 1 A N .f 'W ,nf I, ' r .-gyiry, Q' -,A , g - ,,r.,, . 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' , ., H, .1 , ' . -up lxxfa ,, 3 1Q. --L I 5 I . 7 rx-755 r I - fe . , -jst yt, .-fb f 4' Q . 4-f-A lQ,a,v.A X L . ,J , ff 122325 ,M 7- .,,. South 1 Jullctic the Uni a1fCad5 80041 v going 1 le. bag Papers 80 aw? first ph, then th and P0 indenn lf. afmert lfse alw he ayg - I know he Said, MYOH 'g all import ew York or ly like Huck there are an I have much itewardesses, . Chicago is but Mother iendly, conf- ,terly, Kings. olling south- with maroon of not going P iaa gii - - . P t ', it 5' 1 .. ,- 'Z -mf.-3. a J., z,' ef.i. 'YA ' - -light. .-,Q .V VA fd TH-,7'5L. - -4 - n f. -ev -.,.'1: . A V I nv---,-.- 1 'um - -1-fri., s '-,A P J Ls . .. .- yfg 5-122 -'75-'5 '71Lf'1'L -I' C 'fix '-'iff 24.1-M , . 1, .x ,. , ' z.'T11+f- Jai- P -, -an f. 1 ,',,, ,,'q.- IM YL ,' '. -' lg 'I '-. ' , , ' .1 ,,. ' 0-'1 5 , 1 td- 1 -,I F, I., . it .'!, Sgt W. .ff 'LV' . , P9 -K ,-9 , . , - 1 . Z . - .7-1 1 .5- 1 af' 1' 1 South of New York, the train passes through Princeton Junction, and on a clear day, you can see the spires of the university that gave Fitzgerald a boost when he was already out and could go back voluntarily. This is a good way to return. Going away is troublesome, but going back is depressing under ordinary circumstances, i.e. baggage that has multiplied threefold in the interim, papers that never got written. As I said earlier, you can go away like Huck Finn, on that mutable train that is first the Patriot, then the Afternoon Congressional, and then the Peachtree Limited, with connections to Dallas and points west. That is to say, you can keep on going indefinitely if you are so inclined. ..nns-4'---f1,,, , A 1 fi-'zeaulim M Coming back, seven in a taxi, ice at the Bowen Street entrance, and then no word in the mailbox, is always the same. Going for good is another thing. Never again, the going-out-of-business sale, the station wagon, the U-Haul-It trailer, and the bouts with Railway Express. No room in the trunk, everything must go. And the underclassmen stand in the elevator, distracted by of- fers of desk lamps whose sale will hopefully pay the last of the bills on Thayer Street. You can come back after that, you know. Alumnae get strawberries, and two helpings of danish. x-r X 8 S X Q V X, ' Q XML UT W X' f jZZ7PJj ad and or laam cf 25? gp X 5 0 1 H 99 x A Li? Q ml N V HL,,. ,1 ..- Q N. 1 I ' lf' ?,m1.,mS.Au s , 1, 3 lmgff k 75QJ3IDQF'df-5 :LS 130 Wai , f jf 4 , 5 g gb iw! I 'f w 1 F., s ' . , 5, n ' ' 'l f' Vx fi Elly, A 1, A , f A' ' T lift at JS so. lJf5ffmH0' 15,2 X C if X ,,4,-f-5'1 75g dent completely The picture of the university presi ' ' ' shock mummified in administrative red tape 1S 21 , . . . . d to no one who has spent any time within 1v1e walls. Eventually seems a normal part 0 the bound and benumbed figure f the campus scene. By con- trast, President Keeney's talent for turning respon- sibilities into opportunities appears all the more remarkable. His work as president of Brown Uni- versity has three aspects: first, running the ad- ministrative machinery, second, linking the Uni- versity to the outside world, and third, leading the creative and contemplative life required of mem- bers of an academic community. This heavy re- sponsibility makes its demands on him at all times, but such is his ability to extend himself that the topic on which he addressed last summer's Alumni College was Leisure. President Keeneyls scholarly accomplishments are well known. He is on the executive board of the Medieval Academy of America, and his book, Judgment by Peers, is on the syllabus of Brown's course in medieval history. ' y His unique accomplishments were summed up at Ohio University last I une, where he was awarded an honorary L.H.D. as an Academic Statesman whose keen understanding of higher education, whose courage to act, and whose sense of style have added new lustre to the distinguished name of Brown. His thoughtful analyses, laced with needle-sharp wit, have made him an articulate spokesman for quality education. In today's com- plex, changing world, Barnaby Conrad Keeney stands out as an educational leader. I l 1 r , X fi, N 2 3 . .4 , 3 2 f,-M.,a....,,,.. ,.,..,..,-M-...,.,, ', 1441 ' f n 'J' n ,ffl W4 'Ph I Ax, a 1' .9 .',F, M' A '4 V . P 1 'ft .,., 'Y ,Q .-:rf 1, 'ff 4 +4 ' fm g' ,. 7, 15 gp: V .7 .A v if Fi 'E 5 x.-A. ' ' ' fbi t ffl f -4, A' , 41,1 'Kflf ' ' 1 gg uf? 'vfuafesisy . 'agua 1-. ' p -.lgakigy lg! : ,. 1 Lge ',Y2? f! rm: t .V f ' f f, flaming There is fOr studs of quest W0men C0I1linue Conducts her Held and rese with gd Perspect CIIIS are 3 of the S book, Brown'5 fd up at awarded atesman ucation, of style :d name ed with rticulate fs com- Keeney Q 5 1 I i 1 There is an honesty about a talk with Dean Pierrel which is reassuring for students who meet with her in her office over academic problems or questions of student government. In charge of nine hundred young women and an expanding campus, Dean Pierrel still finds time to continue her program of teaching and research in psychology. She conducts an IC section and some graduate courses, and is noted in her Held for experiments in the psychology of learning. Her teaching and research, and her constant contact with Pembroke alumnae and with other institutions, account in part for her unusually sound perspective. 1 PEMBROKE ADMINISTRATIGN Dean Gretchen Estabrook Tonk V' ' ,1 , g ff '232 Lois Armstrong Bigelow Dean Alberta Frances Brown Charlotte Lowney - I Wo 3-11- L .:,3.f, ' ' fr-. A 1 e U. ' -sw -' K' 4 V. 1 we ,., ,, l'vwe1iH:y, L N--.., r- , r'4wlQQi9k5,,,.J-f, 4- W . .. mf, ,L vr1 Q1 T': :, - -fm 'rf 'fx :rn . ' ,A A sc--Q ...W gx U V 2, f--' Arlene Elizabeth Gorton Elizabeth Law -7 v.. ff' -F Dicie Atwater Elizabeth Baird Sally McPherson Q.: C I H 5 r ' M ,f-any W I I s N R L Aska Sa21SK 1' Philip Andrews Maly I Q it 47 il vi' ffyf ffwfza. ' ELT 7- 5, ., , A at Q ia , if Vi 1? Q -f A , 2 V , ,.,.. L v pl gg, Mary L. Earhart Barnaby Conrad Keeney, Ph.D., LL.D. President of Brown University Rosemary Pierrel, Ph.D. Dean of Pembroke College Elizabeth Baird, A.M. Advisor to Student Activities, Pembroke C Charles Adams Baldwin, B.D. Chaplain of the University Lois Armstrong Bigelow, A.B. Assistant Dean of Admission, Pembroke C Zenas Randall Bliss, Sc.M. Provost of the University Alberta Frances Brown, A.M. Dean of Admission, Pembroke College Friend Morris Cochran, B.S., D.B.A. Vice-President and Business Manager Howard Stone Curtis, A.B., A.M. Secretary of the University John V. Elmendorf, Ph.D. Vice-President Arlene Elizabeth Gorton Assistant Professor of Physical Education Dorothy Spenser Horton, A.B. Recorder of Pembroke College Charles Joseph Hutchinson, M.D. Director of the Health Service Margaret Daley Laing, A.B. Admission Officer, Pembroke College Charlotte Lowney, A.B. Director of Placement, Pembroke College John Kennedy McIntyre, A.B., LL.B. Assistant to the President Sally McPherson, A.M. Director of Residence, Pembroke College Sam Harold Newcomer, B.D. ollege ollege Executive Secretary, University Christian Association Ramona Marion Pugsley, A.B., Sc.B. Administrative Assistant in the Admission Asta Saask In charge, Pembroke College Library Nancy Alva Simons, A.B. Office Pembroke College Director of Religious Activities, Pembroke College Associate Executive Secretary, University Christian Association Doris Madeline Stapleton, A.B. Executive Secretary of the Alumnae Association Gretchen Estabrook Tonks, A.M. Assistant Dean of Pembroke College f ' u If :if 1 3? 1 fs' I sgi I 7' 5: I . Z, I f ' u 'x RESIDENT FELLQWS .bw The Kenworthys, East Andrews l. The Dillons, Morriss Hall PEMBRO PHYSICA X ' 1 N , i EMBRCDKE FACULTY FOR PHYSICAL EDUCATICDN 19 Back to front: Patricia Ann Schiltz, Janet Lutz, Sara Gene Phillips, June Gebelein Mrs. Muriel B. Gill CSecretaryJ. Missing: Jean Quattrocchi. HEADS OF HGUSE QF Homer Elizabeth Baird ..A.............A,..,.. 54 Prospect Street, Northampton, Massachusetts Professor John A. Dillon, Jr. ,...,.....,...... 72 Knowles Street, Pawtucket, Rhode Island Gretchen H. Ellefson CMrs. Raymond CJ ..r.......,............. Columbus, Nebraska Lois Evelyn Frederick ..,.,...........,,. 793 Corbin Avenue, New Britain, Connecticut Mildred F. Green CMrs. Frank 0.5 ....,.,.. 98 Cushing Street, Providence 6, Rhode Island Alice S. Handy CMrs. Edward OJ ......,.,.....,..,,...... Barnstable, Massachusetts Professor Walter J. Kenworthy .,..,, . . 108 Cushing Street, Providence 6, Rhode Island Therese-Marie Lalagiie . . ......., ..,...,..,,....... 1 5 Rue des Cloys, Paris 180, France Aileen Lemon CMrs. Alfred SJ .....,... ..... 8 Elton Street, Providence, Rhode Island Ann Massa .................,... 42 Westbourne Park, Scarborough, Yorkshire, England Sara McGillivray fMrs. John RJ . , . .......,........... R.F.D. 4751, Hampton, Connecticut Sally McPherson ...... ...... . . 108 Cushing Street, Providence 6, Rhode Island Jeannette Ryder 91 Brown Street, Providence 6, Rhode Island .4 vt C To l f . lj K 625 W i l ' t . . - '- Y 'Q fi .' ' ' -. 1 ,Yu B' .,, - - . x .X k -5' lbs, e , ity A. Y x X-Q 5 -x bfi , Professor George Walter Morgan J, , r Like freshmen in convocation, fledglings will perch on a telephone wire and listen to the ad- vice of an older bird who knows the value of his conviction and wants to make it clear. On this particular telephone wire, the fledglings are ex- horted to be educated young women and the word is taken in by all. Some will bear it per- manently in mind, hatched in an IC to become hawks in a seminar at the two-hundred level- And some will be no such bird. It is common for some of the Hock to tumble overboard from ill- attention, or to perch on a high-voltage wire and come out of the experience well-done. Still, the majority keeps sight of its good intentions. If eventually gets off the wire and into the air--110i high as a hawk, but ilying. There 0011155 3 Antflous han studellf Says' t don'illkeEng1 the professor, physics 001156 lhat's US6ful',, scientihc muh oller this mf: ms: that Ellgl of niahkilld' ll thatthemalcon There are alsi skirts, count o see nothing thi or vhite. The the periodic chi I l t 1 on. fledglings will ld listen to the ad- -ws the value of his e it clear. On this T tledglings are eX- g women and the e will bear if Per' 1 an IC 'IO become level. for twqyhundred 1, It is COYIUUOH board ffom ln' JVCI d lh-voltage Wire alll vCll-ClOI1C- Suu' t 6 ns, It mod inrentiv , , 1 Ot d into the mf H There comes a time when bewilderment sets in. A nervous hand goes up, and an English honors student says, half-cautiously, half-resentfully, HI don't like English? Feeling some sympathy from the professor, I hate English? The thunder- bolt has not struck, so: I Want to take eight physics courses next year. That makes sense. That's useful. A discussion on the limitations of scientific truth is inevitable. Someone ventures to offer this unfashionable defense of the liberal arts: that English literature is the proper study of mankind. The defender is apologetic, knowing that the malcontent will say, Oh yeah? There are also people who spill acid on new skirts, count on their fingers in Math D-1, and see nothing through a microscope but solid black or White. The fumes of chemicals are a drug, the periodic chart is a Rosetta Stone. Associate Professor James Orris Barnhill English V lil . r . , - T rr ' f ll i ,V is . . 1 ,V ii ' ' ,. ,Ji ft into .f -Vwf. ,'--- P 5 A IIr4ff:s'ssr.arva'm'45?f '' 5ni'13Q:frQ:efzfrr,'f ' ' ,, ,git .. .1 , ww l- fu' V. Q - -1. ,E A J ' A : lg li' f' ...,.Zk3 ' 'v vu ,, Y V -s L Assistant Professor Gerald Richard Levin, Psychology Assistant Professor Donald Lee Fanger, Russian if-1.- 5: , ,wiv gym, ., , P. E D-,K I' p 1,0 1 V, ., S i P.. pil. PLE. ' , . .1 if ufffv Q f'g'?'2t 4.1, W v 2 U. l: ,, ' I J -V., Q, ,vi ,...-isa! Professor Frank Moore Stewart, Mathematics Restlessness can be the outward sign of any thing from a mental block to lack of talent. These two may be synonymous. But all the Hdgeting and finger-counting may also be the signs of boredom. In any discipline there comes a time when noth- ing is as obvious as the fact that the B and G department has forgotten to wash the classroom windows. The student finds uneasy rest, small of her back on the seat of her chair, and mentally jams the droning voices. There is still a faint buzz of static, but not enough to interrupt the private meditation. All classrooms are two drab colors: Brown Uni- versity Gray, and Brown University Green. Rest- ful, see. Associate Professor V ' ' - Course of her I C Soci . WY- Tramwrec An Opium haze 0 hor eyes. Twenty n The Smoke is a ft The ave 0 ponionate 5 to the q The Pfc In glade olg i Every one of pmfessorl hands Scho than 4., - .:a,.:l,. - Li-AXP .f ,tc Zigi,-155.1 .. ..siss,.tf, - ,tt ,ffm ,.. ..., tu , ,hwgi-, . -ug gg., ' v:L':f.fi ' ': ' Y he -,s , ,1 . ,., 1, t sf.q5,3,i -- wa . . 12539221 11,1'ge- . T'l 1 2'-gi' J f .j- -.-' J Z' 4657 1 'l 5'Ew.' -'H .1 '-'P,.IY'V?5'-Q . . A.-L31 X. 5 loore Stewart, Mathematics ctward sign of2111Ylhlll ck of talent. Tl1CS0lWl i all the fidgeting ill e the signs of boredvfl- es a time when Hom' m G fact that the B and h elassr00H1 smallll enttlll ter . I 3 fam There to wHSh l e ig uneaSY fest' mmmm 15 still thi ' terrUPl nough t0 111 ,own Um' Rel' . en. Jniversiiy GW -ab C0lO1'Sf B 1 1 -141: fi iii l f. pl L . td Associate Professor Walter Sidney Feldman, Art . . . This course is losing. Margaret Mead is out of her mind. I don't want to do anything for society. Trainwreck for lunch. Lunch. An opium haze of cigarette smoke passes before her eyes. Twenty minutes to go. Take notes. The smoke is a fixture, sometimes signifying tire. The percentage of note-taking is inversely pro- portionate to the appeal of the course and the professor. The proportion of smoking is not. Five hands raised, waving cigarettes. It was like this in grade school: Call on Me. They are wrong. Every one of them is wrong. Instructor Erwin Charles Hargrove, Political Science If . C1522 in 1,3 H, ,., mpg., , 1:4 e , , , l .,- ,I ,,,g41 .Lf- .7., -Lie JI ' ,e+.11 ge. I be ,f I- fl LIAR' Q f, A A -'el f I, J 'X' T 4 ,in fl-W1 we 'f'- e Ae 2 foal-ec I- 2' Xml KA up, .X .,, u j . 5,1 W 5 1 only , A T!! ley, Aft - fessor Hugh Town Assoclate Pro ' try Professor Leallyn Burr Clapp' Chemls The hard core of an and troubles. An ove butmonopolizes the 1 But there is still the lhe joys of learning z cones full-force. Nfllody is elated to h osanre token, r Hldiseovery, Unk bad a By eh 50ll A lille professor ntelligem judgement agfam or abr the pm about W Pose of , gf los clear, for it is 11 d. lscovefy more Sa r Hugh Assistant Professor Daniel John Hughes, English YN. v we 1 ig, Y 4.,x' Professor Albert Jacques Salvan, French The hard core of any good experience is covered with distractions and troubles. An overheated classroom or someone who is all wrong but monopolizes the discussion. Or having cigarettes but no matches. But there is still the impulse to cry Eureka The platitudes about the joys of learning are not always platitudes. Once in a while, this comes full-force. Nobody is elated to hear that Napoleonls horse was named Wagram. By the same token, no lecture is exciting unless it brings on a per- sonal discovery. Unless the student sees that Shelley is as good or bad as the professor says he is, or finds reason to disagree. Passing intelligent judgement is in the end more important than knowing about Wagram or about the slippery reputation of Shelley. The pur- pose of the IC program, indeed any well-taught course, is to make this clear, for it is the critical faculty that opens the way to more discovery and more satisfaction. , ,f, ' , 1- figjfeifi' I I ' - 1 f 1, I - Y gL,f 3 a ., , ' Q P 4 if .1 f , in--Q' .' Q . Q... i, L . ,fdq 1 p i i a L I i l i l l I l f Qf L-- ,4 - 4 J 'U-tv, J W .Nt . .,,, ,.7'., , , ,i .2 Yu Nr v - ,' M .-, ,- .A R.Q..,'-, ff , --ia-me ..-.Av ye.-1 -P ., f , . ...H-I ...- X i t ' i Criticism also promotes unrest. When a private Associate Professor John Andrew Dillon, Physics 4 e3 theory falls ilat, the Wastebasket lills up with exam books, papers, and old enthusiasms. The weather always fits the mood. It is one of those cast-iron Providence days, when all of the sensi- ble stay indoors. All but a wet starling on a tele- vision aerial. Pi II. , Professor William Montagna, Biology i l I t notes unrest. Whenapl 'IC wastebasket lillsupi s. and old enthusiasm the mood. It is one all : days, when all of lllllf l but a wet starlingonai 4 W '-'i'?F1 . z ' 'G ' -'71 iz- 1 .e fl Instructor Erich Kunzel, Music Y, Worms FAH I., :Fm r, Ln, fi' , . 1.3241 1 1 uf , ggi, 5,,,z,,e4Q f -v, -A if ' ' P' ., ,agswagh .fiy f ,, igiagful Q 'Q ,M gui, 'L gn ..fgs:' f Mm , n 'WF i 1 U , it A g V 1 ,J 1- if i . ,,m, . S 'J 'M g Vw r f 4 f , ' J , t 31, - A 1 ig., - , ti f ,ff -. u' ,, f' 3 f +, :,. ' 1 . ' f 4' X V ' - i I A 3, 5,4 . ,g 'il' gf 5 v ' ' , ' 477 F , fag. X tele ' the studio if d the ' Work ill sometimes calie whenever students thini In fact, the search is sc mm jurte, or a grab at be alot of work on sur nr a long slow march r tiveresearehnj, but ai means even more. So r those who give the be the language of the have meaning. r 1 Work in the studio is one example of what is sometimes called the individual search, present whenever students think or act creatively. In fact, the search is sometimes a scramble for the mot juste, or a grab at the impossible. It can also be a lot of work on small matters Cupainstakingwj, or a long slow march down a blind alley C'eXten- sive research J, but after the frustration, success means even more. So do all the euphemisms. For those who give the best of their time and ability, the language of the convocation speaker does have meaning. I I Hi I SS HID CCS H C115-if I I ll Q 3 +a5'.s4g'sav-75 San? JUVSUISCH livlartha McCauley Judith MacIntosh Susan Rosenthal Sharon O'Donnell Eleanor Parkman Diane Risen Phyllis Cigiarelli PEMBROKE RECORD Editor-in-chief ....i., Sally Jurgensen ESIDENTS Managing Editor .......i. Elaine Piller : Sylviill News Editor I . . ii.i Judith Skeist 'all I Aflenellii HQNQR CQUNCIL Features Editor .......i Joyce Lefiler Alice Farrar Berit Spant Circulation Manager .,,.,,.......,,, I 1 4 V Bent 55 Christina Anderson M. Lucky lr Business Manager . ,,.., Advertising Manager ..,ii ts Hall ., Nancylt President ...i..i.i Martha McCauley y House Margaretlll Vice-president i...... Eleanor Verrill l , Willoughbyi Secretary .......... Judith MacIntosh JUNIORS COUNSELORS Street I. Valeritl- Head J.C. ,.,... Catherine Schroeder PEMBROKE SOCIAL ORGANIZATION Judith Matlf East Andrews .i... Virginia Callender me V I Barham Catherine Schroeder Presidentld .....i,... SusanFBraf1le2i1 . Sylvia Wasserfi West Andrews .....,... Jane Bowen V1Ce'preS1 ent ' lrgmla alrc .1 I5 D ' Lucy Webber Treasurer i.ii Lyle Eckweller ASS0ClaU0n51iiiiniiitl'Dui Metcalf . . . . , Virginia Van Leer Secretary ..... . . . Eleanor Parkman Helene SG, Alice Farrar use N Miller . , . . . Yolanda Maione PRODUCTION WORKSHOP WEEKENI Carolyn Gahagan Executive Board ..,,...., Joanna Raft AUGHTE5' , ia Pali' Champlin . . . . Sibylle Janssen Bonnie Sour A Hgm Karen Adams QUESTION CLUB 1 ' . l H , ,CE AND ORCHE53 Momss - ' A ' ' Lglta 1331 President .....,,...i.i Judith Brick I t , . W Margm West House . . . . . . Joanne DiPanni Members ' ' A I ' Jilniliiylifflii , F' R CIVIL LIBERTIEE Marlene mn Babette Freund y H v-',4 Ruth NEWMAN CLUB Karen Greene Sally Jurgensen Martha McCauley I' Beverly Nanes Judith Neal Donna Peterson Eleanor Verrill Vice-president ........ Janice Fernald ,i B .. Nall PDQS I A Lead . . , I . . Elizabeth Fallon lL7NDATHlPraJIUela Gold: SKI CLUB Secretary . . . , , . Dorothy Mitchell SOCK AND BUSKIN Secretary .....,..... Missing: Willoughby Ellis Virginia Fairchild Nancy Frazier Elizabeth Hammatt Kay Johnson Beverly Nanes .. Kay Johnson Board Member ..t.i.... Bonnie Sour STUDENT GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION President ,...ii ...,i J udith Neal Vice-president .... J . , Karen Greene Secretary ..,....i,.l. Susan Hapke Treasurer ..i.ii... Eleanor Parkman NSA Co-ordinator .,i... Diane Risen Brun Mael ....,..,...... Susan Davis Campus Committee Beverly Nanes Academic Affairs ..i.i Janice Fernald Publicity .......... Willoughby Ellis UNIVERSITY CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION Vice-president .4 , . , Margaret Lang Secretary ..... , , , Jane Newhagen WBRU Executive-secretary . , Mary L. Wood YACHT CLUB Vice-Commodore . I . Elizabeth Hammatt CSCI! Siii IQIH - I I is 114- r,,.,- I 1, I I I I I I VirginiaV IUIXIICDR COUIXISEIIORS M A from left Carolyn Murp y h Linda Foster Linda Brody Janice Fernald A I an Leer Greta Fell Lucy Webber Sibylle Janssen Karen Adams YolandmcalhmneSchroeder I SIGMA XI 84 PI-II BETA PHI BETA KAPPAM rlene Micklas Elaine PQ Lmgagfom Barbara Cul I I gg Q1 ,2 I ' I 'D an 1 fr Adams 1 Ymlktherine Schroeder Carolyn Gahagan Marlene Finn Joanna DiPanni Jane Bowen Missing: Virginia Callender Alice Farrar Lola Ham J. Missing: QFT A Naomi Greenstein J C 3' Madeline Enfnian-JV Carol Burchard Margo Piore-Jr. Mrs. Jane Sisk Willems in WCU35 llnda GFOUO Barbara Cummins-Jr. Helen Baroway Enid Rhodes-Jr. Doyle Darragh-Jr. Sara Harkness-Jr. Sarah Lee Silberman N l X1 R' 1 ' . ' ' . , fgljygf l' N I Xf ,335 . ,4 i . Q it , ' X 1 , KL 'A D f ,X 1 j 'll X , . JM jf, S ,rio i l I V I ,...,,.,.6' 3 f e , ii J 4 ,, 5 -aa J gfx -.I . Ar XX 'xx 1 4 , il Emi 4 - , fm 1.- 4 ' A X -r qi Ili ll l l l Q C ts,-V. cn: tp ,Vip- - 3 i I 'lt t 'Ni W t - , ,, A. . , . ,. -se. -or 'rfn-'.v,a- na' es::s':e.1:ac-:w-l' Kathy Gauthier How often I watched mYSelf buffy past' Standing Sur- prised at the sight of myself from behind as I skimmed the surface of thought, Occasionally Stopping to Scratch with curiosity at some more interesting spot, to Probe a bit here and there. But there was an unknown dis- tance to travel. I could never stay long in one place. Time was always turning the corner just ahead of me. CI never did catch up.D And sometimes the flicker of a shadow new and strange set me on the 011856, and I would sit down and cross my knees, waiting for myself to return, more slowly than I had gone, drifting back into myself dragging the tail end of a new memory, or the most curious fragment of a broken dream. Often I had forgotten what it was that I pursued. Knowledge was a mysterious all-encompassing word, a carefully formed word whose letters comprised insep- arable parts of some universally acclaimed idea, or an accumulation of thought which often hi truth. Questions disguised themselves as a arose at unexpected times, when I Walked a li ght-spat tered street alone at night and smelled burnin S leave and heard the sound of menis choral voices rough as e n carelessly out of tune, the tramping of feet on the Wet pavement. Then to feel the rightness of pungent Smoke and gruff voices was to sense a unity of things Some- where, deep, below the understanding, and to wonder suddenly if the mind and emotions of man depths for exploration as unfathomable as the 0 uter realms of space in which he seeks for increasing knowj edge and order. And with this comes the understanding that the proc- ess of discovery, of the world, of oneself, is endless, and that the street over which the husky voices ring is gov. ered with rough stones and that the lamps are few. ,. ,X - 'ggi' . in Roberto Mosely During the summer of 1962 I was privileged to partici- I ' . pa e in a Workcamp-study tour in Ghana, West Africa, I y the National Council of the Protestant EPISCOPSJ Church tU,s,A sponsored b -J in conjunction with the Vol- untary Workcamp Association of Ghana CVWAGJ, Tha Work Project itself-construction of littl ill . le v age of Agbosome in the Volta Region of Ghana - asted approximately 3M weeks Campers had C0 fro th I me m e U.S. ttwenty-four of us, mostly college stu- dents, went overj, Gh a chapel for the ana, Nigeria, Ivory Coast, Sierra Leone, Lebanon and England. All told, there were some fifty of us. Before we joined the camp and after it closed, the American contingent toured Ghana either as a body or in smaller groups of from four to seven persons. Perhaps what impressed me most, at least in the early days and until I became used to it, was the juxtaposition and continuous intermingling of the new and the old in Ghana. In the capital city of Accra, buildings exhibiting the latest in architectural technique are interspersed with the low open stalls that make up sprawling MHKOIH Market, current model English and European CHU crowd the roadways but must be continually 011 me lookout for the swarms of people making their WHY on foot g a young man in a western suit and carrying 3 bfitf' case converses with a barefoot man attired in the tra- In mfilll' ditional garb, both speaking fluent English. 5 of the rural villages a lone radio or refrigerator will win up, and telephone poles along the road guard the tem' nal points of narrow footpaths that disappear throjlgh the dense foliage on their way to Sefluestered mba! dancing grounds. uries WPW' inkliot sented in one small country that gave me some 0 of the task facing President Kwame N . fnglo of the progress he has already made, 111 aftempil eu- . l 5 bring Ghana up to the social and economlc And l0yed by the long-established nations Of the Wor ot our . . . illfe he has little choice rn the matter. The na It was this consciousness of the span of cent krumah, and als d an absence of nswers, They present l t i i l i i t i i i i , t i i i i i i i t t i i l l I t t t l F i i I i t times, cicS, I nation into Ill ledge I see at haS I0 I Ont af' of iran from th' g0VCfIlIl the resis me quilt spending to obtain area, the most cel crowded set, ntidd. muda sho tion that how many nation-bui appointed the param expected tt on hand ar of berrnud whose func none of th. Position 33 We learned how the fm been gfatlllt mg but a hp nevertheless local filler ii fined to his going lhe p Cmllpellgateu Personage W fact netessit ge of Pro llmlal rulers Ian of E more fecentlfl I Y et the even Ci Il ' 'men hid all uselves as absenltt answers' il light Q in I walked l smelled bumin 'lla gl . choral voices, rougljatt IlPlIlg of feet on melt htness gf pun lf a 'mill' of motions 'atllom gem Smit. things lop of man PICS: able as llltl 0311 eks for lllcfeasingknng erstanding that the pm of oneself, is endless,Q husky voices ringigoy t the lamps are few. td. All told, there ned the camp and after? ent toured Ghana eii ps of from four to set lost, at least in the eti o it, was the juxtaposlit mf the new and the old? iccra, buildings elhlbli :hnique are intersptrt lake up sprawlillg Maki tish and Eurolw ff st be continually Oli making Ihtif will , suit and Caffyingahm ,t man alll! fluent Ellgh 0 or refrigefa the road guard W 5 that dis2PPef' tal' to sequesteredm nple ed in mem sh. IH mi tor willlf the itll an of cvlllwei T.f1av-will waive Nkrumahirlpttil ly made, in Wie! e fe at 1lrinsTl1e nalllfe all 3 . S.. times, as well as the critical eye of Western democra- cies, has set a limit on the time in which the emerging nations of Asia and Africa must make the transition into modern statehood. But the enormity of such a chal- lenge became apparent to me only after I was able to see at first hand the wide spectrum over which change has to be made. One area on this spectrum is the complicated question of transferring authority and the aura of legitimacy from the traditional rulers to the relatively new national government. The pain this process usually entails and the resistance it must overcome were brought home to me quite sharply when a small group of us who were spending a few days in Sekondi on the coast managed to obtain an interview with the paramount chief of the area, the Omanhene of Dutch-Sekondi. We ,were shown most ceremoniously into a rather dingy fiat on a crowded street in the city, and introduced to a heavy- set, middle-aged man in a short-sleeved shirt and ber- muda shorts. So ludicrously incongruous was the situa- tion that had it not been for a dawning realization of how many and difncult are the problems connected with nation-building, there would have been seven really dis- appointed Americans in Sekondi that day. Here was the paramount chief of the whole area, a man we had expected to see robed in appropriate attire and waited on hand and foot, instead sipping orange soda, in a pair of bermuda shorts, and accompanied by a single man whose function it was to see that the chief transgressed none of the myriad social restrictions encumbering his position as one-time leader of his people. We learned as we talked to Nana Kwamina Anaisie IV how the function of the traditional rulers in Ghana has been gradually usurped by the President, leaving noth- ing but a host of repressive personal restrictions which nevertheless must be fulfilled. When the chief was the local ruler in fact rather than simply in name, being con- fined to his quarters for long periods of time and fore- going the pleasure of even a moment's solitude were compensated' for by the esteem in which such an exalted personage was held and by the actual opportunity-in fact necessity-to exert influence in solving a whole range of problems for the community. Now the tradi- tional rulers occupy somewhat the same position as the Queen of England, except that the former were much more recently powerful in their own right. Yet the eventual decline of the chief in Ghanaian so- ciety was decreed at the very moment when the winds Of nationalism first began to sweep over the C0I1'fiI16I1'f as a whole. For only insofar as he succeeds in replacing allegiance to a narrow tribal grouping with allegiance to the wider concept of the nation does the nationalist leader of today create a strong and internally cohesive state which can withstand the social and economic vicis- situdes of political adolescence. This does not mean that all or even most of what is tra- ditional and unique in Ghana must be destroyed: in fact, it is the presence of so much variety and diversity that gives much of West Africa its charm. But a revolu- tion in the mode of thought accompanying these cus- toms must be made and is being made so that the coun- try will be able to compete successfully with the more advanced nations. The ordinary citizen must learn to look to the national government, instead of to the local chief, for the provision of the good things in life. Or again, some of the powers formerly ascribed to the var- ious spirits and gods must be seen as capable of exe- cution by the very secular authority of the national gov- ernment. For my part, I enjoyed the traditional dancing practiced in the Volta Region immensely, and spent many an hour striving to coordinate my arms, rear end and feet in a hopeless attempt to master the rudiments of this ostensibly simple dance. But if the people had continued to rely on such methods to bring rain in the dry season, instead of experimenting with systems of water storage and irrigation, Ghana would not have the level of gross national product which she has today. At the same time I cannot emphasize too strongly my own personal feeling that if this accelerated maturing process succeeds in producing only replicas of America or the European democracies a very great disservice will have been done to the community of mankind. One of the most serious questions facing our own coun- try today is whether or not we can learn to tolerate, or better, to appreciate difference among people for its own sake. Fortunately for all of us the present leaders of independent African states seem to have no inten- tion of servilely imitating the West. The eclectic manner in which they go about preparing their nations for effective roles in today's world is a dry but necessary pill for the advanced nations to swallow. And it is because their leaders do question the superior- ity of our values and way of doing things, because they do assert the inherent worth of those things unique in their own culture and history, that what I have de- scribed as the juxtaposition of the new and the old in countries like Ghana will continue to delight and charm the visitor from another continent. ii i 'Ni 4 A 1' I Lindo Grotto The people were friendly but poorg the food was plen- tiful but mediocre, apartment buildings were profuse in number but abominable in style. I am sure I have told you nothing new about Russia, but merely confirmed other peopleis impressions. Still, I have impressions of my own, and oddly enough they have their genesis in loudspeaker systems. Such systems are common enough in America-certainly in Providence, where Christmas music is played for shoppers from six to ten in the eve- ning. But I first recognized the significance of loud- speakers inthe Soviet Union. My first encounter with Russian loudspeakers took place in a movie house in Leningrad shortly after my arrival. The highly-rated Soviet film Clear Sky in- cluded a scene depicting Russian laborers, in wartime, gathered about loudspeakers set high on gaunt poles to hear the latest reports from the front. In this attempt at mass communication the emphasis was on mass, the unity of the group, rather than on communication to individuals. The movie, in recalling the scene, elic- ited the same reaction of national pride and oneness from the people of today as it did during the days of World War II. Certainly the Soviet government does not allow its people to forget their unity gained through suffering and sacrifice during their defense of the Moth- erland. There are many manifestations of this preoccu- pation, from the numerous monuments of the park- shrine type, to the comments by Soviet citizens on their horrifying experiences during the war. The war is still very much in the minds of the Soviet people, and is commonly discussed, even with casual acquaintances One morning, as I and a few of my fellow American students strolled down the broad boulevards of Kiev, Capital of the provincial Ukraine, we were serenaded by 3 loudspeaker system penetrating all sections of the downtown area. This concert of martial music heralded the successful flight of Titov, the Soviet Union's sec- ond space traveller. I shall never forget the exultant intonations of the news brief which was repeated during intervals of rest from the cymbalic crashing of marches. There were no organized demonstrations in Kiev: this was, after all, the second successful flight. Citizens showed only mild curiosity on hearing the repeated an- nouncement, but voiced deep pride in the event when we questioned them. The loudspeakers with which I became best acquainted were those I encountered during my two-weeks, stay in the sports camp for students of the Kiev Polytechni- cal Institute. From rasps and gongs at seven to the In- ternationale at eleven, this system produced an almost uninterrupted stream of noise: a buzz of characterless music, news reports, and occasionally political ha- rangues. To my consternation, I discovered that it was impossible to shut the thing off, and almost impossible to escape its range. This method of communication, which no one in the vicinity could avoid hearing, rein- forced the listless character of the students. I was amazed at their lack of initiative in organizing activities such as hikes and picnics. After morning exercises CYes, even advisors had to participatej a general apathy pervaded the camp, in tune with the monotonous drone of the loudspeakers. The most memorable spectacle I witnessed was a IC- ception held in Kiev for delegates from the Interna- tional Youth Festival which had just taken plaCG in Moscow. The ovation given to the representatives fI'0m Africa, Asia, and Latin America was overwhelming. AS the delegates triumphantly entered the auditorium, the people of Kiev clapped rhythmically and chanted peace, friendship? Later speeches over loudspeakefs reaiiirmed the delegates' initial reception. The Soviet Pe0P1c's expression of goodwill was electric. One C0Uld not help but respond to its strength. The intense HH' tional feeling of the Soviets overiiowed into an interna- tional friendship. I clearly saw at this moment the b21SiC dynamic of the Soviet people: faith in the future, the Spirit of the true pioneer. In their national pride is born their effusion of international goodwill. In their national pride is born their unqualitied confidence. A Student gt ning for a sities of ti dent body -Acaden Committee eiiieiently eil. The C Honor Co dent opini plans for 2 change the ted back a each repef f0f her sid UP lht bu ffllllpared mg- Most t Ef0l1p. lf Seniors t ing the res it more 6 Yiilriy intel mad. From bility ,htm Hi t i3Siiy imhman 3. demon' g00d th N everthing En Qf Ame i Uiii is and W 9, as W American ards of Kiev Iliided Of the U re Sere ections I1l0I1'g Sec. Peated during g of marches. in Kiev: this flight. citizen, le repeated an. he event when best acquainted W0-Weeks' stay iev Polytechni- ven to the In. uced an almost if characterless J political ha- :red that it was most impossible communication, d hearing, rein- tudents. I was inizing activities ,ming exercises i general apathy inotonous dI0Il5 :ssed was 2 IC' ,m the Interna- iaken place ill zsentatives ffom iefwhelllllllg- As auditorium, the V and chanted ef loudsPeakeIs ion. The Soviet ld ctric. one sou The intenS0 na' ' Ilia' inI0 an mm iOII1ent the the flllllfes the barn mal P , al Infh basic ride is eir Damon D ,a x ,a,i' I' 15 Student government at Pembroke is effective in plan- ning for and carrying out the day-to-day social neces- sities of the college. It is ineffective in leading the stu- dent body in any real sense. Our numerous committees -Academic Affairs, P.S.O., Campus Chest, Campus Committee, Pembroke Weekend Committee-function elliciently behind the scenes of the larger S.G.A. Coun- cil. The Council and Honor Council, as opposed to Honor Court, however, serve only as sieves for stu- dent opinion, with very few, if any, crystallizations or plans for action resulting from the incessant verbal ex- change tshat takes place within them. Discussion is bat- ted back and forth between the 'tforsl' and 'fagainstsjl each repeating the opinion of the one who last spoke for her side. Occasionally an idea does lead to cleaning up the bulletin boards or posting a daily menu, but compared to what does not get done these are as noth- ing. Most often they could, or should, bypass the larger group. If seniors could govern as they chose, without consult- ing the rest of the college, the system would probably be more efficient, though no doubt the confusion of yearly internal changes would drive the Administration mad. From the point of view of maintaining some sta- bility through a constant procession of students, it is good that we have to deal with four classes, with four vastly different outlooks. The contrast between naive freshman and blase senior is full of implications for truly democratic student government. Nevertheless, it is not to our credit as future club-wom- en of America that one of the most serious problems of our time is being worked out in colleges similar to ours and we, as a school, do or say nothing about it. It is a Scilly Jorgensen sad comment, indeed, that James Merideth, in his at- tempt to attend the University of Mississippi, evokes nothing from Pembroke but an insipid yes, there is a problem, but we must realize how difficult it is for the South to disrupt its traditional pattern of life, essen- tially a refusal to recognize the difficulties faced by the Negro, surely much worse than any with which the Southern White is credited. What is needed is a person, or a group of persons, in S.G.A. willing to assume the responsibility that goes along with doing something that is correct in the long run but temporarily unpopular. The other large segment of student governing is done through Honor Council. There an attempt to change the honor code flared last year with discussions at dor- mitory meetings, visits to other colleges, and a poll which showed that one out of every three students vio- lates the code to some extent. Nevertheless, the under- taking dissolved entirely, probably because it lacked outspoken support. Had the proposed code been pre- sented to the school at the end of last year, it might have been approved and superseded the honor code which is obviously not respected. Hopefully, the pres- ent code will, within a few years, work itself into a so- cial code with fewer but necessarily stricter rules. No doubt, these matters, though they concern a few when they occur, will be among the first to be forgotten as Pembroke becomes a memory and no longer a reality to be faced every morning between 7:30 and 8:30 A.M. Chances are that they in themselves will not make anyone's memories less pleasant. A few people, however, will have benefitted greatly from the experi- ence of facing the problems and attempting to find solu- tions that were not immediately forthcoming. lohormo Rool - 1 , 1 , -. F I yy? I slit f . l Z f . 'Q-1 ui, I, 1 L ii, . ,, -, K 1 :sg . t A l.f. y .A . I 'deft A' . -ey,-' -.if4Lf'- '. I ' ' 44- I t 5 if-e 3 in 1 Professor Juan Lopez-Morillas once told me that a ma- jor in Comparative Literature is, in truth, a major in the history of ideas. This is, of course, a rather broad field. Therefore, before entering it, I had to have a pretty good idea of exactly in what corner I wanted to dig. In my case, this was modern poetry and poetic theory. Fortunately, there were a number of formal courses I could take in this connection: a graduate seminar on Blake, another on nineteenth-century criticism of po- etry, and a third on the theory of Romanticism. How- ever, the formal courses were by no means the flesh and blood of my work. They did, perhaps, serve as skeletons and as sources for basic and essential knowl- edge, but where the life came, where the ideas became active, was in independent studies projects when I was free to work intensively on a single poem, poetic theme or symbol and to follow various lines of thought accord- ing to my inclination. I concentrated on a few poets: Blake, Shelley, Hugo, Rimbaud, Eluard, and discov- ered that a good knowledge of their works gave me a sense of the whole progression of nineteenth-century poetics, somewhat in the way that a few dots, linearly connected by the imagination, can form a complete pic- ture. For example, during the first semester of my junior year I worked on an independent studies project which re. sulted in the discovery of two important themes, that of the poetic voyage and another which I have called the tradition of the reluctant virgin. Both these themesl again took up in iinal papers for courses during the sec. ond semester of that year. I examined Hthe tradition of the reluctant virgin, symbolic of the poem which re- fuses to come into being, as beginning with Blake's Thel, reaching its peak in Mallarme's Herodiade, and finally, being carried on by Valery's Jeune Parque. With the theme of the poetic voyage, that is, the search for the ideal poem in a somewhat less than ideal world, I took three poets: Shelley, Rimbaud and Wallace Ste- vens, and saw, within their framework, the Voyager be- come transformed from a frail and wasted formv into a skinny sailorj' and the voyage from one of hope to one of frustration, and finally, futile resignation. However, books and papers aside, a most important part of this work has been the professors who advised me and whom I came to know. Wallace Stevens once said that the theory of poetry is the theory of life, and that it is life we are getting at in poetry. This is true. Poetry is really an experience, not a subject. Of course it can, and indeed should, be studied rigorously, syste- matically, but in the end, metrical or computer-per- formed verbal analyses, although scholastically valid and interesting, contribute little to the poem itself whose value, as far as I am concerned, is only the in- tensity with which it is a part of my own experience. Thus it is only by increasing my range of experience that I increase my poetic sensibilities. For me, a lecture does little in this respect. But working with and coming to know one or two exceptional professors does a great deal. It is life we are getting at in poetryi'-I fepeat Stevens' statement. After all, isn't it life we are getting at, not only in poetry, but in all aspects of education? By avoiding the restrictions of a single department and eliminating the necessity of the formal lecture, a mfilof in Comparative Literature has obliterated, to some CX' tent, the traditional division between work and Play' So much has this been true for me, that I am Often tempted, when asked about my major here at BTOWH' to explain that I have not majored in a subj6Ci, but in the diverse and organic thoughts of the men with whom I worked. Vw Swan E etzulllolleal Gil 6 most 0 yecalls h will ICH you W 2 self, using Dew for all wlltll if dow. If You me i me old gfal' Chu Macbe the wefll raiI1S the wllCllC5 in saint with the lil! HOW do you feel the Mississippi Of l y you want to do like independent written by Html' wily way to do it. cause they have tc asnall vacation i four letters to ma you, you have only freedom! You have will have weekly cc you read in a Com we out of the wing semester gf my . . . lll' .t stndles IIIIIIIII 111015. - hi O im W ll themes cr which I have all H . C ed, rglnos I I Both these them . for courses IIIIIIIIIII. lx as ' . ed thelradilr :lic of GS be Mall the poem whichi afmeh Herodiaq,I. JY Valery's Jeune C Voyage, that is, the ewhat less than iderlr, Rlmballd and Warm, framework, the voyagri. 'frail and wasted fomlf foyage from one of lui y, futile resignation. rs aside, a most inpl: the professors who ali mow. Wallace Stevensi try is the theory ollilefg g at in poetryf' Tlisir ice, not a subject. Ole be studied rigorouslil I men-ical or computer-7 rlthough scholasticlllll 3 little to the Pllml m concerned, is UM Part of my oWI1 Cllllll sing IIIY g11Slblllt range of ini ies. For mei all . ' Elllf 3111 w0fkmg with an a: tional Profess0IS does 1 life we ll n oetrynfl HI all, isn't if I du, 6 . tin all aspects 0 nu. is of 21 Single depart az. f the forlllal lectumn r sll , has obliteraledf to d. i between iifllf ion limi frmJW f .fue O I I6 all ,ug IIIY I subI1ecI,l. rmalore ugllts O I0 in a I . Cl wlthi Susori Evans One cannot learn anything in the classrooms at Brown because most of them have windows. The professor will tell you what he has decided to tell you about him- self, using Descartes or Faulkner as a pseudonym, and for all the world you cannot follow him because even when it rains there is always something outside the win- dow. If you are an English major it is beech trees and the old gray church and three elms standing like the witches in Macbeth. If the class meets from four to six, all the walls turn red at five and everyone looks like a saint with the light on his hair, but the talk goes on. How do you feel about the river in Huck F inn? Is it the Mississippi or Lethe? If you want to do some serious work you are obliged to take independent study. I wanted to read everything written by Henry James and realized that this was the only way to do it. The red tape is a bit formidable be- cause they have to make certain that you do not have a small vacation in mind, but once you have written four letters to make sure that everyone understands you, you have only to wait for consent. And then-Oh freedom! You have chosen a professor with whom you will have weekly conversations, and the rest of the time you read in a corner of your room where you cannot see out of the window. All the foolish talk disappears ' f, ,ffE.3.1'F , f . I . V. fa:-1 wagggfag 'f ' . 5 qi F . ,ff:f.:.:gwf-V and you think, take a walk and think about Henry James. When it rains, read A London Life. When the sun comes out, visit Professor Gardner and talk. One semester on James and you value society. Nothing will ever be simple again. Forget the Greeks with their passion. Powder it, corset it, teach it to pour tea, trim it with fearful secrets like fine lace and you have-James! It is a dangerous element unless confined to the draw- ing room, where one must wonder about secrets. The nuances, the double entendres are overwhelming. One can scarcely breathe, not to say think or speak coher- ently in the presence of this great silence behind the light chatter. James explored this silence and came out alive. He is indispensable. Simply that. So you can see what happens. Freedom is dangerous but dear. I have heard strange rumors about the boy who did independent study on the Renaissance man of virtu. It is said he became insufferable, but you can be sure that without it he would have remained the same old slab of meatloaf. Strike out on your own! Look out of windows while the man talks about the Wife of Bath, knowing that you have your own worthy pursuit. They even give you grades to send home. It will make you new again! a ' ! lvlorgery Goddord I had been quite nonchalant about my decision to study for a year in Geneva until the first day I entered the doors of its university. I found myself within a small building, surrounded by contemporaries from all over the world. Geneva's reputation as an international city is reflected in her student population: single classes have been known to enroll students of twenty-eight na- tionalities fand languagesl! Slowly I adjusted to the subtleties of European culture. People speak of the confusion characteristic of French administrative agencies. The library of the University of Geneva was a splendid example of this bureaucratic attitude of distrust of the consumer. It was always a mystery to me that so many difficulties had to be put in the path of the potential borrower. Moreover, books were stolen anyway, perhaps in greater numbers than from our libraries. It was very stimulating to be among students who in no way took for granted their opportunity to receive a university education. People crowded at the doors of the lecture halls, rushing in to occupy the best seats available the moment the previous class adjourned. If this enthusiasm was refreshing, its other aspect-bitter competition-was disconcerting. American youth has not generally known the meaning of daily, even hourly, struggle, and I found it difficult to appreciate the un- flagging energy with which European students ap- proached their life at the university. The lectures usu- ally proved worth the courage needed to attend them, though I recall that it was with great trepidation that the class awaited the end of M. Marcel's lectures on pre- romantic literature. We sat there, wishing he might con- tinue his stimulating presentation and dreading the bat- tle against the economics class assembled outside the door. My life in the home of a Genevese family proved to be a most successful experience and one which profoundly influenced the course of my year in Geneva. There, in addition to learning to speak French, I became conver- sant with many Swiss opinions: global, continental, na- tional and local. Living en pension is a common but not always satisfactory arrangement for European stu- dents studying in foreign cities. It was my good fortune to be welcomed into a family group whose keen interest in all fields and whose curiosity about outsiders made them lively companions and genuine friends. To be in Europe, a long way from the United States, for a whole year, is not to be taken lightly. One resigns fhappilyl onels role as tourist to become a kind of dis- enfranchised resident, met with much hostility, as well as hospitality. Detached from one's former existence in the States, life is an experiment in a new independ- ence. And while this independence can create prob- lems, nonetheless it assures its own rich rewards of broadened horizons and increased conviction about the course of one's progress. Steplieriie Stilwell There are two deliveries employed by those educating in human relations-whether it be for civil rights, inter- national cooperation and understanding, or for peace- the hard sell and the soft sell. The soft sell is gentle, easy and somewhat academic. While it deals directly with the problems at hand, it makes little or no attempt to deal with the personalities of the individuals COI1' cerned-the speaker and the audience. It is usually 21 straightforward presentation designed to create an ill' tellectual awareness and comprehension of the pI0b' lem. The personal enters only in the form of anecd0'fCS or stories, designed to evoke sympathy. On the other hard sell- It is Pers0Ilal IS Us the audience' denll' one to 21 We a is H nd of it. l am whi tonnes is tha ot while- But ble fact: ll eSClP3 ed 2 Peffe seem on the fight Sid for 3 marketabl my children I0 more opportuni that he will evel chance land it if come friends, hc he lives in a gh: acause of une ences I can no li ol the color of 1 One begins to orthodox Christi the reality of suc. And by the sam world view whe, In a size we Ca, Pltltlll l ltlf billion to a lll3SlIlgle well get me hundred would Pmlluce WL above the the others would llttlve times a S ll lllllch fuel lk Sixteen times E irhaveh . pefson has ,rea lwhnical accio ltd th 1 VQSQ f . xl amlly prilved Ki One tom at . ch prelim ln Geneva rench, I bee - Tlltrtiin l global, c nsionh alll. S a comme ment for Europe nbul It w an Sm' as my g00d mul' Whose k ame Collier. Omlllemal forum, een illleregi tslflels ma lm-ne fnends. ty abfllli 011 from the United Sims aken 0118 ltiigm Lo become a kind of dk. 1 much hOstilitY, aswel . one's former eiigtm nent in a new indepeii idence can create pm IS Own rich rewardiit sed conviction aboutthi d cattt iloyed by those eu itbeforcivilfl 'oc ea ' erstandillg' orfoip it ll The soft sell 15354 - 'etii C While it dealS diem? . ' , makes lime or no ts cot the illdividua 1 S of ce It is USUN . H , . audle to create ed of 1116 .on 1 rlfnehensl of 31100509 ,Y in -,ii it On the other hand, there is nothing indirect about the hard sell. It is forceful, explicit and often terrifying. The personal is used to shock, to stun, every individual in the audience. The pointing finger is inescapable. Sud- denly one is aware of the color of one's skin: I belong to a race and can no longer live without consciousness of it. I am white. Possibly the only reason this is of im- portance is that not being white is so important to those not white. But it is-suddenly-an important and in- escapable fact: I am white, and the speaker, who had seemed a perfectly normal individual, is not. I can live on the right side of the tracks: he can not. I get training for a marketable job: he does not. I can arrange to send my children to an adequate school which will open up more opportunities: he cannot-in fact, the chances are that he will even ignore his heritage and culture. If per- chance Cand it is a small chance at thatj, we should be- come friends, he could visit my home fairly easily. But he lives in a ghetto and my strangeness there would be a cause of unease and discomfort. These are differ- ences I can no longer ignore: they are as much because of the color of my skin as because of the color of his. One begins to comprehend the significance of what orthodox Christians meant by original sin: the existence, the reality of such a thing begins to become credible. And by the same token, we are presented with a new world view when the world is shrunk proportionately to a size we can comprehend. If we compressed the present population of the world, now over two and a half billion to a group of one thousand, living together in a single room, sixty of us would be Americans, and we'd get half the total income of the town: the other nine hundred and forty would share the other half. We would produce 16W of the townis food supply, eat al- most all of it-and what we didn't we'd store. We'd eat 72072: above the optimum food requirements, most of the others would be slowly starving to death. Weid have twelve times as much electric power, twenty-one times as much fuel, fifty times as much steel, and there would be sixteen times as many non-Americans as Americans. Experiences such as these make one aware of being a have person in a world of have-nots. There is no simple reaction, no single response to this discovery. It has created the social gospel, social work, cultural and technical exchanges, the Peace Corps, philanthropy, and has motivated sit-ins, tutorials, peace demonstra- tions, good neighbor policies pledge drives, fair housing community groups, and a great deal of the Hstudent revolutioni' too. The single common denominator is its complexity, the one certainty that it will take a great deal of time and soul grappling to be able to live with this knowledge maturely. One thing is fairly uniform: the more inescapable the pointing finger, the harder one tries to hide, to deny the reality of what one hears, to reject the guilt levied on one's being. So I refuse to even think about the prob- lems raised, hiding away this new knowledge I have, pretending I have never learned it. Or I try to make an exception of myself-because I'm not prejudiced, and would never discriminate against a Negro, nor would I assert my way of life wholly superior to another's, or travel about in shorts, carrying a camera. And so, in testimony to my guiltlessness, I immerse' myself in ac- tivities, and develop something of a cause mentality, of a professional liberalism. It is largely from such personal and intense phenomena, if not from these specific events or discoveries, that the student revolution has emerged. This means that it has inherent problems. The student activist is apt to be in- tense, and therefore somewhat frightening and incom- prehensible. He sometimes thinks that he is living ques- tions few others are-which often makes him unable or unwilling to talk with others. Often too, he effectually denies his own background and the demands which it places on him. In short, the student movements seem to be characterized by the smugness, singleness of purpose and screaming uncertainty that render adolescence so difficult and alienating. But this seems to be a function of youth. The student movement is rarely older than we are as college stu- dents: it is primarily a product of our own college gener- ation. As we the individuals wrestle with these prob- lems in our lives and develop perspective, awareness and internalization of other problems, of pride in our heritage, a determination to become persons instead of activist, political machines, the problem diminishes. As we mature, realizing the necessity of fulfilling ourselves as persons as well as that of reforming and bettering the world, the movement becomes less offensive and more effective. And each year this is more true, closer to the reality of the situation, than the year before. This means that with maturity we move closer to the reali- zation of our goal of working on the personal level with societal problems. E X r fd Ill I . g 'JUL 8 corwiciioqs N l- 1 jg vwfveiff f 1 f I -. .Avy ' Yan 4- ffag . ' fl ae ' '-IN 1 ' i Z ' A' -.I ,. . X , 0. ,gf H3133 Epi ,, At the base of all student activity, like the submerged portion of an iceberg, is the omnipresent Student Gov- ernment Association, economically styled S.G.A. Concomitant with S.G.A. is Honor Council, a policy- making body and a court, having no nickname. S.G.A. itself is, according to its constitution, designed to be a coordinating body for all student activities. This it is. Yet, criticism of its bilateral structure, as well as desire for government of the students, for the students and by the students has led to the preparation of a new con- stitution which, so far, solves the first problem but not the second. S.G.A. remains a coordinating body with independent projects distantly related to government. Among these projects, each year, is a small experiment in international education, sharing Pembroke with a foreign student or two. Our guests this year were Tone Tvedt of Norway and Dorothy Effange of East Cam- eroon. This year Pembroke has also been hostess to girls from Mexico and Egypt. Another of S.G.Afs daughters is the Pembroke Social Organization, which conducts various functions throughout the year. Among its traditional projects are Christmas and May weekends, both with queens. In addition, P.S.O. sponsors mixers and has recently introduced the novelty of parties for graduate students, quieter and smaller than the undergraduate mixers but serving the same purpose. Another innovation this year is Sunday Open-House at the Field House, where tired skaters can toast marshmallows and toes, while Sunday scholars take a socializing break. YA . 4 .4 ' N' - 5 -1 Q , ' fgffsvx. 3 js 'A . .nh-4 4. Nix li- f 5 uzder the auspices of mm than that of J auch of 1 mation, NM sp ffmbroke bf I., in' Ch Pembra Campus h .. ' 0Wev it 510m Convocation M to lhe - .1 . L0 i- lm , cllflllijhisv eb an ,Q Htl, llle Rev if hai., l H3185 guests this year Wm. my Effange of East Ct has also been hostetst rs is the Pembroke lucts various lunttin .g its traditional prnh kends. both with queer mixers and has recent ties for graduate stndert undergraduate mixers li other innovation this yt! Field House, where .e and toes, whileSunll lc. J Under the auspices of S.G.A., but with a less detined program than that of the social organization, is the Pembroke branch of United States National Students Association. N.S.A. sponsors symposia at other col- leges, to which Pembrokers are invited and sometimes 80. On campus, however, N.S.A.,s activity varies from year to year with the metabolism of the coordinator. The charitable activities of the college are channeled through Campus Chest, which sponsors a massive fund drive in November and a gala carnival in April, with Pfocesds 80iHg to Worthy causes. The Convocation Committee seeks out people who can speak to the point Cie. a twenty minute periodj. Lec- WFCIS have been Professors Borts, Feldman and Mac- Laughlill Of the faculty, Dean Pierrel, President Kee- E313 MiSS.Lowney and Mrs. Stapleton. Convocation kianovili thls Year have been Rex Warner, Ben Bagdr- , C Rev. James Robinson, and Alvin C. Eurrch. I ,H- U 1 Nt' M! ' nga' 'tk---f. - ' x Aff? ., , ,, . , Academic Affairs is both the name and the concern of still another S.G.A. committee. Through its good offices freshmen are eased into university life in the Academic Orientation program. This program involves the choice of a book suitable for discussion by freshmen with se- lected members of the faculty during the opening weeks of school. This year the Committee started an eminent- ly successful course counselling program for freshmen. This program also enabled freshmen and upperclass- men to get to know each other, serving as a more effec- tive substitute for Scut Week, now happily defunct. The Committee's other projects help students and faculty to meet outside the classroom situation, through evening 'fFaculty Firesidesn in the professors' homes, through Monday Luncheons with faculty members as speakers and guests of honor and through the new program of dinners with graduate student guests. Academic Out- look articles in the Pembroke Record also help t0 keep the students aware of their faculty. A new departure in S.G.A. committee activity WQS initiated this year with the formation of the Time Out Committee, otherwise known as February Frolicsf' February, ordinarily a most dreary month, was 611' livened by this group's presentation of a folk singing concert, the Pembroke Ice Capades and an Interclass Sing, all of which were notably successful, balancing the scholarly activity of the Academic Affairs Commit' tee. Only time can indicate the lasting effects Of the Pfffgfam, but is to be hoped that it will answer the COH' stant criticism of student apathy which runs ramlmt in these times. Intelligent and well-directed sCh001 Spirit iS far from being a bad thing. Efforts to indUCe it are commendable. ,,z' w . .n va, f gn 4 ll 1 N fy. ..4, r A. 3 mme and the comm : Through its goodnfiim :titty life in the Acadm Oitam involves the thru -:on by freshmen withx, .iuring the Qpeningwah mittee started an eminem. Pwgram for freshmn iteshmen and upperelu rr. serving as an1oreeHeo ions happily defunct.Tu :Ip students and facultylt situation. through evening oiessors' homes, throne nity members asspftkft d AcademiC W' .ugh the new PIOBIHIH .2 guests. ,gg Record als0l1tlPU :ir faculIY' tiviIYW5 fthe Timm Frolict' Committee as srmation 0 5 35 FebrUHfY 1 dreary' m0I1fhf WM :mation of 3 folk . d an Itlfefdm nltttt mtl sit!! '.zp3dC5 an mit, eucc6S5fUl' .. , t C0 . s X:1demlCAHaH W , 0 eiT6Ct50 H! 5 5WCfm I 5 IBM 1 -tin H It will an J-lr EJ ,' I 5 Lf tL'CH'dHeCted It K7 ' O indljff sffvffsi I ,Z ff , , A D, , ,A . , , , ,xuv 5 VV , , . 1 ,, Q ,, , ,X C! , -M A. , L!g r . '- Zizcgzpf in f Cf! U 1 5 e 1 i , lj, 'u '4 t . ...f..... .W-.0 ,.,.f-,eq -.K ,..,.,.., 1 gt i , 1 It I fi t ' t I 1? 4 t1 is M- ,H In I, H I K JI V' if-1 l if l Ax, Editor Layout Editor Assistants Artists: Dividers Block Prints Literary Editor Assistant Photography Editor Assistant Photographer Assistant Advertising Editor Assistants Compiling Editor Assistants Assistant Editors Business Manager BRUN MAH r i L Susan E. Davis Eleanor Lindgren Susan Davis Carol Burchard Carol Norton Elaine Pillar Leslie Hart Linda Sevey Marise Picou Suellen Libby Elizabeth Reeside Judith Seidel Jennifer Williams Judith Van Riper David Van Riper Merry Youle Kibby Carlisle Judy Watman Elaine Pillar Desire Gorham Arline Micklas Deborah Marshall Carol Meyer Diantha Stevens Sue Becker Ruth Laudati Carol Burchard Judith Seidel Emily Park .13 :gg sa- I' R HU ninlz 'nl Els A ff X 1 .. . . if 4 .1 .X K, . g lf: 4' . ?6.' !-B . ga lf., F9 L.. KS , li -fra V. -la .. Q ls 'la 4-W. ,wc A , . A 't'4 if 2- f fQ Demands on the staff of the Pembroke Record require quick reflexes. Though the semi-weekly Record must compete with the BDH, whose reflexes are even quicker, some problems are solved by an intermediate approach to coverage which the present editor calls features in depth. So, for the Record staff, a visiting speaker involves more than the writing of a review. With the review goes an inter- view, and when possible, a brief biogra- phy and commentary on any books the speaker has written. This year marks the Rec0rd's emergence as a paper which truly reflects student opinion. All school newspapers claim to do this, but the Rec0rd's outspoken edi- torials and thorough coverage of campus issues make its claim genuine. As the Rec0rd's daily competitor, the BDH devotes more of its space to strict reporting, with periodic excursions into liberal protest. While the notorious car- toons and the irritable letters from fra- ternity men are more pertinent to Brown, Pembrokers read the Herald faithfully. Pembrokers working for the Herald have actually been published from time to time, but their usual job was that of push- ing copies under the bedroom doors of Pembroke subscribers. However, this Y -v' year's managing board has a member from Pembroke, a sure sign that the BDH is a fixture in the area between Meeting and Bowen Streets. Recently Pembrokers working for the Liber have been elevated to positions more exciting than those of ad-women in the Brown Yearbook's sales drive. Un- like Brun Mael, the Liber gets no subsidy from the administrations, and as a result must sometimes seek new markets out- side of Brown. For the Pembroker, the Liber offers ex- cellent coverage of the year's events in a handsome format. It also offers pictures of the Brown gentleman offguard: drink- ing beer, reading Playboy, and relaxing unkempt. And impressing some female from . . . But the Liber staff also offers the inducement of an entire section de- voted to Pembroke. Even at nine fifty a copy Cwith a free gift of a fraternity al- bumb the Liber has its attractions. The serious literary efforts on campus ap- pear in the Brown Review as a rule, though the Herald Supplement sponsored a contest for short stories this year. Poems, stories, reviews, and critical ar- ticles by students find a much-needed audience in both publications. har entire issue or S r r h THQ gf hh hh prcfc 5 .f , J.: K :ph ahraps the hahml caprhproduclioru all rhrariclp, too, in lhf rr approach to producc Arrhchthc studcrru of iahr which produced J r pr A ..arrrar. hhhuskirr, ahh a hfrp hh dh V583 play ahrcar Dah, Tcnrrcssee hh hh IHIDIOWSE... bp .hal hhgppp Op Sock E h Hllhic ar whip E.hhEl1l.aQpedl The DUDE up 5301131 rc or QS hp the ,W I Wh' cf rf Variety is always the hallmark of student performances at Brown, this season's productions range from Fuenfeovejuna, a play expli- cated in an entire issue of Supplement, to a concert of folk music. There is variety, too, in the four theatrical organizations, each with its own approach to productions. One play a semester comes from the work of the students of English 23, 24, a scheduled course in dramatics which produced John Osbornels 'eLook Back In Anger first semester. Sock and Buskin, with a fifty years, run to its credit, has done, beside the Lope de Vega play already mentioned, Under the Gaslightj' by Augustin Daly, Tennessee Williams, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, and Tonight We Improvisef' by Luigi Pirandello. Brownbrokers, an in- dependent offspur of Sock and Buskin, will resume this year its per- formance of a musical which is student-Written, student-produced, and student-acted. The number of Sock and Buskin 'calumnii' who graduate to professional work in the theater is one of the best testi- m0I1ials to the quality of the organization, which does not shrink from the difficult. N KL sk ye xx of AE:-Q H -Lui ...-.an 1.3 ru gl - ' Il QU 'Q kg'-'V ' V ' ' N 'nil 1 - y- 'Ek' FL b H fi i L ei: .. Q I P' -1 fy s- L 1. L. -. e r fs 6:9 Production W0rkShf riou whose aim is tr ence to student write pare, two plays bj rho sponsored a cc he and recorded. The Workshop is h touching under Pro mentation. Though 1 iereuces, all are mm on with Which ma Production Workshop, now three years old, is an informal organiza- tion Whose aim is to give experience to student actors, and an audi- ence to student Writers. In addition to Yeats' Words on the Window- pane, two plays by students have been produced. The Workshop also sponsored a concert of folk singers which Was a success both live and recorded. The Workshop is basically what its name implies, offering private coaching under Professor Barnhill, and an opportunity for experi- mentation. Though the theatrical organizations have their basic dif- ferences, all are marked by an interest in learning and an emphasis on quality which make them a pleasure for actor and audience alike. -.RW35311 9 C N feilh the glee club ,charmed 1 glide exhorted eGlee Club add jill th of the Bro' Qebaekiug dorgan, their p egblf, 211 ' Dew ons Te 5, Run Nels iulpressive be emeluded Mozart s s of ' d voir e-if eerks for nuxe TS, the eaiaesufitsmembe ' for won eH with muse Directed, exhorted, charmed and cajoled by Erich Kunzel, the Glee Club adds elan to accuracy. With the backing of the Brown Glee Club, brass ensemble, and organ, their premiere performance of Dr- Ron Nelson's Te Deum at the Latin Carol Service was an impressive beginning for a season which included Mozartis C Minor Mass, and con- certs with the glee clubs of Yale and Bowdoin. While works for mixed voices are probably the favorites of its members, the glee club does equal- ly well with music for women's voices, showing 3 both polished technique and pleasure in singing. On -the lighter side, the Chattertocks and the PDQ,s sing both barbershop, and standards in the far-out idiom. Though these songs form the basic repertoires, each group has its individual sound and manner, and its interest in the new. About the time the PDQ's discovered folk music, the Chattertocks took up Rock in Roll in the interest of more entertainment for their large and appre- ciative audiences. i i 411140 As the center of religious life at the university, Man- ning Chapel is the site of services for all Catholic, Prot- estant and Jewish students. In addition, there are speakers whose appeal and interest cross denomina- tional lines, as in the case of Dr. Will Herberg who spoke this year at the chapel under the joint sponsor- ship of UCA and Hillel. Also this year Manning Chapel saw a performance of the Twentieth Century Folk Mass with audience par- ticipation, an unusual and successful venture in the re- ligious life of the campus. In addition to the activities in Manning Chapel, there are many organizations to meet the needs of students of the Catholic, Protestant and Jewish faiths. Reading and discussion groups as well as lectures and fellow- ship hours offer much for the student with such an interest. Nancy A- Simons Associate Execum Secretufy, Unflfn Chrislian Ass0C101 4 l x ,Y fx. -' 'f ,AA B. X . hi ill the 11 SS for tpl, In 3ddiIi0t1, t liltfSit',ii1t all Catholic Jterest cross dem Dr. W und :l saw a performing -lass with audience pg :essful venture in th Manning Chapel, th- et the needs of studs Ll Jewish faiths. Real: as lectures and fell' le student with sutl htte it Cr the joint spun-1 Rev. Charles A. Baldwin Nancy A. Simons Associate Executive Secretary, University Christian Association University Chaplain -s-4.14 tti Q pt etse fy It 1, A 5, vnyi I A .. tx e1 1 f t it i t , ' e se s s new- 4 few e Monsignor Gwghegan - 1 Kkx ,xgg,x fiwixflx 'Vx X x N QR , I . 1 'r-X, , Q xj Canon John Crocker 1 1. 1 k I Q iljjggvn oufzkllyl R A Q if 0 . V Sam Newcomer wk qs Y oi Q fp 6.2 P 0 'Q1 - . 1 As the service organizations of the Brown community, Brown Youth Guidance and the work camp program of the University Christian Association have drawn an impressive number of students into volunteer work. The work camp program involves actual labor: usually the cleaning and painting of a home for a needy family, This day of activity is followed by a meal and a general discussion and visit with the family. On the other hand, the BYG program is oriented towards counselling. BYG takes a particular interest in the Bradley and Chapin hospitals for emotionally disturbed children, and in the adult patients at Howard, the state mental hospital. The members of UCA and BYG who take part in these service programs are not trained psychiatrists or social workers, but they are interested in people. Thus their work usually centers around games, parties, and m0Sl important, companionship, which no institution C2111 provide in quantity. A friendly interest in another hu' man being, while not a cure-all, is usually very much appreciated. It it Of fe eewfl WUI' n EXW GC elllllnt' ' C :' ' 6f,lt lcfllllbegmn 'in llsllleoral 'ls i fhis zemftlils out 0 er elltoil- Thes i rl- 4 1 elim frightening ' 5titisr10l Only the ' .fgdislurbillg dehun i,,3glheSII1ell Of T ,Ll- kncetentfllfilll' The I f3l0llllffe Pfactical 3 izllhe interest that ll im, and it is as ill :le people they hell .14l:IllSlS usuallll on gil not knowing tht jgafeal, illld spevii lrsthand, have hz to realize how much i l,: ,.,,. , vi?-it .- I , un. wht. '..' vs 4 ,QQ 1.2 Xb-Ere 5 -at - 1311--2 . ef' . 1 'l , W. .. x lv. 'I iss lad - -.Fx . .N , .f . 1 , 3 ' 'l kiifb x of the Brown comm' the work camp prog. ssociation have drau. nts into volunteeru mlves actual labor: ut home for a ueedyfti j by a meal andttfif amjly, On the othert IL ted towards county rest the Bladlelg nally disturbtd CM -Ioward, the Sttll 1 ti 'G who lfikepmmi iarisv of lb Thusl ned psych fu ai PCOPR' t arties, ul my ipstitllllll 5 agothffl Y I H135 ill. is games! P 'hich H0 'nterest in ugllally ve The actual work of these organizations is not always pleasant, Experience may actually be discouraging, For the beginner, it can be a genuine shock. The smell of institutional disinfectant is a smell the volunteer never gets out of his system, even when he becomes feusedv to it. The sensitive and the uninitiated usually find it as frightening as the vacant faces of the patients, for it is not only the smell of necessary cleanliness, but of a disturbing dehurnanization, and is not half as wel- come as the smell of Tide and Spic and Span in a Provi- dence tenement. The latter is the sign of kindly interest, the former, practical as it is, is not. It is the interest that is important to the service organi- zations, and it is as important to their members as it is to the people they help. After all, the malaise of college students is usually one of the spirit. The cliche of a man's not knowing the true advantage of his situation has a real, and special meaning for those who have seen firsthand, have had a success of some degree, and who realize how much more needs to be done. f ,.., s W ., , A .. . ...W ,... A Vt, , - .A ,, , A X Q:,., , A .5 we , . , ,.,, -I X, a.,,4vA, ., ,,,,k,',f .- t 1 530 ' 1 :.,, . f awfff ' ' if Elf ,,?'Zi3zj,l .: e e ': SQ xwz..s:+11sfs qv. Q' sw A-fH'f ,,ff A.- .,.. . e.aaf.,g,, V , A. N ' - - . ,, 4. f f - , ' ws . V, M w I., W,,,,v-.MN-f-Y V. , A ., - 'W' , ' ,,-- W., M K ., - L, , 'A x- . . ,rva ,. L ., W . --gi, 'F - .. ,, . ., . ' ' -, ...,,, I 1 K In W! f 'vt-i-'Haunt W-t , K '- ' ' ' . ,'l' ',' A-46' CQ, ff V T' . :'i4f.'g3?'f mf' gina, Z 1, t. ,, , ,, I,--1 A af 'vs st ig, -5, dy. filfi 4 lnenent, and JS! who i .: ' Dun me n fiance if s autumn, lf BTOWH an me Cries 1istiI1 I inlfltsa I .ilmllll to inliwsimply nr V t'onswh05e CO ' giiln id Cam Club, I DW inames Cfossed 0 Amt' . ' and ilmnlilullons diet fine. . lm H1051 pm, this -nl immediate to the irneislhtmm for lnifnha C0mmmeel Union whose fat mins at Brown COHV irrinlist Discussion G1 pimpin Davis who Sl fefommunist PW- I mints who supported ianpnign in Massac ngnl Operation Abc mn to Ole Miss amd Ifenl petition are oth im of immediate com izllmm Duke is one ilncivil rights crisis. file are also perm ll venerable institutic Q-Dlllill parties. Organi ill Student Pe all HCC the N .5 5 IlS C0lllliCf.m,0lutic nu mailboxes il Studenrg 3 interested in -Sent nh Hfguj aUlCHdeg. i mdfllt cor Ullayin Nd gh0SI at .AMS have als 0 giw Q, Q l l Students at Brown and Pembroke can make adequate rebuttal to the cries of apathetic', and uhypercau- tiougt' simply by listing the names of the political or- ganizations whose constitutions have been approved by SGA and Cam Club. It is true that the list would have many names crossed out, but also many names added. Organizations die, and others spring up to take their place. For the most part, this flux indicates a shift to matters most immediate to the students and the world at large. Gone is the Forum for Civil Liberties and the Fair Play For Cuba Committee, not to mention the Free-Think- ers, Union whose favorite target was the saying of prayers at Brown convocations. To replace these, the Socialist Discussion Group has appeared, sponsoring Benjamin Davis who spoke on his reasons for joining the Communist party. There was also a committee of students who supported Hughes in his ill-fated senator- ial campaign in Massachusetts. A discussion and show- ing of 0peration Abolition, telegrams to Kennedy, letters to Ole Miss and James Meredith, and the ever- present petition are other signs of political interest in areas of immediate concern. An exchange with a stu- dent from Duke is one result of the prevailing interest in the civil rights crisis. There are also permanent organizations, supporting such venerable institutions as the Democratic and Re- Publican parties. Organizations of protest also continue with the Student Peace Union, the Northern Students' Movement, and the N.A.A.C.P. The far right presses for its counter-revolution with the Young Conserva- tives, who fill mailboxes with questionaires. This may Suggest that students at Brown and Pembroke are more interested in arguing among themselves than in manning the barricades, but the opposite is true. At- tendance at student conferences runs high, with the SPU Playing host at their own conference this year. Students have also given active support to political Campaigm, volunteering for Governor Chaffee of Rh0de Island. .ff z 3 'alibi ilf'.a.,f 'N' . F' is 7 X There is a rumor in perpetual circulation among the members of the junior class that Pembroke is the only women's college on the eastern seaboard that has three years of compulsory gym in its program. This rumor seems to have its greatest currency among those who have not been too conscientious about their posture Of their volleyball. Still, true or not, the story has a point: the department of physical education believes that ex- ercise is good for everybody. All the exercise you can take. And when you think of the quantities of potatoes, cauliflower in cream sauce, and race track rolls that appear on the weekly menu, the reasoning is sound. Looking at the matter from a more positive angle, the gym department offers almost every sport that will arouse interest. Many of them are on a club basis for those who are especially enthusiastic. For the athlete, there is plenty to do. An hour of badminton clears away a lot of fog. 5 i if ,gr 1 1. ,av 1,0 ,fav 44' F.e ,,cff', V , K' ,rfb 0 Ill! ,. 1 I f,, ar ,v', vm-i,t y f 9 5 1 , ,ef a',.? 4' , Wm-V, f M ,',l g1' ll . , Q, , ,, no , S49 '65, I , W V ' rittcdf' ,, 977 , , fer, 44, 1 J14!l'9 b fx 4 I t 4 . I t X , J ee 1 V ', Z ,ff Now there are pe hm and frolic. T their resemblance not too sure abo are others who an dlslgl- They are bloomers either. 8911165 When Thi 0Pi11ions about th. ltd hloomers hat Ual I. that lim alilb Qifqlla rn scabqard than IIS program. may C no MY I- til? Story I Dug abc ' the e the quantities Qfm.. and fa Xercise ts. Ce track lttii . the feagonin . KISS: L1 more positive mi DSI Y m are on a club husiastic, For the E.,- Of badminton clean i , . , Now there are people who like neither good health nor fun and frolic. Their special cachet is not founded on their resemblance to Swedish track stars, and they are not too sure about those tunics and bloomers. There are others who are stumblebums, either by nature or by design. They are not too sure about those tunics and bloomers either. Finally, there are those who play games When They Want To. They have very strong opinions about those tunics and bloomers. Those tunics and bloomers have often figured in ceremonial pyres in e i i - .. if I -, 1 t the front yard of Andrews. Still, Recalcitrants, gym is one-two-three-stick-in-your- pelvis good for you. One hour of physical activity burns up a serving of cauliflower in cream sauce. Two hours a week for three years and you can surely tread water long enough to graduate. Discounting the supplicating hand that is rapidly sinking into eight feet of chlori- nated water-for somebody always has her senior life- saving and will rescue-most people get safely out of the locker room and down the hill. UU IJPSUZ 7 OU P i' 3 EER X Xl? rx! 'lf wx: -7- --.Mm ff' N-xi. S X' fu 'X' 4K' gefiisp- 2? ls, w Q x P A -A i 4,14 -V in Q1 5' '7 ' frfaiqfl , , ' ' '. ' F f5.1':a?l5'f 1 '- '- .- 1 ' - W I . A. l .. ' ,... . . f ? V: -91 , ., f n 3 ' K . 115.4-1,1 X I , A . K+ ' . I , 54 , L 0 ' : f . l :gn ,hy ' ,-'HX --Hit-Sw ' 3 Well-infiltrated by Pinkerton men, the crowds at Brown are as seasonal as the flocks of birds or the schools of herring. But man is the most social of all animals, and when he is not in a crowd, he is usually in a group of two or more. Time and again we profess seri- ous intentions, saying that we didn't come here to socialize. This university olfers no courses in water skiing. And we are not the devil-may-care students of the Romberg operettas, the kind that never set foot in a class- room. No. We are real, we are earnest, we are going to lick the Russians. Sociologists: we are the Straight-Faced Generation. nrilrrated by lhff crowds at 5011211 as the : schools of fe lhf most social FS. and when he rd. he is or more. Ind again we proiesi irentions, saying thi rcome here to son iniversity offers non: er skiing. And we in evil-mayfare sfndenn imberg operettas, thai. ever set foot in an NO, We are reall? , we are g0iH3t0m 15, Sociologistsz Hifi ri Qht-Faced Generaliffl I Em the Z. ' 'lo need mugglhhe . I 7' f jfi'. f ,J l 5' P 1 '. 1 - . fsliff' '6' 1 V' 4 page -3 . , .fl ' fl , r .- I Wien' cf l A ,.mvg1' ' .17 1' IW: - ,Uflhe great sourw is al Brown. The UI gprovlding H miller holding a reeCPtl0l .olog classes to Dr- I l hal and gloves a he freshmen go lea on han cl, but t blows the whistle -2 girls wi th circle pi ous people Ph meet the o work I US- hri 'ws poo Illled l . nr Land What comes .U 11 W Under. Is it, h Cam Club h B05 R S a h lI11Four the hols ask the Il ye N hw mel. MO, Pflnbrol ,-3 .A ,ln Li 1 I One of the great sources of security is knowing some- one at Brown. The university sanctions this comfort by providing a mixer with the Brown freshmen, and bb' holding a reception, ostensibly to introduce the incoming classes to Dr. Keeney. With hat and gloves and a dress that is suitable for teas, the freshmen go down to Power Street. There is no tea on hand, but there is plenty of company. No- bodl' blows the whistle, but the great face-off begins. Thus girls with circle pins meet boys with button-down COHHIS. Serious people find other serious people. Less Sefious people meet their counterparts. Thatis how it's Supposed to work. In reality, this doesn't always hap- Pell, mutu bo and what comes of mixing is a great deal of Fil Wonder. Is it, for instance, possible that the thi' in the Cam Club hat is a freshman after all? That OY Who needs a haircut really has a private line :ISI Sluggonheim Foundation? Theyve ebboys ask themselves is not to the point, here. CCH met. More important, some of them will b . e telephonlllg Pembroke soon. K t I I V ,ig ti' Xt' is i fi ' 7 I gy :,, 'fi , ittti tho In is hatches hysicaliy hut me teir cout tl FHB G's acti le activities IH hemselves as th there are a 10 gives them te Fresltntell afe ti and typewriters sn Pt0vidCIlCe them 7 I sts hem with I lllll CI defecti ,uekily the inte I stty cu se of s fthey ind an lt more fttse on teetin itttil th lteh ifteshin twilh th like a X Ci at aetitih l' E iflitttltt I0 Hn still Q Freshmen are the most serious people on a very serious campus. With dictionaries and typewriters, and an orderly Wardrobe from the College Shop, they converge on Providence, take one last grim meal with their parents, and then organize themselves as they will never be organized again. There are a lot of things here to help the freshmen get organized. The university gives them tests with the aim of finding out what they can do. The college provides them with Junior Counsellors to answer their questions. The health service marches them down to Andrews House and to the infirmary to see if they are physically defective. Luckily the interest is mutual. Freshmen are curious and enthusiastic, and tolerant -but mostly curious. After they have investigated Pembroke and thought about their course of study, they go down to Waterman Street to see what is going on. Af FHBG's activities night freshmen have a special chance to look into some of the activities mentioned in the catalogues, to meet people, and to wander alone. If they find an activity they like, they join, and feel a little more entrenched. But it is more like a freshman to stand back for a minute and consider things. Faunce House OH activities night, the course announcement for the coming year, the meeting With the faculty advisor, all have something of a bazaar in their makeup. Until the invention of the twenty-seven hour day, there remains too much to do, and foo much to choose from. For every freshman whO lumps in head-first, there IS a ffCShman still sorting experiences and weighing alt6r11HfiVCS- - 57 '--igx'..,i -Y 'NI . Q l , 1 5 A1 ' 1 1' i '12-6-P-3 CoiTee dates are an 1nst1tut1on here There IS also the so called study date a fut1le busmess as far as the studylng 1S concerned It usually turns 1nto a coifee date but the partles lnvolved l1ke to cherlsh the1r 1l1us1ons of 1ndustry There IS a thlrd kmd of date Wh1Ch beglns w1th a chance meetlng moves 1nto a long conversat1on and ends w1th coffee There 1S no tellrng how many thousands of gallons of coffee most of It bad have stoked the f1res of fr1endsh1p though Brown trad1t1onally clarms that Pembroke 1S good because coffee IS cheap and that leaves more money for Wellesley on Saturdav nlght As a matter of fact Brown dr1nks coffee Wlth Pembroke SIX days a week On Saturday Pembroke dr1nks Gansettvuth Brown Thatsthat A recent change 1n the tradltronal pattern of bad ham burgers and worse coffee IS the off campus apartment a development that has many advantages over the comfy publ1c lounges of the un1vers1ty The apartments belong to the men who cook clean and pay the bllls w1th starthng eiT1c1ency However the weekends br1ng ashes on the rug rmgs on the table tops and d1ShCS 1n the srnk Also com pany The apartment dweller who drops 1nto Wrlston Quad on Saturday n1ght IS met by a dozen people who want to thank hlm for hlS hosprtahty A good party A great party Whv 1sn t he there'7 Party he says Partyv l ,,4 T14 ,. :Liz , X ', rf.. . V, ,V wx Vyfyrz N I , x .. X, , X x 1,1 ' A' x ,135 1 Q' V V .5 V .-.' mmwrpqVW Qzumlijl 13112 fn, 'Q ,, K,-:Z ' .- ff prow, n J'-f1 f4':' N J' 'M' G. K 5' hid, jgiia 6 fl' 14 11' X' R fl H fb, if 'f ' ' ' ll J 1 ' I J 5 I I I I Ii I It 'XIII I III I 'I . 'I I I I - I II II-I' I II ,' Ir-'I I I I IMI 1I'.I II I I I I II I I I I I I I , 1, 9 I'I?I' I IJII 'I I I I I I I I I I Q I I I , I Q . Q' YW .f , M5121 ' Y X- H Q0 'Qs L l rf H -I I . 'rv- x- Pl . jf I l 5 Ll W f-5 i f? J 2 I. l ' M-v' FE Brown on Saturday night is a cross between a Playboy club and the Cavalry Stampede. There is a scant handful of Brown men who offer classical music and hors d'oeuvres in their rooms, but the string quartet is usually muilled by the roar of the twist band and the clatter of beer cans drop- ping into the moat. On Saturday night, the Brown Gentleman comes out of hiding. Having discarded the tattered sweaters and dunga- rees of the weekday, the Gentleman is for real: rep-striped, buttoned-down, creased, shaved, and polished. There he stands, until the stroke of one-thirty. Or sooner, if he gets carried away, but for most of the night he is intact, and with all his props: the glass, the cigarette, and the appropri- ate attire. The Saturday night crowd is mixed. Gentlemen, stags in undershirts, high school sweethearts, imports of all degrees, and unattached souls from Aimee S. McPherson Junior College. Guests from the jug. People that have never been seen before and will never be seen again, all of them crowd- ing the dance lloor and the bar. The stags wander aimlessly, the gentlemen light cigarettes, the beer cans fall into the rnoat. What about it? Well, not that many people play Do You Know, and practically nobody goes to Lauderdale anymore. Brown smashed its last piano three years ago. No, people think of going to Europe and cram for graduate records and worry about getting drafted-on Monday, Tuesday Wednesday, Thursday, and until noon on Friday. Sunday 7 they rest. 5 3 MJ A Y? - X. . , f ., K, vlgzvqxw. 1 fx x. ,I C .g ? M954 1 'ff I I l ' h fy 7 , I - Z ' s 'N y A jp in 'H-.Q fl?f43,,3'2 5 N - I 4 ' , ,5.,,,g l 4 f44 F 3'.'ffNM K ' l lin-ffvJS?l!S2 'M xi I E w , xl I I V . ,i, 5 F I 1 ,, I L1 ' Q ' i i 5 li 1 N V pq I I , i l 4. i , L! i W l 4 , 1 'Z '-ii L ,.. Q A . fi ' . -N .' '5'.,, L 4 1 . ff -M' . L.-1 gi Lf E a 2,1 ff :fry .L Q I 1 n fx Elf ?? s ,aa R' K h . . Qijg , . . r, .M--.,.., my .. xl it E ' V .. Q ! ' 1 .. . sv Avi sf f , ' i .wk A -A ' ex 1 v. Father-Daughter Weekend brings fathers, and occasional stubborn mothers, to the campus to see how things are at the College of Daughter,s Choice. Visits to classes, perfect New England autumn weather, and a round of entertainment made a good impression this year, as always. Building around a Roaring Twenties theme, P.S.O. provided a dance, banquet, picnic lunch, and seats at the Brown-Dartmouth football game. At the last event, the rumors about Brown's team were proved absolutely true, but with raccoon coats, chrysanthe- mums, blue skies, and the prospect of more fun, no spirits were dampened by the loss. Half? K X F 1963 WINTER QUEEN 5usAN HUMPHREYS Winter Weekend does not pretend to be anything like the Winter Carnival, ,though if there is snow there will be Snow sculpture. Winter Weekend's raison ,fezre is the final exams for the first se- mester, and because of lingering fatigue, feelings of mental weariness, and indif- ferent weather, the celebrations pale be- side their spring counterparts. Which is not to say that they arenit celebrations all the same. Some familiar faces are gone. There are empty places on the couches in the lounge. But the survivors give thanks in the Biltmore on Friday and in the quads on Saturday, with keg beer, or a discrete glass of sherry. Sun- day is devoted to open-open houses, at which time the casual visitor sees how orderly or disorderly her date is in his housekeeping. It is also a time for quiet music and quiet talk. Bridge if there's a fourth. And then the long walk home across the ice. 1 E 4- xg Ilililllilll i 2 5,53 Mother-Daughter Weekend marks the coming of Spring in a quieter way, with luncheon and banquet, fashion show, and the traditional May pageant at the Field House. This year's theme was Shakespearean, As You Like It. fea- turing a lecture by Professor Blistein of the English depart- ment. ln keeping with the theme, the weekend was one of casual gaiety and graciousness. Even gray Providence put out appropriate flowers and other signs of Spring to go with new clothes and to add a little more to what is always a favorite weekend. 1963 MAY SUSAN BRA .XA 7. Y. -N.. V'-an-. 9 Q-sk , ' .. . ..,gNE'.-E N, . v,. .,- -2:-Hr-.-1' www , - .e .UM -4...q-A., ' ,ILL-.fn 7 W, N. . .g!m,N- Q' ' ' ff,-. K ' v,-L, 1963 MAY QUEEN SUSAN BRATLEY 373 fn fx A-K ull! wand Pi 1 hh L i' gh i i h h ll ff RY Vi ei I .if ,i hd hhiii y put0Ua ' dh' hi P New on the Program hiianinfomialmgf 'ihe Worst Thillg id ihthers had to tell Ill ihch administered heh get-together, S mperation with the hhioned when it tu hdy Neal, and Mrs hhlo casseroles. Fo hid Coconut cake hilfhthe moth CI Brown Unive mufhmide, who e hh Ugg i ICSC for com Jmelllall A fizhlab i 'MHP fm fUII1nSal . C 1 1. 0WBeanS 0, Whig H 'U' mach i i New on the program this year at Mother-Daughter Weekend was an informal program of off-the-cuff talks by the mothers: The Worst Thing I Did When I Was Your Agef' The Mothers had to tell the absolute Worst, or face a mock court which administered appropriate penalties. Following this lively get-together, SGA sponsored a pot-luck supper in cooperation with the dining hall staff. Much mirth was occasioned when it turned out that Mrs. Law, Mrs. O'Hare, Judy Neal, and Mrs. Feeney had all brought scalloped potato casseroles. Following this gay affair, Dean Pierell served coconut cake to the delighted guests, and offered a prize to the mother with the most novel hat. The prize, a set of Brown University sheets, was awarded to Mrs. Arthur Reeside, who exclaimed My goodness, what a thrill! V11 use these for company! Other prizes were awarded to Mrs. Alfred Bornemann, for being the smallest mother at the weekend. After a gala bus trip to the Outlet, the guests had a box lunch of Autumn Salad, petit hard rolls, Creole meat pifb and Yellow Beans O'Hare in the gym, where the faculty and students Put on a thrilling exhibition of exercises. It was a Perfect ending to a charming weekend. Justly advertised as the greatest show on earth, Spring Weekend is the last C exams, it sometimes proves to have been the last chance. Period. But this UH l people that think they ought to enjoy it-vent their spleen as never before, body has run for the rock'n roll band and the keg beer, and the citizens Of dence have run for the law. Thus, no more Seekonk, and the three thou enthusiastic fans of the Brown crew have been shut up in Aldrich-Dexter, the Isley Brothers and other surrogates. Still, people that enjoy the Weeken bly as never again. hanC6 for students to exhaust the pleasure-loving instinct before Hnal exams. After hf1PPY . . . . - dllfife thought comes from hindsight. Before it is all over, the entire undcrgfa Provi d and p0SSl t i t I i 1 is the last chtitt nd After iiiti al exams. od. But this unhappy entire ditif the citizens three th i the etiteri Aldrich-D toy the eforet is never b undergia oi Pioii -52 4,4 lg! ,gy ll-:ll 7- -Z' 'QA L-If I-if 4. 4 E1 'WU Fit, Sunday morning is always the same, regardless of the weekend. The same longing for cold Water, the same fumbling for a bent cigarette. The only difference is the appearance and long disappearance of the Times, once a fixture in the empty corridors. There is still the long procession to Liggettls, elbows on the counter, double orange juice, hot tea, Alka-Seltzer. And constant as the laws of gravity, there is last Week's Work back at the dorm. .. , mn ' -, V as . K., 'si' , . 5 4 R1 A 4' wma ll f ZA 1 , Y m7f-,M fre' wwf' AV ' 'Af ' 25' .a W ftt+e++ s , 'gr Wi 'j1 H! 'M ,JP 4'7 G,, ,M , if r ' L ,iv 5: '. ' 'Q bf 2 'lei Qraltlation flffiws both MCC al Ollfes Sometin u Km four years. ll --e brothers and sister igmndparentst and 1 tairterest in the wil Qtmmaly, after the teas -l the struggles with rrtarages to get safe fflgll the Van Wiekle alll. For the sentir fl that hate to pack. i 2 Some are appreher 'mit A few take 3lll.Bl1l for Cgnc ill Pembroke College fm I' 4 1 5555'- f t A. 72 1 A ,ex iam I lftnd Protldence R will flnis as whi H011 volume two l Mk xr l Graduation draws both parents to Provi- dence at once, sometimes for the first time in four years. With the parents come brothers and sisters, aunts and un- cles, grandparents, and anyone else that has an interest in the ceremonies. Eventually, after the teas, the receptions, and the struggles with the trunks, the class manages to get safely into line and through the Van Wickle gates with A.B. or Sc.B. For the sentimental and for those that hate to pack, it is a bad busi- ness. Some are apprehensive, some are optimistic. A few take their diplomas and run. But for all concerned, it is the end of Pembroke College, Brown Uni- versity, and Providence Rhode Island, a time to write finis as whim dictates and to start on volume two. B l 5 I , i S71 . if I gi 2 I . , , - fri? Y, 1 , - ' ' LE: , ,V 4 , f A N, bind . Q V 4 ig' , - '5 5 ,ff V in SK Y kim: M y ' , ,.ff.' in ,. X X, 'Q , ,N ,V f Q ' i we 2 1 f ' 'Q fi f' f A 3 9 ' if f vz. M13 ' . ' 1' A fd 7 H ,Wy , X. x 2 '-fi- ' 15-.. , , ,. 3512 ,f ' I - A A mfr--1 ' F f c , ' 1 N Q ga l 1 - -- . ' - f f eg QQ! J f,Q!127,lN5'WQ fy ing f,fN44ws-xx awwzwwk Q, f Q - ' , ' ' x fix Sgw iv w 95' W1 Q' I as-af ff f A e-.mg .. Qwig ff V ' f-'-- 2 5 5 HL .xfkilrkxirx f S I x ,, . MM, ,A g, ,, f f Q-.X ,A ,ex ,f ,f1.-,.,4y.,A V, . ,, V V .AQ , gf, . .ski -fr --V, ,- V V, , , , , ,, gJIf5 E11 C3 J 12 F3 X x -L C . ' 1 NR- A 6'BBP0ld1J1?J9' f 1? ' F 1 W3 K ' LL 4, 'N QQ srmton cw-rss HCDNCRARIES Professors have their share in turning people into English majors or Physicists. Sometimes the influence is negative, but more often it is entirely the opposite, The oflice is crowded, and the sherry hour is packed. The usual praise is He knows eve1y- thing. That, and the ability to say things well, commands admiration. Finally, per- sonal factors enter in, and lecturing, or leading a discussion becomes more than a matter of competence. Seniors recog- nize this When they chose class honor- aries. One is invariably a professorg often two, as now. Professor Rohr lectures in Alumnae Hall, testimony to the popularity of his courses. Though oratory is no part of his method, the place is suited to theupresence and the manner that draw such attention from so many. Backs are stiff with con- centration, chins on hands, eyes front, as the lecture marches ahead, thoroughly de- veloped and straight to the point. Aw--.....,,,,. stance. Senioig CX' -Wil' H professoigoiif :res in Alumnae Hh Fularity of his couises To part oi his meihoi. M83 A5 i N153 Uh '-I in s hw' s ' -LHIIQI-Q philip?- .AHQ3 ii ' V, ' Hfsaiiiiyi fha , L Opp051iE,T. the phd N my ilihi .s He knows W 1: ability to my my , , . ig gmiration, pm, ph , ieCil1I'mg45 s.,- H becomes more thi NCBI . CUOSQ class hggp to the presence iii draw such atienhz ks are stiii with coil hands, eyes iroiih 4' A x 1 -hs ,ngggum 'Vining ' 'I-hun-q -N.. -I N. ,M- -,,, I l 1 ahead, thorougilildi' iothepoint. . 5 Ii ', fi I Y i i 5 t i i i I A' if f 1 In smaller quarters, Professor McLaughlin's classes follow the same pattern. Though a well-placed anecdote draws laughter, the approach as another theory is demolished with a and the students are no less in earnest. Eyes front again, barrage of facts, quotations, and references to outside r g. eadin At the mention of outside reading, a chair creaks. Someone is trying to become invisible. There are courses Where guilt-feelings bother no one, but not here. Perfection is expected by both men. And admiration presses their students to try for it. II I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 1 . I I I I I I I I I I .lw Ir IX, .I I In 'I II I. I ' MARILEE VAILE ACKLEY If Biology I. I I'. I I 'Ii !. If I 1 I II I II ,I , Y -- V ...Wd -. ..,, .-n,YA,Y W H M I I JEAN AMATNEEK I I Anthropology I SUSAN ALDRICH Political Science ,Z ARLENE DREAM ARNOLD JANE ENGLISH AUSTIN Philosophy Latin .I 010 sf Q 5. ' Li' MARY Chemist 'l'l K.. 3 K L ! ,, X 1 f .A ff EQ V g v. 413 -P pn AUSTIN 3 i MARY JANE BAKER Chemistry Sc.B. JOAN W Psyf-'ll0l0gy ADSWORTH BARRY HELEN CAROLE BAROWAY English Literature F I u , x ,, A 2 CHARLENE JOEL BECKER Classics Q 1 I Q 1 E SUZANNE WALTER BASSANI CMYS-D English Literature 'qw I I I I I 'I I 'I II II I II I is -I 'I QII i, I II II I1 I I I I A I I - I FREDDA RUTH BLOOM English Literature I , 3 I I I I I I : I I f 4 -e - I-,Y M kI-fv ,- I MICHELLE CLARA MARTHE BEER Physics ETARAE BLATT German e yi - If I9 Q I I 2 I ' f . I ' Q 1 III MARIE BOR1' i1fII'IIIaIScience ij 1 . I I, rn. 1, SUSAN ELIZABETH BRATLEY JUDITH PHYLLIS BRICK Art American Civilization i , I ' I I 9 Tom MARIE BORNEMANN Political Science I5 ge ii LINDA JANE BRODY Biology ,AJ A 'C SHIRLEY ANN BROTHERS American Civilization CAROL ANN BURCHARD English Literature , A A A R. VICTORIA BUCHANAN History I A L . ELAINE BUTLER ELIZABETH HATT CAMPBELL Classics Art , , X , X' . '1 HLARY ANNA CA Amory ,.,..f-..,,,,N A v V MARY ANNA CAMPBELL History MARY ELIZABETH CARLISLE French and English Literature R x I xt' A EHATT CAMPBiu MABEL LEE-PO CHENG Physics Sc.B. GAIL BARBARA CASLOWITZ Political Science fag, SANDRA KOFFLER CHERNICK Psychology NANCY ANNE CLAYSON Art MARILYN WALKER CLOSSON German S. RUTH COHEN ANN STACY COLES Economics American Civilization .3 MARTHA WISE CRAFT CMH Music 1 3 I 1 v FRY MARGLHQRI' i iiiffravzd French Lit. 3 IR CLOSSON Irs? QE CRAFT 0 SARAH SCOVILL CURTISS American Literature :rx s iii SUSAN ELIZABETH DAVIS American and Russian Literature MARY MARGUERITE CRAIG English and French Literature ANNE CATHERINE DONNELLY English Literature KAREN STEERS EBBITT English Literature Y 1 4 ELEANOR JEAN EBERS Psychology ELAINE ALICE EISEMAN N History JUDITH ECKERSON Political Science SUSAN FOSTER EVANS English Literature IKERSON 'we International Relations TER EVANS azure VIRGINIA WALKER FAIRCHILD Anthropology SUSAN ROCKWOOD FAIRCHILD MARGARET JANICE FERNALD Mathematics f F'3Q3l, - V , L A, , . , I I rkftpl ' I ' , I I 1 I I V JOANNA ALICE FINK Classzcs MYRA KAY FINDER SUSAN HENRY FORNEY Biology A rnerican Literature LINDA RICHARDSON FOSTER Mathematics NANCY MORGAN FRAZIER International Relations SIRI 5 1:sffenc3UARr IIBEIIE FREUND 7zfvr1sSrudies 4 LICE PM BABETTE FREUND ELLEN NORA GASKELL Religious Studies Mathematics BARBAR Political sinifUART GEORGE KATHARINE MARGARET GAUTHIER English Expression BARBARA LOUISE GILBERT History j t MARGERY RUSSEL GODDARD English Literature 1 , A lx , ., W ,Y,Y. Y,Af, , W'-T1 ,f.,,. ,,,: V lncl U M, ,,.-v zwfvlrwmt-?W-'fra''M' I F ,.,.V I . 1.3 I :lm ,Q 4 5 BQ., , I , 1, , QW, X f W , ix-1.1 , A -- '1 'Z I I 1: - . .fgS.g.,.,, XX A b A -',- 11:1 R! , , V, g -. If .V V, I, , ,,, Q.1V , ., . V 5 ,'. Sociology A I VA ..., -E: ' If A , , RDON MARGARET ANNE GORDON MARJOIQIE NANCY G0 Applied Mathematics Sc.B. English Literature 9 k E as. '- ROBERTA ELL Spanish 'I ROBERTA ELLEN GOULD Spanish fs- ? V , I 02' 5 KAREN J. GREENE Biology ' LINDA JEAN GROTTO Russian Language and Lzterature V DEN ISE ELODIE GUERIN Sociology 2 W1, , 'QV K i ELIZABETH HAMMATT English Literature ii . . K' TIHAQKENBUR JUDITH ANN HARRIS lzation G S0Ci0l08y Q u HHARLOW I USS LI Arr E ALICE HART MARYE GAIL HARRISON American Literature ANNE HAYES IISYILN? HAYDEN Political Science syc 0 ogy History V GWEN EDETHA HIXSON MTHARINE AI DOROTHY CLARE HENRY English Literature mv- V. --Y., ...K . N I BA FWIEEQARA THELMA HOFFMAN BARBARA GAIL HORVITZ Psychology SUSAN ELIZABETH HUMPHRE Mathematics YS Political Science ' s N 1 CAR0 Q sDar1isIINE ANN ABETH KATHARINE ALISON JACOBS Political Science SARQLE ANN JONES Pamsh QNX LUCY DIGGS JALESKI CMrs.J PENELOPE ADAMS JOHNSON History A merican Literature SALLY JORDAN Economics SALLY ANN JURGENSEN Psychology NANCY MORRIS KAPSTEIN CMrs.D International Relations JUDITH ANN KARCH Economics ANN EL Political S X51 505 TIDABA ANNE STERLING KASSON H. ET , li0S0phyand 5 1 Ng English Literature 5 KARCH ANN ELIZABETH KIDDER Political Science ANNE T KOSTELA AL , N Philo ETZ CMISJ International Relations Soph , y and English Literature ID ABACK MA BROOKE KRUGER ,V ' ' JJ! LYNN ELAINE KURLANCHEEK History HANNAH LACY NANCY LGU LAHART I 1 5 English Literature Aff ANNE GOLDWATER LANDIS fMrs.D French LESLIE ANN LEOPOLD Mathematics MARGARET NOYES LANG French VARY EL MA H I-IHART CHRISTINE MacGILLIS MARY ELEANOR LINDGREN Art American Literature MARILYN DeSANO MANERA History HANNAH LEWIS History PHILLIS JOAN MARSTELLER English Expression 'irfli' 1 1 1,1 l'l 1 1 E 4 1 L1 1l I 1 1 4 9 l 1 Q W 1 A. 1 l ELIZABETH ALLEN MARTIN . Human Biology 1 1 l ll' I 11 1 1 I 111 1 1 1.' I ' 1 1 I I I Q V 3 K 1 5 l i 1 ..', N 1 ' -iv., A V VJ ' MARTHA JEAN MCCAULEY Psychology 1 I 5 MARY ELLEN MCCABE History ARLINE MARG1 lhzdzenzatics ul ! A 1 1 MAUREEN MCFADDEN A nthropology MARILYN ANN MCQUADE History ARLINE MARGARET MICKLAS CYNTHIA SOMMERFIELD MILLER Mathematics Religious Studies DOROTHY MITCHELL Art 1 MARY ROBERTA MOSELY International Relations CAROLYN JEAN MURPHY A stronomy 11.21301 QS l J X BEVERLY IRENE NANES Economics SARAH Religiou JUDITH ANNE NEAL BARBARA EDITH NELSON History English Literature I 1 i 5 RUTH GRETCHEN NELSON Philosophy r V x WOL FR w 1 '-:Ffh . SARAH BEEDE NEWTON Religious Studies JITH NELSON re C253 FRANCES NORTON ON ELIZABETH LOUISE NOWLIN I NELS CHEN Russian Studies 'WW Kwai CYNTHIA PAGE NUGENT Classics KAREN MARIE NUGENT Philosophy SHARON ANN O,DONNELL History FRANCES MESSER OLAN English Literature i i i t SUSAN CARPENTER OLSON CMrs.j CAROLYN HORBERT Classics PALUMBO CMrs.J English Literature 7 1 fj- it il' 1 Q ' f' I V . lk Q I. -L4.L.g3, 33,351 EMILY SHEPA Wfivan Literal SER OLAN i ELIZABETH HINKLEY LUCIA ANNE PERROTTI PER ' CESEPE CMrs.J Sociology English Literature A Q it EMILY SHEPARD PARK American Literature t i CAROL ELAINE PIERONI American Civilizati0l1 5 MARISE ANN PICOU Art I 1 S 2 ELAINE PATTERSON PILLER American Civilization Qfglish Literature JANICE SHEFTEL PLOTKIN CMrs.D American Civilization E Q NEDDA MILLER POLACK Mathematics MARY MATHEWSON PITTMAN fMrs.D American Literature MARION BRYANT POST Political Science lm ZQIWZJEANNE HEWSON Irs.J 'ature MYRTLE IDELLA POWERS JANET BROWN PRESS qMfS.3 Religious Studies English Lzterature JOANNA ELIZABETH RAPF C omparatzve Literature Hwwua Phf10s0phyJEANNE REAUGH MARION REILLY 'EST ANN International Relations gYANTP :CE JUDITH ISABEL RICE International Relations I we I J , MARLENE ANN RICHTER Applied Mathematics Sc.B. E JOYCE LORETTA RICHARDSON JACQUELINE PATRICIA RIL American Civilization Biology exit S. RC 'tsophl 5 .TRW R til RENEE S. ROSENTHAL SUSAN ROSENTHAL Philosophy American Civilization 1 . Q-in ' gaz- YQX , SAYRE ELLEN SACKS 2 English Literature 1 , I lo ff 5 5 2 , 25 , gl 1 I , 2 I HILARY BERGER ROSS English Literature , - tt, YF A .. i,,... ,, , T, 3 . ,H , z ' .' ' 1 H , 4 1 sa Navi ' 7' 11 ! .- 1 f l 5 t ' 1 'z ,il ig. . ggmx 1 v - I ! a I 5 I l ,413 M lil SUSAN MARGARET SCHENK American Literature LINDA VANCE SEVEY A rt NANCY C. SCULL Economics MARGARET ELIZABETH SARA LEE SILBERMAN SHERWOOD History Political Science I 4 E, ..,' f Q V I ARBARI lpplitd M1 -..,,,,, If sm E1shLilen BARBARA MAE SMITH Applied Mathematics S c.B . BERW SWE SPELIOTIS I nghsh Literature CYNTHIA GAINOR SMITH NAN LYDIA SORENSON Art Chemistry CAROL MARCIA SPINDLER International Relations l H --N,-'nf'-'1 1 3 l ii TILWELL ,,,,,, - ,,,,., T N STEPHENIE RUTH S ARRINE ELIZABETH SULLIVA I American Civilization L Art 1 T s , T l 1 xi' wll fl ll iw. i. 1. I 1 1 5 , 1 1 J T 1 r 1 f 1 5 s 5 t,..,,4--W, ' 1 . , , i , , 1 . 'ts DONNA PETERON TINE QMISD English Literature TOBEY MARIE BEAUDROT M athematics-Economics bl Q YQ l I A Qi CHARLOTTE WELKS THOMSON f ul Philosophy 1 y l Tl 'ATRICIA CAMPBA Tlogy ri Q, 1 l 1, v ,.,,4-, .., ,V E I SULLIVAN - - A ---. Y--H , E .UDROT TOBEY Economics 1 4 i PATRICIA CAMPBELL TOWNE Biofogy Anthropology CAROL ANN VAN OLINDA ALEXANDRA WALCOTT A rt ELEANOR JANE VERRILL French ELIZABETH NEFF WALKER English Literature ' 'N l SYLVIA PEARL WASSERSTROM M athematics-Economics 1' M' MYRTLE ANNE WIEST Biology --In JEAN WIENER Biology J UDITH MARGARET WATMAN Latin Pf4'f'a , f'I-511:35 'ip n , 1 ' - 1 ,V ' , .,,, ,- ,- ' wtf, gt:- -' ' 1' JANE SISK WILLEMS CMrs.J JENNIFER WILLIAMS International Relations Ff6l1Ch WHA JANE N LNDRA BAKER 'glish Literature XOMI BRINKIN 'enfh 'JLORES ROSSI 1 Nguzsrzcs QFUTIJY ANN 1 tosophy W JUHNSON lffffan Literature l VERONICA lwfnics MCGOLD ER WILLIAMS BETTY MARIE WISMER Psychology Unphotographed Seniors SANDRA BAKER JOSEE D. MORSE CMrs.J English Literature Comparative Literature NAOMI BRINKIN GREENSTEIN NADIA ANNA MYKOLAJEWYCZ French History DOLORES ROSSI HARRIS CMrs.J JOAN STELLA OJALA U'i8lliSIiCS English Literature DOROTHY ANN HAUS HOPE ROBERTA POPOVICH PhH0S0Phy English Literature SUSAN JOHNSON ELIZABETH REESIDE American Literature English Literature ANNE VERONICA MAHONY MARGARET SANDERS mimics Economics lm THA JANE MARSDEN SHARLENE DIANNE STEPHENS fl' ERNA MCGOLDRICK DOROTHY LOUISE TROENDLE Sociology MARY LYNNE WOOD International Relations PHYLLIS ELAINE YOKEN Psychology QM A - I 1 X N , f ffblpboiy U50 be goof! 450270535 2 'I R1 1 f 1 50007936 -1 'HFS gl Swv .f ' SQL' 3? ' t A 2 if-N ,,.-a- Above the jello salads and businessman's quick lunches of the Waldorf cafeteria rise the high water marks of every Providence flood on record. It is not a pleasant sight, the least of those Hoods would have drowned the tallest patron of the Waldorf. Providence. Was it the good harbor and the friendly Indians, or a puritanical wish to be reminded of the Deluge that caused Provi- dence? Either practicality, or an attachment to the hair shirt? In any case, the anchor has interesting implica- tions. Does it stand for Hope, or is it functional? Providence refuses to be ingratiating. New York is so- phisticated. Washington is impressive. Philadelphia is a pleasant surprise. Somebody will always like Boston, Boston notwithstanding. But Providence puts transients off until they learn to like incongruity, or at least until they learn that there are low bars and colonial churches. Every day of the week, the Bentleys of Provi- dence dowagers and the gaudier cars of Providence hoods lock bumpers at the front door of the Hospital Trust, suggesting that while the Center Cafe and the Meeting House may not be moral equals, ten dollars in two frves is the same as ten dollars in five twos. Providence is, above all, mercantile. The dowagers' money is probably the interest of a trustg the hoods are undoubtedly in business, whether they sell two-dollar tickets or bootleg liquor. Between the dowagers and the hoods is a wide middle- ground. Some of the middleground caters specifically to the college trade, cooking dozens of hamburgers, selling hundreds of pairs of kneesocks, washing and ironing thousands of button-down shirts. They advise, they indulge whims, they offer extravagant tempta- tions. They listen sympathetically. They close their eyes and cash the checks. Some cater to no one. They are here by impliC21'fi0I1 in the great houses built by steam engines and raZ0f blades, or in the sea captains' houses on Benefit Street- It is Providence's long standing as a commercial center that accounts for these, and for the peculiar mixture Of Italians, Jews, Syrians, Armenians, Portugese, French Canadians, and Irish that is the countewveight of C01- lege Hill. To the provincial who will board four Years in Providence, this means that it is possible t0 bllyta grinder and eat it on the most eminent necrop0l1S ln Swan Point Cemetery. It also means that there Wlu be garlic and shishkebab to go with the johnnycakes' , Others see more, but still prefer steak and french fr1eS- They may like cities-they always like New York' but not for variety's sake. Unfairness is sometime? as bad as indifference. As a matter of fact, it is imP05S1b1e to Sal' that the Italian markets of Federal Hill are more re Providence tha ries, or the old rr herring reflect mainly Providencr is the lulliard lmpers with equa Qrrated by the li flllt, all the more Ella SPace. Wh IHS, and the deg ihundred and fd if ii Universities, riilCll'0W11 kind. , Vrdrio one is exh riihy Providence rrk in two hours' ifllltls. .fliiablluees of the rg . :miiapin H0SPirar enloyed so It is le mr 'rfb ' This is 111 Kent deeds beyr hree days of E I it I rods is a wide middle- rrid caters specilicrly Jzens of hamburgers, eesocks, washing all rr shirts. They adrist, extravagant temlll' r They close their till 3 here by implicatrll am engines and razor uses on Berrelit Street. is a cornrflercial tent? ' . - o culraf mlm. he pe Frerrtl HS, Portugese, terweightof . COW dfourlm will boar W tis Possible 10 'ali eminent ueCf0P01lSb, , sthatdlefewlus ,arr I cakes, the lommifench tries steak andw Yorlf . 'ke . t HWS h m11C53' f - 1116 . SO gsrhlf ' ess 15 . Fedefal H1 llle Providence than the facades of Greek Revival the Eld ghetto where the windows full of Mainly eect the glossy flank of a new Cadillac. lakes the Jumarlgeegs etter for the eclectic taste that Slompers with E u 'uartet and Stephanie and Her mated by thi illlmrty. Others are bound to be err- mitlrlle, all the more ed! 'extremes gud the phlggmatlc Small a Space Wh o vious for being crowded into -so begins, and the d ere Cooke Street ends, Fox Point mhundred and efiitute wander past shops trafficking mm universities if glollar sweaters. Philanthropists Meir Own kind ,Tgl two blocks away, -grafters give Amino one is egh e catalogue is potentially endless. my Pmviden Gifted to love Providence-certainly workintwo houie. t is a mule who will do three day's itrepelsl It is le Zi Hllid then refuse to move. It charms, lohabimees Ofthe01'lI6 comme zl va, a fact as familiar alChapin Hospital SSD museum as to the volunteers tome enjoyed some Dine of it should be commended, rgpossiblel fhis is to erated, some corrected as soon Iurbetter or for even true of the weather which is, Cheer- WOTSG, outside our jurisdiction. What 1nd d ltenthreeeeda beyond the fog bank, but if there have YS of fain, Can there possibly be four? I , I I . n l I I 1 I l s i I I i 5 I 5 5 . . I 'L 1 H .V 'P .C 'LK 1' -v1 1 1 1 I? ,1 '4 IZ yi -5 il 15 'E 11 A I l N 1 L 1 1 1 - 1 1 , l X 3 X 31:- -.i...... i , na Q' - ' , : g ' . x ,' N Q - - , - - g . X . - , x . x 5' 1: ti if .jx QT :tx - , 1: ff-44 7- A-' ' . - xx E' Q II: :JTQ L 3 ' U - - T T' I ' Q - -3' fr . V F 44' 3 7 L, QF. f N :5'f : '- Q ' xx ' - N4 ' Q- Q - ' l - QQ, ,X - X - N- 3 X 4', :X , N X, I i X .lg It ,Q Qxg, xg 5 x ,. i, - l. 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BOTELER, Bruce BOURGETTE, Doris BOWEN, Jane BOYNTON, Elizabeth BRATLEY, Carol BRATLEY, Susan BREGMAN, Lucy BRENNER, Judith BRICK, Judith BRIGGS, Lydia BRIGHAM, Nancy BRILL CMrs.J, Cynthia BRILOFF, Leonore BRODSKY, Barbara BRODY, Linda BROOMHEAD, Nancy BROTHERS, Shirley BROUDA, Stephanie BROWN, Barbara BROWN, Deborah BRUNS, Elizabeth BRUSKIN, Phyllis BUC, Nancy BUCHANAN, Victoria BUCILLA, Doris BURCHARD, Carol BURGESS, Carol BURGESS, Martha BURNHAM, Beverly BURVAL, Patricia BUTLER, Elaine CALLENDER, Virginia CAMP, Sandra CAMPBELL, Elizabeth CAMPBELL, Mary CANDAGE, Constance CANNELL, Mary CANNING, Mary CAPPELLO, Joan CARLISLE, Mary CARLSON, Johanna CARNEY, Kathryn CARR, Lynne CARROLL, Suellen CARUTH, Bonnie CARY, Diana CASLOWITZ, Gail CAYFORD, Christine CHAPPELL, Virginia CHARLES, Elizabeth CHARLTON, Ann CHEEVER, Susan CHEN, Kitty CHENG, Mabel CHERNACK, Karen CHERNICK CMrs.J, Sandra CHILDS, Harriott CHMURA, Anna May CHREST, Avgenia CHRISTOPHER, Carol CICIARELLI, Phyllis CLARK, Nancy CLARKE, Urana CLAYSON, Nancy Anne CLEAVES, Sueanne CLINE, Mary Anne CLOSSON, Marilyn COBB, Betsey COBB, Patricia COHEN, Barbara COHEN, Gail COHEN, Joyce COHEN, Ruth COLE, Patricia COLES, Ann COLLINS, Carol COLLINS, Joan The Plains, Va. 12 Trieste St., Pawtucket, R. I. 921 San Jose Dr., S. E., Grand Rapids, Mich. 18 Ottawa Rd., Cape Elizabeth, Me. 5202 Roosevelt St., Bethesda, Md. 5202 Roosevelt St., Bethesda, Md. 121 West 15th St., New York, N. Y. 7 Barbara Rd., Belmont, Mass. 1453 Hudson Rd., W. Englewood, N. J. 151 Main St., Altamont, N. Y. 212 Fernwood Ave., Upper Montclair, N. J. 565 Angell St., Providence, R. I. 99 Grace Ave., Great Neck, N. Y. 9933 Litzsinger Rd., St. Louis, Mo. 3101 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago, Ill. 53 Alfred Drowne Rd., W. Barrington, R. I. 1163 Washington St., N. Abington, Mass. 15 Sonn Dr., Rye, N. Y. 2639 Harrison Ave., Baldwin, N. Y. 41 Willow Ave., N. Plainfield, N. J. Knollwood Farm, Fayetteville, N. Y. 83 Anita St., New Haven, Conn. 104 Marwood Dr., Bridgeville, Pa. 11 Fairview Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. 13 Clearview Dr., Framingham, Mass. 13 Brooklake Rd., Florham Park, N. J. Blue Hill, Me. 52 Walnut St., Needham, Mass. 41 Pine St., Needham, Mass. 615 S. Western Ave., Park Ridge, Ill. 52 Fort Ave., Edgewood 5, R. I. 1318 Mahantongo St., Pottsville, Pa. 23 85 Kenilworth Rd., Cleveland Hts., Ohio Box 203, Leland, Mich. 40 Lakeview Dr., Moorestown, N. J. 11 Humboldt Ave., Providence, R. I. 2 Ray St., Providence, R. I. 15 Josephine Ave., Rumford, R. I. 868 Plainfield St., Providence, R. I. 71 Norfolk St., Bangor, Me. 6 W. Brookhaven Rd., Wallingford, Pa. 10 Cummings Rd., Newport, R. I. 110 California Ave., Providence, R. I. 1 Mall St., Salem, Mass. 3519 W. 78th St., Prairie Village, Kan. 468 Riverside Dr., New York, N. Y. 17 Lorimer Ave., Providence, R. I. 1811 Columbia Ave., Steubenville, Ohio 950 Paulding St., Peekskill, N. Y. 115 W. Main St., Wickford, R. I. 435 Liberty St., Rockland, Mass. Cedar Lane, Ossining, N. Y. 522 S. 42 St., Philadelphia, Pa. 148 Tai Hang Rd., A-4, Hong Kong, China 9 University Ave., Providence, R. I. 23 Carver St., Pawtucket, R. I. 82 Pitt St., Charleston, S. C. Box 287, Douglas Pike, Esmond, R. I. 65 Huntington Ave., Amesbury, Mass. 11 Beaumont St., Rumford, R. I. 91 Leetewood Dr., Longmeadow, Mass. 78 Home Acres Ave., Milford, Conn. 61 Adams Point Rd., Barrington, R. I. 215 Dawes Ave., Pittsfield, Mass. 129 Williams St., Providence, R. I. 22 Beals St., Brookline, Mass. Elmwood Oakwood Ave., Troy, N. Y. 21 Otis Rd., Barrington, Ill. 1715 Hermitage Rd., Ann Arbor, Mich. 125 New Amsterdam Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. 324 McKinley Ave., Charleston, W. Va. 8523 Milford Ave., Silver Spring, Md Justin Rd., Harrison, N. Y. 298 Bennett St., Montoursville, Pa 85 Federal St., Brunswick, Me 1901 Octavia St., New Orleans, La 339 W. Logan St., Philadelphia, Pa ' f - w w ,fl 151. f 1 S 1 f'1-ws: 4 . tl Ei? .. 4 yr-sig ' 'xX X X nv Q 901' is X S S W. s S . gl '-+I 4 i I N -1 . L X .mr M-a4.ulnnnnd!. 7 A V A f ffl 7 f V . 9 fw fs lj 4- ff! I a C M f L sf YWMYQQQ EW: W if IQTKR fH'f Jlllfzifl Gif if EWG I f' f 'HHgg,i'6? ff WV IWPZUA 'ZZ 6? A 6663? EQQQZTH? rm ifffj ami? wmv V2 u mggnowff M 1 Oxilwk pf T gif,-,g A ' 5 fffffffm M54 ug? ,ff URW vmurifnf SVR, u ww W vffZ?snqvE'6W ff P'f 'YF'vTf'Sl ' rv I9 2177 Z ,ff , f, 4 9' f X46 Af I 4'-'Q-.amp nun! F- .UL 'Q f+?,f 1 gfffo 4, f, iv f '1 .4 l..l.- ,, ,Jung-4'-4lL,,,i, J-4' ' Anuddmd COLMER, Barbara CONROY, Susan CONSIDINE, Carolyn CONVERSE, Carolyn COOK, Charlotte COOKE, Carole COOLBAUGH, Colette COOMBS, Susan COOPER, Catherine COOPER, Elizabeth CORDO, Karen CORKILL, Ruth CORNOG, Martha CORWIN, Laura COSTA, Kathryn COURTRIGHT, Bernadine COX, Margaret COX, Nancy CRAFT CMrs.J, Martha Wise CRAIG, Marguerite CREEDY, Judith CRISFIELD, Janet CROCKETT, Carol CROFUT, Irene CUMMINS, Barbara CURIT, Martha CURTISS, Sarah DABB, Barbara DADSON, Angela DALRYMPLE, Alice DAMIANI, Sandra Lee DANKNER, Elinor DANNENBERG, Carol DARRAGH, Doyle DAVIDSON, Elizabeth DAVIES, Joan DAVIS, Margaret DAVIS, Mary Louise DAVIS, Rosemary DAVIS, Ruth DAVIS, Susan DAVY, Janice DEARING, Susan DEMMLER, Nancy DIECKHAUS, Mary DiFUSCO, Jane DiPANNI, Joanne DOBBIE, Margaret DODDS, Susanna DONNELLY, Anne DONWAY, Lucile DOSWELL, Anne DRAYTON, Margot DREW, Donna DULANEY, Sara DULL, Margaret DUN BAR. Christine DUPRE, Judith EBBITT, Karen EBERS, Jean ECHOLS, Cynthia ECKBERG, Adrianne ECKERSON, Judith ECKWEILER. Lyle ECONOMOS, Irene EDDS, Nancy EDDY, Deborah EDER lMrs.J. Linda EDWARDS, Pamela EFFANGE, Dorothy EHRMAN. Madeline EICHNA, Margaret EISEMANN, Elaine ELDRED. Susan ELIASH, Asya ELLIOTT. Jean ELLIS. Diana 30 Shawnee Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. 157 Mountain Way, Rutherford, N. J. 46 Katherine Court, Warwick Neck, R. I. Federal gl Warren Sts., Wiscasset, Me. Dry Mill Farm, Leesburg, Va. 498 Belgrove Dr., Kearny, N. J. 473 Indian Rd., Pines Lake, Wayne, N. J. Spring Run, Martinsville, N. J. 203 Cedarcroft Rd., Baltimore, Md. 25 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y. Giessen EES Depot, APO 169 N. Y., N. Y. 8 Cumberland Rd., Riverside, R. I. 126 Poplar Ave., Wayne, Pa. ll Park Dr., Newton, Mass. 11 Chester St., Taunton, Mass. APCO, Bell Bay, Tasmania, Australia 201 Brookletts Ave., Easton, Md. 1929 Kakela Dr., Honolulu, Hawaii 107 Ruggles St., Prov., R. I. 234 Maple Ave., Metuchen, N. J. 29 Belden Ave., Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. 94 Stratford Ave., Garden City, N. Y. Musketaquid Rd., Concord, Mass. Continental Rd., Tuxedo Park, N. Y. 11809 Galt Ave., Wheaton, Md. 251 Rumstick Point, Barrington, R. I. Leete's Island, Guilford, Conn. 183 Tenney Ave., River Edge, N. J. 27231 W. 14 Mile Rd., Franklin, Mich. P. O. Box 457, Wilmington, Vt. 5 Cooke St., Waterbury, Conn. 14 Herbert Rd., Belmont, Mass. 25 Glen Ave., Arlington, Mass. 758 Sunrise Ave., Salt Lake City, Utah 520 Hillcrest Ave., Westfield, N. J. 33 Locust Ave., Port Washington, N. Y. R. D. 2, West Paris, Me. 60 Midwood Ave., Glen Rock, N. J. 132 High St., Middletown, Conn. 10 Crestmont Rd., Montclair, N. J. 50 Arlington St., Pawtucket, R. I. 27 Edgewater Ave., Massapequa, N. Y. 114 Sypherd Dr., Newark, Del. 5650 Forbes Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. 7039 Meade Pl., Pittsburgh, Pa. 1111 Marine Dr., Alexandria, Va. 136 Western Promenade, Cranston, R. I. 59 Sedgemeadow Rd., Wayland, Mass. 72 Davis Rd., Port Washington, N. Y. 136 Sayles Ave., Pawtucket, R. I. 257 Shrewsbury St., Holden, Mass 407 Valley Brook Dr., Falls Church, Va. 632 North Bay St., Manchester, N. H. 88 Yale Ave., Warwick, R. I. 6213 31st St.. N. W., Wash., D. C. 38 West Ave., Essex, Conn. 5 Longview Dr., Marblehead, Mass 95 Canton St., Providence, R. I. 26 Kay Boulevard, Newport, R. I Washington Depot, Conn. 1428 First St., New Orleans, La 24 Blanchard Rd., S. Weymouth, Mass 11612 Williams Creek Dr., Carmel, Ind 29 Homer Pl., Manhasset, N. Y 330 Meshanticut Valley Pkwy., Cranston, R. I 12 Starbrook Dr., Barrington, R. I 4 Fairview Ter., Winchester, Mas: 15 Elmgrove Ave., Providence, R. I 15 Woods Lane, Scarsdale, N. Y N.A. School. Buea. West Cameroon. Africa 158 Glenwood Ave., Atherton. Calif. 303 Liberty Rd., Englewood. N. J. 233 Paul Dr., Moorestown, N. J. 9 Howard St., Wenham. Mass. 266 Morris Ave., Providence, R. I. 33 Meadowcrest Dr., East Prov., R. I. 104 Grandview Ave., White Plains, N. Y. X , ,M 17 ,j 1 1 Kd, 2 ,ff . it to 11 Gwiwff .of I., 9 - it. G : X 9' x A X 4 94 X X 5, 3 W 4 N' x W, Qu dv N 34' 295 , M Q , , ,Q x X S 532, sz N ZW ,Q ig xx N f f S K , wx . Q N .fs 5 V-1 0 1 X31 fs? s A k ELLIS, Willoughby ELSASSER, Katherine ELSBERG, Erica EMORY, Margaret EPSTEIN, Ellen ERICKSON, Lee ESTEY, Valerie EUSTON, Kathleen EVANS, Elaine EVANS, Susan FAILES, Jeremy FAIRCHILD, Susan FAIRCHILD, Virginia FALLER, Joan FALLON, Elizabeth FARNHAM, Valerie FARRAR, Alice FARRO, Pamela FEDER, Mary FELL, Greta FELLOWS, Clara FERNALD, Janice FINDER, Myra FINK, Joanna FINKELSTEIN, Susan FINKLE, Maureen FINN, Marlene FISKE, Jane FIX, Alice FLESCH, Anne FLETCHER, Cherry FORNEY, Susan FOSSETT, Susan FOSTER, Julia FOSTER, Linda FOX, Carolyn FRAAD, Martha FRANK, Carol FRAZIER, Nancy FREDERICK, Mary FREIFELD, Riva FRENCH, Barbara FREUND, Babette FRIBOURG, Anne FRIEDELL, Janet FRIEDMAN, Linda FRIEDMANN CMrs.J, Ruth FRIEND, Ellen FRISCH, Joan FROLING, Barbara FROST, Ann GAHAGAN, Carolyn GAILITIS, Mara GALL, Susanne GARDNER, Katherine GASKELL, Ellen GAUTHIER, Katherine GEIER, Marsha GEORGE, Barbara GILBERT, Barbara GILL, Joanne GILMAN, Susan GINSBERG, Barbara GINSBERG, Elizabeth GIUSTI, Cheryl GLADSTONE, Susan GLASS, Elizabeth 517 S. Washington St., Easton, Md. 16 E. Stanworth, Princeton, N. J. Box 353, Lenox, Mass. 810 Baldwin Dr., Westbury, N. Y. 195 Canterbury Rd., Rochester, N. Y. Inagua, The Bahamas 128 Country Club Dr., Port Wash., N. Y. 172 Alston Ave., New Haven, Conn. 8 Barnesdale Rd., Natick, Mass. 1491 Woodmont Blvd., Nashville, Tenn. 35 Edgewood Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. 4305 Hegg Ave., Madison, Wis. 39 The Birches, Roslyn, N. Y. River House, Bronxville, N. Y. 17 Drury Lane, Worcester, Mass. 15 Woodridge Rd., Wellesley, Mass. 528 Scott Rd., Gladwyne, Pa. 554 Alda Rd., Mamaroneck, N. Y. 410 Clark St., Mankato, Minn. 360 Vine Ave., Highland Park, Ill. 11 Scar Hill Rd., Boylston, Mass. 11 Mt. Pleasant St., Winchester, Mass. 3920 Lake Shore Dr., Chicago, Ill. 2720 Fairview St., Allentown, Pa. 478 Woodland Rd., Woonsocket, R. I. 294 Woodland Rd., Woonsocket, R. I. 74 Marbury Ave., Pawtucket, R. I. Box 100, Shore Dr., Warren, R. I. 1060 Hunter Ave., Pelham Manor, N. Y. 24 Belden Ave., Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. 60 Ayrault St., Newport, R. I. 32 Calabria Ave., Coral Gables, Fla. 40-D Route De Malagnou, Geneva, Switzerland Box 21-A, R. R. 1, Harvey's Lake, Pa. 10 Pine Court, Bristol, Conn. 225 West 86th St., N. Y., N. Y. 17 Oxford Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. 96 Concord Ave., Cranston, R. I. 424 Highland Ave., Upper Montclair, N. J. 3750 E. Fairmount St., Tucson, Arizona 606 Churchill Ave., Ottawa, Ontario, Canada 18 Lincoln Woods Lane, Buffalo, N. Y. 507 Westminster Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. 1308 Arlington St., Mamaroneck, N. Y. 2895 Sedgewick Rd., Shaker Hts., Ohio 2420 Greenhill Rd., Lansdowne, Pa. 6 Starbrook Dr., Barrington, R. I. 22 Woodhill Rd., Birmingham, Ala. 90 Berrian Rd., New Rochelle, N. Y. 2871 S. Filmore St., Denver, Colo. 11 Saunders Ter., Wellesley Hills, Mass. 31 Gedney Circle, White Plains, N. Y. 69 Catherine St., Newport, R. I. Box 34, Howard, R. I. 570 Lockport St., Youngstown, N. Y. Box 548, Corvallis, Oregon Chopmist Hill Rd., Chepachet, R. I. 906 Shreiner Ave., Lancaster, Pa. 583 S. Oneida Way, Denver, Colo. 320 East High St., Lebanon, Pa. 277 Bloomfield St., Pawtucket, R. I. 484 Laurel Rd., Rockville Centre, N. Y. 6721 Overhill Rd., Shawnee-Mission, Kan. 32 Long Lots Rd., Westport, Conn. 130 Whitford Ave., Providence, R. I. 46 Brainard Rd., W. Hartford, Conn. 1122 Kenyon Ave., Plainfield, N. J. GODDARD, Margery 350 Provencal Rd., Grosse Pointe Farms, Mich. GOFF, Jennifer 36 Berwick Pl., Rumford, R. I. GUFF CMFS-J, Pamela Spear 30 Jenckes St., Providence, R. I. GOLDBERG, Pamela GOLDIS, Audrey GOLDMAN, Meryl GOODMAN, Kay GORDON, Madge GORDON, Margaret 57 Toppa Blvd., Newport, R. I. 90 Summit Ave., Providence, R. I. 173 Morris Ave., Providence, R. I. 79 Overlook Ter., Roslyn Hgts., N. Y. 25 Fulton St., Geneva, Ill. 8 Addison Rd., Glastonbury, Conn. ian 9 Flflggq u -- a 95, E a Q -I1 ' , - fi.. J A.. -ggx 21 U . , 3 I X I 13. -f .-.- 6 192' k ' 55,qa EERE? IEILE annum uw am A 'wwf' 21395 audi :Ig 14 I' - I I vu ' . ' '2 - I -,gg f H , -..- , ,.f- -.,fff-eiff-if - .wwe-i ' , J f--1----fzau-f .. .. wifi? sw W ...fv-f Z - sun- HORN, J aclynne HORN, Janice HORNY, Karen HOROWITZ, Cara HOROWITZ, Margo HORTON, Virginia HORVAT, Carol HORVITZ, Barbara HOUSE, Janet HOWARD, Judith HOY, Nantelle HOYT, Caroline HUDDLE, Eleanor HUGHES, Emily HUMPHREY, Judy A. HUMPHREYS, Judith N. HUMPHREYS, Susan HUNT, Carol HUNTER, Anne HUNTER, Diane HUNTLEY, Carolyn HUPPER, Anne HURWITZ, Karen HUSTON, Mary ILLINGWORTH, Barbara IMAN, Patricia INGLIS, Susan IRITANI, Chika 717 Birch Rd., Lake Bluff, Ill. 67 Rowland Ave., Hackensack, N. J. 619 Barrington, Grosse Pointe, Mich. 189 Main St., Ridgefield Park, N. J. 6 Windham Rd., Rockville Center, N. Y. 519 Chestnut Rd., Sewickley, Pa. 76 Freese St., Providence, R. I. 35 Sargent Ave., Providence, R. I. 17 School St., Glastonbury, Conn. Macedonia Rd., Kent, Conn. 2900 N. E. 26 Pl., Fort Lauderdale, Fla. 73 Highland Ave., Rowayton, Conn. 452 Calle Arroyo, Thousand Oaks, Calif. 350 Ambassador Dr., Rochester, N. Y. 236 Main St., Montague City, Mass. Londonderry, Vt. Box 38, Shillington, Pa. 1807 Pleasant Circle, Urbana, Ill. 3808 Clay St., San Francisco, Calif. 28 Crannell Ave., Delmar, N. Y. Buttonball Rd., Old Lyme, Conn. 525 N. Oxford St., Arlington, Va. 140 Pearl St., Middletown, Conn. 4411 Cherry St., Erie, Pa. Coolridge Rd., Greenville, R. I. 100 Rock Beach Rd., Rochester, N. Y. 159 Hilburn Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. 20 Jennifer Lane, Port Chester, N. Y. JACKSON, Sharon 2624 Club Park Rd., Winston-Salem, N. C. JACOBS, Katharine 150 East 77th St., New York, N. Y. JALESKI CMrs.D, Lucy Diggs 180 Bowen St., Providence, R. I. JAMESON, Mary 82 High St., Exeter, N. H. J ANSSEN, Sibylle 84 Shadyside Ave., Dumont, N. J . JEFFERYS, Lucy 365 Belrose Lane, Radnor, Pa. JELLINGER, Eleanor 220 Jayne Ave., Patchogue, N. Y. JESPERSEN CMrs.D, Josephine 712 High St., Cumberland, R. I. JOHNSON Deborah 40 Lothrop Rd., Reading, Mass. JOHNSON Kay 4422 Davenport St., Washington, D. C. JOHNSON, Linda 95 King Philip Circle, Warwick, R. I. JOHNSON, Penelope 19 Green St., Kingston, N. Y. JOHNSON, Susan 37 Cushing St., Providence, R. I. JONES, Carole JONES, Carolyn JONES, Diane JONES, Elizabeth JORDAN, Judith JORDAN, Sally JUDGE, Wendy J URGENSEN, Sally KAHN, Barbara KAIMAN, Patricia KAPLAN, Ellen KARCH, Judit. KASSON, Ani' 1 KATZ, Barbara KEANE, R' ... .v KEEFER, Na.. KELLEY, Beverly KELLOG, Karen KENTTA, Marion KEVE, Anne KEYSSAR, Helene KIDDER, Ann KILPATRICK, N KIMMEL CMrs.J, Freda KINDER, Joan KING, Nancy KINGSLAND, Margaret KIRSIS CMrs.J, Alda KIVEN, Ruth kL1r'a, Elizabeth V -.i.OK, Kathryn KNOX, Rebecca KNOX, Wendy KOLB, Marilyn KOLLMER, Phyllis ancy 25 Meadowbrook Rd., Westwood, Mass. 19 Hughes Court, Glens Falls, N. Y. 3 Wyman St., Concord, N. H. 23 Picardy Lane, St. Louis, Mo. 707 Thomas St., Stroudsburg, Pa. 25 Chenery St., Portland, Me. 1566 Scituate Ave., Cranston, R. I. 1 Parish Rd., New Canaan, Conn. 263 Churchill Rd., W. Englewood, N. J . 128 Metropolitan Park Dr., Riverside, R. I 5 Ramsay Rd., Great Neck, N. Y. 66 East Utica, Oswego, N. Y. 1015 West 59 St., Kansas City, Mo. 3726 Pennington Rd., Shaker Heights, Mo. 26 W. Orchard Rd., Chappaqua, N. Y. 4514 Stratton Dr., Salt Lake City, Utah 3 Fairmount Ave., Lincoln, R. I. 110 E. Clinton Ave., Tenafly, N. J. 1010 8th Ave., S. W., Austin, Minn. 4314 Blaisdell Ave. S., Minneapolis, Minn 3 Oberlin St., Maplewood, N. J. 263 Nelson Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. 80 Vernon St., Brookline, Mass. 121 Arlo Rd., Staten Island, N. Y. 3 Barry Way, Binghamton, N. Y. 5 Hilltop Rd., Mendham, N. J 300 S. Main St., Cohasset, Mass. 33 Cushing St., Providence, R. I lll Waterman St., Providence, R. I 1024 East 26th St., Brooklyn, N. 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Y. KONHEIMY Jane . KQOPMANS, Helen - 459 Ridge Rd., Hamden, Conn, KORNBLITH, Regina 50-30 229 St., Bayside, N. Y. KORNET, Kathleen n Stu. Det. U.S.A.W.C., Carlisle Barracks, Pa. KRACZKIEWICZ, Monica Bayerngasse lf 2! 28, Vienna 3, Austria KRUGER, Brooke 50 Newbrook Circle, Chestnut Hill, Mass. KRUGER, Mary 50 Newbrook Circle, Chestnut Hill, Mass. KURLANCHEEK, Lynn 242 Main St., Duryea, Pa. LACY, Hannah 150 Rumford St., Concord, N. H. LAHART, Nancy 1627 Halekoa Dr., Honolulu, Hawaii LAMBERT, Frances 48 N. Court St., Providence, R. I. LANDERS, Gayle 77 Arland Dr., Pawtucket, R. I. LANDMAN, Sandra 216 Dearborn Ave., Silver Spring, Md. LANDY, Barbara 6361 Ebdy St., Pittsburgh, Pa. LANE, Susan 4 Alton Court, Brookline, Mass. LANG, Margaret 2507 Colfax St., Evanston, Ill. LANZETTA CMrs.D, LYUU 93 Congdon St., Providence, R. I. LARSEN, Mary 28 Bulkeley Ave., Hartford, Conn. LAUDATI, Ruth 335 Wayland Ave., Providence, R. I. LEE, Susan 746 14th Ave., Paterson, N. J. LEFFLER, Joyce 49 Las Casas St., Malden, Mass. LeGATES, Charlotte Stony Bank Rd., Glen Mills, Pa. LEOPOLD, Leslie 1328 Surrey Pl., Rockville Centre, N. Y. LEPASAAR, Merike 546 Hope St., Providence, R. I. LEVENSON, Toby 140 Apawamis Ave., Rye, N. Y. LEVIERO, Toni 3861 Porter St., N. W., Wash., D. C. LEVINE, Michele 4500 Conn. Ave., N. W., Wash., D. C. LEVINS, Irene 33 High Rock Ter., Newton, Mass. LEVY, Elizabeth 66 Dana Rd., Buffalo, N. Y. LEVY, MHUTCSH 63 Mount Hope Ave., Providence, R. I. LEWIS, Hannah 12 Sheffield Ave., Pawtucket, R. I. LEWIS, Bliss 926 Tirrill Farms Rd., St. Louis, Mo. LEWIS, Sally Pine Hill, West Barnstable, Mass. UCAT0, Pfudy 555 Ovington Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. LIEBERMAN, Lois 1602 King St., S. Charleston, W. Va. 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J. 3029 Queen Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. 3000 Hudson St., Denver, ColOrad0 285 Bedford St., Lexington, MaSS- 1805 South Rd., Baltimore, Md- fleld Hills M1Ch 336 Wayland Ave., Providence, R. 340 Lakewood Dr., Bloom ' , I- For the ultimate in fashion Visit our second floor THE OUTLET COMPANY IN DOWNTOWN PROVIDENCE ! Q l ,,g,..,.-.-V... - as 96 ' 4 M 5 i-r'F'1 as lll Ill I Pro '- LJ' ,, I Iii. if 1 --.. . w -I-WJ, ,........--v-' 21.-I ' ' ':L.r f III T III I If ., 'r ' go I EA ----1,-,-1.--Q 4 'E ..-as Y ef ,.. ,X M, The Minden Hotel .. I 2 M I'INfxFEUN -.,fHlkWw'Xf .1 If A: La Maison du Charme Teen Town K IIICARTE M CAULE ' Mc MCCLE OM N IIICOLEILDZ II IIIDOSDEN, Iv MCP? M2 MCGOLDRICK HOLDRICK McKINLEXQR3 McMURR Mi MCQUADE' -. MEDRICH'Wl4 IIIELHORN' Cf IILNDLOWIH' MEYERICMO IILYERS, Madi MICKLAS Afh MIDOLETON, MILIIOUER, A MILEMITWI9' MILLER, Abbl' MILLER, CNHI MILLER, KOS? 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I. 350 Stepney Rd., Easton, Conn. Apartado 889, Caracas, Venezuela 22549 Fairmount Blvd., Shaker Hgts., Ohio Box 81, Waterford, Va. 294 Old Farm Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa, 79 Colman St., New London, Conn, 10 Garden Pl., Brooklyn, N. Y, 10 Garden Pl., Brooklyn, N. Y, 24 Oliver St., Chatham, N, J, 915 Andover Dr., Alexandria, Va. 77 Buell Ave., North Smithfield, R. I. 88 Carleon Ave., Larchmont, N. Y. 105 Euclid Ave., Haddonfield, N. J. 420 Riverside Dr., New York, N. Y. 7641 Washington La., Elkins Park, Pa. 242 Lee Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Ells St., Norwalk, Conn. 102 Hood Ave., Rumford, R. I. 1909 N. Franklin St., Wilmington, Del. 9255 Shore Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. 21 N. Glen Rd., Mountain Lakes, N. J. 49 East 96th St., New York, N. Y. 7500 River Rd., Wash., D. C. 1 Shoredale Dr., Manhasset N. Y. 15 Kingston Ave., Providence, R. I. 1718 Hoban Rd., N. W., Wash., D. C. 20 Markwood Rd., Forest Hills, N. Y. 107 Boulter Rd., Wethersfield, Conn. 1425 Minn. 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State St., Springfield, Ill. Magna Lane, Westbrook, Conn. Walkley Hill Rd., Haddam, Conn. 37 Birdsey Ave., Meriden, Conn. 773 Summit Ave., Westfield, N. J. 205 Bedford St., S. E., Minneapolis, Minn. Springside Farm, Annandale, N. J. 531 Lake Front Blvd., Winter Park, Fla- 102 Sweet Fern Rd., Warwick, R- I- 115 S. Winston Rd., Lake Forest, Ill- 1836 Asylum Ave., W. Hartford, Conn 1801 Quincy St., Wash., D. C. 2312 N. 50th St., Philadelphia, Pa. 192 Hillside Ave., Pawtucket, R. I. Shore Rd., Buzzards Bay, M2185- 5422 Farquhar Lane, Dallas, Texas 6405 W. Halbert Rd., Bethesda, Md. 761 Fall River Ave., Seekonk, Mass. ' - - , 1 . i'. , L v L A 1 k -1 ' - -1 - ... N , . .qv ' n 1 . . . . . N , f XX Q v XX tx X Q X 3 f ty 2 t Hx w W' ix V 'X - it- 2 - - f M. . it '-.. X. E' ' . - - , ., ...Q V ,N .X Q .., N , rt ,V .x ,tw X f 1-. 1.., -.x ' Q i . J -yr, . 'x 4. v '-. - -., . Q . . f .1 . 1- -f , . , 1 I Xx i X I K .ga ., tx Et,xj'tit?L ixffr , x, ix X VH. 4,2 1? 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Lake Dr., Hamden, Conn. 101 Medway St., Providence, R. I. 157 Park Pl., Cheshire, Conn. 15400 Layhill Rd., Silver Spring, Md. 1212 Wiltshire, San Antonio, Texas 337 Greenwood Ave., Warwick, R. I. Orchard Way, St. Davids, Pa. ll Shean St., Cranston, R. I. 34 Rialto St., Providence, R. I. 44 W. 58th St., Kansas City, Mo. Hotchkiss Grove Rd., Branford, Conn. Dillon Rd., Woodbridge, Conn. 25 Soundview Circle, White Plains, N. Y. 1022 Findley Dr. W., Pittsburgh, Pa. 3 Woodley Manor, Winnetka, Ill. 167 Fairview Ave., Stamford, Conn. 448 E. Foster Ave., State College, Pa. 1224 Maple Dr., Tallahassee, Fla. 180 Power St., Prov., R. I. 2122 Orrington, Evanston, Ill. 5621 S. Kenwood Ave., Chicago, Ill. 170 Grove St., Melrose, Mass. 688 River Ave., Providence, R.I. 14398 Wash. Blvd., Cleveland, Ohio 135 Cherry Hill Dr., Newington, Conn. 8 Louise Lane, Tenafly, N. J . 80 McFadden Dr., Wilton, Conn. Blueberry Lane, Scituate, R. I. Box 30, Benson, Vt. 42 Mansiield Ave., Norton, Mass. 17017 33 Ave., S. W., Seattle, Wash. 324 South Ave., Glencoe, Ill. 65 Westview Dr., E. Hartford, Conn. 115 Central Park West, New York, N. Y. 26 Braemar Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. 179 Benefit St., Providence, R. I. 7357 Euclid, Chicago, Ill. 15 Hall Place, Cranston, R. I. 4611 29th Pl., N. W., Wash., D. C. 167 Smith St., Edgewood 5, R. I. Bay View Rd., Duxbury, Mass. 835 Woods Rd., Southampton, Pa. 4680 Independence Ave., New York, N. Y. 58 Leslie St., Cranston, R. I. 537 New Gulph Rd., Haverford, Pa. 19 Everett St., Cambridge, Mass. Walnut Ave., North Hampton, N. H. 315 Hope St., Providence, R. I. 1 Oakland Pl., Great Neck, N. Y. 35 8th St., Providence, R. I. 9 Midvale Rd., Baltimore, Md. 276 President Ave., Providence, R. I. 161 West 86 St., New York, N. Y. Old Denville Rd., Boonton, N. J. 141 Chestnut St., Moorestown, N. J. 109 Newton St., Pawtucket, R. I. 4814 N. E., 39th St., Seattle, Wash. 256 Miantonomo Dr., Warwick, R. I. 24 Brantwood Dr., Summit, N. J. 679 Moraine St., Marshfield, Mass. Highland St., Marshfield Hills, Mass. 4909 Flint Dr., Wash., D. C. 17 Briar Cliff Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. 166 Grovers Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. 104 Wilcox Ave., Pawtucket, R. I. 80-34 Kent St., Jamaica Estates, N. Y. 54 Middlesex St., Matawan, N. J. 2023-13th St., N. W., Wash., D. C. 151 Babcock St., Providence, R. I. 91 Midland Ave., Tarrytown, N. Y. Alpendorf, Spofford, N. H. 1705 Oak St., Morristown, Tenn. 8 Roosevelt Dr., Bedford Hills, N. Y. 120 Elsie St., Cranston, R. I. ,Q , 2 1 3 ' v4 1 W 7 , . . 5 5 f .. l E 7 0 I Bauspach Brothers, Wholesale Bakers ,f flLflQ11Kf I, ff-if ., 5 j gm? 1 ,QQ 2 asm-1 ,fy In-JI . jk v?y ,le .,.- A 4. 4 Z' 3, ., ,lb QQ I 7412 V , .Q 1:f,4:,x'V0 621. . ... X55-H. . Z! vo-Nf--mu u 'K 1 Q 1 lx. - 5 win . N., n ,,.fJ1ffQ,?,,. Qui..- . my.. ,jg gh. 6.31 ,-, ,. J r!.qu?,f. ,lsr J, .du any M! V 5'2'iT.7'?E9'Af .'.'.' .wiv 1 j v 25.4 Xt, A . . :Lv ,s. Q.. Adfivl 'Ffh-, ,fbi -' -. 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'I zine :il..zii:11a.H1f' ' 1 arm izizzzif f ' fzfaffisf 3 University Laundromat RIGELHAUPT, Barbara RILEY, Jacqueline RINCK, Louise RINES, Anne RIPPLE, Louise RISEN, Diana ROBBINS, Katherine ROBBINS, Nancy ROCKWELL, Nancy RODEMS, Anne RODGERS, Elizabeth ROGERS, Elisabeth ROHRBAUGH, Joanna ROLAND, Martine ROMANOFF, Phyllis RONSHEIM, Jane ROSE CMrs.D, Carol ROSENDAHL, Lynn ROSENFELD, Susan ROSENKRANTZ, Josi ROSENSTEIN, Linda ROSENTHAL, Renee ROSENTHAL, Susan ROSS, Pamela ROSS, Hilary RUBIN, Felicia RUBOTTOM, Eleanor RUNYON, Nina RUWET, Jane RYAN, Christine SACKS, Ellen SALVA, Edith SAMAK, Vera SANDERS, Margaret SANDHAM, Sally SANER, Lillian SATINSKY, Marjorie SAWYER, Janet SAYRE, Susan SCHAFFER, Hillary SCHAFFRATH, Faith SCHEINHORN, Lynn SCHENK, Susan SCHNITT, Roberta SCHOELL, Susan SCHROEDER, Catherine 36 Concolor Ave., Newton, Mass. 59 Hillsdale St., Dorchester, Mass. 143 Forest Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J. 40 Ocean Rd., S. Portland, Me. 1449-A Fifth St., Fort Knox, Kentucky 9831 Singleton Dr., Bethesda, Md. 90 West Main St., Norton, Mass. 90 West Main St., Norton, Mass. 7 Deepwood Dr., Danbury, Conn. 251 Dyer Blvd., Hammond, Ind. 3 Ranch Lane, St. Louis, Mo. 735 Washington St., Watertown, N. Y. 2 Sea St., Rockport, Me. 21 Beaumont St., Rumford, R. I. 32 Conger Rd., Worcester, Mass. 81 Wensley Dr., Great Neck, N. Y. 226 Gano St., Providence, R. I. Taylor Rd., Mountainville, N. Y. 19 Williams St., Mount Vernon, N. Y. 44 West 77th St., New York, N. Y. 84 Seventh St., Providence, R. I. 1247 Berkeley St., Santa Monica, Calif. 5 22 Linden Ave., Wilmette, Ill. 1541 Summit Dr., Charlestown, W. Va. 208 Lyman Dr., San Antonio, Texas 626 Prospect St., Maplewood, N. J. 14 Jackson Rd., Ft. Adams, Newport, R. I. 28 Marlborough Rd., North Haven, Conn. 1319 S. 20th St., Arlington, Va. Cathlow Dr., Riverside, Conn. W. Atlantic Ave., Allenwood, N. J. 100 Broad Ave., Leonia, N. J . 188 Peninsula Dr., Babylon, N. Y. 4620 Morgan Dr., Chevy Chase, Md. 2417 E. Main Rd., Portsmouth, R. I. 1018 Leland Ave., Scotch Plains, N. J. 320 Winding Way, Merion, Pa. 4 Old Oaks Rd., Rosemont, Pa. 43 Prospect Ave., Montclair, N. J . 404 Cole Ave., Providence, R. I. 4 Hill St., Millinocket, Me. 630 Gramatan Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y. 1301 Gateway Lane, McAllen, Texas 1819 Wiltshire Blvd., Huntington, W. Va. Rt. 3, Box 339, Wayzata, Minn. 38 Shelter Cove Dr., Milford, Conn. SCHUPACK CMrs.J, Helaine 51 University Ave., Prov., R. I. SCHWARTZ, Carol SCHWARTZ, Ina SCHWARTZ, Susan SCOTT, Carol SCULL, Nancy SEESSEL, Sally SEIDEL, Judith SEILER, Jane SENECHAL, Aliene SEVEY, Linda SHAFTEL, Esta SHARP, Susan SHAW, Annette SHEREFF, Ruth SHERMAN, Ann SHERMAN, Dorothy SHERWOOD, Margaret SHOEMAKER, Charlotte SILBER, Ann SILBERMAN, Sara SILVER, Nancy SIMKIN, Barbara SIMS, Judith SINYKIN, Susan SKEIST, Judith SLATER, Karen SLAVIT, Roberta SMITH, Barbara SMITH, Cynthia 92 Rockaway Ave., Rockville Centre, N. Y. 321 Windsor Rd., Englewood, N. J. 331 Mount Vernon Dr., Buffalo, N. Y. 592 Love Lane, East Greenwich, R. I. Star Route, Coopersburg, Pa. 1716 Auburndale Ave., Chattanooga, Tenn. 221 West 82nd St., New York, N. Y. 900 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. 120 E. Main St., Stafford Springs, Conn. ll Brookmont Dr., Wilbraham, Mass. 407 Lyons Ave., Newark, N. J. 121 Dorset Rd., Waban, Mass. Garfield Rd., Concord, Mass. 350 Hawthorne Ter., Mount Vernon, N. Y. 64 Ordale Blvd., Pittsburgh, Pa. 53 Judkins Rd., Medford, Mass. Route :,i3f2, Gaylord, Mich. 7 Silver Lakes Dr., Darien, Conn. 20 Plowgate Rd., Brookline, MaSS- 213 E. High St., Lebanon, Pa. 1704 Saluda River Dr., W. Columbia, S. C. 33 Dan Ave., Pittsfield, Mass. 20001 Eldora Rd., Rocky River, Ohi0 30 W. Minnehaha Parkway, Minneapolis, Minn- 32 Laurel Ave., Summit, N. J. 67 Newtown Ave., Westport, Conn. 292 Morris Ave., Providence, R- I' 263 Palace Ave., Greenwood, R- I- 2 Georgia Court, Esmond, R. I. A5- Ni 1 5 pl . f X Narragansi l IeWI0n . ,M -hester, MTS' 1 Ridge, N Sf' and, Me' P0rtl 'Oxy Kelltuck l iethed Y Q Sa'Md ortori, Mass' qofton, Ma ' SS. fmmondi Ind. bt. Louis, M0 ertown, N' Y' lofjkporti Me' Lumfofdy rcester, Mass' mack. N. Y. 'Yldencn R. 1. Egvllle, N' yn YI1on,N-Y. V york, N, YI ividence, R, In Vlonica, Calif. Wilrnette, Ill, stown, W. Va. ntonio, Texas mlewood, N, J, 'IeWP0rt, R. I. Haven, Conn. arlington, Va. rerside, Conn, enwood, N, J, Leonia, N. J, abylon, N. Y. fy Chase, Md. lsmouth, R. I. h Plains, N. J. V, Merion, Pa. Rosemont, Pa. ontclair, N. J. ividence, R, I. llinocket, Me. Vernon, N. Y. icAllen, Texas ngton, W. V21- 'ayzata, Minn. flilford, Conn- :., Prov., R. I- Centre, N. Y- glewood, N. J. Buffalo, N. Y- -eenwich, R- 1- opersburgi Pa' anooga, Tenn. W York, N- Y' W York, Y. Springs, Colm' Mass. iraham. Newark, N- J' Waban, Mass' ioncord, Mass' Vernon, N' Y' Pittsburgh, f d, Mass. led or Mich. Pa. 3 ay1Ol'd1 . n. Darien, Con kliue oltieballoni Pa' olumbiaf S' C' iusfieldi Mais' gy River! QW' eapolis, Mm? SumH1lt'N'n' 'eSfP0rt'C1inl: Qvidencei 'I' :enw00d'R'I Esrr10nd'R' I , Mais. E ff.. . . .,. Q. , 3, . 5 i 1 . 5 4 - if 'Q L -4520 . 5 ,,,.g1-ij N , l.. A A mf'f .- 5f ' 'K 'A' 5 ' 3 IM. un'- -. .....,. U 1 4 Q x 'Q Q I D us! bg. - 1 'Q, 1 v45, 4 v N u- 'a N. I . emlrxu A '74 , 1 I 'YQ -. 'a in aa 4' 1 3 4 1 1 1 1 I 1 Z' ,- 1 I I gf- Pembroke Bookstore BIOWII Bookstore SMITH, Eleanor SMITH, Gaile 107 Pine Knoll Rd., Endicott N, Y, Rural Route 4111, Almond, N. Y. SMITH, Lee SMITH CMFS-5, Leslie Lechner 25 Chatham pr S' Norwalk, Conn- SMITH, Meryl 116 Columbia Ave., Cranston, R. I. SMITH, Priscilla SMYTH, Wendy SNELL, Ann SNELL, Janet SNELL 1MI'S-D, Julie SNELL, Patricia 134 Brown St., Providence, R. I. Monument St., Concord, Mass, 4705 Henry Hudson Parkway, Riverdale, N, Y, 17 Shore Rd., Bristol, R, 1, 87 Great Oak Lane, Pleasantville, N, Y, 263 CYDress St., Providence, R. I. 17 Shore Rd., Bristol, R. I. SOKOLSKY, Margery SOLOMONS, Suzanne SOLURI, Maria SORENSON, Nan 317 Hammond Pond Pkwy., Chestnut Hill. Mass. 20 Billard Rd., New London, Conn, 303 West St., Harrison, N. Y. 141 S. Broad St., Meriden, Conn, 8 1104 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. SPEIER, Susan 3-75 Woodhaven Blvd., Woodhaven, N, Y, SPEIRS Ann 316 S. 56th St., Omaha, Nebraska ' 665 New York Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. SPELIOTIS, Gayle SPENCER, Shirley SPINDLER, Carol SPIVAK, Susan 6 Fernwood Rd., White Plains, N. Y. 257 Country Club Dr., Manhasset, N. Y. 32 Moorland St., Amherst, Mass. 184-46 Tudor Rd., Jamaica, N. Y. SPRAGUE, Leah STAL, Gunnela STANIELS, Lucia STANTON, Donna STARKEY, Jane STARRATT, Polly STEIN, Judith STEINBERG, Nancy STEINHAUS, Nancy STEINITZ, Victoria STEPHENS, Charlene STERRET, Jane STEVENS, Diantha STEVENS, Kathy STEWART, Catherine STILWELL, Stephenie STINGLE, Karen STOCKLEY, Nancy STOLTZ, Frances STONE, Meredith STRAUSS, Fern STRAUSS, Helene SUGARMAN, Carol SULLIVAN, Larrine SUM, Allison SUMMERS, Marilynne SUSSWEIN, Carol SYLVESTER, Barbara SYMONDS, Susan SYPEK, Sandra TANDY, Rochelle TANENBAUM, Lynne TAUB, Laura TAYLOR QMrs.J, Floride TAYLOR, Suzanne T ESLER, Phyllis TETON, Lynn THOMAS, Mafg0t THOMPSON, Pamela THOMPSON, Stephanie THOMSON, Charlotte THROPE, Aileen TICE, Virginia TINNON, Susan TIPPING, Heather TDBEY, Marie TOTH, Sandrajean TOWNE, Patricia TOWNSEND, Janet TROENDLE, DorothY TRUEBLOOD, Valerie TUCKER, Melinda TVEDT, TOI16 Ladd Hill Rd., Meredith, N. H. Stambanev. 34, Stuvsta, Sweden P. O. Box 302, Sparta, N. J. 393 MacLane, Palo Alto, Calif. Ladder Hill Ter., Templeton, Mass. 16 Charlcote Pl., Baltimore, Md. 2402 Kensington Ave., Snyder, N. Y. 12 Carol Rd., Marblehead, Mass. Elm Ridge Farm, Scarsdale, N. Y. 139 S. First St., Fulton, N. Y. 717 Eaton, Jackson, Mich. 64 Hathaway Dr., Garden City, N. Y. Stockbridge, Mass. 83 Academy Rd., North Andover, Mass. 104 E. Pembrey Dr., Wilmington, Del. 16 W. Grand Ave., Merrick, N. Y. 3744 Oliver St., Wash., D. C. 15 Meadowcrest Dr., Cumberland, R. I. 55 Keene St., Providence, R. I. 27 Indian Rd., Riverside, R. I. 98 Blaisdell Ave., Pawtucket, R. I. 524 South 3rd Ave., Highland Park, N. J. 99 Whittredge Rd., Summit, N. J. Wicomico St., La Plata, Md. Cross Highway, Redding, Conn. 1305 Maple Ave., Coeur d'Alene, Idaho 14 Wisner Ter., Goshen, N. Y. 123 First Parish Rd., Scituate, Mass. 195 Arlington Ave., Providence, R. I. 155 First St., Pawtucket, R. I. 61 Brookview Ter., Hillsdale, N. J. 39 Foxcroft Ave., Warwick, R. I. 247 Lorraine Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y. 170 Paradise Ave., Middletown, R. I. 56 Henry St., Manchester, Conn. 8 Celestine Ter., Stoneham, Mass. 1133 Michigan Ave., Wilmette, Ill. 2552 Willard Ave., Baldwin, N. Y. 43 Bacon Rd., Belmont, Mass. 638 Main St., S. Weymouth, Mass. 47 Leicester Rd., Belmont, Mass. 831 Westford St., Lowell, Mass. 610 St. Marks Ave., Westfield, N. J. 1 Clubway, Mt. Kisco, N. Y. 1044 Keneberry Way, Grand RaPid5, Mich- Box 92, Route 1, Rehoboth, Mass. 340 Kenridge Rd., Akr0r1, 01110 167 Four Mile Rd., W. Hartford, Conn. Montclair, N. J. 268 N. Mountain Ave., Upper 24 Doro Pl., Rumford, R. I. Leesburg, Va. BOX 350, R. 4, St. Simons Island, Ga Thomas Hefty!-IS Gate 29, Oslo, NOTWZY URBAN, Valerie 403 Columbia Ave., Cliffside Park, N. J. VAN BENSCHOTEN, Marsha 12 Dusenberry Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. VAN DOREN, Sally VAN LEER, Virginia VAN OLINDA, Carol VAN RIPER, Judith VEEDER, Mary VERARDO, Norma VERRILL, Eleanor VEZNAIAN, Nancy VIIROJA, Ulle 17 Sunnyside Ave., Darien, Conn. 34 Crane Ave., White Plains, N. Y. 188 Marlboro St., East Greenwich 111 Stephens Rd., Grosse Pointe, Mich. 535 Essex Rd., Kenilworth, Ill. 21 Drill St., Providence, R. I. 608 Gist Ave., Silver Spring, Md. 269 Alabama Ave., Providence, R. I. 621 8th St., Lakewood, N. J. VOTOLATO, Livia 494 Pleasant Valley Parkway, Providence, R. I. WALCOTT, Alexandra WALDNER, Maida WALDSTREICHER, Amy WALKER, Elizabeth WALKER, Judith WALKER, Patricia WALSH, Maureen WARMAN, Jane 1112 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. 233 Warrington St., Providence, R. I. 78 Soundview Ave., Rye, N. Y. 248 McClellan Dr., Pittsburgh, Pa. 1419 33rd St., N. W., Wash. D. C. Storrs Rd., Box 50, Storrs, Conn. 241 California Ave., Providence, R. I. Ludlow Rd., Houtlon, Me. WARNER, Anne HICOMRYSXPOLAD, APO 331, San Francisco, Cal. WASSERSTROM, Sylvia WATMAN, Judith WEAVER, Marian WEBB, Polly WEBBER, Lucille WEBER, Ollie WEINSTEIN, Marcia WEIR CMrs.J, Alexandra WEIS, Virginia WEISENFELD, Linda WEISSBERGER, Dorothy WEISSMAN, Anne WELCH, Sylvia WELSH, Ann WERNERT, Susan WESTSMITH, Jan WHITE, Elizabeth WHITE, Susan WHITMAN fMrs.J, Helen WHITNEY, Eunice WHORTON, Penelope WILLIAMS WIENER, Jean WIEST, Myrtle WILLEMS fMrs.J, Jane Sisk WILLIAMS WILLIAMSZ WILLIAMS, WILLIAMS, Jennifer Martha Paulette Sandra , Virginia WILLIAMSON, Margaret WILSON QMrs.J, Marcia WINEGARDEN, Katharine WINOGRAD, Lois WINTHER, Ingrid WISMER, Betty WOHLERS, Anne WOLF, Heidi WOLFF, Lila WOLL, Judith WOOD, Elizabeth WOOD, Mary WOODS, Loyes WRIGHT, Gail WYLIE, Irene YARDLEY, Susan YOKEN, Phyllis YOULE, Merry YOUNG, Barbara YOUNG Susan 1 Briarfield Dr., Lake Success, N. Y. 4637 Manordene Rd., Baltimore, Md. 30 Eshelman Rd., Lancaster, Pa. 5725 Johnson St., Otis A.F.B., Mass. 1722 Forrest Hill Dr., Vienna, W. Va. 2646 Park Pl., Madison, Wis. 2544 N. E. 39th, Portland, Oregon 118 Power St., Providence, R. I. 1838 Jersey St., Quincy, Ill. 608 Blue Hills Ave., Hartford, Conn. 36 Southern Parkway, Rochester, N. Y. 11 West 81 St., New York, N. Y. 54 Crescent Pl., Wilmette, Ill. 1293 Second Ave., New York, N. Y. 211 Hartford Pl., Utica, N. Y. 320 Sierra Dr., Hillsborough, Calif. 1711 Thornton Ridge Rd., Baltimore, Md. 64 Prospect Ave., Montclair, N. J. 199 Don Ave., Rumford, R. I. 35 Harrison Ave., Highland Park, N. J. 3615 Greenbrier, Dallas, Texas 12 Joan Dr., Pawtucket, R. I. 761 Norgate, Westfield, N. J. 1305 Cleveland Ave., Wyomissing, Pa. 19 Oakland St., Huntington, N. Y. 14 N. Clermont Ave., Margate, N. J. 1727 41st Place, S. E., Wash., D. C. 21 Lloyd Rd., Waterford, Conn. 56 N. 8th St., Lemoyne, Pa. 48 Atherton Ave., Nashua, N. H. 211 Waterman St., Providence, R. I. 2378 Euclid Hts., Cleveland Hts., Ohio 100 Clarendon Ave., Providence, R. I. 1310 Maxwell La., Bloomington, Ind. 1660 Cloverleaf St., Bethlehem, Pa. 60 Peach Tree Rd., Maplewood, N. J. 11 Beverly Rd., Wellesley, Mass. 108-23 Jewel Ave., Forest Hills, N. Y. 1816 Monroe Ave., New York, N. Y. Lake Attitash, Amesbury, Mass. 1173 Sunset View, Akron, Ohio 242 Meeting St., Providence, R. I. 222 East 71st St., New York, N. Y. 135 Mount Vernon St., Boston, Mass. 4413 Sedgwick Rd., Baltimore, Md. 60 Blackstone Blvd., Providence, R. I. 2 Montrose Ave., Baltimore, Md. 46 Baltusrol Rd., Summit, N. J. l Kin fisher Dr Middletown N J , g ., , . . ZAROODNY, Alexandra R. D. 1, Sherwood Lane, Havre De Grace, Md. ZELNICK, Suzzane ZIERLER, Peggy ZINNO, Sally ZUBIAGO, Joan ZWICK, Barbara 30 Eastchester Rd., New Rochelle, N. Y. 6114 Maywood Ave., Baltimore, Md. 134 Metropolitan Rd., Providence, R. I. 127 Massachusetts Ave., Providence, R. I. 16 Fordyce Lane, St. Louis, Mo. Eastern States Farmers Exchange I W ..1 W, ' '111' if e. if- 1- '. ' ' .gas ff '41 fi 3,1551 I The Gate The Blu. The Gate The Blue Room i Y 5 C1 There are several people not on the BRUN MAEL ' ' ted for their ex- board whom we have much apprecia ' his perienced help. Jim Burke, Brown 62, drew from ' ' ' s rocedures and work in publishing to describe to u p possibilities. Mrs. Hugh Townley worked to develop our judgment in looking at layouts. The Brown LIBER statl under Jim Hawley was helpful and fine, and the boys of h AEGIS under Harris Aaronson hosted a the Danimout spirited workshop session. Mr. Roswell Farnham and Mr. Arthur Keefe, our business associates, always were available, and Miss Baird, Dicie, and Miss McPhee Sup- ported us in a less technical way. Our greatest debt of gratitude is due our photographer, David Van Riper, The 1963 BRUN MAEL is lithographed in Velvatone b Wm. J. Keller Inc. The stock IS 8044: Warrerfg Y Saxony, and the dividers are printed 1n four process colors, reproduced from Fluoro-kel art work, I. This book printed b . , y VELVA . lgjaphic printing. Sole producers?-8VIjnE,Ja Special process of litho- o other printing firm is authokized 10 .uljellir Inc., Buffalo, N Y e e Velvatone meth l od. xlw lcPhee s up- .test debt of ln Riper. n Velva ij: WHl'1'6I1,S ays were tone four process tk. . xx I 1 IL .6 J '.- fs' 5 ,ee I , I V 3,1
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