Connecticut College - Koine Yearbook (New London, CT)
- Class of 1963
Page 1 of 278
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 278 of the 1963 volume:
“
w2 AR . L ;EOYC:,, '.:.- Bl v s Tbe:Gz' ftof -: Class of 1963 CONNECTICUT COLLEGE 'LIBRARY VN EOR DU GO N ECTITT CONNECTICUT COLLEGE KOINE' 1963 THE STAFF EDITOR: Barbara Phillips ASSISTANT EDITOR: Ruth Lawrence PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR: Constance Cross ART EDITOR: Diane Lyons LITERARY EDITOR: Susan Schiffman BUSINESS MANAGER: Gail llisley ADVERTISING MANAGER: Mary O. Lore PUBLICITY MANAGER: Jo O'Donnell CIRCULATION MANAGER: Jean Curtin EDITORIAL ASSISTANT: Susan Nishijima TABLE OF CONTENTS '3 Faculty Seniors Dormitories Advertisements PEOPLE ARE MORE INTERESTING THAN THINGS, even in a college, So let's not take the ivy, or even the walls for our subject but rather . . . CONTRARY TO THE PHILOSPHERS Let's talk about WOMAN as we see her. The ETERNAL FEMININE: she wants to know about right now, what came before and what comes next, but most of all about herself. TRUTH IS BEAUTY, and so the beauties, day by day, trudge to class - seeking truth. e APPEARANCES TOO HAVE THEIR REALITY and often beyond the books it is hard to tell what is and what is not. LIFE IS A CURIOUS AFFAIR. 10 ABOUT US ARE THE FREE ARABESQUES OF NATURE and disciplined rhythms of study. Both have their joy. 11 DEDICATION Our awareness of the problems of the Western tradition has been immeasurably heightened by Dr. Edward Cranz, Rosemary Park Professor of History, In his willingness to convey his thoughts concerning the resolutions as well as the questions arising from his study of history, he has given us an opportunity to see the continuous change of our era. It is the hope of the class of 1963, in dedicating this yearbook to him, that it will express our appreciation for his understand- ing and suggestions of some of the possibilities for constructive activity in preserving our Western tradition. Mr. Cranz's office hours are determined by the symbolic presence of a bicycle propped against one of the trees in front of New London Hall. The bike stands there day and evening to tell us that Mr. Cranz is on the fourth floor willing to reccive the problematic inheritance of his students' thoughts and work. We who have visited the stacks of Mr. Cranz's office have come to feel that we need a legendary map to enter. He is presently compiling a bibliography of all Aristo- telian publications from the beginning of printing through 1520, and we feel, no doubt, that each one is in his office. 13 14 Dear Everyone, You can't imagine what it's like here. Everyone is so friendly, and well, so collegiate. It's really neat. By the way, I had my ears pierced. Love, + NEW LONDON The perennial FALL from summer vacation and here we are again wear- ing name tags and looking for courses that don't meet Saturday mornings. There is so much to do when you're A CONNECTICUT YANKEE IN KING CHARLE'S COURT. At last we have a chance to use our minds. School is, after all, a place to learn things. There are teachers to teach, but we study alone. 20 THE SHATTERING REVOLUTIONS OF HISTORY e B pass through the library R Y Ay - ...of:r...-...r.. + e AQ v i iv butr ithish v e ilence. in si HALLOWEEN IS A PIED PIPER who calls all the children with his magic. THE INAUGURATION OF PRESIDENT CHARLES E. SHAIN OCTOBER 20, 1962 The continuity and traditions of our college are seen on ceremonial occasions . .. but EVERYONE LOVES A PARADE. 27 Sometimes we're driven to the brink of mild-hysteria 28 but in the best times we talk to each other and understand. Disciplined movement is the language of the dancer. PEPPERMINT ICE CREAM AND FUDGE SAUCE CREAM CHEESE AND OLIVE SANDWICHES Everything begins to taste the same in the snack shop. 32 We are its bored lovers who can't find happiness with it but haven't the strength to leave either. 33 Someone said COLLEGE IS A SEVEN-DAY WEEK but any college which professes to have its nose always buried in a book is blatantly naive . . . Let's all bless the cursed New Haven RR. 34 ;nlll m lllll m l il o s e Rl T 36 There's no point in pretending that Winter is always beautiful, always draped in a mantle of snow, shaking the ice out of her hair, but sometimes . . . she is. 37 SNOW IS FOR FREE It can even be enjoyed without stretch pants and Head Skis. There are so many ways to have GOOD CLEAN FUN 40 t1120000 i RRAAAA L ALY the ke FRAANRD ,M,;,fw,,,,r.rff .-mm-r...,... A LLARAMRARRNY UL RN but here on Campus S NO CHOICE. THERE 41 We light the Christmas Trees and then shake off our tired old blue jeans. 43 44 CHRISTMAS IS AS INFECTIOUS AS MONO. If's in getting and spending that we waste our days being SECRET SANTAS to someone on the second floor we never knew before. Vacation and we are ABSOLUTELY FREE and have all the time in the world - time to write 3 papers and read 5 books. 46 We will return tranquil and relaxed because, of course, we didn't do anything. 47 BACK IN THE DORMS we find company for wallowing in the winter rains of catching up, self-questioning, and finals. 51 MID-WINTER WEEKEND! 1. See Margaret Meade. Dance as a Preliminary Mating Ritual Among the Dobu and Arapesh, Anthropological Quarterly, ID, pp. 359-442. O POST OFFICE where joys, sorrows, and mostly nothings are doled out into little boxes. We make our com- pulsive pilgrimage to you wanting to know that we are loved, wanted, missed--even if it is only by Time Life Student rates 55 I I - We are all so glad that it rains once in a while. The farmers are too. How else could Spring grow? SOPHISTICATION i ' has no place at Spring Wing Ding i - o Hx h'k ?.3 3 N B i 59 61 E 1 o e n T 3 v v Le c a e e a BEER inspires the annual Trumbull Bike Race. But girls prefer boys to beer or bikes. 63 We mak e the old atte mpt at Wordsworthian contempl mplation 64 85 Someone once charged in Amalgo that the college made tulips bloom on purpose for Father's Weekend Silly girl . . .. - - o - s 66 This weekend's specialty is FATHERS not tulips. 67 68 69 70 There is not much time left to formu- late our message and deliver it to the world. Many people have the idea it's on a cracker-jack box buried at Ocean Beach. wva 71 72 With the maturity of four years SENIORS leave stalking their destinies. SENIOR CLASS OFFICERN TOP TO BOTTOM: Pam Work, Secretary Roberta Slone, A.A. Representative Marcia Mueller, Marshal Carlotta Wilsen, Song Leader Molly O. Lore, Vice President Sue Hall, Graduation Chairman Mady Siegfried, Foreign Student Advisor Linda Barnhurst, Compet Play Director Aggie Cochran, Historian Lolly Bell, Transfer Student Advisor Diane Lvons, Social Chairman Barbara Drexler President Barbara McMillan, Treasurer Cmissing 73 ANNE RACHELLE ACCARDO 278 Brightwood Avenue Torrington, Connecticut CLASSICS Tu ne quaesieris-scire nefas-quem mihi, qguem tibi Finem di dederint, Leuconoe, nec Babylonios Temptaris numeros. Ut melius quicquid erit pati Seu plures hiemes, seu tribuit Juppiter ultimam. HORACE MARGARET ELLEN ACKERMAN 23 Hillside Circle Storrs, Connecticut HISTORY The great man is he who in the midst of the crowd keeps with perfect sweet- ness the independence of solitude. RALPH WALDO EMERSON SUSAN COMRIE ALBRO 37 Pomeroy Road Madison, New Jersey ENGLISH Hate and mistrust are the children of blindness Could we but see one another, twere well; Knowledge is sympathy, charity, kindness Ignorance only the maker of hell, SIR WILLIAM WATSON HARRIET ELIZABETH ALLEN 313 East Street Hingham, Massachusetts BOTANY A thing of beauty is a joy forever: It's loveliness increases; it will never Pass into nothingness. JOHN KEATS NANCY MORRILL ALLEN 519 South Market Street Troy, Ohio COVERNMENT The brain is just the weight of God For, lift them, pound for pound And they will differ, if they do, As syllable from sound. EMILY DICKINSQN DYANN ALTMAN 5000 East End Avenue Chicago, Illinois ENGLISH And that deep torture mav be called a hell When more is felt than one hath power to tell. WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE ELIZABETH SCOTT ANDERSEN 126 Lincoln Street Newton Highland, Massachusetts ENGLISH Awareness of life is of a higher order than knowledge of the lmws of happiness. DOSTOYEVSKY SUSAN STEPHANIE ARTHUR Middleburgh, New York ART HISTORY Many the wonders I this day have seen. JOHN KEATS 75 HEATHER AXELROD 387 Moraine Road Highland Park, Illinois GOVERNMENT Let your life lightly dance on the edges of Time like dew on the tip of a leaf. R. TAGORE ALLISTON LEY BAKER 17 Lee Road Chestnut Hill 67, Massachusetts HISTORY Happiness is a piece of fudge caught on the first bounce. CHARLES M. SCHULZ LINDA FLORENCE BARNHURST 44 A, Troy Drive Springfield, New Jersey PSYCHOLOGY But I know nothing, nothing, and 1 can know nothing but what has been told to me and all men. TOLSTOI VICTORIA BARON 3848 North Pennsylvania Street Indianapolis, Indiana HISTORY There are two ways of spreading light: to be the candle or the mirror that reflects it. EDITH WHARTON GINA R. BENAMATI 236 Funston Avenue Torrington, Connecticut ART HISTORY Ognuno sta solo sul cuor della terra trafitto da un raggio di sole: ed e subito sera. SALVATORE QUASIMODO ELIZABETH FITZHUGH BARTLETT 15 Prescott Avenue Bronxville, New York PSYCHOLOGY We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars. OSCAR WILDE MARTHA PEMBERTON BATES 32 Kelveden Road Waban 68, Massachusetts ART HISTORY Water is taught by thirst, Land by the oceans passed, Transport by throe, Peace by its battles told, Love by memorial mold, Birds by the snow. EMILY DICKINSON ELIZABETH EWING BELL 5235 Westminster Place Pittsburgh 32, Pennsylvania SOCIOLOGY First thing you learn when you're in a lawin' family is that there ain't any definite answers to anything. HARPER LEE 77 SYLVIA ELLEN BLENNER 20 Elmwood Road New Haven, Connecticut HISTORY The tissue of the Life to be We weave with colors all our own, And in the field of Destiny We reap as we have sown. JOHN CREENLEAF WHITTIER SUE ELLEN BERNSTEIN 9 Hawthorne Terrace Great Neck, New York ENGLISH To begin with, I am alive, and that is magnificent ... But you are adlive t0o, 1 believe, and that is magnificent. ANDRE GIDE LAURIE GAIL BLAKE Cherry Lane Mendham, New Jersey STUDIO ART The secret of life is to appreciate the pleasure of being terribly deceived. OSCAR WILDE SUSAN DOROTHY BOHMAN 541 Old Bridge Road Northport, New York TTALIAN In the deserts of the heart Let the healing ffoumain start, In the prison of his days Teach the free man how to praise. W. H. AUDEN 78 ELIZABETH PORTER BORMAN Kenneday Road Mendlam, New Jersey STUDIO ART With a heart of furious fancies whereof I am commander: with a fiery spear and a horse of air to the wilderness I wander. TOM O'BEDLAM'S SONG BELINDA LAWRENCE BREESE 2230 California Street Washington, D. C. HISTORY And how the butler found her in the pantry rinsing her mouth out with champagne. T. S. ELIOT CAROLYN RUTH BOYAN 1444 Clifton Park Road Schenectady, New York ECONOMICS The thought is quiet as a flake, A crash without a sound How life's Reverberation Its explanation found. EMILY DICKINSON SALLY JOANNE BROBSTON 19 Allwood Road Darien, Connecticut ZOOLOGY ... And a mouse is miracle enough to stagger sextillions of infidels. WALT WHITMAN 79 BARBARA A. BROTHERSON 54 North Washington Street Tarrytown, New York HISTORY Children, children! said Eliza sadly. We must try to love one another. THOMAS WOLFE BEVERLY RUFFLE BROOKES 1339 Prospect Drive Wilmington 3, Delaware HISTORY Love never ends; as for prophecy, it will pass away; as for tongues, they will cease; as for knowledge, it will pass away. For our knowledge is im- perfect and our prophecy is imperfect. I cormvTHIANS 13 ANNE HUTCHINSON BROWN White Farms Old Lyme, Connecticut PHILOSOPHY For God's sake, let us sit upon the ground And tell sad stories of the death of kings. WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE BONNIE LOUISE BROWN 7 Sprucewood Lane Westport, Connecticut CHILD DEVELOPMENT Whether you're ugly or good looking its nice to have a face. BERNARD CREATIONS 80 EDITH BRADFORD BUCK East Main Street Opyster Bay, New York PHYSICS One does not expect in this world, one hopes and pays carfares. CHRISTINE HOPKINSON BAKER NANCY CARLA BUDDE RFE.D. 5, Little Neck Road Huntington, New York HISTORY Somewhere in the heart of experience there is an order and a coherence which we might surprise if we were attentive enough, loving enough, or patient enough. LAWRENCE DURRELL MARCIA LOUISE BUERGER 283 Millwood Road Chappaqua, New York CHILD DEVELOPMENT Be not afraid of life. Believe that life is worth living, and your belief will help create the fact. WILLIAM JAMES SARAH BARTLETT BULLOCK 39 Brenton Avenue Providence, Rhode Island STUDIO ART Shall 1 go off to South America? Shall 1 put out in my ship to sea? Or get in my cage and be lions and tigers? Or - shall I be only Me? A. A. MILNE JEANETTE CANNON 78 Walworth Avenue Scarsdale, New York HISTORY One could do worse than be a swinger of birches. ROBERT FROST BONNIE LEE CAMPBELL 56 Salisbury Street Winchester, Massachusetts PHILOSOPHY The universe resounds with the joy- ful cry I am. SCRIABIN MARY ANN CAWLEY 44 Center Street New London, Connecticut HISTORY I'm nobody! Who are you? Are you nobody, too? EMILY DICKINSON JENEFER MARIE CAREY 49 Sycamore Road West Hartford, Connecticut HISTORY The only sin is to know truth and be false to it. ANONYMOUS SALLY CLASTER 3812 Fords Lane Baltimore, Maryland HISTORY It is the future that creates the present All is an interminable chain of longing. ROBERT FROST EVELYN MAY CHERPAK 60 Seneca Street New Britain, Connecticut HISTORY Let your life lightly dance on the edges of Time like dew on the tip of a leaf. R. TAGORE MARTHA DALE CHAMBERS 199 Woodbine Avenue Merrick, New York ZOOLOGY People who get things done lead con- tented lives, or at least I guess so, And 1 certainly wish that either I were more like them or they were less so. OGDEN NASH WALLACE MCLEAN COATES 5 River Road Wethersfield, Connecticut LATIN Hoc erat in votis: modus agri non ita magnus, hortus ubi et tecto vicinus jugis aquae fons et paullum silvae super his foret. HORACE AGNES W. COCHRAN Bryantown, Maryland ECONOMICS Ahways leave them laughing when you say goodbye. GEORGE M. COHAN ALISON SCOFIELD COLEMAN 49 East 96th Street New York 28, New York ART HISTORY my specialty is living . . . E. E. CUMMINGS CYNTHIA HASTINGS COMAN 4030 Howard Avenue Western Springs, Illinois HISTORY You do all you can to humanize and familiarize the world and suddenly it becomes stranger than ever. SAUL BELLOW ELAINE HELENA COHEN 103 Audubon Drive Chestnut Hill 67, Massachusetts CHEMISTRY Learning without thinking is labor lost; thinking without learning is perilous. CONFUCIUS OUISE BALENTINE CONNOLLY 115 Plant Street New London, Connecticut LATIN Fvery time a child says, 1 don't be- lieve in fairies, there is q litile fairy somewhere that falls down dead. j. M. BARRIE ALICE SOUTHGATE CORLEY 5301 Chamberlin Avenue Chevy Chase 15, Maryland ART HISTORY That 1 might drink and leave the world unseen, And with thee fade away into the forest dim. JOHN KEATS MARY BAGG COOPER 10 Graesheck Place Delmar, New York HISTORY The courage to be is rooted in tl:ae God who appears when God has dis- appeared in the anxiety of doubt. PAUL TILLICH ELLEN KATHLEEN COUTTS 221 Highland Street New Haven, Connecticut ZOOLOGY Envole-toi bien loin de ces miasmes morbides; Va te purifier dans lair superieur, Et bois, comme une pure et divine liqueur, Le feu clair qui remplit les espaces limpides. CHARLES BAUDELAIRE PATRICIA MAVENA CRAFT Old Farm Road Basking Ridge, New Jersey ZOOLOGY In my native place There's this plant: As plain as grass But blooms like Heaven. ISSA CONSTANCE ANNE CROSS 9 Hillside Road Southbridge, Massachusetts ENGLISH Men have forgotten this truth, said the fox. But you must not farget it. You become responsible, forever, for what you have tamed. ANTOINE DE SAINT-EXUPERY CAROL VICTORIA DAHLBERG 29 Walbrooke Road Scarsdale, New York ECONOMICS Oh God, the Lord and Maker of all things, Said you shall be a rebel and a seeker And praise the Lord, I seek and I rebel! GOETHE FRANCOISE MARIE DAL PIAZ 425 East 86th Street New York 28, New York FRENCH He who bends to himself a Joy Doth the winged life destroy; But he who kisses the Joy as it flies Lives in Eternity's sunrise. WILLIAM BLAKE MARLENE DVORA DANIELS 94 Booth Avenue Englewood, New Jersey PHILOSOPHY I am glad to the brink of fear. RALPH WALDO EMERSON NANCY ELIZABETH DARLING 157 Glenwood Avenue Leonia, New Jersey ZOOLOGY . the image of mind's two trees, cast downward, ome tilting leaves to catch the sun's bright pennies, one dark as water, rooted among the bones. ALEX COMFORT JILL FAITH DAVIDSON Waverly, Pennsylvania FRENCH Now the world is one flower of many petalled darknesses and I am in its perfume, as in a touch. D. H. LAWRENCE BARBARA DIAMONDSTEIN 230 Hewlett Neck Road Woodmere, New York MATHEMATICS For in the dew of little things the heart finds its morning and is re- freshed. KAHLIL GIBRAN GAEL LEONARD DOHANY 276 Deerhurst Park Boulevard Buffalo 23, New York HISTORY Above All You must be young and glad. E. E. CUMMINGS THEODORA ODYSSIA DRACOPOULOS 7407 Bybrook Lane Chevy Chase 15, Maryland PHILOSOPHY To see a world in a grain of sand. WILLIAM BLAKE BARBARA DREXLER 63 Vine Road Larchmont, New York FRENCH I hate quotations. Tell me what you know., RALPH WALDO EMERSON TIRZAH QUINTA DUNN 484 Lake Avenue St. Louis 8, Missouri STUDIO ART There is one other child, everywhere in all, who seeks to remember In us everyday, in all the gestures we feel But do not make obvious. J. ROBERT LEWIS SUSAN ELIN ERICSON Calhoun Street Washington Depot, Connecticut GOVERNMENT And now it's time to play You Bet Your Life . . . GEORGE FENNIMAN EVELYN EFTHIMION 83 Bedell Avenue Hempstead, New York SPANISH De querer a no querer hay un camino muy largo, y todo el mundo lo anda sin saber como ni cuando. ANONYMOUS SALLY H. ELSON Taylor Lane Harrison, New York ART HISTORY Life is a jest; and all things show it. I thought so once; but now I know it. JOHN CAY JANE ELIZABETH ENGEL 20650 Almar Drive Shaker Heights 22, Ohio STUDIO ART Tantae molis erat . . . VIRGIL SARAH JANE FAILE Box 566 New Canaan, Connecticut ZOOLOGY Faith is a fine invention When gentlemen can see, But microscopes are prudent In an emergency. EMILY DICKINSON MARCIA ELLEN FANEY 10 Charlotte Road Marblehead, Massachusetts ENGLISH Walk together Talk together O ye peoples of the earth; Then and only then Shall ye have peace. SUSAN CULL FARRINGTON 525 South Lincoln Avenue Salem, Ohio GOVERNMENT Nothing ever succeeded that exuber- ant spirits didn't help to produce. FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE AMELIA FATT 901 Caniff Place Columbus 21, Ohio FRENCH Speak in French when you can't think of the English for a thingturn out your toes when you walk-and re- member who you arel LEWIS CARROLL ROSLYN FEIBUS 721 East Gibson Street Scranton, Pennsylvania HISTORY Because such fingers need to knit That subile knot, which wmakes us man ... JOHN DONNE DIANE ELIZABETH FENNELLY 19 Ridgewood Terrace North Haven, Connecticut ART HISTORY There is no duty we so much under- rate as the duty of being happy. ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON MARY-ALICE FENN Washington Depot, Connecticut STUDIO ART There is nothing too small, But my tenderness paints it Large on a background of gold, And 1 prize it, not knowing Whose soul at the sight, Released, may unfold . . . RANIER MARIA RILKE NANCY ELLEN FEUERSTEIN 15 Lakeview Avenue South Brightwaters, New York ZOOLOGY We see our lives from our own point of view; that is the privilege of the weakest and humblest of us ... HENRY JAMES BARBARA FISHER 6600 Tower Circle Drive Lincolnwood 46, Illinois ENGLISH The true way goes over a rope which is not stretched at any great height but just above the ground. It seems more designed to make people stumble than to be walked upon. KAFEKA CONSTANCE WORRALL FLEISCHMANN 45 Seir Hill Road Wilton, Connecticut CLASSICS Nothing human is ever simple. CHARLES BAZOO THERESA GALE FLANNERY 77 Engle Street Tenafly, New Jersey ECONOMICS There is a weird power in a spoken word . . . And a word carries far very far - deals Destruction through time as the bullets Go flying through space. JOSEPH CONRAD HELENE S. FLICHER 2280 Loring Place New York 68, New York ENGCLISH HELEN V. FRISK 1477 Regent Street Schenectady 9, New York RUSSIAN L'homme w'est quun roseau, le plus faible de la nature; mais cest un roseau pensant. PASCAL SUZANNE ELIZABETH FULD Clinton Lane Harrison, New York ECONOMICS To have a friend is to be a friend. RALPH WALDO EMERSON FAITH ANNE GILMAN Gilman, Connecticut COVERNMENT Now in order to become organic we will learn to understand that form and function are as one. On that or- ganic basis a civilization might en- dure forever as a happy humane cir- cumstance. Free. FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT MARIE FRANCE GIRARD 7 Beechdale Road Baltimore 10, Maryland HISTORY If one does not hope, one will not find the unhoped-for, since there is no trail leading to it. HERACLEITUS BERNA C. GORENSTEIN 406 Woodland Road Highland Park, Illinois GOVERNMENT Was it a vision, or a waking dream? Fled is that music: - do I wake or sleep? JOHN KEATS AMY LEE GLASSNER 180 East 79 Street New York 21, New York HISTORY There will never be a finer saying than the one which declares that whatever does good should be hel'd in honour, and the only shame is in doing harm. PLATO NAOMI DOVE GROSSMAN 2017 East 24 Street Brooklyn 29, New York MATHEMATICS Will you, wo'n't you, will you, wo'n't you, won'n't you join the dunce? LEWIS CARROLL AMY PAULA GROSS 88 Rugby Road Brooklyn 26, New York Z00LOGY They said - These are the best years of your life. I laughed and answered Then stop the world. I'm getting off now. However, they couldnt, wouldn't, so I didn't. And I'm glad. SARAH JANE HAMILTON 39 Whistler Road Manhasset, New York HISTORY All, Everything that 1 understand, 1 understand only because 1 love. TOLSTOI SUSAN TILESTON HALL 93 Elmwood Avenue Ho-ho-kus, New Jersey GOVERNMENT O thou O Of round earth of round heaven Unfold thy wings Then beyond the color blue Pass . . . beyond form to idea. STEPHEN SPENDER CYNTHIANNA CLOCK HAHN 1107 Montgomery Avenue Rosemont, Pennsylvania ENGLISH Slim creamy crescent, you turn me from blinking stars . . . who compares beauties? JANET LIVINGSTON HARRIS 1 Little Brook Road Rowayton, Connecticut FRENCH sometimes a wonder of wild roses sometimes E. E. CUMMINGS NINA CLARE HENEAGE 76 School Street Keene, New Hampshire HISTORY We love the things we love for what they are. ROBERT FROST PHYLLIS HATTIS 10 Crescent Drive Glencoe, Illinois ART HISTORY The secret of life is in the interpre- tation of the silence around us . . . LAWRENCE DURRELL MARIE CAROLE HAWLEY 351 High Street Milford, Connecticut ENGLISH Memory believes before knowing re- members. WILLIAM FAULKNER SARAH TREEN HEWSON Red Gate Road, Route 18 Morristown, New Jersey LATIN Quid autem erat causae, cur graecas litteras oderam, quibus puerulus imbuebar Adamaveram enim latinas quas docent qui gfammatici vocantur, ST. AUGUSTINE ROSALIND CARDEN HITCH 828 South Columbine Street Denver 9, Colorado ART HISTORY Follow the Romany vpatteran West to the sinking sun, Till the junk-sails lift through the houseless drift, And the east and the west are one. RUDYARD KIPLING NANCY EDITH HOLBROOK 67 Forest Street Keene, New Hampshire GOVERNMENT To begin with oneself, but not to end with oneself; to comprehend oneself, but not to be preoccupied with oneself. MARTIN BUBER SALLY LOUISE HOBSON 19213 Shelburne Road Shaker Heights 18, Ohio PSYCHOLOGY And now let us believe in the long year that is given to us, new, un- touched, full of things that have never been. RATNER MARIA RILKE REBECCA MAYHEW HOLMES 2957 Eaton Road Shaker Heights, Ohio ZOOLOGY I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills, from whence cometh my help. PSALM 121 NANCY LEE HORVITZ 1316 Highland Avenue Fall River, Massachusetts HISTORY A Friend is a person to whom 1 may be sincere. Before him, I may think aloud. RALPH WALDO EMERSON KATHARINE KING HOWE Hillside Road Greenwich, Connecticut ART HISTORY It's impossible to eat dog food when your stomach is all set for shrimp Louie. CHARLES M. SCHULZ CAROLE MARIE HUNT 176 Monroe Street Dedham, Massachusetts GERMAN When a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is be- cause he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears. HENRY DAVID THOREAU JUDITH PENNINGTON HYDE Obtuse Hill, North Brookfield Center, Connecticut HISTORY Naked 1 reached the world at birth; Naked 1 pass beneath the earth; Why toil I, then, in vain disiress, Seeing the end is nakedness. PALLADAS GAIL E. ILLSLEY 7 School Street Georgetown, Massachusetts CHEMISTRY Yet we were content in our going alone, and we stood there in the breach between the world and the plaything, RAINER MARIA RILKE CAROL JANNEY 5203 Abingdon Road Washington 16, D. C. ART HISTORY Ah, if only that little butterfly could always flutter before me to show me the way. NIKOS KAZANTZAKIS SUSAN JENKINS Front Street Marion, Massachusetts HISTORY A Time to keep silence, And a Time to speak. ECCLESIASTES III JOAN PATRICIA JOHNSON Thimble Island Road Stony Creek, Connecticut ENGLISH Ah, when to the heart of man Was it ever less than a treason To bow and accept the end Of a love or season. ROBERT FROST KARIN MARIE JOHNSON 36 Pilgrim Road Bristol, Connecticut ECONOMICS If it be possible, as much as lieth in you, live peacably with all men. ROMANS X1, 18 CAROLYN HALL JONES 760 Mountain Road West Hartford, Connecticut RUSSIAN Tomorrow we again embark upon the boundless sea. HORACE WHITNEY ARDEN JONES 72 Forest Drive Springfield, New Jersey PSYCHOLOGY TERESANN MARIE JOSEPH 107 Mill Street Binghamton, New York PHILOSOPHY Still is the bottom of my sea: who would guess that it harbors sportive monsters? Impeturbable is my depth, but it sparkles with swimming rid- dles and laughters. FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE Avoid repetition? Hush, don't let happiness hear you! STANISLAW J. LEC JANET ELAINE KASTNER Turtle Cove Warwick, Bermuda FRENCH Aimons donc, aimons donc! de Theure fugitive, Hatons-nous, jouissons! L'homme w'a point de porc, le temps n'a point de rire, Il coule, et nous passons! LAMARTINE MARTHA MARIA JOYNT 601 Duke Street Alexandria, Virginia GOVERNMENT This above dll: to thine own self be true. And it must follow, as the night the day, Thou canst not then be false to any man. WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE JUDITH A. JUDSON 4 Turkey Hill Lane Westport, Connecticut SOCIOLOGY A little joy, a little sorrow: A challenging blend - Today . . . tomorrow. SUSAN LOUISE KANE 685 West End Avenue New York 25, New York ENCLISH There is no cure for birth and death Save to enjoy the interval. GEORGE SANTAYANA PATRICIA MARY KEENAN 82 Farragut Road Swampscott, Massachusetts PHYSICS Sleeping or waking, we hear not the airy footsteps of the strange things that almost happened. NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE FRANCES KNIGHT KEUTMANN 530 Clover Hills Drive Rochester 18, New York HISTORY On Monday when the sun is hot 1 wonder to myself a lot: 'Now, is it true or is it not, That what is which and which is what?' A. A. MILNE NANCY SLOAN KINNEBREW 211 West Cherry Circle Memphis, Tennessee HISTORY Oh as I was young and easy in the mercy of his means, . Time held me green and dying Though 1 sang in my chains like the sea. DYLAN THOMAS BETSY SUZANNE KRAAI 84 South Main Street Fairport, New York ZOOLOGY O for a mirrorl The melancholy of the possible Unmeasures me. LOUIS SIMPSON CONSTANCE LOUISE KUGEL 2929 North Bay Road Miami Beach, Florida BOTANY Now I re-examine philosophies and religions, They may prove well in lec- ture-rooms, yet not prove at all under the spacious clouds and along the landscape and flowing currents. WALT WHITMAN IRENE LAU New Road Monmouth Junction, New Jersey ZOOLOGY The watching, the endurance, the precious love, the anguish, the patient- ly yielded life. WALT WHITMAN ELEANOR SUSAN LANDRES 43 Wykagyl Terrace New Rochelle, New York ENGLISH He would cry out on life, that what it wants Is not its own love back in copy speech, But counter-love, original response. ROBERT FROST RUTH ELIZABETH LAWRENCE 21 Mountain View Road Cape Elizabeth, Maine ENGLISH A world that is ordered is not the world-order. MARTIN BUBER ROBIN CONOVER LEE 11 East 75th Street New York 21, New York ENGLISH The wviolets in the wmountains can break the rocks if you believe in them and allow them to grow. TENNESSEE WILLIAMS LINDA JOYCE LEIBMAN 442 Wellington Avenue Chicago 14, Illinois GOVERNMENT To you is left Cunspeakably confused your life, gigantic, ripening, full of fears, so that it, now hemmed in, now grasping dll, is changed in you by turns to stone and stars. RAINER MARIA RILKE PAULA GABRIELLE LEON 83-40 Edgerton Boulevard Jamaica Estates, New York HISTORY All experience is an arch, to build on. HENRY BROOK ADAMS RACHEL JANE LEVY 1061 North Shore Road Norfolk, Virginia MATHEMATICS Happiness lies in the taste, and not in the things; and it is from having what we desire that we are happy, not from having what others think de- sirable. LA ROCHEFOUCAULD ROBERTA JO LEVY 106 North Shore Road Norfolk, Virginia MATHEMATICS Service to a just cause rewards the worker with more real happiness and satisfaction than any other venture of life. CARRIE CHAPMAN CATT DIANE VANDERBILT LEWIS 605 Fernmere Avenue Interlaken, New Jersey STUDIO ART And some will say all sorts of things, But some mean what they say. ROBERT FROST SUSAN OLGA LIENHARD 32 Oak Hills Road Metuchen, New Jersey FRENCH Too few the mornings be, too scant the nights. No lodging can be had for the de- lights That come to earth to stay But no apartment find and ride away. EMILY DICKINSON JO ELLEN LINDSETH 2118F Sydenham Road Cleveland, Ohio ART HISTORY One can acquire everything in soli- tude - except character. STENDAHL MARY BARBARA LONG 1371 Lincoln Way East Chambersburg, Pennsylvania HISTORY He said it was the best fun he ever had in his life, and the most intellect- ual: and said if he only could see his way to it we would keep it up all the rest of our lives. MARK TWAIN JUDITH ELIZABETH LONG 15 Knight Road Farmingham Centre, Massachusetts ENGLISH Sometimes he thought to himsef,fl why and sometimes ' wherefo're, sometimes Inasmuch as which? and sometimes he didn't quite know what he was thinking about. A. A. MILNE GLORIA C. LOTZ Rolling Hills Drive Morristown, New Jersey PHILOSOPHY MARY OTTILIE LORE 21 Banbury Lane, Ben Avon Height Pittsburgh 2, Pennsylvania ECONOMICS They change their climate, not their disposition, who run beyond the sea. HORACE NANCY MAE MACLEOD 20 Channing Street New London, Connecticut GOVERNMENT Adrift! A little boat adrift! And night is coming ! Will no one guide a little boat Unto the mearest town? EMILY DICKINSON DIANE ELAINE LYONS 2215 Delaware Drive Cleveland, Ohio FRENCH The splendor of Silence, - of snow- jeweled hills and of ice. The way of the wind is a strange, wild way. INGRAM CROCKETT CAROL JEAN LUNDE 316 North Lombard Avenue Oak Park, Illinois GCERMAN The woods are lovely, dark and deep. But I have promises to keep And miles to go before I sleep. And miles to go before I sleep. ROBERT FROST MARY EMILY MACNAUGHT 733 Main Street Hingham, Massachusetts GOVERNMENT Then wear the gold hat; if that will move her; If you can bounce high, bounce for her too, Till she cry Lover, gold-hatted, high-bouncing lover, 1 must have you! THOMAS PARKE D'INVILLIERS CHARLENE MARGOSIAN 144 Gloucester Street Arlington, Massachusetts COVERNMENT Where are the songs of Spring? Ay, where are they? Think not of them, thow hast thy music too. JOHN KEATS ANN LYNN MANSON 15 Fort Drive, Belle Haven Alexandria, Virginia GOVERNMENT There is good and bad in everything, To a more or less degree; But the side that you are looking at, Is the side you are apt to see. ANONYMOUS SARA C. MANWELL 20 Ward Avenue Northampton, Massachusetts BOTANY As a true patriot, I should be ashamed to think that Adam in paradise was more favourably situated on the whole than the backwoodsman in this country. HENRY DAVID THOREAU GAIL ELIZABETH MARTIN Hazelaan 4 Woassenaar, Netherlands HISTORY We dance round in a ring and suppose, But the secret sits in the middle and knows. ROBERT FROST DOROTHY ROSE MAY 77 Morningside Drive West Bristol, Connecticut SPANISH A child said What is the grass? fetching it to me with full hands, How could I answer the child? I do not know what it is any more than he. WALT WHITMAN BARBARA ANN MCMILLAN 1550 Virginia Charleston, West Virginia FRENCH I would rather sit on a pumpkin and have it all to myself than be crowded on a velvet cushion. HENRY DAVID THOREAU MARY MEADE MCCONNELL 10 Westway Bronxville, New York HISTORY HENRIETTA AYRES MOORE 100 Green Bay Road Winnetka, Illinois HISTORY A fearful thing is inexperience. ARISTOPHANES Of all the forms of genius, goodness has the longest awkward age. THORNTON WILDER DEBORAH BRAYTON MORRIS 19000 Shaker Boulevard Shaker Heights 22, Ohio GOVERNMENT What shall we call our 'self? Where does it begin? Where does it end? It overflows into everything that be- longs to us and then flows back again. HENRY JAMES MARCIA ANN MUELLER 11 Aspinwall Road Loudonville, New York MUSIC Music is love in search of a word. SIDNEY LANIER ELIZABETH NEBOLSINE 138 Highwood Avenue Leonia, New Jersey HISTORY There were in that country two extraordinary men: they possessed humanity; they were acquainted with justice; they loved virtue. MONTESQUIEU ALBERTA JANE NORLANDER North Street Mattapoisett, Massachusetts ZOOLOCY Happiness is the only good. The time to be happy is now, The place to be happy is here, The way to be happy is to make others so. ROBERT GREEN INGERSOLL CYNTHIA NORTON 21 Round Hill Drive Fairfield, Connecticut ENGLISH What shuts itself in abiding is already numb. It believes itself safe in the shelter of unostentatious gray? Wait, a hardest forewarns the hard from far away. Alas, an absent hammer up- heaves. RAINER MARIA RILKE JUDITH ANN O'DONNELL Belle Haven Place Greenwich, Connecticut MATHEMATICS Though life holds its treasures out to be enjoyed by everyone, It is the lifted face that feels the shining of the Sun. H. B. 8. VIRGINIA BRADFORD OLDS 7501 Brookville Road Chevy Chase 15, Maryland RELICION I am a Bear of Very Little Brain, and long words Bother me. A. A. MILNE ALICE COFFIN ORNDORFF 1044 Forest Avenue River Forest, Illinois HISTORY Error of opinion may be tolerated when reason is left free to combat it. THOMAS JEFFERSON CAROLINE HALE OSBORNE 286 Engle Street Englewood, New Jersey ENGLISH All who joy would win must share it - happiness was born a twin. LORD BYRON BETTY ANN OSTENDARP Kenwood Road Cincinnati, Ohio SOCIOLOGY The world stands out on either side No wider than the heart is wide; Above the world is stretched the sky No higher than the soul is high. EDNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY ANNE MEHLING PARTINGTON 3681 Traynham Road Shaker Heights 22, Ohio CHILD DEVELOPMENT I am what I will. ERIC ERIKSON SUSAN MARY PASSELL Sgoke Drive Woodbridge 15, Connecticut GOVERNMENT In the time of your life - livel WILLIAM SAROYAN BARBARA WIERCIOCH PERNESKI 350 Bayonet Street New London, Connecticut MATHEMATICS The right angle from which to ap- proach any problem is the try angle. SALADA TAG LINES JO ANN PATNODE 360 Litchfield Street Torrington, Connecticut HISTORY Hearts do not meet one another like roads. AFRICAN PROVERB CYNTHIA JEAN PEARSON 203 Skunk Lane Wilton, Connecticut ART HISTORY The most useless day of all is that in which we have not laughed. SEBASTIAN SHAMEORT NADINE ELLEN PEKARSKI Cedar Lane Uncasville, Connecticut SPANISH . . . que toda la vida es sueno, y los suenos suenos son. CALDERON DE LA BARCA BARBARA PHILLIPS 439 North McKean Street Butler, Pennsylvania ENGLISH Life? Butterfly on Swaying grass - transilient yet Ever Exquisite. HAIKU MARION TREMAINE PIERCE 763 Kimball Avenue Westfield, New Jersey HISTORY To see with the eye is to perceive To see with the heart is to understand. TERESE RACHIELE PINTO 254 Glenbrook. Road Stamford, Connecticut PSYCHOLOGY Now as I was young and easy under the apple boughs About the lilting house and happy as the grass was green. DYLAN THOMAS BEATRICE ROBINETT PORTER 49 Wornall Road Kansas City, Missouri ENGLISH O Chestnut-tree, great rooted blossomer Are you the leaf, the blossom or the bole? O body swayed to music, O brightening glance, How can we know the dancer from the dance? W. B. YEATS BOBETTE KAY POTTLE 531 Monroe Avenue River Forest, Illinois ECONOMICS Too low they build, who build beneath the stars. EDWARD YOUNG HARRIET ANN PRICE 1050 Humphrey Street Swampscott, Massachusetts ENGLISH Gaity, Song and Dance, here we go round the wmulberry bush. A. A. MILNE CAROL ANN PRICE Box 324 R. R. 3 Esmond 17, Rhode Island BOTANY Grant me intention, purpose, and design- That's near enough for me to the Divine. ROBERT FROST PEGGY LEE RAFFERTY Orchard Knob Meriden, Connecticut GOVERNMENT Laws are the very bulwarks of liberty. They define every man's rights, and stand between and defend the indi- vidual liberties of all men. J. G. HOLLAND CHARRIE GODSAY RANDALL 910 Washington Road Pittsburgh 28, Pennsylvania ENGLISH The only real voyage is not an ap- proach to landscapes but a viewing of the universe with the eyes of a hundred other people. MARCEL PROUST ROSLYN RASKIN 175 West 12th Street New York 11, New York HISTORY The nightingale sings no less won- drously this night for having sung an- other. WALTER BENTON BETTE-JANE RAPHAEL 3496. Bedford Avenue Brooklyn, New York ENGLISH The stars are beautiful, Because of a flower That cannot be seen. ANTOINE DE SAINT-EXUPERY CHRISTINE FLEMING RENCHARD Hegemans Lane, Old Brookville Long Island, New York ENGLISH One must know oneself. If this does not serve to discover truth, it at least serves as a rule of life, and there is nothing better. PASCAL VICKI LEE ROGOSIN 35 Palo Alto Place Mount Vernon, New York ART HISTORY PSYCHOLOGY Jack of all trades and master of none . . . ANONYMOUS RUTH ANN RONEY 118 Ridgewood Avenue Glen Ridge, New Jersey HISTORY CATHERINE ROWE 175 Brewster Road Scarsdale, New York ECONOMICS No one will pay par for new stock when he can buy the same old stock in the market at a discount, ELVIN DONALDSON PAMELA FERN RUBIN 6 C Troy Drive Springfield, New Jersey FRENCH Chercher, loin des vains bruits . . . un peu De solitude, un peu de silence, un ciel bleu . . . VICTOR HUGO JOAN ELIZABETH RUSH 926 Morris Turnpike Short Hills, New Jersey ENGLISH Learn of the little Nautilus to sail, Spread the thin oar, and catch the driving gale. ALEXANDER POPE MERLE BETH RUINA 1433 Bay 28th Street Far Rockaway, New York PSYCHOLOGY Those only are happy . . . who have their minds fixed on some object other than their own happiness . . . JOHN STUART MILL ANNE STEPHENS RYAN 420 East 64th Street New York 21, New York ENGLISH How but in custom and in ceremony Are innocence and beauty born? Ceremony's a name for the rich horn And custom for the spreading laurel tree. W. B. YEATS NANCY COOPER RUSTICI Elmridge Road Westerly, Rhode Island ENGLISH Let me mot to the marriage of true minds admit impediments. WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE MARCIA ANNE RYGH 3441 Solana Court Lafayette, California ENGLISH We shall not cease from exploration And the end of all our exploring Will be to arrive where we started And know the place for the first time. T. S. ELIOT SOPHIE DEACOSTA SARGENT 2344 California Street N. W. Washington, D. C. PHILOSOPHY Ye who held your lives in hand- Skimmers, who on oceans four Petrels were, and larks ashore. HERMAN MELVILLE ELIZABETH ANNE SAVELL Mere Point Road Brunswick, Maine ART HISTORY A little Kingdom I possess, Where thoughts and feelings dwell; And very hard the task 1 find Of governing it well. LOUISA MAY ALCOTT PATRICIA LOU SAID Ardcoan House, Curley Hill Strabane, Northern Ireland ART HISTORY You shall be free indeed when your days are mot without a care nor your nights without a want. But rather when these things girdle your life and yet you rise above them naked and unbound. KAHLIL GIBRAN SUSAN BARBARA SCHIFFMAN 164 Prospect Place Rutherford, New Jersey ENGLISH La redlite ne se forme que dans la memoire. PROUST NANCY MARIE SCHOEPFER 86 Arnold Road Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts GOVERNMENT For in the dew of little things the heart finds its morning and is re- freshed. KAHLIL GIBRAN EUNICE ELIZABETH SCHRINER 118 Argyle Avenue West Hartford, Connecticut MUSIC People who make music together can- not be enemies, at least not while the music lasts. NANCY SUE SCHNEIDER PAUL HINDEMITH 80 Knolls Crescent Riverdale 63, New York ENGLISH If white and black blend, soften and unite A thousand ways, is there no black or white? Ask your own heart, and nothing is so plain; i Tis io mistake them, costs the time and pain. ALEXANDER POPE DIANE JUNE SCHWARTZ 184-46 Radnor Road Jamaica Est. 32, New York PHILOSOPHY My father moved through theys of we, singing each new leaf out of each tree and every child was sure that spring danced when she heard my father sing E. E. CUMMINGS MARTHA RAE SCRIBNER Scotch Cap Road Quaker Hill, Connecticut GOVERNMENT Hope is the thing with feathers that perches in the soul And sings the tune without the words And never stops at all. EMILY DICKINSON DEBORAH DEPREZ SCOTT 35 East Pennsylvania Shelbyville, Indiana HISTORY I am not one who must have everything; Yet 1 must have my dreams If I must live, For they are mine. EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON HAZEL SUE SEALFON 185 B. 148th Street Newponsit 94, New York GOVERNMENT Your goal is freedom, but freedom may only be achieved through dis- cipline. MARTHA GRAHAM SUSAN C. SHAPIRO 15 Pell Place New Rochelle, New York ENGLISH We've got to have rules and obey them. After all, we're mot savages. We're English; and the English are best at everything. WILLIAM GOLDING ANNE ROSAMOND SHAW 24 Hubbard Road Weston 93, Massachusetts ENGLISH On n'est jamais si heureux ni si malheureux quw'on simagine. LA ROCHEFOUCAULD LUCIE GALE SHELDON 107 Patterson Avenue Greenwich, Connecticut PHILOSOPHY If anybody wants to clap, now's the time to do it. A. A. MILNE PENELOPE JEANNE SICHOL 10 Viola Road Suffern, New York ENGLISH The truth shall make you free. joun 8:32 MADELINE SIEGFRIED 2111 Albemarle Road Brooklyn, New York ENGLISH Experimenting . . . I hung the Moon on various Branches of the Pine. HOKUSHI EILEEN SHIELA SILVERMAN 127 Tecumseh Drive Longmeadow, Massachusetts PHILOSOPHY I decline to accept the end of man . . . man will not merely endure: he will prevail . . . he has a soul, a spirit capable of compassion and sacrifice and endurance. WILLIAM FAULKNER JOYCE CAROL SIROVER 14 Pinetree Road Westbury, New York SOCIOLOGY There is a Destiny that makes us brothers; None goes his way alone. All that we send into the lives of others Comes back into our own. EDWIN MARKHAM ROBERTA HELEN SLONE Box 379 Chatham, Massachusetts HISTORY We dance round in a ring and suppose, But the secret sits in the middle and knows. ROBERT FROST BETSY BROOKE SMITH 56 Berkeley Street Reading, Massachusetts PSYCHOLOGY Let those love now, Who never loved before; And those who always love, Now love the more. ANONYMOUS MARGOT STERLING SMITH 17810 Lake Road Lakewood 7, Ohio HISTORY Only when one is connected to one's own core is one connected to others . . . ANNE MORROW LINDBERGH NANCY CARTER SMITH 45 Fox Den Road Bristol, Connecticut HISTORY Measure the height of what thoy knowest by the depths of thy power to do. FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE JOAN ROOS SNYDER 7906 Seven Mile Lane Pikesville 8, Maryland ENGLISH It is silly not to hope . . . Besides it is a sin. Do not think about sin . . . There are enough problems now with- out sin. Also I have no understand- ing of it. ERNEST HEMINGWAY MARY ANN STERN 1230 Park Avenue New York 28, New York FRENCH Les grandes pensees viennent du coeur. VAUVENARGUES NANCY WENTWORTH SPENCER 121 Valentine Street West Newton, Massachusetts PHILOSOPHY Oh my soul, do not aspire to immortal life, ut exhaust the limits of the possible. PINDAR PENELOPE ANN STEELE 61 Bedford Place Glen Rock, New Jersey ECONOMICS Man's love is of man's life a thing apart; 'Tis woman's whole existence, LORD BYRON NANCY DIANE STEFFKE Route 1 Wausau, Wisconsin HISTORY Already ripening barberries grow red, the ageing asters scarce breathe in their bed. Who is not rich, with summer nearly done will never have a self that is his own. RAINER MARIE RILKE SUSAN SAUBERT STIETZEL 5 Washington Street South Norwalk, Connecticut GERMAN Ich tanze, wie ich kann. LESSING MARCIA ELLEN STUART 81 Lincoln Avenue New London, Connecticut SOCIOLOGY It is apparent that men can be social beings no longer than they believe each other. SAMUEL JOHNSON LOIS ANNE SUTTON 616 Harold Street Mamaroneck, New York ENGLISH Measure my strangeness with my un- ripe years: Before 1 know myself, seek not to know me. WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE SALLY INGHAM SWEET Cobb Lane Tarrytown, New York HISTORY Books are good enough in their own way, but they are a mighty bloodless substitute for life. ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON BARBARA JUNE THOMAS Blue Hill Ledges Hadlyme, Connecticut ENGLISH 1 turned and looked back upward. The whole sky was blue; And the thick flakes floating at a pause Were but frost knots on an airy gauze, With the sun shining through. ROBERT FROST ROBERTA ELEANOR TUTTLE 1084 Whitney Avenue Hamden, Connecticut CLASSICS I am persuaded that every time a man smiles but much more so when he laughs it adds something to this fragment of life. STERNE ELIZABETH JANE TURNER Sunset Ridge Road Northfield, Illinois ENGLISH Too much of a good thing can be wonderful. MAE WEST GRACE HILL VANNER 10 Oxford Street Winchester, Massachusetts FRENCH In the midst of winter, I discovered that there was in me an invincible summer. ALBERT CAMUS ROBERTA LOUISE VATSKE 420 Fountain Street New Haven 15, Connecticut ART HISTORY She was the single artificer of the world In which she sang. And when she sang, the sea, Whatever self it had, became the self That was her song, for she was the maker. WALLACE STEVENS JANE SHEPHERD VEITCH 34 Sweetbriar Road Summit, New Jersey CLASSICS Just a wee deoch an dorris Before we gang awa . . . If y' can say It's a brae brecht moonlecht necht Then you're all right, ve 'ken. SIR HARRY LAUDER PENELOPE ANNE VAUGHN 695 Mentor Road Akron 3, Ohio HISTORY 1 am not one who was born with knowledge. 1 am one who loves the past and earnestly seeks to know i, CONFUCIUS LINDA JOYCE VINER 99 Quercus Avenue Willimantic, Connecticut ENGLISH The voice of life in me cannot reach the ear of life in you; but let us talk that we may not feel lonely. KAHLIL GIBRAN BARBARA ANN WALKER 55 Phyllis Drive Naugatuck, Connecticut, MATHEMATICS It is a luxury to learn; but the lux- ury of learning is not to be compared with the luxury of teaching. ROSWELL D. HITCHCOCK EUGENIE SCHOEN WALLAS 1149 Centre Drive St. Louis 17, Missouri GOVERNMENT This is the hardest of all: toc close the open hand out of love, and keep modest as a giver. FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE MILBREY KEITH WALLIN 109 Grovers Avenue Bridgeport 5, Connecticut PHILOSOPHY It is a luxury to be understood. RALPH WALDO EMERSON SUSAN JOAN WARREN Keveney Lane Yarmouth Port, Massachusetts ENGLISH in time of daffodils Cwho know the goal of living is to grow forgetting why, remember how E. E. CUMMINGS KAREN JEFFRIE WEIS 222 Cedar Highland Park, Illinois ENGLISH There is a vitality, a life-force, an energy, a quickening that is translat- ed through you into action and be- cause there is only one of you in all of time, this expression is unique. MARTHA GRAHAM CAROL SHEARER WEBER Pine Lawn Selinsgrove, Pennsylvania ZOOLOGY Born with the gift of laughter, and the sense that the world was mad., RAFAEL SABATINI SANDRA WELLS 46 Little Brook Road Wilton, Connecticut HISTORY Le jour n'est pas plus pur Que le fond de nos pensees, Et nos reves sont dazur VERLAINE HARRIET BRYAN WELLS 209 Churchill Drive Wilmington 3, Delaware HISTORY And we, that now make merry in the Room They left, and Summer dresses in new Bloom, Ourselves must we beneath the Couch of Earth Descend, ourselves to make a couch for whom? OMAR KHAYYAM CARLOTTA POWNALL WILSEN 625 First Street Greenport, New York MUSIO The music in my heart I bore, Long after it was heard no more. WILLIAM WORDSWORTH SUSAN ELIZABETH WELLS 384 Lambert Road Orange, Connecticut HISTORY I shall be telling this with a sigh Somewhere ages and ages hence: Two roads diverged in a wood, and I - I took the one less traveled by, And that has made all the difference. ROBERT FROST CAROLYN ELIZABETH WINTERS 29 St. Paul's Place New Rochelle, New York CHEMISTRY Le coeur a ses raisons que la raison ne connait point. PASCAL CAROL ANN WILKIN Route 2 Belton, Missouri ECONOMICS A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds. RALPH WALDO EMERSON SARAH ANN WOOD 40 Niles Hill Road New London, Connecticut CHEMISTRY PAMELA ANN WORK 4031 Bayview Drive Fort Lauderdale, Florida HISTORY But, for my own part, it was Greek to me, WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE SARAH CADWELL WRIGHT 216 East Frederick Street Rhinelander, Wisconsin ECONOMICS The world is so full of a number of things, I'm sure we should all be as happy as kings. ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON SARA PALMER WOODWARD Surplus Street Duxbury, Massachusetts STUDIO ART All art is quite useless. OSCAR WILDE PATRICIA WYHOF 247 Palmer Avenue North Tarrytown, New York HISTORY Who first invented work, and bound the free And holidayrejoicing spirit down.. . To that dry drudgery at the desk's dead wood? CHARLES LAMB MARILYN ELLEN YUDIEN 7 Pine Drive South Roslyn, New York PSYCHOLOGY Love goes toward love, as schoolboys from their books; But love from love, toward school with heavy looks. WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE SUSAN GAMEWELL YOUNG Ashton, Maryland ENGLISH Ful wys is he that kan himselven knowe. CHAUCER CAROL ANN MARIE ZINKUS 25 Ames Street Worcester 10, Massachusetts FRENCH Without music life would be a mistake. FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE IN THE TRADITION OF JUNIORS a show marked by chaotic enthusiasm took place back stage came a quick metamorphosis Shakespeare wrote the sonnets Chaucer wrote the tales . and somebody wrote about a banana My real name is Oedipus but my MOther calls me Sexy Rexy. a class that plays together . . . r Q - e Q lo 0 o v S a o i wv from ladies-in-waiting . . . to black-robed furies 145 146 HISTORY OF THE CLASS OF 1963 7o In recording its history in the files of Connecticut College, the class of 1963 may be entered as a classf. of firsts and lasts. Our class was privileged to be the first class to be a link between the old and the new. In .011;11'.' our years, we have witnessed a change from a student population of 500 members to one of well over 1,200. With this growth, our class has been a transitional part between the last of the small and the first of the large. : r In the beginning someone created the Class of 1963, an eager and varied group of 369 members. It is sufficient to say that we survived Freshman Week. The first semester found many of us either thinner from the now unthink- able five course system or thicker from the concentrated hours spent in the snack shop. We were the first class to be able to use, for four full years, the facilities of Crozier Williams. Freshman year was unique, for it was rr.:arked by the presentation of the faculty show in which we found our new and awesome teachers cast in most peculiar roles. Returning sophomore year our class immediately noticed the first group of graduate students at Connecticut - men who used our hockey field for football and who seemed to be permanent residents of the snack shop. We no- ticed the appearance of a few surrealistic bicycle racks. We participated in Mascot Hunt but not with too much luck, as we came in second, there being only two participants. Similar luck was with us later on in the year as our compet play, Everyman, took third place, and our compet song was panned by the critics, The end of our second year marked the transition we changed from a class of firsts to one of lasts. s It is for this reason :f;t Junior vear is so memorable. Our class was caught in the center of the transition from a small school to a larger one, from a female president to a male president, from five courses to four, and from no North campus to a North Dormitory Complex. We felt rather peculiar taking only four courses until we received our assignment schedules. The new dorms were spreading all over campus, and none of us could take a step without running almost head on into a bull dozer. Furthermore, many members of the Class of 1963 were almost run over by the sudden increase in the number of bicycles. Each old path had suddenly become a drag strip and each innocent pedestrian, a moving target. The surrealistic bicycle racks were replaced by the more functional ones of the Baroque. The announcement during our second semester that Miss Park would be leaving for New Frontiers was one of the greatest changes our class saw, and we began speculating about whom our new president would be. Second semester also saw the presentation of a most amusing Junior Show. The whole class united to perform this work of art entitled A Midsemester Night's Dream. It was at this time that the latent talent of our class was unearthed. Wit and songs modernized some classic works of literature. Our receptive parents were lulled to dream by such memorable songs at Sexy Rexy and Marching to Canterbury. Nights were also spent in preparation for Compet Play and Sings. At last, after the accomplishments of Junior year, our class moved from one of lasts to firsts. This new recognition was accompanied by shocking orange signs of '63 painted on the pavement and a few trees. Might we add that no amount of sanding can remove this important momento. As the year came to a close, we bid farewell to Miss Park at an honorary assembly, remembering her personal interest in and long years of dedication to Connecticut. Welcoming Dr. Shain at an anxiously-awaited assembly in the Spring, our class again was honored to be a link between the old and the new. As the close of of Junior year drew nearer and the reality of Senior year became less of a dream, we began to search frantically for something resembling an academic robe. It was an interesting moment when we donned our oversized robes, or some substitute, and our undersized hats, or some substitute, and marched down the aisles of the auditorium in a state of sleepy wonder. After being greeted by President Shain and the faculty and administration, we soon lost our special feeling of being Seniors and found our- selves beginning another year. Many of us found ourselves residents of the cinder block luxuries of the new dormi- tories and the Elizabeth Harris Refectory. The bookstore, under new management, modernized things to such an ex- tent that paper bags now were given with every purchase 0 F 40 or more books so that half of them are not lost on the way to the dormitory, picked up, and resold. A new wing was added to the library, and we felt a little lost in our f!rsr attempt to find bmks..Sudc.Ie.nly the Cuban crisis was upon us, and we found ourselves seriously evaluating the situation as mature and voting citizens. With tlEe easing of. world tensions, things returned tolnormal, and we began to prepare for Senior Melodrama. The production was entitled Red Ring Around Rosey and introduced Rose Americana and Johnny Bircher, as well as a few rather soft oranges and many more very hard apples. The cast and about half the audience returned them with a good right hook both finally retiring with a few bruises. For the first semester, our clas ivileged to h : , s was privileged to have a special student from Spellman College, Brenda Hall, whom we were all sorry to see leave at the end of the semester. Senior year also saw the extention of the privilege of having men in the room for another hour or so but the door still remains open. 3 Reyiewing our four years, some marked trend-s are evident. For example, we have been witnesses of campus in- flation evidenced by the increased cost of post office boxes from 75 to a shockingly high $3.00. 1 i vein, our class has evolved with a growing Connecticut College. We have seen asgwge 'hgve oW noa e senivi,ls change to a new academic system and an increasingly more liberal stud : RIOWE TRUTS TFREE,, L18 ang cagen , ent government. We are proud to be a class of firsts and lasts, a link between the old and the new; for we have been acquainted with b 11: hich h bined to give us a most memorable and productive four years. i WAl b T Aggie Cochran, Class Historian Somehow a few of us had left-over energy to indulge in CREATIVE ARTS 147 o 3 2 e c 2 5 Wurae A . Ueallor N Fuerg from i l -l-FJ - mL WA L Y D Mh Y 1 Kk ; Ilh.' ;'Wll I T i i 5 I L 2 I-m. , , s Ier F - Hllu t..lld' l r $ S . Sla ANSTA - WY KR A 0 -y -.AI! H 17 H N 148 In Answer to Dylan Thomas There are roses in Milk Wood, beautiful smouldering red roses which catch large diamond dewstones with their giant thorns. They hold them there and become women clutching them to their breasts in the sudden rush of milk and men. There are no hours in Milk Wood so that roses keep their fragile b?ush reflected in the dewstones and never commit suicide. There is a ticking space outside of Milk Wood m?ed by Lord Hourglass with a lolly-pop heart-shaped pendulum and a grand Vesuvius clock ieghing black lava and heat from its open greedy mouth. Next to it sits an ormolu c ock that bickers to chatting biddies over back fences. There in the beds lie the beardless husbands counting the wife-faced sheep which baa in contralto clock voices into the nights of tomorrow, baaing the earth away. susan schiffman hazel sealfon 149 A trembling drop hangs thinly from the wire of the rusted center line until age comes down, twangs the narrow line like gentle summer, and shakes the tremulous drop away but so softly. It is right that the drop in falling is ignorant, in falling is more precious, in going down is dancing rather than stumbling the way of the weary and worn ocean, is shimmering, not chattering in the downward flight down with sudden age to below without the sage shuddering sadness of the downward hawk, dove black crow Cevil birds whose warnings not heard die and are out-fallen by the drop drifting down in the lies of age - - - to night + sara woodward elizabeth borman 150 - 8 n.l. s -0 - L L o s sara woodward 151 Haiku The white wind runs its fingers through October's sky dust grey falling leaves. cynthianna hahn + v beatrice porter 152 I cannot recreate your face although I use my mirror as a guide and twist my features till they ape your own for when my face is yours then there's no room for mirrors and I'm blind amelia fatt courtesy of INSIGHT laurie blake 153 diane lewis 154 sara woodward MARY'S DREAM Eunice Schriner mpe 1 4 4. W + L+ o t 5; ,,....- 2 ot - i Slow with Mationexpress;se e D F Ay o'er Y - LA Al d 1 m ! iyl ST L LV T N N Y . L+ IW T -+ h b W +ri al M2 s Nl N W s ARk ' il Al w. 3 + - I+ i 83 . H 3 Y e HH AII I3 4 L : b, L m 9 il - ... TT15$ L YRR N Nl N F i 1 . LT 2 T, o, 8L N L SRRy L! ,m st 4L x Hll W-. ! - w Ll N !1.1 4 1t bl Ll - Q f P IM- j f f A Y M . 4 T o - '-..ll.r II N+ M atm: b u-.... ..u........ hr.. L A rm.j SN 8 i 1 .. : i . b AL 1 It m.l. M W N lw R + . g L3RS 3 AR SR . T $ : Hs i .l..h B M o N - Nl 2 H L 1T w b F D .m I a 1 H. i L : i Ea il ik ..H . fie 1 H : Mt .tL'! . s W 7 i M +f - - e ket M m k MM T : - NS M 4 M i aerdles 18E M Gl : T I, el : 14 S SN S+ L .-w g . lm- M -....J slh m 0 + A O HE an 3 i T-. ,M o l-.m gt Ly 4 l-.MJ b TSR T .v-M Ll.hu..r. L .... J.M i N WK x A 2 i .m L AN 1 A - IJI P . 5 N v . 2 ! . v . 155 156 mary alice fenn To put on your old green pants, worn at the seat from chairs, and smooth at the thigh - I rant slowly about love; there is nothing brand new to say. I do not write but watch you instead, your hands and the way Fmr back looks, long and thin. must be like the noon child who cannot speak, does not know that it wants to; but my wild eyes, big in my child's head, follow every shape and shadow of your long, smooth body. My eyes lie begging, the child below stirs for us in this green room. Your back and this silence is love, not the heavy silence which settles in chapel rafters; above even the winter blanket in quiet. Once I needed to touch you, constantly, fearfully, child T had become, I would cry cool sounds and reach for your hands. Now I, clothed in old green pants, smile at your back, until your grey eves turn and we two rant slowly into silence and blue night. sara woodward jane engel 157 laurie blake 158 Last weekend Phil told me he had seen a frog's tongue under a microscope and he saw all the blood rushing around in the veins and little white things charging through to get to the wound he'd inflicted on the frog. The other day 1 was walking to class and I saw a little boy in a car and he stuck his tongue out at me. Not malici- ously, just playfully. So T went over to him and asked him if he'd ever looked at the underside of his tongue, He said no and curled his tongue up and looked at it in the rear-view mirror. After studying it for a while he came back to the window and asked me what all those blue things were. I said they were veins. He said what do the do? I said they carried blood through him like the blue things in his wrist., He said why? I wished Phil were there to tell him but I said we all had blood in us and hadn't he ever scraped his knee? He said no. Hadn't he ever cut himself anywhere? He said no. I said oh, well. I asked him whose son he was and he said Joe's. Then we talked about somethin? else, about the weather or something, Finally there was a pause and he went back to the rear-view mirror, curled his tongue up and looked at it for a long time while I stood there watching him. He came back to the window but didn't talk for a long time. Then he said tell me about it. Tell me everything. dyann altman cecily dell elizabeth borman naomi grossman diane lewis Miss Offenbacher Miss Offenbacher blinked her eyes And I heard her three rooms down The hall, smash, smash, smash She went, batting her lashes. It was quite embarrassing To be let in on her secret Had she known, she might have died Or at least stopped her blinking. But she did not guess my intrusion. Until three o'clock in the morning The smash of her lashes lasted And I myself could not think for the noise. joan snyder courtesy of INSIGHT 161 It would be impossible to replace the FACULTY with THINKING MACHINES 162 e i d PRESIDENT CHARLES E. SHAIN Only a year ago last March, at a long anticipated assembly, we welcomed our new president, Charles E. Shain. In this past year we 152ve come to know and to appreciate his enthusiasm for the college and his sincere interest in the indi- vidual student. He has extended his fn'endFiness to us not only in his speeches but also in many informal conversa- tions with us, particularly at dinners in individual dormitories which he himself initiated. Here we found him both eager to discuss our ideas and willing to listen to our suggestions. Mr. Shain's concern for the problems of education, both as a teacher and as an administrator, and his active interest in the continued advancement of education make us look forward to the further development of Connecticut College under his guidance. 164 MISS ELIZABETH BABBOTT Dean of Sophomores From her past position as President of Connecticut's Stu- dent Government to her present office of Dean of Sopho- mores, Miss Babbott has played a vital and unique role in this college community. Her antidote for dealing with sophomore slump and transferitis has been an effective combination of spontaneity and sound guidance with a sprinkling of soft-spoken humor. Miss Babbott's contacts with students, however, have not been limited to her work as Dean of Sophomores. Students of zoology have felt her enthusiasm as a teacher; foreign students have counted her among the first and best of their American friends. Although we regret Miss Babbott's departure, nevertheless we look forward with her to her new experiences, and wish her the success equal to that which she has known here at Connecticut, not only as a dean but also as a student and teacher. APPRECIATION - MISS LOUISE W. HOLBORN Professor of Government The students of this college will remember Miss Holbor's enthusiasm for and dedication to their causes, whether they have been individual causes or ones which were larger in scope. She has given lectures of ultimate value to the stu- dent body and ias brought notable speakers here. She has given new impetus to student organizations, and has helped to create a greater student awareness of national and inter- national issues. If at times her competence in the field of overnment has necessitated an active life away from the onnecticut College campus, she has willingly brought back to her classes the rich background which these activi- ties have afforded her. Miss Holborn's students and associates know her as a source of unfailing energy through which she gives herself fully to her students and friends, and all have been impressed by her warmth and by her support of worthy causes. MRS. SVETLANA KASEM-BEG Chairman of the Russian Department A student's opportunity to arrive at an understanding of and a sensibility for a language and a people foreign to one's own is indeed a rare one. Through the skillful instruction of Mrs. Kasem-Beg, many students at Connecticut have had the opportunity to gain an insight into the Russian lan- uage. In her teaching of Russian, as well as in her in- ?Grmal conferences and dinners, she has opened both her- self and her country to her students. Her patience and un- derstanding, as well as her willingness to devote much of her time to individual students, are several of the many warm qualities which have made knowing her memorable. Countless alumnae of Connecticuc College will remember Arthur W. Quimby as the man who had two great interests in life: his students and his music. No student problem was ever too small to command his undivided attention, and no piece of music he ever performed was too unimportant to receive the maximum of his time, talent, and energy- The growth and development of the music department since Mr. Quimby's arrival in 1942 may be seen in the well filled library of scores, books, and records, the enlarged size of the music faculty, and the number of music majors who have graduated from the college under his leadership. The music major has become one of the strongest in any liberal arts college, and the Connecticut College Choir has taken its place with the finest choral groups in the East. Music stugents as well as hundreds of others who have taken Mr. Quimby's introductory course will remember him as a sym- bol of what the Greeks would have called the ethos in music. Their sound is gone out into all the land and their words unto the ends of the world. MR. ARTHUR W. QUIMBY Lucretia L. Allyn Professor of Music 165 ELIZABETH BABBOTT Dean of Sophomores ALICE JOHNSON Dean of Freshmen WARRINE EASTBURN Assistant to the President and Dean of Administration GERTRUDE NOYES Dean of Women TRUSTEES 1962-1963 MRS. ROBERT P. ANDERSON Noank, Connecticut THE HONORABLE RAYMOND E. BALDWIN 85 Moseley Terrace Glastonbury, Connecticut MISS ESTHER L. BATCHELDER 8 Devon Road Silver Spring, Maryland THE HONORABLE ALLYN L. BROWN, SR. 262 Broadway Norwich, Connecticut MRS. BENJAMIN J. BUTTENWIESER 450 East 52nd Street New York 22, New York MISS CAROL L. CHAPPELL, ALUMNAE TRUSTEE 774 Ocean Avenue New London, Connecticut MRS. CHARLES H. DURHAM 200 East 66th Street New York 21, New York MISS LOUISE C. HOWE, HONORARY TRUSTEE 181 Washington Street Norwich, Connecticut MR. SHERMAN R. KNAPP 1210 Kensington Road Kensington, Connecticut MR. BERNHARD KNOLLENBERG Chester, Connecticut MRS. JOHN G. LEE Old Mountain Road Farmington, Connecticut THE HONORABLE RICHARD R. MARTIN, EX-OFFICIO 18 Raymond Street New London, Connecticut PROFESSOR HENRY MARGENAU 173 Westwood Road New Haven, Connecticut MRS. PARKER McCOLLESTER 157 East 75th Street New York 21, New York MRS. ARTHUR BURKHARD DR. DOROTHEA MOORE 10 Farwell Place Cambridge 38, Massachusetts MRS. JAMES W. MORRISSON, SECRETARY 770 Shennecossett Road Groton, Connecticut MRS. JOHN P. NORTHCOTT, ALUMNAE TRUSTEE 4510 Cedarwood Road Minneapolis 16, Minnesota MISS JANET M. PAINE, ALUMNAE TRUSTEE 242 East 72nd Street New York, New York PRESIDENT CHARLES E. SHAIN 320 Mohegan Avenue New London, Connecticut MR. HARVEY PICKER Edgewater Point Mamaroneck, New York MR. EARLE W. STAMM, HONORARY TRUSTEE 601 Montauk Avenue New London, Connecticut MISS ANNA LORD STRAUSS 27 East 69th Street New York 21, New York MR. FRAZAR B, WILDE, CHAIRMAN 65 Walbridge Road West Hartford, Connecticut 167 B ot - caaie RITA BARNARD Registrar M. ROBERT COBBLEDICK Director of Admissions DR. MARY N. HALL College Physician MARTIN MASTERS Director of Publicity CORBIN LYMAN Business Manager 168 ROBERT H. PIERCE Director of Development ADMINISTRATION RUTH RABORN Bursar ALICE RAMSEY Director of Personnel ELEANOR VOORHEES Director of Residence ART Row l: Miss Hayward, Instructor; Professor Hanson. Row 2: Mr. Ingle, Lecturer; Assistant Professor Lu- kosius; Professor McCloy Dept. Chairman: Associate Professor Mayhew. BOTANY Professor Goodwin Dept. Chairman; Professor Thomson; Associate Professor Niering. Missing: Mr. Zuraw: Mr. Gleason. 170 CHEMISTRY Row 1: Assistant Professor Smith: Associate Professor Johnston. Row 2: Professor Brown Dept. Chairman; Assistant Professor Prokesch: Assist- ant Professor McKeon. CHILD DEVELOPMENT Miss Bacon: Assistant Professor Warner: Professor Kennedy Acting Chairman; Assistant Professor Kuhn. 171 ECONOMICS SEEREREE. brhasarbbhadbran Row 1: Professor Morris Dept. Chairman; Mr, Wiles, Instructor. . Row 2: Professor Finney: Assistant Professor Barnard; Mrs. Maas; Associate Professor Ely. CLASSICS Profesor Evans Depi. Chairman; Mrs, Lord, Lecturer. EDUCATION Assistant Professor Eastburn; Associ Professor Holden Depi. Chairm Miss Coulter, Lecturer. ENGLISH Row 1: Professor Noyes: Assistant Professor John- son; Professor Tuve:; Assistant Professor Phillips. Row 2: Miss Parker, Instructor; Assistant Professor Seng: Professor Smyser; Professor Smyser Dept. Chairman. Associate Professor J. R. Baird; Associate Professor Meredith: Assistant Professor Jarrell; Miss Royer, Instructor; Mr. Brede- son, Instructor; Mr. Willauer, Instructor. Missing: Professor Bethurum; Assistant Professor Hazelwood: Miss De-Weese, Instructor. 173 GERMAN Mr. Burger, Instructor: Professor Hafkesbrink Dept. Chairman: Mrs. Schaefer, Instructor. 174 FRENCH Row 1: Miss Keating, Instructor; Miss Schuler, In- structor; Mrs, Murstein, Instructor; Mrs, Chadourne, Instructor: Miss Degrange. Row 2: Professor Bieber Dept. Chairman; Profes- sor Jones; Associate Professor Deguise. Missing: Professor Chadourne: Mrs. Deguise. GOVERNMENT Miss Turlington, Instructor; Professor Holborn Dept. Chair- man; Assistant Professor Fried: Miss Doro, Lecturer. HISTORY Mrs. Berkman, Instructor; Professor Cranz: Assistant Profes- sor Page: Associate Professor Lowitt: Professor Haines Dept. Chairman; Mr. Jordan, Instructor: Assistant Professor O'Boyle; Associate Professor Mulvey: Mr. Eastman, Instruc- tor; Mr. Perry, Instructor. ITALIAN Assistant Professor Manca, Missing: Professor Monaco Dept. Chair- man. MATHEMATICS Assistant Professor Schlesinger: Professor Hostinsky Acting Chairman: Mr. Transue, Instructor. 176 .,.....-- R MUSIC Professor Alter; Professor Quimby Dept. Chairman; Mrs. Boatwright, Lecturer: Assistant Professor Dale; As- sistant Professor Dendy; Assistant Professor Jacynowicz. PHILOSOPHY Mrs. Woody, Instructor; Professor Lieb man; Mr. Reiss, Instructor. Missing: Miss Phillips, Instructor. Dept. Chair- PHYSICS Professor Garrett Dept. Chairman: Miss Sah, Lecturer; Mr. Fenton, In- structor. PHYSICAL EDUCATION Associate Professor Brett Miss Conklin, Insiructor Professor Merson Dept. Chairman Assistant Professor Wood Miss Johnson, Instructor Miss Perrine, Instructor Assistant Professor Thomas Mrs. Morse, Instructor Missing: Assistant Professor Ferguson 178 PSYCHOLOGY Row 1: Assistant Professor Rhyne; Assistant Professor Torrey:; Assistant Profesor Kuhn. Row 2: Professor Desiderato Dept. Chairman; Assist- ant Professor Ebenholiz; Mr. Goldberg, Instruc- tor; Mr. Cosmides, Graduate Assistant; Mr. Spal- lone, Graduate Assistant. Missing: Mr. Kraft, Graduate Assistant; Mr. Gonzales, Graduate Assistant. RELIGION Mr. Purvis, Instructor; Associate Professor Wiles Dept. Chair- man. CoEtaee - RUSSIAN e . T 5 ' MN-.A:H Mrs. Kasem-Beg. Instructor Dep, e S Chairman - PN b Mr. Mickiewicz, Instructor N em w. Missing: Professor Reeve . Mrs. Reeve, Instructor w A SOCIOLOGY Professor Kennedy Dept. Chair- man Miss Macklin, Instructor Mrs. Vidich, Instructor Mrs. Griscom, Instructor Missing: Associate Professor Rec- ord 180 SPANISH Associate Professor Biaggi Professor Centeno Dept. Chairman Assistant Professor Kolb e ZOOLOGY Professor Kent Dept. Chairman Mrs. Richards Professor Richardson Mrs. Jones Mrs. Roach, Insiructor Associate Professor Hausman Mr. J. L., Baird, Instructor Missing: Assistant Professor Bab- boit JIXssociaie Professor Whee- er At Connecticut College everybody feels differently about ORGANIZATIONS 182 ' CABINET I Row I: R. Richman, S. Hardesty, S. Bohman, A. Gross; Row 2: N. Lindstrom, B. Drexler, M. Lanphier, F. Barth, B. Thomas, C. Jones, President; M. Wallin, C. Boyan, D. Morris; Missing: M. Emeny, M. Rygh 183 HONOR COURT C. Boyan, Chief Justice; C. Pearson, S. Blenner, C. Jones, A. Weatherby, N. Shipley, L. Massie, T. Carter, R. Lee, A. Skully; Missing: D. Nichols HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Row I: F. Barth, Speaker; M. Tobin, Secre- tary; Row 2: C. Aspinwall, P. Rafferty, D. Richmond, C. McNamara, K. Wood, R. Smith; Row 3: C. Jones, W. Coates, A. Worchester, J. Costler, P. Sichol, E. Hays, A. Braver; Row 4: M. Goldstein, D. Lyons, N. Spenser, A. Manson; Missing: J. Gross 184 JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS Row I: K. Palmer, Vice President M. Lanphier, President Row 2: T. Saalfield E. Greenspan J. Grant Row 3: S. Epstein, Treasurer M. Galati, Secretary P. Banfield HOUSE JUNIORS af Row I: S. Grimes, G. Haggerty, C. Angelo, S. Morris, L. Parker, L. Cohen, B. Kimball, 5. Hackett; Row 2: J. Zimmerman, A. Weatherby, C. Lynch, 5. Veysey, D. Richmond, S. Lates, D. Miller; Row 3: C. Layne, P. Kendall, S. Hackenberg, A. Burger, J. Grant, M. Emeny, M. Woodworth, C. Aspin- wall, B. J. Yiener, M. Silcox; Row 4: R. Guptil, C. Archer, K. Palmer, J. Curtis, M. Goldstein, J. wa!'I'IEl' 185 SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS B. Stephenson, C. Fujiwara, Secretary; S. Hardesty, President; N. Butler, Vice-President, C. Brooks, S. Kobren, Treasurer FRESHMEN CLASS OFFICERS J. Stern, Secretary J. Stickel C. Ulrich R. Schulz T. Tanaka, Treasurer J. Licht D. Davis, Vice-President R. Richman, President 186 WORK CHAIRMAN Row I: M. Rendle, B. Brachman, S. Kirtland, N. Burtch, L. McClendon, L. Fay, M. Emeny, M. Wallin; Row 2: A. Staples, E. Overbeck, N. Butler, J. Andrist, J. Gnutti, J. Campbell; Row 3: S. Hackenberg, G. Fritz, J. Klingenstein, S. Wolfenden, L. Reybine, G. Bartlett; Missing: P. Olsen, P. Cushing, B. Mitchell, L. Blubaugh, E. MacNeale, C. Fairfax, J. Goldberg, J. Bigelow, M. Ercoli, P. Silliman, K. Newhouse, J. Mednick, S. Lake 188 FOREIGN STUDENTS Row I: E. Kjellberg Stockholm, Sweden L. DeWulf Bruxelles, Belgium 1. Pristolitsch Graz, Austria M. Percovich Montevideo, Uruguay T. Ucal Istanbul, Turkey Row 2: M. Gamboa Nuevo Leon, Mexico C. Le Houerou Paris, France A. Lahti Tikkurila, Finland M. Siegfried Student Adviser B. Leander Stockholm, Sweden M. Idemitsu Tekyo, Japan ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Row 1: E. Clifford S. Hobson Row 2: R. Richman S. Eshleman R. Slone N. Lindstrom, President B. J. Viener Row 3: M. Sileox S. Hackenburg Row 4: P. Banfield G. Draper C. Layne K. Palmer INTER-CLUB COUNCIL D. Lyons N. Anderson J. Rengier M. Rygh C SYNCHERS P. Kendall, . Crandell, C. Eaton, E. Erda, L. T. Joseph, Jane Levy, Jo Levy, B. Holmes, L. Viner, C. Wilkin, C. Hastert, 5. Brayton, F. J 5 Norton' J. Paul, M. Shierson. C. Fujiwara, E. Gresnspan, B Dive. fheimer, B. Ray, J. Rising, C. LeHouerou J. Hubbard, E. Ho DANCE CLUB C. Chaykin, C. Dell, M. Finkelstein, A. Gerbes, N Gwy R. Raban, B. Schneider, H. Sealfon, M. Tup!ei:'ges. - Sanc P, nn, J. Kaplan, B. Porter, 190 SABRE AND SPUR OUTING CLUB Row I: A. Goulding P. Winslow H. Frisk J. Andrist C. Hahn Row 2: L. Hopper C. Murray S. Wolfenden Sitting: Mrs. Porter, P. Weil, J. Albrecht, S. Hobson, S. Tehan, Mr. Porter Standing: L. Goodwill, P. Coe, B. Leander, B. Brodsky, P. Lucas, B. Jackson, S. Skelly Missing: S. Goodrich, W. McCobb 191 192 RELIGIOUS FELLOWSHIP Row I front to back: S. Lates P. Brown B. Pottle Rev. Wiles Row 2: K. Johnsen M. Galati E. Kimball Row 3: B. Thomas B. Eddy E. Baldwin J. Ross Missing: D. Maulsby M. Alter M. Golart Row 1: B. Whitman, L. Parker, P. Townend J. Campbell, E. Stanley, D. Schwa;h; Row 2: N. Holbrook J. Lindseth, S. Bohman, R. Slone, C. Layne: Missing- M. Phillips, A. Manson, A. Weatherby SERVICE LEAGUE STUDENT DEVELOPMENT COMMITTEE Row I: J. Goldberg, K. Cornell; Row 2: N. Dar- ling, I. Wachtler, S. Rozen; Row 3: E. Greenspan, S. Jones, A. Orndorff, S. Kobren STUDENT LIBRARY COMMITTEE Row I: H. Harrington, J. Torson, B. Mitchell, M. Nierintz, M. Joynt; Row 2: D. Nichols, B. Abramowitz, S. Sargent, J. Humphrey 193 194 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB Row 2: C. Hunt Row I: P. Winslow E. Greenspan P, Steele E. Cohen PEACE CLUB S. Schiffman J. Parker B. Brodsky POLITICAL FORUM J. Carey M. Sinkin J. Humphrey S. Epstein M. Ronk L. Cchen CIVIL RIGHTS CLUB Standing: K. Sammis L. Pellechia S. Sunderland Seated: P. Foley D. Miller 195 FRENCH CLUB A. Fatt J. Trauner P. Rosenblum A e e S S-S e RS- GERMAN CLUB Row I: O. Unknown, P. Antell, A. Allwardt, C. Frank Row 2: R. Oetiker, S. Stietzel, C. Lunde, C. Hunt, P. Choate 196 SPANISH CLUB D. May N. Pekarski E. Efthimion ITALIAN CLUB Row I: H. Tsandoulas J. Basso J. Warner Row 2: R. Slone S. Bohman A. Allwardt S E 3 z :': CE R 2333 : B e E - :wa e : ':x 1- o ag 1 -'!,.: Q wh F 3 4 o . 3 A i !a 3 T o r , S k RUSSIAN CLUB Row I: Row 2: Row 3: Missing: S. Schneller J. Sternbach D. Weinstock B. Drexler H. Frisk S. Barngrove S. Lincoln C. Parker M. Blum M. Harman M. Galati S. Hodgdon P. Stocking C. Krauser S. Wolfenden A. Taylor Mrs. Kasem-Beg C. Hunt Mr. Mickiewicz 197 A. Storer E. Cherpak PSYCHOLOGY CLUB Row I: Z. Tricebock B. Brachman S. Hobson 4 A Lrnd BT Row 2: B. Butler J. Cavan W. Jones B. Smith J. Krieger V. Posner SCIENCE CLUB Row I: C. Winters E. Anderson Row 2: S. Grimes D. Schwartz Missing: N. Darling Row 3: E. Bartlett M. Ruina CHILD DEVELOPMENT A. Partington M. Smith B. Norris MATH CLUB E. Stanley Jane Levy C. Carter J. Campbell J. Cosler J. Zimmerman N. Grossman J. O'Donnell Jo Levy 199 INSIGHT G. Benamati E. Turner A. Ryan P. Arnold B. Brothersen C. Norton Row I: Row 2: Row 3: H. Schanz L. Leibman H. Turner P. Antell A. Jacobowitz J. Steinhurst CON N CE NSUS L. Cohen B. J. Raphael J. Milstein E. Littman Nk anbens B. Murphy A. Gross A. McGrath B.Ge 'mark C. Crossley N. Sinkin . Oliva - ; ca 2 .,. Zs -. - o B -' g -7 : z s s B g o L 13 '4'- 1 ! k f 200 WIG AND CANDLE Row I: H. Turner S. Bernstein Row 2: A. McGrath H. Jackson L. Barnhurst N. Cogut Row I: S. Shapiro B. Cochran Row 2: E. Greenspan M. Bates B. Brotherson C. Frank C. Randall Missing: 5. Geetter S. Schiffman S. Bronson P. Brown G. Goldmark S. Grimes H. Jinks D. Lyons V. Posner P. Yaughn 201 CONN CHORDS G. Crandell, D. Werle, K. Colson, J. Kowal, B. Gorra, D. Schmitz, C. Murray, C. Shimkus, R. Linder, S. Hackett, E. Greenspan, H. Turner, C. Fairfax, N. Twinem, B, Morgan, J. Sheldon 'd SCHWIFFS Row I: J. Grant B. Kimball N. Horvitz D. Little M. Hutchens M. Goldstein C. Wilsen K. Palmer A. Worcester S. Kirtland Row 2: B. Pitts B. Lamb R. Yatske Z. Wood M. Barker 202 CHOIR M. Alter E. Kady B. Potle R. Guptil G. lllsley T. Hogan E. Macneale E. Schriner B. Howard C. Giuffrida E. Leitner J. Sheldon E. Stephenson C. Morse S. Leach P. Rafferty M. Wilkens K. Wahlquist K. Palmer C. Shimkus B. Sears B. Eddy M. Woedwerth D. Willard S. Wolfenden C. Tennenbaum E. Greenspan P. Brown L. Setterholm E. Coutts B. Wallman C. Boyan P. Bvecroft B. Barker C. Hahn C. Wilsen D. Miller B. Chute B. Chase L. Morales S. Dumend D. Morris S. Dill C. Cross B. Sumner L. Foster P. Banfield C. Gress B. Hill B. Drexler K. Gale M. Buerger P. Gwynn B. Thomas J. Jacobs B. Pressprich C. Johanson C. Fullerton S. Lienhard C. Kugel 5 Sroimi W Poct C. Wiksen, J. Veitch, Presid J. Steinhurst M. Pec . Wilsen, J. Veitch, President; B. Pressprich, M. Guptil, . K. Weismann S. Rafferty $ 5 Ruides L. Barnes S. Raymond G. Bartlett R. Yatske H. Frisk H. Wells J. Grant C. Eaton S. Higgins J. Gross P. Reppert E. Hackenburg J. Sheldon M. Monroe J. Veitch S. Morris C. Angelo M. Nierintz D. Brookes E. Pleva K. Johnson 204 FRESHMAN CHOIR L. Adkins M. Comins C. Crossley A, Dickgiesser L. Fay M. Fleck E. Hedberg T. Hogan D. Hummel K. Mather A, Metz C. Nostrand G. Turner B. Wallman B. Burke B. Chute C. Davis W. Doble T. Ingraham L. Johnston K. Landen E. Macneale A. Storer E. Weinberger L. Wohlberg J. Marschner S. Dumond L. Gollan E. Hackenburg J. Harbert A. Kalp N. Herrick C. Miller T. Miller D. Nichols K. Urion L. White C. Basile D. Brookes S. Burnet A. Carter . Clement Griffith . Drew Harrigan Hatch Jones Leng . Schreyer el il el T MUSIC ORCHESTRA J. Humphrey B. Weinberger L. Sheldon L. Massie A, Brown C. Ulrich A, Shapire J. Humphrey S. Worley A, Weinstein D. Brookes S. Flynn A. Yicary E. Hardin L. Maxen M. Faney H. Kane S. Hodgdon C. Gross E. Kady E. Schriner CLUB E. Schriner B. Sears E. Kady DORMITORIES are things we must be in by 12.00 at night The dorms are pictured in following order: ELIZABETH WRIGHT HAMILTON LAMBDIN MARY MORRISSON MARSHALL ROSEMARY PARK BURDICK GRACE SMITH KATHERINE BLUNT LARRABEE BRANFORD KNOWLTON JANE ADDAMS FREEMAN MARY HARKNESS WINDHAM EMILY ABBEY VINAL COMMUTERS 207 Row I: M. Montanye, J. Trauner, S. Rand, C. Lewis, C. Hahn, R. Abel, D. Robottom, G. Turner, J. Spicer, Olds, M. Beckerman, P. Winslow, M. Reemelin, 5. Robinson ELIZABETH WRIGHT B. Johnston, B. Luntz, G. Row I: J. Yasser C. LeHouerou J. Tanenbaum Y. Posner L. Johnston B. Drexler Row 2: R. Parnell J. Veitch J. Faulds . Martin J. Patenaude J. Terson D. Hershiser M. Moershel R. Barnes L. Lindsay M. Peck Row I: K. Newhouse, G. Flannery, D. Hershman; Row 2: S. DuMond, P. Hatch, S. Young, G. Soper, B. Litchfield, M. Wilson, M. Daniels, C. Shamroth, M. Landsberg, G. lllsley; Row 3: M. Monrce, H. Frisk, Miss Royer, W. McCobb, M. Shierson, C. Keyes, P. Hattis, J. Rush, L. Mellen Row I: L. Nebolsine T. Gold E. Cohen B. Griffith M. Yudien P. Resenblum L. Beekman A. Kane Row 2: A. Brown J. Benbasset L. Copeland T. Yonov L. Reckler T. Stocking 5. Harrigan 209 Row I: B. Eddy H. Jacksen Row 2: E. Grob B. Bloomenthal A. Weinstein M. Rieff S. Schmid Row 3: M. Finklestein E. Hofheimer K. Colson B. Lamb M. Reeves HAMILTON Row 1: S. Weingarten, E. Gold, S. Finch, R. Goodwill, J. Carstensen, A. Allen; Row 2: K. Garcia, S. Eggers: Row 3: L. Shemin, C. Angelo, L. Wickwire, G. Martin, J. Donovl Arbuthnot, B. Kady, an, D. Ann Roessner J. Worley, P. Antell, 210 . K. Palmer, E. Schwatz, L. Rogers, Row I: C. Maxman, A. Weatherby, S. Morris, . Magenis, S. Hackenburg Short, G. Fritts, C. Rolfe M. Kaufman: Row 2: M. Lanphier, B. Howard, L. DeWulf, Y. Draper, J. Row 1: D. Werle, 5. Moatz, D. Hummel, M. Welch, J. Adler, . Tiffany, W. Andrews, J. Gray, P. Byecroft, K. K. Wahlquist; Row 2: B. Ray, P. Townend, S. Havill, J. Axlerod, J. Licht, M. Silcox, J. Hackstaff, M. Lasher Missing: B. Balamaci, N. Dana, D. Ephron, P. Evans, C. Giuffrida, S. Hardesty, L. Hardin, M. Kaitz, C. Layne, P. Marx, S. Mikkelsen, R. Platte, L. Randall, D. Richmond, B. Schneider, R. Stearns, S. Steeger, S Thomases, L. Golden, W. Doble, P. Rabinowitz TAs 211 Row I: E. Chase, M. Bates, A. Fichman, L. Campbell, C. Coracci, S. Smith, A. DuBrow; Row 2: M. McCrea, C. Potter, A. Albee, J. Matthews, M. Cooper, M. Geyer, B. Juram, S. Myers, A. Taylor, L. Feely, B. Hibben, G. Andrews Row I: L. Larkey, C. Sweeney, M. Smith, E. Marcus, K. Weis, H. Axlerod, N, Lindst Hansen, M. Goodrich, J. Harris, T. Dracopoules, J. Campbell, C, Sidelman, S. NN:: ;!OCm, I:::'u:'::a.m:;'? .RDW 2: P' Goodwin, Y. Budarz, K. Moore, M. Cambria, B. Diamondstein, M. Emeny, K. Metzger, A. Rutledge, B. Sears, E. Silverman, K.-Weeks i Missing: J. Bishop, L. Blubaugh, S. Brusman, M. 212 Row 1: M. Geldstein P. Johnson S. Veysey S. Passell A. Orndorff C. Price F. Robinson L. Marks Row 2: J. Levy S. Fuld J. Snyder C. Randall S. Claster S. Gemeinhardt J. Grass Row 1: T. Ferguson M. Hosmer B. Gorenstein J. Vlecides Row 2: K. Cornell J. Anderson B. Grubb J. George E. Clifford 213 Row I: J. Angell, N. Anton, C. Lewis, C. Higgins, J. Davison, K. Legg, S. Couch, Luntz, E. Cole S. Rothschild, A. Ansell, D. Dana, S. Ekberg, J. Kott M. Steele, 5. Burnet, J. Wilson, S. Row I: H. Reppert M. Stewart B. Presspricht J. Gnutti D. Goodwin M. Plass N. Twinem Row 2: S. Rozen J. Jacobs A, Keer M. Emmons N. Citron M, Wilkins C. Fullerton Row 1: A. Norlander L. Oplatka M. Pierce P. Rubin D. Sullivan H. Harding S. Bronson Row 2: M. Jaekle D. Schmitz R. Hitch S. Wright I. Pristolitsch C. Zinkus S. Jenkins S. Foley E. Saalfield MARY MORRISSON Row I: B. Caulley, B. Higginbottom, F. Keutmann, S. Bannister, A. Baker; Row 2: M. Joynt, N. Smith, J. Sirover, S. Elson, I. Wachtler, D. Hyde, R. Raskin, E. Efthimion, L. Hart; Row 3: J. Rengiar. A. Worcester, B. Viener, S. Hackett, N. Anderson, L. Vasil, M. Fenn, N. Steffke, P. Said; Missing: S. Albro, E. Baldwin, J. Bredy, D. Cunningham, C. Dawn, C. Fairfax, J. Grant, J. Judson, J. Kastner, B. Kimball, T. McNab, S. Sweet, J. Zimmerman w 215 i .-l' :- : i ! t. P SO i i : 2: L. Foster, E, Overbeck, k i . Sharp, B. Murphy, M. Rehor, E. Litman, G. Oliva, B. Sumn.er, Row : ter, 5?'1. .?'.:: 2:2?; .?:: ?:h ::t; La. Diilap, E Tudenh 'S Kobran, C.. Ziokko, M, Rauch,. 5. Walbridge, L. Cohen, N. Sinkin Row I: D. Maulsby S. Kirshnit D. Goldberg B. Gorham B. Reid S. Cunningham N. Silverstone Row 2: L. Jackle R. Smith W. Lehman L. Wohlberg L. Schechter A. Carter E. Macneale Row I: E. Decker, C. Johnston, A. Lahti, T. Ucal, L. Sanders, S. Breckenridge, R. Shor, S. Roessner, V. Hicks, S. Withers; Row 2: P. Shleffar, Y. Brown, J. Herz, J. Nagel, D. Kraft, S. Goodrich, M. Tobin, D. Davis, P. Pearson; Missing: F. Barth, B. Baruch, M. Birnbaum, B. Butler, J. Cavan, L. Dexter, S. Goddard, C. Henry, J. Judson, S. Lates, D. Miller, J. Milstein, F. Mitchell, L. Norton, C. Rankin, E. Shapiro, J. Sternbach, A. Vicary MARSHALL Row I: H. Batchelder . Luis J. Harbert S. Leiser H. McCulloch A. Partlow K. Haberman S. Derflinger Row 2: S. Thursten A, Metz M. Stewart E. Parsons R. Crane Row 1: J. Bigelow A. Yellott B. Greenberg e ROSEMARY 3 PARK M. Spoerri E. Foldes E. Drew J. Albrecht S. Abendroth Row 3: J. Shelden J. Mackenzie S. Hamilton B. Bagley E. Kjellberg R. Pinkham K. Sheehan P. Litwin M. McKechnie Row I: D. Willard, J. Reich, A. Moncrieff, M. Reese, C. O i . E. Leitner; Missing: D. Stein, S. Schneller, B. Ct:ncbr::.l S. Bar?l:::;ea'g tIlBan;-:l'-. LI Dspisie . Brdgg, Gwynn, R. Harrigan, S. Laskin, J. Leto, J. Soderman, R. Linder, J. Mooz, H :N?:lllzw' C. Crossley, C. Brooks, B. Burke, C. Murray, W. Bolt p c. Wils:n,oa x';oiberhardt F. Gilman, J. Goldberg, P. 218 Row I: L. Leibman S. Yablonski C. Kugel Row 2: S. Welch S. Lienhard J. Ross B. McCoun L. Leng D. Nie K. Dudden Row 3: A. Gulliver B. Anderson S. Nowicki J. Steinhurst C. Aspinwall Row I: K. Weismann K. Steiner R. Herold Row 2: J. Parker B. Brodsky P. Adelaar N. Martin Row 3: N. Grossman M. Chambers 5. Manwell E. Buck Row 4: C. Davis B. Slotnik 5. Ericson Row 5: F. DalPiaz P. Vaughn F. Oreutt S. Bender i i i . Berke; Row 2: S. : i, 1. Li . lannitto, S. Ardery, M. Usher, S. Lincoln, M. Quinn, J. Stickel, D. S9czewa. S prin; fow 5, m;: g: i?::g. :..Lf:r::,r;lfM.arglnr:in. c. l;'N:l:gfram:i. H. Harrington, S. Gray, M. Curnen, S. Weinberg, L. Oliphant; Missing: P. Crawford, 5. Oarmanara, L. Farmer, L. Friedman, E. Hackenburg, 5. Morrill, C. Morse, S. Opovke, S. Ardery BURDICK Row I: N. Mallon E. Kagan C. Carter E. Marsden Row 2: J. Sullivan P. Manning J. Curtin M. Borgess E. Gamache M. Hunt E. Greenberg Row 3: S. Paranke D. Willen A. Braver J. Olsen J. Miniszek K. Sanderson Row 4: S. Tehan A. Scully P. Olson P. Foley L. Troell J. Sheldon Row I: P. Hage, J. Baumgold, M. Dennis, T. Tanaka, K. Wood, D. Garthwaite; Row 2: S. Bennett, C. Platt, A. Kalp, J. Rustigian, H. L. Schantz, K. Lando; Row 3: C. Danico, N. Herrick, A. Lipofsky, A. Dahlian, M. King, K. Ritchell, P. Alex, J. Andrist, A. Langdon, D. Brookes; Missing: A. Backus, J. Cogan, M. Daley, C. Ferayorni, P. Glixon, S. Higgins, R. Huppert, L. Jehle, J. Wareham GRACE SMITH Row I: C. Johnson M. Macfarlane L. Smith J. Sandberg Row 2: L. Dern R. Schultz D. Fasano J. Mcintosh Miss A. Keating L. Fay KATHERINE BLUNT Row I: J. Nilson, C. Rubin, B. McMillan, A. Manson; Row 2: J, Tisher, J. Bucciarelli, A. Staples, M. Stern, K. Urion, M. Wallin; Row 3: J. Campbell, J. Ireland, M. Harman, J. Hubbard, L. Wagner, A. Woldman, A. Wood Row I: P. Wyhof C. Fuller D. Scott K. Diehr M. Lucas B. Smith Row 2: J. Lockhart S. Brobston Z. Tricebock K. Mathiasen B. Blass S. Davenport A. Gross R. Lee Row I: N. Schneider, 5. Abbe, M. Williams, A. Cammer, S. Allan, S. Wilkes, E. Wallas, N. Horvitz, J. Levy, E. Bell: Row 2: L. Aldrich, F. Girard, M. Lore, M. Siegfried, S. Kinnebrew, P. Dale, A. Doughty, 5. Dill, S. Farrington, A. Accardo, V. Baron, S. Blenner, D. May Row I: J. Abbott, M. Rendle, S. Kane, J. Long, A. Moors; Row 2: S. Freiberg, M. Rygh, M. Idemitsu, T. Savell, M. Mueller, N. Budde; Row 3: L. Setterholm, J. Francoeur, B. Clement, L. Sutton, E. Erda; Missing: S. Bullock, L. Good- man, E. Leach, P. Linder, M. Long, K. Perley, 5. PickeH, M. Tupling T ., 4 m-q fig - Row I: C. Shepps, H. Allen, E. Greenspan, C. Kleven; Row 2: A. Goulding, L. Whitfield, B. Goff, J. Rising, E. Morgan, E. Benson, K. Landen, J. Meditz, M. Feldman; Row 3: 5. Lee, E. Cherpak, C. Meister, M. Jackson, L. Walkley, V. Rogosin, B. Bergman, J. Stern, J. Carey, B. Fisher, N. Sterner; Missing: 5. Brayton, A. Brewer, S. Burger, K. Cover, E. Dunn, L. Egbert, B. Goldman, J. Goldman, B. Goldmark, H. Hinchman, C. Keller, J. Kreiger, . Lotz, E. Maltby, M. Mann, J. Marschner, A, McGrath, C. McNeary, A. Morey, J, Nadler, R. Nelson, J. Patnode, S. Russell, A. Towill, H. Turner, J. Weber, C. Wehner, C. Zylman, S. Gabbay, M. Ellman LARRABEE Row I: R. Charny C. Dow M. Buerger C. Basik B. Brachman P. Arnold C. Thomas C. Dahlberg J. Coburn B. Sant' Angelo Row 2: Y. Haggerty S. Shapiro B. Stoddard N. Allen M. Hawley S. Hall E. Bartlet B. Raphael B. Ostendarp M. Cooper 224 Row I: Y. Spaulding C. Eaton B. Leander A. Keegan J. Cosler Row 2: B. Mynttinen P. Weil S. Hobson E. Spingarn Row I: L. MacLellan D. Smith A. FaH M. Blum M. Concemi E. Livesey D. Liddle J. O'Donnell N. Cooper Row 2: M. Blanchard D. Wertheim B. Barker S. Rowland P. Houder M. Cale S. Farber M. Turner J. Rigg 225 Row I: P. Coe, B. Jackson, M. McCarty, B. North, S. Wallitzer, D. Noel, R. Weyer, 5. Adams; Row 2: S. Flynn, D. Weiss, E. Schwartz, N. Schoepfer, A. Shapiro, C. Kling, J. Byrne, L. Rudiger, J. Piserchia BRANFORD Row I: C. Chaykin, C. Arthur, J. Clossen, C. Gaudiani, N. Dennis , T H . . 1 E Rt T O Pate, 5 i Eon 3 S, MenT O Mun:a,anpl, gif:?;?; Row 2: C. Ham, P. Mendelsohn, C. Epstein, J. Daly, S. Lake, Missing: M. Bury, C. Lazzatti, H. Chmela, M. Johnson, B. LyHam, . Sandens E. Silvonen, M. Rosen, A. Swick L. Mittelman, E. Letteau 226 Row I: C. Balandiuk, E. Abdella, R. Richman, M. Hanafin, C. McNamara; Row 2: M. Hodupp, L. Conner, C. Cole, R. Zybala, M. James, S. Archbald, K. Curtis, C. Campo, M. Johnson, J. Kowal; Row 3: J. Diskan, J. Brown, A. Gollan, M. Cotton, B. Dietrich, B. Brunoff, M. Silber, D. Nichols, M. Hamilton, E. Pleva, B. Donahue, B. Riddle KNOWLTON Row I: S. Nishijima, D. Fennelly, B. Mitchell, J. Hornsleth, 5. Kessler, S. Train, D. Healy, M. Ackerman, E. Markman; Row 2: S. Harris, P. Johns, S. Hulsart, S. Jones, P. Deacon, E. Moore, B. Dowd, M. Nierintz; Row 3: B. Trolin, J. McKelvie, K. Brainerd, C. Holland, S. Leach, A. Jacobowitz, C. Davis, B. Brittan; Missing: C. Fujiwara, G. Bartlett, M. Pitts, B. Phillips, L. Viner, M. Hutchens R - 1 W Row I: B. Pottle, S. Schiffman, W, Shamberg, B. Metzger, S. Kanter, N. Heneage; Row 2: H. Harding, J. Basso, C. Parker, S. Mann, J. Campbell, W. Feldman, C. Wilkin, T. Miller, D. Schwartz, P. Keenan, N. Holbrook - - e Row : A. Partington, S. Stietzel, J. Noyes, P. Schwartz, J. Klingenstei . Al Al e 3 2: E. Balis, E. Scott, 5. Raymond, B. Beach, E. Strubing, K. Edgarj:lg. W -:vlfer'll:;r:l':lc .I S Uatdnose. Mittleman, E. Donner; Row JANE ADDAMS Row I: B, Thomas, C. Hastert, J. Warner; Row 2: C. Rowe, 5. Herson, R. Vatske, C. Lynch, E. Schriner Row 1: M. Speare, C. Pearson, C. Lunde, B. Whitman, D. Pappas, L Blake, D. Lewis, T. McConnell; Row 2: S. Bohman, K. Johnson, K. Frankle, J. Karlson, R. Slone, P. Work, A. Ryan, D. Lyons, C. Renchard, A. Shaw, C. Winters 229 FREEMAN Row I: C. Frank, S. Epstein, M. D'Esopo, 5. Hunt; Row 2; L. White, B. Brotherson, I. Obst, S. Pettibone, B. Hill, K. Mather, M, Walker; Row 3: 5. Hoagland, B. Wallman, A. Karmel, M. Cleveland, A. Wilcox, F. Eickele man, S. Sargeni. M. Ma:Nuughi: Row 3: J. Linseth, G. Dchany. C. Boyan, R. Holmes, E. Pandiezi Taass Row I: S, Heller, . Dunn, J. Paul, R. Raban, R. Lawrence, P. Steele; Row 2: E. Olson, A. Glasner, E, Shul P. Craft 230 Row I: C. Schreyer M. Hageboeck J. Hoberman Row 2: 5. Warren S. Smith J. Lauricella M. Phillips Row 3: D. Fischer C. Osborne ... ..,.19- ,S R .'3!,. i i hran, C. Janne . J. Landefeld, C. Miller, L. McClendon, A. Skelly, E. Norris, K. Howe, G. Yanner, M. Strayer, A, Coleman, C. Weber, A. Coc 3 Y EOWC;m:n grlAeHTlur, A, C::rley: Missing: B. Abramowitz, D. Altman, L. Altman, E. Borman, B. Breese, N. Burtch, B. Campbell, A Carter, B. Chase, E. Corroon, E. Coutts, J. Davidson, A. Kiley, H. Leistner, D. Morris, C. Norton, M. Percovich, S. Schlapp, M. Sheesley, N. Shipley, N. Spencer, S. Woodward 231 Row I: R. Owens, S. Eshleman, I. Fleck; Row 2: P. Rifkin, L. Asmuth Row I: K. Churila, M. Huddleston, C. Johanson, M. Gall, B, Brown, 5. Faile, 5. S D. We; r . son, V. Chambers, C. Jaffin, S. Peck, N. Ronk, 5. Wells, A. Hoffmann, G. Wiss, G. Tenenbavm, E ey 2 ';'g.P'E'S:;.'- J. Catherwood, E. Stephen- B. Brown, J. Canciani, J. Carey, C. Fleishman, 5. Hewson, H. Hilton, S. Johnson, G. Justin, D. Kapson, R Lei: 'I Llse. issing: I . Allison, A. Barnard, Pierson, N. Platt, K. Sammis, S. Sunderland, M. Thaller, C. Upham, P. Wenzel, A. White B e, l. Lau, L. Pellecchia, S. Buckenham, G. 232 MARY HARKNESS Row I: S. Challender, E. Bonham, B. Morse, E. Weinberger, D. Neale, S. Hodgdon, E. Dawe; Row 2: J. Mednick, P. Cohen, R. Zaleske, M. Gamboa, J. Oetiker, P. Rosenberg, P. Banfield, J. Stein, S. Hille Row I: K. Churila J. Catherwood H. Pinsker Row 2: S. Peck S. DeMartine E. Stephenson J. Pine E. Hays M. Blake G. Terry Row 3: W. Doble C. Johanson L. Reybine B. Hesse M. Maskell R. Peer A. Fowler G. Crandell C. Krizack WINDHAM Row I: H. McGown, N. Cogut, S. Geetter, A. Storer, A. Dickgiesser, C. Ulrich; Row 2: H. Jinks, P. Camp- bell, J. Kaplan; Row 3: E. Groeneveld, M. Ercoli, B. Easton, C. Adkins, C. Gordon, C. Laney, M. Cohen, M. Meighan Row I: J. Mills, N. Butler, A. Perry, S. Ryan, M. Raisler, J. Humphrey, E. DeSantis, J J Corbett. 5. Mathes, L. Ingraham, S. Worley, C. Wallack, K. Hudsen eSantis, J. Gaffga; Row 2: A. Burger, P. Kendall, M. 234 Row I: J. Sutherland, A. Gordy, K. YanDoorn, M. Ruina, E. Hedberg, J. Jacobs, L. Lawton, N. Macalaster, T. Joseph; Row 2: K. Karslake, M. Comins, M. Miller, K. Archer, H. Hammond, N. Feusrstein, L. Weterrings Missing: L. Barnhurst, S. Bernstein, P. Brown, C. Brush, D. Camp, V. Christie, J. Emslie, R. Feibus, H. Flicher, 5. Geil, 5. Hamilton, D. Hartman, J. Hyde, E. Jones, N. Jones, W. Jones, B. Kraai, J. LeFevre, C. Lumb, L. Massie, M. Morris, G. Rosen- berg, H. Sealfon, P. Sichol, M. Steitz, E, Turner, E. Weber, P. Williams. EMILY ABBEY Row I: C. Miller, J. Stocking, P. Rafferty, B. Johnson, K. Schoepfer, E. Stanley; Row 2: B. Schmidt, M. Alter, M. Faney, C. Hermanson: Row 3: B. Walker, M. Munford, M. Keenan, D. Hall, K. Barnett, R. Guptil, B. Hunt, C. McVeigh, G. Pignato; Missing: M. Galati, A. Gerbes, L. Hopper, J. Rust, H. Tsandoulas, R, Tuttle Row I: M. Richard C. Dell A, Rial M. Melican R. Peck A. Bertolette S. Towell S. Rafferty Row 2: S. Melnichuk N. Darling J. Hall 236 COMMUTERS Row I: M. A, Cawley, B. Gorra, M. Eames; Row 2: M. Woodworth, J. Laurence, F. Sienkowski, J. Bellefleur, J. Gross, D. Chute 237 238 ADVERTISEMENTS KR S M 57 TN N VAR A X D S s LSS 7 P Faial-m Mrs. Dorita D. Altman Mrs. John D. Bagley Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Balentine Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Baron Mr. and Mrs. Aurelius T. Bartlett, IT Mr, William H. Blake Mr. and Mrs. Irving J. Bernstein Mr. and Hrs. Karl E. Bohman Mr. and Mrs. John W. Borman Mr. and Mrs. William L. Breese Mrs. John Crosby Brown Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Brown Mr. and Mrs. William W. Budde Mr. and Mrs, Louis R, Buerger Mr. and Mrs. T. Brenton Bullock Dr. and Mrs. John Cannon Mr. and Mrs. E. Dale Chambers Mr. and Mrs. Bertram H. Claster Mr. and Mrs. Harold D. Craft Dr. and Mrs. Samuel Clive Cohen Dr. and Mis. Karl C. Corley Mr. and Mrs. John E. Coutts Mrs. James E. Cross Mr, Guy Dal Piaz Dr. and Mrs. Robert C. Darling Mr. and Mrs. John S. Davidson Mr, and Mrs. Milton Diamondstein Mrs. Peter T. Dracopoulos Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Drexler Mirs. Tirzah P. Dunn Mr. and Mrs. S. L. Engel Mr. and Mrs. Arlo E. Ericson Miss Joan Elizabeth Ericson Mr. and Mrs, G. E. Farrington Mr. and Mrs. Edward P. Fenn Dr. and Mrs. Benjamin L. Feuerstein Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Fleischmann Mr. and Mrs. Bertram Flicher Mrs. Vladimir G. Frisk Mr. and Mrs, George W. Frost Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. Fuld Mr. and Mrs. Hall B. Gamage Mr. and Mrs. Herman Glassner Mr. and Mrs- E. A. Gorenstein Dr. and Mrs. Joseph M, Gross Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Grossman Dr. and Mrs. George A. Hahn Mr. and Mrs. William T. Hall, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Hanse H. Hamilton Mr. and Mrs. Gordon R. Hawley Mr. and Mrs. W. Neil Pierce M. and Mrs. H. R. Heneage M. Robert J. Pottle Mr. and Mrs. Haskell Hewson Mr. and Mrs. E- R. Randall Mr. and Mrs. Garfield Hill Mr. and Mrs. Samuel P-aphz.ael Mr. and Mrs. John V. N. Hitch Mr. and Mrs. Mort'on Raskin Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Hobson Mzr. and Mrs. William S. R:enchard Mr. and Mrs. Dan W. Holmes Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Rogosin Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Horvitz Mr. and Mis. R. T. Roney M. and Mrs. Peter J. Hunt Mr- and Mrs. Carl S, Rowe Mr. and Mrs. Albert B. Illsley Mzr. and Mrs. Irvin Rubin Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Lee Jenkins Mz. and Mrs. John J. Rush Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J. Johnson Mr. and Mrs. William F. Said Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert S. Jones Mrs. Walter L. Savell, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John M. Joseph Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Schoepfer Mr. and Mrs. John H. Joynt Mr. and Mrs. Louis Schneider M;r. and Mrs. William V. Judson Mr. and Mrs. Peter J. Schriner Mr. Harry C. Kane M, and Mrs. David Schwartz Mr. and Mis. E. R. Kinnebrew M. and Mrs. Raymond V. Scribner Dr. and Mrs. John Kraai Dr. and Mrs. Victor H. Kugel Mr. and Mrs. Joel Landres Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lawrence Mr. and Mrs. M. I. Leibman Mr. and Mrs. Henry Leon Dr. and Mrs. E. D. Levy Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lewis, 3rd Mr. and Mrs. G. O. Lienhard Mr. and Mrs. Elven L. Lindseth Mr. and Mrs, Daniel W. Long Mr. and Mrs. H. Edgar Lore Mr. and Mrs. John H. Lotz Mr. and Mrs. Sydney L. Manson, Jr. Mrs. Charles S. Margosian Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Martin Mr. and Mrs. William May Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. McConnell Mr. and Mrs. John O. McMillan Mrs. P. W. Moore, Jr. Mr. and Mrs, Edwin L. Morris Mr. and Mrs. W, M. Mueller Mr. and Mrs. Walter J. Murphy Mrs. Albert Norlander Mr. and Mrs. Michael O'Donnell Mr. and Mrs. Edson B. Olds Mrs. Woodley B. Osborne Mrs- Margaret Ostendarp Dr. and Mirs. Philip F. Partington Mr. and Mis. Nathan Passell Mr. and Mrs. John B. Pearson and Mis. Robert Sealfon and Mrs, Gerald I. Shapiro and Mrs. William R. Sichol and Mrs. Samuel Sirover and Mrs. Donald McKay Smith and Mis. Sidney Snyder Mr. and Mrs. Carlton W. Spencer Mr. and Mrs. Ulysses C, Steele Miss H. Marie Steffens Mr. and Mrs. William A. Stuart Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. Sutton Dr. and Mrs. Byron L. Sweet, Jr. Mors. June K. Thomas Mr. and Mrs. Frederick W. Turner, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Vanner Mr. and Mrs. James Vaughn Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Veitch Mr. and Mrs. Edmund K. Viner Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Wallin Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Warren Mr. and Mrs. Gustave W. Weber Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Weis Mzr. and Mrs. Cornelius E. Wells Mr. and Mrs. A. Judson Wells Mr. and Mrs. John Wilkin Mr. and Mrs. Henry Winters Mrs. Bernice Work Dr. and Mrs. Marvin Wright Mr- and Mrs, Walter Wyhof Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Young, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Zinkus Mr. Dr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. - WE ALL ll SAY BEST OF LUCK g 3 RIGHT ? WRIGHT! ll JI COMPLIMENTS FISHER FLORIST OF 87 Broad Street A FRIEND New London Compliments COMPLIMENTS . from THE MODERN ELECTRIC CAPITOL CANDY COMPANY SHOPPE 153 Bank Street New London, Conn. 239 THE ARMY NAVY STORE 27 State Street Glbson 2-2844 .n' ',,3 .1 - fa'. . v R 4 o JorgNLNETE A FASHION FABRIC AT Bt L S aAND AWINGED CENTER o M .1: -NL S W cTORY To J . ' ' . - - - Al .u.v i 0 : -nq.'..k -: :; g:.:fr.l f Fabrics of Distinction I TR i 4 ab 2 8 B - 71 State Street ;5 S M a Pl o B s 2 53 e R 3 a4 i EYY ki o 's'l':h e 1 : 17 COMPLIMENTS b N VR P T 28 OF A T D e S FRIEND K 'r :' i g rd - '- -' ' LY '- t Y ' N l 1 : 1 3 'l . 1 ; 1 ; ' 1 ' l COMPLIMENTS OF MICHAEL'S DAIRY 240 NEW TITLES fiction non-fiction art poetry A REPRESENTATIVE BASIC COLLECTION In both hard cover and paperback THE BOOKSHOP CONNECTICUT COLLEGE TO-Hr-goz7v x 7'6 are proud and pleased to have Connecticut College as one of our regular customers. Our design service coordinated with our offset and letterpress facilities have been most successful in producing fund raising material, view books, catalogs, alumni magazines, etc. to fulfill the needs of educational institutions. Connecticut Printers, Incorporated HARTFORD 1+ CONNECTICUT COMPLIMENTS FROM CALIFORNIA WIPING MATERIAL CO., INC. 50 Mclean Avenue Yonkers, New York JAMES DRUG CO., Inc. Apothecaries to the medical profession and to the home since 1913 BANK AT PEARL STREET Gl 2-8575 Free Delivery Makers of the Official Rings at CROW'S NEST Connecticut College 4 alias Designers and makers of rings, emblems, charms and trophies of THE SNACK SHOP the better kind BAILEY BANKS l BIDDLE World Renowned Jewelers Since 1832 Chestnut Street at 16th MALLOVE'S I RS e ivanis expert watch and jewelry repairs e 74 State Street New London Cherry Hill, New Jersey Eastern Conn's. Largest Jewelers s X2f SHU-FIX CO. FOR ALL SHOE REPAIRS SHOES REPAIRED MAIN ST. QUICK SERVICE 1 ! We appreciate your patronage S. S. KRESGE CO. 118 State Street New London Shopping Center New London 242 Family hotel ot moderate rates. Free parking. Distinctive Styling for Fashion Minded Collegiates ELLY'S 127 State Street Dresses Suits Gowns Coats Sportswear Lingerie Jewelry New Londen, Connecticut Joute e 50 State Street New London, Conn. Greeting Cards for Every Occasion Visit our Party Shop Wedding Invitations Announcements Calling Cards Con.ar-n'tulqtions feom mm 'k Harkness NEW LONDON 60 STATE STREET Clothiers to Gentlemen and their sons. Shop GENUNG'S A Complete Department Store State St. New London, Conn. Gl 3-5385 Compliments of MONTGOMERY WARD New London's only complete downtown department store New London, Connecticut 243 - - e e Compliments of WRIGHT DITSON Division of Spalding Sales Corporation GIRLS SCHOOL COLLEGE OUTFITTERS 462 Boylston Street Boston, Massachusetts BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF 1963 Save in a Savings Bank THE SAVINGS BANK OF NEW LONDON Home Office: 63 Main Street Branch: New London Shopping Center Members Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Get in the habit of reading a daily newspaper every day Start now with THE DAY Dayland's Dependable Daily Since 1881 COMPLIMENTS OF PHILIP MORRIS, INC. Compliments of PETER-PAUL AGENCY REALTORS Insurance and Real Estate 311 State Street Ground Floor Phone: Gl 2-4497 STOCKINGS 244 ROBERT ROLLINS BLAZERS, INC. 242 Park Ave., South New York 3, N. Y. SPECIALIZED BLAZER SERVICE .- 1S knowing all l ihe answers.. Like the. Class of 63 l Vc wish you all the best - Hle girls of Lar'rabee. e 248 CAMPUS PIZZA Serving Shore Dinners 12 Noon to 10:30 P.M. Open All Year Yours for the Best in GRUB and GROG Connecticut Turnpike Exit 70 Phone GEneral 4-7863 FERRY TAVERN on the Conn. River Old Lyme, Conn. Trust Your Garments With TROY FABRIC CARE SERVICES Laundering Dry Cleaning Cold Fur Storage Dyeing Box Storage for Woolens PICK-UP and DELIVERY TUESDAYS and FRIDAYS Dial 887-1601 if otherwise necessary THE NEW LONDON STORE FIXTURE COMPANY FOOD SERVICE EQUIPMENT Glbson 3-831 1 12 Montauk Avenue NEW LONDON, CONNECTICUT DANTE'S ITALIAN AMERICAN RESTAURANT A College Tradition for 26 Years 52 Truman Street Phone 3-9295 HELEN'S SHOP Millinery and Accessories 93 STATE STREET New London, Connecticut PURITAN RESTAURANT 235 State St. New London, Conn. FAPR EAST HOUSE Oriental Gifts I5 Green Street New London, Connecticut 247 248 r-z HOWARD JoHnson Landmark for Hungry Americans Open Daily from 7:30 A.M. 4ill Midnight 929 Bank Street, Route I A Just I mile west of downtown New London CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF 1963 MORRISSON HOUSE N. J. Gorra's College Shop, your traditional shopping s Where fashion is individual fabrics styles, and we mean literally help yourselves Our representation is international: all you must do is drop will take care of the rest. ity, for from our pine paneled walls pot for clothes with a distinctive look, shelves you can pick choose al of which, are intrinsically you, in and browse and your taste GROTON MOTOR INN Dancing Saturday Evening ROUTE 95, GROTON HI 5-9784 RESTAURANT COCKTAIL LOUNGE BANQUET ROOMS All rooms have air-conditioning, private bath, television and telephones. All rooms beautifully furnished. We make reservations for all Knott Hotels Compliments of THE YELLOW CAB CO. CADILLAC LIMOUSINES FOR ALL OCCASIONS Phone: Gl 3-4321 SEIFERT'S BAKERY CAKES and PASTRIES for Parties 225 Bank Street Glbson 3-6808 NEW PERRY AND STONE WILLOW RESTAURANT Jewelers Since 1865 GOOD FOOD Crane Stationery Social Engraving 296 State Street and the Best PIZZA 24 Bank Street New London COMPLIMENTS OF J. DAREN SONS, INC. NORWICH, CONNECTICUT WHOLESALE GROCERS 249 250 f.l I l : LEADERSHIP SINCE 1792 HARTFORD NATIONAL BANK AND TRUST COMPANY Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation SERVING SOUTHEASTERN CONNECTICUT ... in these convenient locations STONINGTON MYSTIC GROTON NEW LONDON ESSEX OLD SAYBROOK NIANTIC NORWICH A Gent for the Travelers L. B. McEWEN AGENCY 302 State Street New London Agent for the Travelers Each College Year Brings us to BRATERS Where We Find Cards For All Occasions Art Supplies Handbags Jewelry Luggage PITTSBURGH PLATE GLASS COMPANY 151 JEFFERSON AVENUE NEW LONDON 251 252 Congratulations CLASS OF 1963 Compliments ABC FILM COMPANY i 74 Bank Street THE BOSTON CANDY KITCHEN 190 STATE STREET New London's Complete Photo Center Rapid Quality Photofinishing Compliments of CHAS. W. SCRANTON NEW ENGLAND 8 COMPANY HOTEL SUPPLY CO. 40 Commercial Wharf Member New York Stock Exchange Boston, Mass. Investments Since 1891 Purveyors of Prime Meats Newildaven and Poultry 302 State Street New London comepuiments o YHe cuass OF 2063 GORRA BROS. INC. i' 365 Bank Street New London Fe.onq WinpHar BENOIT'S COMPLIMENTS EXCLUSIVE MEN'S APPAREL FROM 74 STATE A FRIEND 1 STREET New London, Connecticut There's A Savings Office Near You 1 NEW LONDON FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION 15 Masonic ' Streef T Hlew: Liondon; Conn. 1L 2L L R L s I T e Phone Gl 2-9495 299 Esng: HillIRedd, harstanCona: . i e e e e Phone HI 5-2407 2337 Main -Street, Niantic Connt 20 L L e L L N S e Phane PEL 95408 Braadway '8 E- MainyStest Myshic, Connd. L VL I i o o e Phone JE 6-8952 Where You Save Does Make A Difference 253 254 Congrafulat:ons , Sehiors - from us 48 Pranfordies as you prepare +o enter +he world once e a World COMPLIMENTS FROM A FRIEND HOUSE OF TEE CASUAL WEAR Keyed To Lively Living New Londen Neorwich Niantic CARWIN'S Fashions in FOOTWEAR featuring Mademoiselle Pappagallo Manequins Bass Weejuns COMPLIMENTS FROM THE HOLLY HOUSE 92 Huntington Street New London, Connecticut AMERICAN LINEN SUPPLY COMPANY A complete Linen Rental Service For Every Type of Business Institution Gl 2-4487 96 Fitch Avenue New London, Conn. C. L. RADIO and TELEVISION House of Imports SALES and SERVICE Headquarters for S. S. PIERCE Co. Products Phone 247 State St Gl 2-9440 2-9449 New London, Conn. Hodges Square 405 Williams Street 255 256 g- Congratulations and CONQRRTULATilgh:i CLRSS oFf HBZ! Best Wishes Oick Howse jf:'d'paoig: of 2 FrusFrafiong THE NEW LONDON 7 ' PAPER SUPPLY COMPANY, INC. 318 Bank Street New London, Connecticut IN TOWN ON CAMPUS THE TASTE THAT TELLS THE FLAVOR THAT SELLS THE FINEST UNDER THE SUN MALOOF'S ICE CREAM CO. 555 BANK STREET NEW LONDON Compliments of BEST WISHES THE WOMAN'S SHOP i 236 State Street New London U 'g'TYOEgE: LI I:'gOD Junior and Misses Dresses 397 Williams Street London Fog Raincoats Junior Accent Knits and Dresses New London Alas The End Fond Farewells From HAMILTON KOINE Wishes to thank: Mr. Victor H. O'Neil! of Mr. Michael Dasho of Bradbury, Sayles, ONeill, and Lincoln Studios Hurley and Thomson Malden, Massachusetts New York, New York BARBIE PHILLIPS, Editor: CONNIE CROSS, Photography Editor; GAIL ILLSLEY, Business Manager; DIANE LYONS, Art Editor; JO O'DONNELL, Publicity Editor; RUTH LAWRENCE, Assistant Editor; JEAN CURTIN, Cir- culation Editor: SUSAN SCHIFFMAN, Literary Editor; MOLLY O LORE, Advertising Manager ART STAFF EDITORIAL ASSISTANT LITERARY STAFF SARAH BULLOCK SUSAN NISHIJIMA CAROL McNEARY KITTY CORNELL BQA PORTCER DIANE LEWIS 258 : Thi i 4 E5ES s e o I3 - W i E IV S o e S h ';:::k; 3 A w S B W SR e S e o e T g T vh L Sy e A'IL.- e -. W, Loy Ry Ay g IPuZ, FUSNIUSAS et R R P T LQ A e Js -LFH!IM';l T 2 AR Ry o T - AN BN o 6 i '--MA'Q .' Q; hTRAtH A RIS EAS sti'ag- ..a'ivt '. '; . 3 '--'? ..;'..!. bl e Wk ma ;g L5 o A an A ? 'f 7- m E b 3 E SENRRERE o W Lo A TeL ety 1 RTETESY 1 LAy R by et S B Tt . 3 e et Ay v 4 oy A gavh el 'u.!q,, A8 b e e A s Moo B S T mfbt L MXg T A : A e R e Fy o AN ', B 33 ff:im : LA 8 ; v S TR S AT R W 2o B s R A B A - . 9 - - ..I Z - A -.:f- 3 W ; N SRt ot o e W e e e Mk Y 2 ARt A R L T T e S e et g hngiums?gfg?g e t:;a'f g 2 BN AN 1 .m;ws Y L'a'. L5 Tl $ . SE i n;iwk W A AT W !kag:a;l :u.,m LSRR ERE R e i;t ,-l t'ggh i?k'hism S T bR gt 3 m;i?ft 4 3. 4 i 2
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.