California Institute of Technology Cal Tech - Big T Yearbook (Pasadena, CA)
- Class of 1961
Page 1 of 184
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 184 of the 1961 volume:
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FOREWORD Many imporTanT changes have Taken place on The CalTech campus since The lasT Big T was published. A number of These have been The resulT of an exTensive building preo- grani unhaTed several years ago. Perhaps The mosT significanT To The sTudenT body in general is The addiTion of Three new under- graduoTe sTudenT houses, Lloyd, Page, and Ruddock. This Trio along wiTh The old, well- esToblished Blacker, Dobney, Fleming, and RitkeTTs now house a large maioriTy of The undergraduaTe sTudenTs. This firsT year of exisTence, was, of course, a Trial of many aspeTcTs of sTUdenT house liv- ing. The RoToTion problem had To be solved, and iT was decided ThaT There would be a one year moraTorium. The new houses had To organize and geT on Their feeT, and They did so using a remarkable mixTure of old and new methods for solving Their problems. To show This uniting of The old and The new is The purpose of The 1961 Big T. Bob Schmulian Julian Prince 71m... ,. .. .h-Tu 4-4542.-- m- .. guw..- .,.- 7.. ,.,.... a 4m 7M. .. 7 -w77aW 2: ?.er ??$ta'fdgbwiffFWWim65 M' 373' 3 HMVH 479I 4 7'7an '9 i -....1.. ' J 4A'4' W swan:- ,:5!M5i39?3.v-W CONT ENT S FACULTY 6 SENIORS 18 STUDENT GOVERNMENT 44 HOUSES 56 ACTIVITIES . 94 SPORTS 124 ADVERTISING 150 l I Julian Prince, Editor Pete Fischer, Editor Jim Bob Schmulian, Editor Blackmon, Business Manager From: George Reeke, Bob Lieberman. Back: Miguel Levy, Bill Giaugue, Bob William, John Madey. SECTION EDITORS Julian Prince. . . . . ..................... Activities Bill Giougue ............................ Houses Jim Blackmon ................... . . . .Adverfising John Madey ................ . . . . . ....... Seniors Kay Sugahora ................... . ....... Faculty Bob Lieberman ........................ . . .Sporfs ACTIVITIES STAFF Steve Bruenn Bill Bush John Clouser Vic Engleman Herb Flindf Bill Francis Norm Gordon Lorne Hoolnick Bob Jernigan Dove Kendle Chuck Knapp John Lohmcm Wendell Mendell Bob Neilson Julian Prince Bill Reining Art Robinson Jun Sagawo Doug Shakel Joel Tenenbaum Bill Tivol Art Turner Dave Turner Frank Winkler Larry Yeagley Rod Zook ADVERTISING STAFF Jim Blackmon ............. . . . . .Business Manager Les lngber ......................... Bill Collector Doreen Hollis. ......................... Secretory Sam Sum ............................. Salesman , , 3217:? 3?; f4 ; ... GEORGE W. BEADLE Acting Dean of The Faculty FREDERIC BOHNENBLUST Dean of Groduofe Sfudies PAUL C. EATON Dean of Students DEANS L. WINCHESTER JONES Dean of Admissions WILLIAM N. LACEY Dean of The Foculfy FOSTER STRONG Dean of Freshmen HUMANITIES, 15! Row: H. Ellersieck, A. Stern, C. Sfrout, P. Bowermon, H. D. Smith - Chairman, H. Eagleson. 2nd Row: E. Hutchings, Jr., R. Stanton, C. E. Bures, M. D. Brockie, P. R. Baker, P. Orlov, H. N.' Gilbert, P. Fay. Lust Row: C. Hewton, R. D. Wayne, B. Laugsfon, J. C. Davies, J. K. Clark, A. R. Sweezy, D. Thomas, E. S. Munger, R. Conhoim, R. W. Oliver. HUMANITIES AIR SCIENCE THE AFROTC DETACHMENT STAFF Left to right: Moior Francis R. MocKenzie, Capt. Andrew Henry, Capt. Cory D. Stephenson, Ung. Richard E. Stafford, Ung. Willard J. Garner, 5591. John E. Merchant. Huxwau Rum X bkh,v7grynulwl n 1 vv . L. Albee, S. Epstein, C. R. L. T. Silver, R. H. Johns, . 4..., . .42 . Standing Inney Y G O L O E G H. Brown, R. P. Sharp, C. R. McK Allen, H. A. Lowensfam, H. P. Taylor, H. 'Benioff, C. H. Dix. GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES, Seaied, left to right Front Row: F, S Buffmgton, J. K. Knowles, J. H. Wayland, D. F. Welch, D. S. Clark, T. Y. Wu. Back Row: R. H. Scbersky, J. MiklowiTZ, W. D. Ronnie, TOPII I 1' MECHANICAL ENGINEERING ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Jr , N George, C. H. Papas, F. J. Mullin, F. W. Moxstcdt. Volluri Top Row: G. W. Housner, N. H. Brooks, A. T. Rossono, Jr., J. E. McKee, V. A. Vononi, W. R. Samples, R. F. Scott, F. J. Converse,'H. W. Wolf C. W McComick. Seated: R. R. Martel, J. F. Kennedy, G. J. Mahanrao. I I CIVIL ENGINEERING AERONAUTICS Front Row, left to right: R. Sfearman, H. D. Krumhaar, Y. C. Fung, I. Chang, J. D. Cole, T. Kubo'ro, R. Narasimha, E. E. Sechler, B. Sturtevant, H. Groenig, H. W. Liepmcmn, D. E. Coles, C. 'B. Millikan, G. B. Whithon, L. Lees, P. Lagerstrom. Back Row: A. Warts, J. K. Kevorkian, H. J. Stewart, 5. R. Valluri, A. F. Messiter, S. Kaplun, B. L. Reeves, H. W. Lier, A. Demetriades, G. Bienkowski. F. Zwicky, G. Munch. V1 M 0 m N 0 R T H S A Back: J. B. Oke, M. Schmidt, ll!u! Ill ------. -- III. il I-II-I- 'II.... 5' us Back Row: C. A. G. Wiersma, H. Boorsook, G. W. Beadle, R. D, Owen, R. Dulbecco, R. S. Edgar, A. H. Sturtevant, A. J. Hoogen-Smif, A. Tyler, H. Hellmers, A. Long. Front Row: G. L. Keighley, E. B. Lewis, N. H. Horowitz, S. Emerson, H. K. Mitchell, E. G. Anderson. BIOLOGY 2nd Row: G. D. Chokeman, C. R. DePrimo, T. M. Apostol, C. H. A. Andrea, F. B Fuller, M. P. Drozin, C. R. B. Wright. H. F. Bohnenblust, A C. Zaonen, M. Hall, Jr., 0. T. Todd, Back Row, lef! Io nght: S, J W. Mocki, E. Tully, Jr., A. Erdelyi, WIICOX, R. P. Dilworth, M. Ward, J. Todd. Front Row: W A. J. Luxemburg. MATHEMATICS PHYSICS Front Row: R. Gomez T. Lourirsen C. A. Barnes R F Bacher R F Moessbauer C C Louri'rsen J Mo ' I , , . . , . . , . . , . thews H. V. Neher L. Dovns Jr M Gellmonn R. M. Sutton. Back Row: R F Christy W R Smythe H G E Kobrok R F Deer J H M ' I I I V, . I . , . . , . . . , . . , . . ulllns, F. ST E. W. ' H A. Wendenmullerl R. B. Leighton, R. W Gould. Missing: R. P. Feynman. Y rong, cowanl C. D. Anderson! W. Whaling, . L Mgr PM u : R 0': C. H. Left To right: L. Zechmeisfer, E. W. Hughes, E. H. Swift-Choirmon, M. C. Caserio, A. F. Hildebrandt, H. J. Lucas, G. S. Hammond, W. P. Schoefer, T. Tedd, H. M. McConnell, R. B. Corey, F. C. Arson, R M. Badger, J. H. Sfurdivanf, O. R. Wulf, J. H. Richards, G. W. Robinson, J. D. Roberts. 1. 1, W Gellmunn, WIWholing. LINUS PAULING CHEMISTRY WSW ;; at W w WWWWW, WWW W, W W'VW , Don Forrest PRESIDENT Roger Bland T N E m S E R 0.. E m V SECRETARY: Tom Keil ATHLETIC MANAGER: Bob Ruby TREASURER: Chuck Ray J. RAYMOND HRIBAR FLEMING Ray Hribor's tastes in interior decoration run to myriads of small fish and large speakers; indeed he occasionally looks not unlike a large guppy himself, as he darts hurriedly about. His magnificent hi-fi, his large collection of paperbacks, and his noted hospitality have lent his room that exclusiveness and privacy com- mon to gold-fish bowls. . Actually, he is probably more serpentine than fish-like, as his honor standing last year, his Vice-Presidency of ACS, and his activities in the Chem E department will testify. Nor should his athletic prow- ess be discounted. He has been a track manager for four years running. After Tech, Ray plans to go to grad school. DAVID w. KENDLE DABNEY HERBERT RICE FLEMING ROLF RICHTER OFF-CAMPUS Dave came to Caltech from Salina lSuh- LlNE-uhl Kansas, but has done fairly well in spite of this. Among his accom- plishments are getting his soph scholar- ship to pay for his Hi-fi set, being on also ran in the race from Palmdale, and sewing as UCC in Dabney House and Manager of the Karate Club. Know- ing almost enough Karate to protect himself lwitness the hole in the Alley 4 walll, Dave is beginning cautious associa- tion with the opposite sex. Four years as 0 Chem E. has been a maior factor in his decision to attend graduate school in ME lCaltech againl. 22 t;-.x.ks4:9x-s,.4 Y- MA, ,. . -.; u 1.1,:: . -.. s. v 7,. , U, Whether scaling rocks or walls or hanging by his thumbs from a steep precipice or his balcony-Herb is a climber. Many buildings around old CIT has Herb rapelled. The very docile Ch.E. snake, Herb is aroused like a Tiger when you pull his ear or stop him from shaking. When he's not stuck on top of Mt. Everest, he's either playing a fast game of soccer, skiing, sailing, or just trying to get on the good side of his profs at the ACS meetings. Fleming will lose their best waiter'when Herb leaves here for MIT or Princeton. Der Deutschland's gift to the Westerh World, Rolf was transplanted by hIS family to New York City, the better to disseminate Aryan propaganda. To hIs peers, Rolf's greatest achievement .has been the maintenance of good relatiens with Mrs. P. of the A., which requ'ir'es less skill than diplomacy. Rolf's facxlity with words has caused him to be judged the campus' liveliest cynic. He. IS tho; admirably suited for his forthcoming WOI' at Aeroiet. GUY ANDREWS DABNEY When Guy first came to Tech, he was known as the wild driver from the high plains. After the loss of his car, he became a wild motor cyclist. Between accidents he has designed transistor cir- cuits for the Naval Ordinance Test Station. Guy doesn't say much about his future plans, but they obviously include a girl named Judy, as well as a lucrative job in the electronics industry. JIM BLACKMON DABNEY Rocketing into Southern-California from Charlotte, NC. via Andover, Mass., the Hlittle kid left behind his basement rocket, and set out to learn how he had built a much-acclaimed missile. Tiring of playing the student, he branched into football and track. He became so destruc- tive that he earned an instructor's rating in Karate. He also became Dabney head waiter. Jim found money so attractive that he stuck through two years as Big T Business Manager. Cars being his favorite love, next to women, he is co-holder of the Los Angeles to Charlotte driving record of 48 hours. With his naive, innocent 'iWho, me? look, he has trouble fighting off all his women i But I'm a good Ioser. i Graduating in AE, the missile world is sure to feel Jim's presence in years to come. BEN G. BURKE RICKETTS TBII A Brewterton, Washington man, Ben has combined hard work with ability to be- come one of the really outstanding mem- bers of his class. He is a four-year letterman in track and was Vice-President of Ricketts House. During track off-season, Ben contributed much to interhouse ath- letics. Ordinarily quiet and unassuming, one soon learns not to argue for the opposing side when Ben joins a dis- cussion. JAMES Q. COE DABNEY Jim is one of .those fellows who couldn't bear to leave Caltech. Starting here in '55, he finished two years during which he played freshmen baseball before a bout with Valley Fever kept him out of school for a year. He returned as a member of the class of '60 and ended as one of the select group of Dobney seniors who didn't graduate with their class. He finished at the close of first term and is now working for the highway department in Fresno. His time during the summer of 1960 wasn't wasted, though, as he occupied himself by marry- ing Ethel, the girl next door. Jim will always be remembered as the originator of Coe tokens; the A4El society, and the evenpopular Coe trophy of Dabney. RALPH E. BREDEHORST OFF-CAMPUS Eric came to Caltech from that nearby community, Los Angeles. Hoving spent several years at Pasadena City College, he became a member of the class of 1961 in his iunior year. During his iunior year he held the post of Vice-President of the ASCE. Upon graduation Eric intends to enter the field of productive employ- ment before attempting any further activi- ties in the field of higher education. KENDALL F. CASEY RICKETTS Although none of the other troops in. Ricketts caq pronounce Ken's address in Hawaii, Honors-at-Entrance Casey has managed to accept his compatriots with near equality. Ken's reputation of being socially aware, mentally awake, and morally one-of-the-boys is aspired by many, but attained by few. Since Kendall is one of those leaders of men so seldom turned out by the Coltech AFOTC, he plans to let the Air Force help him continue his education. DELMAR CURTIS DABNEY DelMar is an EE with much promise. He is one of the few who worries about each new difficulty, and he usually over- comes each one with few problems. His spare time is taken Up with the Glee Club and in intimate hours with his fiancee, Myrna. After graduation, Del plans to put his engineering talents to work for some Bay area concern, but first comes the wedding bells, the date being set for shortly after graduation in June. Del is always cheerful, even when being kidded by his friends; he is weH-Iiked by all, a situation which will undoubtedly follow him throughout his life. ENGINEERING KIRK M. DAWSON RUDDOCK RODNEY D. DOKKEN RICKETTS Shy, quiet and little, aren't exactly the terms in which one would describe Robin Devon Dokken. In his Junior year at Tech, Doc ran for President of Ricketts House on the ticket that he had helped more people in any situation than probably any other man in Ricketts House. He was right, Go ask Doc was almost a pass- word here, and he won and led Ricketts House to its best record socially, scholas- tically, and athletically in his generation at Caltech. Rod is useless, he always picks the wrong side and wins, iust try praising the DAR or American Legion in his presence. After striving nobly through 4 years here at Tech, Doc intends to come back for more punishment as a grad student next year. DOUG FENWICK RUDDOCK Doug was a stalwart upholder of the manly art of civil engineering and a graduate of the California Wine Institute. As Ruddock House secretary, he devoted much effort to inspiring innocent frosh in the monumental Fenwick imangower- ful, bacchanolian, yet suave, sophisti- cated, and even humble as he chose to drive the cutest little Volvo. He sang bass in the Glee Club and attempted to play the guitar, unfortunately. Doug is looking for five guys to save up money, buy a boat, and sail around the world. JOEL K. DONNELLY RUDDOCK TBH Energetic President of Ruddock House, Joel's blinking blue eyes proved more commanding than door bells and dinner gongs. He sang in the Glee Club, played in the Band, starred in interhouse volley- ball, and excelled at dancing the charles- ton, babying a new car, and program- ming computers. He remained a popular and patient IHC president through the heat of battles on broken windows, scratched doors, and rotation plans. On the side, Joel found time to be a good enough EE to make Tau Beta Pi. DONALD B. FORREST RICKETTS One of those boys from the elite section of Larchmont, New York, Don is con- sidered by the femmes as one of the neatest guys at Tech. The Seniors here, possibly on their girl friend's recom- mendation, elected him President of the Senior Class, and considering that he is from Ricketts, which is considered by some as political anathema, this is quite an accomplishment, proving that Don is one of the cool guys at Caltech. He joined the ranks of the off-campus, but participated actively in Rickett's athletics and social program; that is he played tennis and dated at least once this year. Don plans to continue his education. SIDNEY LEIBOVICH LLOYD TBII A prime example of the Ricketts House political machine, Sid Leibovich has plow- ed through elections and committee ap- pointments galore. Some aspersions have occasionally been cast as to the proper functioning of that machine; Leibo agrees ehe lost an election for Rep-at-Large. It for BOC, House Social Chairman, ASClT Treasurer, Tau Beta Pi Vice-President, ran admirably, however, through elections while the spoils system added the sinecure of Freshman Class President. Zeal for the commonweal and a humble recognition of civil responsibilities led to campus activi- ties such as the Educational Policies Com- mittee, Model UN, and circulation mana- ger of the California Tech. Sid is allegedly studying Applied Mechanics and has managed to squeak by with two years of honor standing. lilt was real easy is his modest dismissal of the subject. With a mind towards the goal 'iwell-rounded , Leibo spent two years each throwing and chasing lusually not farl the javelin and discus. For his heroic efforts in this area, he was awarded a letter. in a great Ricketts purge, Sid was sent to a new campus home, Lloyd House. There, with a small group known as the Old Guard, Leibovich acted the elder statesman role and saw much sound advice discarded by callow youth. lARRY LONG DABNEY Larry's biggest problem at Tech was teach- ing people how to pronounce the name of his home town in Ohio l iust south of Akron l, Cuyahoga Falls lsay Ki-yoh-go Boo-Bool. Under the guise of being a shy, naive, likeable guy, Larry was chosen as Dabney House Headwaiter and was elec- ted Senior Class lot '60 that isl Athletic manager. His ability to blush at the drop of a whatever one blushes at the drop of . . . endeared him as house stop- light. After three years of varsity toot- ball, Larry was a pretty good tackle and has now ioined the ranks of discouraged ex-frosh football coaches. As C.S.C.'s only reliability engineer, his future in E.E. looks secure. ANTHONY I. IWATA OFF-CAMPUS Stout Anthony Itsu Iwata has been some- thing of a misfit at Caltech; originally intending to go to a good business school, he could not get in because of his not being Jewish, and he was forced to come to his second choice, Caltech. ltsu, as his friends fondly call him, has resented this ever since and has combined this resentment with his business sense into an amalgam ethos, as exemplified by his recent statement, If IBM should decide to kill off all the Jews like Eichman did, it would be all right with me as long as my stock went Up! Conflicts have arisen because of his basic incompatability with Caltech. Brought up as a Seventh Day Adventist and having learned that the Creation was around 5700 BC, after taking geology, he was forced to moderate this extreme view and date the creation at about one million years ago. in ltsu we see the meeting of many traditional opposites: scientific idealism versus business practicality, East versus West, science versus religion, and mind versus matter, It is anyone's guess which ones will win out. While at Caltech Itsu has been a member of the Chinese Stu- dents Association. Next year he plans to go to work for Southern California's growing electronics industry. ENGINEERING MILTON S. LINDNER FLEMING Mickey came here from clear-aired Den- ver. Apparently he liked gulping smog, because he immediately went out for swimming and water polo. The latter he dropped but he has continued swim- ming for Tech and Fleming House, earning letters from both. ROTC also interrupted his concentrated snaking for three years, until he joined his many deserting class- mates. Next year he plans to begin revolutionizing industry as an EE. SERGE LOUSSARARIAN RICKETTS Though nobody in Ricketts is able to spell or pronounce his last name, the Ricketts House Armenian, a transfer student from Cairo, Egypt, has managed to get along with the identification, Serge what's-his- name. When the house TV was koput, Serge had to spend even more time studying and waiting at the Antheneum. Few men in his alley this year will forget Serge's strange devotion to his sink, and fewer still will forget that Serge always won in the few card games he ioined, and his infinite supply of cigarettes. Next year Serge will stay on at Caltech. 25 ENGINEERING ROY H. MAKINO BLACKER It is common knowledge among the people who know him that Roy's pose. as the strong silent Hawaiian type IS lust intended to keep his artistic talents under wraps. However, the news still seems to leak out before election campaigns, Inter- house dance, and other artistic proiects, when Roy becomes House Artist by proc- lamation. Roy is most respected, however, for his influence with the powerful anti- showering faction of the House. The most determined showering force dissolves when the whispered phrase spreads throughout the House: Makino says no! Roy is also a charter membei' of the Seniors' Volley- Bad-Tennis Club. He will graduate in electrical engineering and may continue study in graduate school. IAN D. MARKS FLEMING CHARLES A. RAY RICKETTS A rare notive Californian, Chuck is most envied for his perpetual ear-to-ear grin, and his faculty for snagging interesting summer iobs. He left the option-go-round at Guggenheim, as one of the few who know how planes come apart. Knee iniuries forced Chuck to drop football at the end of his sophomore year, but left him more time to participate in other activities. Currently A.S.M.E. Chairman and Senior Treasurer, he has served Cal- tech in exemplary fashion, a precedent set by the earlier generation of Rays. In fact, Chuck's burning ambition has been to live up to his father's fine reputation. He hasn't. After graduation, Chuck will go to Slenderella. WAYNE A. MASSEY RUDDOCK DWAIN J. REED BLACKER Dwain came to Caltech planning, like all frosh, to be a theoretical nuclear physi. cist. However, in his Junior year he switched options and took over the posi- tiori on House Double-e, vacated that year by Larry Elmore. The duties of this office include broadcasting music con- tinuously over the Blacker Music Exchange lines and playing badminton at least one night a week. When not tending to these duties he could be found leading the House teams as House Athletic Manager or playing volleyball or Fermi-particle-in- a-box in the courtyard. With exposure to the humanizing influences of the Caltech Y and the Blacker Pseudo-Liberals, he has become interested in the social sciences and is tentatively planning to do graduate work in psychobiology. aim ' ' Ilifl :ii ;. Nde w-x v w, :kkkke h .- ch ; -ge'rdx azQ Ab 'eex.- H 1.4. PJQ r: thk'rfr raj I 1 RN;- Po w; 53$: l l l l illl ill f l l, . l Na N Mmo- x a s ROBERT M. RUBY PAGE Bob Ruby is one of the best water polo players Caltech has had. A three year letterman and an All-Conference per- former in his iunior year, Bob was one of the big reasons the Beavers tied for the league championship this season. Aside from water polo, Bob is also a good skier, an interesting bridge player, and an outspoken critic of Barry Gold- water. During his spare time, Bob studies ME. WILLIAM K. SHUBERT OFF-CAMPUS Coming from a real pit lthey take out 1 million pounds of copper a day--Morenci, Arizonal, he soon fell in with that rowdy crowd from Phoenix, and became a char- ter member of the A.S.S.S. Along with this he was an active member lbridge, hearts, eth of Throop Club to the bitter end. Chem. 1 lab convinced this boy to go into engineering and those whizzing electrons hacl attraction, thus future plans include an MS degree in E.E. here at Caltech lsome never learnl and a summer spent at J.P.L. NEIL R. RICHARDSON FLEMING l'Laundry and dry cleaning go out to- night. A hissing sound is heard, and a wet paper napkin strikes Neil's polka-dot waiter's jacket. In addition to laundry, this Seattle man's outside activities in- clude interhouse cross country, interhouse track, freshman track, ASCIT dance class chairman, doughnut salesman, and Flem- ing House co-social chairman. The last activity he had to drop because it threatened to flunk him out lalong with the four other co-social chairmenj. Neil's plans are to go on to graduate school and to return the laundry. MICHAEL R. RUECKER RlCKETTS TBH Another member of the A.S.S.S., this Phoe- nician came to Tech to study Chem. E. A gung-ho Ricketts frosh, Mike carried the brake drum to safety more than once and aided in interhouse athletics. He lettered in football and track but a knee injury and marriage confined his sports activities. Swift lab squelched his interest in chemistry and he switched to E.E. Mike has two children and is a member of Tau Beta Pi. He is coming back for a Masters Degree next year. JERRY SIEGEL DABNEY Jerry came to Caltech from Brockton, Mass, and immediately began to make a great many friends with his all-Ameri- can personality. Among his best friends were the deans and the registration com- mittee, but most of us will remember him because of his reluctance to say not This, coupled with his artistic and mechanical ability, led to the success of many Inter- house dances. He also was a good full- back and an excellent golfer. He is look- ing forward to five years of flying with the U.S. Air Force, after which he will go to work as an A.E. STEPHEN D. SLOBIN Steve Slobin was his high school's vale- dictorian, getting all A's in every course he took. Steve, who came to Caltech as a freshman, has that rare blend of sensitiv- ity and hustle that makes him likeable to everyone that meets him. After his arrival at school, Steve tried finding his niche at Caltech: neither frosh waterpolo lone dayl nor frosh football ltwo daysl seemed to suit him, and he quit each because of a fight with Coach Preisler; however, he finally found his place in IRE of which he has been an active member, and interhouse athletics where he has been one of the really spirited Blacker Indians. A prodigious reader, Steve's favorites are lonesco, photography annuals, and books on electricity and magnetism. Steve's im- mediate plans are for graduate work, and his farsighted dreams includea split-level ranch house somewhere in the San Fer- nando Valley, 0 nice white Protestant girl, and absorption by some big corporation. JOHN R. SMITH DABNEY John came to Tech determined to become an Electrical Engineer. He has fulfilled this goal very well if the cries Hey, Smith, how do you do the 106 problem are any indication. Around Dabney House, John is noted as a perpetrator of clever stunts. He has also bored us all to tears with stories of his travels in Europe last summer. He has spent much of his time at the swimming pool, if not as a mem- ber or manager of the swimming team, as a life guard. John has also been active in the Student Shop and is a member of the IRE. After grad school, John will be designing clever devices for some lucky company. KAY SUGAHARA PAGE Kay has always taken his card playing seriously. Most anytime he can be coaxed into a friendly game of most anything. When he plays, the kibitzers come from miles around to study his anticseno one plays cards quite like Sugahara. Kay has also distinguished himself as quite a golf player, a mainstay on the varsity squad. This year he expanded his empire by joining the Big T staff, certainly a noble gesture. JOHN P. STENBIT DABNEY TBH On seeing Skip, Bert La Brucheric's little heart skipped a beat and his beady eyes brightened; for Skip is 6'-3 of brute force and was born to be an all confer- ence tackle. Unfortunately, Skip was so weighted down with his honor certificate, honor key and T.B.P. bent that he couldn't make it to the football field; he collapsed at first base and earned three letters in baseball. As a defense mechan-- ism icompensating for what he calls his yellow streak regarding footballi, Skip has participated heavily in extra-curricular activities earning a spot as a Beaver; Skip's future ambitions involve manage- ment, and after Grad school iTech or Stanfordl he will become a wheel at I.B.M. SAMUEL R. SUITT DABNEY Sam decided shortly after his arrival at Tech that since nearly everyone around here was either a troll or a twitch, he should distinguish himself in athletics. After lettering in frosh football and base- ball, his interest died, his weight in- creased, and he went in for more exciting pastimes.. He established several records such as ill 34 minutes from Mt. Wilson to Dabney House in a '54 Plymouth, l2l staying up 110 hrs. without sleep during exams, i3i wall papering an entire alley with TS letters, l4l earning i2l $2600 in one summer, i5l catching the worst case of mononucleosis on infirmary record, and, of course, he is co-holder of the LA. to Charlotte, NC. driving record of 48 hours. Sam will be remembered for a long time for his willingness to help Ol' Dabney and his fellow students, his foggy, glassy-eyed expression shortly after the beginning of each term, and his ability of snag cake from a blonde in a T Bird at 75 mph. Sam plans on getting a iob, getting married, and getting an M.S., in that order. THOMAS A. TISCH LLOYD TBII In spite of the fact that he made Tau Beta Pi as a Senior, Tom Tisch's advisor swears that he has taken a maior in extra curricular activities. As a freshman Tisch was captain of the freshman water- polo team, got elected to the ASClT Board as Representative-at-Large, lthe firstl, and finished the year as a member of the swimming team and Frosh Athletic Manager. Sophomore year he lettered in varsity waterpolo, and to the delight of his teachers showed a spark of interest in engineering by joining the IRE. As a iunor lhe ran for an office and lostl he wrote for the California Tech, then teamed up with John Todoroff to edit the Wretchecl Rag. His senior year, was high- lighted by his selection as captain of the varsity waterpolo team, and subsequent choice as guard on the All-Conterence Waterpolo team. At last notice, though, Tisch had decided to go on for a higher education, and was planning to take a Masters degree in EE from any school that would accept him. CHRIST O. VELLINE RUDDOCK TBH BYRON F. SUMMERS OFF-CAMPUS DAVID P. TURNER DABNEY In addition to learning all the things a good EE should know, Dave learned the techniques for fixing elections as chair- man of the elections committee. Since the outcome of football games can't be rigged, his presence as senior manager of the football team was to no avail. Dave also has been an active member of the student shop, and rounded out his extra-curricular activities by being a UCC in Dabney House. Dave is planning to continue his education in Grad school next year, then to put in 3 years as a lieutenant in Uncle Sam's Air Force before going out to make his first million. GARY O. WALLA BLACKER Leaving his girl in San Diego, Gary came north to grow to manhood at Caltech. All in life is not electrical engineering he said, but developing socially. He prompt- ly ioined Blacker House, ROTC, Glee Club and eventually the EE option. After three years of frivoling away from his home, with girls, music, rifle shooting, and EE, he decided to share his social wisdom and become president of Blacker, winding up his term by winning the lnterhouse sing. He has also been voted the man with the best liked tool box on campus, received an Honor Key, and is an alumni representative. Gary found it easy to get a iob if you're in ROTC. To prove how eager he is, Gary is marrying the girl back home and has promised Proctor and Gamble he can make soap bubbles elec- trically. ASTRONOMY BIOLOGY JOEL A. MICHAEL FLEMING Joel began as a typical gung-ho frosh physicist, but having seen the light he is finishing as a gung-ho biologist. Dur- ing this metamorphosis he has also be- come a typical Fleming boor, as inveterate bridge player, a persistent JV soccer player, and as a manager, the slave driver of the swimming team. Rumor has it that he has become a beakish and somewhat less than infallible UCC. With this sordid background he is a prime can- didate to become a grad student at some indiscriminant school, moioring in of all things, neurophysiology! I MILES W. MCLENNAN RICKETTS A member of the numerous Class of 1960.5, Bill came to the center of the known universe from Ohio. Besides an exponentially decaying CPA, among the things he collected at Tech were numerous friends, 2 swimming letters, a taste for hi-fi, a waIk-on part in an ASCIT play, 4 trophies for junk collecting, and a beautiful wife. After bouncing harmlessly off physics, he settled down to his tree love, astronomy. After graduation, he Wlll appropriately enough become a sonar engineer and do his part to extend the arms race. LELAND H. HARTWELL OFF-CAMPUS Originally from Glendale, Lee transferred to Tech following his freshman year at Glendale College. Ignoring the pleas of football coach La Brucherie, Lee dedicates himself to becoming an excellent bioloe gist. For his efforts he achieved honor standing in. his iunior and senior years. Next year Lee will venture to Boston and MIT where he will continue his studies in the field of Biochemical Genetics. With Lee will go his attractive wife Judy and young son Tod. LAURENCE J. SLOSS FLEMING Larry is one of the most unusual charac- ters seen in Fleming House in a long time. Whether this is good or bad de- pends on your point of view. At any rate no one can imagine Fleming without Larry. His socially approved activities have included being librarian and social chairman several times, but his genius has more often been applied to other activities. His familiar lunprintablel greet- ing to House members returning from dates have been a boon to four genera- tions of Women are Evil Club Presidents and his church activities have brought salvation and baptism to courtless Flem- ing. Men, Larry will undoubtedly be best remembered for his role in The Sloss Case and the subsequent Doug Stalin McLane dictatorship. BIOLOGY DOUGLAS K. STEWART RlCKETTS From the State of Northern California Doug came to us with all sorts of ambi- tion to be a Doctor of Medicine and surprisingly enough after four years of science, leaves the same way. His room- mates must admit that he snaked a great deal, achieving amazingly good grades from this effort. Besides having a lot of the girls from Santa Barbara at his peck and call, Doug, a four year letterman in track, was athletic manager of Ricketts House in one of its most successful years. In his iunior year he was elected to the ASCIT BOC, proving that not only Ric- ketts but also the rest of his classmates consider him one of the most responsible as well as stable individuals at Caltech. Doug is Stanford bound which ought to round out his education. WILLIAM R. BAUER DABNEY TBII Almost from the first day he arrived at Tech Bill Bauer has been engaged in an extraordinary wide variety and large volume of campus activities. Every time he has left one activity or office to take up another, he has left with an increased reputation for efficiency, dependability, and initiative. These were the qualities he showed as a member of the BOC and later as BOC Secretary, as a Feature Edi- tor of the California Tech, an assistant editor of the Big T, member of the EPC, ASCIT secretary and most recently and most importantly as ASCIT President. Even more amazing is that while participating in all these activities Bill has compiled a first rate academic record. In spite of his obviously bright future as a chemist, Bill has decided to study psychology. He has been awarded a Marshall Eellowship so the next two years will find him studying CHEMISTRY at Oxford. GARRET M. lHLER FLEMING The Great God Garret, as he was known at times to his Sundry devotees and multitudinous detractors, began his check- EDWARD 1- EVANS . PAGE ered career as a Fleming man and would- To the casual observer, Ed Evms looks be chemist by arriving on campus with like he's asleep. For four years, though, Ed has opened his eyes every spring long enough to play Interhouse football. This year his excellent quarterbacking led Page to an undefeated season-much the same way he led Ricketts to an un- defeated season his freshman year. When not playing football, Ed plays Chemistry. his pelvis in a sling. In spite of the rigors of a Caltech education, it is still the same old Gary who will graduate this June with the rest of the remnants of the class of '61. Even a year as house president has failed to dim his iaundiced eye, nor has the groveling grind abated his cynicism one whit. Soon he will march resolutely onward, secure in the knowl- edge that whatever the future may hold, it might be worse. 3i 32 CHEMISTRY ARNOLD R. JONES RICKETTS Coming from Manhatten, Kansas, Dick has managed to do more than hold his own in this melting pot of city slickers and big spenders. He studied about a third of the time, and sang with the Glee Club the rest of the time. His Ricketts House activities were House Sec- retary, as one of the Prexy alley boys, Pledge Master and a UCC. Ostensibly a chemist, Dick combines a lot of smart in chemistry with being well-read in the Humanities and an exceptional knowledge of electrical engineering, so he plans to come back next year for a BS in EE to add to his BS in Chemistry. JEROME V. V. KASPER BLACKER TBII Jerry comes from the glorious San Fer- nando Valleeran Nuys High. During his stay at Tech he was elected Social Chairman of Blacker House and president of the ACS club. He was elected to Tau Beta Pi in his junior year and was a member of the honor section of his class sophomore year. lWhat happened first term Junior year, Jerry?l The first three years his social life centered about a certain red-headed student nurse. He says that his two biggest mistakes were learn- ing to play bridge during his Freshman year and waiting until his senior year to get married to the redhead. Future plans include a Ph.D. in Physical Chemistry hope- fully in three years at Cal Berkeley as an NSF fellow lfor the first year at leastll past doctoral study in Europe, and then a large family while teaching idealistic young chemists like those at Tech. JOHN E. LOHMAN DABNEY Most people first remember John Lohman as the freshman who pitched for Dabney's softball team and had to brush a map of hair from before his eyes after every ball he pitched. Since that time John has indulged in almost every kind of activity to be found on the campus and some that aren't. Active in Glee Club, YMCA, student guiding'and IHC he has received letters in Tennis, and served on several student-faculty committees. He was very active in Dabney House, served as Treasurer and was later elected to lead the house as President. John drifted toward geochemistry and geology in his iunior year but returned to the chemistry Option, and plans to go to grad school in psychology and education. His latest weakhess is planning skiing trips on the basis of which areas are closest to random female acquaintances he knows around the country. ROBERT E. LONG FLEMING It is the proud boast of Bob Long that he has done practically nothing that anybody would consider worthwhile . Most Fleming men would disagree, in view of his fruitful careers as House Historian, UCC, and finally as House Vice President. The chemistry department, his option, might also possibly disagree, con- sidering the large quantities of research he has managed to cram into the inter- stices of his busy life. Bob has a talent for giving machines conniptions, especi- ally the computer, which shrinks visibly at his approach, and his largish motor- cycle, which is usually in smallish pieces. Eventually, he hopes to do grad work in X-ray diffraction crystallography. WILLIAM C. RIPKA ORTWIN A. WERSEL RUDDOCK FLEMING KARL H. POOL RICKETTS A native of La Habra isomewhere in the vicinity of L.A.J Karl is one of those fortunates who can study during weird hours . . . in the mornings, Saturdays, before dinner, and after baseball prac- tice. This is fortunate since Karl wastes his evenings doing .problems for the fresh and sophs in Ricketts House. When his girl friend isn't around,' Karl spends his time as last year's Athletic Manager, as a UCC, as President of the PBCC, and as an occupant of the Ricketts House party room. Next year, Karl will be a TA and grad student at Washington. OLIVER SEELY RUDDOCK In the days of oide there dwelt a Seely who was dubbed Sir Golly Ollie. He was enthusiastic. Help! Help! The cries of a fair damsel in distress arouse the goodly knight; Golly guys, we've got to do something! He was enthusiastic Ruddock House social chairman. But lo, the storied fire breathing snake! Sir Golly is sore grieved and wails in anguish. He was enthusiastic Glee Club member. Undaun- ted, the brave hero unsheothes his sword and behold! The snake is smote in twain. He was an enthusiastic member of the Caltech band. Noble Ollie sweeps the maiden onto his steed, and sayeth Gee, guys! HUGH H. KIEFFER BLACKER Hugh is well known as the strongest man ever to haye a permanent medical P.E. excuse and as the most eromment senior geologist. He has been active in many things, Including terms as BOC member, ASCIT activities chairman, and Blacker House Vice-President. He has also been one of the most active climbers in the Alpine Club. Hugh is headed for graduate school and Antarctica where he will probably get cold. Hugh will be most remembered at Caltech for his prodigious feats of strength and for often proving that Kieffer will do anything. DOUGLAS W. SHAKEL DABNEY Doug was so interested in the complexities of Caltech, that he took five years to graduate. Lured into the geology option, he soon showed outstanding talent for rock collecting, lunar geology and big picture geology. e Doug's forte was the student houses, where he has made outstanding contributions to student life. As the sage of Dabney, his opinion was sought by many. A political dilet- tante, he led a successful coup to become Dabney secretary as a frosh, followed by house historian, IHC Secretary, and Dabney executive vice-president. Talented, the effluent Mr. Shakel contributed literary articles on student life, kept visitors land the News Bureaul happy as head guide, vocalized with the Caltech Glee Club, and served as Beaver secretary. Hiding behind the protective wings of his beloved AFROTC Doug successfully managed to avoid contacts with athletics most of the time. He made a contribution, nevertheless, and the contest of strength and endurance known as Shakeling shall long remain a part of Dabney legend. Doug appears to be headed for service with the Air Force upon graduation, but is ultimately destined to set up residence on the moon, or in Washington. GEOLOGY LAWRE Ever 1 Larry the qu to loot He is senior Honor His ye sophis weeks rest 0 signifi back. being of the and V man. Harva ROBERT D. NASON PAGE The YMCA would never have been the same without the efforts of dedicated Bob Nason, Y and UCC worker. At the sacrifice of more carnal pleasures lexcept for Geologyl, Bob devoted his senior year to being YMCA President. The work involved in this office is tremendous, but Bob did a fine iob, set- ting a standard that is hard to follow. But more of an outstanding feature than his competence is Bob's friendliness, sincerity and enthusiasm, and his puzzling devotion to Geology Club. LAWRENCE D. BROWN DABNEY TBH Ever true to his Beverly Hills background, Larry Brown lcall him by his full namel is the quiet and unassuming tso he won't have to loan it outl owner of a blue Ford Falcon. He is also one of the top scholars in the senior class, his GPA's having earned him Honor Standing ever since he's been here. His years at Tech have seen him acquire the sophistication of travel, including a few weeks in Denmark, a whirlwind tour of the rest of Europe, and a brief lbut not in- significantl stay over at Vassar on the way back. His other accomplishments include being President of Tau Beta Pi, Chairman of the ASCIT ExComm, member of the EPC, and varsity basketball several times letter- man. Next year will find him at either Harvard, Chi or Cornell. SHELBY L. BRUMELLE RUDDOCK Shelby goes off to work in industry after graduation, leav- ing behind him a truly indelible imprint in the history of Rud- dock House. He is one who will always be remembered, for his friendly West Texas accent and his quiet, easygoing nature, for his revolutionary approach to beating the drums in the Cal- tech Band, for the sparkle he lent to so many house social functions, and for his religious avoidance of work, responsi- bility and ambition. But mostly he will be remembered for the beer stains left in Room 238. GEOPHYSICS PETER R. VOGT OFF-CAMPUS Born-Hamburg, Germany; U.S. 19474957; Caltech 1957-1961. Only nominally a geophysicist, Vogt's future is uncertain. Next year will be spent at the University of Innsbruck, Austria, under a Fulbright study grant. His project there will consist of skiing, mountain climbing, agitating for another Anschluss and other scholarly enterprises. Upon return to the U.S., Vogt may continue scrambling up the academic ladder toward a Ph.D., or else slide down into the flophouse, continuing as an adventurer and burn. Vogt completes his Caltech soiourn with an unblemished record of non participation in school-centered social, political, cultural and athletic activities. P. R. Vogt, a 4 yr. O.C. proudly nominates himself the number one campus out-of-it of the class of '61 and challenges anyone to match his record. MATHEMATICS ELI I. CHERNOW RUDDOCK TBH A math major headed for law school so that he can enter politics, Eli was the local campaign manager for Kennedy, Rudd Brown, and in general all things Democratic. Natur- ally he was president of the Caltech Young Democrats. He was also an active officer of the YMCA. As Ruddock House vice-president he interpreted the law with a strong sense of Fleming liberalism inter- spersed amid the traditional beakish- ness. He was elected to Tau Beta Pi. THEODORE H. ELCONIN OFF-CAMPUS THOMAS LAIN GORDON RUDDOCK Why does the Olive Walk smell so queer? What makes Tom Gordon carry a leer? But never fear The ice box is neare Notable among TG's accomplishments at . , Caltech include Ruddock House Comptrole DAVID FRIEDMAN FLEMING ., , . t ' Ier, Salton Sea Skinneydipper, 1.1 Crew U ' Team Boatswain, Champion Alley 4 Re- frigerator Opener. Where Tom will go we do not know. What Tom will be we cannot see. But we will claim It's a dirty shame The Olive Walk will never smell the some. STEPHEN H. HECHLER DABNEY Steve Hechler was born in New York City, spent a good portion of his life in the wide open, boom town of Rutland, Mass., and now resides in San Leandro, Califor- nia. He has served oh the Coltech Y Cabinet for three years and received RONALD W. GATTERDAM RUDDOCK three letters in varsity tennis. Steve's unique style of making dinner announce- ments has assured that he will be long remembered by the men of Dabney House. He has definite plans to attend grad school at either the University of Cali- fornia at Berkeley or Wisconsin U., or Ohio State. NICHOLAS S. MORE OFF-CAMPUS Upon graduating from high school I spent a year trying to decide what to do. Decided to go to college and started with Glendale. After a year and a half I came to Tech as a sophomore, switch- ing from mining engineering to math. Spent much time commuting from La Crescentc, working waiter at the Hunt- ington Sheraton, and bus boy at the Coconut Grove. Then after a portion of social life and some sleep, I found little time left for model building, chess, and poker. Future plans include the Univer- sity. of Colorado and then teaching at the university level. CLEVE B. MOLER LLOYD TBH RICHARD S. NORMAN BLACKER TBH Dick Norman, from Mexico, made many friends and partici- pated in sundry activities, despite the above handicaps and a discolored tooth and fingernail. This was in no small part 0F: due to his ability to recite off-color phrases in Hungarian and CAMPUS Spanish, and his ability to stop a conversation cold. His activities have included, ASCIT Business Manager, ASCIT Activities Chairman, House Librarian, House Treasurer, and ill- fated marriage to D.K., Band, Frosh Football, lnterhouse Athletics, and he has received an Honor Key and Certificate. Next year Dick will attend Michigan in Communication Sciences singe. Someone Burned his letters from MlT. Good luck to Dick in his never-ending quest to answer the Eternal Question. I RUDDOCK Elsoqueet? Ir alee? TY t MARTIN H. SCHULTZ DABNEY Marty ioined the class of 1961 late; he is one of the few PliShments l members of the class to complete college in three years. In MC 0 spite of the heavy academic load he has carried, Marty has 0mPll0l' managed to participate actively in the affairs of Dabney er, H Crew House, where his Boston accent has become a familiar trade- MA I ICS AlleyARe. mark. He has served energetically as house Secretary for the last year. As seems to be the way with all mathematicians, thnow. Marty's immediate plans call for several years of grad otsee. school, after which he undoubtedly will make significant contributions to mathematical knowledge. sell the same. HAROLD M. STARK FLEMING TBH LAWRENCE F. SHAMPINE DABNEY TBH Larry came to Caltech fresh from Florida with math on his mind. If it was math that was on his mind you can rest assured that he would muster the energy and zeal to excell in it-and he has. A member of Tau Beta Pi he is a strong contender for academic honors. His enthusiasm for everything he undertakes is contagious and it enlivens the spirit of those about him whether it be in freshman basketball, house volleyball or crew. His most recent love is Karate. Convinced that it is a superior sport, he will not relax his efforts until he has at least a brown belt. Larry will continue graduate school at Caltech and then hasten into industry to add to the heritage of numerical analysis. JOHN F. WILKINSON DABNEY Raised in the very shadows of the Golden Gate Bridge, in bustling Sausalito, Calif., John came to Tech with the infamous class of 1960. His solution of the Techman's perennial problem of what to do for more time to pursue his extracurricular activities will remain legend in Dabney House. It is brilliant in its simplicity and it is a wonder someone had not thought of it before4on't attend classes. When he returned, John settled down to the hard work of the math option and soon became an honor student. He gained the admiration and respect of his instructors li'Ancl iust exactly what ingenious name do we give to this sort of group, Mr. Wilkinson? l as he did of his fellow Dabney House members, who bestowed upon him the office of htv lwhatever that meansl. He was the acknowledged master of the art of crew in Dabney House, winning the Headlight Trophy, and helping the Darbs set the record time of 24.3 seconds on their way to the Acme trophy. He is the last of the old Scrooge players and is a good bridge player besides. it is hoped that he will be able to continue developing these and other skills he learned in Dabney as he pursues his graduate work in mathematics here at Caltech. PHYSICS ROGER W. BLAND BLACKER Since arriving at Caltech from Redding, California, Rog has managed to keep busy at physics, music, class activities and aquatic sports. Rog earned the re- spect of the water polo team for his sub- conscious growling during the rougher games and his consistent attendance he didn't miss a day except when practice conflicted with his violin lessonsl. Rog plans to narrow his field of interest to Physics at Berkeley next year. RICHARD H. DREW DABNEY Richard Drew is a successful example of a student interested both in science and management. At the school he has dis- tinguished himself by an enviable record in the physics option and by his leader- ship in a wide variety of campus activi- ties. Not one to be confined by Caltech's walls, he is a frequenter of the fine restaurants and theaters of the area. To utilize his pleasant personality and scien- tific ability he intends to work as techni- cally-oriented management. As prepara- tion for this goal his studies toward graduate degrees in electrical engineer- ing and business administration. DONALD E. FAHNLINE BLACKER Don's interest during college have been very diversified. For a while he was the rider of on eight foot high unicycle which he rode until it wore out. Then too, we must not forget his volleyball spike which helped Blacker win its games. But Don also had other activities. He was chairman of the Religious Em- phasis Commission of the Caltech YMCA and through it he was very active in bringing other points of view to Caltech. The little publicized Institutions, a service organization, was headed by Don for three years. If you ever needed someone to help you and he was able, you could depend upon him to get the job done right. Don's future plans include Betty as of June 10th, and graduate study in Theology at the University of Chicago for a year to find out more about the world and then perhaps back to physics. JOHN L. EMMETT FLEMING This carrot-topped nemesis journeyed all the way from Rochester, Minn. to be a plague upon authority in general and Neil Pings in particular. Even when he wasn't up to anything, his air of spurious innocence was a siren call to minions of the law, and a premonition of disaster to the populace at large. A glib tongue and fantastic good luck completes the picture of the man who will soon be loosed upon an unsuspecting world, there his won- drous misdeeds to perform. ROBERT L. HEATH FLEMING Since Bob is one of those rare native Californians, no one has been able to understand why he came to Caltech. Surely, they say, he would have been smart enough to look it over before he came. Making the best of a bad deal, Bob has carved'out an empire for him: self, holding several of those mysterious YMCA positions and galloping across Country in the service of his Creator. Fortunately Bob is an enlightened YMCA leader and. frequently indulges in Wine, Women, and Song, as his darkened room Saturday nights will testify. Bob has also been active in Caltech sports lswimmingl and House Politics iUCC of Fleming for two yearsl. 1i. i e 5 2 g I g THOMAS E. KEIL BLACKER Having been awarded the Harvard Book as the outstanding well-rounded student of his class at Harverford Senior High School, Tom It's fun to run Keil came to us with the following accolades: A National Merit Certificate, 0 General Motors Scholarship, Certificates for high scholastic attainments in Physics I and II, American History, Latin 11, Algebra II, Plane Geometry, and Trigonometry, and a Certificate of Superior Merit for meritor- ious proficiency in Latin, having obtained a score of 101 out of a possible 120. Tom was awarded Honors at Entrance. Despite this, Tom made many friends in his five years as a typical Techman not the least of which was one F. Patty, with whom a most memorable evening was spent. Ah, youth. Ah, spring. Outside his studies, he managed to find time to be Blacker House Social Chairman and Athletic Manager and win many varsity letters. After a bit of trouble with Polycarp, Tom decided to come back to his Alma Mater for grad school. Tom will always be remembered for his husky voice. DAVID C. KUBRIN BLACKER BENT HULD BLACKER Bent's reverending search for an absolute qualifies him as one of Caltech's last romantics. He quickly replaced his super- natural yearnings four years ago with a sound belief in Plato's ideals. Bent now calls these idealseephysics. With such a religious background, Bent was a very successful turner of the Caltech crank. His goals in life are to add to human happiness by producing a few more kilo- watts through his research in magneto- hydrodynamics, and to further the Jewish tradition in the growth of Physics. ERNEST G. JANZEN LLOYD STANLEY A. KLEIN BLACKER Stan Klein is not hard to notice as he lurked in leather jacket about Blocker House, the YMCA, the playing fields of Scripps, the hearing rooms of the House Committee on Un-American Activities, the garden parties of the radical left, and the summer plants of the missile makers. Yet to understand the motivations of his mystic's mind is o trying task. What can be concluded about a YMCA vice presi- dent who invites the Southern California Communist Party chairman to dinner yet, is at the same time playing up to the trots ky-ites, who not only pursues Phy- sics in search of mystical revelations but claims to find them in every PH 129 homework assignment, who with his dar- ing and resourceful Danish companion. Bent Huld, keeps such stocks of liquor in their room at the Dubridges as would shock the daylights out of Dubridge and her weto cronies. Was he a communist trying to infiltrate. The Y ? No, he was a Y-mon trying to infiltrate the commun- ist. JAMES S. LINDSEY BLACKER It has never been reliably suggested that when Jim Lindsey appeared at Caltech the Deans looked and remarked, trivial! On the other hand, it has been reliably observed that Jim regards most of Col- tech 05 failing in complexity and chal- lenge, except possibly around humanities termpoper time. A diver and avid bi- cyclist, he plans to spend the summer at Hughes and then ride north to the lpresumoblyl trivialities of solid-state at Berkeley. 40 PHYSICS PETER I. LIPPMAN LLOYD Giggles Lippman throoped in from far- off L.A. each day for the first year and a half of his Caltech career, living, under- standably enough, the stereotyped life of the Out-of-it. Now that he has added to his background the rich and varied ex- periences of social membership in Ricketts and residence in Lloyd, all his friends state that he is still out of it, but that it is no longer understandable. His activities included cross-country itwo letterst, track, the BOC, the Caltech Drama Club lvice- president and villainl, the co-social-chair- manship of Lloyd house, guitar-and folk songs-ing, letter-to-the-Editor of the Cali- fornia Tech, motorcycling-for-distance- and-breakdowns, and Alexes ithe last mentioned lives in Santa Monica, which largely explains the next-to-the-last-men- tionedl. He thinks he is 0 Physics major, but knows very little about the subiect and so is not sure. DAVID LOEBBAKA RICKETTS TBH David entered Caltech from Lima, Ohio. Member of Ricketts House, Lettered fros'n and soph cross country and frosh track. Married summer between to girl from home town and faded into social mem- bership of Ricketts. Tau Beta secretary. Future: graduate study at University of Maryland, with hope of getting on the other end of exams, tgiving instead of gettingl. HAYDENtB. MACURCA FLEMING Hayden came to Caltech from Pleasant- ville, New York, where he was soon to make his fame as Hateful lSnakel Matudy. He played on the Water Polo team and stayed on the swimming team until Water Polo finally gave him his charity sweater and a sweater to curl up in. His four years in Fleming were soon to have an influence on him, however, when he became Fleming secretary, runner up for the most spastic waiter award; and discovered the beauty of Women, skiing, rum cakes and bottles bouncing off the Synchrotron. We will miss his tirades from the Fleming balcony as the Hateful, no-longer snake, leaves the fold of Cal- tech for Grad School or for the cruel, dark, outside world, probably half asleep as always. STEPHEN J. LUNER BLACKER Steve Luner, crazy as the day is long and brought Up by an overprotective mother, has an uncle who is an elevator operator, this uncle has a son who is Steve's cousin, Melvin. During a recent visit of cousin Melvin to California, Steve took him sailing on one of the Caltech Sailing Club boats, which Steve somehow man- aged to sink. In addition to the Sailing Club, Steve's other activities at Caltech were being in the IRE, being Blacker House Pope, and writing sometimes funny articles. Steve's future aims include not listening to the last two movements of Beethoven's Fourth Symphony and a rumored study of oceanography at Scrippa Institute. In oceanography he hopes to plumb the depths of the human condition. PETER C. MAYER FLEMING Pete alias The Mouth has been around Fleming for years; although he is still one of the original Frosh. Being one of the true House characters you can always find him around the lounge expounding his philosophy, complaining o'r iust being mayer; that'is, if he isn't swimming or working for the YMCA. The one place where his mouth helps him the most is in his swimming being a three year letterman for his breast stroking. Giving up water polo in his sophomore year he tried his hand at soccer and was an outstanding addition. After three years at Tech, he finally saw the light and switch- ed to economics. And so he spends all his free time busily snaking econ. so he can attend MIT next year. All in all, the people around here are losing a lot more than iust a reason to saying, Shut your mouth, Mayer . l ; ROBERT F. POE LLOYD Although ostensibly 0 Physics maior, sour- natured R.F. has spent most of his four years at Tech dodging slide rules and taking Humanities courses. His chief seduction has been the Drama Club, for which he has acted several roles, in- cluding that of President for two years. As Social Chairman of Lloyd House, he played Cupid and Pandar to a small but growing in group. Poe also spent a summer in Europe as guest of the Junior Travel Prize Committee. Next year he plans to acquire what he calls an under- graduateeeducotion, by majoring in Eng- lish Lit. at a Liberal-Arts college before settling down to that long Ph.D. program in Physics. Cynical Poe feels his maior achievement here at Tech was his taking four courses from Dr. Stern. PAUL PURDOM RICKETTS All the way from Philadelphia, Paul is one of the few people ever to complete the uncler-graduate program in three years. Paul has complimented his supurb intellectual achievement with active par- ticipation in the YMCA and Ricketts House social program. Paul's ability to maintain his GPA while indulging in such things as midweek dates makes him an often envied man. Next year, Paul will continue his quest of a Ph.D. at Harvard. PAUL D. MCCORMICK OFF-CAMPUS Poul, Mac , joined the class of '61 at the beginning of the iunior year from Santa Monica City College. His eye was firmly fixed on a degree in physics The only thing that can compete with his devotion to physics is the beach, and this must be reserved until the summer months when he spends many pleasant week-ends with his wife at the ocean's edge. His attraction to the beach, it is to be clearly understood, is not a result of his four years in the Navy. Mac plans to continue his pursuance of physics in graduate school next year. GEORGE R. MUENICH BLACKER George read and discussed theology, sponsored continuous liquid parties, com- posed masterfully meaningless ROTC orders, song in the Glee Club quartet and served as Glee Club president, and guided morals as a Blacker UCC in lieu of physics homework 99 44t100 percent of the time but tooled the instructors any- way. He heads for grad school in Germany. SANDFORD P. POLLACK OFF-CAMPUS MICHAEL SCHWAB BLACKER Returning from a summer of Junior Travel prize travelling, Mike came back for a miserable workless senior year. To keep in shape physically and mentally, Mike has been practicing folk dancing this year. Having found that Berkeley offers seven days of folk dancing 0 week, Mike will miglote there for a year. Besides folk dancing and physics, Mike spends his time trimming his cute curly hair to look appropriate for his dream of returning to a kibbutz in Israel. PHYSICS JOHN L. STROMBERG DABNEY John came from Piedmont, Calif. An errant member of Dabney House he also worked on the Educational Policies Com- mittee and was a student camp coun- selor for three years. He hopes to do graduate work at the Scripps Institute of Oceanography. GARY W. STUPIAN OFF-CAMPUS Gary wound up his little Morris Monor every morning for four years and put- tered up to class from his home in San Gabriel. Next he is going to the Univer- sity of Illinois to be a physics TA and work for his Ph.D. Although noted for continuously insisting I have to snake Gary always found time to tell one why he hated chemists, schools of education, liquor, ROTC, Democrats, and women and why he loved physics and Caltech. RICHARD S. THOMPSON LLOYD TBII Richard Thompson came to Caltech to become a physicist and leaves, after much grinding, only a little wiser, with the same ambition in mind. After being nur- tured in the famous Ricketts House politi- cal tradition for three years, he decided to pass culture on to a new student house, and set up a respected UCC re- gime as Vice President of Lloyd. Culmi- nating four years of Caltech Glee Club singing experience, he led his new house to their first defeat in the lnterhouse Sing. If Harvard really wants him as a graduate student next year, he will generously accept. HENRY A. THIESSEN FLEMING Arch came to Caltech from Dumont, New Jersey, with the goal of studying Physics. After four years he still has his original enthusiasm and plans to come back next fall for graduate work in physics. During his stay here, Arch was a member of the Caltech Band and treasurer of Fleming House. Fleming men remember that when he was not at the poker table, he was most likely 'lcommuting to Pomona Col- lege to visit a certain female art student. Arch and Challis announced their engage- ment in February 4. They plan to be married after she graduates which will be during the summer of '62. GARY G. TIBBETI'S BLACKER Arriving from the cultural center of the Midwest, Gary took to Caltech like a duck to water. Being a firm believer in a well-balanced education, he divided his time equally among the humanities, satisfying histPE requirerhent, and playing violin in the Blacker House string quartet. A slow starter but improving at every turn, Aquaman has left a mark for Cal- tech students to shoot at for many years. Since Gary was reiected from the Peace Corps for color blindness l 'lhose niggers all look the same to me l and is deter- mined to stay out of the Army, he has contracted to teach physics and iudge turns at University of Illinois next year. He will take a well-deserved vacation this summer due to the acute advice of his faculty advisor, Dr. Trollstuff. , , muff WV xxswmmmwstkN isa-husoegexanKK-sex JOHN B. TRENHOLME FLEMING One of Trollhole's first steps on arrival at Tech was out of a window, a move which neatly eliminated for him the more onerous aspects of the PE program. While nominally a physicist, his devotion to the call of science is by no means single-minded. A visit to his room reveals forays into weird cults and even stronger electronics. On his door, a social chair- man's sign peers disconsolately through a thicket of religious tracts and other curios; within, a pair of beady eyes glower behind a miasma of sinister con. traptions. This is Troll Knoll, which will one day disgorge its musty contents and grubby occupant into the waiting arms of some lucky grad school. CLYDE S. ZAIDINS BLACKER . . While from the tirmanent he spoke, The music of the spheres temake. Dante, De Vulgari Eloquentia Portly Clyde Zaidins, affectionately known as Burly C.Z., is most celebrated for being cavernously umbilicate. Adipose Clyde, half-Gentile, has distinguished himself by participation in many activities, to wit: Honor section, BOCVC, House VP, SNH Club, Beavers, TBPi, Potentate of the Syndicate, ASCIT V.P., House Secre- tary, Carole Olsen Fan Club, House letter, and Honor Key and Certificate. Pursy Zaidins, a pillow buff, after a short cunctation will take the vows with win- some Flo of Columbus, 0., a shag rug buff. Roly poly Clyde, not the son of a butcher, will return to his Alma Mater for graduate studies. JOHN A. TODOROFF RUDDOCK TBII John maiored in extra-curricular activities, but minored in Physics well enough to make Tau Peta Pi. A iournalist since grade school, John wrote stories, wrote headlines, took pictures, and sharpened pencils for the California Tech for four years, becoming co-editor as a senior. It was in this iob that he discovered ASCIT incompetence and people who think too much about rotation. He also ran the ROTC and was Ruddock House treasurer. Most of the rest of his time was spent on long distance phone calls and ex- travagant dates like 1600 miles for lnterhouse. John plans a Ph.D. in Physics followed by college teaching. BRUCE T. ULRICH RICKETTS Inquisitive Bruce, besides being a gung- ho physicist, has contributed considerably to his Caltech home, Ricketts House. His interest in Caltech academics has led to his position of EPC chairman. Bruce's ravenous appetite, resulting from such activities as tennis, mountain climbing, and skiing, has often left him hungry after student house meals. But the main part of Bruce's waking hours are spent in furthering his knowledge and under- standing of Physics tsnakingl. After this year Bruce plans to attend tat, for more work in his chosen field. DAVID W. ZIMMERMAN BLACKER Dove came to Caltech from Waukesha, Wisconsin, with a slightly less than burn- ing desire for 0 Physics degree and a smiling good humor. Turning to tennis instead of women to expend the energy he wasn't pouring into PH 112, Dave has become, in three years of varsity play, one of Coach Lamb's most treasured right-court doubles specialists. Dave hopes to avoid any more specialization next year when he will pursue an advanced degree in Physics and a 11-8. -' m 1;!- youimcll': IHI NCIII RISPO-F IWINUS IHI l5! H 1' BOARD; Dlm-m Rs 8 I Um N I COUNCII Dom Qua 46 Top, left to right: Roger Bland, Vice-President; Don Forrest, President. Bottom: Chuck Ray, Treasurer; Bob Ruby, Athletic Manager. Not shown: Tom Keil, Secretary. CLASS OF 61 Caltech circa '57-'61 was a school in transition. 80 too was the class of '61. From what? We do not yet have twenty years perspective; merely an inkling. The transition was from a time when you could be a science major and still be thought of as somewhat queer. It was a time when you could be an engineering major and take Materials and Process'. It was a time when college boards were fun. Where did the class of '61 stand? It was the last class to use a calculus book by Phillips. It was the first class to occupy the new houses as seniors. It was the class which heard Dr. DuBridge's new student camp speech on the challenge ot,science and technology and had it echoed round the world exactly two weeks later by something called a Sputnik. If there was a problem for the class of '61, perhaps that was it. The admission committee had selected them just a few months before scientists, engineers, and the education theremc became a national preoccupation. Forty percent of the original group demonstrated that 800's on college boards were not enough to catch the Russians within four years. The remainder were quite human. Precocious frosh Bill Bauer and Cleve Moler remained precocious for almost four years. Stan Sadiera won three'lnterhouse Sings. Clyde Zaiclins remained happy. What is the transition aimed toward? Twenty years from now these men and the hundred forty others may be able to say. In the meantime the world changes too fast. We all wish the graduating seniors the very beS'f possible luck in the future and hope that they will be successful in all their endeavors as they leave the sanctuary at Caltech and prepare to face the crUel outside world. 3K .1. I;- .le '- ,. .91 CLASS OF 62 The class of 1962 claims To be one of The mosT TolenTed classes To have enTered Tech los does every oTher clossl. Academically, This orgumenT is supporTed by on abnormally low drop-ouT roTe. As The firsT Two-hundred-plus class, iT was The TirsT To creoTe freshman secTion K. This now-noTorious secTion hos sTuck TogeTher and has perpeTroTed such schemes as The i'LiTTle K , a humorous scandal sheeT which exposed much of campus life for what H was. The great Rose Bowl fiasco also was conceived and accom- plished by These members of The class of '62. In The individual sTudenT houses, The class of '62 has conTribuTed greole To The spiriT and The ocTiviTies. AlThough The sTudenT houses are The nuclei for sTudenT ocTiviTies, The friendly rivalries presenT There hos noT inTerfered wiTh The overall spiriT of This class. In any school orgonionion, from ASCIT To The glee club To The YMCA, The class has been well represenTed. More can be expecTed of The class of '62 nexT year, for if will have reached The pinnacle of ColTech greoTness 2 The senior year. :ame Ianl GIG ears. rosh , for OUSe The hese sOY' besi ll be The cruel if? L A 2E; Pick Chung, President. Middle: ArT McGorr, SecreTory. Bottom, lefT To righT: Bob Heorn, ehc Monoger; Gory TUmer, Vice-PresidenT; John Curtis, Treasurer. 47 Left to right: Henry Abarbanel, Secretary; Jim Sagawa, Treasurer; Ken Manley, Vice-President; Art Robinson, President. Not present: Pete Fischer, RIP. The class of '63 was supposedly the smartest class ever to be at Caltech. Perhaps this explains their unusual interest in promoting school spirit and preserving Tech's few tradi- tions. Under the capable leadership of Art Robinson, the class organized and supported beach parties and other extracurricular activities. After showing them what organi- zation will do by leading the sophomore iuggernOUf T0 victory in the annual Mudeo, the officers of the class of '63 worked closely with the freshmen officers to prepare them for their new jobs. This unprecedented cooperation resulted in such activities as the cleaning of the HT on the mountain- All in all, the class of '63 displayed a marvelous dffifUde of responsibility to the school. er; Ken I: Pete Left to right: Tom Deklyen, Vice-President; Steve German, Athletic Manager; Al Gillespie, Treasurer; Tom Reubel, Secretory; Art Turner, President. tver 'est 1di- the her mi- to '63 ited ain. ude CLASS OF 964 This year the Executive Committee of the Class of '64, composed of the class officers and the section leaders, undertook the job of building 0 class organization for the new freshmen by sponsoring several class activities. During first term, the activities included a beach party, held in coniunction with the Class of '63, and c1 stag party to help post-midterm blues. Second term brought an expedition to the mountains to plant barley on the '.T' Third term found the class busily engaged in planning the freshman-sophomore dance, May-lei, which the freshmen ran for the enjoyment of the two classes. Thus they paid for their loss idue to questionable iudging on the part of the impartial iuniorsi to the sophomores in the annual Mudeo extravaganza held first term. 49 Left To right: John Golden, Business Manager; Dick Norman, Activities Manager; Sid Leibovich, Treasurer; Clyde Zaidins, Vice-President; Bill Bauer, 3 President; Dave Priichard, Secretory; Tim 'LiTIe, Social Chairman; John ArndT, Athletic Manager; Jim Sagawa, Representative-uT-Large. Now working else. . where: Bob Juola, ex-AThIeTic Manager, and Chuck Brooke, ex-RepresenToTive-aT-Lorge. i i i i On Monday nighTs c1 small power TrusT represenToTive of Thef our affluency meeTs To discuss The ToTe of our lives, TorTuneS: J Dep and sacred honors. AfTer The long hours of budgeT plannirig, T YoU This Board of DirecTors Turns iTs ctTTenTion To oTher rouTIne : Oiie nonsense of oppoinTing various officers and commiTTees, some T iTg of which would ocTucuIly affecT sTudenT life. Then The BY'I-OWS ome geT revised once again which will probably noT offecT anyone Too much. ed some This year The onoITy oaTh conTroversy generaT k' or m9 3 heaTed enThusiasm. Board acTion helped solve The p 50 ve Of tunes; ning, oUHne some .Laws nyone 50me arking i5 TheTTs problem wiTh The cooperaTion of The Physical PlanT DeparTmenT. Two new organizaTions ioined our ranks: The Young Democrats and Civil Defense. There also was The aborTive aTTempT To curb The preTenTiousness of The BOD by changing ifs name To HSTUdenT Council. This was after a successful amendmenT which changed ArTicle IX To X of The By-Laws and vice versa. All This did serve To break The clouds of apaThy ThaT pervade college life e aT ieasT Temporarily. Perhaps our successors can help reduce The lack of communication. BOARD OF DIRECTORS BILL BAUER A.STC.I.T. President 5i i 4.7. V .. h...,...,.- , ...,...s.,... -...A, s. N, Left To right: Bill Bauer, Gary Mitchell, Lorry Robinowitz, Ben Burke, Jacques Colmo, Clyde Zaidins, Spicer Conant, Tom Bopp, Doug Stewart, Deon Gerber, Carl Hamilton. BOARD OF CONTROL The Board of ConTroI is one of The few groups which is really Token seriously around ColTech. The Honor SysTem is one of The sacred insTiTUTions here, and The BOC is The execuTive group for The Honor SysTem. Ordinarily, The BOC handles few cases of violoTions of The Honor SysTem, bUT H is in charge of The inTerpreToTion of The SysTem. WiTh more Thon TorTy years of success behind ET, The honor sysTem is clearly one of our mosT valuable osseTs of which we may well be proud. CLYDE ZAiDiNS, BOC Chairman Fewmwekw wn. 7.. e . , Left to right: Bill Bauer, Clyde Zoidins, 'Larry Brown-Chairmcn, Lance Taylor, Doug Shakel, Dove Bowman, Bob Koh. Not piclured: Cleve Moler. In spite of its name, excom has no executive powers whatsoever. Its sole iob and power is to gather information and opinion and give advice to ASCIT. Hopefully, the committee will depend more on the information than the opinion. One of the main topics this year was rotation. ExComm originated several plans which were presented for general opinion. The final decision was to suspend rotation for a year until the new houses could get under way. The discussion was deferred to next year. EXCOMM 53 INTERHOUSE COMMITTEE i left: Joel Donnelly, lHC President. Right: Larry Sloss, IHC Secretary. The InTerhouse CommiTTee's purpose is To pro- moTe harmonious working relaTionship beTween The houses. The InTerhouse CommiTTee decided noT To i have roTaTion Tor anoTher year. IT was hoped Tha'r by Then The houses will have completely lost Their characTer Pi. ElecTions This year were loaded in The usual Two or Three ways. The mOST hole conTesTed issue was The TUTure name of The BOD. The second mosT hoTIy conTesTed was AsciT President The Third . . . . . . Oh well, forgeT iT, everyone else has. The elecTion rally was good, anyway. Left To righT: Larry Seide, John Denyes, Julian Prince, Dave Turner-Chairman, Warren White, Ray Fernandez, Henry Abarbanel, Tom 'Bopp. ELECTION COMMITTEE EDUCATIONAL POLICIES COMMITTEE Henry Aborbanel and Dave Krubrin. Not pictured: Bruce Ulrich, Lance Taylor, Steve Coine, Skip STenbif, John Stromberg, Kent Frewing, Chuck Rodoy. Since iTs creoTion, The EPC has played on imporTonT role in sTUdenT life. The mosT graphic example was The sweeping curriculum revision which if helped To eTfecT. This year The principle invesTigoTions concerned honors secTions, combined English 7 lecTures and undergraduoTe i research. There are few American colleges where The sTUdenTs' opinions are so warmly received by mosT of The focuify; we should be extremely proud and graTefui ThoT our communiTy can work TogeTher so effectively. Ideally, The sTudenT-ToculTy relaTions commiTTee should consisT of all The undergroduoTes CIT ColTech, plus CH of The TocuiTy. Since This is noT o pracTicoi course, The 1961 commiTTee was The nexT besT Thing. Anyone who wonTed To oTTend could, and all 0T The campus organi- ZOTions had represenToTives. As a consequence, oil in- volved have a considerable beTTer insighT inTo The minds of The aliens Then before. Good. hairman, STUDENT FACULTY RELATIONS PROF. C. J. PINGS, JR. Faculty Head of Studem-Foculty Relations Committee Ty 55 W w. , J 311.....4 f. 2 .9 t9 k .. : b.?M a ; 153 , k? trirybrfnr s! a i1 4. 4! 56 57 JOHN P. ANDELIN Rickens House ROBERT G. RINKER Ruddock House PHILIP O. BANKS Dabney House ROBERT D. RYAN Page House WILLIAM F. DOVE Blacker House RICHARD H. STANFORD Fleming House NOEL D. JONES Lloyd House House Officers: Hugh Keiffer iVice-PresJ; Bob Riller, Dick Robertson, lLibrarionsi; Ed Miller iSocial Chairmoni; Al Pfeffer iSecretaryi; Gory Walla iPresJ; Joe Bockelage iTreosJ; Dwain Reed iAth. Manogeri. BLACKER THE EARLY MORNING VISITATION OF EGETH It is night. Dwoin Reed, Jim Johnson stand in the Blocker Courtyard. REED Soft, what is that? JOHNSON Methinks some form draws nigh. REED Holt, who goes there! PRITCHARD A friend and man of Blocker. JOHNSON How quietly you come upon us, Pritchord. PRITCHARD Why, if that ghostly form of which you spoke Again appears tonight as is its wont I foin would make no noise to give it fright REED In sooth 'twos at this very hour of night The time the manhole cover up in Hell Commenced its clott'ring on the concrete floor The spirit last was seen here PRITCHARD How looked it? REED It had the very form and countenance Of Howard Egeth who was freshman here The year l was myself, 'twos fearful sod. PRITCHARD By the Rood, Reed, thou hast me scored. The manhole cover starts to clatter on the concrete floor in Hell. JOHNSON Look, it comes. GHOST Oh . . . Ooooh . . . . OOoooOoH ..... ooooooooh REED Speak to it, Pritchord; well it knows thou art A physicist, for listen how it moons 59 60 Seniors, Isl Row, left to right: Roy Makino, Dave Kubrin, Mike Schwab; Norman; Tom Keil, Hugh Keiffer; Gory Walla. 3rd Row: Don Fchnline; Juniors, 15? Row, Altman. 3rd Row: left to right: Fred Chorene; Al Bernstein; Al Pfeffer- Al Whmelsey; Pete Hammond; Dove Kauffmanl Dove AI Dwain Reed; Jim Lindsey; Dove Drummond; Stan Klein. Pfeffer. 2nd Row: Geo. Musnich; Clyde Zoidens; Bent Huld; Dick Prifchord. 2nd Row: Ed Miller; Wendell lng; Barry Gorden; LONY 9'. am' Sophomores, 15! Row, left to right: Barry McCoy; Jim Johnson; Al Pfeffer; Hal Harrison; John Sovari. 2nd Row: Eric Neumellc, Dick Sears; Bruce Carter; Dick Robertson; John Caywood; Dave Clark. 3rd Row: Dan Schwartz; John Lindsey; Lee Samuelson; Steve Maston; Karvel Thornbcr; Dave Large; Randy Wore; Bob Diller; Kurt Anderson. Freshmen, Is! Row, left to right: Herb Chen; Dave Hearn; Carter Noyler; Forber; Dove Dixon; Art Johnson,- Steve Teiglond; Carl Woebcke; Bob Greenwold; Pot Dunn; Dove Kubrin; John Wheeler; Mike Boll; Tom Larhorn. 3rd Row: Pete Mazur; John Modey; Tom Krusger. Bill Cheng; Al Tyrrill; Bill Schoknechf. 2nd Row: Lorry Weaver; Steve Rob Gorden; Gunthrie Miller; Ed Lee; 6l 62 Chemistry professor Jurg Waser discusses his field wiTh Blackermen. PRITCHARD Speak, be Thou goblin damned, or wave-like form Exiled from EarThly probability By physics' laws, I conjure Thee To speak Explaining why Thou sTalkesT Through our halls GHOST I come here as The ghosT of Blacker PasT The slow degeneraTion of The House Has long ago progressed beyond The poinT Where l'll endure iT. REED CansT Thou know of This? GHOST All souls who here on EarTh no longer dwell Have open views of Heaven, EarTh and Hell PRITCHARD WhaT hasT Thou seen, speak up Thou ghasle spriTe Why walkesT Thou Through Blacker House by nighT And Thou dosT To us These secreTs Teach I pray Thee change To prose Thy anTique speech. lThe ghosT gesTures, a dumb shew of freshmen appear. A hidden chorus heard singingzl CHORUS Hail, house of Blacker, The house of individualisTs Who, in roTaTion were someTimes The residualisTs In The world of Science You will hardly find a slacker Who is noT ouTslacked by Some courageous man of Blacker. -Blacker Hymn, T961 GHOST This is The freshman class of T960. There was no roTaTion and whaT a mess! Piano players, cellisTs, lock pickers, aThleTes, model airplane builders, noT a True Blacker Trosh in The bunch. Look aT Them dash abouT campus shouTing HCUbCI Si, Yanqui No like a bunch of Havana Reds. And when Eric Adel- berger comes around dressed as CasTro smoking a vile cigar do They shower him righT away as in The old days? No, The iuniors have To show The freshmen how. Well, iTs Too laTe To change Them now, The oaTh of iniTiaTion is solemnly being adminisTered by Gary Walla. FROSH HIT I forgeT Thee, O Blacker, may my righT arm lose iTs cunning, may confusion be visiTed upon my house, and may all my percipiTaTes be colloidal. PRITCHARD They're sworn in all righT. GHOST Yes, and now for The Lounge Run where every fresh- man is supposed To geT showered and Dave Kubrin is waiTing wiTh sTooges To sTarT his underground rail- road To geT The frosh ouT of The lounge wiThouT being officially bapTized. The phony showering crew is supposed To release Them once iT geTs Them ouT mm The courTyard. JOHNSON Well, we didn'T leT Them geT away wiTh iT. REED All They goT for Their efforTs was a Trip To The showers Themselves. GHOST True, bUT The facT ThaT They almosT did geT away wiTh iT shows ThaT There is a sTrong growTh of anTi- shOwering sympaThies developing in The house degeneraTes. BUT now The freshmen are soaked and are sTarTing To Think of The lnTerhouse Dance. The courTyard afTer The RickeTTs waTerTighT was lefT a soaking sTeaming swamp, which gave Mike Town- sEndTan idea. PRITCHARD And a preTTy good idea. JOHNSON A preTTy lousy idea. GHOST In The good old days when Blacker was Blacker lor is H blackerl we had ships, dragons, odysseys. Each year we Tried To Turn The courTyard from a swamp f0 someThing decoraTive. This year you leave iT iUS? as a swamp and our Spanish ruin of a lounge 05 a Spanish Ruin. REED We called iT following The grain, bending wiTh The wind, noT TighTing The currenT. GHOST l ThoughT iT was a lousy dance, and wiTh a lousy week of finals noT Too long afTer H was no wonder Dell TroTT flunked ouT. PRITCHARD TroTT? GHOST LasT of The Real Blacker men. Once he lefT The whole second Term was ruined. REED WhaT happened second Term? GHOST NoThing, ThaT was The problem. We came in Third in inTerhouse Tennis, fourTh in inTerhouse Track, nondescripT posiTions if such Things ever were. JOHNSON We goT PriTchard elecTed House PresidenT second Term. GHOST Yes, buT only afTer he losT in The ASCIT elecTions. JOHNSON We came in among The Top 3 in inTerhouse sing. GHOST And you had a snow parTy wiTh no snow. PRITCHARD ThaT didn'T boTher us. No, The men of Blacker didn'T feel discouraged second Term. GHOST Oh yeah, lisTen: q. CurT STrobeck, whaT was The mosT importanT Thing ThaT happened To you aT CalTech This year? lvoices off sTagel o. I don'T know. q. Your ex-Holiness, why did you resign from The papacy of The Blacker Church This year? a. IT was againsT my religious principles, I felT. q. Mr. Zaiolens, whaT does Blacker House mean To you? 0. HOUSE: assembling gaThering convergence forgaThering collecTion ingaThering concourse conflux congregaTion rendevous mobilizaTion conTesseraTion levy coligaTion collocaTion REED YeT we were sTill having fun second Term. Consider, for insTance, The Trip made by MasTin, Pfeffeffr, Numela eT al To Tiiuana. GHOST BUT did They have sense enough To sTay There? PRITCHARD Who says Blacker isn'T as exciTing as TJ? The off campus parTies, The bridge games, The exchanges. OFF STAGE CHORUS Here's To The parTies ThoT raise us To deleriousness Here's To The sTudies we TreaT wiTh uTmosT seriousness For each human ocTion You are sure To find a backer MidsT The denizens of ThaT enchanTed realm called Blacker. eBlacker Hymn, 1961 GHOST O.K. Then. WhaT was The mosT exciTing Thing ThaT happened To you aT an exchange? JOHNSON Well, one Time when an exchange goT dull we hiTchhiked To Bakersfield. GHOST Enough of ThaT. IT second Term was bad, Third Term was worse, no one was even here. PriTchard dis- appears, leaving a rumor ThaT he's been married. Chris Larson, who lived in Page, buT was a Blacker man To The end, flunked ouT. Also, There was The SyndicaTe. JOHNSON ThaT gang of gallanT beach bums? GHOST The faTheads who drive for four hours so They may siT on The sand for Two. Then everyone else is busy looking for summer jobs in The war indusTries. A greaT crew, They go To ACLU meeTings and peace marches in The fall, Then sign disclaimer oaThs To works for Hughes in The summer. OFF STAGE CHORUS Who will defend us from CommunisT lmperialisTs DialecTicians, Hegelian maTerialisTs, Who'll design The warheads Who'll man each SpuTnik Tracker? None buT The noble men who Leap To Their country's call from Blacker. -Blocker Hymn, 1961 PRITCHARD Look, EgeTh, even if you did live in Blocker Three years ago, you don'T have To Take such a hostile lfl Cl . a 'U 8 GHOST l have To and I will. I shall sTay each nighT from when The manhole cover rings Till when The cock crows.. lWiTh The sound of a cock crowing, The ghosT vanishes and STan Klein appears.l PRlTCHARD How did you do ThaT? House Officers, left To right: Jim Blackmann IHeadwaiteri; Frank Ridolphi iSocial V.PJ; Wendell Mendell iComptrolleri; Chuck McBurney iAth. Mng; Doug Shake! iExec. V.P.i; Harold Haskins iATh. Mng; John Lohman iPresJ; Bill Francis iLibrariani; Julian Prince iTreas.; Marty Schultz iSecJ; Carl Hamilton iSoc. V.PJ. DABNEY 'iSay, I think I'll watch television tonight. Let's see, it's Wednesday, that means The TV is in The game roomeor is it The lounge? Oh well, I'll iust follow The antenna wire and see where it leads me. The school year 1960-61 was particularly signif- cant in The annals of student house life, not because of the advent of the new student houses, but because it was The first year a student house threatened to become lost in a Tangled mass of TV antenna wire. The huge snakelike monster wound its way in and out of every nook and cranny, doubling back on itself, and making the way impassible at spots. In the sunny days of late September, as the Darbs found their way home to Dabney House, little did They realize what kind of year was in store. It was a year like any other year, but . . . The social life of Dabney House started even before New Student Camp. A gala barbecue-swim- ing party gave old friends a chance to meet again and helped bring the Darb frosh into the swing of things. The Upper classmen could show The frosh how friendly they were; this friendliness of The barbecue was soon to turn into the hostility of initia- Tion, a custom finally ended by the freeing of the serfs. The first term partying season got under way with the Tacky Party. There was a general attempt to find the wildest ties with the loudest patterns, the most dazzling shirts, the zaniest hats, and the brightest socks. The party was topped off by a Dixieland band. In the midst of the social whirl, the Coe Interally Trophy started its season. Alley golf provided an opportunity for ingenuity on the part of house members. The golfballs ranged from water balloons to tiddley-winks. Upper Seven won the competition. Interhouse sports saw Dabney tie for first in softball, Take second in volleyball, but come in sixth in swimming. At the end of first term, the Darbs were a scant six points behind the interhouse leader. Came the Saturday of the Interhouse Dance, came the rain. The Theme being the Wizard of 02, the cornfield was no fire hazard and the moat was well filled. Inside, the cup-eating cowardly , www-ar. .r - ., , I ,1, ,. :1 . . . 7:7 7.. 1., ,-............,- .mmw. ,V ,, w... M. w. , fix, , wvuul nay . . , 11,. ,H . - cue ; em J71? .- .r - - - , 'H . -v' .. r- . r w.-s 1.477770' , -rv. T. lion chewed merrily away while the green punch seemed to flow from a sourceless spout. The wizard's screen was a mass of gadgetS, and the lounge looked like the grand ballroom of the emerald palace. First term drew to a close with the Christmas party, which saw Rabbi Nicholas dispensing gifts to his boys from his bottomless laundry bag. It was the first Santa ever with a Yiddish accent tauthentici. With the end of their term of office in sight, the social chairmen went all out in planning the second term social program. There was a Speakeasy party at a nearby hideout. Bathtub gin flowed freely in coffee cups. The snow Party was a smash despite the fact that there was no snow. The Barn Dance with Ruddock saw an exciting crew race in which Dabney won by a fair margin. The Dabney Flamers won handily. Step no. i on the way to winning the crew and tlamer trophies. Demonstrating that New York City has no corner on Summer Festivals, a Spanish Party was next on the social program. An authentic Spanish Hacienda added to the atmosphere of the party, and Uncle Siddy made things more atmospheric with Flamenco interpretations. lnterhouse sports continued their merry way. A tie for fifth in tennis and a tie for second in track kept the Darbs within six points of the lead. As election time drew near, political fever started to mount. When the dust had settled, Dabney found itself with a new set of officers. John Arndt assumed the Presidential duties and Vic Engleman was selected as his right hand man. New social veeps were IW and Miendell and Dave Barker. Secretary and Treasurer were Don O'Hara and Rich Peterson re- spectively. Demonstrating their deep concern for athletic affairs and house spirit, Julian Prince and Dave Osias were selected Athletic Managers. It was time for a change and Rich Maxson sUcceeded Viv Meksin as Historian. Bill Bush and Bill Tivol took on the duties of Librarian and Comptroller. The chore of handling the friendly waiters went to Joel Tenenbaum. What can we do this weekend? Let's take a bike ride. In fact, let's have a bike race-to Balboa Beach. Ten brave souls set out Saturday morning after finals for the long 50 mile ride. All ten finished, and an unusual ruling threw the contest into a tie. .l-,- wnuw .. aux , .i ' ' - Dove Kendel; Lorry Shampine; Dave Turner; John Lohmon; . t . ht: Dou Shekel; Jerry Slegol; John Wilkinson. 2nd Row: . :flTlcgglLJeelrf' StonY'SLeefttt. 03:;gRow: Mgarty Shultz; Delmar Curtis; Skip Stenbif; John Smith; RICh Drew; Steve Heckler, Larry Brown. WWII ' Juniors, 15? Row, left to right: John Golden; Joel Tenen Bill Tivol; Vic Engleman; Jim Yoh; Efcn- Morkowifz. 3 Norm Gussin. boum; Warren Teitelmon ; John Arndf; Dove Osios. 2nd Row: Julian Prince; Carl Hamilton; rd Row: John Erskine; F rank Ridolphi; Bill Palke; Dove Sellin; Gory Mitchell; Steve Bruenn; Sophomores, 1st Row, left to right: Ying Bun Woo; Rich Siquig; Wendell Mendell; Jim Sagowa. 2nd Row: Dave Barker; Steve Lowe; Norman Gorden; Roy Fernandiz-Martin; Bob Jernigcm. 3rd Row: Art Robinson; Bill Francis; Rich Peterson; Steve Joseph; Harold Haskins; Chuck McBurney. Freshmen, Is! Row, left to right: Jim Whitney; Howie Monell; Bill Bush; Don Brogan; Arr Turner; Bob Neilsen. 2nd Row: Dove Lambert; Herb Flindt; Bob Bruner; Lorry Yeogley; Doug Hill; BiH Reining; Frank Zigofoose Winkler; Rod Zook. 3rd Row: Don O'Hara; Mike Howard; Rich Moxson; Dove Divoky; John Clauser; Chuck Knapp; John Burke; Dove Uhrich. 67 68 Third Term opened wiTh The Yale Russian Chorus paying a visiT. The aTTer concerT dance in The House Lounge was Iivened by The Russian Folk singing of The Chorus. The Officers' IniTiaTion ParTy demonsTraTed some new Crew TalenT in The new exec commiTTee. John ArdnT finished in Twelve seconds! Julian Prince was sTunning as The EasTer Bunny, while Joel Tenenbaum demonsTraTed his imaginaTion in charades. Bobbing for marbles in a bowl of milk was The sporT of The evening, wiTh Vic Engleman discovering The slosh Technique, which eliminaTes The milk problem. Roamin' Holiday was a bigger success Than iT had been in The pasT few yearseyucca, yucca, and if DexTer didn'T find The divide, Sam SuiTT mighT sTilI be looking for Mr. Boleyn. In The Barn Dance wiTh RickeTTs, Dabney Tool: The crew race handily. The flamers compeTiTion was closer, and a gargie almosT pulled RickeTTs Through, buT when The poinTs were Tallied, Dabney was vicTorious once more. A bigger and beTTer version of The facuITy parTy Took place aT The home of The Dabney Non-ResidenT AssociaTe, Dr. Frank Lindvall. Over TwenTy faculTy ,JI members and Their wives and abouT ThirTy-five Darbs and Their daTes were enough To make The parTy a full house. The Dabney House drama group sTaged a skiT enTiTled Oh ThaT Powerful Feeling or iiWaTT Makes George Run? This biT of drama revealed The cause of The Campus power problem. The Spring Formal followed. A band and a charcoaI-broiled sTeak dinner provided a seTTing for many fond memories. The year's social program drew To a close wiTh The annual Luau. The feaTure was a roasT pig, compleTe wiTh Trimmings. John Lohman, showing Up in red slacks, was dunked, and a good Time was had by all. A Third in fooTball and a second in baskeTball pUT Dabney in a Tie for The lnTerhouse Trophy. OTher Trophies won by Dabney were The Acme Beer Trophy and The Flamers Trophy. Numbers played a large parT in conversaTion during Third Term. While some people said 12, oThers were noT so sure and UTTer 37, 37', and 92. BuT IesT we be carried away by numbers we can go To a more convenTional sysTem and say So long and 73. .Tv-y. House Officers, Oleft to right: Bob Lonb tV.P.J; Howie Wang tLibrariant; Hayden Macurdu tSecJ; John Trollhole tSoc. Choirmant; Ganett lhler tPresJ; Arch Thiessen lTreasJ; John Russ iSoc. Choirmant; Bob Gershman tAth. Mng; Bill Rowe tAth. Mng. FLEMING The lack of rotation this year denied Fleming's incoming trosh their traditional ration of 8:8. and confusion, but Smiling Ted Tarby, their pledge- master, was careful to see that they were not denied any of their other traditional rations. The Frosh proved a little too fierce tor 'iTarbelly however, and after depositing him a convenient distance from the campus, they proceeded to use up their excess energy in initiating the other six houses. One night the Frosh from Page appeared unnoticed in the Frosh room in Upper 5. After performing the sacred rite for which their mission had been instigated, they found to their dismay that they had been duped, for the whole episode was known by, even planned by, the Fleming Frosh. The attackers were allowed to leave only by the way of the Upper 5 showers. After observing such antics, the Upperclassmen began to live in terror of the day initiation would be over, so made a peace offering in the way of a huge steak barbecue. While this helped, the Frosh gave constant reminders of who was boss. Egged on by the scrutable Oriental, H. Wang, they pub- lished an edict banning Senior Cords. The Frosh then attempted to lock the Seniors out of the house while they were away depositing Wang in the Hollywood Hills. Third term came, and with it the unkindest cut, the usurption of the Senior Table by the unfeeling Frosh. First term brought the usual revival of the 69th Gospel Church. The Purity Test was administered by the Church with the result that the Frosh had received the lowest score, and Pope Fecephilus LXIX delivered a stirring oration on sin to the visiting Divinity Students. Besides the usual converts among the Frosh, the Church managed to obtain the services of two nuns. Sue E. and Linda B. entered this difficult order. Also active in the dining room was the in- famous Women Are Evil Club, headed by C. Mead, noted researcher in the field, and the Waiters Union imottoeeat it tasteri managed to drive the house to a 6.9 minute lunch. Social achievements were, as always, quite varied this year. One enterprising Sophomore, discoyering Wine, Women, and Song, managed to drop from a Seniors, left to right: Bill Dowd; Herb Rice; Neil Richardson; Dove Friedman; John Trollhole; Ray Hribor; Arch Thiessen; Bob Heath; Pete Mayer; Bob Quigley; Hayden Mocurda; Mickey Lindner; Jim Perry. Juniors, left to right: Bill Rowe- Bob Gershmon Alan D , ; an er,- Bob Rondo; Bob Lowler; Bob Linn; Lee Elliott; Roy Jordan; Sgiyru ChUCk ROdOY; Bob Moore; John Russ; Bill Weihofen; Chuck Flynn; Carl Baum; 5 Mead; Lauren Merritt; Roy Bonglow; Bob Williams. W 3:7 Sophomores, left to right: Ern Anderson; Howie Wang; Richard D'Ari; Bill Burke; Ed Bender; Don Blokenship; John Letcher; Brian Belcnger; Sig Hoverson; Burt Semptner; Harold Stewart. Freshmen, 15! Row, left to right: John Webber; Roger Mineor; Steve Green; Terry Wogon; Frank Rhome; Harold Nathan; Poul Perdew; Doug Abe. 2nd Row: David Colton; Don Davies; Robert Wallace; Steve Hillyord; Hons Manes; Bill Nicholson; Geo. Cody; Bill Smith; Marc Kaufman. 3rd Row: Don Harlow; Steve Goldner; John McCoy; Bill Schoene; Mason Williams,- Lorry Gowen; Roger Cord,- Martin Weiner; Al Cosand, 7l .mynt. WJN- . w-5vn, 3.9 To a .39, wiTh c1 comparable drop in Purify Score. On a sligthy differenT social plane, one of The Frosh in Room 69, appeared depressingly monogamous in his choice of daTes. Various members of The house seT Themselves up as seIf-appoinTed crusaders, en- deavoring To convince This naive Frosh of The obvious benefiTs which could be derived by him if he would only expand The scope of his acTiviTies somewhat However, The crusaders received qUiTe a shock when said Frosh suddenly moved off campus, disclosing ThaT he had been married To The girl all This Time. UndaunTed, These crusaders Transferred Their energies To cnoTher piTiTul case, buT again had To admiT defeoT. They had noT been Tricked This Time, buT raTher had run mm a hopeless case. H. MocPuriTy had managed To daTe The same girl over TwenTy Times wiThouT geTTing more Thom a bare good nighf. QuoTh MocPuriTy, l didn'T wonT To lead her asTray. When ICIST heard of, he was bombarding The Syn- choTron wiTh freshly empTied boTTIes in exTreme frusTrcTion. Flemings obvious inTeresT in social ochievemenTs found considerable expression in The social program This year, The highlighT of which was, of course, The lnTerhouse Dance. Due To The almosf god-like n'Tx rT. foresighT of our Social Chairman, when The rains came, The evening of The dance, Fleming's decora- Tions were noT desTroyeol, for They were mainly in shelTered areas. In line wiTh an Old WesT moTif, The lounge and dining room had been converTed mm a saloon and gambling casino, compleTe wiTh player piano, gambling equipmenT and bar. Also present were Madam Ma Hale and her girls , who spenT The evening dealing 2i andror providing enTer- TainmenT for lonely males. WiTh so much merrimenT, The only creaTure in Fleming miserable in The inclem- enT weaTher was MacPuriTies Ass, who had been Tied in The courTyard To provide aTmosphere. Animal lovers soon moved The beasT mm The Lower 5 head. Early risers, desiring To use said head discovered To Their disgusT ThaT during The nighT The Ass had noT. House elecTions broughT The usual quoTa of officers. Chuck Radoy, who had resigned The Social Chairmanship far enough in advance for house members To forgeT his general incompeTence, became PresidenT. Debonair Bob Moore became Vice-Presi- denT, while crany Bill Weihofen became SecreTary. Those ferocious iocks, Bob Gershman and Bob Williams were elecTed AThleTic Managers, and The Terror of The Poker Tables Bob Lin became Treasurer. Sue E. and Linda G. were defeaTed in a close elecTion for The office of Social Chairmen by The 'lHouse Mink, John Russ and his Frosh apprenTice, Terry Wogan, while The TradiTion of having an OrienTal as Librarian was finally broken by Frank Rhame. WiTh such an inTrepid, diversified crew leading The house, nexT year promises To be as good or beTTer Than This year. How good was This year? DespiTe The facT ThaT The iocks were gone and gianTs no longer walked The earTh, The house spiriT remained inTacT, a spiriT ThaT comes from The realizaTion ThaT Fleming is a damn inTeresTing place To live, and while some claim The pasT was beTTer, all agree ThaT The present is far from unbearable. Along This line, The wriTers have aTTempTed To reconsTrucT a few of The incidenTs which occured This year and which helped To make life in Fleming enjoyable. This seemed a more meaningful Task Than To aTTempT To prove ThaT Fleming is The neaTesT of all possible houses. We hope ThaT The Seniors, in parTicular, have found The arTicle inTeresTing, and will, in fuTure years, bring To Their memories some of The good Times from Their years in Fleming. We also hope ThaT They will come back To visiT; fuTure classes will undoubTably enioy seeing whaT The gianTs of The pasT looked like. Chuck Radoy Cyrus Mead House Officers, Is! Row, left to right: Richie Harris iTreasJ; Dick Thompson iV.P.l; Bob Poe iSoc. Chairmanl; Pete Lippman iSoc. Chairmanl. 2nd Row: Bill Hogan iPresJ; Gary Chamness lSec.l; Pete Ford iAth. Mng; Dick Brandt lAth. Mgr.l. LLOYD Dear Linda, How is Berkeley now? It sure was great seeing you this Christmas . . . . The construction on campus is going at a furious rate. The noisy, early-morning tractors are laying dust all over everything. The new student houses are beginning to look like they're going to be great to live in. House B looks like it has a good group of guys throoping into it. I really don't know why l've decided to desert the old house; it may be for political reasons il've always aspired to be a V.l.P.l or possibly because the hot and cold water comes out of the same tap in the new room sinks . . . . Pete Dear Linda, Right now I'm Up in the Y lounge waiting for the next batch of pages of the Lloyd House Facts for Frosh to proofread. lBy the way, we've gained a new name, Lloyd's of Tech.l The place is full of newly arrived and freshly scrubbed freshmen looking wide-eyed at our valiant but inefficient efforts. I hope to finish here by five A.M.ethe frosh will have all taltered by then . . . . Tomorrow we're moving into Lloyd in full force. The Student House Office wouldn't let us move in this weekend because there weren't any fire extin- guishers yet. The fire extinguishers still aren't here, but they have to let us in tomorrow. As soon as I find something that will burn, I'll write . . . . Pete Dear Marian, lnterhouse is going to be great! The theme is Alice in Wonderland, and we've been working all week on itethe plan looks good. You'll come in through the White Rabbit's Burrow under the wall of Troy-then walk on narrow paths through the TUlgy Wood, where the Caterpillar solemly smokes his hookah and the Cheshire Cat grins down from the trees. Around a corner the Jabberwock waits, bur- . bling gently to himself. Then we'll sit for a while at the Mad Tea Party or dance on the Queen's Croquet Court. There will be a White Rabbit too- that's Sparky Luskin. His date will be Alice, and Don Davis is the Mad Hatter. They're all out hunting for costumes now. Bio is down in the lounge with Langly directing the work and painting fantastic things in quiet moments. Last week Lippman and Poe put on a Useless Exchange. There were all types of people here. Every one of the them brought something useless, like a 1960 White Sox World Series ticket, the Throop Club checkbook, or Berman-in person. But the prize went to a chastity belt, obviously a useless item Gary Dear Marian, What do you mean-of course it worked! How could you doubt? When Hardy and Clemens and Lloyd House plot a nation-wide R.F., why, it's iust fated to happen. But I really wish you could have stayed for the New Year's Eve party and seen those 2300 cards spread all over the dining room, with serious-minded young scientists bending over the tables puzzling out which cards get stamped blue in space 14. We watched the game in Ruddock Lounge. Every- body knew about the plot, and the suspense was terrific. We thought they'd never get through the nine tricks we gave them back. But finally the tenth came up-CALTECH! The room, and shortly the whole campus, exploded with joy, and each person who came back later that night had to hear about Lloyd's first Rose Bowl victory all over again . Gary P.S.-This term I'm going to snake. Dear Marian, . and then we'll sing the Lloyd House Song. Fervently. With Spirit. With straight faces, I hope, because Slonski's words and Poe's music add up to a real farce on an Alma Mater las McCombs will point out in the introductionJ But if Thompson laughs when he turns to lead the thing, lnterhouse Sing is finished. We smashed the world in tennis this term. Leezer, Bradford, and Medal starred in singles, and Riddick and Liebovich wiped out everybody in doubles, so we'll have extra sundaes for a few weeks . . . . Gary Dear Linda, Hi-sorry to be so long in writing, but . . . House elections are tonight. You never saw such a group of politicians. We've even had a reasonable attendance at football practices and games since the election fever started. Nobody dares stop long enough to snake from the fear that someone else may gain a vote by out-talking or maybe out- drinking him. There are four candidates for president this year. Supposedly, this affords a good choice, but .w k m .m E .D m .n, m a m. m e C B m l e A P ; .m m a m w w 0 H B I e mm..r.. . M .,w. r D We m mH o wW R M. ; d n n m 2 no. . .mm m JLO m ;e o. .mk P rW .II. C H..., e d a an P .nmm V .l B 3g...f m ma W eD b hr ., .m ok L 9m d Md .I. U , s .ma .EEszEnH 9, J b .. o ; o D. m3 :0 e K O mr...r B eh i .n, Clam 0 9H M .m. ee . m Re .IJ o d h r: T ow Fo k .m wk D 5 PM m. m2 T unmm m kg 0 cu T iK .- D t ..Y hg m i a r .va r m 09, t rm f e n I Lem . a w ,h o wC R o I RN, 5 .90 II IG 5. rn 51.; mm mm nun .Iln ea mm SJ JZ 76 v 11 HWWMFVVMm WWMMWMWWMMI Sophomores, left to right: Ivar Tombcch; Randy Wore; George Scott; Bill Schrader; Terry Ernst; Gerry Chandler; Rich Blich; Lee Molho; Dove Windsor; Wayne Huber; Don Davis; Frank Vlach; Steve Yellin; Clarence Fuzak. m Howenstine; Dole Knulsen; Bob Srorwick; Volker Vogt; Bob Estlin; Ed Medof- Ed Angel; Mike McGommon; Jacques Colmo; Rich Hoke; Mark Gurnee; Bob Freshmen, 15? Row, left to right: Floyd Herbert; Roger Leezer; AI Luskin; Bob , Phil Sokolove. 2nd Row: Lorry Seide; Jim Whittington; Wk Chins; Ron Findley; Eliot Bradford. 3rd Row: Al Gillespie; George Moger; Tom Reuble; AI Young. 77 it is quite amusing to see that each candidate has a line down pateunfortunately the same line. Hogan claims that he doesn't give a damn who wins, just so long as someone does and takes over from him, quickly. It doesn't matter because no one has talked to Bill since it was learned that the constitution denies him a vote anyway. Oh well, the one good thing about election night is the keg. Last weekend we had the first annual Beer Barrel Classic, ambitiously sponsored by candidates Ford and Brant. The tleet-footed Oleanna snakes won the relay race, and the iuniors won the basket- ball round robin much to the dismay of a rather cocky group of freshmen. The interwing soccer game ended in a tie because neither side could kick the ball for enough to score a goal. The evening ended with the usual refreshmentsethe last i remember, Sasser was on his way out to get another case . . . Pete Dear Marian, Election night. Ford of the New Frontier won the presidency and Newmeyer, boy innovator, the vice-presidency. Dick Brandt, Young Democrat, is secretary, Blish is treasurer, and Calma comptroller. Berman l7l, Lampton l8l, and Sokolove l4l will pro- vide dates, and Ruddick iiri, Huber isophl, and Gillespie ifroshl will provide victories-we hope. The social chairmen announced their first big event -an exchange at Berkeley. Not enough local talent Ga ry Dear Marian, No time for a letter, not after last weekend, but i though you'd like Abell's story about it from the Teche Beak has trouble gathering information from Floyd Berkeley Exchange. All he gets from returned fun-lovers are sighs and knowing smiles. First returns indicate fair success, as indicated by the flurry of Cal applications seen around the house. Bugler, unfortunate middleman, returned carrying a sour face and disposition to match. Seems he only had one and a half measly hours out of the whole weekend to spend with his girl . . . . Ga ry Dear Linda, Thank God the year is coming to an end. The days are warm and sultry, and I find that looking out the window is infinitely more desirable than snaking. Everyone is too lethargic to do anything much at all except the frosh, who continue to play football and alleyball in the hall. This is much to the dismay of noble RA Noel Jones, who finds that his door is being used for the south goal, and Heller and Poe, who claim that it disturbs their 12:30 night activities. I never knew a group of guys who could get more ofa kick out of playing football on a field lOO feet long and five feet wide. They're just crazy, that's all. Senior Ditch Day has come and gone with its assorted fun and games. Lippman is still looking for his furniture. Last I heard it was at the bottom of the pit in Robinson. Mr. Wm. House iHoganl formally announced his engagement, an event which resulted in damp congratulations. Later his fiance had little trouble talking the house into repeating the demonstration. At this point Bill lost patience and threw her in too Its been a good year and the men of Lloyd have surely got a great deal out of it. Many of the guys will be around Pasadena for the summer, so I expect that we will continue to drink together and fight each other. Jim Clovis will be our RA next year. This year has been great, but Lloyd is hot to have an even greater one next year. Pete ice 9 ice ive Jys uect :ch 'his ven 5441,2771, A , a - - 7. ---H - A -,-....,, Front Row: Dave Siegel, 'Librarian; Pete Metcalf, Social Chairman; Frank Mullin, Secretary; Bob Koh, President. Back Row: Stu Linn, Vice-Presi- dent; Roger Noll, Athletic Manager; Geary Younce, Social Chairman; Bob. Hearn, Athletic Manager; Mat Couch, Treasurer. PAGE Before Page it was A, and before that inot so long agot it just wasnit. But things happen fast in the big city. From nothingness arose the amor- phous mass called Scarlet A. Hope was high, determination rife, and Koh elected. Flying a pure white flag and carrying a snake, Koh led on, until was formed the influential Page House, campus leaden There were initial setbacks. Promising member House abandoned ship while still in port in order to pursue more stimulating activity, and Schultz took off for Texas Western after just one party at his house. But the hardy stayed on, so numerous as to become the only full house in the world idepending on your definition of worldJ At the start of first term there was a revolution in house living, complete with Fidels. The freshmen learned first hand the thrill of hand-to-hand combat and the vengeance of Cline's wickedness. After the freshmen suffered several consecutive losses in water fights, the Upper classmen gave up in disgust and let the clumsy oafs in. Interhouse athletics began with a resounding bang, with Dabney,'s once proud footballers falling To the youthful, up-coming Page in the year's firsT Discobolus match. But then something happened- Athletic managers Hearn and Noll became surly until, like manna from Heaven, things picked UP when swimming came iwe had Rux e nobody else had porpoisest. Limpo became the first frosh iock by being the best in tennis, and Hansen became the second in track. By football season interest was high, and Daddy Denyes guided the charges to victory after victory e and even Little Willy Emerson got to play. Social life was rather popular with the Page House set. The gods ruined Troy 0 fifteenth time, but the horse stood firm. Weingarten's 35 hours of labor on a temple were washed away in 35 minutes, in spite of the countless times Rick shot the staple gun at the clouds. The Halloween party was better e- the old greasy saw a final fling with Page and Ricketts doing their part to help the wrecking crew. By second term it was decided that Page should have a traditional event, and the first idea was a Shipwreck. At first, the plan was to decorate Floyd as the Queen Mary, then dynamite her e but this was dismissed because then nobody would have anyone to make fun of. As a substitute, sailors Raynor and Allen, their car obscured by 0 Sailing Club Yacht, navigated the Harbor Freeway and care- fully wrecked the ship in the lounge. Metcalf and Younce directed willing laborers in building a little grass shack and iungle forest. The result was fine, and a tradition was born. Continued on Page 82 79 80 ums. Bob Ruby, Kay Sugahora, Ed Evans, Gory Lorden, John Armstrong, Pete Metcalf, Geory Younce, Bob Koh, Arf McGarr, Mullin, Roger Noll, Fred Hcmeetman. Bob Nason. Ahmad Abu Shumoys, Lance Taylor, Nelson Siegel, Frank Jerry Clough, Stu Linn, Richard Weingarten, Bob Ross, Bob Heora, Mot Couch, Frank Curfus, Steve Prato, Mike Perlemon, Allen King, Dave Barton, Dave Ollis, Larry Robinowifz, House Mascot, Dave Sfoufemeyer, Bruce Chesebro, Jock Arnold, Dave Siegal, Pat Mannies, Jackson Ito, Sam Allen, Don Aney, John Rayner, Jan Dash, Jerry Davis, Jim Williams, Frank Matthews, Ted Gibbs. Al Moline, Jim Boumgormer, Jock Beouchomp, Dove George Cannon, Dove Seib, Gerry Thomas, Don Emingh, Arr Lipson, Bruce Julian, Howard Ono. Barry Peterson, Gene Fellner, Mike Lambert, Craig Bolon, Bill Stwolley, Dick Burgess, HOHZ, Spicer Conant, AI Limpo, Don Dick, Jim Follonsbee, Bob Me yer, Ken Leonard, Dave Hewif, Leon Thomsen, Dennis Ross, Steve Wiesner, 8I H..- w w '-vm,.. SecTion C1 Alumni -- a group of iuniors who felT cheaTed e immediaTely challenged The Wombats To NeaTguyness e or Volume . The obiecT: To bring as many girls To dinner as possible in a week. For Two nighTs The conTesT remained sane, wiTh The WombaTs Taking a 15-11 lead. BUT The C1 Alumni had been saving up. The WombaTs reTaliaTed e and wiTh one nighT To go, The score was 57-54 WombaTs. Suddenly a whiTe flag appeared from The kiTchen e Saga had given up. Please, no more Than TorTy a nighT, cried lovable ol' Dempsey. lnvesTigaTion found ThaT boTh groups had each arranged for more Than ThaT on The final nighT e it would have been exciTing. So The conTesT was called off, and a rouleTTe wheel decided The posses- sors of The Trophy. Fads and fancies found Their place in The Page House life. Clever pracTical iokes ran in waves. ConTinued Trom Page 79 The besT evenTs of The year, Though, were The group conTesTs. FirsT, The UCC's esTablished a pre- cedenT by dreaming up an excellenT conTesT e hood baiTing wiThouT cop baiTing. Each alley fielded an enThusiasTic squad of pseudo-hoods, and drove off for El MonTe, EasT LA, and oTher culTural cenTers. Surprisingly, no one goT caughT by hood or cop, in spiTe of aTTemst by boTh To mar The record. NexT came a real TesT of skill - boorishness while eaTing. McGarr won individual awards wiTh a handful of mashed poTaToes To The headwaiTer's ear, and followed by a spoonful of gravy Thrown indiscriminanle. AT The beginning of second Term, 0 Trophy was purchased. IT was offered To The winner of a conTesT of skill eToTal score in various games aT a Penny Arcade. The WombaTs became The firsT Trophy winner as everybody's TavoriTe Fellner proved ThaT anyone can overcome Parkinson's disease. Two vicious house members persuaded a friend of Theirs aT WhiTTier To send Siegel an inTimaTe, sugar-coaTed loved IeTTer Tor proposiTion, if you preferl and Then, signed The name of some CalTech bird from off campus. Likewise, The bird goT a similar noTe signed, Love, Dave. Several freshmen picked up some useful words while IisTening To The Two slander each oTher The nexT day e unTil They discovered whaT had happened. The fearsome sophomore iock-group, CurTis, Cheseboro, Dash, Manning, Ollis and STouTemeyer, cornered The RF markeT, carrying on a year-long grudge againsT each oTher. Shaving cream sales in Pasadena hiT an all-Time high when CurTis dis- covered iTs many nasTy uses. And sTuolenT house board cosTs will undoubTedly go up soon To cover The high consumpTion of l'ScoTT's soTTesT in Page ouse. ConTinueol on Page 83 Continued from Page 82 Another fad which spread throughout the house was the reading of dimestore novels, affectionately labeled i'raunch . Emerson, who has every Walt Disney comic since 1939, is also the world's foremost authority on lusty literature. Every night Emerson, above Linn's fervent objections, would host a score of avid raunch readers, if he wasn't too busy trying to reach Seattle with his hi-fi. The seniors all suffered from some sort of addic- tion. For two, Larsen and Sajdera, the addiction was 'iliving and we miss them both. Two more, Ruby and Sugahara, are hooked on cards. Sugahara, who finally found a senior class he liked well enough to join, would play anything e and no matter what the game, he'd soon find a situation that called for the famous Hhoooooooo hoo hoo hoooooo . Ruby was more picky - he wouldn't play fish. And instead of hooing, he'd usually iust blow smoke in your face and giggle. Nason's addiction was'geol- ogy. When he wasn't out hiking or at geology club, he'd talk about rocks lor sometimes hurricanesl. Evans certainly liked beer. In the spring, he took off a few days in order to win some football games for the house, but he got back to serious drinking when- ever he could. So that was Page for '60-'61. Sure, we're young yet, got a lot to learn. But already we're good enough that everyone wants to beat us! Already we've got our traditions laughing at Floyd, being active in campus affairs, having more athletes than :1: anyone, complaining about Saga leveryone wants ou his turn on the food committee except McGarr who'll ch eat anythingl, and most important, getting along a with each other. Pretty good work there, Page boys, pretty good work. en Stately, plump Rod Dokken came from the Prexy he stairhead bearing a mug of foul-smelling amber ey liquid. He was approached by a pea-green freshman . lunrotatedl, whose name may or may not be Ray '5' Weiss, and asked whether or not he was a freshman. er, So the year at Ricketts began unpropitiously as The m9 President Himself was smashed. leS Initiation, as usual, proved to be at least fairly iS' amusing and quite educational for all concerned. For use instance, George Reeke tfrom Green Bay, Wis.l V96; Continued on Page 84 3. l E! , 83 WA 84 Front Row- Dick Jones, Secretary; Marty Hoffman, Social Chairman; Jay Russo, Librarian. Back Row: Barry Moritz, Social Chairman, Rusty Marr, Athletic Manager; Rod Dokken, President; Gary Turner, Treasurer. RICKETTS Continued from Page 83 learned that the fraction 23T33 can be computed far more accurately than the value he reported in his thrilling duel with Hal Petrie. Also, the freshman from Turkey underwent a name change from Dimugluugluig or something like that to DD, or The Turk to those who knew him well. Blacker House learned not to mess with Deklyen andyor Radke. The UCC's busily worked at integrating the frosh lunrotatedl with all deliberate speed. Ricketts almost decided not to participate in the annual lnterhouse Dance in 1960, but the event was saved by the fact that the freshmen were so very gung-ho. So it was decided that the house should participate in the event as in years past. The proiect selected was the building of a huge Trojan. After much difficulty, the horse was erected. Unfortu- nately, however, on the day of the dance, it rained lfor the first time in twenty yearsl and the fun was taken out of the whole thing. The fiercely-contested skill-games trophy was wrested from hard-fighting LD by scrappy Snatch in the sports of head-knocking, Turkish Yoga lwhat- ever that isl and crutching to Robinson for speed. The most popular form of diversion first term was the game of rack, and the accompanying remarks llike: l doubt your corpulent posterior, Thomas. One personable freshman was even seen to be teaching the game to an oriental fellow lnamed Sugarhair or something like thatl. The fellow seems to have had considerable luck at the game since. Smart, those Japanese. As the first term finals approached, the Ricketts house members came up with one of their traditional waste-of-time-before-finals, in the form of 'iTransom Ball, also known as 'iSlobko's Folly. The ball was not a ball at all but rather a paper cube, as it turns out. However, everyone seemed to study enough, except Slobko and Hill, who had money involved. The house did reasonably well, however, and there was even some talk lvery quiet talk, however,l that Ricketts might even win the Snake Trophy lgaspl. The end of finals was celebrated with the usual festivities this year; the house members decided to name the holiday Christmas . The idea seems to be spreading, from all reports. The fiercely-contested breakdrum was wrested from the hard-fighting sophomores by the scrappy frosh during second term. The pile was more grue- some than usual, and it caused several sophomores to swear off violence forever. Instead, the class .of 1962 decided to attempt to regain the chrome dISC through trickery and deceit. They even went so far as to kidnap tight-lipped George Reeke lfrom Green Bay, Wis.l in an ilI-fated attempt to discover the whereabouts of the drum. But courageous George Continued on Page 85 sfrvy-rw ConTinued from Page 84 wiThsTood The hours of menTal TorTure and The sopho- mores were ThwarTed. In The absence of STan Saidera, Barry MoriTz Took over The reins of The house vocal chords. BUT The fiercely-conTesTed lnTerhouse Sing Trophy was wresTed from hard-singing RickeTTs by crappy Blacker, whose members are repUTed To resemble moles. Clearly The finesT choral group presenT, The RickeTTs Team was judged TirsT by Two of The judges, bUT dead lasT by some random old woman. WaiT unTil nexT year. The fiercely-conTesTed presidency was wresTed from hard fighTing Rod Dokken by scrappy Kerry Donovan during second Term. All oTher house offices were unconTesTed, and quire dull. ExcepT House Jock. The Team of Thomas The Unpure and Rosenberg The Jew eked ouT a close vicTory. UndoubTedly, however, The mosT inTeresTing TeaTure oT elecTion nighT was The showing of The Raunch Flicks. These movies, iT should be poinTed ouT, are vasle overraTed, and are no more Than come-ons for The average horny Tech man. NoT once during The performance can This reporTer remember seeing even a glimpse of bare ankle. Second Term also marked The beginning of The Houyhnhnms lyesl, a socieTy of good fellows dedi- caTed To geTTing rich quickly. IT seems They had a sysTem of beTTing on The horses, and when ThaT didn'T Turn ouT so well, They began To invesT in The commod- iTies markeT. To make a long sTory shorT, read The lasT paragraph of This sTory. Second Term finals were marked by The invenTion of polygonal handbirol, one of The besT Time-wasTers in recenT years. Tom Slobko was one of The mosT proficienT polygonal handbird players. We'll always remember Tom. Spring vacaTion, called EasTer by some Tech- men, was one of The mosT inTeresTing in years. IT seems The house Armenian disappeared, and every- one was quiTe occupied wiTh The game of guess where The Armenian is . The game was ruined when Serge reTurned. Spoil sporT. Once more The skill games Trophy became acTive during Third Term. Boy did iT ever become acTive. Up Your challenged SnaTch in door sTealing, and somehow Crud won. Then LD challenged Crud in an alley band conTesT; meanwhile SnaTch challenged Prexy To clean living and Spring challenged The LD Trosh To shower him. The final resulT of all This confusion is noT obvious, bUT aT lasT reporT, LD was T, aT The Top of The Trophy board. Earlier in The Term, Phil ToileT Bowles seT an all Time record by downing TwenTy-five mugs of waTer in one evening in one of The greatesT displays of gunghoiTy in hisTory. UnforTunaTely, The fiercely- ConTinued on Page 88 85 ls! Row- Carl Pool Russ Marr, Paul Purdom, Ben Burke, Dick Jones, Keith Matthews. 2nd Row: Ken Casey, Bruce Ulrich, Rodney Dokken, Doug Stewart, Lewis Hemphill. '15? Row: Ken Larson, Dove Edwards, Kerry Donovan, Robert Bump, John Crossman, Carl Rovoinen. 2nd Row: Tom Slobko, Butch Lungershausen, Gary Turner, Keith DeMenf, Doug Smith, John Curtis, Neil Gretsky. xm 15? Row: Carlos Johnson, Hal Thomas, Truman Seely, Jim Morrow, Joel Young, Warren White. 2nd Row: Al Yur, Marty Hoffman, Joseph Russo, John Kessler, Will Scum, Barry Moritz, Pete Fischer, Les Tomley, Tom Bopp. 'lsl Row: Ron Sipherd, Bill Rosenberg, Duygu mm Demirlioglu, Joseph Toynoi, Elliot Harry; George Reeke, Fred Don. 2nd Row: Wayne Coving- Ton Rod McCoIley, Roy Weiss, Dennis Holt, Dove Hyde, Bob McEliece, Terry Murphy, Alphonso Bedouyo, Steve Hansen, Torn DeKlyen, Phll Bowles, Lee Peterson, Roy Riblef, Hal Petrie. 87 71 ! .m v15 1 ff??? . WM Continued from Page 85 contested Acme Beer Trophy was retained by hard- drinking Dabney in the face of a stihc challenge by the scrappy Ricketts crew team. . During third term the senior EE's decided that It was time to put their four years of nebulous theory into practice in the form of a great big tesla COll. The hard working fellows endured derisive cries at good luck, guys, and Nernst and finished their coil. It didn't work, to the surprise of no one. But in all fairness to Dokken, Casey, and C0,, it should be pointed out that the coil sure did impress that high school stuff at the Mad Scientist Party. Good work, fellows. After' all that, life settled down to a peaceful routine, interrupted only occasionally by Paul Puralom and by the rumor that turned out to be true that Barry Moritz had a dread disease. Way to have a dread disease, Moritz. 1 At the time of this writing, third term finals are l approaching, the house has iced the Discobulus trophy lwe may make Dabney eat itl, rooms for next year are being randomly selected,'lGretsky is all alone with his belovedl, and a fifty-dollar share in the Houyhnhnms is now worth exactly eighteen cents lyesl. First row: Doug Fenwick, Secretary; Eli Chernow, Vice President,- Joel Donnelly, President; Bill Farrell, Social Chairman; John Tudoroff, treas- urer. Second row: Bill Ripka, Athletic Manager; Rick O'Connell, Historian; Russ Russell, Headwaiter; Tom Gorden, Comptroller; Ken Manley, Librarian; Ron Gatterdam, Athletic Manager. RUDDOCK THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO 1. In the beginning there was nothing. The campus was null and void. 2. Then George Green said let there be no more parking spaces and he sent the angel of noise and dirt to construct a new and unequalled garden eastward of greasy chandler. 3. And he took a finger from marge Cheney and created bud taylor and he was a iimhole. And behold he looked upon his work and it was good. 4. But He saw that His work was not yet complete and perfect. 5. Then he created Jose Frink. And He said this is cool. 6. And he saw that Jose was lonely. It is not good that man or Frink should be alone. 7. He caused a deep sleep to fall upon Frink. While he was sleeping all his signs were stolen. 8. From Frink he took a bone and with the bone He made Lola. ELI 9. And He saw that she was good but not perfect so he made her again. 10. The admissions committee brought forth creeping things and they were called frosh. i 1. And from the old houses came forth the beasts of the field and they were called sophomores. 12. And from Huttenback's office sprang forth the foul of the air and they were called iuniors. 13. And there dwelt in the paradise Ruddock Jose and Lola and the beasts and the fowl iAnd the creeping things dwelt there tool 14. And in the paradise there was a great abundance of chocolate sundaes. 15. And the fair maidens flocked to the citadel to pay homage. 16. And they were impressed. 17.And He spake unto the inhabitants saying ye may partake of any tree in the Donnelly, Lola, Tom Gordon, Vince Haskell, Dove Herring, Bill : Joel Wayne Massey. Back Row Back Row Russ Russell, Bill Farrell, Ruperf Bell. Doug Fenwick, John Todoroff, M a Z n w m w H m m h B C r: H e E m I 9 a n k a p L R . 1w mm B s ..w h f .n ha 9 mo .n rk rl u i 09 WK .T.M hm, and lea km .0 In If we wr hm .mA nn no 0 7 f0 m. FR FS 90 SOPHOMORES, 15! Row: Lloyd Rice, Henry Abarband, Bob Schmulian, Ken Manley. 2nd Row: Al Wright, Steve Leppla, Larry Gershwin,- Bill Giauque, Ron Korefz. 3rd Row: Norm Reifz, Paul Rosenthal, Bob Gilman, Mike Behrens, Tom Atkinson. ' :Ra Green D on, Geor e Preston, Terry Most, Don Paxton, Bob Lelbermonn. 2nd Row y , Tom 0C 9 Jeff Wise 3rd Row: Dick Stanton, C-eorge McBeon, Bruce Beeghly, Bill Tony Dohlen, Steve German, Jim Dixon, Tom MocDowellh Russell ellcn, Harry Rosen, Dick McGehee missingL FRESHMEN, 1st Row: Joe Weis, Dave Hammer, Bill Meisel, Tom Lubensky, Mike Cosgrove, Arden Walters, Richard Korp, Weber, Don Terwilliger, Keith Gillen, Jim Hole. 4th Row: Dove Helfmcn, Hogemun, Dick Shlergeris, Jock McKinley, Lorry MCCI 92 garden excepting not only the cherry tree from which ye shall not pluck least ye die. 18. And there was in Ruddock House a snake and he so disgusted Jose that Frink plucked from the tree in frustration. 19. And the holy angel Rinker saw what they had done and he was angered and he said unto Jose thou shalt leave the comfort of the Institute never to return and go forth unto the non-rigorous world. 20. And Jose reioiced. 21. For he was to be graduated. 22. And Jose went forth east from Eden and did grow and multiply. 23. AND THE PARADISE LANGUISHED IN HIS ABSENCE. 24. Enchevetrer lierre est concocteur luron ceunt. Initiation discovers Dick Shlegeris. As the usual Rites of Fall descended upon Ruddock, administered by Pledgemaster Larry Gershwin, Freshman Shlegeris takes a ride on the Chandler dirty-dish conveyor belt. The usual amount of gas was dished out to the Frosh, but when all was over, there were no hard feelings and a spirit of unity had come into the group of guys who were now living together as a house. Following hot upon initiation was the interhouse dance, Ruddock's first. It was one to remember as Ruddock joined with Ricketts in constructing a huge Greek scene, complete with Troian Horse, located just inside the gates of Troy. The rain sort of dampened things lno pun intendedl but a great time was had by all. In the first elections of the new year, Lola, here shoWn with the usual group of zeal0Us guardians pledged to protect her chastity, was unanimously chosen as the interally trophy and eternal companion to the immortal Jose. Then, after a time made seemingly infinitesimal by the endless rounds of too, too cool parties and exchanges arranged by social chairmen Ollie Seely and Bill Farrell! came the first term finals, and the customary time-wasting athletics usual to this period. This Time H was mounTain climbing sans mounTain. AnoTher one was climbing The sTairs using only The Tops of The halT-inch wide baseboards, boTh of which were recorded for posTeriTy by The gung-ho Ruddock hisTorian. The hisTory of inTra-ally sporTs didn'T sTop There however. WiTh second Term came ally baseball and handball, and The developmenT reached iTs peak wiTh The greaT CalTech Trisbee boom of Third Term, when The in Thing in Ruddock was The abiliTy To Throw The Trisbee The lengTh of The ally wiThouT Touching The wall. As Third Term approached, so did The House elecTions. When all was said and done, Bill Farrell was chosen To follow Joel Donnelly as presidenT. Vice president is Bill Hassenzahl, while Bob Gilman, PeTe Laszlo, and Tom MacDowell were chosen To Try To follow Ollie Seely's reign as Social Chairmen. Secrefary is Henry Abarbanel, and inheriTing The Treasury is Larry Gershwin. AThleTic Managers are Bob Liebermann and Chuck Vinsonhaler, while Ray Green, Dan PaxTon, anal Arden WalTers Take over as Librarian, HisTorian, and CompTroller. Succeeding Russ Russell in The unenviable posiTion of Chief Clod lHeadwaiTerl was Ron Counsell. AnoTher TeaTure of Third Term was The announce- menT ThaT Ruddock was co-holder of The lnTerhouse TrOphy. The fooTball Team, shown defending againsT 0 Lloyd pass, IosT only one close game, while The sofTball, baskeTball, and volleyball Teams had good records To give Ruddock The coveTed prize. All in all, The men of Ruddock felT ThaT They had a very good year, and an ouTsTanding one for a new house. WiTh The uniTy and spiriT of Ruddock well esTablished, a greaT year seems cerTain for '61-62. The men of Ruddock feel ThaT iudging from This year's record, This will be a greaT house for a long Time To come. 93 Q9 ,2... . av thy WK. 0 L55 K hun-WIQ'JVs-l V ted ' 5 . I - AW 71 71 . i ' .s-----.;Lm-m, , i o Is! Row, left to right: Christ Velline, Dave Turner, Robert Poe, Eli Chernow, John Newmeyer. 2nd Row:'$id Leibovich lVice Presidentl, Richard Thompson, Byron Summers, Larry Brown lPresidentl, Clark Benson, Ollie Schwab, Dick Norman lTreasurerl, Dave Loebbaka lSecretaryll Random Troll, Bill Bauer, Steve Hechler, Richard Hess. Joel Donnely, Marty Schultz. k I71 Mr L! 1 J ' Kls .L. 4 w' r; I J4... A. ..4 hi... .. FM 4,, 96 TAU BETA PI The Caltech chapter of Tau Beta Pi is the only scholastic honorary society on campus. Tau Beta Pi itself is a national fraternity whose purpose is to honor those who have attained high academic stand- ing with a record of integrity and service. Members are elected twice each year from nearly all campus options. Seniors admitted to Tau Beta Pi must stand in the upper fifth of their division, iuniors in the upper eighth. Every year the Tau' Beta Pi chapter president travels to a national convention of chapter presidents in order to better co-ordinate this chapter's activities and policies with those of other chapters. This year the Cal Tech, U.C.L.A.- and U.S.C. chapters had a combined initiation, banquet and dance. Also every year a Freshman Award is given by Tau Beta Pi to the freshman who, more than any other, possesses those qualities necessary for TGU Beta Pi membership. This year's award was pre- sented to Thomas Latham. l l Tom Sallee, Bob Ruddick, John Todoroff. 3rd Row: Tom Tisch, Cleve Moler Bent Huld, Garry Lorden. Back Rows: Dick Zacher, Kip Thorne, Barry Gordon, I l Isl Row, left To right: John Todoroff, Gory Walla, John Lohmon, Tim Little, Bob Koh. 2nd Row: John Golden, Roger Noll, Dave Pritchard, Larry Brown, Lance Taylor. NoT Pictured: Bill Bauer, Rod Dakken, Joel Donnelly, Sid Leibovich, Dick Norman, Tom Tisch, Clyde Zaidins. hompson. y Gordon. uer. Sieve Honor Keys and Honor CerTificoTes are awarded inTo consideraTion by The Committee. Honor Keys each year by The Board of DirecTors upon The recom- mendoTion of cm Honor Award CommiTTee. This Honor Award CommiTTee evoluofes sTudenT applicanTs upon The basis of ouTsTcmoling service To The sTudenT body. VorieTy as well as degree of service is Taken are The Top service awards given by The ASCIT. BoTh The Honor Keys, which are The harder To achieve, and The Honor CerTificaTes are announced during second Term and Then presenTed of The anual Spring Awards BomqueT in TournamenT Park. Oliver Seeley and Carl Hamilton 15' ROW, left To right: Rich Harris, Joel Tennenboum, Julian Prince, Eli Chernow, Jim 5090m9'2neiRjz'e: John Arndr, Dick Thompson, ArT Robinson, Gary Mitchell, Bill Hogan, Arr Turner: NTO' bf: ur ' BOCHGQEI Gory Ihler, Tom Keil, George Muenich, Carl Rovainen, Doug Shekel, 5k'P en Lu-.- m. 4T- 98 Sitting, left to right: Stan Klein, Eli Chernos, Carl Rovainen, Bob Nason, Barry Gordon, Paul Purdom. Standing: Don Fahnline, Bob Keith, Dick D'Ari Barry McCoy, Harold Harrison, Howard Monell, Steve Hechler, Al Green, Wes Hersey. Y.M.C.A. ' Through the years the YMCA has been outstand- ing for its many contributions to the welfare and culture ot the Caltech student body. This year has certainly been no exception. Under the able leader- ship of President Bob Nason, Vice-President Barry Gordon, Treasurer Eli Chernow, Secretary Paul Pur- dom, National Representative Stan Klein, and Pub- licity Director Carl Rovainen, together with Executive Secretary Wes Hershey and his assistant Al Green, the Caltech Y has enjoyed one of the most successful years in its history. This year's program was highlighted by Leaders of America Archibald MacLeish, who discussed his poetry and plays, and Margaret Mead, who spoke on the social problems of Techmen. Other popular visitors were the Yale Russian Chorus, who presented a concert, and a group of eight seminary students, who spent a few days in the student houses discus- ing religion and other subiects with students. Other YMCA activities included participation in the annual Asilomar conference, which was attended by the largest Caltech delegation in many years, and sponsorship of a conference with U.S.C. The Public Affairs Commission, and several speakers, including Dr. Linus Pauling, representing various viewpoints on congressional investigating committees. Regular programs that have enjoyed popularity are the Diner Club, foIk-dancing, and the Y film series. YMCA members have also continued a recent tradition by spending weekends working at the Pala and Niii Indian Reservations. Elected officers for the coming year are Barry Gordon, President, Carl Rovainen, Vice-President, Bob Ross, Secretary, Dick D'Ari, Treasurer, Norman Reitz, Publicity Director, and Gerry Chandler, Regional Representative. Under their leadership, the YMCA members anticipate that the coming year will be even more interesting than the past one. The gathe eacl' Spor autl This play gore pr09 fhest in S Thes: irifor Them Dick n in nded ,ond 'ublic ding oOims QUIC I Diner MCA .n W . Niii BarrY Dr. Margaret Mead was one of the leaders of The Yale Russian Chorus presents 0 Concert. Visiting Seminary students porticipoteino discussion America visiting Coltech. group. The Yale Chorus participates in a post-concert Margaret Mead discusses problems facing Coltech Techmen participate in the Annual ASILOMAR gathering. students. conference. LEADERS OF AMERICA PROGRAM The YMCA devotes a good part of its budget each year to the Leaders of America series, which sponsors visits to Tech by persons of fame and authority in various aspects of American culture. This year Archibald McLeish, noted author and playwright, and foremost anthropologist Mar- garet Mead visited the campus as guests of the progranm The series provided for meetings between these famous Americans and the students, both in group and indhdducl confaencex Dang these,the Technwen vvere obleto obtain voluokhe infonnoHon about a Mnde range oftopks honw these expens and Ieadersin thew hekix Archibald McLeish of Tech 99 ne rt! - 4; r'-L 4.1V l00 4th Row, left To right: R. Moore, D. Kouffmon, L. FreTwell, Frewing, J. Donnelly, O. Frodsham. 3rd Row: R. Counsell, D. Curtis, R. Thompson, F. Spaid. 2nd Row: R. Kruse, J. B. Francis, J. Lonman, R. O'Connell, D. Dick, T. Ruebel, L. MerriTT, L. Kugler, K. G. Muenich, J. ArmsTrong, D. Grimes, G. Mitchell, D. Barker, D. Dickson, A. Johnson, Hole, D. Helfman, T. Creighton, D. Terwilliger, D. BarTon, D. Fenwick, G. Thomas, G. Lorden, A. Hindmarsh, O. Seely, M. Perlman, S. MasTin, K. Casey. Ist Row: T. Davey, R. Dawson, K. Russell, D. Abe, W. Howard, W, Specht, J. Davis, P. Johonson, J. Yoh, V. Hoscall, G. Preston, C. Velline, C. Hamilton The CaITech Glee Club conTinued iTs TrodiTion of performing some of The finesT choral music 0T numerous concerTs ThroughouT The year. The Tiny-six membered club is one of The mosT acTive organizaTions on campus. Under The superb direcTion of Olenc M. Frod sham, Professor of Music CIT OccidenTol College, The club has maTured info 0 finely blended chorus wiTh amaz- ing Tone producTion. AcTiviTies were many and varied This year. On campus The club presenTed iTs Annual Spring Con- cerT, sponsored The InTerhouse Sing and performed for The service league and The lnsTiTuTe of Dairgabo. ConcerTs presenTed in The locoliTy of Pasadena in- cluded The TradiTionol service aT The WesTminsTer PresbyTericm Church, The Pasadena Women's Sym- phonic AssocioTion, The OnieTa CongregoTional Church and an appearance aT The opening session THE CALTECH QUARTET, lefT To right: Robert Moore, James Davis, George Muenich and WalTer SpechT. of The WesTern Division of The Music EducoTors NaTional Conference. Spring vocoTion once again was devoTed To a Tour of cenTral California wiTh concerTs scoTTered beTween San Bernardino and Berkeley. An enjoyable evening exchange wiTh The Pomona Woman's Glee Club and The gala Annual FesTival 0T L. A. SToTe College compleTed This year's concerT season. Officers of The club for 1960-61 were: George Muenich, PresidenT; Kendall Casey, Manager; STephen MasTin, SecreTory; William Howard, Treasurer; Lauren MerriTT, Librarian and Lyman FreTwell, STUdenT Con- ducTor and QuorTeT DirecTor. Olaf M. Frodsham, DirecTor la OI'S T a red ble lee oTe rge en ran 14. V Blacker House Sing Like many Things on The CalTech campus This year, InTerhouse Sing underwenf several changes. The mosT noTeworThy of These changes was ThaT The Trophy goT a new home. Blacker House broke The monopoly on lnTerhouse Sing long enioyed by iTs neighbor To The north. Lloyd house was second, and Page House was Third in The compeTiTion. WiTh many houses compeTing if was decided noT Lloyd House Sing Ruddock House Quartet Sing SING To have a single conTesT number. Thus each house chose iTs own. songs, and There was a great deal more varieTy in The evenings' singing Than There had been in The past. Everyone was surprised wiTh anoTher break in TradiTion when Dean Eaton announced The winner as soon as The results were Tabulafed. Page House Sing INTERHOUSE lOI Gutless wonder Ricketts, Page and Ruddock presented the rape of Troy as a grand, amalgamated effort. Neo-Troions danced in the temple courtyard but forgot to pour Iibations to the resident god tit seems he was the god of roinl. Blocker merited the Order of Serendip: they were prepared for the deluge with on Okeefenokee Cypress Swamp. Pogo and AI . . . . . cruised the courtyard in the John B. Alice, Queen of Hearts and unidentlfled rabbit. Pogo's house was way out. Welcome Committee msE DANCE :71 ? . Dobney was transformed into 1he Land of Oz. The Emerald Palace 3 looked more like a granite castle, but the moat really worked! The Wizard appeared on his screen inside, attended by the Cowardly- cup-eating lion. - ' late with saloon casino and dancing girls. Jobberwock reacts to So a cookie Flemmg went western, comp . . ' y 9 Ned Hale ran the full house with on Iron hand. Below: outsude facade; Linus' Place. Grand Lake, Colorado. tforeground: representations from U.C.L.AJ r, w ' , u. A5. GM: m9 'f'v ,y. , THE CALIFORNIA TECH Tom Tisch, Editor Another year has passed and the California Tech staff, led this year by editors John Todorott and Tom Tisch, has faithfully recorded ahother year of Caltech history. lt was a news filled year, and the Tech provided comprehensive coverage of events suited to a wide variety of tastes. In the ever popular area of student affairs, the bit stories this year were the rotation talks and the BOD. - Dave Kubrin feud. The most important news item of the year concerning faculty affairs was that Dr. Beadle was leaving the Institute to accept the position of Chancellor of the University of Chicago. The news department also reported on such things as the athletic picture, the many cultural programs going on around campus and achieved its crowning success when it scooped all of the nation's newspapers in reporting the inside story of the Rose Bowl card stunt 'lR.F. Supplementing the news department was a strong editorial department, led by the Tech's co-editor's Tisch anal Todorott, which produced a regular editorial column. The best way, to characterize this year's editorials is to say that they were controversial. Usually dealing with some aspect of student life or student body attitude, the editorials criticized, complained and made people think. Although those who read the editorials may not always have agreed with the comments which were made they could not read them and remain ignorant of the problems facing the average Caltech student. lite; A -. -jnx: in anTgb-ng q - u . , ! Left to ri ht: Lan T l . 1 Karp, Bagrlry Peteffonf'y or, Roger Knoll, Howard Monell, Don Thompson, Lorry Gershwm, Bill. Meisel, Craig Bolon,. Richard I ; THE TOTEM The campus literary magazine Totem produced under the guidance of Editor Dave Benson assisted by stattc members Barry McCoy, Bob Diller, Steve Joseph and Ray Barglow has again shown that Techmen's interests extend beyond the realm of science or engineering. The magazine contains a wide variety of original essays and poems written by members of the student body. Much of the charm of this magazine is derived from the fact that the contributing authors deal with familiar themes in a new and different way which is uncommon in normal literary publications. The only problem facing the Totem at present is of finding more contributors, a problem which we hope will be solved so that the Totem will continued to be published. is year by er year of arehensive Jular area ; and the :onceming Totem Staff iccept the ment also programs t scooped Rose Bowl apartment, 0 regular is to say udent life .e people e agreed d remain THE z' IJTTLE T '60 The little t is the Institute's version of a student handbook. Provided by ASCIT, and ordinarily edited by a team of two Sophomores, and little t was this year produced single-handedly by Senior Stan Saidera. The information included in it ranges from a spurring message from President DuBridge and girls' telephone numbers to useful, but less interest- ing, ASCIT by-laws and students' addresses. It fills the gap between the Big T, the Tech and the institute catalogue, preserving traditions and providing a handy shoppers' index as well. Editor Stan Scidera I05 .aw. ,s- 'V'ww .,, CARNEGIE LECTURE SERIES hi The first in a three year series of guest lectures financed by a grant from the Carnegie Foundation brought a large array of outstanding figures to our campus in the past year. The grant is to be used for the promotion of historical science, the behavioral sciences, and relations between science and government. The lectures this year emphasized the relationships between science and government, and special emphasis was given to national defense and arms control. The program first term featured General MaxWell Ta.ylor, General Bernard A. Schriever, C. P. Snow, and Dr. James R. Killian. Second term the series included Prof. C. E. Osgood, Prof. Jerome 196 hIs the B. Wiesner, Prof. Tom Schelling, John Strochey, Prof. Kenneth ONO Boulding, Mr. Denis Healey, Prof. Daniel . mer Lerner, Prof. ltiel de lo Solo Pool, W. K. H. life Ponofsky, Prof. I. I. Rabi, and Sir SoHy Zuckerman. ing Besides the main lectures, each man ' by participated in a faculty - graduate seminar cud tive and various discussion groups. Professor Jerome B. Wiesner discusses current scientific and military problems. T t' l q l V 't f . I Professor ltiel de la Solo Pool spoke on 'TPublic Opinion and I 1 Policy . I t g gl 111 12 5! Sir Solly Zuckerman and l. l. Robi talk w'th f on the Athenium stairs. I GCUhy membefs l06 t T T Caltech presented its third annual Jazz Festival at the Pasadena Civic Auditorium on February 10, 1961, with Bill Stewart, KLAC disc iockey, serving his third year as M.C. Starting the performance were the Hi-Lo's and the Barney Kessel Quartet. Feature artist George Shearing and his Quintet brdught the show to a rousing climax. Shearing's time-proven piano-vibes-guitar combination scored again by mfprogram captivating the Pasadena audience with his popular ' arrangements. The addition of cm Atro-Cuban drum- mer for his final numbers put considerably more life into both quintet and audience and brought the group back for several encores. Though disappoint- ing to the iozz purist, the concert was well received by the Pasadena community which filled both the auditorium and ASCIT treasury tor the third consecu- tive year. Beverly Hilton Hotel. Lilting music, pleasant conver- sation and les plus belles temmes resulted in the most enjoyable ASCIT Formal in years. Swoying to the music of Wayne Songer's Band, over a hundred couples danced away the evening of February 18th in the Cordovo Room of the plush l07 YELL LEADERS The cheerleaders had a lot of fun roasting the Pomona Sagehen and accompanying the stolen Oxy Tiger across the field at halftime, but none of the magic seemed to work. Very special thanks go to Judy Roberts and Kathy Lang who stuck with the iob through thick and thin and performed spiritedly all the while. Wendell Mendell, John Sovari, and Howard Monell managed to squeeze some lusty cheers out of the small but enthusiastic Cal Tech following. John Sovari, Howie Monell, Wendell Mendell DIVIDER STORY-ROSE BOWL R.F. The spectators at this year's Rose Bowl football game in January were given a special treat during the half-time ceremonies when what would have been the monotony of a routine traditional Wash- ington sequence of card formations was unexpectedly interrupted by one of the most lavish examples of Cal Tech prankstership in its history. All went well for the Washington card section director, running complacently through the first run of his planned formations. The first time that anything had gone wrong was in the tenth formation when the word CALTECH appeared instead of Washington. Sus- picions were confirmed with the backwards spelling out of the script i'Huskies, and the appearance of the Caltech Beaver instead of the Washington Mascot in the Twelfth Trick. By this time the bewildered card stunt director was ready to call it a day, and he ground the proceedings to a halt. The Washington card stunt team was the victim of fourteen Lloyd House members who sacrificed the customary conviviality of New Year's Eve to labor over 2332 cards that were to be used in the coming Rose Bowl performance. . Sometime shortly before Christmas the idea of pulling this card stunt occurred to these pranksters. A few appropriately placed phone calls ascertained that the University of Washington band would arrive December 29 to stay at Long Beach State. Shortly after the arrival a reporter for the Dorsey High School Dorseygram dropped by the Long Beach dormitory and asked to see the card stunt director. This obliging soul was very pleased to discuss the operation and the reporter soon knew the detailed workings of the stunts as well as the, location of the master sheets and the 2332 cards. The reporter returned an hour later for another talk, but the director was unfortu- nately at dinner--so to insure accurate journalism the reporter took one card from the middle. of the heap. Very quickly after the reporter had returned to headquarters lthe Lloyd House dining rooml and the card rushed to the printers, there appeared 2300 near duplicates. An attempt to dye the cards to match the tattered and worn real ones failed, so the schemers decided to gamble on. the the new cards getting through. Time: Friday, December 30. The next clay the interviewer again failed to find the director in his room-since the whole Washington contingent was at Disneylandeso he borrowed the master plans, large pieces of graph paper colored in the manner that the stunts were to appear. In the sanctuary of the Lloyd dining room, the con- spirators spread out the substitute cards before them. In the short space of 140 man-hours, a new set of cards emerged with the correct instructions stamped on them. The cards were quickly returned to Long Beach. The group, their work now done, sat down to await the game and one of the best execufecl of all Caltech stunts. 'k s, e' a .V . '4-7 ,1 f. . .AA...,-...,a.,. , v . MUDEO Once again come the fateful day. There were the usual meek, gentle trosh milling about in a snorting mob. However, the bronze-bodied, powerful sophomore men calmly waited for the trial by mud to come. Capt. Pete Fischer, clad only in his blue dress shorts and 0 cost about his qrm, quietly surveyed the scrawny bodies nervously pawing the ground across the gaping mow of the pit. At the sound of the junior judge's whistles, he stepped bravely into the mire and to his amazement, immedi- ately sunk to eye level. Glancing wildly about, he saw each of his behemoths fall to the same fate and then helplessly watched the frosh Iightweights float by on their backs. The wily sophs retaliated by offering to throw Ed Evans into the pit if the iudges would Hfix the contest. Naturally the honest, up standing judges agreed and were immediately dunked by the angry trosh. Thus passed another Mudeo into history. I09 ' Is! Row, left To righT: L. Kugler, D. O'Hara, J. Donnelly, S. Brumelle, D. Harris, J. Deichman. - A I This year The bond has become a very ocTive 8 organionion. WiTh obouT forTy members, The greoTesT number since iT was reorganized five years ago, if has been able To expcmd iTs concerT program To include Three concerTs a year. The quoliTy of The music and of The performances has risen sTeodin wiTh each new concerT. AT oThleTic evenTs The bond is always presenT, boosTing The Team wiTh spiriTed playing and equally enThusiosTic cheering. Once again This year, The band played 0T Disneyland. ColTech is The only small college To have been so honored Twice, and The Disneyland concerT promises To become TrodiTionol. m Much of The crediT for The band's Tine record goes it To Mr. John Deichmon, who comes each week from Torzona To direcT The group. He is well known among SouThern California music circles as a man R. Russel, D. Norman, D. Helfman, J. Wise, B. Farrell, D. AgresTi. 21nd Row:.O. Seely, E. Nummelo, J. Dash, D Kauffman C. Olson, G. Preston, T. Luboeansky, R. Young, R. Maxson, R. GoTTerdam, D. Terwilliger, A. Wright. 3rd Row: D. HI ,H. G-eier, NT Drazin DI. Krause, C. Velline, D. Hummer, B. Jernigan, G. ScoTT, B. Tivol, B. Diller, P. Mazur, B. Hunter, J. Sogowa, B. Belanger. Standing: of many musicol ocTiviTies, including The direction of The Chorger's band. 50 for him, leading our band is G labor of love. AssisTing him are Dove Kouffman, The bond monoger; Brion Belanger, The secreTory; and George ScoTT, The librarian. WiThouT The able odminisTroTion of These men, The band could noT funcTion. The growTh in The band's numbers is only half The growTh in iTs spiriT. However, The band is an informal group, and There is no pressure puT on any of iTs members To oTTend evenTs. STill, oTTendonce is excellenT, as is evidenced by The large number of bond award iockeTs around The campus. The mem- bers have always TeIT a real pride in belonging TO The bond, and This pride conTinues To grow as The bond becomes a greoTer and greoTer parT of CalTech life. Preacher HT Barbara Al - Dork of AT Thi UniversiTy rePresente BOb Koh, The Mode by delegi COIIege re and Ogeni Notions, C GUfhemic ing The E Standing C To the fiell Qment Ae gQTes om greGTer 5U DRAMA CLUB The Drama Club was very active last year and has continued to grow in size and quality during this year, Last year they produced readings of the Caine Mutiny Court Martial and Antigone as well as the third term ASClT play, Dark of the Moon. During the summer, they produced HThree Sisters , and this year they con- tinued with reading of J. B. and My Heart's in the Highlands. The play third term will be Camino Real. The president of the club during this past year has been Bob Poe, and all productions were directed by former Tech student Mike Talcott. Preacher Hagler lStu Goffl and Mrs. Summey lSandra Kollorsl pray for Barbara Allen lTami Kirkl as John returns from Old Baldy Mountain. euDark of the Moon . MODEL U.N. At this year's Model United Nations, held at the University of Oregon at Eugene, Caltech was ably represented by Roger Noll, Chairman, Jim Geddis, Bob Koh, Sid Liebovich, Lance Taylor and Tom Tisch. The Model U. N. is an annual conference, attended by delegates from many western colleges, each college representing one country. The organization and agenda are identical to that of the actual United Nations, and the delegates attempt to represent the authentic views of their country. Caltech, represent- ing fhe Dominican Republic, was one of the out- standing delegations, making valuable contributions to the fields of South African problems and disarm- ament. After this year's accomplishments, the dele- gates anticipate that next year will bring even greater success. Left to right: Roger Noll, Tom Tisch, Lance Taylor, Jim Geddis, Bob Koh. 15! Row, left to right: Pete Lippman, Bob Poe and Mike Lampton. 2nd Row: Bill Schrader, Rick Harris, Art Robinson, Bill Hogan, Bob Lawler, and John Neumeyer. John Human lArt Robinsonl sets Marvin lPete Lippmanl up for a little bolt of lightning.e Dark of the Moon . m m l futm rum. :3. .; 'W .4; DEBATE CLUB The ColTech DeboTe Club culminoTed onoTher successful year wiTh a Tour of Hawaii. Under The TuTelage of Mr. Dwight Thomas and The presidency of Kip Thorne, The deboTers reaffirmed Their sTonding as one of The Top Teams in The souThland. WiTh The reTurn of Junior Kip Thorne, The ColTech deboTe Team con nexT yeor expecT To seT new sTondords of excellence and ochievemenT. Left To right: Gary Lorden, Barry McCoy, Carl Rovainen, Kip Thorne, Roger Noll, Stan Klein, Richard Korp. DANCE CLASS Is' 3 AsciT Dance Class meeTs every week 3' 2;, if in The lounge of one of The sTudenT W i u houses. InsTrucTions are given in all popular forms of dancing. IT is dedicoTed To The belief ThoT regardless of how poor a dancer you may be, There is a worse dancer in The class. . mi 3...-.. w - i i L I ; Pete Lozlo, Ray Borglo ., i i l i ii HZ 4, . Jlmihoned I TOUr of r. DWighT 0T Kip led Their m in The Unior Kip eam can idurds 0f NEW STUDENT CAMP egsfer Upan Ifntmnw Www NEW STUDENT CAMP On The sunny aTTernoon 0T SepTember 22, a handful of Upperclassmen herded 200 freshmen and a few Transfer sTudenTs inTo six waiTing buses. RepleTe wiTh name Tags, sleeping bags, This year's little T and The TirsT issue of The California Tech, These newcomers To The Cal Tech scene wended Their way To New STudenT Camp. The lack of roTaTion This year had an eTTecT on The general aTmosphere of The camp Through a minimum of aggressive enThusiasm on The parT of The Upper Class counsellors. The TaculTy speeches in The Tire circle also had someThing of a dampening eTTecT by painTing a more realisTic picTure of campus life Than had been done in The pasT. However Trosh camp as a whole was a resounding success; The freshmen were impressed wiTh The friendliness and frankness of everyone, especially The TaculTy represenTaTives. There was The usual pleThora 0T mounTain golf, volley- ball, and bridge. The TaculTy-upperclass- men sTeamrolIer crushed The freshmen in The TradiTional soTTbaH game. Geary Younce demonsTraTed some sorT 0T abiliTy by scaling The lodge's sTone chimney. And The TirsT TesT of SAGA Food Service was raTher inconclusive. On The lasT night, Dean STrong and Dean EaTon had Their usual verbal baTTle To everyone's delighT. Tom Tisch sold newspapers, and John STromberg pushed green securiTy blankeTs for Those cold nighTs. The upperclassmen's skiT com- pleTely wiped OUT The freshmen Though few of The IaTTer seemed To noTice or care. Larry Weaver's bass voice was clearly The hiT of The TalenT show; Wen- dell Mendell aided by Carl Rovainen provided a shining example of cheer- leader spasTiciTy. Dr. Dubridge ended The evening on a more sober noTe wiTh anoTher impressive speech. Everyone was very glad ThaT he had been able To find The Time To visiT The camp. On SaTurday morning, Dean STrong delivered The denouemenf speech aT The fire circle. The cabins were swepT and checked Finally John Soule gave The All Clear Signal, and The busses sTarTed home. BEAVERS .x AfTer a year and a halfeof inacTiviTy The Bque reappeared on The campus scene. Long a campus frqdfs Am Tion, The group Tried To regain some sense of The Origin; he purpose of The Club as well as moinToin The reCem T . ' ' I e somol domgs. As OI servxce To The school, The Beavers mt resumed Their high school visiTaTion program with Iso The blessings of The Admissions Office and The generous 9g m assisTomce of Dr. PeTer Miller. Skip STenbiT Took charge of visiTaTions, while Meier and Tisch saw To iT ThaT The Beaver ParTy occurred. Doug Shokel qu careToker president New membership and a capable crew of officers should have The Beavers back in The middle of campus acTiviTies by nexT year. Pres lst Row: Cleve Moler, Doug Shokel, Tom Tisch. 2nd Row: Larry Brown, Roger Noll, Skeep Stenhut. 3rd Row: Art Robinson. INSTITUTERS The InsTiTuTers are sTUdenTs devoTed To doing whaT , people ask Them. WiTh uTTerly no IisTed membership : besides The presidenT, TProcurer of cheap IaborT and on T on enTirely volunTary basis, lnsTiTuTer members help ASCIT, The foculTy, and oTher campus organizaTions by doing any odd chores ThaT mighT arise. Thus They may be found Taking TickeTs or ushering 0T fooTbaH games or 0T concerTs, managing lighTing effecTs 0T plays, decora- Ting for ASCIT dances, climbing Trees, cooking on The I Awards BanqueT, working wiTh The Y for a work ; ' proiecT, or even ringing doorbells for The American : Cancer Finance Drive. Therefore, The InsTiTuTers perform I viTal services for The CalTech communiTy. 4 151' Row: Don Fohnline, George Muenich, Tom Kiel, Steve Martin, Hugh Kieffer, John Caywood, KurT Anderson, Dwain Reed, Tom LoThom. 2nd Row: Barry McCoy, Mike Mem I Townsend, Gary TibbeTfs, Dave PriTchord, Ed Miller, Gory Wcllu, Harold Harrison, Don Dove Kauffman, Roy Makino. 3rd Row: AlberT WhiTTles'ey. PHYSICS CLUB I ' in o I The Physics Club meT periodically feaTuring speakers ing, 1: from The campus on inTeresTing subiecTs. These professors and : included Dr. Feynman, Dr. LeighTon, and Dr, Pellam. I The members also engaged in various research projects. 0cTi ' The high poinT of every meeTing come When refreshmems bee were served 0T The end. TiOn. Vice Left To right: Prof Mead Prof Lour. 'T ' , . ITsen, J h Zacher, Bob HeoTh, Frank McTThews, Bucky SmiTh.o n Trenholme, ll4 Sig Holverson, Dick 4 Mg: , -., 1. may H. 53: he Beavers npUs h'Gdi. . e original e recem e Beavers graniiwhh e generoUs 30k Charge it that the corelaker le crew of rhe middle kieffer, John cCoy, Mike .ld Harrison, 3 speakers professors r, pellam- h projects- reshmems A.C.S. The Chemistry Club, which is affiliated with the American Chemical Society, presents programs during the year that are of interest and aid to those persons interested in chemistry. The meetings are open not only to ACS student affiliates and iunior members, but also to all persons in the chemistry or chemical engineer- ing options. Guiding this group are Jerry Kasper, President, Ray Hribar, Vice-President, Bob Ross, Secretary- Treasurer, and Dr. Norman Davidson, Sponsor. Members: Ahmad Abu-Shumays, Sam Allen, Gerry Clough, John Danyes, Lee Elliot, Don Forrest, Bob Hearn, Chuck Ray, Neil Richardson, John Russ, Rick Weingarten. S.A.E. The Caltech student branch of the Society of Auto- motive Engineers is an organization for students interested in any phase of automotive, aircraft, or missile engineer- ing. The Club provides for its members films, talks, and field trips to local automotive and aircraft concerns, along with an opportunity to participate in the L. A. area activities of the National SAE. Members of the SAE have been engaged in research on automobile smog produc- tion. The club is presided over by President John Cross- man, with Dr. Acosta as advisor and Marshall Buck as vice-president, secretary-treasurer. Trail; . Ist Row, left to right; Norman Gordon, Peter Metcalf, Bob Causey, Dr. Norman Davidson, Ray Hribar. 2nd Row: Matt Couch, Bob Ross, Dr. Fred Anson, Charles Flynn. A.S.M.E. The purpose of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers as stated in its charter is to further the advancement and dissemination of knowledge of the theory and practice of mechanical engineering. The student section, with the help of its advisor, Professor Charles Crede, serves this goal by bringing the student into contact with both members of the faculty and members of industry. Through its lecture program, it tries to present current techniques and problems of research, development and production. The highlight of the year is the regional ASME student conference, held this year at the University of Arizona. Members of the various participating schools present papers in a contest, talk shop, and participate in the local social life. The ASME student section serves an important role by presenting the student members with additional opportunities to help him gain more knowledge in any branch of engineering that is of interest to him. Left to right: Bob Bump, John Crossmon, Lonnie DeMent, George Root. IIS Left To right: Steve Caine, Rich Drew, John Golden. 3rd Row, left To right: Cullen, ErnesT, Bresi, Kauffmon, Birty, Kennedy, Kendle. 2nd Row: Dr. Longwell, Rice, Richter, Engleman, Preston, Hribor, BolsoiTis, Venegian, Cuffil, Fernandez, Gershman. Seated: Deon Lacey, Dr. Corcoron. llb I.R.E. - A.I.E.E. This year The ColTech combined sTudenT branch of The lnsTiTuTe of Radio Engineers and American InsTiTuTe of EIecTrical Engineers has conducTed an exTremer acTive program. The program organized by president Richard Drew included several very inTeresTing Speakers. The highlight of The year's evenTs was a field Trip To The soTelliTe Tracking sToTion CIT GoldsTone. The EE'S who are members of The sTUdenT branch of The l.R.E.- A.I.E.E. find parTicipoTion in iTs ocTiviTies a rewarding addiTion To Their educoTion. CHEMICAL ENGINEERING CLUB The Chemical Engineering Club meeTs once a monTh. AT each dinner meeTing There is a guesT speaker who speaks on a Topic in his specialTy. The club has had people speak oh various fields of chemical engineering, such as coTalyTic crackers inoT To be confused wiTh animal crackersi, iob opporTuniTies in chemical engineering, paTenT law, and The sTock markeT. The advisers of The club are Dr. William Corcorcm and Dr. Paul DeVries Manning. RADIO CLUB The ColTech AmaTeur Radio Club, under The leader- ship of presidenT Dave Large, is now larger Than ever before. Open To all inTeresTed people CIT CaITech, The Club currenle has a membership of over 20. During This year The Club sTctTion obTained The call W6UE, which daTes back To a Tech radio club of 1926. W6UE's shack sporTs a new HQ-170 receiver and a singIe-sideband adapTer, boTh pI'OViCJed by ASCIT, and a kiloquT final amplifier builT enTirely by Club members. UT worksJ The Club, which belongs To The Golden Bear Acheur Radio NeT, has provided a free radiogram service To The CaITech communiTy for The second year. has facil proii CurT mdk Pow The m0V STud shop pres J. Sr Com The I Tearr STUdT miliTi To a Thoug Son i in Th ProT- FirsT 1, , STUDENT SHOP lbronch During The pasT year The CalTech STudenT Shop Ion lnsm Ol has .conTInued To prowde wood- and meTol-working ex Uie TGCIlITIes for members who wish To work on hobby y e.mely projecTs. This year The Shop, under The leadership of g 5;:5'Eem CurT Kuebler, Shop Foremon, has added a mill vise, liald TQ' Ers. making The milling machine usable, and several hand . PTO power Tools To iTs wood and meTol working TociliTies. lThTehT Eli's The Shop CommiTTee has been gleefully onTicipoTing -R-E.- moving inTo The shop's new quarTers in The WinneTT rewarding STudenT CenTer. When The CenTer is compleTed, The shop will have almosT Twice as much room as in The presenT, Temporary locoTion. Shop Officers: Foreman, C. Kuebler; AssT. Foreman, l J. SmiTh; SecreTary, W. Burke; Treos., Ron GoTTerdam; l CommiTTeemen: M. KinTer, L. Renger, D. Turner. Left To right: Dove Turner, CurT Kuebler, John Smith, Ron Gotterdum. A.F.R.O.T.C. LUB DRILL T EAM 3T5 once a One of The mesT selecT orgonionions on campus is Is 0 guesT The Air Force ROTC deTochmenT's drill Team. The drill aciolTy. The Team is on exTro-curriculor c:cTiviTy open only To Those 5 fields 0f sTudenTs who demonsTroTe above average fociliTy in rockers lnoT miliTory drill. Every year, The drill Team looks forward uporTuniTies To a good season. In Their only performance so far, ' The SlOCk Though, They losT a close conTesT in sTandcrd drill To Dr. William San Diego SToTe, perennially one of The sTrongesT Teams in The area. Left To right: Ivar Tombach, Carl Baum, Dove Kouffman, Thor Hanson, Joe Bcchluge, Bill Ricks, Terry Murphy, John Burke, Mason Williams, Rick Hake, John Slonski, Doug Hill, Mark Gurnee, Wm. Sconce, Rick Uhrich, Bill Reming, Howard Ono, Malcolm Morrison, David Heorn, Terry Wogon, Douglas Abe, Rich Harris, Roy Jordan, Reg. Clemens. CIVIL DEFENSE CLUB The leader' The Cal Tech Civil Defense Club is organized To rThdn ever proTecT lives and campus properTy in The evenT of o lTeChlhe major or minor disosTer. In order To carry OUT iTs :0 funcTions mosT efficienle, iT is divided inTo four in- : d The ; dependenT divisions - CommunicaTions, Fire SofeTy, lam? clU i FirsT Aid, and Radiological MoniToring. radlgi170 John Russ is direcTor of over-oll program,- Bill H ided T Rowe, Supervisor of CommunicoTions; Bill Weihofen, hProV. Iy l Chief of Fire SoTeTy Division, Morc Kaufman, head of ill enme The FirsT Aid and Rescue Team; and Rich Drew, DirecTor f Radiological MoniToring. lClen Bear 0 ralegram , cond Yea r. Left To right: Morc Kaufman, Bill Weihofen, Bill Rowe, Moson Williams, John Trenholme, I I7 John Russ. e..'r...--. , , , . .tu i CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP The ColTech ChrisTicm Fellowship is c: group of sTudenTs who have regular meeTings which include Bible sTudy and special speakers wiTh The purpose of presenTi'ng Jesus Christ as Lord and Saviour and of deepening and sTrengThening The TaiTh of ChrisTians. The presidenT of The group is Gory Swanson; he is assisted by Vice-PresidenT Von Hughes and SecreTary- Treasurer Clark Benson. Seated, left To right: Gory Swanson, Clark Benson, Van Hughes, Pieter Koen, Charles Flynn, William Ko. Standing: Ralph Young, Dave Clark, Bob Kruse, Tom Noonan. NEWMAN CLUB The Newman Club is The sTudenT CaTholic organi- T U zaTion. In oddiTion To The weekly meeTings in The w05i house of some CaTholic faculTy member, iT sponsors ' Safer Three Talks on Term, an annual reTreaT, and occasional 10 St Trips To poinTs of inTeresT. Upon compleTion nexT year, were The Newman cenTer CIT ST. Philips will be Their meeTing conTir place. Sierr T TenTa 159 Row, left to right: Frank Matthews, Carl Baum, President, Robert Arenz, S.J., Father M. Francis Meskill, Chaplain, Father Richard Trame, S.J., guesT speaker, Tom Sollee, Harold Harrison, Dr. Bruce Sheldon. 2nd Row: Arf MessiTer, John Hunter, Harold NaThon, George Reeke, Brian Belanger, Terry Wogan, Alfred Pinchak, Frank Mullin, Tom Bieniewski. 3rd Row: Peter Mazur, Rick Hoke, Poul Mikolai, Joseph Cullen, Pat Dunne, Charles Knapp, Bob HerTel, Gary Mitchell, Ed Bender. DESERET CLUB The CaITech DesereT Club is an organization of Mormon sTUdenTs on campus, consisTing of about Twelve or ThirTeen members. Their main purpose is To discuss religious or philosophical quesTions which They feel are of general inTeresT. An efforT is made To keep The meeTings informal, so ThaT all may porTi- cipoTe. The leader of The group is Dr. George Boyd of The InsTiTuTe of Religion CT The UniversiTy of SouThern California. MeeTings are held weekly. Is! Row, left To right: Bill Ricks, George Lawrence, Dr. George Boyd, Joe Free. 2m: . 3rd R Row: Herb FlindT, Bob Morfimer, Richard Jenson, Jim Midgley. Kip Thorne. Georg ' 2nd R0 Cannon. ' CHINESE STUDENTS9 ASSOCIATION The Pasadena Chinese STudenT AssocioTion was esTablished in 1958 wiTh The purpose of organizing The Chinese sTudenTs in The Pasadena area. This year iTs membership has soared To an unprecedenTed 75 people, of whom 37 are from ColTech. The resT ore from P.C.C., U.S.C. 0nd U.C.L.A. IT provides needed social ocTiviTies Tor iTs members, holding one moior social evenT each Term, along wiTh iTs group meeTings. K05 , Charles 0m Noonan, Left To righT: Norman Wang, Vice Pres., Hung Cheng, President B ALPINE CLUB illc organi- Under The TuTeloge of Herb Rice, The Alpine Club 95 l The was one of The more ocTive clubs on campus This year. if SPonsors l SofeTy sessions for The novices and several excursions occasional To STony PoinT, TothiTy Peak, and MounT Pocifico l EXT year, were The feoTures of This year's program, AcTiviTy will eir meeTing conTinue Through The summer wiTh a Trip mm The Sierra MounToins already planned and a few oTher TenToTive Trips. More is planned for nexT year. 3rd Row, left To right: Rice, Pinchok. 2nd Row: Whittlesy, Burke. 159 Row: Green, Miller, Stroke, Bacon. SAILING CLUB WiTh KeiTh MoTThews and Don Marks heading The Sailing Club This year, many more lond-locked Tech- men have cashed in on This urge To meeT The sea; so much so, ThaT The members per bocT roTio is higher Thon ever before. There is also The Racing Team for Those wiTh o more Then passing inTeresT in soiling. A member of The inTer-collegioTe YochT Racing Assn., The racing Team has enTered in regoTTas up and down The coosT, Traveling Twice To Berkeley This year alone. AcTive This year were Skipper Don Marks, KeiTh MoTThews, Hal STork and Bob Moore and crews Alon Donger, Don Jensen and L. Miller. 3rd Row, left To right: Alon Danger, Bob Williams, Joseph Christensen, John Letcher. 2nd Row: John Rayner, Allon King. 159 Row: Dave Hyde, Harold STork, Bob Despom. ll9 D. S. Clark The Caltech Alumni Association is an activity of little concern to most Caltech undergrads. It is thought of variously as the donor of the Alumni Swimming Pool, a contributor to the development program, or just another corner of Doc Clark's empire. Many techmen eventually discover that if they receive a degree from noble ClT they automatically become alumni. And many of those who have already achieved this status have ioined the Alumni Association. For ioining same, and paying an absurdly minimal tee, they receive the alumni maga- zine Engineering and Science, lpride'and joy of Ed Hutchings and Gerda Chambers and probably the best done alumni publication in the countryl and are furnished with the Alumni Directory, lwho's what and where, in science, engineering and money- mokingl among other things. Alumni young, and not so old, gather on campus once a year for Alumni Seminar Day. This is an occasion for much slapping of backs, introducing of wives, listening to lectures and eating of spaghetti in the Student Houses. The Association also sponsors an annual meeting in downton LA. and chapters in several of the larger cities of the US. also meet and socialize. CAL TECH ALUMNI ASSOCIATION Many,01c the undergraduates who care 'at all about such things lament that our alumni are differ- ent from those of other schools and that our alumni are incredibly inactive lfor better or for worsel. The truth is that our alumni are less noisy, but not less active. That they are different is probably true, especially when one remembers that the Caltech student body is the group directly responsible for this condition. One should also remember that Tech has graduated less than ten thousand men, CIT, TCT, TIT, TPI, ETC. included. Remember too that the new' Varsity Rating Trophy was provided by the Alumni Association, and that the Association de- frayed much of the cost of the last lnterhouse Dance. In the news last year was Caltech's third con- secutive winner of the Sports Illustrated Silver Anni- versary All-America award. Mr. Frank W. Davis of Convair, Forth Worth, was twice captain of the Varsity Frank W. Davis all . once a year fooTboll Team and winner of The WheCITon Trophy for Two successive years. He was ocTive in a number of oTher sporTs, was a represenToTive To The BOC for Two years and was presidenT of The Beavers. Mr. Davis received his 8.8. in 1936 in M.E. His recenT exTro-curriculor ocTiviTies included chairman- ship of The CalTech DevelopmenT Program, ForT WorTh Division. Any quesTions you may have about The Alumni AssocioTion should be direcTed To The permanenT secreTory of The AssociaTion in Throop, lovable ol' Doc Clark. He will gladly reveal To you The benefiTs of membership in The ossocioTion, as well as The inTricocies of achieving The prerequisiTe sToTus of groduoTe. His only requesT is ThaT you make no aTTempT To geT The Association in any way involved in The RoToTion conTroversy. lT's Things like ThoT ThaT ore opT To Turn a man's hair grey! l2l l22 A. C. S. BOB CAUSAY MATT COUCH CHARLES FLYNN NORM GORDON RAY HREBAR PETE METCALF BOB ROSS AFROTC DRILL TEAM DOUG ABE CARL BAUM JOE BACKLAGE JOHN BURKE REG CLEMENS CLARENCE FUZAK MARK GURNEE RICK HAKE THOR HANSON RICK HARRIS DAVE HEARN DOUG HELL RAY GORDAN DAVE KAUFFMAN MALCOLM MORRISON TERRY MURPHY HOWARD ONO BILL RAINING BILL RICKS WILLIAM SCONCE JOHN SLONSKI IVAN TOMBACH RICK ULRICK MASON WILLIAMS TERRY WOGAN ALPINE CLUB BILL BURKE DAVE CARTA TOM DACON LARRY FITZGERALD RAY GREEN ROGER GRIFFAN JOHN GROVER BILL HASSENSAKE HUGH KIEFER ED MILLER ALF PINCHEK HERB RICE BILL STRAKA BRUCE ULRICH AL WHITTLESY JEFF WISE A.S.M.E. AHMAD ABU-SHUMAYS SAM ALLEN GERRY CLOUGH JOHN DANYES LEE ELLIOT DON FORREST BOB HEARN CHUCK RAY NEIL RICHARDSON JOHN RUSS RICH WEINGARTEN BAND DAVID AGRESTI BRIAN BELANGER SHELLY BRUMELLE JAN DASH BOB DILLER MIKE DRAZIN JOEL DONNELLY BILL FARRELL RON GATTERDAM HAROLD GEER DAVE HAMMER RICK HARRIS DAVE HELFMAN DOUG HILL JOHN HUNTER BOB JERNIGAN DAVE KAUFFMAN DAN KRAUSE LARRY KUGLER TOMMY LUBORNANSKY RICK MAXSON PETE MAGUR DICK NORMAN ERIC NUMMELA DON O'HARA CAROLE OLSON GEORGE PRESTON KENT RUSSELL JIM SAGAWA GEORGE SCOTT OLLIE SEELY DON TERWILLIGER BILL TWOL CHRIST VELLINE JEFF WISE AL WRIGHT RALPH YOUNG BEAVERS BILL BAUER LARRY BROWN BILL FARRELL JIM GADDIS BOB KOH CLEVE MOLER ROGER NOLL JOHN PITCHARD ART ROBINSON DOUG SHAKEL JERRY SIEGEL . JOHN STENBIT LANCE TAYLOR TOM TISCH JOHN TODOROFF CLYDE ZAIDENS BIG T MIKE BALL JIM BLACKMOR PETE FISCHER MIKE LEW BOB LIEBERMAN JOHN MADEY JULIAN PRINCE HERM RICKERMAN BOB SCHMULLEN KAY SUGAHARA BOB WILLIAMS CALIFORNIA TECH CRAIG BOLON DAN ENTINGH INDEX LARRY GERSHWIN DAVE HELFMAN RICHARD KARP CHUCK LEONARD BUTCH LUNGERSHAUSEN BILL MEISEL CLAVE MOLER HOWIE MONELL ROGER NOLL BARRY PETERSON LANCE TAYLOR TOM TISCH JOHN TODOROFF CHEMICAL ENGINEERING CLUB JOHN ARNDT CRAIG BROSI JOE CULLEN VIC ENGELMAN TERRY ERNEST RAY FERNANDEZ BOB GERSHMAN RAY HRIBAR DAVE KAUFFMAN DAVE KANDLE GEORGE PRESTON HERB RICE ROLF RICHTER RICH SEARS CHINESE STUDENTS ASSN. DICK CHANG HERB CHEN BILL CHIN WENDELL INC; BOB KOH BOB LIN NORM WANG YING-BUN woo JIMMY YOH ALBERT YU CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CLARK BENSON BOB BUMP DAVE CLARK CHUCK FLYNN VAN HUGHES BILL KUNG WILLIAM KO BOB KRUSE TOM NOONAN BUNSO OTANE DARDEN POWERS GARY SWANSON AL TYRRELL LARRY WEAVER RALPH YOUNG CIVIL DEFENSE CLUB SAM ALLEN BUD BARNES STEVE CAINE GEORGE CANNON ALBERT COSAND STARR CURTIS JOSEPH DAUBEK BOB DESPAIN BILL DOWD RICH DREW LEE ELLIOT CHUCK FLYNN STEVE GOLDNER STEVE GREEN DON HARLOW BILL HOWARD LAS INGBER PAT ION MARC KAUFMAN BOB KOH BOB LUSHENE PETE MAYER JAMES MCCOY CYRUS MEAD ROGER MINEAR HOWARD MONELL BILL NICHOLSON RICK O'CONNELL NEIL RICHARDSON ART ROBINSON BILL ROWE JOHN RUSS BOB SCHOEN BILL SCONCE JOHN SOULE JOHN TRENHOLME HOWIE WANG BILL WEIHOFEN MASON WILLIAMS DANCE CLASS RAY BARGLOW PETE LASZ LO DEBATE CLUB RICHARD KARP STAN KLEIN GARY LORDEN BARRY MCCOY ROGER NOLL CARL ROVAINEN DESERET CLUB NORM BURNINGHAM GEORGE CANNON STARR CURTIS HERB FLINDT JOE FREE RICHARD JENSON JON KELLY GEORGE LAWRENCE JIM MIDGELEY BOB MORTIMER BILL RICKS ED SEPPI KIP THORNE DRAMA CLUB RICH HARRIS BILL HOGAN MIKE LAMPTON BOB LAWLER PETE LIPPMAN' JOHN NEUMEYER BOB POE BILL SCHRADER GLEE CLUB DOUG ABE JOHN ARMSTRONG DAVE BARKER DAVE BARTON TOM BOPP KEN CASEY RON COUNSELL ROM CREIGHTON l DELMAR CURTIS TED DAVEY JIM DAVIS RALPH DAWSON DON DICK DAVE DICKSON JOEL DONNELLY DOUG FENWICK BILL FRANCES LYMAN FRETWELL KENT FREWING DAVE GRIMES CARL HAMILTON VINCE HASCALL DAVE HELFMAN ALAN HINDMARSH JAMES HOHE BILL HOWARD BILL HOWARD PETE JOHANSON ART JOHNSON DAVE KAUFFMAN BOB KRUSE LARRY KUGLER JOHN LOHMAN GARY LORDEN STEVE MASTEN LAUREN MERRITT GARRY MITCHELL BOB MOORE V, GEORGE MUENICH TERRY MURPHY BOB NElLSON RICH O'CONNELL MIKE PERLMAN GEORGE PRESTON BILL ROWE TOM RUSKEL JOHN RUSS RUSS RUSSELL OLLIE SEELY ; LARRY SLOSS FRANK SPARD WALTER SPRECHT DON TERWILLIGER GERALD THOMAS DICK THOMPSON CHRIST VALLINE JIMMY YOH HONOR CERTIFICATES JOHN ARNDT JOE BACKLAGE ELI CHERNOW RICK HARRIS BILL HOGAN GARY IHLER TOM KEEL GARY MITCHELL GEORGE MUENICH JULIAN PRINCE nu . :- ,3'5' wu Wt: 143' .1 .gjaglxwm ,j Jig: MW x. w-z 'r 1.. - .- ART ROBINSON JOE CULLEN BEN BURKE DICK THOMPSON WILLIAM HO CARL ROVAINEN PAT DUNNE KEN CASEY KIP THORNE ALAN HUBERWARD JIM SAGAWA RICK HAKE GARY CHAMNESS TOM TISAK JOHN HUNTER Doue SHAKEL HAROLD HARRISON ELI CHERNOW JOHN TODOROFF DAVID HYDE SKEP STENBIT BOB HARTEL ROD DOKKEN DAVE TURNER RICHARD KARP JOEL TENENBAUM JOHN HUNTER JOEL DONNELLY CHRIST VELUNE JON KELLY DICK THOMPSON CHUCK KNAPP JIM GEDDIS AL ZACHER HUGH KIEFFER ART TURNER PETE MAZUR BILL HOGAN CLYDE ZAIDENS STANLEY KLEIN ART MESSITER GARY IHLER DAVID KUBRIN HONOR KEYS PAUL MIKOLAY BOB JUOLA TOTEM CHRIS LARSEN BILL BAUER GARY MITCHELL BOB KOH KENNETH LARSON LARRY BROWN FRANK MULLEN DAVE KUBREN RAY BARGLOW STEPHEN LEPPLA ROD DOKKEN HAROLD NATHAN SID LEIBOVICH DAVE BENSON STUART LINN JOEL DONNELLY JOHN GOLDEN ALFRED PINCHAK GEORGE REEKE JOHN LOHMAN WENDELL MENDELL BOB DILL'ER STEVE JOSEPH ARTHUR LIPSON JOHN LOHMAN BOB KOH TOM SALLEE ROGER NOLL BARRY MCCOY pONzy LU SID LEIBOVICH TERRY WOGAN 22:5 PR'TCHARD w. LUNGERSHAUSEN TOM LITLE ROVA'NEN YELL L D JOHN MADEY JOHN LOHMAN PHYSICS CLUB STAN SAJDERA EA ERS KENNETH MANLY ROGER NOLL BOB HEATH OLLIE SEELY HOWIE MONELL FRANK MATTHEWS DICK NORMAN SIG HOLVERSON DOUG SHAKES JOHN SORVARI RICHARD MAXSON FRANK MATTHEWS JOHN SOULE WENDELL MENDELL JOHN MAY JOHN PRlTCHARD LANCE TAYLOR BUCKY SMITH JOHN STENBIT LAWRENCE McCOMBS TOM TISCH JOHN TRENHOLME DOUG STEWART CALTECH Y.M.C.A. BARRY MCCOY JOHN TODOROFF DICK ZACHER JOHN STROMBERG CLEVE MOLER GARY WALLA TOM TISCH LAWRENCE ALTMAN LEE M, MOLHO CLYDE ZAIDENS RADIO CLUB GARY WALLA KURT ANDERSON HOWARD MONELL GEARY YOUNCE WILLIAM ANDERSON NICK Moaez INSTITUTERS D'CK BROCKME'ER CLYDE ZAIDENS DONALD.ANEY ROBERT NASON JIM CAMBELL MIKE BALL ROGER NOLL KURT ANDERSON JOHN CAYWOOD DON FAHNLINE GEORGE CANNON JIM FOLLANSBEE JOHN GOLDEN STUDENT SHOP BILL BURKE RAY BARGLOW DAVE BENSON ALAN BERNSTEIN RICHARD NORMAN DONALD O'HARA HOWARD ONO HAROLD HARRISON JIM KESSEL RON GOTTERDAM ROGER BLAND BARRY PETERSON DAVE KAUFFMAN DAVE LARGE MALCOLM KENTER GEORGE BOLON GEORGE PRESTON TOM KEEL ARNOLD LES'KAR CURT KUEBLER JAMES D. BOWMAN DAVID PRITCHARD HUGH K'EFFER M'LT LEVENBERG LEE RANGER CHUCK BROOKE PAUL PURDOM TOM LATHAM JOHN MADEY JOHN SMITh CRAIG BROSI LARRY RABINOWITZ ROY MAKINO CARVER MEAD DAVE TURNER BRUCE CARTER DWAIN REED STEVE MASTIN GARY MITCHELL GERALD CHANDLER NORMAN REITZ BARRY MCCOY LEE MOLHO TAU BETA Pl ELI CHERNOW JAMES RICH ED MILLER GEORGE REEKE SEUNG CHOY RICHARD ROBERTSON GEORGE MUENICH BILL REINING BILL BAUER DAVID CLARK ARTHUR ROBINSON DAVE PRITCHARD HERM RICKERMAN CLARK BENSON EDWARD CLINE DENNIS ROSS DWAIN REED DANNY ROSS LARRY BROWN THOMAS CROCKER ROBERT ROSS GARY TIBBETTS BILL ROWE BEN BURKE JOHN CROSSMAN CARL ROVAINEN MIKE TOWNSEND BOB RUDDIG ELI CHERNOW GARY DAHLMAN TOM RUEBEL GARY WALLA JOHN SLONSKI JOEL DONNELLY RICHARD D'ARI PETER RUX ALBERT WHITTLESEY MASON WILLIAMS BARRY GORDON TOMAS DeKLYEN MICHAEL SCHWAB STEVE HECHLER ROBERT DESPAIN RALPH SHUEY 'KE-A'EE S-A-E- DICK HESS DAVID EDWARDS RONALD SIPHERD STEVE CAINE BOB BUMP BENT HULD TED ELCONIN PHILLIP SOKOLOVE RICH DREW JOHN CROSSMAN JERRY KASPER DANIEL ENTINGH ROBERT SORENSEN SID LEIBOVICH DONALD FAHNLINE DOUGLAS STEWART JOHN GOLDEN LONNES DaMENT GEORGE ROOT DAVE LOEBBAKA J OHN GOLDEN STEVEN GOLDNER KENNETH STOLARSKY LANCE TAYLOR LITTLE T GARY LORDEN MODEL U N JOSEPH CHR'STENSEN JOHN NEWMEYER R. B. GRIEPP LYNN TEN EYCK ALAN DANGER DICK NORMAN RUSSELL HAGEMAN DON TERWILLIGER ICATES J'M GADDIS BOB DESPA'NE BOB POE DAVID HAMMER RICHARD THOMPSON BOB KOH DAVE HYDE HERB RICE LEON THOMSEN 5'0 LE'BOV'CH ALLAN K'NG BOB RUDDICK THOR HANSON KIP THORNE ROGER NOLL JOHN LETCHER MIKE RUECKER RICHARD HARRIS GARY TIBBETTS LANCE TAYLOR JOHN RAYNER TOM SALLEE HAROLD HARRISON JOHN TODOROFF TOM TISCH HAROLD STARK MARTY SCHULTZ DAVID HEARN JOHN TRENHOLME NEWMAN CLUB BOB W'LL'AMS MIKE SCHWAB STEPHEN HECHLER CHARLES TRIMBLE CARL BAUM STUDENT CAMP L113 ?;?;;NE DAVID HELFMAN GARY WALLA BRIAN BELANGER COUNSELLORS SKIP STENBIT LEWIS HEMPHILL FRED WEINGARTAN TOM BIENIEWSKI LARRY BROWN ARCH THIESSEN LORNE HOOTNICK STEVEN YELLIN u..u- x ,x L. ! I .94... l The oThIeTic sToff is one of Tech's mosT efficient . and able organizeTions. Under The capable super- . vision of H. Z. Musselmon, The inTercollegiaTe sporTs I run smooThly. Coach Jim Nerrie direcTs The physical I educaTion and inTerhouse programs. SecreTaries MC- a Coach Jim Nerrie Athletic Director: H. Z. Musselmon Gee, Wayne, and Shoup handle The office chores of The deporTmenT. The sTon is rounded OUT by The coaches of The inTercolIegioTe sporTs, picTured wiTh Their respecTive Teams, and The Trainer and equipmenT managers. Secretaries: Miss McGee, Mrs. Shoup, Mrs. Wayne. Trainer: Floyd Doc Hones vw- mnwermw ewmmjmwf .3me K e Floyd i'Doc Homes has become 0 legend GT Cal- Tech. A permanenT TixTure as Trainer since 1923, Doc specialized in physical and menTol Therapy, which he liberally adminisTered To injured Tech oThIeTes. His counsel and sogocious advice has eased many players over a mid-seoson, or mid-Term, slump. In addiTion To his dUTies 05 Trainer, Doc served as cross- counTry and Track coach during The war years when Tech oThleTic rosTers were enriched by The V-12 Trainees. His services as medical consulTonT, inTerim coach, and ersTwhile psychioTrisT will be sorely missed. An era is GT 0 close: Doc Hones, The balm of hurt minds and bodies, reTired in June, 1961. Of our swimming aggregation, we are justly proud Y. f'I liii'H EH hxX .9 .y Hu1OO9.A 1w -' Oovvv $202020 Equipment Managers: Lloyd D. Fergy Ferguson and Carl Lyfle. Carl Burrs Following ThirTy-six years of service as equipment manager, Carl Burrs retired in November, 1960. To him go our bes'r wishes and Thanks. INTERHOUSE Volleyball Champs: in and out of action. I1 Up and over they go. Below: Superfrosh scores again. Sport Softball Vol leybaH Swimming Tennis Track Football Totals STANDINGS. Left: Our own whirling-dervish. B D F L P Ri Ru 3 19Vz 131A 6 9 19V; 131A 12 18 9 15 3 6 21 3 6 9 15 WW 191A 15 15 71A 12 21 18 7V; 3 9 161A 6 12 3 21 161A 6 15 3 12 19Vz 9 19V, 48 78 72 82 V2 88 V: 82 1A XX -mwlm 1:15 V I X1 22W 1960 SEASON RECORD VARSITY . Pasadena City College Alumni Orange Coast College . College of Pacific San Fernando State Claremonf - Mudd Pomona .. UCLA .. . Redlands . . Occidental Claremonf - Mudd Pomona Los Angeles State .... Redlands ... .. . Occidental . . -a-a MOHVUIOOVVAM-'ODOJN -a ..I 1960 SEASON RECORD FROSH Q -i Claremonf - Mudd Pomona .. UCLA .. . Redlands . .. Occidental .. Claremonf - Mudd Pomona Redlands . . . Occidental -a coOOxro-I-'MOO ..l . 159 Row, left to right: Bruce Chesebro, Fred Homeetman, Roger Blond, Al Huber, Gory Tibbetts, John Smith, Gary Turner, Mike Newton. 2nd Row: Coach Warren Emery, Bob Russell, Tom Tisch, Jim Show, For Manning, Sherm Gratch, Gary Mitchell, Dave Ollis, Bob Heath. The Caltech varsity waterpolo team had its best fostmoving forward line of Chesebro, Hameetmon, T season in five years osittied torSCIAC championship and Ruby was ably backed by the fine defensive ' . Conference first team choices Bruce Chesebro, Fred of the season was an 18-7 Pomona victory. i i honors with Pomona. The team was led by All- work of Tisch, Tibbetts, Bland, and Buck. Highlight in T i Hameetman, and Tom Tisch, The aggressive and FROSH '; Like young Beavers taking to water; the Tech- frosh team started short on experience and personnel, but improved throughout the season. Dove Seib, Mike McCommon, and Marc Kaufman were the outstanding players for the team and will definitely contribute to next year's varsity. The progress of the Beaverbobes was indicated by the greater ease with which they dumped Pomona and Redlands at the season's end, when compared with the beginning of the season. At Right: Isl Row, left to right: Roy Weiss, Mike McCommon, Marc Kaufman, Elliot Harry. 2nd Row: Coach Warren Emery, Arr Turner, Dick Uhrich, Dove Lambert, Tony Williams- mgr. Left to right: Coach Walter Mack, Rich Harris, Art McGarr, Bob Juola, Pat Earley, Norm Reitz, Bill Giaque, Marshall Johnson, Al Whittlesey, Pete Mozur-mgr. 1960 SEASON RECORD CIT 21 .......Whittier..... 26 . . Claremont - Mudd . 21 ....Pomonc1.... 21 ......Redlands..... Eorley's early, but which woy's which? For the second straight year, the Coltech cross-country team was undefeated in league dual competition. Although powerful Oxy captured the conference honors, Tech remained tops in the amateur division. Top mom for the harriers was sophomore Pat Earley. Second man on the squad was iunior captain Richie Harris. With the majority of the 1960 squad returning, prospects are bring for continued success. CIT Coach Walter 33 ..... l9 ..... 2O ..... 15 ..... ....... WhiTTier . . . . . . . . . . . .22 To cop The remaining Three dual meeTs. In The conference ....... Pomona . . . . . . . . . . . .39 meeT, The Techmen again did well, finishing Third To ClaremonT-Mudd ........ 31 powerful Oxy and WhiTTier. Top runners were Ed Lee ....... Redlands . . . . . . . . . . . .21 and CapToin Larry Weaver, fufure vorsiTy Timber. FROSH CROSS-COUNTRY 1960 SEASON RECORD The CalTech frosh horriers had an impressive record: after losing To WhiTTier in The opener, The Team wenT on -- 4'9 2.. 41. W Lee bottles for lead 05 The pack disperses; VARSIT Y SOC ER Chen boots iT home for The score. The CalTech varsiTy soccer Team had a proTiTable, if noT highly successful, season. Working wiTh nine reTurning leTTere men, Coach Lee Andrews spenT mosT of The season experi- menTing. All The games were hard-ToughT and closer Than The scores mighT indicaTe. The Team was characTerized by a never-say-die spiriT, coming from behind in Three of The four games won. George Argyropoulos, a grad sTudenT from AThens, Greece, was voTed The MosT Valuable Player Award and was The only Techman To make The AII-League TirsT Team. Joel Kwok and Gary OsTerberg were elecTed co-capTains. AIThough These Three Beavers were The hearT of The Team, The enTire squad was weIl-balanced. Probably The greaTesT inspiraTion To The Team was iovial Coach AndreWS wiTh his perpeTuaI line of wiT. 1st Row, left To righT: Coach Lee Andrews, Joel Kwok, John Russ, Jim Yoh, ?Ill Dowdi Herb Chen, Dave Osias, Ted Gibbs, John Weaver, George Seielstad, Mertrey Davrs, Wes Shanks, Kay Sugahara, Joe Young, Gary OsTerberg, CaTalin l scu. AT left: Sugahara baffles for control of The ball. 1960 SEASON RECORD VARSITY . :. Biola .UC Riverside .Redlands............ Pomona .... Biola .UC Riverside ...Redlands............ Pomona UCL'A hwoww'm-aomm AAw-ImAMMgwn J.V. SOCCER Kwok blocks Uclan's shot. vorsiTy soccer Turned in 0 very respecToble season record under The direcTion 0T player-cooch Jim NorTon. In Three games wiTh UCLA, ColTech Tied Them Twice and losT once. The Techmen also played several pracTice game wiTh The Senile Seven + Four, cm assorTed group of faculTy members. Because The Team was inTegroTed wiTh The varsiTy squad, iT never had 0 definiTe line-up. The usual Iine-Up, however, consisTed of Weiner, Cheng, Woo, NorTon, or Mayer, I. forwards; Lindsey, Wong, holfbacks; Sogawa or 5 Yoh, fullbacks; and McGehee, goalie. Showing parTicular promise was frosh goalie McGehee. This year's JV Team should provide a valuable reservoir Upon which Coach Andrews can draw for nexT year's vorsiTy. g? T :33 '3 o 4 T3: 99 d , d Q. 3:. $ 933' .9 .39 o 90 o 9 3. u 3w; figvgv m... 9 6w 9?... Y 'Q :31: 039$ o .39 cg o 99 e 9:: 33T- 32$ 69 O :10 a-y ' 0 33:6 i'b Tc T'? 4: ? Th 3 r UT v A we ix. 0 v i 4'5 x'w' $707. I m: A 65:, h 3 Left to right: Howard Wong, Jim Yoh, Jim Sogowo, Rich McGehee, John Russ, Jim Norton, and Martin Weiner. AT right; Chen Tackles large opponent. 1960 SEASON RECORD FROSH CIT i .............. UCLA .............. i 3 .............. UCLA .............. 3 O .............. UCLA .............. 3 Although lacking a regular schedule, The iunior I35 I36 VARSIT Y FOOTBALL For the first time since 1954, Caltech failed to win a football game. It was an inexperienced team lall but two men were juniors or sophomoresl, lacking in weight anci speed. Of the thirty-man squad, twelve were on last year's team, but only five had seen much action. Six others were competing in football for the first time. It was one of the lightest teams to represent Caltech: the regular guards and ends were under 160 pounds with the backfield averaging a little less. Plagued by injuries, the team ended the season with a record of 0-8 and only 22 players. Francis, Younce, and Evans, who came out late in the season, performed well in filling in some of the vacancies. Marshall led some brilliant offensive attacks, but only a few culminated in touchdowns. Carder, Herting, Bocklage, Arnold, and Seely made a fine forward wall, but there was little depth. Fullback Cline and halfback Hascall provided some substantial ground yardage. Baum received the Wheaton Trophy. With virtually the entire team returning intact, Coach La Brucherie is optimistic about next fall's prospects. In addition, the deletion of Whittier and Redlands from the 1961 schedule will place the Tech gridders in a better position to compete on their own level. Frank Marshall Dave Barker Joe Bocklage 1960 SEASON RECORD CIT 18. . . ......... Riverside ............ 28 o............tRedlands ....... .....64 0. . .......... Pomona ..... . ...... 34 7 .......... Cal Western .......... 46 12 . ..... . ..... Whittier ............ 56 6. . . ......... La Verne ............ 22 6 ........... Occidental . . . . . ...... 48 23. ....... Claremont - Mudd . . . . . . . .47 John ArndT, picTured 0T righT in spring pracTice, is TasT becoming a TooTball legend 0T CalTech. A quarTerback's dream of a perfecT receiver, John ouT-mcmuevered, ouT-ran, and ouT- ToughT The opponenTs defenses To snag 56 aerials for 704 yards and 6 Touchdowns during The 1960 season. This record-breaking performance gar- nered him fourTh place among pass-receivers in The NaTional AssociaTion of lnTercollegiaTe ATh- leTics small college sTCIndings. His sure hands and quick reflexes made him a valuable asseT To The Team's defensive secondary, and as ccpTCIin of The squad John was one of The prime inspir- CITional forces on The Team. AT The end of The season, John was voTed To a firsT-Team berTh on The SCIAC AII-Conference Team and was a second-Team selecTion on The DisTricT Ill NAIA oII-sTar Team. John Arndt Ed Cline, Gerry Younce, Carl Baum, Sig Hoverson, Ed Evons, Jim Morrow, Dove Barker, Jock Arnold, Rick Foster, Bill Hossenzohl Dove Grimes Frank Marshall Joe is! Row, left To right. Ron Koretz, Ed Miller, Vince Hoscoll, John Arndr, Frank Ridolphi. 2nd Row: Martin Kellogg- mgr., Ross Carder, Truman Seely, Coach Shelby Calhoun.c3rd Row: Dove Turner mgr., Bocklage, Bob Williams, Dove HerTing, Coach Bert Lo Brucherie. I37 ,WEf-Tsfzya; w: w - .- , Jack Arnold Vince HcscaH Ed Cline FROSH FOOTBALL The frosh Team This year was choracTerized by en- Thusiasm and inexperience. Coaches Jim Young and Larry Long guided The Team Through a 5-game schedule which, unforTunaTely, did noT include a vicTory. The frosh played The enTire season wiTh an effecTiye squad of abouT TwenTy players, over half of whom porTicipoTed in Their firsT fooTbalI game in The Oxy opener. Injuries cuT mm The backfield sTrengTh, as did mid-Terms. OuTsTonding enThusiasm and energy were displayed by The Three co-capToins: QB. Bob Liebermonn, engineer of The four Touchdowns; Tom DeKIyen, sTalwarT on The line; and halfback Arden WaITers, experienced leader of The pass defense. Inspiring defensive efforTs were Turned in by DeKIyen, line-bockers Chuck Tiger Vinsonhaler and Mike Cosgrove, end Tom Krueger, and guard Joe Taynai. Offensively, The poss-caTching of Lee PeTerson was balanced by The running of Jim Baumgor'mer. 1960 SEASON RECORD CIT O ........... OccidenTol ............ 58 6 ............ Pomona ......... .. . .44 8 ............ Redlands ............ 56 6. .. ......... WhiTTier ............ 46 8 ........ ClaremonT - Mudd ........ 38 'lsl Row, left To righT: Lee PeTerson, Bill Smith, Bob Liebermonn, Terr Homing, ArT Johnson, Don O'Hara, Chuck Vinsonhcler, Arden WolTers mgr., Coach Lorry Long, Jim BoumgurTner, Tom DeKIyen, Tom Krueger Young. Y Wogon, FFGNk Rhome, Mike Cosgrove, Dave HewiTT. 2nd Row: Dick , STeve Green, Joe Toynoi, ElioT Bradford. 3rd Row: Bill Nicholson- , Bob McElrece, Thor Hanson, Bill Schoene, Roger Card, Coach Jim 44 56 46 38 15! Row, left to right: Torn Bopp, John Arndf, Bill Ripka, Larry Brown, John Haworth, Roger Noll. 2nd Row: Gerald Chandler-mgr., Ron Gebhardf-mgr., Deon Gerber, Dove Barker, Mike Perlman, Les Tomley, Gerry Clough, Pete Rux, Frank Mathews-mgr., Coach Ed Preisler. F R O S H 159 Row, leff to right: Gary Dohlmon, Chuck Vinsonhaler, Dick Burgess, Pot Dunne, Volger Vogt. 2nd Row: Ralph Dawson- mgr., Don Thompson-mgr., Don O'Hara, Leon Thomsen, Joe Weis, Steve Teiglond, Dove Low-mgr., Coach Gory Shoir. W'III' 1960 SEASON RECORD VARSITY CIT 63 ...... Naval Training CenTer ...... 8O 51 .......... Cal WesTern .......... 88 67 ............ Upland ............ 61 102 ........... LA Pacific ........... 5O 63 .......... UC Riverside .......... 66 55 ........... Redlands ........... 79 67 ........... Pomona ........... 62 49 ...... Orange CounTy STaTe ...... 95 79. . ......... OccidenTal ........... 78 57 ............ WhiTTier ............ 76 66. . . .. ...... La Verne ........... 49 63 ............ Upland ......... . . .58 72 .......... UC Riverside .......... 60 47 ........... Pomona ........... 57 42 .......... Cal WesTern .......... 58 58 ........ ClaremonT-Mudd ........ 52 57 .......... OccidenTal .......... 73 46 ............ WhiTTier .......... . .82 52. . .. ....... Redlands ......... . .79 59 ........ ClaremonT-Mudd ........ 67 Old Automatic scores again. 140 The 1960-61 varsiTy baskeTball Team finished wiTh an overall record of 8-12, The besT for a Tech Team in seven years. The keys To The success of The Team were The presence of Two Tall men and Bill Ripka. Tom Bopp and Roger Noll averaged beTTer Than 27 poinTs and 22 rebounds per game beTween Them. Captain Ripka, 5'-7 senior guard, was The playmaker and acknowledged floor leader of This year's aggregaTion. His leadership influence was The cohesive force which molded a group of individ- uals info a Team uniT. In addiTion To Bopp and Noll, The Team was well-balanced and could score from The ouTside as well, as aTTesTed by an overall field goal percenTage of 4007,. Ripka had The besT seT shoT in The league and The oTher sTarTers-eDean Gerber, PeTe Fischer, and Larry Brownecould hiT from anywhere in The forward courT. A Third feaTure of This year's Team was depTh: Tour subsTiTuTes played infer-changeably wiTh The 1sT sTring- John ArndT, Mike Perlman, Gerry Clough, and Dave Barker. The high poinT of The season was The vicTory over OccidenTal, 79-78, in which Tom Bopp coolly Tossed in Two free Throws in The last Ten seconds To culminaTe a real Team vicTory: five men scored Ten or more poinTs. AlThough This season's record was mediocre, The prospects for nexT year are brighT, as There were only Two senior leTTermen and Coach Preisler will have seven reTurning leTTermen as a nucleus for nexT year's squad. Gerber shoots over Stag ballerina defense. sk- The fresh boskeTball Team had a mediocre 1960-61 season. In exhibiTion games, They com- piled a 3-4 record and in league play, a 2-8 record. The ouTsTcmding players on This year's squad were guard Gary Dahlmon, cenTer POT Dunne, and forward Dick Burgess. Dunne and Burgess, each averaging 11 poinTs per game, were The mosT valuable under The baskeT. Dahl- mcm, an aggressive Team player, was The play- maker of The Team and a beTTer-Than-average ouTside shoT. GUThrie Miller, a versaTile 6'-2 forward, was The Team's besT rebounder. Chuck Vinsonhaler, a good percentage shooTer, added his spark and playmaking abiliTy To an oTherwise sluggish Team. STeve Teiglond, Volker VogT, Leon Thomsen, Bill Ricks, and Don O'Hara provided imporTomT relieTc To The TirsT-line men. Noll '1sTuffs in Two. 1960 SEASON RECORD FROSH CIT 68... ..... . LA Trade Tech 68.. ....... . Rio Hondo 55.........LATradeTech.... 43..........UCRiverside..... 46........... Redlands...... 60. ..... Pomona 67.. Rio Hondo 54.......... OccidenTol 38............WhiTTier....... 57...........LaVerne...... 59. Rio Hondo 49...... Pomona 65. . . ..... ClaremonT-Mudd . . . 40...... OccidenTol 52............WhiTTier....... 44....W. Redlands...... 57........ ClaremonT-Mudd ArndT guns as Bopp and Perlmon maneuver for rebound position. Drivin' around The corner. ..103 ..100 A vicious volley wiTh a new innovation: Two bolls in play. TENNIS VARSITY For Coach John Lamb and The varsiTy Tennis Team, improve his posiTion, and The quoliTy of play is y slit iT is quiTe likely That This will be The besT season in consisTenle high, so ThoT no one can afford To leT 1 ne: years. SCIAC Tennis perennially dominoTed by power- down. In The doubles, The Teams of Hess and Dave y Upl ful Redlands, buT Tech neTmen have high hopes for Zimmerman, followed by Frank CurTis and Dave Al 0 second-place finish This year, despiTe o disappoinf- Owen, provide considerable sTrengTh. The fuTure $1 ing early loss To Oxy by a narrow margin. looks very brighT, since only Two of The Ten players The ouTsTonding individual player on The Team will groduoTe This year and houhc of The reTurnees l is iunior Dick Hess, who won The ScoTT Tennis Trophy ore sophomores. . lasT year. Each man on The squad is pressing To Kneeling: Ted Furr, Roy PlouT, Bob Hearn, Ted Gibbs. Standing: Steve Hechler, Dave Owen, Bob Ruddick, Dick Hess, Dove Zimmerman, Frank Curtis, Coach John Lamb. 385 i i; 4?. 175W ' Kneeling: Dave Hammer, Ed Medof, Allan Lim Weber, Roger Card, Eliot Bradford, Tom Latham. po, Roger Leezer. Standing: Coach John Lamb, Bill FROSH This year's trosh tennis squad is strong and should provide considerable help for the varsity next year. in the opening match they missed an upset over Redlands by the narrow score of 5-4. Although the frosh have also lost to cm exceptionally strong Claremont-Horvey Mudd team, hopes are still Gibbs and high for CI good season. Allan Limpo is the out- standing individual player and ioins with Roger Leezer to form a fine first doubles team. Tom Latham, a hard fighter for every point, has done very well in third singles. Owen rally in on intra-team ladder match. I43 . 2nd ike Newton . Arr McGarr, Joel Michael No sweat for this man. indsey, M imL i'rchell I Alan Huber, J Gary M 1 ,5 2x4 Dick Zacher I Roger Bland ins ibbetfs, , Gary T ifh-mgr. .Y S Ma 8 V e .I S r: e n r. U T y r G G ine, Bruce Chesebro ., John Sm im Show im McCoy, J ig Hoverson-mgr J S left to right: Pat Manning, John Ersk Coach Warren Emery, Seated on ground: ls! Row, Row: mgr. VARSITY Swimming has always been one of ColTech's sTronger sporTs. This year The vorsiTy squad is comprised of upperclossmen from losT year's vicTorious Team and a TalenTed group of sopho- mores. The ouTsTanding performances of Gary TibbeTTs, one of The reTurning conference award- winners, have been The backbone of The Team's disTance freestyle. Bruce Chesebro has proved To be very valuable in The sprint TreesTyle races. In The backsTroke, Gary Turner, anoTher All- Conference pick, is expecTed To bolsTer The Team considerably. Gary MiTchelI swims many of The buTTerfly races. Even Though iT is working under The handicap of uncerTain eligibiliTies, The Team is capable of winning The conference champion- ship. FROSH The Trosh swimmers are, as yeT, unTried, bUT are expecTed To make 0 good showing. Dove Seib has been 0 big asseT To The Team. He has made great improvemenT and has Turned in some very promising Times in The sprinT freesTyle races. The resT of The Team is working hard, and They make up in spirit whoT They lack in quanTiTy. Some of These swimmers will sTarT ouT slowly, owing To a deorTh of experi- ence, buT should pick up considerably as The season progresses. k, . rs. tfmbin T ', e314 FRITSH T05 , 9' 41:6? i x ' T :0: T! P, 4 ., T V T 1M 7'; 51.53 s; i - . 'f u x Left To right: Coach Worren Emery, Duygu Oemirlioglu, Tom Crocker, Mike McCommon, Elliot Harry, Dove Lambert. I45 - .7,V.rm ,,,e.,.w.e,r. pvwvgp BASE Prospects are noT Too brigh'r for Coach Ed Preisler's baseball Team This year. If will be difficult to fill The gaps left by the graduation of Three members of last year's All-Conference Team. However, several men up from losf year's frosh squad show promise, and Bill Palke should . step into The empty catcher's posifion. The team should be led at the plate by Captain Buzz Merrill and Skip Stenbif, the only seniors on The ,' team. 15? Row, left to right: Christ Velline, Jim Morrow, Carlos Johnson, Buzz Merrill, Marty Hoffman, Julian Prince, Jim Sogawa Reed Borrett-mgr. 2nd Row: Coach Ed Preisler, John Russ-mgr., Dave Barker, Barry Moritz, Joe Bocklage, Skip Sfenbif Bill Polke, Clark Benson, Bob Gilman, Jim Sasser-mgr. ' 3 , , 3; ' '1. T' 3 3 t .. -' l ' w .4 i . l , 7 , x N 3'? r ,3 e ;l . L K! W 1E i; ' , . 3 2:? v e t LL v ..ksk$'3 :.-,v7v- a pt 3 V The Calfech frosh are en- thusiastically looki ng for- ward to a beffer-Than-aver- age season This year. Using a few previously seasoned ballplayers as a nucleus, Coach Hum' has hopes of fielding a pretty good ball club. The Team seems To have a lot of potential power of The plate and the fielding EQNi 1 of lerul JUld The the ire en- g for- l-GVBF Using isoned ucleU5: oes of d ball ems l0 Power ieldlng Buzz, Marty Hoffman, and Steve Heineman will lead the mound crew. John Arndt and Joe Bocklage, the two remaining lettermen, should see plenty of action at second and third base respectively. All in all it will be a young team with plenty of promise for the future after the players gain a year's experience. 13? Row, left to right: Jim Whittington, Fred Dorr, George Cody, Gory Dohlmon, Dick Stanton, Bob McEliece, Tom MacDowell, Bob Leibermon, Bill Ricks. has already improved to the stage where the players are working together as c: team. Pitching, as usual with Tech teams, will be the big prob- lem for the club. Before the season progresses too for, the pitchers s h o u I d have gained enough experience to be able to lead the team to 0 successful year. N! ,1; i6: 5?. : vv-u-uc 159 Row, left to right: Jim Williams, Lorry Sloss, Bill Hassenzahl, Dick Van Kirk. 2nd Row: Roy Hribor, John Curtis, John Lindsey, John Letcher, Bill Francis, Ben Burke, Herb Rise-mgr. Faced this year with o stronger league and the loss of several bright prospects, Coach Bert Lo Brucherie is developing a nucleus of sophomores to support his veterans and improve hopes for 1962' Outstanding among the sophs is John Letcher, who early in the seasen has cleared 6-2 in the high iump. Arom Mekiion throws the iavelln well, pressing 190 feet. Will Soom ioins senior Tom Kyle in the 440: along with Jon Dosh, who also brood jumps. The veterans are headed by the iniury-prone Jim Klett, one ?f the league's outstanding sprinters. Ben Burke does yeoman work In the 880, running with his improving teommote Bill Hossenzahl. TECh strength in the hurdles centers around Geory Younce in the lOWS and Frank Curtis in both highs and lows. In the field events, Ed Clinefil.nd John Weaver pole vault; Doug Stewart throws the discus and Wm Bill Francis in the shot. In the relay Tom Kyle, Will Soom, Jan DGSh' and Ben Burke carry the baton. Hopes are not high, bUf the team has the potential and may pull off a few upsets. I48 Hossenzohl and Burke: Our haltemile duo. x - veral 5 Cl 962. ason velin 440, k in Tech andl and iolnS posh, eam The face of The CalTech Track coach is noT oTTen seen in The IighT 0T vicTory buT This year Coach Lo Brucherie is happily expounding The meriTs of frosh George Radke, shoT puTTer and discus hurler, who in cm inviTaTional meeT wiTh SouThern California frosh finished second To a man from USC. George has broken The Tech frosh record in The shoT and Rodke: Coltech's own Hercules. AT Right: 15? Row: Bill Spring, Lorry McClellan, Jacques Colmo, Jim Boumgormer. 2nd Row: Al Cosond-mgr., Dennis Holt, Thor Hanson, Hal Petrie, Jim Hole. discus early in The season. The spiriT of This year's Trosh Team is high. The performances of The oTher Team members have also been heorTening To Coach Lo Brucherie. This frosh Team will be a welcome oddiTion To nexT season's varsity squad. Left to right: Coach Warren Simmons, Frank Curtis, Fred Homeetmon, Bill Dowd, Gory lhler, Jerly Siegel, Ken Larson, Dove Siegel, Koy Sugohoro. AfTer c1 somewhat dubious sTorT, ColTech produced a gol1c Team consisTing of Two experienced golfers and several duffers. However, under The excellent TUTeloge of Coach Warren Simmons The Team res- ponded rapidly and beef WhiTTier in a close early- seoson match. CapToin Jerry Siegel recenle represenfed Tech in The Southern California Tournament of Palm Springs and fared well. The Team has improved and should do beTTer in future moTches. For example, rookie- of-The-yeor Fred Homeetman can now shoot under 60 for nine and should become a Threat To The present Team members within The next Two years. I49 SUPPORT OUR ADVERTISERS On the next few pages you will find advertisements from the people who are supporting this annual. Over haltc the money necessary to publish the 1960 BIG T was supplied by these advertisers. You will notice that many of them offer various services to Techmen while others handle the products which every- body needs. It is our advice that you patronize these people when seeking such services and products. You will also notice a number of ads from large companies who are interested in hiring Caltech students. These advertisements provide a good method of becoming better acquainted with the iob opportunities and fields of activity of these companies. We suggest that you use the BIG T as a guide when seeking interviews. The BIG T staftc and the entire Caltech student body wish to thank these advertisers for supporting this annual, and hope that they reap the benefits of their ads and will be with us for many years. Gowdhldim t0 the CLASS 0F 1961 from your BIG T STAFF We're lookng for engineers and scientists with a bent for big mis- sile and space systems. Lots of the most stimulating work in the world is waiting for you . . . projects like Saturn. Delta. Zeus. 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PP RT lPl-f MISSILEANDSPACESYSTEMs-MILITARYAIRCRAFTIDCSJETLINERSIRESEARCHANDEcVELOP..iEixii PnoueeiSI ,iSLJ RI :S'SIE S-l-up'pwe IC OUIOD?VU O. Egogri g -. 731 -- $Fe , ' -n' 1v - .6 rr-: - -fei yv-z-v-n- - w ; hmffn'rrmf . f f'tt' .-- ' A ' I z 1 . 75,, ..- EHT . . .1- YRVW l52 Cirnation . 4w. ? ICE CREAM c7796 Greateyt Name in Dairy Productf Carnation Company B V U E p D IMP! D BlUE DIAMON mos Of w WORLD DIVISION . 3 0L -. - g , THE FLINTKOTE COMPANY aqyummena la a HINIKOIE W BASIC BUILDING MATERIALS GROCERY COMPANY I650 SOUTH ALAMEDA STREET 824 E- California LOS ANGELES 54, CALIFORNIA PASADENA LEONARD W. ROSS '27, Vice-Presidenf : ? -::;-11;,AD m M m mm ..... 13ggxihnun. 3nb2penheut ' '. , guu2 gNur-jB n$. PASADENA - CALIFORNIA A RP o R AT 1 o N 5mm oRf The General Tire and Rubber Company uh; , Aerojet's leadership in propulsion adds an arsenal of ready rocket power to our nation's defense. Ablestar Aerobee Astrobee Atlas-Able Blue Scout Bomarc Bquup Dyna-Soar Eagle Genie Hawk Minuteman Polaris Scout Skybolt Sparrow Tartar Thor-Able Titan XM-59 153 GROWING WITH WESTERN INDUSTRY SINCE1849- For 112 years Ducommun has served :15 a key supplier of materials to WCStm'II Industry. Today, as we enter the space age, we are lookingr ahead 10 rmluiH-nwnts 01 our vustomvrs who produce suvh equip- ment--jusl as we lookvd ahead to the requirements 01 the minor, the vnginccr and the early settler in 1849. We con- tinm- t0 moot every donwnd on our products and facilities STAINLESS, ALLOY AND CARBON STEELS ALUMINUM - BRASS AND COPPER TOOLS, ABRASIVES - INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES IDIJC1D1VI DI II N METALS 8: SUPPLY CO. SERVICE CENTERS Los Angeles, Ca1if., 4890 S. Alameda $1., LUdlow 8-0161 Berkeley, Calif., 2550 Seventh $1., THornwall 1-1820, ENterprise 1-2012 San Diego, Calif., 1Notional City1, 1300 Wilson Ave., GRidley 7-3141 Seattle, Wash., 120 Dawson 51., PArkway 5-1500 Phoenix, Arizona, 301 S. Tweniy-sixfh 51., BRidge 5-4471 Tucson, EAst 6-2839 San Francisco, Calif., 975 Bryant St, HEmlock 1-6900 Seattle, Wash., 2709 Utah Ave., MAin 3-6730 i' FOUNTAIN 1f SNACK BAR i' CAFETERIA OPEN 7:00 TO 4:00 CHANDLER DINING HALL ON THE CAMPUS Burnett, Hopen, Smith, and Sulit Civil Engineers and Land Surveyors 35 South qumond Avenue Pasadena, California SY 5-0458 - MU 1-0606 Harold A. Barnett '23 . 61' JOHN M. n 2 W8 tsoqNs. l1uc JMillwork 3514 E. WALNUT ST. SYCAMORE 2-2068 PASADENA, CALIF. MURRAY 1-4428 COMPLIMENTS OF Kenneth Fraser Company, Inc. Plumbing - Heafing Licensed Fire Sprinkler Contractor MUrray 1-7168 707 S. ARROYO PRWY. SYcomore 2-4167 PASADENA 1, CALIF. at Leading Stores Everywhere k-vn x,- 445e . The 'Jet Propulsion Laboratory has been assigned' responsibility for the Nation's progrem of unmanned lunar, planetary, and interplanetary exploration. The 'obiectives of this program tire to contribute to mankind's fundamental knowledge of spate and the space environment and to contribute to the development of the-technology of space exploration. For the next ten years, eus larger booster vehicles become available, spacecraft with ever-increasing scientific instrument payloads will be developed. . The Jet Propulsion laboratory will conduct the RANGER ' ., 1 . x missions, utilizing these spacecraft to orbit and land SPACECRAFT ; I ' ' on the moon; to probe interplanetary space, and to ANTENNA orbit and land on the near and far planets. PATTERN . TEST AT JPL CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY JET PROPULSION LABORATORY . A Research Facility operated for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration . PASADENA. CALIFORNIA . . . EmPIOYmenr opportunities for Engineers and Scientists interested in basic and applied research In these fields: COMMUNICATIONS - INSTRUMENTATION - INFRARED - ASTROPHYSICS - GEOPHYSICS GEOCHEMISTRY - ASTRONOMY - PROPULSION - MASER - STRUCTURES 0 PHYSICS ' ' ' i . ' . ration Send professional resume, with full qualifications and experience, for our Immediate COnSlde I55 'Hllh'u'lIlIIl'I' ' 11;5 A. : xlIll ' 11 1111111111 IIIII A l 9 I I,I1IIIIIIIII'J ll llw' A 5 I Ilhhh IIIII'IH'V' 1 3 vIIIIIl'llllll 2 1 WIlll' 11' 1'? MI...- III .81 3. d '8'. I. 1:...,I...- Ifilxhl 'WM II i ACU A chm M 1IIII1II III1IIH111 1m Xlllql 1 2..I.I.Ul ,- ' 0 17H II-IilIIII1IIII1U'l' 1 0Q HHI II.I.1.I-lIN'l'l'l 'ri1' L JII IIIIII l 1. r L, M 5' 1.19511 I1H1lnlh A ., IIIIIIIII IIII y. y II1IIII1IIIIIIIIIlIIIInIIIIIIl1IIIII I .., mi: W x I1IIII IIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIID IIIII..IIII1L T. 57,, CIVIL..MECHANICAL...ELECTRICAL- Edison offers you both challenge and opportunity in the aIl-elcctric filtm'e. If you want a career with challenge, we at Edison would likt to talk to you We d like to explain our role In the expanding economy of Southern California. Today, Edison StrVGS nearly five million pIOplI In ten was it is estimated that approxi- mulvly seven million will be served. And weid like to explain how you can fit into this all- clIclIic lIIturI. Unlimiud opportunities exist for creative Inginecrs as the demands for electricity continue to grow. To meet lhIse growing demands new and more ellicienl engineering, construction and operating methods must be developed. You,ll find opportunity at Edison. Because at Edison. you link your future with the all-electric future. For full details, write or call: Mr. C. T. Malloy Southern California Edison Company P.O. Box 351 . MAdison 4-7111 L05 Angeles 53, California SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA COMPANY T Y P E W R I T E R 5 Adding Machines of All Makes Sold - Rented Repaired .V . - Illl All Makes Poriables Special Terms 10 Sfudenis Duplicaiors Standard ' Poriablc ' Eleclric and Supplies Fac1ory Dealer - Royal Typewrifers Anderson Typewriter Co. 120 E. Colorado Sfreel Phones: SY 3-2166 MU 1-6877 ll4 So. Garfield Alhambra AT 9-3829 See the Stenorene Diclalator e $199.50 Seb Gerh'nenian's Pasadena Wholesale Produce Co. 275 E. ORANGE GROVE SY 5-9711 PASADENA, CALIFORNIA We Sell Caltecb Tbcir Fresh Fruits and Vegetables 1H1 WILLIAM WILSON 80. REAL ESTATE o INSURANCE o LOANS 40 NORTH GARFIELD AVENUE, PASADENA SYCAMORE 3-8111 0 MURRAY 1e6961 ESTABLISHED 1887 IF YOU DECIDE TO MAKE YOUR HOME IN SOUTHERNCALIFORNIA,LETUSHELPYOU SELECT IT FINANCEIT INSURE IT SPECIALIZING IN CHOICE RESIDENTIAL PROPERTIES Sole Pasadena Agenls - HARTFORD lNSURANCE CO- o- a- . teWAmwv 144 l 1 I r F ' PHOTO ElECTRIC - ElECTRONIC EQUIPMENT AUTOMATION SMOKE DETECTION HlGH-SPEED - BATCH - INDICATORS COUNTERS TIME DELAY CONVEYOR - JAM-UP ILLUMINATION START-STOP BURGLAR- r ust DIE PROTECTION -FIRE ALARMS f SAFETY SPECIAL APPLICATIONS ,; onq M Icno INDUSTRIAL SWITCHES OF EVERY DESCRIPTlON FOR ANY TYPE OF SWITGH INSTALLATION. BODIIE GEAR HEAD MOTORS INSTRUMENT MOTORS ELEcT. SYNCHROUS MOTORS INDUST. TIME DELAY, INTERVAL AND RECYCLING TIMERS. ALSO TIMERS PERCENTAGE TIMERS, ETC. GUARDIAN RELAYS IIIIRA KOOL MERCURY SW. BOSTON SEQEfN'cSFESS'SEEc?9 ER'E'Sw' F5 em sagggiaNngxgs'sz-Tc. snowman 32:52.? VEELOS mm ; m: BALL smiles sun mu commas ,N zano MAX SPEED REDIIOERS DU HARDWARE AND METAL COMPANY SPECIALIST IN POWER TRANSMISSION EQUIPMENT MECHANICAL ELECTRICAL ELECTRONIC '5 1610 W. 7th ST. DU-l-33H lOS ANGELES ZO. 157 F SCIENTISTS and ENGINEERS CEC, located in the San Gabriel Mountain foot- hills north-east of the Cal Tech campus, offers professional challenges to the Cal Tech graduate who has directed his career toward research and development in the advanced field of electronic instrumentation. CEC's analytical and control, data processing, magnetic-tope, dynamic recording, and pressure and vibration instruments and systems are wide- ly used to advance the position of companies in the industrial field; to pioneer research in colleges and universities; and to help secure this nation's advantages in the military and space programs. We would appreciate the opportunity of discuss- ing with YOU any phase of our technical effort that may be of' interest to YOU. Address your inquiry to e WILLIAM PECKHAM Assistant Personnel Manager CONSOLIDATED ELECTRODYNAMICS CORPORATION Subsidiary of Bell 8t Howell Company 360 Sierra Madre Villa, Pasadena, Calif. SYcamore 6-9381 Pitzer 8c Warwick Clothes for Loud and Dad 321 E. Colorado Street Our 5'lst Year 1910 I961 CERTIFIED CONCRETE READY MIXED. Compliments of E. LOCKETT 8x SON BUILDING MATERIALS 552 South Raymond Ave. Pasadena II Calif. LEE 8: DANIEL STRUCTURAL STEEL 1465 E. WALNUT SYcamore 6-8153 PASADENA . HYDRAULIC OIL WELL PUMPING SYSTEMS The engineered solution to cm industry-old problem KOBE, INC. 3040 East Slauson Avenue Huntington Park, California 4'9'Ins and cunning, haanuzstaMQId of comparison; A 1 II. ; GhrTRuual Tclcghone SYcomore 6'43H 3 l ' .mndzg's;CIoantng 96X e-- .wx ., ani- vga- qr. , 3 ankiLW-f 3:513:33 .37 . -..... -a, , rytgrmyyfrxV2..-,.-...,.,,,? .4 3 3-.A- sV..-r:..1,'-r'; a . A . W3 ,- . Waxh ,. CLEANERS Rain or Shine-We're Always on Time 3 LAUNDRY HOUR 3 CLEANING TAILORING bn requesH FREE PARKING 902 E. CALIFORNIA ST. 3 IN REAR PASADENA SYcamore 3-6704 Space Filler The Twenty-One MANUFACTURERS OF . ' THE BIG T 3 YEARBOOK COVERS INDUSTRIAL CATALOG COVERS BINDERS 0 PRESTIGE PACKAGING THE s. K. SMI.TH COMPANY 5300 W. 104th Street - Los Angeles, Calif. 1 SPring 6-2424 ECONOMY from fhe right . . . JOHNSON MOIORS, INC. 267 W. Colorado 5!. Pasadena 1, Calif. C 8: H SALES COMPANY Surplus Elecfronics Equipmenf a+ a Tremendous Savings 0 AU'osyns Alnico Motors Dynamotors I Inverters Aircraft lnstrumenis Generators 1 Amplidynes Synchros Rate Generators Tachometer Generators Fractional Horse Power Motors Immediam Delivery on Thousands of Sfock Hems Pasadena. California 2I76 E. Colorado Sf. MUrroy 1-7393 SYcamore 6-2362 l59 HWMV-73FR 1' '3 33033 W3 3 3, '77- , 7 0 3 - 3 ,. - --- v- -w - - - , - -'r-: i, ,wrr, 3--,v--,-v-..- - .. - -- , ; -V, V 1.-. ,u,,.,-; , b.'u-7'rv..z'i. 7-353, BEHRENDT-LEVY INSURANCE AGENCY ESTABLISHED 1902 325 West 8th Street 0 Los Angeles 14 0 MAdison 2-1261 CROWN SURGICAL SUPPLY COMPLIMENTS OF 1Division Edward Weck and Co.1 LABORATORY J. A .CRU I KSHAN K $3.22: 8- SON GI. 8-8571 CU. 3-6736 2I6 N. Meeker Avenue. El Monte EQUIPMENT AND SUPPLIES SY 5-061 1 MUrroy 1-7780 1070 E. Green 5!. GEDDES PRESS at W Printer; A WE OFFER A COMPLETE PRINTING SERVICE 5x Og1gmo11iooo LETTER PRESS OFFSET and cgiiE?UEG'Sl little l Publixloer 3589 East Colorado Street A Tech Favorite Since 1947 Open 6:30 A.M. to 12:00 P.M. 7 days a week SY. 5-9955 MU. 1-7264 975 East Green Street - Pasadena RAY GERHART GENERAL CONTRACTOR SYcomore 2-2468 231 So. Pasadena Ave. Pasadena 2, Calif. l l unl'IENAI- vv nan. I una PASADENA. CALIFORNIA WW Mm??? WINE, smns AND PARTY soon WE HAVE A FINE mms'vx 3m? Assoawem 0F 5 . .. - - , SNACKS ' o STORE HOURS 9:30 AM. - 10 PM. daily 10:30 A.M.-6:30 P.M. Sundays and Holidays 526 SOUTH LAKE AVE. PASADENA 67w CHEFS BROILER OPEN 24 HOURS luncheon 75: 0 dinner: from 96: - $1.50 . Special sizzling U.S. choice lop Sirloin steak - $2.25 635 East Colorado SY 2-91 1 I o SALES dedrick's - RENTALS TH! YUX SHOP MEN'S FORMAL WEAR 250 South Lake PASADENA SY 6-4651 HOLLYWOOD WESTWOOD SANTA ANA OALTECH PHARMACY PRESCRIPTIONS Courlexy 0 Sen'ire 0 Satirfarlian MOTOR DELIVERY Member Posodeno Merchants Association CATERING ICE CREAM Prenripliom Called for and Delitercd 882 E. CALIFORNIA STREET 5f. corner California and Lake! PASADENA, CALIFORNIA Phone SYcomore 2-2101 Ask for Called: Vitamins and Callcrh Wheat Germ Cereal 162 A Community Friend Since 1895 mumer 8c $ten2n5 C1111. FUNERAL DIRECTORS 95 N. Marengo Pasadena ALVIN'S PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES 504 South Lake Ave., Pasadena MOCK Printing 0 1122 MISSION STREET SOUTH PASADENA. CALIFORNIA SYcamore 9-171 I 0 MUrray 2-1875 HENRY N. BEETS 00. ISOTOPES 1 RADIUM X-RAY SUPPLIES 1 EQUIPMENT 2611 W. Seventh St. Las Angeles 57 DUnkirk 9-1151 67731 ugoddnegqf VARIAN associafes manufacturers of: KLYSTRONS, TRAVELING WAVE TUBES, BACKWARD WAVE OSCILLATORS, LINEAR ACCELERATORS, MICROWAVE SYSTEM COMPONENTS, NMR AND EPR SPECTROMETERS, LABORATORY MAGNETS,IMAGNETOMETER$. STALOS, POWER AMPLIFIERS, GRAPHIC RECORDER5, RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT SERVICES, VACUUM PRODUCTS THE MARK OF VAR I A N associates lEADERSHIP PALO ALIO, CALHOINIA 3; 1 mil! -- m r-v'tr ! AWNINGS Metal or Canvas NOW WE MANUFACTURE PROTECTO COVERS DARN We Cover Everything . POPULAR Manufacturers of . . . Dealers in. . . . o Awnings . Linoleum I 0 Window Screens . Garden Furniture u , 0 Window Shades - Venetian Blinds Popular is as Protective Coverings for Machinery Popular does? That's The Home 6' w' COX 2 SON Of the BIG BOY and Just a Shade Better x young people and 63 No. Fair Oaks, Pasadena 1, Calif. SY. 3-2186 their parents know the fine environment The Home of the BIG BOY Ojfers all discriminating young people. KThe 23 stands for, Oh, we'll never telll'v EATON FLOORING C0. GLENDALE A. L. Eaton Sole Owner 14 -v-; BURBANK PASADENA . . VAN Nuys Flooring - Engineers - Contractors GARDEN GROVE WHITTIER Cork, Asphalt and Rubber Tile TOLUCA LAKE ,, sm FERNANDO .1 Linoleum - Vinyl - Composition ; m m b NORTH HOLLYWOOD 175 0 S sazzzum? - 415 E. SECOND STREET MA 4-5081 h THE HOME OF THE ORIGINALBIG BOYeHAMBURGER LOS ANGELES 12, CALIFORNIA Compliments of IRV NOREN 1 LANES 32 AUTOMATIC PIN SPOTTERS Billiards 2 Air Conditioned Pasadena's Own S. S. Finest Recreation Center in Southern California 3545 E. FOOTHILL BLVD. IS EL. 5-3326 PASADENA, CALIFORNIA ETERS, W Clark Motel 22 UNITS O 14 WITH KITCHENS AIR CONDITIONED FREE TV 82 HI FI IN ALL ROOMS HEATED POOL I A 3019 E. Colorado Sf. Phones in Rooms Pasadena, Calif. SYcomore 2-2121 I63 .. 2.. ..rV...,.,.e .' ., - -2 .. 2, .-v 'Rr-vr;uh .f--w u-r- 2-2.K2 9-2 . au- . .nv-gw'zw;.7-VW,'WG'TH 'e'h'eeW-VFF'ZCI' -' .-': 'V'TVW v . . ,Aknka-q-wru. e. . LA MANDA PARK MARKET Wholesale Meaf Department for the RESTAURANT, HOTEL and MARKET JOE SCHWEIKERT PHONES SYcamore 3-2181 and 13-2182 2526 E. COLORADO ST. Valley Cities Supply 853 E. Valley Blvd., San Gabriel ATlanfic 8-1260 CUmberland 3-3179 Wholesale Distributors Plumbing 6 Indmm'al Supplies COMPLIMENTS OF E. D. NAY 130., INC. MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS PASADENA --+ Ry 'PRODUCTS. INC. plastics 'n precise difficult , and Thermoplastic materials Dust Free Hood for us'e ' Unusual CUmberland 3-8877 - ATlanfic 2-3440 703 50, Palm Avenue, Alhambra, Calif. NATIONWIDE SERVICE f ; : 3 811? S hgueroa St. - Los Anggles 3, Calif. . TWX LA 517 . PLeasant 01321 HOUSE D 1'60 - '611 WISHES BLACKER HOUSE BEST OF LUCK IN YEARS TO COME Mike Townsend, Pre's. Clyde Zaidins, Sympathizer Hugh Kleffer, V.P. AI Whitflesey, U.C.C. Jon Kelly, SecJPope Dick Norman, Off Campus U.C.C. Torn Keil, Soc. Chairman and Last and Least, Dwain Reed, Afh. Man. Steve Farber, House Frosh. PASADENA MOTOR 2131 E. Colorado - Pasadena I64 OFFICIAL AAA MEMBER WEATHERCONDITIONED ROOMS COMPLIMENTARY COFFEE HEATED POOL FREE TV CLOSE TO TOWN and CALTECH SY 6-3121 I79 uslics I.C.C. DINGS ITALIAN INN The Place f0 Feel of Home ITALIAN FOOD AT ITS BEST Home of Me Popular Minisfrone Soup After the theater try Pasodena's favorite Crown Pizza Try our Newest W PIZZA BURGER 4:30 P.M. to 12:00 P.M. Tues., Wed., Thurs. 4:30 P.M. to 1:00 A.M. Fri., Sat. 4:00 P.M. to 12:00 P.M. Sun. CLOSED MONDAY 2055 East Colorado Street Pasadena, California SY 2-0657 $en7ing CAL-TECH Students and Faculty for all Their Laundry and Dry Cleaning Needs i' SUDS-KISSED i' LAUNDROMAT 922 E. California Sfreei' - SY 2-2300 DEPENDABLE CHOICE 5 T : ; a 14. ABRASIVES BRONZE BEARINGS 8: BAR STOCK DRILL BUSHINGS ELECTRIC 81 AIR TOOLS ELECTRONIC ASSEMBLY TOOLS FASTENERS HAND TOOLS LIGHT MACHINE TOOLS MACHINE TOOL ACCESSORIES METAL CUTTING TOOLS PRECISION TOOLS SHOP FURNITURE 8: SHELVING SHOP SUPPLIES 25,000 different industrial items INSTRUMENTS RECORDING SPECTROPHOTOMETERS-For rapid recording of spectra with good resolving power and high photometric accuracy. Provide the rug- gedness and reliability needed for routine labora- tory use, plus the flexibility to handle a variety of problems in the research laboratory. IAMAN SPECTROPHOTOMETER-Uses a unique optical system which gives high light-gathering power, high zero stability and freedom from eHects of scattered light. Provides the advantages of raman spectroscopy with small samples, high speed and good accuracy. ELECTROMETERS-Vibrating reed instruments for measuring very small currents, charges and volt- ages. High sensitivity and accuracy, good stability and reliability. Available for many applications.- pH and carbon 14 determinations, mass spec- trometry, etc. APPLIED PHYSICS CORPORATlON IVrite for complete . W . Lo dexrriptiom, including V H II ? W? th 0f 4 msmumsms 2724 So'uth Pefk Raf . Cary mnmmemr. MODNVIOI Califomna CALIFORNIA 394w PHARMACY 555 S. LAKE AVE. PASADENA, CALIF. SYcamore 2-6222 - SYcamore 2-3156 DRUGS - COSMETICS - FOUNTAIN FREE PARKING IN REAR WET Servmg the Community for Good Health' erspr . 'fwf'nz'v'i- 7x' hm'T'f- w 0-' 5': K 5 ' 7' 3 Generations of 1 service To The funeral profession In the matter ofcareer opportunities, your attention is respectfully directed to positions now open at Beckmcm Instruments, Inc. LAMB in thefollowingJQelds: I PW HOWE 415 EAST ORANGE GROVE. PASADENA SY 3-3159 RESEARCH ENGINEERING TECHNICAL MARKETING Air Conditioning Refrigerafion Your inquiry is invited. A W E S T E R N A I R Address: Technical Employment 2 500 Harbor Boulevard, Fullerton, California 6 REFRIGERATION, INC. 1819 GLENDALE BLVD. NOrmandy 3-1103 Electronic components, instruments, systems. .. LOS ANGELES for analysis, measurement and control. Automatic Fire Sprinklers Air Conditioning Phone SchImore 3-8183 Ventilating Heating x; Plumbing . W Controcfors CW'W Of MUNGER MUNGER H. B. Hubbard Electric CO., Inc. . A Corporation - Established 1890 ELECTRICAL commcrons AUSTIN MUNGER 174 East Union Street, Pasadena, California SYcamore 6-2661 - MUrray 1-6537 30 East Del Mar, Pasadena, Calif. I66 EMETT 8. CHANDLER INSURANCE BROKERS and AVERAGE ADJUSTERS Industrial 8. Commercial 2999 West Sixth Street, Los Angeles 5 iTelephone DU 1-1201 PHOTOGRAPHIC g PRODUCTS FOR SCIENCE. INDUSTRY AND THE GRAPHIC ARTS THE HARWOO COMPANY , H I MI W. VALLEY BLVD., ALHAMBRA. CALIF. 2830 AUBURN BLVD., SACRAMENTO, CALIF. THE FLEMING WAITERS' UNION cordially invites you to EAT IT FASTER! . . , -V - -- -r-m.r..-. va.v::-,vx'v:;1 . -.-- L-. -. z ku: 1 -. r;cu--; -- ..-., .rg-v-f Kr -'--';- -. , r . th r .n 4 v.-- .HVWL-w , , w-Vrk --r-. m uv...w.- , .- , .. , . ',, :WWVO .-Y.- . . ,, ' t , f .,-.-, . 1., Thanks to Gail Holtermonn, Pasadena City College, for her Empfy-Space Fillers. raw: ., 0 :7... '.'K m ' -' ' ?1' .- . '36 v I'- : -' .,.-. w. -. -. -th... Advertiser9s Index AeroieT-Generol .............................................. 153 Almquist Brothers .......................................... 165 Alvins Camera Shop ...................................... 162 Anderson Typewriter Co. ................................ 156 Andrews Hdwe. 5 Metals Co. ........................ 157 John M. Anslinger 5 Sons .............................. 154 Applied Physics Corp. .................................... 165 Barnett, Hopen, Smith 5 Soli'r ........................ 154 Beckman Instruments, Inc. .............................. 166 Henery N. Beets Co. ........................................ 162 Behrendf-Levy Insurance Co. .......................... 160 Blue Diamond Co. .......................................... 152 Bob's Restaurants .......................................... 163 C 5 H Sales .................................................... 159 California VRexalI Pharmacy .......................... 165 Colfech Bookstore .......................................... 168 Colfech Pharmacy .......................................... 161 Carnation Company ........................................ 152 Chandler Dining Hall ...................................... 154 Chef's Broiler .................................................. 161 Clark Motel .................................................... 163 Consolidated Electrodynamics Corp. .............. 158 G. W. Cox 5 Son ............................................ 163 Wm. C. Crowell Co. ........................................ 161 Crown Surgical Supply ........................ - ............ 160 J. A. Cruikshank 5 Co. .................................. 160 Dedricks .......................................................... 161 Dino's -1. ........................................................... 165 Douglas Aircraft Co., Inc. .............................. 151 Ducommon Metals 5 Supply .......................... 154 Eaton Flooring ................................................ 163 Emmeff 5 Chandler ........................................ 166 Kenneth Fraser, Inc. ........................................ 154 Fleming Waiter's Union .................................. 167 Geddes Press .................................................. 160 Ray Gerhorf C0. .............................................. 160 The Harwood Co. ............................. 167 Sid Haup'r's ...................................................... 160 H. B. Hubbard Co. .......................................... 166 The Independent Stor-News .......................... 152 Jet Propulsion Lobora'rory .............................. 155 Johnson Motors, Inc. ...................................... 159 Jurgensen's Grocery Co. .................................. 152 Kobe lncorporofed .......................................... 158 Kloke's ............................................................ 161 La Manolo Park Market .................................. 164 Lamb Funeral Home ........................................ 166 Lee 5 Daniel .................................................... 158 E. Lockeff 5 Son .............................................. 161 Mirror Bright Polish Co. .............. 154 Mobile Rentals Corp.- ............................ - .......... 164 Mock Printing .................................................. 162 Munger 5 Munger .......................................... 166 E. O. Nay Co. ................................................ 164 Irv Noren's Lanes lnc. .................................... 163 Oak Knoll Cleaners ................................. 159 Pasadena Motor Hotel .................................... 164 Pasadena Wholesale Produce ........................ 156 Pifzer 5 Warwick ............................................ 158 Ray Products .................................................... 164 Royal Laundry ................................................ 158 S. K. Smith Co, ................................................ 159 Southern California Edison Co. ...................... 156 Suds Kissed Laundromat ................................ 165 Turner 5 Stevens ............................................ 162 Valley Cifies Supply ---------------------------------------- 164 Varion Associates .......................................... 166 Western Air 5 Refrigeration ............................ 156 William Wilson Co. 45.7 44-5., , 4..k,-...-.2 W A utographs -w-- 4 wt; v uv-: ' .-- 3ch . f'Z'Qmw , 'L'r S h p. a r g 0 t u A Autographs 32V , :1. 7 ' 'i S - 2n; '2' 9-71: , n: -. ruv..m ... --w w 37;- 9 l x IL! lfrr '1 LL- 1,17 1 yIl III! ill S t 4 U : n ., v r' rw Ixil w 11!: x w v 1 . . l . w: J ,1 xx. JV ,.V,,,;;1MH!M.:;1 i w ,ihulmuul 1.3.: L L3 :23 . if.l,, W'x as c .zilry' ,C Autographs p U ,,- r-a'w :- . v; :rYLrgwrgti . Autographs I76 vli - V .5: :2 La. .. u .. F. . iii. I Ii. 2 moi. Eigfk: 2r! 1 . K k . H .1 7.... 04 . , . n. ,r . 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