Dartmouth College - Aegis Yearbook (Hanover, NH)

 - Class of 1970

Page 1 of 394

 

Dartmouth College - Aegis Yearbook (Hanover, NH) online collection, 1970 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 394 of the 1970 volume:

AEGIS AEGIS 1970 AEGIS 1970 DARTMOUTH COLLEGE 2 3 4 5 6 9 10 11 12 17 Ifl Ā Ā L J ā– mk sĀ«rft pĀ« ar ' t 66 ■• ' V . ' . AY’ A : .• ;--v •. . r • • j ' •. A ? . :X  • ..,, 1 . ; V . - ā–  i V v. f; v ,v ' v ' ' 73 Ā®. hv ' ' • ā–  I • ' v • ; •’ ā–  I A, Ā .’• v, v . V t ' I . ā–  , i i . Ā ' • I - . 4 • •J ? 1 ! - • vc .  • .. • «• • ā€ž . v • • ' .. Ā« ' 1 ' f- ā–  ' ’ J t .. k V •; T . W. S, ' • • V ■• s ' ' rĀ v$r; ' • - v .At • .V V •’ • • ••• ..... If ā–  ā€˜ r: • v v ā€˜ I • V s ā–  ' iK VV ' • Ā Ā - Vf-ā€žā€˜ -x • i . S • • . • ' ā–  .V - ā€˜ - ā– - ' V ' ā€ v v. I -.• iĀ£ .i’’ V, v I s .;v V •••: 1 .-V ' . c.v ;;• ••; • ' !« • ā–  . :V . • ? • ' • ' ' • v n ' i. ♦ • ' s . y 72 ā–  82 84 - 85 91 ā–ŗ i Ā£ |$p ; mm ā– .ā€˜it ā€˜. ' i’f x •; 96 its 98 StĀ® 100 .FwSI - - I Ā®5i • N Wac- 103 104 -l 1 ’[ jiffld Mm 115 117 120 121 i 2 . 128 MSB! 129 3 132 134 135 138 139 i K 143 144 n!W!iimii!!!!!! 4,| t amĀ rj|| jj| II III 148 jĀ i ill 150 151 154 156 71 - i. -sr - V •vr.4 V ' - . 165 % 17 Z IV; k 4 . iti 1 iivfl [ ' (jppg vP — ? ff r J 172 174 Ā« r V .li- Mi Ā« r 182 183 184 185 ,e ,’i IjJr v mMm j Seniors STEVEN BARRY ABRAMSON, 43 Forest Avenue, Peekskill, New York; Lakeland H.S.; CHEMISTRY; Pi Lamba Phi: Foreign Study Program 3: II Circolo Italiano 4; Phi Beta Kappa; Senior Fellow. JOE HOUSTON ADAMS, Box 361, Muleshoe. Texas; Muleshoe H.S.; ARCHITECTURE; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Football 1,2, 3, 4: Lacrosse I : Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 1, 2, 3 , 4 . RONALD KAZUO AIKAWA, 619 S. Poplar Way. Denver, Colorado; George Washington H. S.; ENGLISH; Alpha Theta; Ski School I. 2. 3: Mountaineering Club I; Ledyard Canoe Club 1, 2; Course Guide 3, Editorial Assistant. GEORGE ROSS AINLEY, 1561 Wawona Drive, San Jose, Calif.: Pioneer H.S.; ENGLISH; Foley House; Cutter Hall Ex. 2; Ledyard Canoe Club 4; Tucker Foundation Intern in Brasstown, N.C., fall term 3; Boston Marathon 2. HOYT EAVES ALLEN, Jr., 87 Easton Road. Westport, Connecticut; Phillips Academy, Andover; BIOLOGY; Rifle 1, 2, 3, Manager. WILLIAM ALBERT AMBROSE, St. Paul’s School, Concord, New Hampshire: St. Paul’s School; CHEMISTRY; Sigma Theta Epsilon; Crew 1, 2; Phi Beta Kappa. THOMAS AMPER, 255-11 Upland Road, Great Neck, New York; Great Neck H.S.: PHI¬ LOSOPHY; Phi Beta Kappa. CHARLES HILL ANDERSON. JR., Sara Drive, Saepern R.E.D. 1, Annapolis, Maryland: Kent School; ENGLISH; Casque and Gauntlet; D.C.U. I, 2—Commissioner, 3—vice-presi¬ dent, 4—president; Winter sports 1. GAIL VICTOR ANDERSON, JR., 217 Oaklawn Avenue, South Pasadena. California; South Pasadena H.S.; HISTORY; Beta Theta Pi; Track 1, 2. 3, 4; Crew I; Rugby 3; The Dartmouth 2, 3, sports reporter; Tucker Foundation 3, 4; Tucker Intern; Compton Coordi¬ nator. PHILIP NILS ANDERSON, Moore Hill Drive, Southington, Connecticut; Kimball Union Academy; ENGLISH; Phi Sigma Psi—social chairman—athletic chairman; I DC 2; Soccer I, 2, Manager; Basketball Boosters Club 2, treasurer. CARL WILLIAM ANDROS, 22 Fiarfield Avenue, Northampton, Massachusetts; Lawrence Academy; PHILOSOPHY; Phi Delta Alpha, Warden; Sphinx; Lacrosse 1, 2, 3, 4; Intramu¬ rals 1; D.O.C. 1. GEORGE SCOTT ANTHONY, 710 Lawrence Avenue, Westfield. New Jersey; Westfield Sr. H.S.; BIOLOGY; Foley House; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Dartmouth Five 1, 2, 3, 4, Leader 3, 4. JAMES KENNETH APPLETON, 1 Bridlewood Road, Northbrook, Illinois; Glenbrook North H.S.; ECONOMICS; Beta Theta Pi; Football I; Intramurals I, 2, 3, 4; D.O.C. I, 2, 3, 4. BEN WADE ARMFIELD, 1225 Westwood Avenue, High Point, North Carolina; High Point Central High School; FRENCH. S. B. Abramson J. H. Adams R. K. Aikawa G. R. Ainley H. E. Allen, Jr. W. A. Ambrose T. Ampcr C. H. Anderson, Jr. G. V. Anderson, Jr. P. N. Anderson C. W. Andros G. S. Anthony J. K. Appleton B. W. Armfield J. D. Arndt M. L. Arnold R. F. Asbury J. V. Aukerman E. H. Austin J. C. Aveilone T. L. Avery E. J. Babcock C. R. Bacheller, III L. J. Badger JOACHIM DAVID ARNDT, 38 Maple Street, Hanover, New Hampshire; Middlesex School; DRAMA; Foley; Casque Gauntlet; Green Key 3; The Dartmouth 3, 4, photography; WDCR 4; The Players 1, 2, 3, 4, Secretary; HOPSAC 3, 4, Rep. from Players. MARK LEE ARNOLD, Box 479, Sitka, Alaska; Jefferson Senior H.S., Cedar Rapids, Iowa; GOVERNMENT; Forensic Union 1, 2. ROBERT FROST ASBURY, 3825 Earls Court View, Cincinnati, Ohio; Walnut School; Alpha Theta; Rufus Choate Scholar; Phi Beta Kappa; Squash 2; Crew 1; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Episcopal Youth 1,2, 3; NROTC 1. JAMES VANCE AUKERMAN, 33 Clark Lane, Kingston, Rhode Island; South Kingstown H.S.; GOVERNMENT; Kappa Kappa Kappa, Rush Committee; Glee Club 1, 2; Ad Hoc Committee on ROTC Affairs 3, 4; McCarthy Campaign N.H. Calif, and N.Y. Primaries 2; N.H. Legislative Intern 3. ERLE HARRIS AUSTIN, 1305 Armistead Brdg. Road, Norfolk, Virginia; Norfolk Academy; BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY; Kappa Sigma; Football 2; Track I; Rugby 3, 4; Senior Fellow 4. JOSEPH CHARLES AVELLONE, 17886 Beach Road. Lakewood, Ohio; St. Ignatius H.S.; PSYCHOLOGY; Sigma Alpha Epsilon—President; Sphinx; Green Key 3; I.F.C. 3; Crew 1; Rugby 2, 3, 4; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4; UGC-JC 2. THOMAS LYNN AVERY, 135 42 Emperor Drive, Santa Ana, California; Servite H.S.; HISTORY. ERNEST JOSIAH BABCOCK, 232 Edge Hill Road, Milton, Massachusetts; Milton H.S.; ENGLISH; Alpha Chi Alpha, Soph.-Jr. Judiciary Committee Member; Green Key 3; Football 1, 2, 3, 4, varsity co-captain; Lacrosse 1. W. C. Badger W. V. Bailey D. R. Balcom L. C. Banos CHARLES ROBERT BACHELLER, III, 351 Central Avenue, North Caldwell, New Jersey; West Essex Region H.S.; HISTORY; Foreign Study Program 3—Germany; D.C.A.C. 1, 2; S.D.S. 2, 3, 4; Chess Club 1; Dartmouth Conserv. Society 1, 2, 3; Germania 3; Young Repub. 1. LELAND JAMES BADGER. 636 Park Drive, Kenilworth, Illinois, New Trier Township H.S., GOVERNMENT; Pi Lambda Phi, Secretary; Glee Club 1, 3; Forensic Union 1, 2, 3; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; AFROTC 3, 4; Phi Beta Kappa; Senior Symposia Committee 3, 4—Director, Publicity. WILLIAM CAMPBELL BADGER, Landgrove, Londonderry, Vt.; Pinary School; ART HIS¬ TORY; Sigma Theta Epsilon; Rifle 1, 2, 3, 4—Captain; Intramurals 2, 3, 4; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Ski School 2, 3, 4—-(Instructor); Bait Bullet 2, 3, 4—President; Phi Beta Kappa; Art Dept. Curriculum Com. 3. WILLIAM VINCENT BAILEY, 43 Hearthstone Drive, Medfield, Massachusetts; Cherry Creek H.S.; ENGINEERING; Phi Beta Kappa; Student Bicentennial Committee; NROTC 1.2, 3, 4. DONALD ROBERT BALCOM, R.D. 1, Keene, New Hampshire; Monadnock Regional H.S.; GEOGRAPHY-URBAN STUDIES; Honors Major; Crew 1; AEGIS 4—Business Manager; WDCR 1, 2, 3, 4—Comptroller—4; Dartmouth—M.I.T. Urban Studies Program—3; Urban Affairs Intern. LEONARD CHARLES BANOS, 239 Boston Street, Lynn, Massachusetts; Lynn Classical H.S.; GEOLOGY; Alpha Delta; I.D.C. 2, 3, 4—Chairman of Dorm; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Geology Club 3, 4; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4—Chairman of Entertainment; Cabin Trail 1, 2, 3, 4. WAYNE BORDEN BARDSLEY, 87 Willow Avenue, Somerset, Mass.; Somerset H.S.; ECO¬ NOMICS; Pi Lambda Phi; The Dartmouth 2; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Army ROTC 1, 2, 3, 4; Freshman Council 1; Head Start 2. DANIEL JOSEPH BARNETT, R.F.D. 1, Ridge Road. Laurel, Syosset. N.Y.; Cold Spring Harbor H.S.; PSYCHOLOGY; Heorot; NROTC 3, 4. WARREN BARRASH, 8117 So. Essex, Chicago, III.; South Shore H.S.; ENGLISH; Film Society 1. IGNACIO JUAN BARROSO, 465 Park Avenue, Apt. 6E, New York, N.Y.; Malvern Prep S.; ENGLISH; Delta Kappa Epsilon; Soccer 1; Intramurals 2. 3. 4; The Players 1. 2. 3, 4; Cosmo. Club 1; Le Cercle Franc 1. JOHN JOSEPH BARRY, III, 481 Main St., Stoneham, Mass.; Culvert Hall College H.S.; PSYCHOLOGY; Kappa Kappa Kappa; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Forensic Union 1; Newman Club 1,2,3, 4. DAVID EDWARD BAVLNKA, 808-8th St., Mosinee, Wis.; Mosinee H.S.; GOVERNMENT; Kappa Sigma; Football 1; Rugby 1, 2, 3, 4; Wrestling 2; Jack-O 1, 2. FRANS RUDOLF BAX, 216 Denvale Drive, Danville, III.; Danville H.S.; GOVERNMENT; Pi Lambda Phi, President; Tennis 1; Forensic Union 1, 2; Army ROTC, I 2, 3, 4; Drill Team 1, 2 ,3, 4; Phi Beta Kappa. CLARK WILUAM BEIER, 2520 Memorial Drive, Brookfield, Wis.; Brookfield Central H.S.; ENGLISH; Beta Theta Pi; Dragon; Football 1,2, 3, 4; Baseball 1; Rugby 4. MELVIN STUART BELIN, 8233 Harding Avenue, Miami Beach, Fla.; Hazleton Senior H.S.; PSYCHOLOGY; Phi Tau; The Dartmouth 1, 2; J.L.C. 1, 2, 3, 4, President; Young Dem. 2. SAMUEL GILBERT BILLINGS, 58 Rumford St., West Hartford, Conn.; Governor Dummer Academy; ENGLISH; Psi Upsilon. PETER WOOD BIRKETT, 15 Middle Drive, Plandome, N.Y.; The Taft School; SOCIOL¬ OGY; Delta Kappa Epsilon, Rush Chairman; Wrestling 1; The Dartmouth 2, 3; Band 1; S.D.S. 1, 2, Treasurer; D.O.C. 1; Paroles 1, 2, 3, 4, Business Manager; Dartmouth Independ¬ ent Study—Canton, 3, 4, Head. JEFFREY WILLIAM BLOMSTEDT, 113 Canterbury Drive, Wilmington. Delaware; Brandy¬ wine H.S.; PHYSICS; Alpha Chi Rho; I.D.C. 3; Track I, 2, 3, 4; Rugby 1; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; DOC 1, 2, 3, 4; NROTC 1, 2; Drill Team I, 2. BRUCE DAVID BLUMBERG, 245 Davis Avenue, Albany, N.Y.; Milne S.; BIOLOGY; Phi Beta Kappa; I.D.C. 2, 3, 4, Dorm Chairman 3, 4; Crew 1; WDCR 1; J.L.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Bridge Club 2; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Winter Carnival Council 1; Winter Sports 1, 2, 3, 4. BRUCE A. BORDETT, 77 W. 55th Street, New York, N.Y.; Leysin American School; DRAMA; Pi Lambda Phi; Rifle 1; WDCR 1; The Players 2, 3, 4; S.D.S. 3, 4; Camera Club 4; Motor Sports 2, 3, 4; Winter Carnival Council 1, 2, 3; Ski School 1; Film Society 2, 3, 4, Astronomy Club 3. F. R. Bax C. W. Beier M. S. Belin S. G. Billings P. W. Birkett J. W. Blomstedt B. D. Blumberg B. A. Bordett 194 W. A. Bornstein R. S. Bourdon, Jr. T. P. Boyer P. C. Bradstreet R. M. Brodersen G. T. Brooks WILLIAM ALLEN BORNSTEIN; 251 W. DeKalb Pike, Apt. C-3I1, King of Prussia, Pa.; Lexington H.S.; MATHEMATICS; Crew 1, 2, 3, 4; AEGIS I; The Dartmouth 1; Camera Club 1; J.L.C. 1, 2, 3, 4. ROBERT SLAYTON BOURDON, JR., RD 1, Stowe, Vermont. Northwood S.; ART (Studio); Kappa Sigma, Grand Master Ceremonies: Soccer I: Rifle 1; Barbary Coast 1; Ski Club 2, 3, 4; Ski Team 1. THOMAS PAUL BOYER, 1437 Elbur Avenue, Lakewood, Ohio; Lakewood H.S.; ENGLISH; Class Officer 1, President; Swimming 1; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Christian Science Organization 1, 2. 3. 4. PETER CHRISTOPHER BRADSTREET. 209 Haverling Street, Bath, N.Y.: Haverling Cen¬ tral S.; HISTORY; Sigma Nu Delta; Green Key 3; Intramurals I, 2, 3, 4; The Dartmouth 2; Band 1, 2, 3, 4, Drum Major 2, 3, 4, Exec. Committee 2, 3, 4; Episcopal Youth 3, 4; D.O.C. 1, 2. 3, 4; AFROTC 3, 4; Community Chest Committee 3, 4; Project Buddy 2, 3, 4. LYNN ROBERT BREEDLOVE, 218 Prol. deGto., Celaya, Gitio., Mexico; Phillips Exeter Academy; GOVERNMENT; Heorot; I.D.C. 2, 3, Dorm Chairman; Basketball 1, Freshman Numerals; Track 1; Rugby 2, 3, 4; College Committee on Standing and Conduct 3. 4; Committee to Revise College Guidelines on Discipline 3. DENNIS CLAYTON BRIGHT, 1506 Earlham Drive, Dayton, Ohio; Colonel White H.S.; ENGLISH; Glee Club 1, 2; Dartmouth Comm. Sym. 3. RANDOLPH MICHAEL BRODERSEN, 2114 East Montebello, Phoenix, Arizona; Camel- back H.S.; MATHEMATICS; Phoenix; Swimming 1, 2; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Debauched Hospodars 2, 3. GARY THOMAS BROOKS, 450 Como Avenue, Coral Gables. Fla.; Coral Gables H.S.: GOVERNMENT; Alpha Theta; Casque and Gauntlet; Class Officer, 3, President; U.G.C. 2; Green Key 3; Intramurals 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 1, 2, 4, President (1); Phi Beta Kappa; CCSC 3; UGC-JC 1, 2. ARTHUR EDWARD BROWN, 10 Lanark Road, Wellesley, Mass.; Wellesley H.S.; RELI¬ GION; Theta Delta Chi; Sphinx; Foreign Study Program 3; Wrestling 1, 2, Freshman Captain; Intramurals 2, 3, 4. CHARLES ALAN BROWN, 11049 Powder Horn Drive, Potomac, Md.; Walt Whitman H.S.; BIOLOGY; Phi Delta Alpha; Dragon Senior Society; Football 1; Rugby 2, 3, 4. IRVING EUGENE BROWN, III, Epping Road, Newmarket, N.H.: Newmarket H.S.; ENG¬ LISH; Intramurals 1, 2, 3. MICHAEL STEPHEN BROWN, 640 Kranteria Street, Denver, Colo.; George Washington H. S.; MATHEMATICS; Sigma Alpha Epsilon—Recording Secretary; Green Key 3; Sphinx; I. D.C. 2; Swimming I, 2, 3, 4—Co-captain; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Episcopal Youth 1; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Gymnastics Club 2; Middle Mass Mens Club 1, 2, 3. STEPHEN GILLINGHAM BROWN, Linden Hill, Woodstock, Vt.: Woodstock Union H.S.; ENGINEERING SCIENCE: Intramurals 1; D.O.C. 1,2, 3, 4: Ski Patrol 1,2, 3. 4; Army ROTC 3, 4. STEVEN JAY BROWN, 28 Gregory Road, Cos Cob, Conn.; Shawnee Mission East H.S.; ENGINEERING; Kappa Sigma; Dart. Soc. of Engineers 2, 3, 4; Rugby 2, 3, 4; Intramurals 2, 3, 4; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4: Bait Bullet 1; NROTC 1, 2, 3, 4; Drill Team 3. S. G. Brown S. J. Brown MICHAEL ARTHUR BRUELL, 2046 Revere, Cleveland Hts., Ohio; Cleveland Hgts. H.S.; HISTORY; Phi Delta Alpha, Athletic Mgr. 3, Pledge Captain, House Rabbi; Dragon; Football 1; D.C.A.C. 3, 4, Sports Information; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4. STEPHEN JOHN BRUEMMER. 416 Summit Road, Madison, Wise.; Madison West H.S.; HISTORY; Tau Epsilon Phi—Chaplain; Phi Beta Kappa; Green Key 3, Chairman, Dick’s House Visitation Comm.; WDCR 1, 2—Newsman; S.D.S. 2, 3, 4; D.C.U. 1, 2, 3, 4,— Chairman, Valley Tutorial Pro., Chairman, Big Brother Program, Vice President; Episcopal Youth 1, 2, 3, 4; NROTC 1; Edgerton House Sheltered Workshop 3, 4; Project Follow Through Volunteer 3, 4; ABC Summer Tutor 3; Dartmouth-Talladega 3. ROBERT EMERSON BRUNET PETER McBRIER BRYANT, 311 Prince Street, Alexandria, Va.; The Grange S.: GOVERN¬ MENT; Psi Upsilon—Rush Chairman; Rugby 1, 3; D.C.U. 3; AISEC 3; Ledyard Canoe 3, 4; Dragon 3, 4—Vice President. JAMES WALLACE BUCHMAN, 357 East Cherry Circle, Memphis. Tenn.; White Sation H.S.; ENGLISH; Foley—Gargoyle; Casgue Gauntlet: Foreign Study Program 3, Greece: Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Cutter Hall Ex. 3, 4. ROBERT HOMER BULL, 11170-74th Avenue Nā€ž Seminole, Fla.; Seminole Senior H.S.; FRENCH: Foreign Study Program 3: D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Phi Beta Kappa. DAVID OSCAR BURBANK, 170 Taunton Ave., Norton. Mass.; Norton H.S.; ENGLISH; Alpha Theta; AEGIS 1, 2; The Dartmouth 1, 2, 3, 4; ABC Program 3—Resident Tutor, 4—Fund Raising Director; Bicentennial Recruitment Committee 3, 4; Big Brother Program 3. JAMES FRANKLIN BURKF., R.D. 3, Phillipsburg, N.J.; Belvidere H.S.; PSYCHOLOGY- BIOLOGY; Kappa Sigma; U.G.C.-J.C. 2; Football 1, 2; Lacrosse 1, 2, 3; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Ski School I, 3, 4; CCSC 3—Subcommittee. DOUGLAS CLEMONS BURNELL, Pleasant St., Conway, N.H.; Kennett H.S.; GEOGRA¬ PHY; Intramurals 2, 3, 4. JUDSON DUNAWAY BURNHAM, 5033 Edgemoor Lane, Bethesda, Md.; Bethesda-Chevy Chase H.S.; PHYSICS; Gamma Delta Chi; Camera Club 3, 4. M. A. Bruell S. J. Bruemmer R. E. Brunet P. M. Bryant J. W. Buchman R. H. Bull JOHN CHRISTIAN BUSCHMANN, 227 College St., Lewiston, Maine; Hebron Academy; BIOLOGY; Green Key 3; Football 1, 2, 3, 4, Manager; Lacrosse 1, 3, 4; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4. THORNE GORDON BUTLER, Cove Neck Road, Oyster Bay, N.Y.: St. Mark’s S.; ENGLISH; Heorot; Sphinx; I.D.C. 3; Hockey 1; Lacrosse 1, Captain; Rugby 1, 2, 3. 4, Captain: Intra- murals I, 2, 3, 4; Ledyard Canoe 3, 4. STEVEN ANDREW BUXBAUM. 214 Blalock, Houston. Tex.: Bellaire H.S.; ECONOMICS; Tau Epsilon Phi, Treasurer 3. Rush Chairman 4; Dart. Com. Symph. Orch. 1, 2, 3, 4, President 3. WILLIAM McCarthy BYRNE, JR., 205 Twin Hills Drive, Syracuse, N.Y.; Christian Brothers Academy; PSYCHOLOGY; Theta Delta Chi; Football 1, 2, 3; Rugby 1, 2, 3, 4; Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4. D. O. Burbank J. F. Burke JOHN MATTHEWS CALDWELL, 2259 Avon Lane, Birmingham, Mich.; Groves H.S.; ENGLISH; Intramurals 1, 2, 3; D.C.U. 3. GORDON MUIR CAMPBELL, 4211 West 16th Ave., Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada; University Hill H.S.; ENGLISH; The Tabard—Pledge Trainee, Rush Comm. GEORGE GILMAN CANN. JR., 38 Harvard Sq., Melrose, Mass.; Melrose H.S.; ENGLISH; Phi Delta Alpha; Hockey I; Golf 1. D. C. Burnell J. D. Burnham 196 J. C. Buschmann T. G. Butler S. A. Buxbaum W. M. Byrne, Jr. J. M. Caldwell G. M. Campbell KIM DECKER CANNON. Box 33, Cora, Wyo.: Burbank H.S.; HISTORY; Alpha Theta; Course Guide 2, 3. 4. Executive Editor; Ridgcr Outfitters 3, 4. WILLIAM WESLEY CANTLIN, 79 Church St., Lebanon. N.H.; Lebanon H.S.; PSYCHOL¬ OGY; Psi Upsilon: Ski Team I, 2, 3, 4. CHARI.ES RISING CAREY, 6605 Bay Tree Lane. Falls Church, Va.; Thomas Jefferson H. S.: BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION-GOVERNMENT; Tennis 1; Rugby 2, 3, 4; Intra- murals 1, 2, 3, 4; AEGIS 1; The Dartmouth 1, 2. 3—Photography Ed.; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Winter Carnival Council 1; Army ROTC I, 2. 3, 4. GARY PATRICK CAUDILL. 202 Sunset Drive. Berea, Ohio; Strongsville Sr. H.S.; PHYS¬ ICS; Phi Tau; The Dartmouth 3, 4; Bridge Club 2. 3, 4, Treasurer; NROTC 1, 2, 3, 4. LEE FRANCIS CHAFFEE. 2 Spring Court. Portville, N.Y.: Portville Central; RELIGION; Sigma Theta Epsilon, Scholarship Chairman; Phi Beta Kappa; Football 1; Track 1, 2, Wrestling 1; Intramurals I. 2, 3, 4; D.C.U. 1, 2, 3, 4; Project Mexico 3—Assistant Director. THOMAS W. CHARLES, JR., 5905 Valley Way, Centerville. Wilmington, Dela., Interna¬ tional School of Geneva; GOVERNMENT-URBAN STUDIES; Bones Gate—Treasurer; I. D.C. 2; Soccer 1, 2. 3, 4; Glee Club I. 2. 3. 4; Winter Carnival Council 1, 2; Army ROTC 1, 2. 3, 4; Project Buddy 3, 4. JAMES JOHN CHARTRAND. 27 East Prospect Street. Fitchburg. Mass.; St. Bernards H.S.; ART-ARCHITECTURE; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Football 1, 2, 3; Intramurals 1, 2, 3; Newman Club 1, 2, 3; Tucker Intern 3. CHRISTOPHER CHESSER. 414 North Country Club Road, Tucson. Arizona; Tucson H.S.; ENGLISH; Phoenix; I.D.C. 2; Football 1; Foreign Study Program 3; Intramurals I. 2, 3. 4; The Dartmouth 4; Forensic Union I, 2, 3. 4; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Dartmouth Film Society 3, 4. GLENN DALE CHINEN, 1411 Kaminaka Drive, Honolulu, Hawaii; Iolani School; GOV¬ ERNMENT; Dart. Conscrv. Society 1, 2; Bait Bullet 3; Army ROTC 1, 2, 3, 4. JOHN BENNETT CHITTICK, 111 Ross St., Fitchburg, Mass.; Deerfield School; HISTORY; Sigma Nu—Projects Chairman; Class Officer I—Secretary; U.G.C. I, 2—I.C.C.; Glee Club I, 2; Lyme Children ' s Program 3, 4—Chairman; Volunteers for McCarthy 2; Young Republican 2. GREGORY SUTTON CHURCH. 711 Bay View Court, Elkhart, Ind.; Exeter Academy; ANTHROPOLOGY; Heorot; Sphinx; Soccer 1, 2, 3. 4—Captain; Lacrosse 1; Rugby 2, 3, 4. L. F. Chaffee G. P. Caudill C. R. Carey W. W. Cantlin K. D. Cannon G. S. Church J. B. Chittick G. D. Chinen C. Chesser T. W. Charles, Jr. J. J. Chartrand T. L. Claassen j. H. Clark P. K. Clark C. C. Clifford, Jr. H. S. Cody, III W. J. Coffey, Jr. B. B. Coffin T. A. Coffman A. M. Colby F. L. Coldwell G. W. Cole R. P. Conklin TERRY LEE CLAASSEN. 2526-19th Street, Great Bend, Kans.; Great Bend Senior H.S.; GOVERNMENT: I.D.C. 2; Intramurals 1. 2, 3; WIET 1, 2, 3; Public Service Fellowship 4. JAMES HAROLD CLARK, 6 Sunset Drive, Barre, Vt.; Spaulding H.S.; ENGINEERING; AFROTC 3, 4; Dartmouth Society of Engineers 3, 4. PETER KING CLARK. Kennebunk Beach, Me.: Kennebunk H.S.: ENGLISH; Foley; Foreign Study Program 3; Band 2; Cutter Hall Ex. 4; Le Cercle Franc 4. CLIFFORD COLLINS CLIFFORD. JR., 362 Elm Street, Biddeford, Me.; Biddcford H.S.; GOVERNMENT; Kappa Sigma—Secretary 3, Social Chairman 4; I.D.C. 2; Basketball 1; intramurals I, 2, 3, 4. HIRAM S. CODY, III, 50 Dartmouth Road. Mountain Lakes N.J.: Mt. Lakes H.S.; ENG¬ LISH; Tau Epsilon Phi; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Band I. 2, 3, 4. WILLIAM JOSEPH COFFEY, JR., 42 Glendale Avenue. Melrose, Mass.; Malden Catholic H. S.; GEOGRAPHY; I.D.C. 3, 4; Football I, 2, 3; Crew 1; Intramurals 4; Newman Club I, 2, 3, 4—Dorm Rep. BRENT BERNARD COFFIN, 2449 So. Leyden, Denver, Colo.; Cherry Creek H.S.; PHI¬ LOSOPHY; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Class Officer I—Vice President; Green Key—Vice President; Bicentennial Planning Committee 2, 3, 4. THOMAS ANDREW COFFMAN, 7521 Chicago Avenue South. Richfield, Minn.; Benilde H.S.; HISTORY; Psi Upsilon; Hockey I, 2, 3, 4. ALEXANDER MacGREGOR COLBY, Washington Street, West Boxford, Mass.; Phillips Academy; ECONOMICS; D.O.C. I, 2; Army ROTC 1, 2. W. D. Conner D. B. Comer S. L. Crocker J. E. Crouch FREDERIC LEWIS COLDWELL, 10 Commonwealth Avenue, Middletown, N.Y.; Blair Academy; ECONOMICS-URBAN STUDIES; Alpha Delta—Rush Chairman; Motor Sports 3; Ledyard Canoe 3, 4. K. M. Cunningham L. A. Curtis 198 S. Dagirmanjian J. S. Dahlman B. L. Dancey W. S. Darter, III R. J. David D. S. Davies D. R. Davies G. E. Davis R. Davis J. E. Day GEOFFREY WARREN COLE, 5722 Nevada Avenue, Washington, D.C.; St. Albans S.; ENGLISH; Phi Sigma Psi—House Manager; D.O.C. 1, 2; Bait Bullet 1, 2. RALPH PRESTON CONKLIN, 5238 DeLoachc Avenue, Dallas, Texas; St. Mark’s School of Texas; MATHEMATICS; Green Key 3; D.C.A.C. 4—Executive Committee; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4—Secretary 3, President 4; C.O.S.O. 3, 4—Secretary 3; AEGIS 1, 2, 3, 4—Layout Editor 2, Editor-in-Chief 3, President 4; Glee Club 1, 2; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Day-by-Day 3, 4—Editor; Estival 3, Editor; Bicentennial Publicity Committee 3; Phi Beta Kappa. WARREN DALE CONNER, 3903 Douglass Avenue, Memphis, Tenn.; Messick H.S.; GOV¬ ERNMENT; Kappa Kappa Kappa. DONALD BRUCE CORNER, Horseshoe Hill, Hockessin, Dela.; Alexis I. DuPont H.S.; PHYSICS; Phi Beta Kappa; I.D.C. 2, 3, 4. SAMUEL LINCOLN CROCKER, 54 Lexington Street, Weston, Mass.; Weston H.S.; ENGI¬ NEERING; Kappa Kappa Kappa—House Manager; Ski Patrol 1, 2. JOHN EDGELL CROUCH, 45 Elm Street, Gardner, Mass.; Garner H.S.; ENGLISH. KEVIN MARK CUNNINGHAM, 24 Rip Road, Hanover, N.H.; Phillips Exeter Academy; GOVERNMENT; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Ski School 1, 2, 3, 4. LYNN ALAN CURTIS, 13 Minnewawa Drive, Timberlake, Ohio; North H.S.; BIOLOGY- PSYCHOLOGY; Intramurals I; D.C.U. 2, 3, 4. STEVE DAGIRMANJIAN, 40 Prentice Road, Whitinsville, Mass.; Northbridge H.S.; PSY¬ CHOLOGY; Alpha Theta; Dragon; Football 1; Baseball I, 2, 3, 4; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4. JEFFREY STUART DAHLMAN, 3 Spring Lane, Yardley, Pa.; Pennsbury H.S.; HISTORY; Phoenix—Vice President; I.F.C. 4; Football 1, 2, 3; Young Repub. 1, 2, 3, 4. BURT LEE DANCEY, 419 Haines Avenue, Pekin, III.; Pekin Community H.S.; ENGLISH. WILLIAM SMITH DARTER, III. Rt. 2, Box 50A, Delta, Colo.; Delta H.S.; PSYCHOLOGY; Tabard; Foreign Study Program 3; Wrestling 1, 2; Intramurals 1, 4. RICHARD JOSEPH DAVID, 1237 Campbell Avenue, Jacksonville, Fla.; Englewood H.S.; PSYCHOLOGY-BIOLOGY; Foreign Study Program 3; Crew 1; Dart. Com. Symph. Orch. 1, 2, 3. DeWITT SMITH DAVIES, 121 Hewlett Avenue, East Patchogue, N.Y.; Patchogue H.S.; EARTH SCIENCE; Phoenix; Dragon. DOUGLAS REES DAVIES, 11025 Stanmore Drive, Potomac, Md.; Mercersburg Academy; ENGINEERING SCIENCES; Pi Lambda Phi; Band I; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; DYCA 2, 3, 4, Vice President. GARY EDWARD DAVIS, 250 Brown School Road, Vandalia, Ohio; Butler H.S.; ECO¬ NOMICS; Gamma Delta Chi, Treasurer; Phi Beta Kappa; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4. RANDALL DAVIS, 45 Jackson Road, Valley Stream, N.Y.; Valley Stream South H.S.; PHYSICS; Pi Lambda Phi, Rush Chairman; Phi Beta Kappa; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; WDCR 1, 2, 3, 4—Disc Jockey; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Society of Physics Students 3, 4—Presi¬ dent. JONATHAN EVERETT DAY, 6214 Dahlonega Road, Washington, D.C.; Walt Whitman H.S.; PSYCHOLOGY; Phi Sigma Psi—Social Chairman; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; D.O.C. 1; AFROTC 3, 4. 1QQ JAMES H. DECKER, JR., 115 Nottingham Road, Syracuse, N.Y.; Nottingham H.S.; HIS¬ TORY; Theta Delta Chi; Sphinx; Football 1, 2, 3; Rugby 3, 4; Track 1; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4. DAVID ALLEN DEESE, 7 Surrey Lane, Holden, Mass.; Wachusett Regional H.S.; GOV¬ ERNMENT; Pi Lambda Phi—Marshall; Honors Major; Foreign Study Program 2, 3, Group Leader; El Circulo Espan 1, 2; Ski School 2, 3, 4—Head Instructor; Ski Team 1; NROTC 1, 2, 3, 4. JEFFREY TITUS DEMERATH; 7304 Lindell Boulevard, St. Louis, Mo.; American Inti. School, New Delhi, India; GOVERNMENT; Gamma Delt—Rush Chairman; Pledge Cap¬ tain U.G.C. 2; I.D.C. 2; Foreign Study Program 3—Florence, Italy; Tennis 1; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; WDCR 2; D.C.U. 3. JOHN FRANCIS DENIS, 203 St. James Boulevard, Springfield, Mass.; Technical H.S.; CLASSICS; Foreign Study Program 3; D.C.U. 2. 3; Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Dart. Conserv. Society 2, 3, 4; Classics Club 1, 2, 3, 4—-Editor Dartmouth Classical Journal, 2, 3, President—4, Librarian 4. MILTON EARL DENKER, Breezy Knoll, Hinsdale, N.H.: Hinsdale H.S.; ENGINEERING SCIENCE; Dart. Soc. of Engineers 2, 3; Intramurals 1, 3. ERIC LEE DERRICKSON. 2 Westfield Street, Nashua, N.H.; St. Paul’s School; ITALIAN; Delta Kappa Epsilon—Assistant Social Chairman; Foreign Study Program 2. 3; Rifle 1, 2; Glee Club 1; Le Cercle Franc 1, 2; NROTC 1, 2, 3, 4; Italian Club 1, 2, 3, 4—President. DANDRE GREGORY DeSANDES, 114 Gramercy Place, Teaneck, New Jersey; Teancck H.S.; SOCIOLOGY-GOVERNMENT; Green Key 3; Foreign Study Program 3; Track 1, 2; Afro-American Soc. 1, 2, 3, 4. LAWRENCE SHEPPARD DeVAN, 213 Eichelberger Street. Hanover, Pa.; Choate School; GOVERNMENT; Gamma Delta Chi—Secretary; Lacrosse 1; Intramurals I, 2, 3, 4; New¬ man Club I, 2, 3, 4; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Ski School 1, 2; Bait Bullet 1. GEORGE ALLOU d’HEMECOURT, III, Mercedes, Texas; Georgetown Prep.; GEOGRA¬ PHY; Alpha Theta—Athletic Chairman; I.D.C. 2; Basketball 1; D.O.C. 1. P TER MICHAEL DONOVAN, 7309 Delfield St., Chevy Chase, Md.; Sidwell Friends School; GOVERNMENT; Theta Delta Chi; Casgue Gauntlet 4—Vice President; Foot¬ ball 1, 2, 3, 4; Intramurals, 1, 2, 3, 4; Army ROTC 1, 2, 3, 4. STEVE WING DORISS, 65 Goodwives River Road, Darien, Conn.; Darien H.S.; ARCHI¬ TECTURE; Phoenix; Track 1; Intramurals 3, 4; D.O.C. 1, 2. CHARLES EDWARD DORKEY. Ill, 408 East Spring Ave., Ardmore, Pa.; Louer Merion H.S.; HISTORY; Theta Delta Chi—Treasurer; Football 1, 2, 3, 4; Lacrosse 1, 2, 3, 4; Foreign Study Program 3; Russian 3, 4. JAMES REYBURN DOUGLAS, JR., 537 Valleybrook, Memphis, Tenn.; White Station H.S.; CHEMISTRY; Phi Beta Kappa; AEGIS 1, 2—Photographer; D.C.U. 2, 3, 4—Commis¬ sioner. JEFFREY LAURANCE DOW, 8 Pearl Street, Belfast, Me.; Belfast H.S.; GOVERNMENT; Phi Delta Alpha; Football 1; Intramurals, 1, 2, 3, 4; Dart. Com. Symph. Orch. 1, 2; Barbary Coast 3, 4. J. H. Decker, Jr. D. A. Dcese J. T. Demerath J. F. Denis M. E. Denker E. L. Derrickson D. G. DeSandes L. S. DeVan G. A. d ' Hemecourt, III P. M. Donovan S. W. Doriss C. E. Dorkey, HI J. B. Douglas, Jr. J. L. Dow 200 J. P. Doyle J. D. Druce, Jr. S. F. Duarte R. D. Duckworth, III D. C. Durgin G. J. R. Dyer N. R. Easton, Jr. N. P. Economou P. H. Ehret D. L. B. Eldredge P. T. Elliott G. G. Ellsworth R. H. Emerson, Jr. W. D. Engle JUSTIN PATRICK DOYLE, 327 Allens Creek Road, Rochester, N.Y.; Allendale S. RELI¬ GION; Tabard; The Dartmouth 1, 2; S.D.S. 1, 2, 3; Camera Club 1, 2, 3; Motor Sports 1, 2, 3, 4. JOHN DIX DRUCE, JR.; 158 Prospect St., West Boylston, Mass.; Phillips Exeter Academy; GOVERNMENT; Heorot; Soccer 1, 2, 3; Rugby 1; Ski School 1, 2, 3. STEPHEN FRANCIS DUARTE, Webster Avenue, Pelham, N.H.; Alvirne H.S.; ENGLISH; Phi Tau—Athletic Chairman; Phi Beta Kappa. ROY DEMAREST DUCKWORTH, III, 15 Park Aveā€ž Bronxville, N.Y.; Bronxville H.S.; GOVERNMENT; Psi Upsilon; Treasurer; I.D.C. 2—Representative; Football 1, 2, 3; Golf 1; NROTC 1, 2, 3, 4. DANA CARROLL DURGIN. R.F.D., South Casco, Me.; Bay Shore H.S.; GEOLOGY; Tau Epsilon Phi—Vice President: Football 1; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Geology Club 3, 4; NROTC I, 2; Drill Team 2. GEOFFREY JOHN ROLLINS DYER. 77 Wildwood Park, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada; Vincent Massey Collegiate S.; ENGLISH; Psi Upsilon—Vice President; Hockey 1; Foreign Study Program 3; Tennis 1, 2, 3, 4; Intramurals 2, 3, 4. NELSON ROY EASTON, JR.; 4451 Washington Boulevard, Indianapolis, Ind.; Shortridge H.S.; CHEMISTRY; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; WDCR 1; Cheerleader 1; AISEC 2, 3, 4; Dart. Conserv. Society 1, 2; D.O.C. 1, 2; Kriegspiel Society 3, 4—President; Chemistry Research A sst. 3, 4; NSF Fellow 3. NICHOLAS PHILIP ECONOMOU, 224 Villa Street, Manchester, N.H.; Memorial H.S.; PHYSICS; Phi Beta Kappa; AFROTC 3, 4; Society of Physics Students 3, 4. PHILIP HAROLD EHRET, 16 Burwell Road, West Roxbury, Mass.; Boston Latin S.; MATHEMATICS; Delta Kappa Epsilon—Treasurer; I.D.C. 2: Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4—Busi¬ ness Manager. DAVID LAWRENCE BELDING ELDREDGE, 215 Main Street, Hingham, Mass.; Hingham H.S.; SPANISH; Sigma Nu Delta; Soccer 1; Foreign Study Program 3; Rugby 1, 2; COSCO—Dartmouth Project Mexico 2; Cosmo. Club 1; El Circulo Espan I, 2, 3, 4; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Ski Team 1, 2, 3, 4; Carcajou Ski Club 1, 2, 3, 4—Secretary. PETER THOMAS ELLIOTT, 1539 So. 76 Street, West Allis, Wise.; West Allis Central; GOVERNMENT; Beta Theta Pi—Vice President; Dragon—Social Chairman; Football 1; Track 1, 2, 3, 4. GARY GEORGE ELLSWORTH, 70 Overbrook Road, West Hartford, Conn.; William Hall H.S.; PSYCHOLOGY; Alpha Theta—Social Chairman; Soccer 1; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; NROTC 1, 2, 3, 4. ROGER HILL EMERSON, JR., 757 Main Street, Hingham, Mass.; Hingham H.S.; BIOL¬ OGY; Alpha Chi Alpha; Foreign Study Program 2; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Project ABC 3, 4. WILLIAM DOUGLAS ENGLE, Rt. 1, Murray, Ky.; Solvay H.S.; PSYCHOLOGY; Alpha Chi Rho, Activities Chairman; Intramurals 1, 2, 3; Crew 1; D.C.U. 2, 3, 4—Social Service Commission, Vice President; Cabin Trail 2. S. R. Fahey J. B. Farnum S. C. Fay T. R. English D. B. Estey S. C. Eurenius T. M. Evans W. A. Fead S. C. Ewart THOMAS ROBERT ENGLISH. 1360 SW Bonnie Brae, Beaverton, Ore.; Jefferson H.S.; HISTORY; I.D.C. 4—Dorm Chairman Secretary; Football 1; Track 1; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4. DAVID BOMAN ESTEY, 173 Nichols Street, Norwood, Mass.; Governor Dummer Acad¬ emy; ECONOMICS; Phi Tau—Secretary; Handel Society 1; Glee Club I, 2, 3. 4. STEPHEN CHENEY EURENIUS, Pollard Street. Conway. N.H.: Kennett H.S.; MATHE¬ MATICS; Psi Upsilon—House Manager; Baseball I; Rugby 3, 4; AEGIS 3, 4; Camera Club 4; Germania 4; D.O.C. 3, 4; Ski Team 3, 4; Ledyard Canoe 3, 4. THOMAS MORE EVANS. 1160 East 56 Street, Chicago. III.; St. John’s Prep.; SOCIOLOGY; Foreign Study Program 3; Intramurals I, 2, 3, 4; Greensleeves 1; Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Le Cercle Franc I, 2; Community Youth Organization 1, 2, 3, 4; Youth Christian Students 1, 2—Co-Ordinator; D.C.U. Tutoring I, 2; D.C.U. Prison Program 1,2. STEPHEN CHARLES EWART, 349 S. Bristol Lane. Arlington Hgts., III.; Arlington H.S.; BIOLOGY-PSYCHOLOGY; Phoenix 2. 3. 4; Football 1, 2; Track I, 2, 3, 4. DAVID CHRISTOPHER FABRE Y, 919 Locust Street, Perrysburg, Ohio; Perrysburg H.S.; ENGLISH; Delta Kappa Epsilon; Cross Country 1; Intramurals l, 2, 3, 4; D.O.C. 1. STEPHEN ROBERT FAHEY, 10 Ware Road, Winchester, Mass.; Winchester H.S.; BIOL¬ OGY; Phi Delta Alpha—Secretary; Dragon; Phi Beta Kappa; Basketball 1; Track I; Rugby 2, 3, 4; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4. JAMES BROTHERTON FARNUM. 827 North Rebecca Place. Peoria. Illinois; Peoria H.S.; GREEK STUDIES: Heorot; Squash 1; Foreign Study Program 3; Tennis 1; Dart. Conserv. Society 2, 3. SEAN CARL FAY, 1006 San Roque Road. Santa Barbara. Calif. San Marcos H.S.; ASIAN RELIGION; Alpha Chi Rho; Football 1; Wrestling 1; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; S.I.M.S.— Hanover Chapter—President 3, 4. WILLIAM ALEXANDER FEAD. 818 Shackamaxon Drive, Westfield, N.J.; Westfield Sr. H.S.; HISTORY-PSYCHOLOGY; Kappa Kappa Kappa; I.D.C. 4; Soccer, I, 2, 3, 4; The Players 1; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Winter Carnival Council 1; Mt. Club 1; Yacht Club I. ROBERT SHELDON FELD, 555 Elizabeth Avenue, Newark. N.J.; Vailburg H.S.; BIO¬ CHEMISTRY; Phi Beta Kappa; Basketball I; D.C.U.—Tutor 2; Undergraduate Research in Chemistry 3, 4. S. B. Ferguson D. E. Feldman B. W. Flaherty W. L. Flaherty P. L. Fogg F. S. Fountain S. C. Fox P. S. Francis R. W. Fraser W. J. Fraser T. M. Frawley C. R. Fricek P. M. Gambaccini P. N. Geary R. M. George AARON JOEL FELDMAN, 4 Fairway, West Hartford, Conn.: Conard H.S.; PSYCHOL¬ OGY: Phi Tau—Treasurer; Phi Beta Kappa; Band 1, 2. DOUGLAS EDWARD FELDMAN, 5125 Chevy Chase Parkway, N.W. Washington, D.C.; Woodrow Wilson H.S.; HISTORY; Delta Kappa Epsilon; U.G.C. 2, 3—Dorm Chairman; 1. D.C. 1, 2, 3—Chairman—Const. Review Comm.; Football 1, 2—Manager; Baseball 1, 2—Manager. SANFORD BARNETT FERGUSON, 14 James Ross Place, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Hun School of Princeton; MATHEMATICS; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Casgue Gauntlet; Crew I, 2, 3, 4. BRUCE WILLIAM FLAHERTY, 78 Devon Street, Portland, Me.; Deering H.S.; PSYCHOL¬ OGY; D.C.U. 3, 4; Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Young Repub. 2, 3, 4; Winter Sports 3, 4. WILLIAM LOUIS FLAHERTY; 24 Stiles Street, Stratford, Conn.; Frank Scott Bunnell H.S.; BUSINESS; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; U.G.C. 3; I.D.C. 2, 3—Dorm Chairman Middle Mass 3; Ski School 1, 2, 3, 4. PETER LOCKHART FOGG, 7024 Indian Peaks Trail, Boulder, Colo.; Boulder H.S.; GOV¬ ERNMENT; Bones Gate—Junior Rush Chairman; Crew I; Rugby 2; Intramurals 1, 2, 3; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3; Mt. Club 1; Rock Band 3. WALLACE LEONARD FORD. II, 28 East Maple St., Teancck. N.J.; Teaneck H.S.; HIS¬ TORY; Senior Fellow; Class Officer 1—Representative; Intramurals 1, 2, 3; The Dartmouth 2, 3, 4—Feature Writer; WDCR I, 2. 3. 4—Annou ncer; Afro-Am Society 1, 2, 3, 4 Co¬ ordinator. FREDERICK SHELDON FOUNTAIN, 183 Main Street, Wolfville, Nova Scotia, Canada; King ' s College S.; FRENCH; Phi Delta Alpha; Foreign Study Program 3; Rugby 1, 2, 3, 4; Intramurals 1, 2, 3. 4; Cosmo Club 1. 2; Le Cercle Franc 2. 3. 4; Hockey Club 2, 3; ABC Program 4. STEPHEN CRESS FOX, 30000 Rock Creek Drive, Southfield. Mich.; Loyola Academy; GOVERNMENT; Beta Theta Pi—Recording Secretary; Dragon Sr. Soc.; Football I, 2; Lacrosse I; Rugby 2, 3, 4—Secretary; Jack-O 4. PAUL SANDERS FRANCIS, 2505 Richen St., Artesia, New Mexico; New Mexico Military Institute; GOVERNMENT; Bones Gate—Social Chairman; Winter Carnival Council I, 2; Ledyard Canoe 1, 2. 3; Army ROTC 2, 3, 4. ROBERT WELLINGTON FRASER, 2 Knoll Road. Tenafly, N.J.; Tenafly Sr. H.S.; CHEM¬ ISTRY; Tau Epsilon Phi—Treasurer; Phi Beta Kappa; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 1, 2; Cosmo. Club I; Chess Club 1. WILLIAM JOHNSON FRASER. 1400 Warm Springs Avenue, Boise, Idaho; Fountain Valley S.; GEOGRAPHY; Sigma Nu Delta—Social Chairman; Dragon; I.D.C. 3; Crew I: Rugby 3. 4; Intramurals I. 2, 3, 4; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Dartmouth-Lyme Program 3. 4. TIMOTHY MICHAEL FRAWLEY, 1229 Gordon Place. Anaheim. Calif.; Servile H.S.; SOCIOLOGY; Sigma Alpha Epsilon—Vice President; I.D.C. 3—Chase House Dorm Chair¬ man; Swimming 1, 2, 3, 4. CREIGHTON RYDER FRICEK, 28728 Osborn Road, Bay Village, Ohio; Bay H.S.; COM¬ PUTER SCIENCE; Pi Lambda Phi—Social Chairman; Crew 1, 2, 3, 4; Winter Carnival Council 2, 3, 4—Chairman of Features; Senior Symposia 4—Director of Hopkins Center Relations. PAUL MATTHEW GAMBACCINI, 8 High Point Road, Westport, Conn.; Staples H.S.; HISTORY; Phi Beta Kappa; I.D.C. 2, 3—Dorm Chairman; WDCR 1, 2. 3, 4—Gen. Man.—Chairman of the Board; Glee Club 1, 3, 4; D.C.U. 2, 4; Freshman Council I; HOPSAC 2, 3, 4. PETER NORMAN GEARY, 138 Church Street, Westwood, Mass.; Westwood H.S.; BIOL¬ OGY; Bones Gate—Athletic Manager: The Dragon; IDC 2, 3—Dorm Chairman 3; Basket¬ ball 1—Manager; Intramurals 1. RICHARD MINOR GEORGE, South Street. Middlebury, Conn.; Woodbury H.S.; MATHE¬ MATICS; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Band 1, 2, 3, 4; D.O.C. 1; NROTC 1. GREG JAY GEPNER, 5000 West 28th Street, St. Louis Park, Minn.; St. Louis Park Sr. H.S.; BIOLOGY; Alpha Theta. GEOFFREY NEAL GILBERT; 2020 El Camino. Tempe. Ariz.; Tempo H.S.; ECONOMICS (Honors); Phi Beta Kappa; Greensleeves 1; Chess Club 1, 2, 3—President. DAVID RICHARD GILMOUR, 52 Woodview Avenue. Hamburg. N.Y.; Hamburg Sr. H.S.; ANTHROPOLOGY; Cross Country I, 2; Track 1. WILLIAM EDWARD GLANZ, 8806 Hawthorn Lane, Philadelphia, Pa.; Springfield Twp. Sr. H.S.; BIOLOGY; Phi Beta Kappa; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Cabin Trail 1, 2. 3. 4 Trips Director 3; DOC Directorate 4—Vice President, Freshman Trip Director. KEITH THOMAS GI.EESON, 2106 Old Bainbridgc Road, Tallahassee, Fla.; Leon H.S.; ECONOMICS; Zeta Psi; Foreign Study Program 3; Sailing Team 3, 4; Dart. Conserv. Soc. 2, 3, 4—Publicity Chairman and Secretary; Yacht Club 4. STEPHAN RONALD GLICKEN, 333 Trotting Road. Union, New Jersey; Wcequahic H.S.; ENGLISH; The Players 1, 2, 3, 4. MARK BARRY GLOVSKY, 23 Ober Street, Beverly, Mass.; Tabor Academy; ENGLISH; Psi Upsilon; I.D.C. 1; D.O.C. I, 2, 3; Winter Sports I. STEVEN JOHN GOLDSTEIN, 25 Norwood Road. West Hartford. Conn.; Conard H.S.; ENGLISH; Kappa Kappa Kappa—Treasurer; Golf I, 2—Manager; Intramurals 1, 2. 3; Winter Carnival Council 1. PAUL WALLACE GORMSEN, 460 LeSclle St. So., Salem, Ore.; South Salem H.S.; ENG¬ LISH; Zeta Psi; The Dartmouth l, 2, 3, 4; Jack-O I; Glee Club 1; D.O.C. I, 2, 3, 4; Ski Patrol I; Ski School 3, 4; Ski Team 1; Flying Club 1, 4. MICHAEL JOHN GORR, 13 Oakhurst Avenue, Ipswich. Mass.; St. John ' s Prep.; PHILOSO¬ PHY; Phi Beta Kappa; Numismatic Curator (Museum) 1, 2; Philosophy Student Union 3, 4; Co-Ordinator, DEC Course 3; Karate Club 1. STEVEN BRYANT GOSS, 226 Franklin Street, Lakeport, N.H.; Laconia H.S.; MATHE¬ MATICS; Psi Upsilon; Football 2, 3; Ski Patrol I, 2, 3, 4—Hill Captain. LAWRENCE BARRY GOTLIEB, 521 No. Flores Street, Los Angeles, Calif.; Fairfax H.S.; GOVERNMENT-URBAN AFFAIRS; Pi Lambda Phi; Class Officer 3—Student Senate; Green Key 3; WDCR 1, 2; Forensic Union 1; J.L.C. I, 2; Int. Rel. Club 1; Winter Carnival Council 1. G. J. Gepner G. N. Gilbert D. R. Gilmour W. E. Glanz K. T. Gleeson S. R. Glicken M. B. Glovsky S. J. Goldstein P. W. Gormsen M. J. Gorr S. B. Goss L. B. Gotlieb P. A. Gotsis D. A. Graves S. H. Graves. Ill P. S. Gray S. D. Greenber g R. A. Greenewald R. M. Grimes G. A. Gross D. P. Gross! R. M. Groves A. E. Haag C. E. Haldeman, Jr. J. L. Hall M. C. Hamilton G. P. Hansen P. C. Harter PERRY ANDREW GOTSIS, 851 South Branch Parkway, Springfield, Mass.; Classical Sr. H. S.; BIOLOGY; Delta Kappa Epsilon—Corresponding Secretary; Glee Club 1, 2; D.C.U. 1—Tutorial Program. DAVID ALLEN GRAVES, Possum Ridge, New Fairfield, Conn.; Danbury H.S.; DRAMA; Heorot; The Dartmouth 3, 4—Photographer; WDCR 1, 2, 3, 4—Newsman, Engineer; The Players 3, 4; Camera Club 1. STANLEY H. GRAVES, III, 28 Elmview Terrace, Pittsfield, Mass.; Pittsfield H.S.; BUSI¬ NESS ADMINISTRATION; Kappa Sigma—Athletic Chairman; Dragon; Football 1; Rugby I, 2, 3; D.O.C. 1; Winter Sports 1, 2, 3. PHILIP SOUTHER GRAY. 16 Wakeman Road, Darien, Conn.; Darien H.S.; HISTORY; Swimming 1, 2, 3, 4—Manager; NROTC 1, 2, 3, 4. STEVEN DAVID GREENBERG, 8228 Forest Avenue Elkins Park, Pa.; Cheltenham H.S.; GEOLOGY; Phi Tau; The Players 1; Camera Club 3, 4; Mt. Club 1, 2, 3, 4 Treasurer; Film Society 4—Student Manager. RUBBIE ALBERT GRFENEWALD. 374 Rock Run Road. Elizabeth, Pa.; Elizabeth-Forward H.S.; ARCHITECTURE; Football 1, 2; D.O.C. 3, 4; Boots and Saddles 3, 4. ROGER MANNING GRIMES, R.R. 3, Marshalltown, Iowa; Marshalltown H.S.; GOVERN¬ MENT; Beta Theta Pi—Athletic Chairman; Football 1; Track 1; D.O.C. 1. GLEN ARTHUR GROSS, 37766 Park Avenue, Willoughby, Ohio; South H.S.; PHILOSO¬ PHY. DAVID PAUL GROSSI, 342 Union Street, Leominster, Mass.; Leominster H.S.; ECONOM¬ ICS; Phi Delta Alpha: Dragon; Basketball 1. ROBERT MARTIN GROVES, 3915 St. Charles Ave., New Orleans, La.; DeLaSalle H.S.; SOCIOLOGY; Phi Delta Alpha; Phi Beta Kappa; Foreign Study Program 3: D.C.U. 2. A. EVAN HAAG, Penna. Ave., Ivyland, Pa.; The Hill S.; HISTORY; T he Players 2, 3, 4—Tech. Dir. CHARLES EDGAR HALDEMAN, JR.. 1032 Anna Road. Huntingdon Valley, Pa.; Abington Sr. H.S.; Sigma Theta Epsilon President; Phi Beta Kappa; I.F.C. 3, 4; Intramurals I. 2. 3, 4; Forensic Union I, 2, 3; D.C.U. 1, 2, 3; Young Repub. 1, 2, 3, 4; Fencing 1, 2, 3. JEFFREY LEE HALL, 135 Richmond Lane, West Hartford, Conn.; Conard H.S.; PSY¬ CHOLOGY. MARK CONGDON HAMILTON, 601 Fort Hill Road, Scarsdale, N.Y.; Edgemont H.S.: BIOLOGY; Casque Gauntlet; Cross Country 1, 2, 3, 4—Captain; Track 1, 2, 3, 4. GARY PAUL HANSEN, 2808 N.E. 27th Way, Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; Sparta H.S.; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; I.D.C. 2; ABC Tutor 3. PETER CHARLES HARTER. 749 W. Toledo St., Chandler. Ariz.; Chandler H.S.; GEOL¬ OGY; Kappa Sigma—Vice President; Sphinx; Football I; Lacrosse I, 2, 3, 4; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4. 205 GEORGE K. C. HAYES, JR., 16 Winding Road, Leetsdale, Pa.; Scwickley Academy; ENG¬ LISH; The Dartmouth 1. DONALD JOSEPH HEALEY, 728-H Memo, NATC Patuxent River, Md.; Bishop Kenny; PSYCHOLOGY; The Players 1, 2, 3, 4; Fencing Club 1, 2, 3, 4. MARK J. HEBENSTREIT, 24 Bolton Place, Bloomfield, N.J.; Bloomfield Sr. H.S.; COM¬ PUTER SCIENCE; Foley House; Soccer I, 2, 3, 4; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4. MARK EDWARD HELLER. 133 Conway Road, Manchester, Conn.; Manchester H.S.; ENGLISH; Beta Theta Pi; l.D.C. 1; Football 1, 2, 3. 4; Baseball 1; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4. GREGORY HEMBERGER, 569 River Road, Hamden, Conn.; Williston Academy; ARCHI¬ TECTURE; Heorot; l.D.C. 2, 3; Lacrosse 1; Intramurals I, 2; Germania 1; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Ski Patrol 1, 2. CHRISTOPHER CHARLES HENDERSON. 16 Omaha Way, Lakewood. N.Y.; Southwestern H. S.; GOVERNMENT; Sigma Nu Delta—Vice President; Squash 1; Tennis 1; Intramurals I, 2, 3, 4; Newman Club 1. 2, 3, 4; D.O.C. 1, 2. 3, 4; NROTC 1, 2, 3, 4. RICHARD JOHN HENNESSEY, 1269 Boylston St., Newton, Mass.; Newton South H.S.; GOVERNMENT; Heorot House; Foreign Study Program 2; Intramurals 1, 2. DONALD EMIL HESS, 2828 Balmoral Road, Birmingham, Ala.; Indian Springs S.; MATH¬ EMATICS; Foley House; Green Key; Kasque Gauntley; The Dartmouth 1. 2, 3, 4— Advertising Man. Business Man.; J.L.C. I, 2. ROBERT STANBROUGH HILLAS, 2433 Swainwood Drive, Glenview, 111.; Glenbrook So. H. S.; MATHEMATICS; Alpha Chi Alpha—Treasurer; l.D.C. 3; Swimming 1, 2. KENNETH LEE HILLENBURG, 1447 Frandale Ave., West Covina, Calif.; La Puenta H.S.; SPANISH; Gamma Delta Chi: Foreign Study Program 2, 3; Glee Club 1; El Circulo Espan I, 2, 3,4. WALTER HASKELL HINTON, II, 48 Frontier Road, Cos Cob, Conn.; Phillips Exeter Academy; ENGLISH: Bones Gate—Secretary; Squash 1, Foreign Study Program 3; Camera Club 1, 2, 3, 4. WILLIAM GROVER HIPPS, JR., 4701 Willard Ave., Chevy Chase, Md.; Hampton Roads Academy; INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS-GEOGRAPHY; Tabard; Class Officer 4— Secretary-Treasurer; Crew 1, 2; Intramurals 1, 3; AEGIS 1, 2; Jack-O 1; Episcopal Youth 1, 2, 3; Cosmo. Club 1; Int. Rel. Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Young Repub. 1, 2, 3, 4; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Winter Sports 1, 2; AFROTC 3, 4; Tuck School 4; Arnold Air Society 3, 4. THEODORE I. HIROKAWA, Hartman Road, North Wales, Pa.; North Penn H.S.; RELI¬ GION; Alpha Theta—President; Class Officer 1—Treasurer; U.G.C. 1, 2; l.D.C. 1, 2— Dorm Chairman; I.F.C. 3, 4; Crew 1. DON RICHARD HOBBS, Lynnfield, Mass.; The Hotchkiss S.; PHILOSOPHY ECONOM¬ ICS; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Winter Sports 1, 2, 3, 4. CORY BARNES HOKANS, Box 188, Newport, N.H.; Sunapee H.S.; EARTH SCIENCE; Soccer 1; Intramurals I, 2, 3; Geology Club 2; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3; Ski School 3; Ski Team 1, 2; Phi Beta Kappa. WILLIAM FREDERICK HOLEKAMP, 128 W. Mermod Place, Kirkwood, Mo.; John Bur¬ roughs S.; ECONOMICS; Beta Theta Pi; Soccer 1, 2; Rugby 1, 2, 3, 4. G. K. C. Hayes, Jr. D. J. Healey M. J. Hebenstreit M. E. Heller G. Hemberger C. C. Henderson R. J. Hennessey D. E. Hess R. S. Hillas K. L. Hillenburg W. H. Hinton, II W. G. Hipps, Jr. T. I. Hirokawa D. R. Hobbs C. B. Hokans W. F. Holekamp S. Holland H. G. Hoople R. C. Homer F. J. Howard C. H. Howarth, Jr. S. O. Howe G. B. Hughes J. D. Hughes M. D. Hughes R. W. Huiskamp W. H. Hunt P. D. Hurd SCOTT HOLLAND, 1061 Lamberts Hill Road. Westfield, N.J.; Westfield H.S.; BIOLOGY; WDCR 3, 4: Glee Club I, 2, 3, 4; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Cabin Trail 1, 2, 3. HOWARD GORDON HOOPLE, 25 West Main St., Wolcott, N.Y.; Leavenworth H.S.; PSY¬ CHOLOGY; Phi Tau—Social Chairman; Glee Club 1, 2, 3. 4. ROBERT CURTIS HORNER; 16 Prospect Ave., Bar Harbor, Me.; Bar Harbor H.S.; HIS¬ TORY; Kappa Kappa Kappa; Foreign Study Program 3; Glee Club 2, 3, 4; Injunaires 2. 3, 4; D.O.C. 1,2; Bait Bullet 1. FRANK JESSE HOWARD. 4345 Brook Avenue, St. Louis Park, Minn.; St. Louis Park H.S.; BIOLOGY: Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Sphinx; Football 1, 2; Track 1. 2, 3, 4. CHARLES HOLDEN HOWARTH, JR., Hood House, Durham, N.H.; Oyster River H.S.; BIOLOGY; Tau Epsilon Phi; Soccer 1; The Dartmouth 2; D.C.U. 3; Dartmouth Course Guide 3—Science Editor; Phi Beta Kappa. STEVEN OLSON HOWE, 90 North Fairview, Santa Barbara, Calif.; Chadwick S.; BIOL¬ OGY; Alpha Chi Rho; Track I; D.O.C. 1, 2. GORDON BLACKISTONE HUGHES, 1331 Bennington Ave.. Pittsburgh. Pa.; Mercersburg Academy; PSYCHOLOGY; Theta Delta Chi—Social Chairman; I.F.C. 3, 4—Social Chair¬ man; Soccer 1; Rugby I, 2, 3, 4; Judo Club 2; Camera Club 1; Cosmo. Club 1; Motor Sports 3, 4; Young Repub. 4; Yacht Club 3; Flying Club 2. JOHN DAVIDSON HUGHES. 7011 Bellona Avenue, Baltimore, Md.; Peddie S.; ENGLISH; Delta Kappa Epsilon: Foreign Study Program 3; The Players I, 2: Ledyard Canoe 1, 2, 3, 4—Trip Dir. 4; AFROTC 3, 4. MICHAEL DAVID HUGHES, 132 N. Walnut St., Yellow Springs. Ohio; Yellow Springs H.S.; ENGLISH; Kappa Sigma; Track 1; Rugby 1, 3, 4; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4: NROTC 1, 2, 3, 4; Drill Team 3, 4. ROBERT WILLIAM HUISKAMP, 816 Grand Avenue, Keokuk, Iowa; Keokuk H.S.; ENGI¬ NEERING SCIENCE; Heorot; Football 1: Baseball 1; Rugby 1, 2, 3, 4. WILLIAM HUDSON HUNT, 49 Sixteenth Street, Bangor, Me.; Bangor H.S.; BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION; Foreign Study Program 3, 4; Cutter Hall Ex. 3; Dart. Conserv. Society 3; 11 Circolo Haliano 1, 2, 3. PETER DeWITT HURD, I Jordan Road, New Hartford, N.Y.; New Hartford H.S.; PSY¬ CHOLOGY; Alpha Chi Alpha—Corresponding Secretary; Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Band 1, 2; Winter Sports 1; Ledyard Canoe 1, 2. ) J. W. Hussey, Jr. B. R. Hyde P. Y. Inashima G. G. Irving D. H. Irwin K. M. Jackson JOHN WORTHEN HUSSEY, JR., R.D.F., Sunderland, Mass.; Deerfield Academy, ENGI¬ NEERING SCIENCE; Psi Upsilon; Dart. Soc. of Engineers 2, 3, 4; D.O.C. I, 2, 3, 4; Ski Team 1, 2, 3, 4; NROTC 1, 2, 3, 4. BRIAN REED HYDE, 416 James Street, Flagstaff. Ariz.; Flagstaff H.S.; ENGINEERING; Delta Kappa Epsilon—Social Chairman; Foreign Study Program 3: D.O.C. 1, 2, 3. 4; Ski School 2, 3, 4; Ski Team 1. PAUL YUTAKA INASHIMA, 8405 E. Liberty St., Spokane. Wash.: Coeur d ' Alene Sr. H.S.; ANTHROPOLOGY; I.D.C. 2; Wrestling 2, 3, 4; Intramurals 2, 3—Dorm Athletic Chair¬ man; Army ROTC 1, 2, 3, 4. GEORGE GERARD IRVING; 15 Hazelton Avenue. Needham, Mass.; Catholic Memorial H.S.; INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS; Phi Tau; Green Key 3; Foreign Study Program 3; Forensic Union I, 2, 3, 4; D.C.U. 2, 3; Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Young Repub. 3, 4. DAVID HORANDT IRWIN. 74 Yale Street. Bloomfield N.J.; Bloomfield H.S.; MATHE¬ MATICS; Psi Upsilon; Soccer 1, 2, 3, 4; Intramurals 1, 2, 3; D.O.C. 1,2, 3, 4; Ski Patrol 1; Ski Team 1, 2, 3, 4. KEITH MILAN JACKSON, 6850 Beloit Avenue, San Diego, Calif.; James Madison H.S.; ECONOMICS; Basketball 1; Afro-Am Society 1. JOHN SPRINGSTEED JENNESS, JR.. 5 Cold Spring Hills Road, Huntington, N.Y.: Walt Whitman H.S.; HISTORY; Zeta Psi; Lacrosse 1; Rifle 1; Barbary Coast 1, 2, 3, 4—Leader; Dart. Conserv. Society 1, 2, 3. CHARLES LEROY JOHNSON, 195 Central Avenue, East Falmouth, Mass.; Lawrence H.S.; HISTORY; Beta Theta Pi—Rush Chairman; Dragon; U.G.C. 2; Green Key 3—Head Usher; I.D.C. 2, 3, 4—Dorm Chairman 3, Vice President 3. President 4; Football l, 2, 3, 4; Track 1, 2, 3; Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Chest Fund 2, 3—Steering Committee. DAVID EUGENE JOHNSON, 447 Thorncliff Road, Kcnmore, N.Y.; Kenmore West Sr. H.S.; GOVERNMENT; Alpha Theta; Casque Gauntlet; Swimming 1, 2, 3—Frosh Captain. HERSCHELL LEE JOHNSON, 934-1 st Street North, Birmingham, Ala.; Holy Family H.S.; ENGLISH; Casque Gauntlet; Senior Fellow; Intramurals 1, 2, 3; The Players 3, 4; Afro- Am. Soc. 1, 2, 3, 4—Treasurer 1, 2; Blackout 2, 3—Art Editor. STEPHEN MACKEMER JOHNSON, 1302 Glenwood Avenue, Grand Junction, Colo.; Grand Junction H.S.; ENGINEERING SCIENCE; Kappa Sigma—Treasurer; Dart. Soc. of Engi¬ neers; Bridge Club 1, 2; D.O.C. I, 2; Ski Team 1, 2. WILLIAM HENRY JOHNSON, 141 E. Genesee Street, Skaneateles, N.Y.; Skaneateles Cen¬ tral; GEOGRAPHY; Beta Theta Pi; Sphinx; I.D.C. 2; Football 1, 2, 3, 4; Lacrosse 1, 2, 3, 4; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4. DENNIS ROLAND JOLICOEUR, 160 Ridge Road, Manchester, N.H.; Cranwell S.; ECO¬ NOMICS; Foreign Study Program 2; AEGIS I; The Dartmouth 1, 2, 3, 4—Sports Editor; Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Le Cercle Franc 1. MARC ANTONIO JOLICOEUR, 160 Ridge Road, Manchester, N.H.; Cranwell School; GEOGRAPHY; Squash I; Foreign Study Program 2; AEGIS 1, 2; The Dartmouth 1, 2, 3, 4—Sports Editor; Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4. J. S. Jenness, Jr. C. L. Johnson D. E. Johnson H. L. Johnson S. M. Johnson W. H. Johnson D. R. Jolicoeu r M. A. Jolicoeur Ann J. F. Joline D. S. Jones R. M. Jorgensen C. A. Joyce A. J, Kaplan H. Katz JOHN FORSYTH JOLINE, IV, Darrols School, West Lebanon, N.Y.; Deerfield Academy; STUDIO ART; Crew 1, 2, 3; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Ledyard Canoe 3, 4; Storm Kings 1, 2, 3, 4. DOUGLAS STUART JONES, Cloutman Point, Marblehead. Mass.; Tabor Academy; ENGI¬ NEERING; Gamma Delta Chi—Athletic Chairman; Crew 1, 2; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Sailing Team 2, 3. JEFFREY WIGHTMAN JONES, 169 Virginia Avenue, New Britain. Conn.; Berkshire; ENGINEERING; Psi Upsilon; Golf 2, 3, 4; Dart. Soc. of Engineers 2, 3, 4; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; D.O.C. I, 2, 3, 4: Ski Patrol 1. 2. KENNETH MOODY JONES, JR.; 1902 Dumons Court, Timonium, Md.; Dulaney Sr. H.S.; MATHEMATICS; Phi Tau—Vice President; Foreign Study Program 3; Intramurals 2, 3, 4; WDCR 3, 4—Sales Director: Band 1. 2. ROBERT MICHAEL JORGENSEN. 10 Crosby Street. Arlington. Mass.; Arlington H.S.; GOVERNMENT; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; I.D.C. 2; Hockey 1, 2, 3, 4; Bacchus 4—President. CRAIG ALAN JOYCE, 1437 Hall Street, Tempe, Ariz.; Tempe H.S.; HISTORY; Phi Beta Kappa; Glee Club I, 2, 3, 4; Newman Club 1, 2. 3, 4: D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4. GEORGE HAY KAIN, III, Glen Cara. Emigsville, Pa.; Gilman S.; INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS; Casque Gauntlet; Green Key 3; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Cabin Trail 1, 2, 3, 4—-Director of Ski Touring, Director of Heeling; Chairman; DOC Directorate 4; NROTC 3, 4. ALAN JAY KAPLAN, 57 Beechwood Lane, Fairfield, Conn.; Andrew Warde H.S.; MATHE¬ MATICS; WDCR 1, 2, 3, 4. HARVEY KATZ, 4 Gibson Road. Natick, Mass.; Auburn H.S.. SOCIOLOGY-URBAN STUDIES; Cutter Hall Ex. 3, 4; D.O.C. I, 2, 3, 4; Cabin Trail 1, 2. GREGORY STEVAN KEAN, 1254 Martin Drive, Wantagh, N..Y; Wantagh H.S.; GOVERN¬ MENT; Phoenix—Athletic Chairman; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4. ANDREW JOHN KEMPER. 1418 Englewood. Royal Oak, Mich.; Kimball H.S.; PSYCHOL¬ OGY; Phoenix; Football 1, 2, 3; Intramurals 1, 2, 3. 4; Newman Club 1, 2; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4, RK HARD LAURENCE KENNEY, 46 Woods Lane, Scarsdale, N.Y.; Scarsdale H.S.; ENG¬ LISH; Foley House—Vice President; I.D.C. 1, 2, 3; Lacrosse 1; Foreign Study Program 3. THOMAS BAUSMAN KENWORTHY. Sycamore Farm, Chester Springs, Pa.; Friends School; GOVERNMENT; Theta Delta Chi—Rush Chairman; Sphinx; Football 1, 2; La¬ crosse I. ALAN LELAND KIBBE, 197 Farmington Road. Longmeadow, Mass.; Longmeadow H.S.; DRAMA; The Players 2, 3, 4; Director 4; Glee Club 1—Manager; Young Repub. 1; D.O.C. 1. JAY KIMBALL KIDNEY, 38 Commerce Street, Clinton, Conn.; The Morson S.; PSY¬ CHOLOGY; Phi Lambda Phi—Treasurer, Rush Chairman; Soccer 1; Intramurals I, 2, 3, 4; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3. 4; Ski School 4; NROTC I, 2, 3, 4; Outward Bound 3. ROBERT WOODHULL KIEFABER, 3732 Blossom Heath, Kettering, Ohio; Fairmont West H.S.; PSYCHOLOGY; Intramurals I, 2; Sailing Team 1, 2; Camera Club 3, 4; D.C.U. 3, 4; Episcopal Youth I, 2; D.O.C. 1, 2; Winter Sports 1, 2; Yacht Club I, 2. ROLF WILKO KIELMAN, 1829 Bickford Drive, Mississauga, Ontario. Canada; Lome Park H. S.; ARCHITECTURE; Sigma Alpha Epsilon—Rush Chairman; Green Key 3—President; I. D.C. 2, 3; Hockey 1, 2—Captain 1; Crew 1; Campus Conference 3, 4. MARTIN L. KILLGALLON, II, Oakwood at Park. Bryan. Ohio; Bryan H.S.; ECONOMICS; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; I.D.C. 1; Football 1, 2, 3, 4; D.C.A.C. I, 2. J. K. Kidney R. W. Kiefaber ROBERT SIMPSON KING, R.D. 1, Abbottstown, Pa.; Spring Grove Area H.S.; GOVERN¬ MENT; Sigma Nu Delta—Treasurer; U.G.C. 2 ,3; I.D.C. 2, 3; Cross Country I; Lacrosse 1, 2, 3, 4; Intramurals 1, 2, 3. JOHN THOMAS KIRKLAND, 6501 Indian Hills Road. Edina. Minn.; Edina H.S.; ECO¬ NOMICS; Beta Theta Pi; Hockey 1; Intramurals 2, 3, 4; WDCR 2. 3, 4; Ski School 3, 4; Chest Fund 3—Steering Comm. WILLIAM EDWARD KOENIG, 34 Lebanon St.—Apt. 8, Hanover, N.H.; Serra Catholic H.S.; ENGLISH; Phi Delta Alpha; Dragon; Green Key 3—Corresponding Secretary; Foot¬ ball 1, 2, 3, 4: Baseball 1; Newman Club 1, 2, 3. 4. MARK WILLIAM KOROTASH, 10 Murray St., Ansonia, Conn.; Ansonia H.S.; ENGLISH; Heorot—President; l.F.C. 3, 4; Football I, 2; Rugby 1, 2, 3, 4; Newman Club I, 2; Hopkins Center Box Office 1, 2, 3, 4. MICHAEL LEONARD KREINDLER, 13 Melek Assa, Machanek David 96 1, Haifa, Israel; Gimnasia Bialik S.; PSYCHOLOGY; Phi Tau; I.F.T.C. 2, 3, 4; Intramurals 1; J.L.C. 2, —President; ABC 3—Tutor; Hebrew School 3—Principal; ā€œAnafim Magazine—3, 4— Editor. DAY KROLIK, III, 5965 Lahser Road, Birmingham, Mich.; Cranbrook S.; ENGLISH- URBAN STUDIES; Kappa Kappa Kappa; Soccer I; Squash I; Tennis 1; Motor Sports 2, 3, 4—Secretary-Treasurer 2, President 3, 4; NROTC 1, 2, 3, 4. EDWARD ROBERTS KRUSE, JR., 410 E. Chapel Avenue, Cherry Hill, N.J.; Cherry Hill H.S. West; HISTORY; Gamma Delta Chi; Phi Beta Kappa: Foreign Study Program 3; Glee Club 1; Dart. Com. Symph. Orch 2; S.D.S. 3. PAUL WILLIAM LADENSON, 704 Westmount, Columbia, Mo.; David H. Hickman H.S.; Senior Fellow; Heorot; Phi Beta Kappa; Rugby 2, 3, 4; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Le Cercle Franc 1; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Valley Tutorial Program 2. DALE ROBERT LALLY, 923 Hastings Hill, Suffield, Conn.; Suffield Academy; ENGLISH; Foreign Study Program 3; Intramurals 3; Glee Club 1, 2, 4; D.O.C. 1, 2; Ski Patrol 1, 2, 3, 4; Circolo Italiano 1, 2. RICHARD SHERMER LAND, 6 Henone Drive, Old Greenwich, Conn.; Greenwich H.S.; GOVERNMENT; Kappa Kappa Kappa; Football 1, 3, 4; Baseball 1, 2. W. E. Koenig M. W. Korotash M. L. Kreindler D. Krolik, III E. R. Kruse, Jr. P. W. Ladenson D. R. Lally R. S. Land Tin R. A. Landholm D. R. Lange J. M. Larson T. J. Laughlin D. W. Lawrence J. Lazarus S. R. Leary R. K. Lease W. M. Lee G. A. LeMaistre, Jr. P. J. LeMarbre J. L. Lemke S. B. Leslie A. D. Lewis ROGER AUGUST LANDHOLM, 601 First Street SW, Crosby, Minn.; Crosby-Ironton H.S.; PSYCHOLOGY; Phi Delta Alpha; Football 1, 2. DAVID RICHARD LANGE, Dayton-Bramit Road, New Carlisle, Ohio; Miami East H.S.; BIOLOGY; Zeta Psi—Treasurer; I.D.C. 2; Football I: Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Ski School 1. JOHN MALCOLM LARSON, 51 Larrabee Street, East Hartford, Conn.; East Hartford H.S.; ENGLISH-URBAN STUDIES; Dart.-MIT, Urb. Studies; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; AEGIS 4; Motor Sports 4; Sociology Assistant 3. TERRY JAMES LAUGHLIN, 2940 Lilac Lane. Northbrook, III.; Glenbrook N.H.S.; ECO¬ NOMICS; Beta Theta Pi—Secretary; Football I, 2, 3; Intramurals I, 2, 3. DAMON WASON LAWRENCE. Old Street Road, Peterborough, N.H.; Peterborough H.S.; ENGINEERING SCIENCE; Psi Upsilon; Sphinx; Dart. Soc. of Engineers 2, 3, 4—Vice President 4; Track 1; Ski Team 1, 2. 3, 4. JAMES LAZARUS, 1009 Catawba Valley Lane, Cincinnati, Ohio; Cincinnati Country Day School; GOVERNMENT; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; U.G.C. I, 2; Foreign Study Program 2—MIT-Dart. Urban Studies Program; 3—Urban Studies Fellowship; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4. STEPHEN RICHARD LEARY, 27 Park View Drive, Hingham, Mass.; Hingham H.S.; HIS¬ TORY; Theta Delta Chi; Football I; Hockey 1, 2, 3, 4; Lacrosse 1, 2, 3, 4; Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4. ROBERT KERR LEASE. 8407 Wilson Mills Road, Chesterland, Ohio; West Geauga H.S.; GOVERNMENT; Beta Theta Pi; Green Key 3—Treasurer; I.D.C. 1; Football 1, 2, 3, 4; Baseball 1; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4. WILLIAM MYERS LEE. 7913 Ridge Road. Indianapolis. Ind.: North Central H.S.: ENG¬ LISH; Alpha Theta; I.D.C. 2; Intramurals 1, 2, 3. GEORGE ALEXANDER LeMAISTRE, JR., 44 Woodland Hills, Tuscaloosa, Ala.; Indian Springs S.; GOVERNMENT; Foley House; Rufus Choate Scholar; Intramurals I, 2; The Dartmouth 1, 2, 3, 4—Editor-in-Chief; D.C.U. 1; Young Dem. 1; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Ski School 1; Chest Fund Committee 3. PAUL JOSEPH LeMARBRE, Hopedale Street, Mendon, Mass.; Natick H.S.; ANTHROPOL¬ OGY; Beta Theta Pi; I.D.C. 2; Football 3, 4; Cross Country 1; Track 1; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4. JAMES LEE LEMKE. Box 104. Swartswood, N.J.; Newton H.S.; ANTHROPOLOGY; Delta Kappa Epsilon; U.G.C. 3; I.D.C. 2, 3—Dorm Chairman; Foreign Study Program 4; Intra- murals 1, 2, 3, 4. STEPHEN BARRETT LESLIE, 19 Ledge Road, Bristol, R.I.; Pilgrim H.S.; BIOLOGY: Gamma Delta Chi—House Manager; Sailing Team 1, 2; D.O.C. 1; Yacht Club 1, 2. ANDREW DOUGLAS LEWIS, 410 Hibiscus Trail. Melbourne Beach, Fla.; Melbourne H.S.; ENGLISH; Kappa Kappa Kappa; I.D.C. 1, 2, 3. 4—Dorm Chairman; Freshman Council 1; Sophomore Council 2. 211 JOHN MURCHIE LEWIS, 3269 Warrington Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio; Shaker Heights H.S.; MATHEMATICS; Sigma Theta Epsilon—Treasurer; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; WDCR 1; D.C.U. 2, 3, 4—Vice President. MARK ALAN LEWIS, 58 Winding Way, West Orange. N.J.; West Orange H.S.; PSYCHOL¬ OGY; Tabard-Athletic Chairman, Rush Chairman; Phi Beta Kappa; Ski Patrol 2, 3, 4. TRACY KARL LEWIS. 83 Elm Street, Potsdam, N.Y.; Potsdam Central S.; SPANISH; Phi Beta Kappa; Cross Country 1; Foreign Study Program—Spain 2; Track 1; D.C.A.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Intra murals 1, 2. J. M. Lewis M. A. Lewis GEORGE OREN LINDSAY. 13 Gilbert Road, Storrs, Conn.; The Choate S.; PSYCHOL¬ OGY; Football 2; Rugby 1; Dart. Conserv. Soc. 3, 4; Young Dem. 1; Chest Fund 3, 4. PETER STOKES LINTON, 3105 West Queen Lane, Philadelphia, Pa.; William Penn Charter S.; ENGLISH; Kappa Kappa Kappa—Rush Committee; Green Key 3; Soccer 1, 2, 3—Cap¬ tain; Glee Club I; Ski Patrol 1, 2. NORMAN BANKS LIVERMORE, III, 141 Mountain View Avenue, San Rafael, Calif.; The Thacher S.; ENGINEERING SCIENCE; Kappa Sigma; Phi Beta Kappa; I.D.C. 3—Dorm Chairman; Dart. Soc. of Engineers 4; Crew I, 2; Rugby 3, 4; Glee Club 1; D.O.C. I, 2, 3, 4; Bait Bullet 1. JEFFERY CHARLES LOCKE. R.R. 2 Box 1562, St. Charles. 111.; St. Charles H.S.; HIS¬ TORY; Bones Gate Rush Chairman; Golf 1, 2; Foreign Study Program 3, 4. T. K. I-ewis G. O. Lindsay PETER JAY LOGAN, 3750 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, III.; Francis W. Parker S.; HIS¬ TORY; Foley House; I.D.C. 3—Dorm Chairman (North Hall); Intramurals 2, 3, 4; The Dartmouth I, 2, 3, 4; Camera Club I, 2, 3, 4—Resident 2, 3, 4; D.C.U. 3—Tutor; Cutter Hall Ex. 3, 4; Freshman Council 1; Sophomore Council 2; Film Society 3, 4—Photogra- pher Usber; Smith College History Exchange 4; IFPC 3. ROSS EUGENE LONG, JR., 85 Peach Lane, Lancaster, Pa.; Manheim Township H.S.; BIOLOGY-PSYCHOLOGY; Phi Delta Alpha—Vice President; I.D.C. 2; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4. WINDHAM EUGENE LOOPESKO, 7200 Arizona Avenue, Los Angeles, Calif.; Westchester H.S.; GOVERNMENT; Pi Lambda Phi; Tennis I; Intramurals 1,2, 3, 4; Cheerleaders I. ROBERT SHERMAN LOVEWELL, 41 Pine Ridge Road, Wellesley Hills, Mass.; Wellesley H. S.; ENGLISH; Foreign Study Program 2; Band 1; D.C.U. 1; Cutter Hall Ex. 3; Le Cercle Franc 2; D.O.C. 3; Ledyard Canoe 3. PAUL CONGER LOWE, Litchfield Turnpike, Bethany, Conn.; Hopkins Grammar School; GEOLOGY; Basketball 1, 2; Geology Society 2, 3, 4; D.O.C. 3, 4; Cabin Trail 3, 4—Heeling Director 4. LAWRENCE RUSSELL LUCAS, JR., 5412 W. Wemett Road, Pasco, Wash.; Pasco H.S.; GOVERNMENT; Phi Delta Alpha—President; Dragon; I.F.C. 4; Football 1; Army ROTC I, 2, 3, 4; Tucker Intern 2. EDWARD CARMICHAEL LUCK, 607 Glenview Drive, Carbondale, III.; University School; INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS; Crew 1; Sailing Team 1, 3, 4; Int. Rel. Club 4; Yacht Club 1, 2, 3, 4; DCU Tutoring 2, 3; Rock Band 1, 2, 3, 4. JOHN THOMAS LUDLOW, 1515 Edgewater Avenue, St. Paul, Minn.; Mounds View H.S.; ECONOMICS; Beta Theta Pi; Dean ' s List and Economics Honors’ Program; I.D.C. 1; Football 1; Crew 2, 3—lightweight captain; Tennis 1; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4. ROBERT CHARLES LUDOLPH, JR.. 221 North Elm St., Columbiana, Ohio; Proviso East H.S.; ART HISTORY; Football 1; Tucker Foundat ion 3, 4. JOHN WALTON LUGAR, 6204 Heather Drive, Memphis, Tenn.; Dulaney H.; ART; Kappa Kappa Kappa—Vice President; I.D.C. 2; The Players 2, 3; Glee Club 1, 2, 3. 4; Directed ā€œThe Boyfriend 2, Dartmouth on the Roadā€ 2, 3. P. S. Linton N. B. Livermore, III R. E. Long, Jr. W. E. Loopesko 212 R. S. Lovewell P. C. Lowe L. R. Lucas, Jr. E. C. Luck J. T. Ludlow R. C. Ludolph, Jr. ROBERT BRUCE LUMBERT, 5 Indian Hill Road. Burlington, Mass.; Burlington H.S.; MATHEMATICS; Phi Beta Kappa; Episcopal Youth 1, 2, 3. JAMES McKAY LYALL, 40 Nannahagen Road, Pleasantville, N.Y.; Pleasantville H.S.; ECONOMICS; Phoenix—Secretary; Cross Country 1; Track I, 2, 3, 4; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Army ROTC 1, 2, 3, 4. DONALD MARION McAMIS, 129 Pleasant St., N.W. Vienna, Va.; —James Madison H.S.; ENGLISH; Alpha Chi Alpha; Tennis 1, 2, 3, 4; AFROTC 3, 4. RONALD D. McCALLISTER, 2954 S. Fleming, Indianapolis, Ind.; Brebeuf; ENGINEER¬ ING; Dart. Soc. of Engineers 1, 2, 3, 4; Wrestling 2; Russian Club 3. THEODORE ALVIN McCONNELL, R.D. 1, Box 115, Aliquippa, Pa.; Hopewell H.S.; GOVERNMENT; Sigma Theta Epsilon—Rush Chairman; Casque and Gauntlet; I.D.C. 2; Football 1, 2; NROTC 1, 2, 3, 4; DCU Valley Tutorial Program 2; Tucker Intern 2; Senior Symposia—Director; Dartmouth Course Guide—Associate Editor. JOHN WELLS McCRAVEY, 130 N. Crest Road, Chattanooga, Tenn.; McCallie School; ENGLISH: Beta Theta Pi; I.D.C. 2; Soccer I, 2, 3, 4; Track 1, 2; D.C.U. Upper Valley Tutorial Program 3; Tucker Foundation Teaching Intern 3. THOMAS WARD McDERMOTT, 11 Loma Linda Drive, Colorado Springs, Colo.; Cheyenne Mt. H.S.; ECONOMICS: Kappa Kappa Kappa—Imperial Phantom; I.D.C. 3, 4; D.O.C. I, 2, 3, 4; Ski School 1, 2, 3, 4; NROTC 1, 2, 3, 4; Course Guide 3, 4. JOHN HUGH MacEACHRAN, 1317 N. 12 Street, Manitowoc. Wis.; Lincoln H.S.; HIS¬ TORY; Kappa Kappa Kappa; Swimming 1; D.O.C. 1; Fencing Club 1. EARL EDWARD McEVOY, 138 Grandview Avenue, Rye, New York; Phillips Academy; ENGLISH; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Cross Country 1, 2—Frosh Captain; Track 1, 2; Newman Club 1, 2, 3. JEFFREY JAMES McFARLAND: 5708 Schaefer Road, Minneapolis, Minn.; Blake S.; ENG¬ LISH; The Dartmouth 2, 3, 4; Cutter Hall Ex. 3, 4; The Film Society 1, 2, 3, 4—Student Director—3; HOPSAC 3, 4—Student Director 4. RANDALL HUGH McFARLANE, 2528 Buckelew Drive, Falls Church, Va.; George C. Marshall H.S.; HISTORY; Foreign Study Program 2; Intramurals 3; Chess Club 1; Le Cercle Franc I, 2; Lacrosse 2, 3—Manager of Freshmen. J. W. Lugar R. B. Lumbert J. M. Lyall D. M. McAmis R. D. McCallister T. A. McConnell J. W. McGravey T. W. McDermott J. H. MacEachran E. E. McEvoy J. J. McFarland R. H. McFarlane 213 J. D. McIntyre P. E. McKeever J. R. McKcman, Jr. E. F. McLaughlin A. C. McLean D. R. MacMannis, Jr. D. F. Macomber P. A. Mailloux G. B. Malone S. M. Marantz L. Maranzana G. Marchmont-Robinson JAMES DAYTON McINTYRE. 56 Mozart St.. West Hartford. Conn.; Conard H.S.: PSY¬ CHOLOGY-BIOLOGY; Tau Epsilon Phi—President; I.F.C. 4—Rush Committee: Glee Club l; D.C.U. 3: D.O.C. I, 2, 3. 4; D.E.C.—Course Coordinator. PETER ELLIS McKEEVER. 2408 Telequaha Dr., Anchorage. Alas.; Arapahoe H.S.; GOV¬ ERNMENT-URBAN STUDIES: Kappa Kappa Kappa; Green Key 3; Foreign Study Pro¬ gram 2; AEGIS I; Camera Club 4; Winter Carnival Council 1, 2. 3. JOHN R. McKERNAN, JR., 256 Kenduskeag Avc., Bangor, Me.; Bangor H.S.: GOVERN¬ MENT; Heorot; Dragon: I.D.C. 2; Basketball 1; Tennis I, 2, 3, 4; Rugby 4; Intramurals I, 2, 3, 4; Young Rcpub. 1, 2, 3, 4; Electric Backboard 3, 4—President 4. EDWARD FRANCIS McLAUGHLIN, 6 Calvin Road. Jamaica Plain. Mass.; Boston Latin S.; PSYCHOLOGY; Gamma Delta Chi—Projects Chairman. ALLAN CAMERON McLEAN, 331 Foreside Road. Falmouth Forcsidc, Portland. Me.; Pcddie S.; ENGLISH; Heorot—Treasurer; I.F.C. 2; Lacrosse 1,2, 3, 4. DONALD R. MacMANNIS. JR.. 68 Holly Place, Larchmont. N.Y.; Mamaroneck H.S.; PSYCHOLOGY; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Crew 1; Intramurals 1. 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Injunaires 1, 2, 3, 4; Freshman Council I. DWIGHT FRANK MACOMBER, 3452 Lisburn Road, Mcchanicsburg, Pa.: Cedar Cliflf H.S.; ENGINEERING SCIENCE; WDCR 1, 2, 3, 4. PETER ALDEN MAILLOUX, 61 5th Avenue, Haverhill, Mass.; Central Catholic H.S.; ENGLISH; Alpha Theta; DEC 2, 3. GARY BRUCE MALONE. R.R. -I, Box 258A. DuQuoin, III.; DuQuoin H .S.: GEOLOGY; Alpha Chi Alpha; Dean’s List; I.D.C. 2; Football 1; Track 2; Geology Club 3, 4. STEVEN MARK MARANTZ, 460 Twin Oaks Road, South Orange, NJ.; Columbia H.S.; PSYCHOLOGY-ANTHROPOLOGY (modified); Tabard. LOUIS MARANZANA, 3701 S.W. 40th Street. Hollywood. Fla.; Phillips Academy: ENG¬ LISH; Theta Delta Chi; Casque and Gauntlet; I.D.C. 2; Football I, 2, 3, 4. GUY MARCHMONT-ROBINSON, 9400 Springfield Ave., Evergreen Park, III.; Evergreen Pk. Comm. H.S.; HISTORY; I.D.C. 3, 4; WDCR 1; Dart. Conserv. Soc. 3, 4—Publicity Dir.; Motor Sports 4; Fencing 1. L. M. Marsh S. M. Marsh J. C. Marshall J. R. Martell B-E. K. Martinez D. C. Masselli T. M. Mayerle F. A. Meier, Jr. LAWRENCE MONBLEAU MARSH, 520 Main Street, Harwick Port, Mass.; Harwick H._ Tabor Academy; COMPARATIVE LITERATURE; Delta Kappa Epsilon; Foreign Study Program 2, 3; Handel Soc. I; Glee Club 1; S.D.S. 2, 3; Le Cercle Franc 1; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3. STEPHEN MICHAEL MARSH. Box 202. Wilder. Vt.; Hartford H.S.; RELIGION. J. CHRISTOPHER MARSHALL, Conway, N.H.; Kennett H.S.; HISTORY; Alpha Chi Rho. JEFFREY ROBERT MARTELL, 75 Townsend Road, N. Scituate, Mass.; Simsbury H.S.; CHEMISTRY; Pi Lambda Phi; Crew 1; Rugby I, 2, 3, 4; NROTC I, 2, 3, 4; Outward Bound 3. BYRON-ERIC KAHR MARTINEZ, 5600 Lakewood Dr., LeMesa, Calif.; Lakewood Sr. H.S.; GOVERNMENT; Tabard; Casque Gauntlet; Green Key 3; I.D.C. 2; Lacrosse 1; Foren¬ sic Union 1. 2; Cutter Hall Ex. 2; D.O.C. I; Karate Class 2, 3, 4—Instructor; ABC Intern Coordinator 3, 4; Jersey City Intern 3; Senior Symposia 4. DAVID CHARLES MASSELLI, 10 Falcon Terrace, Middleford, Conn.; Middletown H.S.; GOVERNMENT; Rugby 2, 3, 4; The Dartmouth I, 3, 4; Dartmouth Review, Senior Symposia. J. P. Merriam S. P. Meyer J. F. Michael, Jr. M. D. Middleton RICHARD FRANK MACIERN, 69 Hutchinson Street, Clark, N.J.; Arthur L. Johnson Regional H.S.; BIOLOGY; Phi Beta Kappa; Handel Soc. 3, 4; Glee Club I, 2; Band I. JONATHAN WALTER MAY. 2911 Orchard Lane, Wilmette, III.; New Trier East H.S.; RELIGION; Beta Theta Pi; Football 1, 2; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4. THOMAS MICHAEL MAYERLE, 202 8th Avenue, Bovey, Minn.; Greenway H.S.; HIS¬ TORY; Psi Upsilon; Hockey I, 2; Foreign Study Program 3; Intramurals 2, 3, 4; AEGIS 2, 3. FREDERICK AUGUSTUS MEIER, JR.. 35 Loring Ave., Salem, Mass.; Salem Classical H.S.; GERMAN; The Dartmouth 2, 4; Band I, 2, 4; Forensic Union 1; Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Germania I, 2, 3, 4—Treasurer, President; Young Dem. I, 2, 4. JOHN POWER MERRIAM, Horseshoe Hill, Pound Ridge, N.Y.; Pomfret S.; ANTHROPOL¬ OGY; SQUASH; D.C.U. 2. 3, 4 (Hospital Service); Cabin Trail 1, 2, 3, 4; Bait Bullet 3, 4; Brotherhood of Dartmouth Hobos 1, 2, 3, 4—President STEPHEN PAUL MEYER. 815 Grace Ave., Chariton, Iowa; Charilton H.S.; MODIFIED HISTORY; Theta Delta Chi; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Army ROTC 1 2 3, 4. JAMES FREDERICK MICHAEL, JR., 201 North I5th St., Fernandina Beach, Fla.; Feman- dina Beach H.S.; GOVERNMENT. MICHAEL DOUGLASS MIDDLETON, 900 St. David’s Lane, Schenectady, N.Y.; Niskayuna H.S.; GEOLOGY; Geology Club; D.O.C. I, 2, 3, 4. DAVID ROBERT MILES, 23 Walcott St., Oxford, Mass.; St. John’s S.; GOVERNMENT; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; AEGIS 1, 4; The Dartmouth 1; D.C.U. 3; D.O.C. 1; NROTC 1 2 3,4. GREGORY HOWARD MILLER, 8715 Woodworth Ave., Omaha, Neb.; Westside H.S.; ENGINEERING SCIENCE; Dart. Soc. of Engineers 3, 4; Band 1, 2, 3, 4. WILLIAM GARETT MILLER. JR.. 49 Hickory PI.. Livingston. N.J.; Livingston H.S.; PSY¬ CHOLOGY; Sigma Nu Delta; Crew I; Glee Club 1. 2; NROTC 1. 2, 3. 4—Captain Rifle Team 4. ROBERT ARTHUR MILLIKIN, R.D.F. 1, Box 66. Springfield. Vt.; Springfield H.S.; ARCHITECTURE; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Intramurals 1. 2, 3. 4; AEGIS 2. 3. 4; Army ROTC 1, 2, 3, 4; Estival 3—Editor; Dartmouth Summer School Directory. DAVID JOHN MILLS, 1620 Pine Street, Muskegon. Mich.; Muskegan Sr. H.S.; HISTORY; Phoenix—Rush Chairman; Football 1. 2, 3. 4. ROBERT BACON MLAKAR, 115 Hunting Trail. Moreland Hills, Ohio; University S.; Theta Delta Chi—Grand Krukon; Football 1, 2, 3. 4; Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Newman Club 1, 2. 3. 4; Ski School 4; Sphinx 3. 4; Dean ' s List 3. DENNIS MacDONNELL MOORE. 196 Pearl Croft Rd.. Cherry Hill. N.J.; Cherry Hill H.S. West; ECONOMICS; Alpha Delta—Vice President; Omicron Delta Epsilon; Football 1, 2; Golf 1, 2; Foreign Study Program 2; Intramurals 1. 2, 3. 4; Handel Soc. 3, 4; The Players 2, 3, 4; Germania 1; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Ski Patrol I HARRY E. MORGAN, JR., 300 E. 9th Street, N.. Newton, Iowa; Newton H.S.; PSYCHOL¬ OGY; Sigma Alpha Epsilon—Secretary; I.D.C. 2, 3—Secretary-Treasurer. Dorm Chairman; Football I. HICKS BERNARD MORGAN, 27 Lake Drive, Woodville, Tex.; Campion Jesuit H.S.; HIS¬ TORY; Jack-O 2—Writer; Newman Club 1, 2. 3, 4—Social Chairman; D.O.C. I, 2, 3, 4. Army ROTC 1, 2; YCS Youth Organ. 1. 2—Chairman; Freshman Council 1; Freshman Council Moderator 2. W. G. Miller, Jr. R. A. Millikin D. J. Mills R B. Mlakar JAMES GAIL MORGAN, JR., 18 South King George ' s Rd.. Cranbury. N.J.; St. George’s S.; ECONOMICS; Zeta Psi; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; D.O.C. 1. 2, 3, 4; NROTC 1. ANDREW STEPHAN MORRISON, 815 LeBrun Road, Buffalo, N.Y.; Nichols S.; ART; Foley House; I.D.C. 1, 2, 3; Crew 1—Manager; WIET 1, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 1; J.L.C. 1; D.O.C. 1,2, 3, 4; Winter Carnival Council 1. DAVID WILBUR MORSE, 59 Wheeler Lane, Torrington, Conn.; Torrington H.S.; PHYS¬ ICS; Alpha Delta—Social Chairman; D.O.C. 1, 2. 3. 4: Ski Team 1; Ledyard Canoe 3, 4. JOHN PRESCOTT MORSE. R.D. F4, Red Lane, Danville. Pa.; Mercersburg Acad.; ENG¬ LISH; Phi Delta Alpha—Social Chairman; Foreign Study Program I; Rugby 1, 2, 3, 4—Social Chairman, Publicity; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; The Dartmouth 1, 2, 3, 4. H. E. Morgan, Jr. D. M. Moore D. G. Muller, Jr. A. G. Mulley, Jr. J. A. Nachtwey C. E. Nagel J. P. Naylor W. S. Neal J. W. Nellen S. S. Nelmes E. C. Nelson G. W. Nemetz DOUGLAS FREDERICK MORTON, 467 Walker Road. Wayne, Pa.; Conestoga Sr. H.S.; ENGINEERING SCIENCE; Phi Tau—President; I.F.C. 4—President; Band 1, 2, 3; Dart. Com. Symph. Orch. 1, 2; Barbary Coast 2, 3, 4—Business Manager: The Dartmouth Five 3, 4. RICHARD MATTHIEU MORTON, P.O. Box 224, Farmington. Me.; Farmington H.S.; ENGLISH; Alpha Theta—Vice President; Lacrosse 1; Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Army ROTC 1, 2, 3, 4. JAMES STEPHEN MOSS, 1609 Simmons Drive. McLean, Va.: Rogers H.S.; ECONOMICS; Phi Tau; The Players 1; Episcopal Youth 1, 2. 3, 4—Secretary-Treasurer; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Army ROTC 1. 2, 3, 4—M.W.W. GREGORY LEONARD MOSSER, 2130 West Lake of the Isles Blvd., Minn., Minn.: West H.S.; PSYCHOLOGY; Beta Theta Pi—Social Chairman; Sphinx: Hockey 1; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Ski School 3, 4. WILLIAM CHARLES MOYES. 77 Saunders St., Lawrence, Mass.; The New Hampton S.; ECONOMICS—Tuck School; Phi Tau—Rush Chairman; WDCR 1, 2, 3, 4—Chief An¬ nouncer; Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Paxs Recording Co., 3, 4—President. JAMES LEO MUHLFELDER, 8 Tudor Road. Albany, N.Y.: The Albany Acad.; GERMAN; Beta Theta Pi; Dragon; I.D.C. 2; Football 1, 2; Foreign Study Program 3; Tennis 1, 2; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Germania 1, 2, 3, 4; Army ROTC 1, 2: German Dept. 4—Academic Assistant. JOHN PATRICK MULLEN, 358 Grove St., Elmira, N.Y.; Elmira Free Acad.; PHILOSO¬ PHY; Phi Sigma Psi—President; I.F.C. 3, 4; Crew 1; Rugby 4; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Ledyard Canoe 2, 3, 4. DAVID GLADING MULLER. JR., 6604 Hitchingpost Lane. Cincinnati, Ohio; Worcester Acad.; EAST ASIAN STUDIES: Phi Beta Kappa; WDCR 1: NROTC I, 2, 3, 4; East Asia Cr. Committee 3, 4: Student Council on International and Comparative Studies 2, 3—Vice- Chairman. ALBERT GEORGE MULLEY, JR., 401 Chestnut St., Wilmington, Mass.; Phillips Academy; BIOLOGY-PSYCHOLOGY; Phi Beta Kappa; Crew 1, 2, 3. 4; Intramurals 1. 2; D.C.U. 2, 3, 4 ; Newman Club 1, 2, 3; Le Cercle Franc 1; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4. JAMES ALAN NACHTWEY, 73 Helena Street, Leominster, Mass.: Leominster H.S.; GOV¬ ERNMENT; Heorot; Football 1; Rugby 1, 2, 3, 4; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Ski School 2, 4. CARL EDWARD NAGEL, 61 Rankin Rd.. Snyder, N.Y.; Amherst Central H.S.; ECONOM¬ ICS; Sigma Alpha Epsilon—Social Chairman: Dragon; Green Key 3; I.D.C. 2; Soccer 1, 2. 3, 4; Swimming 1; Lacrosse 1; Rugby 2, 3, 4; Winter Carnival Council 1, 2, 3, 4; Ski School 3, 4; Ledyard Canoe 1; HOPSAC 3, 4. JAMES POLLARD NAYLOR, 485 Pullman Rd., Hillsborough, Calif.; Darien H.S.; SOCI¬ OLOGY; Gamma Delta Chi—Social Chairman; Football 1; Intramurals 1, 2. 3, 4. WILLIAM STRATTON NEAL. 363 Snowball Drive, Levittown, Pa.; Neshaminy H.S.; ENG¬ LISH: Phi Sigma Psi—Historian, Vice President; Crew 1; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4. JAMES WILLIAM NELLEN, Old Plank Road. DePere, Wis.; Abbott Pennings H.S.; GOV¬ ERNMENT; Tau Epsilon Phi; Intramurals 3, 4; AEGIS 3, 4—Associate Editor; WDCR 1, 2, 3; D.C.U. 2, 3, 4—Vice President 4, Chairman—Valley Tutorial Program; Young Repub. 3, 4; D.O.C. 1; Bait Bullet 1, 2. STEPHEN SALISBURY NELMES, 90 Meadow Road, East Longmeadow, Mass.; E. Long- meadow H.S.; RUSSIAN LANGUAGE LITERATURE; Phi Tau—Secretary, House Manager; Foreign Study Program 3; Band I, 2, 3, 4—Student Conductor; Dart. Com. Symph. Orch. 1. EUGENE CURTIS NELSON, 1053 Carr Street. Elgin, III.; Larkin H.S.; SOCIOLOGY; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; U.G.C. 3; I.D.C. 3; Football 1; Track 1, 2; Rugby 2: Dartmouth Cest Fund 2, 3. GREGORY WILLIAM NEMETZ, 380 Lowell St., Manchester, N.H.; Manchester H.S. Cen¬ tral; MATHEMATICS; Delta Kappa Epsilon—House Manager. ROLAND CHEW KEF. NG. SIH-B. No Judd St.. Honolulu. Hawaii: lolani School: CHEMIS¬ TRY: Fencing Club 1. 2. 3. 4. JON NICHOLAS NISTAD. 23 Bradford Lane. Bethpage, N.Y.; Bethpagc H.S.: ECONOM¬ ICS: Phoenix; Football I. 2. 4; Baseball I. 2. 3; Judo Club 2: Intramurals I. 2. 3. 4: Newman Club 1: Episcopal Youth I: Motorcycle Club 3. 4—President. FREDERIC ADRIAN NITSCHELM. 4 Brook Road. Hanover. N.H.: Hanover. N.H.: PSY¬ CHOLOGY; Heorot: Soccer I. 2. 3. 4: Intramurals 2. 3. 4. DAVID FRYE NOYES. 989 Bay St., Manchester, N.H.; New Hampton H.S.: ECONOMICS; Bones Gate: I.D.C. 2—Social Chairman; Tennis I: Intramurals 1, 2. 3. 4; D.O.C. I, 2, 3, 4; Ski School 2, 3. 4—Head Instructor; Ski Team I. KENT EVANS NYBERG, 104 Roosevelt Avenue, Coleraine, Minn.; Greenway H.S.; ECO¬ NOMICS; Beta Theta Pi; Hockey I. 2. 3, 4. JOHN NIKKI NYS, 1223 90 Avenue West. Duluth. Minn.: Morgan Park; GOVERNMENT: Crew 1; Intramurals I, 2, 3. CHARLES CALLAN O ' BRIEN: 56 Edgcsrtounc Rd.. Princeton. N.J.: Lawrcnceville S.; GOVERNMENT; Sigma Theta Epsilon; Casque Gauntlet: Class Officer 1. 2—Freshman Rep., Sophomore Council: I.D.C. 3—Streeter Dorm Chairman; Lacrosse 1; Intramurals I. 2, 3; Motor Sports 2; Winter Carnival Council I. 2. 3, 4—Treasurer—President 4: Ski School 1. 2, 3: Dartmouth-MIT Urban Studies 3. PAUL WILLIAM ODEN. 401 Park Lane. Vermillion. S.D.; Vermillion H.S.: GOVERN¬ MENT; Foley House—Secretary; Golf 1; Intramurals I, 2, 3. JOHN LARKIN O ' HERN, JR.. 1001 West 25th St., Odessa. Tex.: Odessa H.S.; GOVERN¬ MENT: Phi Kappa Psi—Corresponding Secretary: Intramurals I. 2, 3. 4: AEGIS 2, 3—Fra¬ ternity Editor: WDCR I ; D.O.C. I. STEVEN MICHAEL OLIVO. 75 Chambers Road. Danbury. Conn.: Danbury H.S.: HIS¬ TORY: Intramurals I. 2; Motor Sports 2, 3. 4—Secretary-Treasurer 3. Vice President 4. JAMES HOWARD OIJ5TAD. Cashton. Wis.; Cushion H.S.; ENGLISH: Class Officer I — Freshman Council: Band I. R. C. Kee Ng J. N. Nislad F. A. Nitschelm D. F. Noyes K. E. Nyberg J. N. Nys DENIS ROCKWELL O ' NEILL; 3 Turkey Hill Circle, Greens Farms. Conn.; St. George ' s S.; GOVERNMENT; Heorot; Casque Gauntlet; Green Key 3: Soccer 1, 2. 3; Hockey I, 2, 3. 4—Captain: Lacrosse 1, 2. 3. 4. HAROLD WENDELL OPENSHAW: 12 Kevin Road. E. Brunswick. N.J.; East Brunswick H.S.: BIOLOGY: WDCR 2. 3. 4; Band I. 2. 3. 4: Germania 1. 2; Valley Tutorial Program 2 . JON CARL OPLINGF.R. 605 Cowpath Road. Lansdale. Pa.; North Penn H.S.; ENGLISH: The Tabard—Social Chairman; Crew I. 2; Germania I; D.O.C. 1. 2, 3, 4; Winter Sports I, 2. 3—Dir. of Comm. 2. Dir. of Publicity 3: NROTC 1, 2. 3. 4. CARLOS LAWREN ORDONEZ. Pasco lie Las Palmas =725 Lomas Mexico 10. D.F.; Holy Cross Abbey; GOVERNMENT; Altha Theta; Foreign Study Program 3; Crew 1; Glee Club I. 2: Camera Club 4: Newman Club I: Cosmo. Club I: Ini. Rcl. Club I: El Circulo Espan 1. WAYNE JOSEPH OSMOND. 59 Montvale Road. Weston. Mass.; Weston H.S.; FRENCH; Tabard—Chaplain: Hockey 1: Foreign Study Program 3; Intramurals I. 2, 3. 4. J. L. O ' Hem. Jr. S. M. Olivo J. H. Olstad D. R. O’Neill H. W. Openshaw J. C. Oplinger C. L. Ordonez W. J. Osmond R. F. Ostberg T. R. Ostermueller K. R. Overman R. A. Paley R. D. Palmer D. S. Palter R. J. Pansegrau R. D. Payne, III T. E. Peisch W. E. Pelham. Jr. P. C. Penberthy J. C. Perry RICHARD FIKE OSTBERG. 10 Curve St.. Sherborn, Mass.; Dover-Sherborn R.H.S.; ANTHROPOLOGY; Heorot—Vice President: Sphinx: Rugby I. 2. 3. 4. THOMAS RUDOLPH OSTERMUELLER. 28 Fairchild Place. Whippany. N.J.: Hanover Park H.S.: ECONOMICS: Sigma Theta Epsilon; Phi Beta Kappa; I.D.C. 2; Intramurals I, 2. 3. 4. KARL RICHARD OVERMAN. 6504 Torrey Road, Flint, Mich.; Ainsworth H.S.: GOVERN¬ MENT; Crew I: Intramurals I, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4: Young Rcpub. 1, 2. ROBERT ALAN PALEY, 5700 E. First Avenue. Denver, Colo.: George Washington H.S.: ENGLISH; Tabard; Crew 1; WDCR 1; Ski School 1. RICHARD DREW PALMER. 89 Jefferson Ave., Cresskill. N.J.; Northern Valley Reg’L; Alpha Chi Alpha; I.D.C. 2; Basketball 1; Baseball 1; D.C.A.C. 2, 3, 4; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4. D. SCOTT PALTER, 6 Sterling Place. Cedarhurst, N.Y.; Woodmere Acad.; HISTORY; Dart. Conserv. Soc. I, 2—Executive Board; Army ROTC 1, 2, 3. ROBERT JOHN PANSEGRAU, 13 Summit Trail. Sparta. N.J.; Sparta H.S.; PSYCHOL¬ OGY; Band 1, 3, 4; NROTC 1, 2, 3, 4. ROBERT DONALD PAYNE. III. 223 Firth Road. Palatine. III.: Palatine H.S.; ECONOM¬ ICS; Phi Delta Alpha—Treasurer. THOMAS EDWARD PEISCH. Appletree Point. Burlington. Vl.; Burlington H.S.: GOVERN¬ MENT: Zeta Psi—Vice President, Social Chairman: I.D.C. 2—Dorm Rep.; Foreign Study Program 3, 4—France; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4. WILLIAM ELLERBE PELHAM, JR.: 1602 S. Hull St.. Montgomery, Ala.; Sidney Lanier H.S.; PSYCHOLOGY; Kappa Sigma; I.D.C. 2—Dorm Chairman; Squash 1. PHILIP CLEVELAND PENBERTHY, 67 Highland Ave.. Rowayton, Conn.; Bricn McMahon H.S.; RELIGION; Alpha Theta—Rush Chairman; Dragon; Green Key 3; I.D.C. 2; Basket¬ ball I. 2, 3—Captain, Freshman: Baseball I: Intramurals 4; ABC—Tutor 3; Fund Raising ABC 4; Louis Benczet Memorial Retreat 2. JOHN CHRISTOPHER PERRY; Lakeview Drive. Fayetteville. N.Y.; Fayetteville-Manlius H.S.; PHILOSOPHY; Phi Beta Kappa; Cross Country I; Classics Club 1, 2, 3—Treas.: Philosophy Student Union 3ā€”ā€œConvener ; Ad Hoc Committee for Coeducation 3—Coordi¬ nator. W. S. Perry, II R. E. Peterson, Jr. M. A. Pfeiffer A. S. Phaneuf, Jr. G. A. Pickering R. F. Pinkston WINTHROP SCOTT PERRY. II, 6 Walnut Road. Weston, Mass.: Phillips Academy; ECO¬ NOMICS; Bones Gate—President 4. Pledge Master 3; Sphinx: Class Officer 2—Secretary- Treasurer: U.G.C. 1, 2. 3: Green Key 3: I.D.C. 2. 3: I.F.C. 4; Rugby I: Inter-Class-Council 2 . ROBERT EDWIN PETERSON, JR.. 275 Bayberry Lane, Westport, Conn.; Staples H.S.; HISTORY: Kappa Kappa Kappa: Crew 1; The Players 4: Ski Patrol 4: NROTC 1, 2, 3, 4. MARK ALAN PFEIFFER. 3572 Westenedge Drā€ž Columbus, Ind.: Columbus Sr. H.S.: GOV¬ ERNMENT; Kappa Sigma: Dragon Sr. Soc.: Basketball 1: Young Repub. 1, 2, 3, 4—Presi¬ dent. ALBERT STANTON PHANEUF, JR.. 2 Chandler St., Nashua. N.H.; Nashua H.S.; Foreign Study Program 2; AEGIS 2, 3, 4—Photo Editor: Band 1, 2; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4: Ski Team 1. J. A. Plumer S. G. Pooley GREGORY ANDREW PICKERING. 24 Hobbs Road, Hampton, N.H.; Winnacunnet H.S.; GOVERNMENT; Kappa Sigma—Rush Chairman; Dragon; Green Key 3; I.D.C. 3; Basket¬ ball 1, 2, 3, 4—Captain; Baseball I, 2; D.C.A.C. 4. RUSSELL F. PINKSTON. 193 Midwood St.. Brooklyn, N.Y.: Poly Prep CDS.: ENGLISH: Bones Gate: I.D.C. 2; Soccer 1, 2; Winter Carnival Council; NROTC 1, 2. JOHN ALEXANDER PLUMER. 94 Orange Street, Roslindale, Mass.; Boston Latin S.; PSYCHOLOGY. SAMUEL GRAHAM POOLEY. Box 211, Scarborough, N.Y.; Lincoln Community H.S.; ECONOMICS; Kappa Sigma: I.D.C. 2, 3; Football 1: Tennis 1; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3; Mt. Club 2. RICHARD H. PORTER, 69 Olney Commons. Prov. R.l ; Custer H.S.; GOVERNMENT; Foreign Study Program 3; WDCR 1; Forensic Union I; Filene Fellow 2, 3; Blackout 2, 3—Editor; Afro-Ant. Soc. 1, 2, 3—Executive Board; Fencing I, 2; Freshman Reading Committee 1, 2: ABC Tutor in residence 1, 2; Freshman Council 1—Executive Board; Sophomore Council 2—Executive Board. ROBERT JAY PRAGER, 333 Council Rock Ave.. Rochester, N.Y.; Brighton H.S.; MATHE¬ MATICS; Phi Sigma Psi; Phi Beta Kappa; Intramurals 1, 2, 3; Dartmouth Medical School 4. SCOTT EVERETT PREECE. 226 Mortimer Road, Glencoe. III.; North Shore Country Day 5. ; MATHEMATICS (Computer Science); Sailing Team 1; The Dartmouth 1; WDCR 2; Band 1; Camera Club I, 2. 3. 4—President 3; D.O.C. I; Yacht Club 1. 2; Parietals Review Com¬ mittee 3. DOUGLAS CHAPMAN PRINCE, 2026 W. William St., Decatur, 111.; Douglas MacArthur H.S.; BIOLOGY; Alpha Chi Alpha: I.D.C. 3. 4—Dorm Chairman; Crew 1, 2, 3, 4—Fresh¬ man Captain; College Committee on Standing Conduct 3—Alternate. LEE CLARK PULIS, 1 Park Lane. Ottumwa, Iowa; Ottumwa H.S.; BIOLOGY; Kappa Kappa Kappa; Swimming 1; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Ledyard Canoe 1, 2, 3, 4—Social Director. DONALD JOSEPH QUENNEVILLE, 20 Leahy Avenue, So. Hadley, Mass.; Precious Blood H.S.; ENGINEERING SCIENCE; Gamma Delta Chi; Dart. Soc. of Engineers 2, 3, 4; Intramurals 1, 2; Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4. THOMAS JOSEPH QUINN, 412 Ocean Ave., Massapequa Park, N.Y.; Berner H.S.; PSY¬ CHOLOGY: Alpha Theta—Secretary; Dragon; I.D.C. 3—Dorm Rep.; Football 1, 2, 3, 4; Baseball 1; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4—Treasurer 3. R. H. Porter R. J. Prager S. E. Preece D. C. Prince L. C. Pulis D. J. Quenneville Tin T. I. Quinn W. F. Quinn D. A. Raelson J. C. Rainie J. I. Rapoport J. F. Rasor W. L. Ream T. G. Reddy WILLIAM FRANCIS QUINN. 98 Bayview Avenue, Salem. Mass.: Salem H.S.; GOVERN¬ MENT; Phoenix—President; I.D.C. 2; I.F.C. 4. DOUGLAS ARTHUR RAELSON, III Graceland Drive, LaPorte, lnd.; l.aPorte H.S.; PHI¬ LOSOPHY; Delta Kappa Epsilon; JACKO I; Band 1. 2; S.D.S. 1, 2, 3; DE-E Sono 4—Vice President. JAMES COOKE RAINIE, 78 School Street. Concord. N.H.; Concord H.S.; MATHEMAT¬ ICS; Gamma Delta Chi: Handel Soc. 3. 4: Band I, 2, 3, 4: Dart. Com. Symph. Orch. 1, 2, 3, 4. JONATHAN IRA RAPOPORT, 1255 E. 21 St., Brooklyn, N.Y.: Midwood H.S.: ENGLISH: Pi Lambda Phi; D.O.C. I, 2, 3, 4; DCYA 2, 3, 4—President; Pre-Medical Society 3, 4—President. JOHN FREDERICK RASOR. 2316 E. Rancho Drive, Phoenix, Ariz.; Brophy College Prep.; GOVERNMENT-URBAN STUDIES; Sigma Theta Epsilon—Social Chairman: Golf 1, 3—Captain; Crew I; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4. WILLIAM LOVELAND REAM. 1714 N. Main St.. Jefferson, Mass.; Wachusett Reg ' I. H.S.: MATHEMATICS—Computer Science: Bones Gate; Football 1; Foreign Study Program 3; Rugby 1, 2, 3, 4; Inlramurals 1, 2. 3, 4; D.O.C. 1, 2; Ski School 1, 2. THOMAS GRANT REDDY, 830 Kimball Avenue. Westfield. N.J.; Westfield H.S.; RELI¬ GION; Foley House—President; Basketball I, 2, 3, 4; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; THE DART¬ MOUTH 3, 4; Committee on Dissent 3. 4. ALAN RICHARD REESE, 52 Circuit Road, Dedham, Mass.; Roxbury Latin S.; ENGLISH; JACK-O 1, 2; GREENSLEEVES 1; Dart. Conserv. Society 1, 2, 3, 4; Le Cercle Franc 1; Germania 1. GEORGE HENRY REMMER, 337 Vanderbilt Blvd.. Oakdale, N.Y.; Connetguol H.S.; EARTH SCIENCE; Phoenix; Track 1, 2, 3, 4. JACK MORRIS RICE, Box 357, Ashton. Idaho; North Fremont H.S.; GEOLOGY; Phi Beta Kappa: Sigma Phi Epsilon; Football I; Geology Club 3, 4; D.O.C. I, 2, 3, 4: Ski Team 1, 2. 3, 4—Freshman Captain. JAMES HAROLD RICH. 2 Baysidc Drive, Manhasset. N.Y.: Manhassel H.S.; HISTORY; Sailing Team 1; Lc Cercle Franc 1; D.O.C. I, 2, 3, 4; Ski Patrol 2, 3, 4—Hill Captain, Assistant Patrol Leader; Yacht Club 1; Army ROTC I, 2. ROBERT BRUCE RICH. 440 West End Avenue, New York, New York; Bronx H.S. of Science; GOVERNMENT; Pi Lambda Phi; Phi Beta Kappa: AEGIS 1, 2—Managing Editor; WDCR I; D.O.C. 1, 2; DCU Tutor 2; Chest Fund 3, 4; Course Guide 3, 4. LAWRENCE ARTHUR RIGGS, R.D. 1, Box 242, West Chester, Pa.; Henderson Sr. H.S.; BIOLOGY; Crew I, 2; Intramurals I. 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Cabin Trail 2, 3, 4; Ledyard Canoe I, 3, 4; Gymnastics Club 1, 2. A. R. Reese G. H. Remmcr J. M. J. H. Rich R. B. Rich L. A. Riggs 221 JOHN STEPHEN RITCHIE, 2243 San Anseline 6, Long Beach, Calif.: R.A. Millikan H.; ECONOMICS; Beta Theta Pi; Sphinx; I.D.C. 2. 3; Football 1. 2, 3. 4—Co-Captain; Intramurals 1, 2, 3. 4. JOHN EVAN ROBERTS, Rt. 4. Box 285 R, Stevens Point, Wis.; P.J. Jacobs H.S.; ENG¬ LISH; Beta Theta Pi; Dragon; Football 1, 2. 3, 4; Glee Club 1. 2, 3, 4; Injunaires I. 2, 3, 4. PETER GAMBLE ROBINSON, 570 Seminole Dr., Winter Park. Fla.; Phillips Exeter Acad.; HISTORY: Kappa Sigma; Class Officer 3. 4—Secretary-Treasurer 3, President 4; U.G.C. 2, 3— Inter-Class Council; Lacrosse 1; Rugby 1, 2; THE DARTMOUTH 1; WDCR 1. THURMAN JOHN RODGERS. 2338 Hickory Lane, Oshkosh, Wis.: Oshkosh H.S.; PHYSICS AND CHEMISTRY; Gamma Delta Chi: Phi Beta Kappa; Football 1; Intramurals 1. 2, 3, 4; Ledyard Canoe 4: Army ROTC 1, 2, 3, 4. PETER RICHARD ROGOL, II Dodwood Drive. Danbury, Conn.: Danbury H.S.; MATHE¬ MATICS; Phi Beta Kappa; Green Key 3; Basketball 4—Manager; Baseball 4—Manager. DAVID ALLEN ROSEBOOM, 2239 Praisie, Glenview. Ill.: Glenbrook S. H.S.; PHILOSO¬ PHY: Foreign Study Program 3; Intramurals 1, OBL 3. 4. STEWART GORDON ROSENBLUM. 31 Brooklawn Ave., Stamford, Conn.; The King School; HISTORY; Phi Beta Kappa; Green Key 3—Dick ' s House Visitation Comm.; Lacrosse I. 2, 3, 4-—Manager; Foreign Study Program 3, 4—France, West Africa; Features Reporter; J.L.C. 1. 2—Treasurer 2; Dartmouth College Museum Student Curator 1, 2, 3, 4. LON MARK ROSEN FIELD, 282 Sunset Blvd., Minn.. Minn.; West H.S.; ENGLISH; Tabard —Secretary; Phi Beta Kappa; Inlramurals 3, 4; Band 1, 2, 3, 4: Rufus Choate Scholar 2, 3. MICHAEL BRUCE RUBENS, 222 Gibson St., West Memphis, Ark.; Christian Brothers H.S.; MATHEMATICS; Crew I; Rifle 1, 2, 3. ROBERT STEVEN RUDNEY, 3506 Livingston St. N.W., Washington. D.C.; Wilson H.S.; HISTORY; Phi Beta Kappa: Foreign Study Program 3; THE DARTMOUTH 1, 2, 3, 4; JACK-O I, 2, 3; J.L.C. 1, 2. 3, 4—Treasurer; Cutter Hall Ex. 2, 3, 4. DAVID BRIDGE RUED1G, 1104 N. Cherry St., Galesburg, 111.; Exeter Acad.; HISTORY; Zeta Psi; Golf 1; ABC 4. TIMOTHY CRAIG RUSSELL, 1708 Sherwood Circle, Villanova, Pa.; Harrison H.S.; PHI¬ LOSOPHY; Tabard; I.D.C. I, 2; Lacrosse 1; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Course Guide 3, 4. JAMES KOLLER RUXIN, 4238 Bushnell Road., University Hts., Ohio; Phillips Exeter Academy; ENGLISH; Pi Lambda Phi; Squash 1, 2; Tennis I; THE DARTMOUTH 1, 2, 3, 4— Executive Editor. WILLIAM HARVEY RYAN, IV., 540 Country Club Drive., Battle Creek, Mich.; Lakeview H.S.; GOVERNMENT; Sigma Alpha Epsilon—Treasurer; Swimming 1, 2, 3. 4; Rugby 3, 4; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4. JOHN ROLAND SADD, 326 Frederick Ave., Sewickley, Pa.; Quaker Valley H.S.; MUSIC; Delta Kappa Epsilon—Corres. Secretary; Green Key 3; WDCR 1; Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Injunaires 2, 3, 4—Director. RICHARD CRANLEIGH SAMMIS. 10 Puritan Place, Huntington, L.I., N.Y.; The Hill S.; HISTORY; Heorot; Lacrosse 1, 2, 3, 4; Foreign Study Program 3. J. S. Ritchie J. E. Roberts P. G. Robinson T. J. Rodgers P. R. Rogol D. A. Roseboom S. G. Rosenblum L. M. Rosenfield Ok M. B. Rubens R. S. Rudney D. B. Ruedig W. H. Ryan, IV J. R. Sadd R. C. Sammis D. H. Samson, Jr. M. J. Sateia G. J. R. Sauer R. R. Saunders D. M. Sawyer B. A. Saylor T. 0. Schad R. J. Scheff R. Schulz T. G. Schuster J. D. Schwartzman J. Schweizer DAVID HENRY SAMSON, JR., 9 Paddock Lane, Great Neck, N.Y.; Great Neck SHS.; BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION; D.C.A.C. I, 2; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Cosmo. Club 2; Bridge Club 1; D.O.C. 1, 2. MICHAEL JOHN SATEIA, 4126 Peach Tree Circle, E., Jacksonville, Fla.; Bishop Kenny H. S.; BIO-PSYCHOLOGY; Kappa Kappa Kappa; Green Key 3; I.D.C. 3, 4—Chairman- Bonfires Comm.; Crew I; Intramurals 2, 3, 4: Cheerleaders 2, 3, 4; D.C.U. 2, 3, 4. GEORGE JOHN REID SAUER, 44 South St., Medfield, Mass.; Mcdfield H.S.; BIOLOGY; Phi Beta Kappa; Handel Soc. 2, 3, 4; The Players 2, 3, 4: Hopkins Center Ushers 3, 4. ROBERT REED SAUNDERS, 2 Hall Ave.. SufTern. N.Y.; SufTern H.S.; ENGLISH; Sigma Alpha Epsilon (Chronicler); Green Key 3; Soccer 2, 3, 4; Crew I; THE DARTMOUTH 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 1; D.O.C. 1, 2. 3, 4; Ski Patrol 1; Ski Team 1, 2, 3. 4; Ledyard Canoe 1. DAVID MERRILL SAWYER, 9 Spencer Ave.. Salem, N.H.; Salem H.S.; ENGLISH; Swim¬ ming; D.C.U. 4—Chairman, Comm. Services Commission; Episcopal Youth, 1, 2, 3, 4_ Freshman Program 2, Coordinator of Sheltered Workshop 3, 4. BRUCE ADAMS SAYLOR, 151 Washington Ave., W. Caldwell. N.J.; James Caldwell H.S.; GOVERNMENT; Beta Theta Pi—President; Dragon; I.F.C. 3. 4—Treasurer; Football I. 2, 3, 4; Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4. TIMOTHY OWEN SCHAD. 2606 Sinclair N.E., Grand Rapids, Mich.; Creston H.S.; ENGI¬ NEERING; Alpha Chi Rho—President; I.F.C. 4—Secretary; Football 1, 2, 3, 4—Captain, I, Lacrosse 1, 2; Dart. Soc. of Engineers 2, 3—Secretary-Treasurer; Intramurals I, 2, 3, 4; ABC Tutor 3. ROBERT JAMES SCHEFF. 18 Oakleigh Lane. St. Louis, Mo.; Ladue H.S.: MATHEMAT¬ ICS; Pi Lambda Phi; Phi Beta Kappa; Green Key Society; Tennis I; AEGIS 1, 2, 3, 4—Sports Editor 2, Managing Editor 3. Editor-in-Chief 4; Day-by-Day 3, 4—Editor; Intra¬ murals 1, 2, 3, 4. RICHARD SCHULZ. 4814 Tillman Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio; West H.S.; PSYCHOLORY GERMAN; Cosmo. Club 1; Germania 3, 4—President. THOMAS GORDON SCHUSTER, 5809 Dewey Hill Rd., Edina. Minn.; Breck S.; ECO¬ NOMICS; Gamma Delta Chi; Hockey I, 2, 3, 4. JOSEPH DAVID SCHWARTZMAN, 2805 Elliott St. N.S., Washington, D.C.; The Sidwell Friends S.; BIOLOGY; Sigma Theta Epsilon—Recorder; Casque Gauntlet; J.L.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; D.C.C. 1, 2, 3, 4—President; Cabin Trail 4; Winter- Sports 1, 2. 3, 4—Director of Competition 2, 3; Ski School 3, 4; DOC Directorate 4: Bait Bullett I, 2, 3, 4; Ledyard Canoe 1, 2, 3, 4—Vice President; DOC Nova Scotia Gamcfish Seminar Team 3, 4—Cap¬ tain; Senior Fellow 4. JOHN SCHWEIZER. 1408 West Water St., Elmira, N.Y.; Elmira Free Academy; ENGI¬ NEERING SCIENCE; Psi Upsilon—President; I.D.C. 2; I.F.C. 4; Dart. Soc. of Engineers I, 2, 3, 4; Ski School 2; Mt. Club I, 2, 3, 4; Ledyard Canoe 1, 3, 4; Army ROTC 1. GEOFFREY GATES SCOTT, 246 Fox Wood Road, Stamford, Conn.: Hill School; GOV¬ ERNMENT; Psi Upsilon—Social Chairman: Squash I, 2, 3, 4—Captain 4; Tennis 1; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4: Young Repub. 1, 2, 3, 4; Flying Club 4: Army ROTC 1, 2, 3, 4. FREDERICK EARL SEVERANCE, III, 12 Hill Haven Road. Manchester, N.H.; Manchester H. S. Central; ENGINEERING; Delta Kappa Epsilon; Swimming 1, 2, 3, 4; Dart. Soc. of Engineers 1,2, 3, 4; Sailing Team 2, 3, 4; Yacht Club 2, 3, 4—Treasurer. WILLIAM DANA SEWALL, 277 Country Way, Scituate, Mass.; Noble and Greenough; HISTORY; Tau Epsilon Phi: WDCR 1, 2; D.C.U. 1; ABC Program 3. 4; HUB 3, 4. WILLIAM REGIS SHANAHAN. JR.. 18242 Oakridge Dr., Santa Ana, Calif.; Foothill H.S.; BIOLOGY: Kappa Sigma; Track I, 2, 3, 4; Army ROTC 1, 2. 3. 4; Mt. Winter Warfare I, 2, 3. 4. WILLIAM H. SHARKEY, JR., 1016 Kent Road, Westover Hills, Wilmington, Dela.; Alexis I. duPont H.S.; MATHEMATICS; Phoenix—Social Chairman; National Honor Society. AFS Rep.: l.D.C. 2; Track 1; Glee Club 1. WILLIAM HYLIN SHATTUCK, 3033 Chadboume Rdā€ž Shaker Hgts., Ohio: Shaker Hgts. H.S.; ENGINEERING SCIENCE; Sigma Theta Epsilon Vice President; Dart. Soc. of Engineers 2, 3; Wrestling 2, 3; Intramurals 1, 2, 3; Army ROTC 1, 2, 3, 4. GEORGE SHIAO-MING SHENG, 1827 Indiana St., Lawrence, Kan.; Lawrence H.S.; BIOL¬ OGY; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4. RICHARD EARL SHEPHERD, 14 Saunders Road. Lynnfield. Mass.; Lynnfield H.S.; GEOL¬ OGY; Tabard—House Manager; Track 1; Episcopal Youth I, 2, 3; Geology Club 3, 4; D.O.C. I, 2, 3, 4: Bait Bullet 1, 2, 3. 4; Ledyard Canoe 4; NROTC 1, 2, 3, 4; Drill Team 2, 3, 4. CARL PAXSON SHERWIN. Ill, 27 Prospect St.. Malone. N.Y.; St. Joseph ' s Academy; HIS¬ TORY; Phoenix; l.D.C. 2; Glee Club 1; Newman Club 1, 2, 3. 4: D.O.C. 1. Freshman Council 1. PAUL WANER SHINEMAN, 63 Indian Spring Lane, Rochester, N.Y.; Brighton H.S.; PSY¬ CHOLOGY; Alpha Chi Rho; Crew I, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 1. WILLIAM CLARK SHINEMAN, 63 Indian Spring Lane, Rochester, N.Y.; Brighton H.S.; GEOGRAPHY; Alpha Chi Alpha; Crew 1, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 1. ROBERT JOSEPH SHULOCK, 653 4th Street, Donora, Pa.; Donora Sr. H.S.; ENGINEER¬ ING SCIENCE; Phoenix; Football I; Dart. Soc. of Engineers 1; Intramurals I, 2, 3, 4: Newman Club 1, 2. 3, 4; D.O.C. 1. EDWARD E. SHUMAKER, III, Mechanicsville, Bucks County, Pa.; Choate S.; HISTORY; Psi Upsilon—Secretary; Squash, 1, 2, 3, 4; Army ROTC 1, 2, 3, 4. GRANT DEAN SIEVERTSEN, JR., 139 Briarwood Nā€ž Oakbrook, Ill.; Weston H.S.; BIOL¬ OGY; Phi Sigma Psi; D.O.C. 3. 4; Winter Sports 4; Rufus Choate Scholar; Hopkins Center Usher 3, 4. ROBERT L. SILLS, 320 Oakdale Ave., Chicago, 111.; The Latin School of Chicago; ECO¬ NOMICS; The Tabard; l.D.C. 2, 3—Dorm Chairman; Rifle 1; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; D.O.C. 1, 2; Sophomore Council 2. LAWRENCE IRWIN SILVERSTEIN; 29V4 Raymond St., Nashua, N.H.; Nashua H.S.; GOVERNMENT; Tau Epsilon Phi—Phi Beta Kappa; Green Key 3; l.D.C. 3, 4—Dorm Chairman; Bicentennial Student Committee 2, 3, 4; Chest Fund Steering Committee 3. G. G. Scott F. E. Severance, III W. H. Sharkey, Jr. W. H. Shattuck W. D. Sewall G. S. Sheng R. E. Shepherd C. P. Sherwin, III P. W. Shineman 224 W. C. Shineman R. J. Shulock E. E. Shumaker, III G. D. Sievertsen, Jr. R. L. Sills L. I. Silverstein JEFFREY HORACE SIMCOX, 559 Squirrel Lane, Lansdale, Pa.; North Penn H.S.; GOV¬ ERNMENT; Alpha Chi Alpha; Foreign Study Program 3; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4. DOUGLAS KNOX SIMPSON, 13 Juniper Road, Bloomfield, Conn.; Bloomfield H.S.; PSY¬ CHOLOGY; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Army ROTC I, 2, 3, 4. JULIUS SKLAR, 24 Ridge Ave., Claremont, N.H.; Yeshivah Mir, Poland; HISTORY. LAWRENCE MICHAEL SLATER, 135 Circuit Road, Winthrop. Mass.; Winthrop H.S.; HISTORY; Band I, 2, 3, 4; J.L.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Committee on Freshman Reading 2, 3 Student Director 3; Tour Guide 3; J.L.C. Hebrew School 3, 4—Treasurer 3. JAMES SISSON SUGAR, 240 Sherbrooke, Williamsville, N.Y.; Williamsville H.S.; GOV¬ ERNMENT; Phi Beta Kappa; Foreign Study Program 3; Public Service Fellowship 3; Sophomore Council 2. EDWARD HARRY SMITH, Marsh Mill Road, Kirkville, N.Y.; Chittenango H.S.; PSY¬ CHOLOGY; Football 1,2, 3, 4; Wrestling 1, 2, 3, 4. MICHAEL SPINNER SMITH, 121 Red Hill Road, Jamestown Star Route, Boulder, Colo.; Pierre S. duPont H.S.; CHEMISTRY; Phi Beta Kappa; THE DARTMOUTH 2, 3, 4— Ass’t. Bus. Manager: D.O.C. I. 2, 3. 4; Ski School 2. 3: Ledyard Canoe 1, 2, 3, 4. GREGORY BRADSHAW SNYDER, 7910 Grccntree Rd., Bethesda, Md.; Walt Whitman H.S.; PSYCHOLOGY; Phi Sigma Psi—Rush Chairman: Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; D.O.C. I, 2, 3, 4; AFROTC 3, 4; Blood Drive 3, 4—Chairman. SAMUEL KEVIN SNYDER. 228 No. County Line. Hinsdale, 111.; BIOLOGY; Phi Delta Alpha—House Manager: Football I; Intramurals I, 2, 3, 4; Dorm Athletic Chairman 3. RALPH LEWIS SPECHT, JR., 21 Burnham Road, Wenham, Mass.: PSYCHOLOGY: Sigma Nu Delta; U.G.C. 2-—Alt. Dorm Rep.; I.D.C. 3, 4—Dorm Chairman; Band 1, 2, 3, 4. EDWARD LOUIS SPENCER. St. Pauls S.; Concord. N.H.; GEOGRAPHY AND URBAN STUDIES; Crew 2, 3, 4; Intramurals 3, 4; Cutter Hall Ex. 2; D.O.C. 2. 3, 4; Mt. Club 2. HENRY MORGAN SPENCER, III, 10 Kenwood Circle, Bloomfield, Conn.; The Loomis S.; PSYCHOLOGY; Kappa Sigma; Foreign Study Program 3, 4; Intramurals 3, 4; Winter Carnival Council 2; Apprentice Teacher (French) 2, 3, 4. RICHARD W. SPRAGUE, 5519 12lh Avenue South, Birmingham, Alabama: Indian Spring S.; ARCHITECTURE; Foley House; Glee Club 1, 2; Camera Club 2, 3, 4—Secretary. CHRISTOPHER C. STAI.EY, 3 Powderhorn Green. Sparta, N.J.; Sparta H.S.; CHEMIS¬ TRY; I.D.C. 3: D.C.A.C. I, 2; Intramurals 1. 2, 3. 4; AEGIS 2; WDCR 2. 4; D.C.U. 3; Chess Club 1; D.O.C. 1. 4; DCU Tutor 3, 4; UGC Coed Committee 2, 3. KARLIS SVEN STEINMANIS, 4237 Walcott, Indianapolis, Ind.; Emmerich Manual H.S.; GOVERNMENT-GEOGRAPHY; Kappa Sigma—Rush Committee; Dragon; U.G.C. 3— J.C.; I.D.C. 2; Basketball I, 2, 3. 4; Cosmo. Club 2; Young Repub. 2, 3, 4: Army ROTC I. 2, 3, 4; College Committee on Standing and Conduct 3, 4: Sophomore Council 2. LARRY ROY STEPHENS, 24 Cumberland Aveā€ž Roosevelt, N.Y.; W. Tresper Clark H.S.; GOVERNMENT; Casque Gauntlet—President; Cross Country 1; Foreign Study Program 3; Glee Club I, 2, 3; lnjunaires 2, 3: Afro-Am. I. 2, 3, 4—Exec. Comm.; Segal Fund 2, 3. JOHN EDWARD STERN, 1521 10th Street S.. Fargo. N.D.; Fargo Central H.S.; PSYCHOL¬ OGY; Gamma Delta Chi; Sailing Team 1; THE DARTMOUTH 3. 4; Dart. Com. Symph. Orch. 1, 2, 3, 4; D.C.U. 3; Yacht Club 1, 2; Army ROTC 1. PETER MICHAEL STONE, 3 Sealy Drive, Potsdam, N.Y.; Potsdam Central H.S.; GEOL¬ OGY-MATHEMATICS: Theta Delta Chi—Vice President; Sphinx; Hockey I, 2, 3, 4; Intramurals I, 2, 3, 4. ROBERT MASON STONE, II, 31 Marmion Way, Rockport. Mass.; Rockport H.S.; GOV¬ ERNMENT: Delta Kappa Epsilon: Foreign Study Program 2, 3; THE DARTMOUTH 3. 4; Camera Club 4; Le Cercle Franc 2; It Circolo Italiano 2, 3, 4. DAVID WARD STONEBRAKER, 18 High Road, Newbury. Mass.; Governor Dummer Academy; ENGLISH; Alpha Chi Alpha: I.D.C. 2; Episcopal Youth I, 2, 3, 4; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Winter Sports 4; Ski Patrol 1, 2, 3, 4—Patrol Leader. CHRISTOPHER FLEMING STOUFFER. Box 13, Bryn Mawr, Pa.; St. Paul ' s School; MU¬ SIC. CARL R. STRATHMEYER, 110 Eton Drive, Pittsburgh, Pa,; Fox Chapel H.S.; MATHE¬ MATICS; AEGIS 1, 2, 3, 4; THE DARTMOUTH 1; WDCR I, 2, 3, 4—Chief Engineer; Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Camera Club I; D.O.C. I, 2, 3, 4. STEPHEN PAUL STRAUS, 108 Linden Avenue, Verona, N.J.; Verona H.S.; MUSIC; Squash 1; Intramurals I, 2, 3, 4; The Players 1, 2, 3, 4: Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Dart. Com. Symph. Orch. 1; Dartmouth Five 3, 4. R. W. Sprague C. C. Staley K. S. Steinmanis L. R. Stephens J. E. Stem P. M. Stone R. M. Stone, II D. W. Stonebraker C. F. Stouffer C. R. Strathmeyer S. P. Straus D. N. Strohm D. W. Struble L. S. Stryker E. R. Sturman B. F. Sweeney J. P. Swift M. A. Swistak OTA M. P. Szyper H. B. Tabaknek J. R. Teeters C. E. Tetirick, Jr. C. G. Thegze, Jr. D. R. Thomas D. E. Thompson, Jr. M. P. Thorman DAVID NORMAN STROHM, 316 Cooper Avenue, Elgin, III.; Elgin H.S.; Heorot—House Manager; Dragon; Phi Beta Kappa; Class Officer 1, 2—President; Green Key 3; Crew 1, 2; Course Guide 2, 3, 4; D.E.C. 2, 3, 4. DALE WILLIAM STRUBLE, 1401 Madison Avenue, Wall Township, N.J.; Wall H.S.; GER¬ MAN; Kappa Kappa Kappa; Germania 3, 4; Gymnastics 1. 2. LANCE STEWART STRYKER, 806 East Sixth Street, Prineville, Ore.; Crook County H.S.; OCEANOGRAPHY; Phoenix; Football 1; Foreign Study Program 3. EMANUEL ROBERT STURMAN, 555 Claybourne Road. Rochester, N.Y.; Brighton H.S.; GOVERNMENT; Sigma Theta Epsilon; Soccer 1; Intramurals 1, 2, 3. BRIAN FELIX SWEENEY. 20 Clark Rd.. Lowell. Mass.; Lowell H.S.; CHEMISTRY; Phi Beta Kappa. JOHN PAUL SWIFT. 45 Railroad St.. Lancaster. N.H.: Lancaster H.S.; ECONOMICS; Zeta Psi: I.D.C. 3; D.C.U. Tutor 3. MICHAEL ALAN SWISTAK. 99 South Street. Chicopee. Mass.; Chicopee H.S.: ENGLISH; I.D.C. 1, 2—Dorm Chairman; Swimming 1, 2; Athletic Manager of Dorm 1, 2. MICHAEL PAUL SZYPER. 1743 So. 62 St.. West Allis, Wis.; Marquette University H.S.; PSYCHOLOGY; Phi Beta Kappa; Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4. HOWARD BARRY TABAKNEK. 68 Reber Street. Albany. N.Y.; Colonie Central H.S.: PSYCHOLOGY; Handel Soc. I; Glee Club 1, 2. 3, 4—Soloist. Publicity Manager; Cosmo. Club I, 2, 3—Secretary-Treasurer 2. President 3. RALPH WILLIAM TARR, 3017 Saratoga. Bakersfield, Calif.; Foothill H.S.: GOVERN¬ MENT; Kappa Kappa Kappa—Rush Chairman; Phi Beta Kappa; I.D.C. 3—Chairman of Evaluations Comm., Dorm Chairman; Baseball 1; Intramurals I. 2, 3. 4; W.D.C.R. 2, 3; Forensic Union I; D.C.U. 1, 2, 3; Young Repub. 1, 2, 3. KESANG TASHI, 15 Link Road. New Delhi, India; Dr. Graham’s School; Pi lambda Phi; Soccer I; Camera Club 2; Cosmo. Club I. 2, 3, 4; Int. Rel. Club 2. JAMES RICHARD TEETERS. 86 Edgcbrook Court, New Shrewsbury, N.J.; Manmouth Regl. H.S.; MATHEMATICS; Crew 1, 2, 3, 4; Intramurals 1. 2. CARL EDWARD TETIRICK. JR.. 2880 N. Sear Road, Columbus. Ohio; Upper Arlington H.S.; ARCHITECTURE; Kappa Kappa Kappa; Football 1; Intramurals 1. 2, 3. 4; Army ROTC I, 2. CHARLES GREGORY THEGZE JR.. 1656 N. Rutherford Ave., Chicago. III.; Camption Jesuit H.S.; ENGLISH; Intramurals I, 2, 3, 4; THE DARTMOUTH 1, 2, 3, 4— Reviews Editor; Forensic Union 1: Newman Club 1. 2, 3, 4—Sophomore Rep.; Yacht Club 1; Film Society 2, 3, 4—Associate Director. DAVID RODMAN THOMAS, 1929 Boulevard. West Hartford, Conn.; Conard H.S.; ANTHROPOLOGY; Gamma Delta Chi—Vice President. DUDLEY EUGENE THOMPSON. JR.. 3906 Isbell St., Wheaton, Md.; Wheaton H.S.: BIOLOGY; D.O.C. I, 2, 3, 4: Cabin Trail 2, 3, 4—Publicity Director 3, Secretary 4. MICHAEL P. THORMAN, 2445 N. Utah Street. Arlington, Va.; Washington-Lee H.S.; CiOVERNMENT; Sigma Alpha Epsilon—Exec. Comm.; U.G.C. 2—Student Senate; Green Key 3—Secretary; Baseball I; Intramurals 1, 2. 3, 4; Casque Gauntlet 4. 777 THOMAS KLICK TIEMANN, 2524 Bopp Road, St. Louis, Mo.; Ladue H.S.; ECONOMICS; The Tabard—Treasurer; Cross Country 1, 2, 3; Track 1, 2, 3; Course Guide 4. LISBON URCHOVITCH TILLMAN, JR., 36 W. Hortter St., Philadelphia, Pa.; Germantown H.S.; SOCIOLOGY; Intramurals 2; Army ROTC I; Drill Team I; Afro-Am. Soc. 1, 2, 3, 4; ABC—Jersey City 3. ATHANASE TSHIBAKA. c o Honore Ngandu. Dir. AIL Soc. et Dev. Communautaire, Mbujimayi Democratic Republic of the Congo; E.S.P. Bibanga; ECONOMICS; Soccer 3; Center Forward; Intramurals 2; D.C.U. 2—Tutor; Cosmo. Club 2, 3;—Afro-Am. Soc. 3; Apprentice Teacher 3—Math. ALAN WINGATE TUCK, 26 West Garden Road, Larchmont, N.Y., Mamaroneck H.S.; ECONOMICS; Crew 1, 2; Intramurals 1, 2, 3. 4; NROTC 1. 2, 3, 4. JOHN LAWRENCE TULLY. 39 Wellington St., Hempstead, N.Y.; Hempstead H.S.; ENG¬ LISH; Phi Tau—Athletic Chairman; Phi Beta Kappa; I.D.C. 2; WDCR 1, 2. 3, 4; Forensic Union 1. HENRY DIXON TURNER, 67 Oakland Street, Melrose, Mass.; Melrose H.S.; BIOLOGY; Tau Epsilon Phi; Casque Gauntlet; Phi Beta Kappa; Cross Country 1, 2, 3; Track 2, 3; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4. ROBERT WILLIAM TURNER, 1897 Bayberry Lane. Coshocton, Ohio; Coshocton H.S.; GOVERNMENT; Kappa Sigma—President; Sphinx; I.F.C. 4; l.F.T.C. 4; Football I, 2; Crew 1; Rugby 3, 4; Intramurals l. 2, 3, 4; D.O.C. 1; Winter Carnival Council 1, 2; Army ROTC 1, 2, 3, 4. DAVID ALGOT ULLRICH, 1310 Mclndoe Street, Wausau. Wis.; Wausau Sr. H.S.; ENG¬ LISH; I.D.C. 3—Dorm Chairman; Cross Country 1. 2, 3, 4; Track I. 2. 3. 4—Freshman Captain. JOHN WILLIAMS VALLEY, 5 Moon Hill Road, Lexington. Mass.; Lexington H.S.; GEOL¬ OGY; Crew 1; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4. PETER HOWARD VAN DEMARK, 187 Crosman Terrace, Rochester, N.Y.; Monroe H.S.; GEOGRAPHY; Green Key 3—Activities Night Chairman 3; Cosmo. Club I. 2, 3—NMUN Delegation Chairman 2; AISEC 3; D.O.C. 1,2, 3; Ski School I, 2. LLOYD MURRAY VAN LUNEN, JR.. Davidsonville, Md.; Porter-Gaud School; BIOLOGY; Hopkins Ushers 1, 2, 3, 4. JAMES RONALD VAN WOERKOM, 1139 Roberts, Muskegon. Mich.; Muskegon H.S.; ECONOMIC-GEOGRAPHY; Phoenix—Treas.; Football 1; D.O.C. I, 2, 3, 4. PETER G. VIKRE, 219 Alexander Ave., Scotia, N.Y.; Scotia-Glenville H.S.; GEOLOGY; Alpha Chi Alpha—Athletic Chairman; Dragon; Football 1; Crew 1; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4. JOHN OGDEN VOGT, 515 Puritan Avenue, Birmingham, Mich.; Cranbrook S.; BIOLOGY; Green Key 3; I.D.C. 3; DOC 1, 2, 3, 4; Winter Carnival Council 3—Rep. DOC; Winter Sports—Chairman 4; DOC. Directorate 3—Director of Publicity; Eart of Darts Pipe Band 2—Secretary-Treasurer. T. K. Tiemann L. U. Tillman, Jr. A. Tshibaka A. W. Tuck J. L. Tully H. D. Turner R. W. Turner D. A. Ullrich J. W. Valley P. H. Van Demark 228 L M. Van Lunen, Jr. J. R. Van Woerkom P. G. Vikre J. O. Vogt D. H. Wadleigh E. B. Walentine A. C. Walesa T. R. Walker R. C. Wallace E. R. Wallingford, III J. E. Walsh, Jr. T. S. Warren D. Waters K. A. Wayson R. L. Weil D. D. Weir, Jr. DAVID HOWLAND WADLEIGH, 4 Winthrop Place, Wayland, Mass.; Middlesex S.; GOV¬ ERNMENT; Phi Psi; Hockey 1, 2, 3. 4—Manager; I.D.C. 4; Christian Sci. Org. 1, 2, 3, 4. ELLIS BLOOMFIELD WALENTINE, 1525 Lincoln Street. Bethlehem, Pa.; Liberty H.S.; PSYCHOLOGY; Handel Soc. 1; Glee Club I, 2, 3, 4; Camera Club 3, 4. ANTHONY CARL WALESA, 3820 W. 104th Street, Chicago, III.; Morgan Park H.S.; CHEMISTRY; Phi Beta Kappa; Foreign Study Program 3; Handel Soc. 2, 3. 4; Band 2, 3, 4; Dart. Com. Symph. Orch. 2, 3, 4; Hanover Chamber Musicians 2, 3, 4. THOMAS RAY WALKER. 2801 Tarlton Street, Corpus Christi, Tex.; Solomon Coles H.S.; ART; Football 2, 3; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; AFROTC 3, 4; Afro-Am. Soc. 1, 2, 3, 4—Secretary Intramurals Director; ABC 2, 3—Teacher Tutor. RICHARD COPP WALLACE. Gilliam Lane. Riverside, Conn.; Greenwich H.S.; ENGLISH; Theta Delta Chi—President; Sphinx; I.F.C. 3, 4; Swimming I, 2; Rugby 1, 2. 3, 4; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 3, 4—2nd Tenor; D.O.C. 3, 4. ELDON RICHARD WALLINGFORD, III, Westchester Ave., Pound Ridge, N.Y.; Phillips Exeter Academy; COMPARATIVE LITERATURE; Psi Upsilon—Pledge Master; Phi Beta Kappa; Foreign Study Program 3; Wrestling 1. JOHN EDWARD WALSH, JR.; 116 N. Fairfield Rd., Devon, Pa.; Devon High; PRE-METE; Pi Lambda Phi; Phi Beta Kappa; Intramurals 1, 2, 3; AEGIS 3, 4; D.C.U. 2, 3. THOMAS STUART WARREN. RFD, Pike Street. Epping, N.H.; Newton H.S.; PSYCHOL¬ OGY; Phoenix; I.D.C. 3; Lacrosse 1; Track 2, 3, 4; North Fayerweather 3—Chairman. DAVID WATERS, R.D. I, Box 369 Hockessin, Dcla.; Parkersburg H.S.; ENGLISH; Phi Beta Kappa. KIM ALLEN WAYSON, 6310 W. Burlington Ave., Portland, Ore.; Woodrow Wilson H.S.; BIOLOGY; Football 1; Intramurals 1, 2, 3; THE DARTMOUTH 1, 2; Newman Club 1, 2, 3; Ski School 1, 2. ROBERT LEE WEIL, 100 Woodland Drive. Pleasantville, N.Y.; Loomis School; PSYCHOL¬ OGY; Phoenix; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4. DONALD DAVID WEIR, JR., 1117 Thornton Ave., Plainfield, N.J.; Blair Academy; PSY¬ CHOLOGY; Alpha Delta—Treasurer. 229 TIMOTHY JAY WELCH. 14 Oakwood Avenue. Holyoke. Mass.; Holyoke H.S.; GOVERN¬ MENT; Beta Theta Pi—Treasurer; Dragon; U.G.C. 2; l.D.C. 2; JACK-O 3; Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Winter Carnival Council 1; Chest Fund 3—Steering Committee Secretary. WILLIAM ALLOWAY WENDELL, 2853 N. Hills Drive, Atlanta, Ga.; North Fulton H.S.; ENGLISH; Alpha Theta; U.G.C. 2—Dorm Chairman; l.D.C. 2; Cosmo. Club 1; Int. Rel. Club 1; Senior Symposia 4; HUB 4. THOMAS RALPH WENTWORTH. 65 Oakley Road. Watertown, Mass.; Watertown H.S.; BIOLOGY; Pi Lambda Phi; Phi Beta Kappa; Camera Club 3. MARK ALLEN WERRE. 868 2nd Street North, Wahpeton. N.D.; Wahpeton Sr. H.S.; ENGINEERING SCIENCE; Alpha Chi Alpha; Foreign Study Program 3; Dart. Soc. of Engineers 2, 3, 4; Crew 1. 2: D.O.C. 1. 2. EDWARD KENDALL WHITE, III, 22 Shaw Drive. Wayland, Mass.; Hebron Academy; RELIGION; Gamma Delta Chi; Swimming I. 2; Crew 1; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Jersey City Internship, Jewett Tucker Foundation 3. RICHARD NATHAN WHITE. Box 5013, University Park. New Mexico; Las Cuuces H.S.; PSYCHOLOGY; Pi Lambda Phi—Treasurer; l.D.C. 2: Intramurals 2, 3, 4; D.C.U. 3. STEPHEN McCONNELL WHITE, 1429 Breton Rd.. S.E., East Grand Rapids H.S.; PSY¬ CHOLOGY; Theta Delta Chi—House Manager; Rugby 1. 2, 3. 4; Intramurals 2; Sailing Team 1; D.C.U. 3; Cutter Hall Ex. 3; D.O.C. 1, 2. 3, 4; Flying Club 4; NROTC 1, 2, 3. 4; Tucker Intern 3. WILLIAM HEDGES WHITE, Four Story Lane, Torrington, Conn.; Torringlon H.S.; SOCI¬ OLOGY; Sigma Nu Delta. RICHARD WALLACE WHITNEY, 50 Front Street. Weymouth. Mass.; Weymouth H.S.; PSYCHOLOGY; Kappa Kappa Kappa—Social Chairman; Squash 1; Tennis I, 2, 3, 4— Varsity Manager; Intramurals I, 2, 3, 4; AEGIS I. 2—Assistant Sports Editor, Newman Club 1.2, 3, 4; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4. RAYMOND PETER WILCOX, 1025 Olive St., Denver, Colo.; George Washington H.S.; ECONOMICS; Bones Gate—Vice President; Class Officer I, 2—Student Senate; Fresh, and Soph. Council, Fresh, and Soph. Exec. Council.; U.G.C. 1, 2—Rep.; I.F.C. 3; Lacrosse 1; Rugby 1, 2; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; THE DARTMOUTH 1; Camera Club 3. 4; Motor Sports 2, 3. 4; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Ski School 2, 3, 4—Head Instructor; Ski Team 1. CHARLES ROBERT WILSON, 1119 16th St.. Manson. Iowa; Manson Community H.S.; BIOLOGY; Intramurals I, 2, 3, 4; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4. S. M. White W. H. White R. W. Whitney R. P. Wilcox C. R. Wilson W. B. Wilson WILLIAM BURTON WILSON, Box 782, River Rd., Hanover, N.H.; Hanover H.S.; ENG¬ LISH; Phi Delta Alpha—Social Chairman; I.F.C. 2; Squash 1; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; NROTC 1, 2, 3, 4. ALEXANDER PAUL WINN, 24 Farrington Ave., Saugus, Mass.; Saugus H.S.; ENGLISH; Alpha Theta; Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4. ROBERT S. WITTE. 2627 Brookside Dr.. Elgin. 111.; Larkin H.S.; BIOLOGY; Sigma Phi Epsilon—House Manager; Intramurals 3. JOHN MICHAEL WOJTOWICZ, JR.. 44 Carlton PI., Passaic, N.J.; Passaic H.S.; ANTHRO¬ POLOGY; Beta Theta Pi—House Manager; Football 1, 2, 3, 4; Track 1, 2, 3, 4. A. P. Winn R. S. Witte J. M. Wojtowicz, Jr. J. S. Wolf JOHN STERN WOLF, Fernbrook Kent Rd., Wyncote, Pa.; Chestnut Hill Academy; ENGLISH; Bones Gate; Squash 2; Crew 1; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4. MICHAEL LYLE WONSON, 136 Maple Hill Road, Hopkins, Minn.; Blake S.; GEOGRA¬ PHY; Sigma Nu—Athletic Chairman; Foreign Study Program 3; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; WDCR 1. M. L. Wonson D. W. Wood W. E. Wood D. C. Young J. A. Young, II L. A. Young, III DUNCAN WILSON WOOD. 101 Maelou Drive, Hamburg. N.Y.; Hamburg Central H.S.; ENGINEERING SCIENCE; Phi Sigma Psi—Treasurer; Dart. Soc. of Engineers 2, 3, 4; Band I, 2; Episcopal Youth 1, 2; D.O.C. I, 2, 3, 4; Ski Patrol 1, 2, 3, 4—Hill Captain; Lcdyard Canoe 3, 4; Upper V alley Tutorial Program 3. WILLIS ERSKINE WOOD. 65 Gates Street, Framingham, Mass.; Framingham South H.S.: Vt. Academy; ENGLISH; Foley House; Cross Country 1; Cutter Hall Ex. 3. DAVIS CHEATHAM YOUNG. 2829 Mapleton Avenue, Norfolk, Va.; Washington H.S.; GOVERNMENT; Tabard—Scholarship Chairman; I.D.C. 2; Intramurals 1; Forensic Union I; Episcopal Youth I. 2; Afro-Am. Soc. 1, 2, 3, 4. JAMES ARTHUR YOUNG, II, 1801 Pennsylvania St., Gary. Ind.; R. Roosevelt H.S.; HIS¬ TORY; Sigma Phi Epsilon—Rush Committee. LOUIS ALONZO YOUNG, III, 140 Steeplechase Rd., Devon. Pa.; Conestoga H.S.; PSY¬ CHOLOGY; Alpha Theta—Social Chairman; Sphinx: I.D.C. 2; Football 1, 2; Lacrosse 1, 2, 3, 4. ROBERT STEPHEN YOUNG. 8 Ralston Road, Richmond. Va.; The Hill School; ENGLISH; Gamma Delta Chi; Squash I; WDCR I. CHRISTOPHER CARL YULE; 200 Weir St. Ext., Hingham. Mass.; Hingham H.S.; ENGI¬ NEERING SCIENCE; Zcta Psi—Special Events Chairman; Dart. Soc. of Engineers 2, 3, 4; Crew 1; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Motor Sports 3; D.O.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Winter Sports I, 2, 3, 4; Head Start Program 3. JAMES BRADFORD ZIMPR1CH, W139 56830 Sherwood Circle, Hales Corners. Wis.; Mar¬ quette Univ. H.S.; PHILOSOPHY; Alpha Chi Alpha Secretary; Foreign Study Program 3— Greece. EARL WARREN ZUBKOFF, 10904 Martha Drive. Silver Spring. Md.; Springbrook H.S.; MATHEMATICS; Green Key 3; THE DARTMOUTH 1, 2. 3. 4—Managing Editor; J.L.C. I. 2. 3. 4—Publicity Chairman: Dart. F.x. College 3—Course Coordinator. STUART G. ZUCKERMAN, 761 Plato Street. Franklin Sq., N.Y.; H.F. Carey H.S.; PSY¬ CHOLOGY; Tau Epsilon Phi; Crew 1; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; AEGIS 4; WDCR 1, 2, 3, 4— President; J.L.C. 1, 2; Winter Carnival Council I, 2; Frosh Council 1. PHILLIP MARK ZUNDER; 22 Sheldon Street, Roslindale. Mass.; Boston Latin S.; PSY¬ CHOLOGY; Alpha Delta Phi—Corres. Secretary 3. President 4; I.F.C. 4; Band 1, 2, 3, 4; DCT Valley Tutorial Program I. J. B. Zimprich E. W. Zubkoff S. G. Zuckerman P- M. Zunder 0 ’70’s not pictured Adams, David Gordon Adams, Ronald T. Alway, Frederick Robert Andersen, David Fadum Anderson, Eric R., II Anderson. Jeffrey B. Ano, Harold Peter, Jr. Baer, Thomas Ernest Ball, Stuart Michael, Jr. Bambino, Richard S. Barrett. Stephen F. Barton, David R. Berger, John Francis Bergesch. Louis Robert Berman, Alan Roy Blackmon, James Stanley Bloom, Stephen Michael Bolayi, John Zoltan Bone, Henry Grady, III Brady, James Peter Brand, Nicholas Mouldon Breedon, Thomas M., Ill Brezinski, Bruce Henry Buckanaga. Harry James Cameron, Bruce Thomas Cargill, Terry Ken Carlson, Roy Duane, Jr. Carter, Thomas John Chamberlain. John B., Jr. Chemoff, Kenneth M. Cirincione, Ross Joseph Clark. Robert Arthur Cleary, Gerald B., Jr. Coffin, Timothy Lewis Collins, Michael John Cooch, Peter Corson, Bruce Alan Coulson, William Roy Cox, Bruce Eugene Cox, Stephen Thome Cranch, Edmund Titus, II Crosbie, Malcolm A. Cummings, F. R., Jr. Curtis, Charles Miller Dabney. William Cā€ž III Davenport, Ronald Gregg Dayson, Don Alfonso DeGraff, Robb M., Jr. DiPretoro, Richard S. Dobney, Bruce William Doherty, Michael Joseph Doig, Stephen Keith Donahue, James Aā€ž Jr. Douglas, Eric Peter Douglas, Gilbert D. Doyle, Barry Wilson Doyle, Thomas Francis Durant, William B. Dyer, Michael George Eagan, James Jeffrey Eckel, Robert William Ellis. Gordon Walker Everson, James Rowland Faurot, Randall Rix Felton, James William Ferguson, James William Finely, Paris James Fitzhugh, John Hardy Fluharty, Mark Edward Fox, Douglas Hitchcock Frey, Karl Frederick Friedman, Paul Michael Garbacz, Adrian Francis Garzon-Lopex Camilo E. Gass, James Andrew Graham, Michael Paul Gray, Thomas Campbell Haag, Richard Wayne Habeeb, Edward David Hadley, Ronald Walter Hagen, Richard Lyon Hall, Raymond Thomas Hanecak, Rudolph Jā€ž Jr. Harewood, Keith Leslie Harrington, Robert B. Harris, Mark Hart, Barry Jean Harter, Peter Charles Hartzel, Terry Jack Harvard, Stephen E. Heilzman, Robert E., Jr. Hesson, Peter John Hinman, Crawford M., Jr. Hoar, Danial Gary Holcomb, William W. Holmberg, Ronald Edward Holmen, Robert William Horn, Mon Bill Hoots, Geoffrey Lee Horton, Peter Daniel Howard, John Billings Howard, John McKee Hutton, David J. Irving, David Henry Ives, Arthur Harvey. Ill Ivey, Joseph A. Eā€ž III Johnson, Charles M. Johnson, Lawrence Reid Jones, Ancil Arthur Kardon, Peter Franklin Karp, Douglas Paul Kelley, David Edward Kennedy, Devin Paul Kent, William Davis Kingsbury, Fred H. Kirle, Bruce Steven Kitz haber, John Albert Koch, Philip David Koury, Donald C. Kovacic, Jan Peter Lambe, Robert M., Ill Lamorey, Daniel Hayes Langley, John Arthur Lehman, Terry Lynn Leonard, John Ellyson Lewis, Peter B., Jr. Lilly, David Maher, Jr. Livingston, Robert J, Locke, William Wā€ž III Lockey, Fletcher McAlister, Donald S. McClay, David Ralph McKay, Robert F., Jr. McKeown, Stephan Grue McKinlay, Richard S. McLean, Allan Cameron McWilliams, A.M. Maher. Brian Adrian Martin, Presley F., II Massengill, Michael D. Maynard, Dan Walter Mellquist, John Quincy Meny, John Scott Mercer, Traylor Tullar Merchant, Christopher C. Merrick, Thomas Paul Metaxas, George Jason Meyer, Alfred C., Ill Miller, Kenneth Fearing Miller, Thomas Bryan Milne, Joel Mina, Jose Agustin Mizan, Abraham Elias Moats, Alan Stewart Moony, Michael James Moore, Alan Wood Moore, Stephen W. Moral, Jose Luis Morrison, James Edwards Moskowitz, Robert Allan Nagy, Joel Gordon Nakamura. Yoshihiro Needham, James R., Ill Nelson, David Nintzel, Christopher A. Nordgren, Jeffrey R. Nunes, Melvyn Donnell Oberst, George John Olson, Steven Michael Olson. Iver Manuel, II Owen, Richard Thomas Pace, William Roby, III Panas. Anastasios John Parkhurst, John Leich Parks, Robert Walsh Pattee, Roger Russell Paul, Peter Franklin Payne, Pierre Daniel Perell, Ronald Eric Peterson, Donald S. Pettee, John Irving Pierce, Philip Harvey Porter, Arthur B., Ill Powell, Byron Wendell Powell. Jonathan Lee Price, Leonard Paxton Puccio, Frank Sā€ž Jr. Purdy, William Randolph Rachele, Armand Joseph Relson, David Michael Renner. Michael David Roberts, Bruce Burnham Robertson. Philip Dee Rockwell, Winthrop A. Rohrer, Walter Bruce Roussos, George William Rowe, David Callan Runch, Anthony Ruston. Charles Michael Sandberg, Joseph E. Schifani. William G. Scoville, Richard P. Seelbach, Charles F., Jr. Sharpe, Robert Connor Shattuck, Robert D.. Jr. Shaw, Richard Clark, Jr. Shay, Laurence Marcuse Sheldon. George M. Sils, Juris Singh, Rajesh Smith, Charles Duane Smith. Frank Schuyler Smith, Gregory Paul Smith. Gregory Thompson Smith, Timoth Knowlton Soberg, Ronald John Sokol. William Andrew Sollenberger, Roger H. Soter, Dennis Stephen Spadoni, Charles B. Staudt, William O. Steams, Donald Eidson Stem, John Edwards Stone, Carey A., Ill Stonefield. Stephen E. Strauss, David Michael Streater, John Stockman Sunde, Erik Takagi, Shin Thomas, Frederick N. Thompson, Todd Stephen Tillotson, John S. Timbers, Dwight Edward Tourek, Steven Charles Truex, Richard Hall Tumansky, Stuart M. Tyson, Henry Camberlon Valore, Joseph Charles Van Arsdale, John C., Ill Vance, Stuart Michael Van Hoy, James Allan Walsh, Thomas Michael Walters, Timothy Neal Waniata, Dale Thomas Watson, Bruce Douglas Watson, Robert William Watts, Dana Allen Weale, William Wā€ž III Wheeler, John Oxenham Whitcomb, Gaines B. Whitcomb, Robert B. Wilkes, Jeffrey Allen Wimsatt, John David Wise, Tracy B. Wood, Thomas William President 1945-1970 John Sloan Dickey 238 John G. Kemeny 239 Carroll W. Brewster Dean of the College LL.B. 1961 Yale University, at Dartmouth since 1969 Katharine S. Stevens Assistant Dean of the College A.B. 1952 Vassar College at Dartmouth since 1969 Albert I. Dickerson Dean of Freshmen A.M. 1930 Dartmouth College at Dartmouth since 1930 Paul R. Shafer Associate Dean of the College Ph.D. 1951 University of Wisconsin at Dartmouth since 1952 Edward G. Williams Assistant Dean of the College M B.A. 1969 Tuck School at Dartmouth since 1969 240 Dean of the Faculty Leonard M. Rieser Leonard M. Rieser Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Ph.D. 1943 University of Chicago, at Dartmouth since 1952 241 HUMANITIES ART ROY W. BANWELL, JR.. Lecturer. B.A. 1957 University of Pennsylvania, at Dartmouth since 1966. VARUJAN BOGHOSIAN. Professor, M.F.A. 1958 Yale University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1968. TRUMAN H. BRACKETT, JR., Lecturer. M.A. 1960 University of Pennsyl¬ vania, at Dartmouth since 1962. JAMES O. CASWELL, Instructor. M.A. 1962 University of Michigan, at Dart¬ mouth since 1969. EDWARD J. HILL. Visiting Artist. M.F.A. I960 Yale University. JOHN JACOBUS, Professor, Ph D. 1956 Yale University, at Dartmouth since 1969. HOLLISTER KENT, Lecturer, Ph.D. 1956 Cornell University. ROBERT L. McGRATH, Associate Professor. Ph D. 1963 Princeton University, at Dartmouth since 1963. RAY NASH, Professor, M.A. 1947 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1937. JOHN T. PAOLETTI, Assistant Professor, Ph D. 1967 Yale University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1966. FRANKLIN W. ROBINSON, Instructor, M.A. 1963 Harvard University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1969. JOHN WILMERDING, Associate Professor. Ph.D. 1965 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1965. ALFRED L. WONDERLICK. Assistant Professor, M.F.A. 1968 Yale University, at Dartmouth since 1965. MATTHEW WYSOCKI. Professor, M.F.A. 1954 Yale University, at Dartmouth since 1966. CHINESE HENRY TIEN-K UN KUO, Assistant Professor, B.A. 1948 National Peiping Normal University, at Dartmouth since 1965. JONATHAN M1RSKY, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1967 University of Pennsyl¬ vania, at Dartmouth since 1966. CLASSICS CHRYSANTHI BIEN, Lecturer. EDWARD M. BRADLEY, Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1963 Yale University, at Dartmouth since 1963. R. Banwell V. Boghosian T. Brackett J. Caswell R. McGrath R. Nash J. Poletti F. Robinson J. Wilmerding A. Wonderlick M. Wysocki H. Kuo J. Mirsky E. Bradley J. Marshall W. Scott J. Tatum S. Waite NORMAN A. DOENGES, Professor, Ph D. 1954 Princeton University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1955. DANIEL J. GEAGAN. Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1965 Johns Hopkins Univer¬ sity, at Dartmouth since 1967. J. C. DOUGLAS MARSHALL. Assistant Professor, Ph D. 1967 University of Pennsylvania, at Dartmouth since 1969. WILLIAM C. SCOTT. Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1964 Princeton University, at Dartmouth since 1966. JAMES H. TATUM, Assistant Professor, PhD. 1969 Princeton, at Dartmouth since 1969. STEPHEN V. F. WAITE. Assistant Professor. Ph D. 1969 Harvard University, D. tieagan N. Doenges M. Wiencke P. Wallace at Dartmouth since 1965. PAUL W. WALLACE, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1969 Indiana University, at Dartmouth since 1968. MATTHEW I. WIENCKE, Professor, Ph.D. 1947 Johns Hopkins, at Dartmouth since 1959. COMPARATIVE LITERATURE JOHN HAWKES, Lecturer. A.B. 1949 Harvard University. DRAMA ROD ALEXANDER, Professor, M.A. 1953 Columbia University, at Dartmouth R. Alexander R. Beyer R. Cook E. Hill R. Jeter B. McMullan since 1967. ALICIA ANNAS, Assistant Professor. M.F.A. 1965 University of Texas, at Dartmouth since 1968. ROLF T. BEYER, Visiting Assistant Professor, M.F.A. I960 Yale University. RAY COOK, Lecturer. JOHN W. FINCH, Professor, M.A. 1940 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1939. ERROL G. HILL. Professor. D.F.A. 1966 Yale University, at Dartmouth since 1968. RICHARD W. JETER, Instructor, A.B. 1963 Bates College, at Dartmouth since 1968. JOSEPH LOSEY, Visiting Professor, A.B. Dartmouth College. BRUCE W. McMULLAN, Assistant Professor, M.F.A. 1961 Yale University, at Dartmouth since 1966. 243 H. Williams J. Atkinson P. Bien H. Bond J. Cox l- Davies ARTHUR L. MAYER, Lecturer, A.B. 1907 Harvard University. HENRY B. WILLIAMS, Professor, M.F.A. 1948 Yale University, at Dartmouth since 1937. ENGLISH JAMES B. ATKINSON, Assistant Professor, Ph D. 1968 Columbia University, at Dartmouth since 1966. PETER BIEN. Professor, Ph.D. 1961 Columbia University, at Dartmouth since 1961. HAROLD L. BOND. Professor, Ph D. 1955 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1947. JAMES M. COX, Professor, Ph.D. 1955 Indiana University, at Dartmouth since 1955. LAURENCE J. DAVIES, Visiting Instructor, M.A. 1968 Oxford University. RICHARD G. EBERHART. Professor, M.A. 1933 Cambridge University, at Dartmouth since 1956. JAMES A. EPPERSON III. Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1966, University of Cali¬ fornia, Berkeley, at Dartmouth since 1964. JOHN W. FINCH, Professor. M.A. 1940 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1939. ALAN T. GAYLORD, Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1959 Princeton University, at Dartmouth since 1967. JEFFREY P. HART, Professor, Ph D. 1961 Columbia University, at Dartmouth since 1963. JAMES A. W. HEFFERNAN. Assistant Professor. Ph D. 1964 Princeton Univer¬ sity, at Dartmouth since 1965. ROBERT G. HUNTER, Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1962 Columbia University, at Dartmouth since 1959. JOHN J. KANE. Instructor, M.A. 1962 Johns Hopkins University, at Dartmouth since 1969. J. Epperson J. Finch A. Gaylord J. Hart J. Heffernan R. Eberhart R. Hunter J. Kane 244 N. Perrin J. Price L. Salamon H. Schultz MARY T. KNOWLES, Lecturer. ALEXIS LEVITIN, Instructor, M.A. 1964 Columbia University, at Dartmouth since 1967. JOHN E. LINCOLN, Associate Professor, M.A. 1950 Columbia University, at Dartmouth since 1969. CHAUNCEY C. LOOMIS, JR., Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1963 Princeton Uni¬ versity, at Dartmouth since 1961. DARREL L. MANSELL, Associate Professor, Ph D. 1963 Yale University, at Dartmouth since 1962. CARL E. MAVES, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1969 Stanford University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1969. GUNNARD A. NELSON, JR., Instructor, M.A. 1966 Princeton University, at Dartmouth since 1967. E. NOEL PERRIN, Associate Professor, M.Litt. 1958 Cambridge University, at Dartmouth since 1959. MICHAEL D. PLATT, Instructor. M.Ph. 1968 Yale University, at Dartmouth since 1969. JOHN W. PRICE, Assistant Professor, Ph D. 1968 Harvard University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1968. MICHAEL P. REWA, JR., Assistant Professor, Ph D. 1967 Stanford University, at Dartmouth since 1964. PETER C. SACCIO, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1968 Princeton University, at Dartmouth since 1966. LINDA B. SALAMON, Lecturer, A.M. 1964 Bryn Mawr. HARRY T. SCHULTZ, Professor, Ph.D. 1953 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1948. HERMINE C. SENSENIG, Lecturer, Ph.D. 1952 University of Munich. ROBERT H. SIEGEL, Assistant Professor, Ph D. 1968 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1967. H. Sensenig R. Siegel 245 R. Taylor H. Terrie D. Trafton T. Vance RICHARD D. TAYLOR. Assistant Professor. Ph D. 1966 University of Durham, at Dartmouth since 1966. HENRY L. TERRIE, JR., Professor. Ph D. 1955 Princeton University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1952. DA1N A. TRAFTON, Assistant Professor, Ph D. 1968 University of California, Berkeley, at Dartmouth since 1968. THOMAS A. VANCE. Professor, Ph D. 1935 Yale University, at Dartmouth since 1940. THOMAS VARGISH, Assistant Professor. Ph D. 1966 Princeton University, at Dartmouth since 1965. T. Vargish E. Chick B. Duncan L. Duroche GERMAN MIRIAM B. ARNDT, Lecturer, B.A. 1944 Robert College. EDSON M. CHICK. Professor, Ph.D. 1953 Princeton University, at Dartmouth since 1964. DONALD H. CROSBY, Visiting Professor, Ph D. 1956 Princeton University. BRUCE DUNCAN, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1969 Cornell University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1969. LEONARD L. DUROCHE, Assistant Professor, Ph D. 1965 Stanford University, at Dartmouth since 1965. WERNER KLEINHARDT, Assistant Professor, Ph D. 1962 Hamburg Univer¬ sity, at Dartmouth since 1965. CHRISTA J. A. MACHT, Lecturer, M.A. 1969 Indiana University. RICHARD M. MACHT. Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1968 Indiana University, at Dartmouth since 1968. GEORGE SALAMON, Assistant Professor, Ph D. 1966 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1967. HERBERT R. SENSENIG, Professor, Ph D. 1933 University of Bonn, at Dart¬ mouth since 1932. MUSIC JON H. APPLETON, Assistant Professor, M.A. 1965 University of Oregon, at Dartmouth since 1967. DON CHERRY. Lecturer, at Dartmouth since 1970. WILLIAM L. CHRISTIE, Instructor. M.M. 1969 Yale University, at Dartmouth since 1969. MARIO diBONAVENTURA. Professor, Ecole des Beau Arts. Fontainebleau 1948, at Dartmouth since 1962. W. Klein hard! C. Machl R. Macht G. Salamon H. Sensenig M. diBonaventura 246 i. Fairer D. Rosen D. Wendlandt W Doney B. Gen T. Duggan J. Sykes P. Zeller JOHN A. FARRER. III. Instructor, M.A. 1966 University of Michigan, at Dart¬ mouth since 1967. DAVID B. ROSEN. Instructor, M.A. 1964 University of California, Berkeley, at Dartmouth since 1969. JAMES A. SYKES. Professor, M.A. 1934 Eastman School of Music, at Dart¬ mouth since 1953. DONALD WENDLANDT, Associate Professor, M.M. 1952 University of Wis¬ consin. at Dartmouth since 1952. PAUL R. ZELLER. Professor, M.M. 1939 University of Michigan, at Dartmouth since 1947. PHILOSOPHY WILLIS F. DONEY, JR.. Professor, Ph.D. 1949 Princeton University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1958. TIMOTHY J. DUGGAN, Professor. Ph.D. 1957 Brown University, at Dartmouth since 1957. BERNARD GERT. Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1962 Cornell University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1959. ALAN F. GEITNER. Instructor. M.A. 1965 University of Chicago, at Dart¬ mouth since 1969. FRANCIS W. GRAML1CH, Professor, Ph.D. 1936 Princeton University, at Dartmouth since 1940. PETER P. KISSIN, Research Instructor. Ph D. 1969 University of Wisconsin, at Dartmouth since 1968. JAMES A. MARTIN, Assistant Professor. Ph.D. 1969 University of Michigan, at Dartmouth since 1967. DAVID H. SANFORD, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1966 Cornell University, at Dartmouth since 1963. THOMAS S. K. SCOTT-CRAIG, Professor, Ph.D. 1938 Edinburgh University, at Dartmouth since 1944. ROBERT J. ZASLOW. Instructor. M.A. 1964 Brown University, at Dartmouth since 1969. A. Gettner F. Gramlich J. Martin D. Sanford T. Scott-Craig R. Zaslow 247 RELIGION FRED BERTHOLD, Jr., Professor, Ph.D. 1954 University of Chicago, at Dart¬ mouth since 1949. FRANCIS H. COOK, Instructor, Ph.D. 1970 Cornell University, at Dartmouth since 1968. RONALD M. GREEN, Instructor, A.B. 1964 Brown University, at Dartmouth since 1969. GERSHON GREENBERG, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1969 Columbia University, at Dartmouth since 1968. AUGUSTIN-PIERRE LEONARD. Professor, D.S.T. 1948 University of Fri¬ bourg, at Dartmouth since 1967. ABRAHAM J. MALHERBE, Associate Professor, Th.D. 1963 Harvard Univer¬ sity, at Dartmouth since 1969. HANS H. PENNER, Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1965 University of Chicago, at Dartmouth since 1965. CHARLES H. STINSON, Instructor, M.A. 1966 Catholic University. EDWARD A. YONAN, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1968 University of Chicago, at Dartmouth since 1966. ROMANCE LANGUAGES JOHN R. ALLEN, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1969 University of Michigan, at Dartmouth since 1969. ANDREW F. CAMPAGNA, Instructor, M.A. 1967 University of Rochester, at Dartmouth since 1968. MADELINE L. CINOTTI. Lecturer. PETER COCOZZELLA, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1966 St. Louis University, at Dartmouth since 1967. JAMES O. CROSBY. Professor, Ph.D. 1954 Yale University, at Dartmouth since 1968. GAIL dcMALLAC-SAUZIER, Lecturer, M.A. 1959 Radcliffe College. GUY deMALLAC-SAUZIER, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1967 Cornell Univer¬ sity, at Dartmouth since 1967. F. Berthold R. Green G. Greenberg A. Leonard ā–  A. Malherbe H. Penner C. Stinson E. Yonan 248 C. Ehrmann J. Fleming J. Foran L. Hammond A. Harvey L. Harvey M. Herschensohn A. Hyde V. Kogan D. Loughran A. Madrid S. Nichols CLAIRE U. EHRMANN. Lecturer, D.P.L. 1939 Sorbonne. JEAN L. FLEMING, Lecturer, M.A. 1968 University of Colorado. JOHN M. FORAN, Instructor, M.A. 1965 University of Wisconsin, at Dart¬ mouth since 1969. COLETTE L. GAUDIN, Lecturer, C.A.P.E.S. 1953 Sorbonne. L. DAVIS HAMMOND, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1964 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1968. A. MOSBY HARVEY, JR., Instructor, J.D. 1969 University of Texas, at Dart¬ mouth since 1969. LAWRENCE E. HARVEY, Professor, Ph.D. 1955 Harvard University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1955. MICHAEL J. HERSCHENSOHN. Instructor. M.A. 1967 University of Pennsyl¬ vania, at Dartmouth since 1967. A. ALEXANDER HYDE, Lecturer, A.B. 1965 Dartmouth College, at Dartmouth since 1968. VIVIAN KOGAN, Instructor, M.A. 1966 Brown University, at Dartmouth since 1969. DAVID K. LOUGHRAN, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1969 Johns Hopkins Uni¬ versity, at Dartmouth since 1968. ARTURO MADRID, II, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1969, University of Cali¬ fornia, Los Angeles, at Dartmouth since 1965. STEPHEN G. NICHOLS, JR.. Professor, Ph D. 1963 Yale University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1968. GLYN P. NORTON, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1968 University of Michigan, at Dartmouth since 1968. NEAL OXENHANDLER, Professor, Ph D. 1955 Yale University, at Dartmouth since 1969. JOHN A. RASSIAS, Professor, Doc. d ' Un. 1952 University of Dijon, at Dartmouth since 1965. N. Oxenhandler J. Rassias 249 R. Russell R. Shupp D. Sices F. Yudin W. Arndt J Garrard BEATRICE A. ROEDER. Lecturer, M.A. 1965 University of California, Berkeley. ROBERT H. RUSSELL, Professor, Ph D. 1963 Harvard University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1957. ROBERT P. SHUPP, Instructor, M.A. 1967 University of California, Santa Bar¬ bara, at Dartmouth since 1969. DAVID SICES, Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1962 Yale University, at Dartmouth since 1957. FLORENCE L. YUDIN, Assistant Professor. Ph.D. 1964 University of Illinois, at Dartmouth since 1969. RUSSIAN WALTER W. ARNDT, Professor, Ph D. 1956 University of North Carolina, at Dartmouth since 1966. JOHN G. GARRARD, Associate Professor. Ph D. 1966 Columbia University, at Dartmouth since 1964. PETER JAROTSKI, Lecturer, Mikhailowski Artillery School, at Dartmouth since 1961. GEORGE KALBOUSS, Assistant Professor, M.A. 1961 Columbia University, at Dartmouth since 1967. GORDON D. LIVERMORE, JR., Instructor, A.B. 1964 Duke University, at Dartmouth since 1969. BASIL MILOVSOROFF, Professor, A M. 1934 Oberlin College, at Dartmouth since 1959. RICHARD R. SHELDON. Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1966 University of Mich¬ igan, at Dartmouth since 1 ' 966. GEORGE Me. YOUNG. JR., Assistant Professor. M.A. 1966 Yale University, at Dartmouth since 1969. SPEECH ROBERT W. GLENN, Instructor. M.A. 1968 Northwestern University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1969. ALMON B. IVES, Professor, M.A. 1936 Northwestern University, at Dartmouth since 1939. P. Jarotski G. Kalbouss B. Milovsoroff R. Sheldon R. Glenn A. Ives 250 H. James J. Neale B. Graham R. Wilde N. Arnold J. Copenhaver H. Croasdale A. DeMaggio D. Dennison R. Forster D. Gephart HERBERT L. JAMES, Associate Professor, M.A. 1949 Ohio University, at Dartmouth since 1949. JOHN V. NEALE, Professor. M.A. 1939 Cornell University, at Dartmouth since 1934. SCIENCES AEROSPACE STUDIES BUFORD D. GRAHAM, Professor, B.A. 1960 University of Maryland. RODNEY C. WILDE, Lecturer, A.B. 1954 Harvard University. BIOLOGY HAROLD L. ALLEN, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1969 Michigan State Univer¬ sity, at Dartmouth since 1970. NORMAN K. ARNOLD, Professor. Ph.D. 1932 Yale University, at Dartmouth since 1932. WILLIAM W. BALLARD, Professor, Ph D. 1933 Yale University, at Dartmouth since 1930. RAYMOND W. BARR ATT, Professor. PhD. 1948 Yale University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1954. SHAUN BENNETT, Instructor. A.M. 1968 Dartmouth College. CARL W. BIRKY, JR., Visiting Research Professor, Ph.D. 1963 Indiana Univer¬ sity. JOHN H. COPENHAVER. JR.. Professor, Ph.D. 1950 University of Wisconsin, at Dartmouth since 1952. HANNAH T. CROASDALE. Professor, Ph D. 1935 University of Pennsylvania, at Dartmouth since 1953. AUGUSTUS E. DcMAGGIO, Associate Professor, Ph D. 1960 Harvard Univer¬ sity, at Dartmouth since 1964. DAVID S. DENNISON. Associate Professor. Ph D. 1958 California Institute of Technology, at Dartmouth since 1958. ROY P. FORSTER, Professor, Ph D. 1938 University of Wisconsin, at Dart¬ mouth since 1938. DALE S. GEPHART, Lecturer, M.D. 1966 University of Southern California, at Dartmouth since 1969. 251 J. Gilbert R. Holmes W. Jackson C. Lyon A. Nelson W. Reiners JOHN J. GIL.BERT, Associate Professor, Ph.D, 1963 Yale University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1966. RICHARD T. HOLMES, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1964 University of Cali¬ fornia, Berkeley, at Dartmouth since 1967. JAMES HOWARD, Lecturer, Ph.D. 1966 Brigham Young. WILLIAM T. JACKSON, Professor, Ph D. 1953 Duke University, at Dartmouth since 1959. NICHOLAS J. JACOBS, Lecturer, Ph.D. 1960 Cornell University. CHARLES J. LYON, Adjunct Research Professor. Ph.D. 1926 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1920. ANDREW P. NELSON, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1962 University of Cali¬ fornia, Berkeley, at Dartmouth since 1962. ELMER R. PFEFFERKORN, JR., Lecturer, Ph D. 1960 Harvard University. JAMES P. POOLE, Curator, Jesup Herbarium, Ph.D. 1921 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1922. WILLIAM A. REINERS, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1964 Rutgers University, at Dartmouth since 1967. THOMAS B. ROOS, Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1960 University of Wisconsin, at Dartmouth since 1960. EVELYN S. SPIEGEL, Research Associate, Ph.D. 1954 University of Pennsyl¬ vania. MELVIN SPIEGEL, Professor, Ph.D. 1952 University of Rochester, at Dart¬ mouth since 1959. DAVID A. STETLER, Assistant Professor, Ph D. 1967 University of California, Berkeley, at Dartmouth since 1969. WAYNE THORNBURG, Lecturer, Ph.D. 1952 University of Illinois. CHEMISTRY GORDON M. BARROW, Adjunct Professor, Ph.D. 1950 University of California, Berkeley. RICHARD J. BATEMAN, Instructor, Ph.D. 1968 University of Wisconsin. DOUGLAS M. BOWEN. Professor, Ph.D. 1940 Harvard University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1945. CHARLES L. BRAUN, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1963 University of Minne¬ sota, at Dartmouth since 1965. YOSHIAKI CHIKAHISA, Visiting Fellow, Ph.D. 1965 Tokyo Metropolitan Uni¬ versity. T. Roos M. Spiegel D. Stetler G. Barrow R. Bateman D. Bowen C. Braun Y. Chikahisa 252 R. Cleland G. Gribble E. Hornig J. Homig D. Johnson C. Kuhlmann D. Lemal W. Magee ROBERT L. CLELAND, Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1957 Massachusetts Insti¬ tute of Technology, at Dartmouth since 1960. GORDON W. GRIBBLE, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1967 University of Oregon, at Dartmouth since 1968. EVALYN O. KORNIG, Lecturer. Ph.D. 1956 University of Wisconsin. JAMES F. HORNIG, Professor, Ph.D. 1954 University of Wisconsin, at Dart¬ mouth since 1962. D. W. JOHNSON, Research Associate. Ph.D. 1969 University of Wisconsin. CARL F. KUHLMANN, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1963 University of Utah, at Dartmouth since 1965. DAVID M. LEMAL, Professor, Ph.D. 1959 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1965. WILLIAM S. MAGEE, JR., Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1963 Brown University, at Dartmouth since 1965. MAYNARD V. OLSON, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1970 Stanford University, at Dartmouth since 1969. STEPHEN W. PROVENCHER, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1967 Yale Univer¬ sity, at Dartmouth since 1967. PAUL R. SHAFER, Professor, Ph.D. 1951 University of Wisconsin, at Dartmouth since 1952. ROBIN A. J. SMITH, Research Associate, Ph.D. 1968 University of Otago, at Dartmouth since 1969. ROGER H. SODERBERG, Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1963 Massachusetts Insti¬ tute of Technology, at Dartmouth since 1962. KAREL SOLC, Visiting Fellow, Ph.D. 1961 Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences. M. Olson S. Provencher P. Shafer R. Smith R. Soderbcrg K. Sole 253 THOMAS A. SPENCER, JR., Professor, Ph.D. I960 University of Wisconsin, at Dartmouth since 1960. WAL.TER H. STOCKMAYER, Professor. Ph D. 1940 Massachusetts Institute of Technology, at Dartmouth since I960. ENGINEERING SCIENCES EDWARD S. BROWN. JR.. Professor. C.E., S.M. 1937 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1937. GEORGE A. COLLIGAN, Professor, Ph.D. 1959 University of Michigan, at Dartmouth since 1962. ALVIN O. CONVERSE, Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1961 University of Del¬ aware, at Dartmouth since 1963. ROBERT C. DEAN, JR., Professor, Sc.D. 1954 Massachusetts Institute of Tech¬ nology, at Dartmouth since 1962. JOSEPH J. ERMENC, Professor, M.S. 1940 University of Michigan, at Dart¬ mouth since 1942. HANS GRETHLEIN, Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1962 Princeton University, at Dartmouth since 1968. MILES V. HAYES, Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1950 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1962. THOMAS LAASPF.RE, Associate Professor. Ph.D. 1960 Cornell University, at Dartmouth since 1961. CARL F. LONG, Associate Professor. D. Eng. 1964 Yale University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1954. FRED K. MANASSE, Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1962 Princeton University, at Dartmouth since 1968. MILLETT G. MORGAN, Professor, Ph.D. 1945 Stanford University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1947. THOMAS F. PIATKOWSKI. Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1963 University of Michigan, at Dartmouth since 1967. PETER W. RUNSTADLER, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1962 Stanford University, at Dartmouth since 1965. T. Spencer W. Stockmayer E. Brown G. Colligan A. Converse R. Dean J. Ermenc M. Hayes T. Laaspere C. Long M. Morgan T. Piatkowski P. Runstadler 254 R. Schile P. Shannon B. Smith B. Sonnerup S. Stearns J. Strohbehn M. Tribus G. Wallis RICHARD D. SCHILE, Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1967 Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, at Dartmouth since 1969. PAUL T. SHANNON, Professor, Ph.D. 1959 University of Illinois, at Dartmouth since 1963. BARNARD E. SMITH. Professor, Ph.D. 1961 Stanford University, at Dartmouth since 1968. BOB L. SMITH, Visiting Professor, Ph.D. 1954 Purdue University. BENGT U. O. SONNERUP. Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1961 Cornell University, at Dartmouth since 1964. S. RUSSELL STEARNS, Professor, M.S. 1949 Purdue University, at Dartmouth since 1943. JOHN W. STROHBEHN, Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1963 Stanford University, at Dartmouth since 1963. GEORGE A. TAYLOR, Professor, M.S. 1940 New York University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1949. MYRON TR1BUS, Professor, Ph.D. 1949 University of California, Los Angeles, at Dartmouth since 1961. GRAHAM B. WALLIS, Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1961 Cambridge University, at Dartmouth since 1962. ROBERT G. WOLFSON, Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1965 Northwestern Univer¬ sity, at Dartmouth since 1967. J. ALBERT WOOD, Professor. Ph D. 1935 Cornell University, at Dartmouth since 1946. GEOLOGY (EARTH SCIENCES) SAMUEL B. BONIS, Research Associate, M.S. 1957 Louisiana State University. ROBERT W. DECKER. Professor, D.Sc. 1953 Colorado School of Mines, at Dartmouth since 1954. S. LAWRENCE DINGMAN, Lecturer, A.M. 1963 Harvard University. CHARLES L. DRAKE, Professor, Ph.D. 1958 Columbia University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1969. R. Wolfson A. Wood R. Decker C. Drake 255 N. Johnson J. Lyons A. McNair R. Reynolds R. Stoiber W. Weeks NOYE M. JOHNSON, Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1961 University of Wisconsin, at Dartmouth since 1961. JOHN B. LYONS, Professor, Ph.D. 1942 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1946. ANDREW H. McNAIR. Professor, Ph D. 1935 University of Michigan, at Dart¬ mouth since 1935. ROBERT C. REYNOLDS, JR., Associate Professor. Ph D. 1955 Washington Uni¬ versity, at Dartmouth since 1960. RICHARD E. STOIBER. Professor, Ph D. 1937 Massachusetts Institute of Tech¬ nology, at Dartmouth since 1935. WILFORD F. WEEKS. Adjunct Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1956 University of Chicago. MATHEMATICS MARTIN ARKOWITZ, Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1960 Cornell University, at Dartmouth since 1964. JAMES E. BAUMGARTNER. Research Instructor. Ph.D. 1969 University of California, Berkeley, at Dartmouth since 1969. MARY K. BENNETT. Research Instructor. Ph.D. 1966 University of Massachu¬ setts. THOMAS F. BICKEL, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1965 University of Michigan, at Dartmouth since 1967. KENNETH P. BOGART. Assistant Professor, Ph D. 1968 California Institute of Technology, at Dartmouth since 1968. EDWARD M. BROWN, Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1963 Massachusetts Institute of Technology, at Dartmouth since 1964. MARIANNE BROWN. Lecturer, A.M. 1959 University of Pennsylvania. RICHARD H. CROWELL, Professor. Ph.D. 1955 Princeton University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1958. M. Arkowitz J- Baumgartner M. Bennett T. Bickel K. Bogart B. Brown M. Brown R. Crowell 256 S. Garland J. Geiser K. Gross R. Hargraves G. Higgins J. Kemeny D. Kreider T. Kurtz J. Lampcrti I. Monroe R. Norman R. Prosser STEPHEN J. GARLAND. Assistant Professor. Ph D. 1967 University of Cal¬ ifornia. Berkeley, at Dartmouth since 1967. JAMES R. GEISER. Lecturer. Ph D. 1966 Massachusetts Institute of Technol¬ ogy, at Dartmouth since 1966. KENNETH I. GROSS, Assistant Professor. Ph D. 1966 Washington University, at Dartmouth since 1968. ROBERT F. HARGRAVES. JR.. Assistant Professor. Ph D. 1967 Brown Uni¬ versity. at Dartmouth since 1967. G. ALBERT HIGGINS, Lecturer, M.A.L.S. Wesleyan University, at Dartmouth since 1970. JOHN G. KEMENY. Professor. Ph D. 1949 Princeton University, at Dartmouth since 1953. DONALD L. KREIDER. Professor, Ph.D. 1959 Massachusetts Institute of Tech¬ nology, at Dartmouth since 1960. THOMAS E. KURTZ. Professor. Ph.D. 1956 Princeton University, at Dartmouth since 1956. JOHN W. LAMPERTI, Professor, Ph.D. 1957 California Institute of Technol¬ ogy, at Dartmouth since 1961. ITREL E. MONROE, Research Instructor. Ph D. 1969 Washington University, at Dartmouth since 1969. ROBERT Z. NORMAN. Professor. Ph D. 1954 University of Michigan, at Dart¬ mouth since 1956. REESE T. PROSSER. Professor, Ph D. 1955 University of California, Berkeley, at Dartmouth since 1966. GLADYS A. REYES, Visiting Fellow. M.A. 1951 Syracuse University. DAVID W. ROEDER, Research Instructor. Ph.D. 1968 University of California. Santa Barbara, at Dartmouth since 1968. WILLIAM E. SLESNICK, Associate Professor. A.M. 1953 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1962. D. Roeder W. Slesnick 257 E. Snapper J. Snell C. Williams ERNST SNAPPER, Professor, Ph.D. 1941 Princeton University, at Dartmouth since 1963. J. LAURIE SNELL, Professor, Ph.D. 1951 University of Illinois, at Dartmouth since 1954. CHARLES W. WILLIAMS, Visiting Fellow, Ph D. 1949 University of Virginia. RICHARD E. WILLIAMSON, Professor, Ph D. 1955 University of Pennsyl¬ vania, at Dartmouth since 1956. MILITARY SCIENCE JOHN H. DUCKLOE, Professor. B.S. 1959 Pennsylvania Military College, at Dart¬ mouth since 1967. DENNIS I. RUNEY, Lecturer, B.A. 1961 Bucknell University, at Dartmouth since 1969. WILLIAM A. SCHERR, III, Lecturer. B.S. 1962 United States Military Acad¬ emy, at Dartmouth since 1968. NAVAL SCIENCE WALTER P. CARLIN. Lecturer, B.S. 1945 United States Naval Academy, at Dartmouth since 1968. WILLIAM J. HURST, Professor, M.A. 1964 George Washington University, at Dartmouth since 1968. DAVID L. McCONAGHA, Lecturer, B.S. 1964 Ohio University, at Dartmouth since 1969. THOMAS E. POWERS, Lecturer, B.A. 1961, at Dartmouth since 1968. ORLO K. STEELE, Lecturer, B.A. 1955, at Dartmouth since 1968. STUART N. TEMPLETON, Lecturer, B.S. 1963, at Dartmouth since 1968. R. Williamson J. Duckloe D. Runey W. Scherr W. Carlin W. Hurst D. McConagha T. Powers O. Steele S. Templeton 258 F. Boley R. Christy W. Davis J. Harris E. Huggins J. Kidder A. King A. Luehrmann PHYSICS FORREST I. BOLEY, Professor, Ph.D. 1951 Iowa State, at Dartmouth since 1964. ROBERT W. CHRISTY, Professor, Ph.D. 1953 University of Chicago, at Dart¬ mouth since 1953. WILLIAM P. DAVIS, JR., Professor, Ph.D. 1954 University of Michigan, at Dartmouth since 1955. WILLIAM T. DOYLE, Professor, Ph.D. 1955 Yale University, at Dartmouth since 1955. JOSEPH D. HARRIS, Professor, Ph D. 1955 Purdue University, at Dartmouth since 1961. ELISHA RHODES HUGGINS, Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1962 California Insti¬ tute of Technology, at Dartmouth since 1963. JOHN N. KIDDER, Associate Professor. Ph.D. 1960 Duke University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1962. ALLEN L. KING, Professor, Ph.D. 1937 University of Rochester, at Dartmouth since 1942. ARTHUR LUEHRMANN, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1965 University of Chi¬ cago, at Dartmouth since 1965. JOHN R. MERRILL, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1966 Cornell University, at Dartmouth since 1967. RICHARD A. MORROW, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1963 Princeton University, at Dartmouth since 1964. AGNAR PYTTE, Professor, Ph.D. 1958 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1957. LEONARD M. RIESER, Professor, Ph D. 1952 Stanford University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1952. LEONARD C. ROSEN, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1968 Columbia University, at Dartmouth since 1969. JAMES H. VIGNOS, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1962 Yale University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1966. J. Merrill R. Morrow A. Pytte L. Rieser L. Rosen J. Vignos 259 JOHN E. WALSH, Assistant Professor, Sc.D. 1968 Columbia University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1968. SOCIAL SCIENCES ANTHROPOLOGY HOYT S. ALVERSON, Assistant Professor, Ph D. 1968 Yale University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1968. JAMES W. FERNANDEZ, Professor, Ph D. 1962 Northwestern University, at Dartmouth since 1964. DAVID D. GREGORY, Instructor. B.A. 1963 Florida State University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1969. ELMER HARP, JR.. Professor. Ph D. 1953 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1946. ALFRED F. WHITING, Adjunct Assistant Professor, M.A. 1934 University of Michigan, at Dartmouth since 1955. ECONOMICS WILLIAM L. BALDWIN, Professor, Ph D. 1958 Princeton University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1956. HOWARD N. BARNUM, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1969 University of Cal¬ ifornia, Berkeley, at Dartmouth since 1969. ERWIN A. BLACKSTONE, Assistant Professor, Ph D. 1968, University of Michigan, at Dartmouth since 1968. COLIN D. CAMPBELL , Professor, Ph.D. 1950 University of Chicago, at Dart¬ mouth since 1956. MEREDITH O. CLEMENT, Professor, Ph D. 1958 University of California, Berkeley, at Dartmouth since 1956. STEVEN W. DOBSON, Instructor, B.S. 1963 University of California, Berkeley, at Dartmouth since 1969. EDWIN G. DOLAN. Assistant Professor. Ph.D. 1969 Yale University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1969. ALAN L. GUSTMAN, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1969 University of Michigan, at Dartmouth since 1969. J. Walsh H. Alverson D. Gregory J. Fernandez A. Whiting H. Bamum W. Baldwin E. Blackstone C. Campbell M. Clement S. Dobson E. Dolan A. Gustman 260 L. Hines D. Marx J. Menge G. Pidot L. Sandberg M. Segal J. Ragle A. Carlson V. English R. Huke D. Lindgren G. Macinko LAWRENCE G. HINES, Professor, Ph.D. 1947 University of Minnesota, at Dartmouth since 1947. JAMES C. KNOWLES, Instructor, Ph.D. 1970 University of Wisconsin, at Dart¬ mouth since 1968. DANIEL MARX, JR., Professor, Ph.D. 1946 University of California, Berkeley, at Dartmouth since 1941. JOHN A. MENGE, Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1959 Massachusetts Institute of Technology, at Dartmouth since 1956. GEORGE B. PIDOT, JR., Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1966 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1966. LARS G. SANDBERG. Associate Professor. Ph D. 1964 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1967. MARTIN SEGAL, Professor. Ph.D. 1953 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1958. ADRIAN W. THROOP, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1967 Stanford University, at Dartmouth since 1967. EDUCATION DONALD A. CAMPBELL, Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1960 Yale University, at Dartmouth since 1964. BRITTA McNEMAR, Research Associate, M.Ed. University of Pennsylvania, at Dartmouth since 1969. BARBARA B. RAGLE, Research Associate, B.A. 1945. JOHN W. RAGLE, Lecturer, M.A. 1952 Middlebury College, at Dartmouth since 1966. WILLIAM UPSHAW, Instructor, M.A. 1969 Vanderbilt University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1969. SAMUEL WHITESIDE. Lecturer. GEOGRAPHY ALBERT S. CARLSON, Professor, Ph.D. 1939 Clark University, at Dartmouth since 1929. VAN H. ENGLISH, Professor, Ph.D. 1942 Clark University, at Dartmouth since 1946. ROBERT E. HUKE, Professor, Ph.D. 1953 Syracuse University, at Dartmouth since 1953. DAVID T. LINDGREN, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1969 Boston University, at Dartmouth since 1966. GEORGE MACINKO, Visiting Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1961 University of Michigan. 261 D. Nutt R. Simpson M. Bailin D. Baldwin H. Ehrmann H. Erdman DAVID C. NUTT. Research Associate, A.B. 1941 Dartmouth College, at Dart¬ mouth since 1947. ROBERT B. SIMPSON, Associate Professor, Ph D. 1941 Clark University, at Dartmouth since 1965. JOHN W. SOMMER. Assistant Professor. Ph.D. 1968 Boston University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1968. GOVERNMENT MICHAEL A. BAILIN, Lecturer, M.U.S. 1968 Yale University, at Dartmouth since 1969. DAVID A. BALDWIN, Assistant Professor, Ph D. 1965 Princeton University, at Dartmouth since 1965. HENRY W. EHRMANN, Professor, D.J. 1932 University of Freiburg, at Dart¬ mouth since 1961. HOWARD L. ERDMAN, Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1964 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1964. EDWARD W. GUDE, Instructor, A.B. 1959 Dartmouth College, at Dartmouth since 1968. CARNES LORD, Instructor, B.A. 1966 Yale University, at Dartmouth since 1969. EUGENE M. LYONS. Professor, Ph.D. 1958 Columbia University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1957. CHARLES B. McLANE, Professor, Ph.D. 1955 Columbia University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1957. DONALD W. McNEMAR, Instructor, M.A. 1968 Princeton University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1969. ROGER D. MASTERS, Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1961 University of Chicago, at Dartmouth since 1967. LIVINGSTON T. MERCHANT, Assistant Professor, Ph D. 1969 Harvard Uni¬ versity, at Dartmouth since 1969. LAURENCE I. RADWAY. Professor, Ph D. 1950 Harvard University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1950. ARTHUR G. RUBINOFF. Instructor, M.A. 1966 University of Chicago, at Dartmouth since 1969. FRANKLIN SMALLWOOD, Professor, Ph.D. 1958 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1959. E. Lyons C. McLane D. McNemar R. Masters L. Merchant L. Radway A. Rubinoff F. Smallwood 262 E. Smead M. Smith V. Starzinger R. Sterling R. Winters J. Adams J. Darnell G. Garthwaite L Morton J. Prosser D. Roberts F. Roberts M. Gerassi D. Kubnn ELMER E. SMEAD, Professor, Ph.D. 1934 Princeton University, at Dartmouth since 1934. MICHAEL P. SMITH, Instructor, M.A. 1966 University of Massachusetts, at Dartmouth since 1968. VINCENT E. STARZINGER, Professor, Ph.D. 1960 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1960. RICHARD W. STERLING, Professor, Ph.D. 1956 Yale University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1954. DENIS G. SULLIVAN, Professor, Ph.D. 1962 Northwestern University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1968. RICHARD F. WINTERS, Instructor. M.A. 1966 University of Hawaii, at Dart¬ mouth since 1969. HISTORY JOHN C. ADAMS, Professor, Ph D. 1936 Duke University, at Dartmouth since 1941. WALDO CHAMBERLAIN, Professor, Ph D. 1939 Stanford University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1969. JERE R. DANIELL. II. Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1964 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1964. GENE R. GARTHWAITE, Assistant Professor, Ph D. 1969 University of Cali¬ fornia, Los Angeles, at Dartmouth since 1968. MARYSA N. GERASSI, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1964 Columbia University, at Dartmouth since 1968. DAVID KUBRIN, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1968 Cornell University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1965. LEO OU-FAN LEE, Instructor, M.A. 1964 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1968. LOUIS MORTON, Professor, Ph D. 1938 Duke University, at Dartmouth since 1960. JEANNE M. PROSSER. Lecturer, D.e.L. 1951 University of Bordeaux, at Dart¬ mouth since 1966. F. DAVID ROBERTS, Professor, Ph D. 1953 Yale University, at Dartmouth since 1957. HENRY L. ROBERTS. Professor. D.Ph. 1948 Oxford, at Dartmouth since 1967. 263 H. Scheiber K. Shewmaker P, Slater L. Spitzer C. Wiltse C Wood HARRY N. SCHEIBER, Professor, Ph.D. 1962 Cornell University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1960. KENNETH E. SHEWMAKER. Assistant Professor. Ph.D. 1966 Northwestern University, at Dartmouth since 1967. PETER G. SLATER, Instructor. M.A. 1965 Brown University, at Dartmouth since 1968. LEO SPITZER, Assistant Professor, Ph D. 1969 University of Wisconsin, at Dartmouth since 1967. CHARLES M. WILTSE, Professor, Ph.D. 1932 Cornell University, at Dartmouth since 1967. CHARLES T. WOOD. Associate Professor, Ph D. 1962 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1964. JAMES E. WRIGHT, Assistant Professor, Ph D. 1969 University of Wisconsin, at Dartmouth since 1969. PSYCHOLOGY JOHN C. BAIRD, Assistant Professor, Ph D. 1964 Princeton University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1967. JOHN C. BAREFOOT, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1968 University of North Carolina, at Dartmouth since 1967. CHARLES A. DAILEY. Adjunct Professor, Ph D. 1950 University of Michigan, at Dartmouth since 1968. ROGERS ELLIOTT, Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1960 University of Illinois, at Dartmouth since 1962. VIRGIL A. GRAF, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1967 Bryn Mawr College, at Dartmouth since 1966. W. LAWRENCE GULICK. Professor, Ph D. 1957 Princeton University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1965. GEORGE C. JERNSTEDT, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1967 Johns Hopkins Uni¬ versity, at Dartmouth since 1967. FRANCIS W. KING, Professor, Ph.D. 1952 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1949. ROBERT E. KLECK, Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1964 Stanford University, at Dartmouth since 1966. JOHN T. LANZETTA, Professor, Ph.D. 1952 University of Rochester, at Dart¬ mouth since 1965. ROBERT N. LEATON, Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1963 Yale University, at Dartmouth since 1964. CHARLES LEWIS, Instructor, B.A. 1965 Swarthmore College, at Dartmouth since 1968. WILLIAM N. MORRIS, Instructor, B.A. 1965 New York University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1969. V J _ - J. Wright J. Baird J. Barefoot C. Dailey R. Elliott V. Graf W. Gulick G. Jemstedt 264 R. Kleck J. Lanzelta R. Leaton C. Lewis W. Morris ALLAN G. REYNOLDS, Instructor, M.A. 1967 Western Ontario University, at Dartmouth since J 969. WILLIAM M. SMITH, Professor, Ph.D. 1950 Princeton University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1958. LOUISE S. TIGHE, Research Associate, Ph D. 1963 Cornell University. THOMAS J. TIGHE, Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1959 Cornell University, at Dartmouth since 1963. GEORGE L. WOLFORD. II, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1969 Stanford Univer¬ sity, at Dartmouth since 1969. SOCIAL SCIENCES ROBERT G. McGUIRE, III, Instructor. M.A. 1961 Johns Hopkins University, at Dartmouth since 1949. PETER J. D. WILES. Visiting Professor, Social Science, M.A. 1962 Oxford. SOCIOLOGY OIOMAR J. BARTOS, Visiting Professor, Ph.D. 1958 Yale University. BERNARD J. BERGEN, Lecturer, Ph.D. 1962 Harvard University. JAMES A. DAVIS, Professor, Ph.D. 1955 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1967. H. WENT WORIH ELDREDGE, Professor, Ph.D. 1935 Yale University, at Dartmouth since 1935. EDMUND D. MEYERS, JR., Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1967 Johns Hopkins University, at Dartmouth since 1966. NICHOLAS C. MULLINS, Assistant Professor, Ph.D. 1967 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1968. ROBERI SOKOL, Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1961 Columbia University, at Dartmouth since 1961. BERNARD E. SEGAL, Associate Professor, Ph.D. 1960 Harvard University, at Dartmouth since 1962. GEORGE F. THERIAULI, Professor, Ph.D. 1951 Harvard University, at Dart¬ mouth since 1936. R. McGuire O. Bartos B. Bergen J. Davis H. Eldredge N. Mullins R. Sokol G. Theriault 265 Activities Dartmouth Outing Club Directorate This year marks the 60th anniversary of the D.O.C., but the club itself is always changing in response to or in anticipation of the climate of the times. The return to a three-divisional structure came about with the creation of an Environmental Studies Division. President Joe Schwartzman ruled over the sometimes tumultuous board meetings, which included such highlights as the Battle of the Budget, re-writing the Constitution to bring it into line with current proce¬ dures of the club, and enlarging the voting membership of the Board of Directors. He hopefully found solace, however, in heading up the D.O.C. contingent to the annual three-day deep sea fishing tournament ofT Wedge- port, Nova Scotia. Vice President Bill Glanz cranked out timely and sometimes not so timely minutes of the board meetings, but will be best remembered for running an excellent Freshman Trip for over four-hundred incoming Dart¬ mouth freshmen. Director of Transportation A1 Lamarre kept the fleet of D.O.C. vehicles running smoothly. The Chevy Carry All, a faithful, battle-scarred veteran of countless expe¬ ditions, was ho norably retired and replaced by a new model. Tim Dreisbach headed up the Club’s vast propa¬ ganda ministry. A few newsletters came out, and the mailing address list was computerized. To highlight the Club’s anniversary, displays were ar¬ ranged for the Baker Library corridor and the rotunda of the Hopkins Center. Duncan Wood, Director of I.O.C.A., ran two fine co¬ ed weekends at the Ravine Lodge. Square dancing and singing continued long into the night. A few hardv souls even managed to climb up Moosilauke the next day. Otto Edson headed up the Programs Dept. He did a fine job as chef at a special feed held in the fall to honor retiring President John Sloan Dickey. As a token of the Club’s appreciation for the many kindnesses he has shown it over the years. President Dickey was presented with a special pair of snowshoes, hand-crafted by Edu¬ cational Officer James Schwedland. Paul Lowe supervised the traditional fall steak break at the D.O.C. House on Occom Pond. One of the most visible changes during the year was the ā€œRobinson Renovation.ā€ Room 17 was refurbished in garrish medieval splendor with church pews, gold drapes, and what the B G paint chart falsely called a subdued red. After the initial shock and threats of im¬ peachment for those responsible, the members quickly adjusted to their new surroundings. Routed signs were also placed on all the office doors. 268 Cabin and Trail 1st Row: Herrick, Allen. 2nd Row: Thompson, Harper, Goldthwait, Kain, Bob Lamarre, Ruhlc. Stimson. 3rd Row: Riggs, Ealon, Averill. Schwartzman, Dethier. Lay, Oostenburg, Brand, Dean, Wood, Clear, Noon, Merriam, Nichol, Dreisbach, Lowe, Al Lamarre. Back Row: Glanz, Streeter, Montgomery, Sherry, Canadensis. Metz, Knowled. Husted, Edson. Absent: Andrews, Byrkit, Bickford, Porter, Weed. Under the leadership of Chairman Kain, this year was the revival of old traditions, creation of some new ones, and an expansion of the hard core.ā€ The ancient but colorful patch ceremony was revived, and heeler skits became a part of the feeds. Pizza runs after the lively Monday night meetings are now common prac¬ tice. A large C T in little white stones mysteriously appeared in the Hop sculpture court. D.O.C. Secretary Olive Provencher was elected to honorary membership. Trouser raids proliferated, and missing doors almost be¬ came the rule of the day. Spring term witnessed the installation of new bunks in Great Bear Cabin, the second annual attempt to shoot the Errol Rapids in an open canoe, and Tom Goldthwait’s Woodsmen’s Team making a strong show¬ ing at the Nichols College meet. Over the summer, Chas. Allen’s cabin chain and Dave Dethier’s trails and shelters were assisted by Sec¬ retary Dudley Thompson’s trail crew, who did some major repairs, stocked the woodsheds, and cleared trail. In the fall, much energy was devoted to a special project, but there was still time for hiking. Kain, Bick¬ ford, and Stimson made the annual fifty-mile trail walk from Kinsman Notch to Hanover in under twenty-three hours. Larry Riggs’ publicity turned out a large group to climb Mt. Katahdin in Maine, the highest peak in the North-East. Allen, Glanz, Herrick, Kain, Bob Lamarre, and Ruhle finished the last of their forty-six four-thou¬ sand-foot peaks in the White Mountains. A hugh snowshoe trip up Mt. Cannon opened Steve Ruhle’s winter trips program. Then Andy Harper ran the 4th Annual Ski-Touring Workshop, which was well attended by DOC members and the public at large. The workshop included an impromptu candle-light square dance at Harris Cabin. The winter Woodsmen’s Week¬ end in Montreal expanded the member’s horizons to include cosmopolitan night-life. Glanz, Riggs, and Thompson succeeded in a three-day, sub-zero traverse of the entire Presidential Range. After a wild feed at Holt’s Ledge Cabin, the Buck Memorial Downhill Race was won by a ski-less Fritz Meyer. Bob Lamarre’s equipment department was cleaned out—to the tune of $1,000. A small heating stove and new bunks were put in Happy Hill Cabin, some Harris flooring was replaced, and extensive vandalism of the Summit Cabin was repaired. As the lame duck administration hobbled away into the sunset, young blood previously recruited by Heeling Director Paul Lowe prepared to carry on the Cabin and Trail tradition of being the backbone of the Outing Club while promoting fun and fellowship in the out-of- doors. Ski School Ski Patrol Winter Sports Well, we did survive the winter of 1970, but not by much. It almost started out with a disaster for the East¬ ern Cross-country Championships way back in Janu¬ ary, but Vogt and Haag learned how to drive a Polaris and managed to get along without Beanie, Schwed, and Al. The Invitational jump went off without a hitch, but McEntire is still wondering what to do with all the hay. Then the alpine group took over, first for the C D Giant Slalom, which had so many racers that it almost ran over until Monday; and then Vogt’s brainchild, the Dartmouth Cup, which ran so smoothly that the mem¬ bers of the course didn’t even complain about the lack of hot chocolate (the heelers, of course, didn’t know any better). Then, all of a sudden, it was Carnival, and just as suddenly, the thermometer began rising. The Skiway was salted, the cross-country course was moved, the jump was packed, and JR was worried. Powers blew the equipment budget on new Dartmouth racing bibs and flags; the coaches descended upon Wulfson, rule books in hand; Vogt set a new record for laying a three-thou¬ sand foot cable; and Abbott almost let someone know the truth about the timer. Exhausting, as always (only a WS member knows what it’s like to get up at 6 a.m. on Saturday), but when the pressure was on, even the heelers came through, and it was undoubtedly the best of all sixty. But before you can catch your breath (and catch up on your work), it was the NCAA Champion¬ ships, as the entire Winter Sports Division packed up and moved to the Banshee Hut. The memories of a spectacular four-day meet: Willy, Avalanche, the TV trucks, the Franconia Inn (what’s that in the window??), George, the computer copping out, great snow and great skiing, painting the poles, watching the fog, and, of course, Willy. There were more students involved in running this meet than in any previous national cham¬ pionship; when it was over, Vogt said to Powers, it’s all yours, but one could sense the satisfaction at having done a spectacular job. It was a perfect conclusion to an ambitious schedule; besides that, it was a nice vacation. Bait and Bullet President. Vice-President ... Sec.-Treas. Members: Wally Dameille Foss Jones John Merriam Dave Hunter Gary Oines Dave Hall Brad Sullivan John Jurkovich Paul Gross John Boyle Paul Waldman Don Nichol Pat Babbit Steve Lewis Bruce Johnson William C. Badger . Charles W. Allen .Chris Bird Mountaineering Club 272 Environmental Studies March 23, 1856 I seek acquaintance with Nature,—to know her moods and manners. Primitive nature is the most interesting to me. I take infinite pains to know all the phenomena of spring, for instance, thinking that 1 have here the entire poem, and then, to my chagrin, 1 learn that it is but an imperfect copy that 1 possess and have read, that my ancestors have torn out many of the first leaves and grandest passages, and mutilated it in many places. I should not like to think that some demi-god had come before me and picked out some of the best of the stars. I wish to know an entire heaven and an entire earth. —Henry David Thoreau D.O.C. members have been pursuing recreation in the out-of-doors for years. Increasingly, however, many re¬ alized that all was not well with the outdoors. Aware¬ ness of and distress at the decreasing quality of the environment prompted a group of Cabin and Trail men, a few Winter Sports fellows, and others to try to trans¬ late these concerns into action. Accordingly, a new di¬ vision of the Outing Club was created in October as a forum for discussion of local environmental problems, an information center for material on the subject, and a mechanism for effecting constructive change. George Kain was elected as the first Chairman, with Charles Allen as Secretary and Bill Schlesinger as Treasurer. Cabin and Trail, Winter Sports, and the affiliated clubs will continue their recreational role, for people must be gotten out of doors to realize what many of the problems are and what is worth trying to save. The Environmental Studies Division can be the place, how¬ ever, for anyone in the college community, student or adult, to work together to do what is possible to re¬ establish some quality to living. It would seem the organization can be more effective the closer it stays to home. As a start, the project of having the college lands at Moosilauke declared a wil¬ derness area and closed to vehicular traffic, which had begun in Cabin and Trail, was taken over and carried out under the direction of Paul Lowe. The effectiveness of the undertaking remains to be seen, but with constant watchfullness it may succeed. Plans were also laid to create an Environmental In¬ formation Center in Robinson Hall. The Titcomb Room is being used for this purpose at the moment, but there is a good chance for expansion. Campaigns have been mapped out to familiarize local residents with the dangers of certain presticides and deter¬ gents through a series of newspaper ads. As this goes to press, the successor administration of Chairman Bill Schlesinger, Secretary Bob Deyle, and Treasurer Dwight Sargent is preparing to conduct a spe¬ cial Earth Day in the spring. There will hopefully be workshops in the areas of population control, pollution, and household ecology among others. The ultimate character, direction, and success of this venture will take a long time to determine, but opportu¬ nity is abundant. 273 Ski Team A number of surprisingly strong showings left little doubt about Dartmouth’s supremacy in the Eastern ski world. It was a season of uphill battles, as the Indians overcame icy slopes and unusually strong competition to add another chapter to coach A1 Merrill’s long suc¬ cess story. A second place finish at Williams was the only blemish on an otherwise spotless carnival slate, as the Green once again outclassed the rest of New England. In the 60th annual Dartmouth Carnival, the jumping duo of Scott Berry and Bill Cantlin gave the Indians a decisive victory on their own icy slopes. The meet at Middlebury a week later saw the team on top once again in one of the closest Eastern meets in recent his¬ tory. But even an eclipse of the sun could not stop the University of Denver at Franconia, N.H., where the Pioneers swept to their ninth NCAA championship in the last ten years. Here the Indian squad held on for a commendable second place against an extremely strong field. Led by Sheldon Perry and Chuck Bent in the slalom and Teyck Weed in the cross-country competi¬ tion, the Green gave Denver an early scare before the powerful Western jumpers sealed the outcome. So as the snows began to melt, Dartmouth was able to look back on a satisfying season as the pride of the East. 274 Glee Club Handel Society 275 l .: . , . jTi ā–  ' ā–  • 5 w yaf • ' ā– Ā« Ā£nl3 ' kri $ - - ?( ' ' ipJSteeA: VĀ« 4 n -K r II M tr Ā£x t r yj? —aift 1 m Ā« J ā– ft • t ā– r m r Wlff E t • ā„¢ Ah liV Pep Band 2: Barbary Coast Chess Club The Chess Club is one of Dartmouth’s oldest student organizations. Recently it has put itself on the chess map by affiliating with the Intercollegiate Chess League and the U.S. Chess Federation. The Club’s best players are always contenders—often successfully—for the state chess championship. Its team plays matches with other Eastern schools, including the Ivies. A club tournament, held in the winter, is the major annual event. Players range in strength from aspiring expert to Class E. Thursday nights, 41 Robinson. 278 Boots and Saddles Film Society 280 The Players 281 Kiewit Computation Center 282  « Dartmouth Society of Engineers The Dartmouth Society of Engineers is a student engineering society, a forum for student ideas, a social club, a speaker bureau, and a student government. What does it do? It organizes panel discussions on topics of current interest to engineers, makes recommendations to the faculty regarding the engineering curriculum, and sponsors the Thayer School intramural athletic teams. Corinthian Yacht Club 285 Forensic Union 286 Dartmouth Christian Union Young Democrats This year the Dartmouth Young Democrats, under the guidance of advisor Professor Laurence Radway, began to revive a faltering organization. In the Fall, the YDs succeeded in renewing a charter with the state organization that had expired several years earlier. They also sponsored a successful appearance by pollster Oliver Quayle, and club President Steven Hoisington was elected to the executive committee of the national college organization, the CYDCA. In the Winter, for¬ mer Governor of Vermont Philip Hoff was the guest of the Dartmouth YDs. He discussed national issues and the possibility that he might run for the Senate in No¬ vember. In the Spring, the YDs began mobilizing to help Governor Hoff in his attempt to unseat Senator Winston Prouty. Club President Steven Hoisington and Club Treasurer Keith Jordan. 287 Interdormitory Council 289 Gymnastics A wait until next yearā€ attitude marked the end of a season in which the Indian gymnasts had to content themselves with second place in the Ivy League. But the 9-2 dual meet record points to a year of accomplishment for a squad that had been picked to do little better than break even in the tough Eastern circuit. Losses to Cornell and Massachusetts failed to daunt the Green, who were able to save their best perfor¬ mances for the toughest competition. Yale and MIT discovered this side of the scrappy team; the largest gymnastics audience in recent years was treated to a rare thrill in the return engagement with MIT, as Dart¬ mouth came out the winner by less than one point. Despite Tom Weigle’s capture of the ā€œMaster Gym¬ nastā€ title, the Indians were unable to dethrone Cornell in the Ivy League Championships. Tom Weigle, Jeff Rogers, and Chris Cain all played key roles, however, as the squad placed a strong second in the meet. A week later, the Green emerged number one in the Collegiate Division of New England meet, where once again Tom Weigle placed first in the all around compe¬ tition. And with the entire squad returning, the Indians appear to be in top shape for next year. Dartmouth 110.70 Cornell Opponent 120.45 116.80 M.I.T. 115.35 118.60 Boston St. 98.70 118.60 Plattsburg 76.00 125.20 Yale 113.50 125.20.20 Penn 67.75 121.40 Lowell Tech. 91.80 126.40 Mass. Frosh 135.75 123.90 M.I.T. 123.10 107.95 Plymouth St. 79.00 120.65 U.N.H. 105.25 290 2nd—Ivy League Meet 1st—New Englands Dragon Pete Bryant Jim Muhlfelder Steve Fox Jack Roberts Bill Koenig Phil Robertson Sandy McWilliams Dewitt Davies Pete Vikre Charlie Johnson Karl Steinmanis Rocky Nagel Tom Quinn Bill Fraser Russ Lucas Bruce Saylor Pete Geary Mike Bruell Sean Fay Tim Welch Dave Grossi John McKemon Greg Pickering Steve Fahay Mark Pfeiffer Cleve Penberthy 292 Sphinx Carl Andros Joseph Avellone Daniel Barnett Arthur Brown Michael Brown Thome Butler Gregory Church Thomas Coffman James Decker Geoffrey Dyer Richard Hagen Peter Harter Frank Howard John B. Howard Gordon Hughes Robert Huiskamp William Johnson Thomas Kenworthy Damon Lawrence Allan McLean David Mills Robert Mlakar Gregory Mosser Richard Oslberg W. Scott Perry John Ritchie Peter Stone Robert Turner Richard Wallace John Wimsatt Louis Young 293 Casque and Gauntlet 295 Rifle Team W1 ET • ? 298 Jewish Life Council 299 301 jDAffTUOUT J| Army ROTC 1970 brings to a close the longstanding and well respect¬ ed relationship between the Army Reserve Officer’s Training Corps and Dartmouth College. This year Major Duckloe. Major Runey, and Major Scherr have been successful in maintaining the unit spirit and the standards of excellence which have always characterized Dartmouth ROTC and which have made the Dartmouth Unit one of the most respected ROTC units in the First Army Area. The Dartmouth Army ROTC unit views with pride its past associations with the College, and we are confi¬ dent in the knowledge that the combined resources of Dartmouth and of the AROTC have provided hundreds of young officers with an education and a motivation which will allow them to go as far and to rise as high as their own capabilities will permit. J h V Navy ROTC 1 1 m 1 .1 A ā–  1 Wi WDCR ā€œGood evening, everyone, 39 degrees in Han¬ over under clear skies. I’m Steve Zrike with the WDCR 11 o’clock news, this edition brought to you by Executive Airlines, the airline that gets you there and brings you home safely. In the top of the news tonight, thirty-three persons died today when their airliner crashed in Utah .. • When the class of 1970 arrived in Robinson Hall in September of 1966, it was the first freshman class to work with cart machines. That September 3X was where the tech office now is, the record libes occupied the present-day MC space, and MC itself was over in today’s studio three. Studio 4 was adjacent to the old three under the ill-disguised obscenity 4Q. and studio 5 did not exist. The station had not been on the previous summer, the business department consisted of one man, yearly sales hit a new high of $20,297.36, and the 1967 Directorate consisted of five men. These men recalled happily how great the improvements had been in the four years they’d been at the station ... • • ā€œWe can sit here and be amused by Graves until Hell freezes over. ā€... Ken Jones • • Spring 1969 dawned the Age of the Frisbee, and hundreds of things of beauty cluttered the second floor of Robinson Hall, by the end of May threatening to envelop the COSO Room. Flower sculptures, a continu¬ ous tape loop of a heartbeat, cakes and pies, a lock of Dean McGinnes’ hair from his first haircut, color photo¬ graphs of Raquel Welch—all were part of the flood of entires that could not be returned. One woman entered her baby, but we gave back the baby. • ā€œPaul, forget about ever being a disc jockey. Your future at the station is in news. ā€... Jeff Kelley Parkhurst kept the college up all night, and the sta¬ tion stayed on 24 hours—at the time, a major achieve¬ ment. It all started with Downall and Brewster sta¬ tioned at Crosby and Wentworth just in case, but as McHugh verified on winged foot, it was Parkhurst for sure. Lippman manned the legion clalls from the outside world while the Zuckermans drove around the Tri- Town looking for state troopers. UPI ran at the top of the First World Round-Up: ā€œState troopers march onto the Dartmouth campus ... 200 Vermont and New Hampshire police broke down the oak door of Park¬ hurst Hall this morning ...ā€ (Wherever they got their exaggerated information, it wasn’t from us.) Everyone pulled an all-nighter. Gambaccini passed out next morn¬ ing while conversing with Jeff Kelley: Aydelott cracked up on 91 but got more mileage out of an acci¬ dent than anyone in history—his film and tall tale had even the court at his feet. The tapes are still in archives, waiting to be cata¬ logued. • M ’m married and that takes a hit of time. ā€... Don Bal- com ♦ Best of Broadway, Larry Henchey. Swingalong, Jay Brady, Molly Franke, Brent Petty, Sean Hennessey. Mac Cross, IFQ, Larry Parkhurst, Music for a Sunday Afternoon, Rev. Baker, Jazz Jamboree, station opens and closes. Nightline, R B Hall of Fame. Suppertime Part II. Adam’s Original and Unparalleled Floating Opera, David Saul, Scott McQueen, Pete Wheelock, Nightwatch, Pick of the Past, Fiasco, Greensleeves Poetry, Rev. Rogers, 6 hours of dead air, Friday Con¬ cert Hall... R.I.P. ♦ ā€œI’d love to he repped in New York.’’. .. Stu Zuckerman Ā Nelson started off the summer by humbly asking if he could do Dawn Patrol across the board, and somehow everyb ody knew it was going to be an incredible term. Gina and Merit cooked the goodies for the moonwalk watching in studio I. while a more anonymous babe recorded a short-lived promo for Loon and Billy—a precursor of ā€œJe T’amie.ā€ Shaps and Karr accelerated Jones’ spring pace, and historic Shiretown proved the first account to request Dawn Patrol every morning. Coakley did his first across-the-board shift. Aydelott fell off the fire engine on July 4th, Marshall started loving Vermont in earnest, and Stitham developed his first groupie problems. Somehow significant progress was made, and when everybody returned in September there were many new things—not the least of which was a new Program Director. Graves brought more than Arndt to the job. He went wild with ideas and proved that miracles do still happen. Unfortunately, he was still smoking. He should have realized long ago that the only way to stop is to never smoke. I ' ve forgotten wlmt side I ' m on. .. . Dave Graves Freshmen came up Activities Night in greater num¬ bers than sophomores rushed at any house. Whether they were attracted by the four-page Louis Armstrong blurb, the WDCR film with Curt Welling and the dog, the all-night shows, or the fledgling station lounge, we’ll never know. Suffice it to say that they came in record numbers, and spawned many goldmines. Phil Young- holm was still alive and gavotting, but his successor, Mark Woodward, was proving that somebody could succeed department builder Phil. Gina and Don ran down Main Street with chairs on their heads and, hail Henry, the hardest of the hard core returned for yet another year, graciously living up to his title of Grand Old Man. ā€œI asked not to be given a shift. When you don ' t have it it’s no fun. ā€ Don Balcom Ā« Coakley. Davis, Walkley, Roger, and Claxton’s made quite a team, and quite a lot of money—$5926 for the LRTC. It was the first time since Zrike and Shockley were on page one together that the station made the Union Leader in such a prominent position. True, Loeb did call us ā€œhoodlums,ā€ but that was only on the phone. Phrases like ā€œcapital improvementsā€ and ā€œair condition¬ ingā€ filled the air during the fall. Came Christmas and Alan Shepard and the Zuckermans spent a holiday they ' d never forget and too few station members would learn of. Ā Some night I’ll have to listen to Wally Ford. ā€... Leon¬ ard Rieser ♦ Fall term had been too much of a good thing for Openshaw, but it was just starters for Olivo. Winter saw Holland finally getting his evening classical shift and Nagy finally getting married. Somehow Joel found it harder to relate to the hoppers ... something Ralph Tarr had no trouble with as he increased his record number of Saturday P.M. appearances. Carl, Dwight, Tom, and Henry helped the transmitter pull a Lazarus act, proving that the report of its terminal crump was premature. For a while the Post Office considered for¬ warding Dwight’s mail to 41 Robinson, he was spending so much time at the station. And then, just as the tech department started praying for a miracle man, Eckels descended from on high with his first. As Dwight well realized, the money kept coming in, very little from Ivy, where the Stalking Moon and Notre Dame were at last word still cavorting. ♦ I ' ll be doing all the donkey work. ā€... Ken Jones A year ended in a blaze of mispronounciations on Mike Moore’s part. And, although everything had changed, it had still remained the same. As sure as the sun comes up every 24 hours and Walt Whitman’s seasons manage to make it every 12 months, the station was renewed by sic men who had earned one of the college’s greatest honors. Something to be even prouder of was the freshmen. There were more of them, there were bet¬ ter of them, and there were harder core of them than ever before. And with all their faith, the seniors believed that four years hence some upstart would be chronicling the comparatively meager achievements of the 1970 Di¬ rectorate and how its members had recalled the great improvements that had been made in the four years they’d been at the station. That was the way it should be, and that was the way it would be. 305 Ledyard Canoe Club 3i 307 308 The Dartmouth The Oldest College Newspaper in America TW leech ha Writ p sse d U a new irwniha ā–  . . —John r Kennedy ny Rim AMD rntriHW Shockley Ā Mi Many of the Neither ' He Co IHr tmr. Mm . rarervatitra. lb Irttar ,Ā«M. rorlr Ā ā–  Ā - student ywUfday rodent mtuluid wrrr fmh- .iradrrr.y hail issued aii Ij.yiu- EUnca Dr Shockin ' IUU offered prevented Kobe I-laureate WII- m n Ā Ā pw U i amt or- Uon lor Shockley ta speak As rat new rre ra nfi program and liam Shockley or Stanford Uni- eanUrd wiih the knowledge of a member of th academy. no new approach to psychomc- rersitv from dclivrrina a rDeech ,h ol the Cal- Shockley ha th prtrllrgr of trie measurement . while eon- un jvfretlr difference between ,ra, ā€˜ Afro-American Society addressing the academy on mat- ritotaig avalist data with vtrwv bucks and white to the Ka- according to Wallace L. ford try he believes deserting of )U concerning the managrmant of tlonal Academy of Selene r ' 0. AA8 chairman _ interrei vadetne nrealdent wrlfore oroenurw the NAB dne [ SDS Asks No Punishment hu talk and then continued iheir clamant for nearly an hour o the speech could not be Riven. : Shockley, who won thĀ Nobel prise for hu work on the trans¬ lator. attempt to prove in hi paper Utal black have lower intelligence and achievefnnt be¬ cause of gcnetlr inferiority ra¬ ther than dtoetiinatton After opvrral unsuccessful ap¬ peal by Dartmouth iminam to the buck student to let Shockley (peak. Profcwar ol Chemistry Walter Stnrkmarer. chairman of the meeting. ad¬ journed the Nwrion and acknow¬ ledged the preientatton of BhockWĀ written teat Shock- By TOM SHERRY A petit lun asking that black undent who participated la the Shockley dmonaumUm not be punished wa handed to Dean Albert I. Dickerson, chairman of the College Com- milter on Standing and Oon- duel yesterday afternoon The document, sponsored by Student for a Democratic Society, hat been circulating for about two week and con- taut over 400 denatures. It state . We believe that the black student who pre¬ vented Dr William Shockley from speaking should not be punished in any way by the OCBC or any other College McIntyre Reverses War Stand, Decries Continued U.S. Presence Trustees Name Kemeny To Succeed Dickey as College President March 1 Special Boston Meeting Called for Board ' s Vote Today ' s Decision Ends Long Search Process 309 Nation Prepares Vietnam Protest Ivy Editors Back Protest NEW YAKK UP1 -All eight Ivy League undergraduate nrw t Ā pĀ r joined Monday tn supporting the Oct 15 Viet¬ nam Moratorium and calling for -the immediate withdrawal of tH American troop from Vietnam and Uie rest of south- Tha Joint statement wa announced Monday at a new conference at Columbia University It will be printed Tues¬ day morning In the Brown DaUv Herald the Columbia Spec- Petitions Sent to Nixon A petition calling lor the immediate withdrawal ol 11 American force from Vietnam ha been signed by 1US col- lege to President Kim. the Dartmouth College Moratorium Committee announced the results of the two- week drive to collect names. Spokesman Jeff R Leight on. M. mid that the figure would have been hither wtth improved circulation furthermore. he explained, a third of the pe¬ tition —Including another lour to !x hnndred name —had not been collected when the letter wa mailed to the Pro - ijri. ' . A1 though the committee will not gather additimuU name . Leighton expressed the hope that a many people a poss¬ ible will canvas Wednesday - II also urged student to attend the teach-tn and rally, and help with the swmNf of pamphlet In Bartlett Hall Turn for them activities are Mated below. _ . . L JOm tatter wa also sent to New HampsliUc ficnsU YR’s Withdraw Support By !L GERALD JOHNSON Th Dartmouth Young Republican last night reversed their pub!it rred stand .uppurting the October lb Morato¬ rium We changed our stance to non-support because that (the pervtoo resolution) implies immediate withdrawal of troops from Vietnam. Mated D. Roger Rochlen ' ll The resolution passed by the Young Republican UĀ t Tuesday declared. We support a moratorium . In order to secure from PinMrnl Nixon a commiunrnt for the with¬ drawal of ail American troop or a specific art of proposal .,u4i ll fi .ha nv — rtavsa n wmii— — - - —• — A ft now itand . the Dartmouth Young Republicans have rescinded their support of the moratorium and have re¬ signed theniselve to a position of non-supportā€ However, Day stated that. Hie officer and bulk of the Young Re¬ publican . aa It exmed before last evening, support the moratorium. ' scholar He fuu served Dart¬ mouth with singular distinction a • teacher, as the founder of today 1 fine Department of Mathematic , and a the mov¬ ing spirit In establishing here By GEORGE LeMAIMHE Proteaear o ( Mathematics John O Kemeny baa been nam¬ ed the thirteenth PreaidMU of the College 1 -kivit D Brace of Hatton. Applauding Students Prevent Shockley From Giving Paper IGA to Continue Stocking Grapes By BILL smik UJS Senator Thomaa J McIn¬ tyre 37 delivered a plea for dlo- engaaement from Vietnam last night In an address before tba National Academy of Sciences tn Spaulding Aud.tortum The New Hampshire Democrat wrapped U) scheduled lecture on military (pending and called Instead for an end to the quagmire that t Vietnam.ā€ McIntyre, an earlier supporter of the Vietnam war. said he shared th responsibility lor expanding US involvement there, bui now Ortlrres tn dia- mgagrmrnt ā€œwith all due xpsed.ā€ Tboae who are familiar with my position in the past may ap- pc relate the personal anguish 1 experience in making that statement. be said McIntyre reviewed the statla- Urs at the war. citing the death of 45.00 Americans tn Vietnam, including J00 from New Hamp¬ shire Hr matntslnd that the IN billion spent yearly on the war could be channeled Into porrrty programs and research but In¬ stead U la brine spent ta bombs, tn bullet , In the nega¬ tivism of dm true Uon. Wf must save our own Nation first, for our own Nation Is tear¬ ing Itself apart under UMr ordeal of Vietnam.ā€ he said. In past conflict , the nation was united In a cause virtually every American regarded aa Ju t This U not the caae in Vietnam The appointment of Professor of Mathematic, John a Kemeny a thirteenth president of the College culminate an tn- lenaive sixteen-month search by a lotnt trustee-facul tv commit- found lions. and public affairs Thto process, the statement said, enlarged our perspective and enaoied us to examine the Dart¬ mouth presidency both Cram the point of view at the institution and the larger educational com- Br RICHARD Ml ' RPHY The Lebanon IGA ha no In¬ tention of removing California grapes from sole, according to David Holbrook, head of the local food store It wa reported tn yesterday ' s issue of THE DARTMOUTH (list Uw Lebanon Mare would stop selling the trepe in a statement attribut¬ ed to Assistant Professor of Hfltnanrr languages Arturo Madrid H The management of 4he Ioa had refused comment on the rtatrment Wednesday • In a letter written yesterday t a the editor of THE DART¬ MOUTH. Madrid its ted that no agreement wo reached between hr owner of the Lebanou IOA. Mr David Holbrook, ur any uf lire picket r involved In the Ā«rapr boycott. • Madrid aUn anoUMtard for Abbott also mid that he hat received no response from the Croat Company to a letter ha sent them explaining the pnol- Unn of the boycwUera The Craws Company Is the parent company of the Super Dupre chain and Is located tn White River Junc¬ tion The picketing ha been going quite well in Hanover. Abbott natd He has not been at the other locations recently and could not estimate how sueenw- ful the picket ! were tn turn¬ ing away shoppers in Hartford and Lebanon Although the pick Ire an restricted to the sidewalk at Urn Hanover Super Dupre. Mickey r Yurkrvles TJ. who picketed the alt , estimated that tt-Jb on’ tud been turned away on Wed- Vigil Scheduled At CRREL To Discuss Role In Hanover Ry LARRY AIHXMAN An ad hoc committee with the United Stale Cold Regions Research and Knginning Lab¬ oratory nos announced a silent vigil in front of the faculty Monday. Prb 14. limed to co¬ lor id with the months antl- VMtnaro moratariam activities Both Tony Wagner, mrmber of the Hanover Priend Meeting Peace Committee, and H1U An¬ derson TO —spokesman Tor the committee streaaed the edu¬ cational nature of tte vigil. Thi is dm a protest, but an attempt tn make people more aware of research don at cent to the community and to Uto people at CRREL thetn- relvwr We hope in bring about • dl ' cuaslon of CRREL a rela¬ tion to Dartmouth and Ute Community. A pamphlet soon to h re¬ leased describes eormnlttee con¬ cern with the work done at CRREL It mention CKREL ' a involvement la Project San¬ guine. a proposed commumci- tion network lb be Installed in Wisconsin, which u ā€œopposed by many bees use of ttt . . threat . . to th ecology of the region The pamphlet also Present plan rail tor a ratty on th Ore n tn front ol Park- hum at 3 pm. Pen. 14. f ol- mwrd by a walk to OWL where a brief silent vigil WtU follow. However. Wagner des¬ cribed the piano a tentative. We still have to negotiate with th Hanover potlre and CRREL officials to determine where ww are going to stand, Wagner noted Anderson mentioned a desire for a ā€ non-ideologiral bust for nnc.Honing We hope to w- votd the uyu t cunserraiMe- radical spilt We hope rather that everyone win consider the aril vl lire of th committee si id Ā« CMBV f — • . taM mĀ her divide us without contrtbut- tng to the rvsotuiioR of any loutā€ McIntyre said he supported the President in hi effort to end the fighting but said doing ao will require Use courage to cut through Hie heart of the matter, courage to make ' .he decisions and Issue the urden that will lead us out of this tra¬ gedy The queatlon of vtciory in Vietnam to no longer relevant, he aut ' All of uĀ contemporary rhetoric about defeat re victory In this war u now bmtdr th paint ft ha been truly said Anti-ROTC Dissidents Seize Parkhurst Hall, Yield to 90 State Troopers After 12 Hours Four Ivy Colleges Expect Decline in ’74 Applications College Reviews Applications From 150 Women Transfers Dickey Calls for Sustained Peace In His Last Convocation Speech Brewster Requests Mutual Respect 11? DAVID AYLWAliD Alumnus Dismissed from Army After Refusing Vietnam Duty MIDNIGHT OIL Post Office Honors Webster with Stamp College, Afro-Am Society Appear In Accord; A AS Pledges Nonviolence as Talks Continue Faculty Reviews Plans Wednesday Dickey Reasserts McLane Proposals Ā ? mu sunn PreaMeat Jolla A Dtcfcry |Ā - sur4 • letter culm April 10 to numbers of tile Wart mtneiu ti¬ tty Ā«t Ute CfeUet in rĀ H nw to recent demand! of Afro- American Society The r n-paĀ«r dpenment con¬ tain citeerpU from • January tt report of If Da run ou Ui CVvntnftlee on Kqua) Opportuu- 314 316 317 Spring Sports VARSITY GOLF (12-1) Dartmouth Opponent 6 at St. Anselm’s 1 4 at Army 3 3 with Villanova 4 4 at Amherst 3 4 Massachusetts 3 6 with Brown 1 5 at Williams 2 4 with Holy Cross 3 Easterns 6th 4 at Harvard 3 7 St. Michael’s 0 7 at Middlebury 0 7 New Hampshire 0 6 Springfield 1 VARSITY LACROSSE (4-8) Dartmouth Opponent 6 at Baltimore 8 4 Brown 11 5 at Yale 7 6 at Wesleyan 4 3 at Princeton 12 4 Middlebury 6 2 at Pennsylvania 11 8 Williams 7 9 Harvard 6 7 New Hampshire (ot) 10 3 Cornell 22 8 at Holy Cross 2 IVY LACROSSE W L PTS. 4 2 8 4 2 8 4 2 8 3 3 6 3 3 6 2 4 4 1 5 2 VARSITY TENNIS (10-7) Dartmouth Opponent 8 at Old Dominion 1 5 Maryland 4 4 Mich. St. 5 5 at William Mary 3 9 at Randolph-Macon 0 2 Geo. Washington 6 5 at Loyola 0 4 at Navy 5 5 at Yale 4 3 Pennsylvania 5 5 at Cornell 4 6 MIT 3 3 Princeton 6 9 Brown 0 2 at Harvard 7 2 Army 7 8 at Middlebury 1 EASTERN LEAGUE TENNIS W L (overall) Princeton 8 1 11 1 Harvard 8 1 12 5 Army 7 2 13 2 Pennsylvania 6 2 8 2 Navy 5 4 11 6 Dartmouth 3 5 10 7 Yale 2 6 2 8 Columbia 1 6 4 6 Brown 1 8 4 10 Cornell 0 6 2 6 VARSITY TRACK (3-2) Dartmouth Opponent 70 at Colgate 83 110 Boston Univ. 32 34 Harvard 119 79 at Brown 75 at Heptagonals 8th 109 Springfield 45 at IC4A’s 6 pts. VARSITY BASEBALL (16-14) Dartmouth Opponent 4 at Old Dominion I 4 at Old Dominion 2 4 at Old Dominion 7 0 at No. Carolina St. 4 12 at No. Carolina St. 10 0 at No. Carolina St. 4 2 at Campbell College 3 2 at East Carolina 5 0 at East Carolina 13 7 at Old Dominion 5 7 at Rutgers 2 12 Rochester 1 6 at Brown 4 0 at Boston Univ. 5 4 at New Hampshire 6 10 Princeton 3 6 Massachusetts 12 5 at Columbia 2 10 at Pennsylvania 3 5 Holy Cross 4 7 Holy Cross 4 5 at Yale 4 9 at Harvard 12 1 Army 4 8 Boston College 2 5 at Cornell 1 0 at Vermont 5 10 Boston Univ. 13 2 Massachusetts 5 NCAA Regional Tourney at Am¬ herst, Mass. EASTERN LEAGUE BASEBALL W L T GB Dartmouth 6 2 0 — Cornell 6 3 0 Harvard 4 4 0 2 Army 4 4 0 2 Brown 4 4 1 2 Yale 4 4 1 2 Princeton 4 5 0 2 l j Columbia 3 5 0 3 Navy 2 4 1 1 3 Pennsylvania 2 4 3 Cornell Brown Yale Pennsylvania Princeton Harvard Dartmouth 320 HEAVY VARSITY CREW (14-7) Dual—Alabama 1st Bill Cup—Rutgers Boston Univ. 1st Cochrane Cup—Wisconsin MIT 2nd Eastern Sprint Championship 7th Packard Cup—MIT and Syracuse 1st I.R.A.’s at Syracuse 3rd LIGHT VARSITY CREW (1-14) Durand Cup—MIT Yale 3rd Biglin Bowl—Harvard MIT 3rd Dual—Cornell 2nd Eastern Sprint Championship 10th Baseball College baseball never makes headlines. The ballplay¬ ers rarely make the majors, especially those from north¬ eastern schools. Crowds are sparse at best. The sport simply does not have the appeal or money of football, basketball or hockey at the college level. But in his own professional way, Coach Tony Lupien has turned out some fine ball clubs in his 13 years on the Hanover Plain. He is building a tradition of strong base ball here, and the 1969 team has strengthened that tradition. How good was the Dartmouth baseball team of 1969? A very difficult question. Good enough to make the Regionals aided by a rained out game with Navy and a concession from the Cornell department of athletics. But elimination, via losses to U Mass and Boston Univer¬ sity on the first day of the tourney, dashed any illu¬ sions of grandeur. A gutsy ball club with many strengths. Dagir batted .346 and made only 1 error all year in left. Bruce Saylor had five homers and was flawless in right. Chuck Seel- bach averaged better than a strikeout an inning in post¬ ing a 1.95 ERA. And the fact that first sacker Terry Light, catcher Jon Hanshus, and hurler Glen Culbert¬ son were the squad’s only seniors augurs well for ’70. The team didn’t jell until late April. With the season’s record at 8-9, Seelbach stopped Columbia, 5-2, and the Green reeled off five straight. Oz Griebel notched three big victories, and the Indians finished 16-12 overall, 6-2 in the EIBL. While the varsity battled for first, freshman pitcher Pete Broberg was striking out everybody in sight with his blinding fastball, and rumors flew that the talented youngster was going to sign with the Oakland A’s. A devastating hitter, Pete could be a great one if he can tame his Ryne Duren control problems. (rkj Tennis A good season that might have been excellent. That was tennis in 1969. The 10-7 record could have been improved if the gods had not frowned and brought rain for key matches with Williams and Columbia. The Co¬ lumbia match was a league affair, and a victory might have spurred the team to better their finish in the East¬ ern Tennis League. Captain Dave Burwell led the team with 19 victories, including a 12-8 record in singles and a 7-7 doubles record compiled with sophomore Justin Stanley. Junior Ed Cranch, out for the first time because of injuries, had an excellent year near the bottom of the team with an overall record of 17-4. Jon Mueller, who alternated with Cranch at the number five and six positions, finished the season with a 15-4 combined record. The number one doubles team of Geoff Dyer and Jock McKernan had a successful season. They both notched a total of sixteen victories in singles and doubles. These two both played at the number one spot for part of the season. The team’s depth was further demonstrated by the fact that senior Tim Greist also occupied the number one spot. The best doubles record for the team was recorded by Barry Brink. He compiled a 10-4 mark with a variety of partners, including Cranch, Greist and Gerry Hills. Coach Kenfield’s squad completed a successful sea¬ son, highlighted by 5-4 victories over Maryland and Yale. If the Indians had won several of their close matches in league play, they would have improved on their respectable sixth place league finish. Golf Dartmouth’s fine golf course is developing a reputa¬ tion for versatility. First of all. it’s a challenging home course to the golf team. It’s also a place where the golf¬ ing student can hit the ball around for a few hours of relaxation. In the winter beginning skiers devastate it, and experienced jumpers descend on it. And on balmy starlit Friday and Saturday evenings in the spring, it has been known to offer up its fairways to countless lovestruck couples. But the course certainly took a beating in the spring of 1969. A 12-1 overall record and 6th place in the Easterns reflects the balanced attack and consistent per¬ formances of the Indian golfers. Led by captain-elect Sandy McWilliams and sophomore Jim Cox, who com¬ piled a combined record of 23-2, the team promises more good things for 1970. Their only loss to graduation was Captain Barry Simpter. Marsh Gavre, who performed brilliantly in the second half of the campaign and creditably in the Easterns, joins Mike Furey, Dave Hill and Mark Hallenbeck in the role of returning vet¬ eran. All four exceeded the .600 percentage mark in ’69. Speaking of the season, Coach Bill Johnson re¬ marked, ā€œWe played a lot of 4-3 matches, and we’ve had strong performances at both top and bottom of the lineup when we needed them.ā€ The only way the golf team can better its 1969 record is to go undefeated in 1970. The potential is there. 324 Crew The Dartmouth crew’s remarkable 3rd place finish in the IRA Regatta on June 15th at Syracuse was a fitting end to a season which lifted the Indian oarsmen from collegiate obscurity to national prominence as a rowing power. The season began on L.ake Martin in Alabama where the Green trained for two weeks. Coach Gardner attri¬ butes much of the Indians ' success to these warm weather workouts. Before coming north, the crew knocked off the University of Alabama in its first race of the season. A victory over Rutgers and BU in the Bill Cup at New Brunswick, N.J., followed, and then a tough loss by less than a second to Wisconsin in the Cochrane Cup. In mid-May, the Eastern sprints at Worcester saw Dartmouth gain the reserve crown after losses to Penn and Cornell in the trial heats. A satisfying win of the Packard Cup over Syracuse and M.I.T. rounded out the regular campaign. After a 3 week layoff came the big meet at Syracuse. Dartmouth, still not expected to be a major threat, whipped Northeastern, Stanford. Georgetown and UCLA in the trials. Then, in the dramatic 2000 meter finale, after Penn had taken a 3 length lead at the half¬ way mark, the Big Green oarsmen cut loose and closed the gap to less than a length at the line, finishing ahead of Washington, Wisconsin, Cornell and Navy. Jim Willis and Capt. Tom Gilmore, and cox Rick Feins are gone for ’70. But much experience returns as do high expectations. Spring Track To say that the Dartmouth track team had a 3 and 2 dual meet record is to say very little. It tells nothing of individual performances which, in track, are everything. Fans didn’t care how the University of Kansas fared; they wanted to know how fast Ryun’s mile was. Weightmen DeWitt Davies and George Remmer ex¬ celled for the Indians. At the Heptagonals in Philly, Davies earned a second in the hammer, and Remmer gained sixth place in the shot put and fourth in the discus. In the IC4A ' s in New Brunswick Davies and Remmer each placed third in the hammer and discus, respectively. Captain-elect Davies broke into the record book on May 17 when he heaved the hammer 194 feet II and 3 4 inches to set a new college mark. Credit Bill Di- neen. Frank Howard, Don Knezek and Tom Miller with some inspired moments also. For Coach Ellie Noyes, 1969 was the end of a long era piloting the thinclads. Ken Weinbel replaces this man who has become an institution. Lacrosse Phrases like ā€œrebuilding yearā€ and ā€œtough breaksā€ pop up repeatedly in dis¬ cussions of the ’69 lacrosse team. Perfor¬ mances during the 4-8 season ranged from competent to horrendous, shading the lat¬ ter. The highlight of the campaign had to be the 9-6 upset victory over Harvard. ā€œDinner never tasted as good as it did that nightā€, was coach Burnham’s reac¬ tion to the game. The spring reached its nadir when a 10 point fourth quarter gave Cornell a 22-3 emasculation of the laxmen. Quipped one fan. ā€œWhitey oughta fine the boys $1000 eachā€. 1-5-2 in the Ivies was good for last place. Goalie Pete Harter succeeds Jeff Norton as Captain in 1970. There is room for improvement. 326 VARSITY FOOTBALL (8-1) Dartmouth Opponent 31 at New Hampshi ire 0 38 Holy Cross 6 41 Pennsylvania 0 38 at Brown 13 24 at Harvard 10 42 at Yale 21 37 at Columbia 7 24 Cornell 7 7 at Princeton THE IVIES 35 W L overall Dartmouth 6 1 8 1 Yale 6 1 7 2 Princeton 6 1 6 3 Cornell 4 3 4 5 Harvard 2 5 3 6 Penn 2 5 4 5 Brown I 6 2 7 Columbia 1 6 1 8 Fall Sports IVY LEAGUE SOCCER Harvard Brown Penn Columbia Dartmouth Yale Cornell Princeton W 7 4 4 3 3 2 2 0 L 0 2 3 3 4 3 4 6 T 0 I 0 1 0 2 1 1 VARSITY SOCCER (5-6) Dartmouth Opponent VARSITY CROSS COUNTRY 3 Middlebury 0 (6-11) 2 Springfield 0 Dartmouth Opponent 1 Amherst 3 22 Colgate 36 0 Williams i 18 Boston State 37 1 Pennsylvania 1 4 16 Columbia 45 1 Brown 4 23 Yale 32 0 Harvard 4 18 Brown 38 4 Yale I 44 Harvard 17 2 Columbia 4 23 Northeastern 32 2 Cornell 1 Heptagonals 7th 3 Princeton 2 IC4A 19th 327 Football It left you feeling listless and numb; you were more drained than angry, enervated than frustrated. The cli¬ max, anticipated for nine weeks was instead an anti¬ climax. The boys were stale, and one claimed that he had known for three weeks that they would be. And those near the team understood the defeat. But the alums, who had huddled at the Commodore near Grand Central for The Big Game—they couldn’t figure it out. So they toasted next year. Thus Princeton, who lost three games, and Yale, a second-rate squad, joined the Green as the Ivy League’s title co-holders. And a magical season came to an inglo¬ rious end. If it had been a grade B movie, Chasey would have rallied the troops for four touchdowns in the last ten minutes and a 36-35 storybook victory. But it was not to be. There was nothing to fall back on that day. The season should have ended the weekend before in Hanover on Houseparties when the Big Green turned back Cornell 24-7. There were eight stunning victories in ’69. An awe¬ some 42-6 walloping of highly touted Boston College in a pre-season scrimmage set the stage. Then, the Green outclassed UNH and swamped injury-riddled Holy Cross. So much for the season’s non-Ivy opponents. Penn was Dartmouth’s first Ivy opponent. Most ex¬ perts felt the Quakers had the makings of an Ivy power in ’69, but the game, which was supposed to be the Green’s first crucial test of the season, was instead an unholy massacre. The final was 41-0, the rout in part attributable to the Philadelphians’ loss of All-Ivy QB Bernie Zbrzeznj (?), but more to Dartmouth’s obvious man-for-man superiority. Indian quarterback Jim Chasey threw for a touchdown and ran for one. Veteran halfback Bob Mlakar scored twice on runs of 6 and 12 yards. It was also a day for breaking records. The Big Green racked up 509 yards on the ground, a new Ivy mark, with Chasey, Mlakar, fullback Stu Simms and John Short each contributing over 80 apiece. Short’s personal total of 130 yards sweetened the bitter taste left by the loss of superrunner Clark Beier. The Indian defen¬ sive unit distinguished itself too, yielding only 182 total yards and registering its second shutout in three games. Its two point per game average was tops in the nation. Pete Donovan’s five PAT’s gave him 82 career points kicking, a new Dartmouth record. The next four Saturdays took the Green gridders to Providence, Cambridge, New Haven and New York, a withering 1500 miles of traveling. Yet the team emerged unscathed, and the odds-on favorite to capture the Ivy League crown. Brown was first. A 38-13 tally, but a closer game than the score indicates. The Bruins were scrappy, and when legal tactics failed, didn’t hestitate to try illegal ones. Dartmouth’s ground game recorded 387 yards, good enough to maintain its nation-leading position. John Short electrified the crowd with a 97 yard scoring return of the opening kickoff. Other Dartmouth scores came on two Chasey to Mlakar touchdown passes, and a dandy 83 yard touchdown run by Tom Quinn, who was to become something of an instant legend before the season was out. Despite nine fumbles (only two lost), the Indian performance was good enough to leave them ranking among the nation’s leaders in five categories. Don’t let anyone ever tell you there is no animosity between students at Harvard and Dartmouth. We loathe them. They detest us. Our 24 to 10 victory, there¬ fore, was indescribably satisfying, and by Sunday even¬ ing, the whole city of Boston had shared in our celebra¬ tions. The scoring was confined to the first half. First, Quinn took a Harvard punt 61 yards for a touchdown. Then, Pete Donovan converted a 42 yard field goal. An interception by safety Willie Bogan set up the Green on the Cantabs’ 11, and three plays later Jim Chasey sneaked in from the one. On the very next series, Russ Adams came up with another interception, raced un¬ touched for 28 yards and a score, and the Indians led 24-0. Harvard then stiffened, stopping the Dartmouth offense for the rest of the afternoon, and getting 10 points of their own, but it wasn’t enough. And Big Green fans had themselves a satisfying, though unspec¬ tacular, victory. In 1967 and ' 68, Yale humiliated us on the gridiron, so revenge was on everybody’s mind on the first of No¬ vember, 1969. When the dust had cleared, the Green had a 42-21 win and the most points they had ever scored against Yale. It was an afternoon for the offense, as Mlakar once again tallied twice, Tom Quinn threw a TD pass on a halfback option and scored on a 54 yard punt return, and Chasey and Short ran for paydirt. The Elis’ 17 straight Ivy string was rudely halted, and the Dartmouth express rolled on. The following weekend against Columbia, the Indians excelled in both directions as the Green machine pum- meled hapless Columbia 37-7. The offense amassed 508 yards, and for the third straight week, Tom Quinn scored on a punt return, this time a 68 yarder. It also marked the 4th consecutive week the senior from Mas- sapequa had chalked up a touchdown. Simms and Short rushed for scores, and Chasey passed to Brown for an¬ other. The defense, in relinquishing a mere 179 yards, also aided Chasey’s cause. A jolting tackle by defensive tackle Larry Killgallon forced a Lion runner to cough up the football deep in Columbia territory, and linebacker Jon Nistad pounded on the pigskin in the end zone. So Dartmouth remained undefeated, Columbia stayed winless, and the over-extended road trip was finally over. 328 If quarterback Chasey deserves a good hunk of the credit for the Indians’ success, he certainly showed it in his performance against Cornell. The lanky junior completed 12 of 20 for 226 yards and three touchdown passes, two to Darrel Gavle and one to Bob Brown. Pete Donovan’s sixth field goal of the season, sand¬ wiched between the 2nd and 3rd TD, gave Dartmouth its 24 points. Cornell’s lone score came on a run by the notorious Ed Marinaro, one of this country’s finest run¬ ning backs, and the Big Red’s only claim to fame. The sophomore sensation however, spent much of the after¬ noon running into co-captain Ernie Babcock, Rick Lease, Murray Bowden, and the Green’s unsung hero, Tom Price, who made many unassisted tackles all season long. And so it was. Down to Princeton unblemished. An evergrowing reputation. Visions of 1965. NCAA Game of the Week with THE Bob Murphy doing the play-by- play. More publicity than you can shake a helmet at. And then came Saturday. And it was all over very quickly, almost painlessly. It gnawed at you for a while, but eventually just faded away. 329 Soccer Pete Linton took the corner kick from the left side. He arched a long inswinger toward the right corner. Up shot Randy Quayle to head it toward the left corner. The Princeton goalie, by now fairly confused, managed to bat it away. This was his last move on the playing field that day. Charlie Silcox, the All-Ivy lineman, showed some of his hard-nosed style of play by complete¬ ly demolishing him. As Charlie sat on the maimed hu¬ man speciman, Dave Irwin pumped a fine shot into the left corner of the nets. The Princeton goalie made it off the field, but not under his own power. The Princeton coach was quite angry at Quayle. thinking him t o be the culprit, but nevertheless Dartmouth had just put in the winning goal of a brutal 3-2 contest. This game marked the end of a season-ending 3-out-of-4 game winning streak that had been tacked onto a long 5-game drought. It also marked the end of an era, and as logi¬ cally follows, the beginning of a new one. It was the end of the Whitey Burnham era. Coach Burnham has brought Dartmouth soccer a long way in ten years. As he would say, ā€œSoccer used to be played so far out in the woods that the scores only appeared in Field and Stream. Now, however, soccer scores even appear in the ā€œN.Y. Timesā€, and although the accounts may be slightly inaccurate, the ā€œDaily Dartmouth man¬ ages to put in the score, most of the time correctly. Of course, Whitey is not totally responsible for this transi¬ tion from Field and Stream to ā€œThe Dartmouth, but under his tutelage and that of Grant Standbrook, the fine freshmen coach, the Dartmouth team has emerged from the woods with the rest of the Ivy. In fact, the Ivy League could be the toughest soccer loop in the coun¬ try, principally because the St. Louis area isn t or¬ ganized into a league. This area always turns out excel¬ lent teams, usually a national champion. This year was no exception, as the Billikin booters from St. Louis U. easily won the championship game. They were hard- pressed in the semi-finals, however, by Harvard, as it took a final minute goal for a 2-1 St. Louis victory. The Penn and Brown teams were also highly rated in the nation, further showing the strength of the Ivy League. Against this excellent Ivy competition, the Indians com¬ piled a 3-4 slate, good for 5th place. They were 5-6 overall. This record is a respectable one, considering the competition; but considering the talent on our squad, it was by no means good. The preseason forecasts were all optimistic. Cautious words were whispered about going to sunny California in December. ā€œI wanna be on that plane crowed veteran Pete Linton. The team had the experience, the talent, and excellent help from the sophomores. They pro¬ ceeded to go on a 4-game preseason tear, destroying an excellent Vermont team in the process. The regular season started with a 3-0 victory over Middlebury. Then came the big game against Springfield, then rated the 1 team in the East. Dartmouth, sky-high emotionally. 330 won an inspired 2-0 contest. The next game the team crashed into Amherst, and came out on the tail-end of a 3-1 score. This uninspired play continued against the Williams Effmen, as we lost IT). Then, in another ex¬ ample of the excellent Ivy League scheduling, (schedul¬ ing which sees the Penn and Princeton basketball teams dispel much possible suspense by playing each other back-to-back early in the season), our soccer team faced Penn, Brown, and Harvard in rapid succession. We lost each game, giving up four goals in each. This record makes our defense suspect. You can rarely give up 4 goals and win. Defense may be the hardest aspect of soccer. Consider the prospect of trying to keep the ball out of a goal which is 15 ' wide and 8 ' high. That ' s about as wide as two single rooms put together (maybe three or four in the Wigs), and only slightly shorter than your last blind date. Besides that, you have all of these shifty (Harvard) Zambians run¬ ning wild with the ball, faking and passing and dribbling it through your legs—always moving for the goal. This prospect is not encouraging, but other defenses had to face it too. Our offense was adequate, scoring as many goals (13) in the Ivy League as 4th-place Columbia and only 3 less than 3rd-place Penn and 2nd-place Brown. Our defense, however, was the most porous in the Ivy League, allowing 20 goals. Harvard allowed only 4. Our goals-allowed figure must be trimmed down consider¬ ably next year if Dartmouth is to be a contender. The new era of Dartmouth soccer will begin without senior fullbacks Mark Hebenstreit, Fred Nitschelen, Greg Church, linemen Dave Irwin and Pete Linton, and halfback Carl Nagel. These players all have played, under Whitey, many minutes of soccer since their sophomore year. Sophomores this year. Sophomores this year who gained valuable experience include wing¬ ers Mike Meehan and Jim Neville, linemen Wayne Pir- mann, and Rich Gifford (who Whitey would say is ā€œskinny enough to tread water in a garden hose,ā€ but who is nevertheless very good). They contributed much to the team effort and depth this year, and should add to the scoring threat already present in Charlie Silcox, Randy Quayle, Gary Gaspar, and Mr. Orphanoudakis. Hopefully this offensive punch will take some pressure off the beleaguered defense. These players, along with the returning goalies, Dave Brooks and John Orange, should provide a fine nucleus for next year’s team. Perhaps the key to next year’s season is the spirit of the team. We showed a poor ability to rebound from a disheartening loss to Amherst. Expectations will again be high, and the team may be prone to another year of frustration if an ability to rebound isn’t displayed. It’s a credit to the team that, although they were out of the Ivy race, they did win 3 out of their last 4 games, and the Columbia loss shouldn’t really be counted. (That was when God was out to break his own record for consecutive days of rain, and the team had to practice in Leverone.) This rebound from a 5-game disaster streak, and the last goal of the season show the type of play and spirit the Dartmouth squad is capable of achieving. It was a satisfying way to end the Whitey Burnham era, and an excellent foundation for the con¬ struction of a new winning tradition. 331 I Cross Country Formula for success: 1. Secure the College Grant in northern New Hamp¬ shire for 10 days in the early fall. 2. Take the cross-country team up there and run them ragged with three workouts a day. And thus did Coach Ken Weinbel begin the Dart¬ mouth harriers’ finest season in 25 years. A dual meet record of 6-1 followed, with the only loss coming at the hands of powerful Harvard. ā€œWe feel very optimistic about the season,ā€ ventured first-year man Weinbel at the outset, and his optimism was reinforced on October 3rd when the Green won their opener at Colgate. First place went to sophomore Eric Potter, a spark on the horizon who became a blaz¬ ing ball of fire as the campaign progressed. It was the Indians’ first win over Colgate in 22 years. Then came wins over Boston State, Yale, and Colum¬ bia; the season’s record ballooned to 4-0; the Boys got excited. This was no sham. There was quality cross¬ country in Hanover. Potter. Parke Rublee, and Captain Mark Hamilton were running extremely well, and prompted the normally dispassionate Weinbel to pro¬ claim, ā€œWe were very pleased.ā€ Brown became Dartmouth’s fifth victim with Potter and Hamilton finishing 1-2, and Coach Weinbel once again being really pleased.ā€ But the boys were looking to Harvard, the year’s big meet, the one that meant just a bit more than the rest. And they whupped us right in our own backyard. The Green could only manage a 4th in the top 7 places, against a squad that eventually won the Heptagonals for the third successive year. A dis¬ appointment, sure, but not a disgrace. The thinclads vanquished Northeastern to close out the regular season, then looked lousy in the Heps and the lC4A’s. But fortunately, most of the boys ' ll be back to provide some more good long distance running at the Hanover Country Club. 332 Rugby Happiness is Rugby. Ask any of the Dartmouth seniors who play the game, especially the old-timers like Morse and Ostberg. Squashead will tell you that happi¬ ness is a warm scrum, and he ought to know; he’s played for eight seasons, and has been in more scrum- downs than most rugby balls. Berger will tell you what a trip it is to break down the field with the wind whip¬ ping through your fuzzy blond locks. Ask him about the hair-tackle that guy from Fairfield put on him last fall. Boule will be glad to enlighten you on the finer points of taking the ball away from your own scrumhalf and bulling your way straight up the middle a Mike Obrien. Koro’s eyes will light up as he fondly recalls some of his finely executed late tackles. Good stick. Bag. Oops will point out the advantages of playing scrumhalf, including a personal acquaintance with every emergency room intern and plastic surgeon between here and Bermuda. Foxy will smile through his new teeth and talk of his days with the Ogre Isle First XV. Bymie likes to refer to rugby’s material benefits, and will proudly show you some of the many souveniers he has gleaned from countless road games. Reamer will demonstrate his distinctive prop style, a technique which thwarts the efforts of second rows and wing- forwards alike. Breedlove will show you the only toe in America insured by Lloyds of London. Ask Danny about playing fullback, and he’ll show you how to find the 25 yard line with your eyes closed. Pete, Bill and the Greaser would like you to believe that it’s all done with mirrors, but no, they really are running right by you out there. That spunky peasant will be glad to give you a few rugby tips he’s picked up in such far-flung areas as Acapulco, Mexico and Ely, Vermont. Hole likes the game because he knows that if you’re good you can move right on up to the top, and Decks enjoys the game because you don’t have to be in really great shape—right Jim? Jeff will reminisce about his days at second row with the Occum Ridge Raiders, and Big A1 will flash you his ā€˜We Try Harder ' button. JB will proudly show you how rugby has made him the Ugliest Man in the World. Ask any of these guys, or any of the other 50-odd Dartmouth ruggers; better still, ask anyone who’s ever been to Bermuda or Nassau during spring vacation— they’ll tell you just what Dartmouth Rugby is all about. Then again, they might just tell you ā€˜Rugby Because.’ 333 Winter Sports VARSITY HOCKEY ALL GAMES (9-15) Dartmouth Opponent 5 Norwich (ot) 4 5 Middlebury 3 1 at Harvard 6 6 McGill 5 3 Western Ontario 8 2 Bowdoin 1 5 at Clarkson 6 5 at St. Lawrence 12 2 at Boston College 4 9 Pennsylvania 4 5 New Hampshire 8 7 Pennsylvania 4 5 Princeton (ot) 4 2 Boston University 5 9 Northeastern 3 10 Yale 6 5 Brown 11 1 Harvard 8 4 Yale 5 2 Cornell 3 0 at Army 5 3 Princeton 5 0 at Cornell 14 5 at Brown 7 IVY LEAGUE HOCKEY W L T Cornell 12 0 0 Brown 8 3 1 Harvard 8 4 0 DARTMOUTH 4 8 0 Princeton 3 8 1 Pennsylvania 3 9 0 Yale 3 9 0 VARSITY SWIMMING DUAL MEETS (10-1) Dartmouth Opponent 64 Williams 40 61 Navy 52 73 at Army 40 66 Springfield 47 88 Columbia 24 63 at Pennsylvania 50 57 at Princeton 56 72 Harvard 41 49 Yale 64 76 at Colgate 27 76 at Cornell 37 EISL STANDINGS W L Yale 8 0 Dartmouth 7 1 Princeton 6 2 Harvard 5 3 Navy 4 4 Pennsylvania 3 5 Army 2 6 Cornell 1 Columbia 0 8 VARSITY INDOOR TRACK OVERALL MEETS (5-6) Dartmouth Opponent 29 Cornell 80 52 Colgate 57 54 Northeastern 55 39 Manhattan 70 33 at Princeton 76 80 Boston State 26 80 Boston University 29 64 Massachusetts 45 49 at Yale 60 81 Vermont 28 71 Brown 38 VARSITY WRESTLING OVERALL MEETS (1-9) Dartmouth Opponent 19 New Hampshire 23 3 at M.I.T. 35 7 Springfield 36 13 Williams 28 10 at Wesleyan 36 13 at Union 26 9 at Massachusetts 29 14 at Brown 26 16 Worcester Tech 26 44 Holy Cross 0 IVY LEAGUE BASKETBALL W L Pennsylvania 14 0 Columbia 11 3 Princeton 9 5 DARTMOUTH 7 7 Yale 7 7 Cornell 4 10 Brown 3 11 Harvard 1 13 VARSITY BASKETBALL ALL GAMES (13-12) Dartmouth Opponent 67 Worcester Tech 58 91 at Vermont 73 100 Harvard 85 58 at Purdue 82 83 at Vanderbilt 82 76 at Auburn 85 77 at Memphis St. (2ot) 74 93 Amherst 66 75 at Pennsylvania 89 64 at Princeton 73 83 at Harvard 80 68 Springfield 70 74 at Boston University 79 88 Connecticut 83 73 Valparaiso 75 66 at Brown 74 87 at Yale 59 70 Princeton 69 68 Pennsylvania 96 58 Columbia 72 72 Cornell 69 74 at Columbia 107 72 at Cornell 74 69 Yale 66 78 Brown 68 VARSITY SQUASH OVERALL MATCHES (5-7) Dartmouth Opponent 4 Williams 5 5 at M.I.T. 4 0 Harvard 9 2 Army 7 4 Yale 5 3 at Amherst 6 8 at Wesleyan 1 9 at Bowdoin 0 8 Cornell 1 8 Rochester 1 0 at Pennsylvania 9 I at Princeton 8 IVY LEAGUE SQUASH W L Harvard 5 0 Pennsylvania 4 1 Princeton 3 2 Yale 2 3 DARTMOUTH 1 4 Cornell 0 5 334 335 Basketball A winning season. The fanaticism of the quest. It reminded one of the hound who gallantly stalked a cer¬ tain tiny but colorful bird for many years. After a cer¬ tain amount of missed attempts, the size of the prey in relation to the others in the woods no longer mattered to the crusty canine. He became blinded to the simple joys of being a hound and pinned his very existence on the ultimate capture of the elusive little bird. Finally, after many years, the hound was making his rounds in the woods when he noticed the bird on the ground with a broken wing. His initial feeling of jubilation wore off after a while when he discovered that he didn’t know what to do with the bird. He couldn’t go brag to his friends, because catching an injured bird is certainly nothing great. He couldn’t move on to stalking harder prey because he knew that he really wasn’t ready for a new chase. In fact, he could hardly feel much inner satisfaction, for he knew of better hunting hounds in his very own neighborhood. So it is with a 13-12 record. The record is really noth¬ ing to gloat about, it isn’t going to draw any attention from anywhere else, and it doesn’t even hold much wa¬ ter within the confines of the suddenly hoop-hyped Ivies. 13-12. It may rate higher than a kiss from sis, but not much higher on the titillation scale than a good natured buss from a shapely aunt. One of the painful things about a just-winning record is that proponents of the team tend to travel in clusters for about a month after the end of the season. They spout things like, ā€œWell, we were 13-12, but if we only didn’t lose to Springfield, B.U., Valparaiso and Brown in the span of five games, we couldda been 17-8.ā€ Thank you gentlemen. The general basketball public is well aware of these facts. We also realize that the record could have been 9-15, but most of all we realize that the final ledger read 13-12. Granted, we lost to four support¬ ing-cast laden teams, but non-championship teams are very apt to do this sort of thing. The play of the team as a whole this past winter was pretty generally uninspiring but a knowledge of the re¬ turning personnel is enough to make one realize that a strong unit is in the offing. This June the erstwhile Lily White Big Green will be losing two of her mainstays to the outside world. One is Capt. Greg Pickering who used his substantial midsection and good basketball sense to command a large number of rebounds for the Dartmouth Five. The other departing stalwart is Alex Winn. It is truly unfortunate that Alex did not break the individual scoring record, if only because he came so close. With six games remaining in the season, Alex needed but 42 points to break the old record. As fate would have it, however, he fell ill and had to content himself with the play-by-play of each contest. His jump shot may have been humorously awkward, but it found the range often enough so that we stayed in many games that we otherwise would have conceded at the half. But the crew that is coming back! Erland, Masker, VanKurin, Cook, Dicovitsky, Ryzewic. The 71 ' s paid their dues two years ago, the 72’s paid theirs when then- coach Gary Walters committed the sin of leading this talented bunch of kids to a .500 season. These guys are ready for the exhilir ation of a really good season. If they happened into any of the freshman games this past win¬ ter they would have seen the true fun of a good season as performed by James Brown and the Fabulous Fresh¬ man Flames. That’s right the much heralded Mr. Dy¬ namite will be appearing regularly next season on the varsity level. His presence will also mean that Dart¬ mouth will regain a large cheering section which it had regrettably lost in recent years. And we do need a big winner here in Hanover. We take the football team for granted and the swimmers always lose to Yale. We need a new sport to strike our fancy, and thanks to the work of former coach Dave Gavitt, we are on our way. From all indications. Coach George Blaney is carrying on well from where Gavitt left off and soon he will be coaching his own recruits. Dartmouth may not have a gymnasium to speak of, but it should soon have a basketball team that will have everybody talking. 337 Hockey Davis Rink is a humorless anachronism, but the game is hockey, so the fans come. And they come in droves. To cheer, boo. drink, and otherwise release pent-up under¬ graduate frustrations. Davis Rink is also a pit in the classic sense of the word. Put an overflow crowd within its tiny frame and you can intimidate the hell out of the visiting team. There is even a small group of fans whose sole purpose of attending is to pick out a particularly susceptible looking player and ride him relentlessly and unmercifully with insults that would make a trooper blush. The hecklers are often a big part of the evening ' s proceedings, especially when the crowd is small and the action slow. But on Saturday evening February 9th, their heckling turned to cheering when the Dartmouth College hockey team came within a whisper of the im¬ possible: the conquering of undefeated Cornell. There was an electric atmosphere in jam-packed Da¬ vis Rink before the game even got underway, yet no one even dreamed that the Green, off a 5-4 loss to Yale, would be in front by 2-1 after 10 minutes of the third period. Dartmouth tallied first when captain Denis O’Neill unloaded a blazing slapshot at 6:28 of the opening ses¬ sion that beat goalie Brian Cropper on his glove side, and the Indians maintained their lead for the remainder of the period. Cornell evened the score at 2:23 of the second as Larry Fullan dumped a rebound past sopho¬ more netminder Dale Dunning. The locals regained the lead 50 seconds later. Winger Jeff Kosak first drew Cropper out of the goalmouth, and then flipped the puck into the open net. And the partisan onlookers erupted with glee. By the second intermission the place was in a frenzy, and when the Green skaters emerged for the dramatic final stanza, there was a spontaneous ovation from the appreciative multitude. They were twenty minutes away from a victory that would convert a mediocre season into a glorious one. a victory that would rock the ranks of collegiate hockey. But there was also that undeniable feeling that there was just no way Dartmouth could beat Cornell, that it was too much to ask. And, as it turned out, it was. The first half of the period was heart-stopping agony. Dunning was turning in the performance of the year in the nets with some spectacular saves on breakaways that left the onlookers spellbound. But that scoreboard clock was moving ever so slowly and finally, at 10:12, the Big Red tied the score, and at 13:01 they got the game ' s final and deciding goal when Kevin Pettit tallied on a power play. Dartmouth, however, could generate noth¬ ing offensively. And that was that. It was inevitable. So Cornell boosted their record to 20-0, and earned their 31st consecutive win in the Ivy League. The In¬ dians dropped to 9-11 on the year. But one of the front- row hecklers, the last fan to leave the rink, said it all: ā€œI’m goin’ over to the lodge for some beer-pong. It’s gonna be the first time I’ve ever gotten smashed cele¬ brating a loss.’’ 338 Swimming When the Varsity Swimming team began its presea¬ son workouts in October there was a feeling that 1969- 70 was going to be a banner season. One of the primary reasons for this feeling was the fact that this was Coach Karl Michael’s last year, his 31st piloting the Indian Mermen. There was the desire to make this, his last season, one of the very best. Another factor was the return of Stu Vance, College record holder in the 100 yard freestyle, after a brief sojourn with the Army in Hawaii. An outstanding group of sophomores led by freestyler Chris Carstensen and individual medleyist Jim Gottschalk were expected to add strength to the varsity in these areas. The last factor behind the drive to make this season a good one was the desire to make up for last year’s disappointing moments: losing to Harvard and then finishing fourth in the Eastern Swimming Championships. The dual meet season turned out to be the best the Mermen have had since 1950 when they were 11-1. This season’s record included easy wins over Williams, Army, Columbia, Springfield, Cornell, and Colgate. The Green encountered stiff resistance from Navy, who came to Hanover expecting to roll, but saw victory snatched from their hands as the 400 yard freestyle re¬ lay team of Vance, A1 Rheem, Gottschalk, and Carsten¬ sen soundly trounced their Navy counterparts. The toughest leg of the season was the trip made to Pennsyl¬ vania and Princeton on successive days. Penn revealed that they are a team to be dealt with in the future. The Princeton meet, as indicated by the 57-56 score, was extremely close and exciting with every race being cru¬ cial. The final point was garnered by diver Mike Brown in the 3-meter diving event. On Carnival weekend Har¬ vard came into town and was smashed 72-41 by a sky- high Dartmouth team. Jim Gottschalk and Jack Dick- ard paved the way with outstanding times in the 200 yard individual medley and 200 yard breaststroke respec¬ tively. The faint hopes for an undefeated season were squelched by a powerful Yale team. Then, after vanquishing Colgate and Cornell, the team moved onto the Eastern Championships which were held in Han¬ over. At the end of the first night Dartmouth was a close third behind Yale and Princeton. Chris Carstensen won the 50 yard freestyle in a time of 21.48. Mike Brown won the one-meter diving event with an astronomical point total of 520.25. When the points were added after the second night the Green was still third but the mar¬ gin between Princeton and Dartmouth had grown to thirty-eight. Yale, needless to say, had a commanding lead. The third night saw Dartmouth chew Princeton’s lead down to seven and a half on winning performances by Carstensen in the 100 yard freestyle, Vance in the consolation 100 yard freestyle, A1 Rheem in the 100 yard butterfly, and the 400 yard freestyle relay of Vance (47.8), Fred Severance (47.4), Gottschalk (46.4), and Carstensen (46.1). The relay time of 3:07.7 was a Dart¬ mouth and meet record. Dartmouth was third as Prince¬ ton hung on for second. Yale took first in the post-sea¬ son classic for the eighth straight year. Because they had been banned from the NCAA Swimming Champion¬ ships, the Eli went all out, registering a 76 point margin of victory. As a form of protest, freestylist Mike Cadden gave his Yale shirt to Mike Brown to wear at the NCAA award ceremonies should Brownie finish among the top six. Two weeks after the Easterns the Big Green Swim Machine traveled to the University of Utah’s two mil¬ lion dollar natatorium (with individual marble showers), side of the 1970 NCAA Swimming Championships. Here the Indian Mermen hoped to add a fitting climax to Coach Michael’s career by finishing in the top ten. 340 Squash — ā€œI have to think we ' re an improved team,ā€ offered Coach John Kenfield after the squash team’s 5-4 squeaker over M.I.T. early in December. What this typical morsel of coaches ' jargon really meant was that the Green had another so-so squash squad; that with a few breaks they might eclipse the 7-6 record of the ’68- ' 69 team; and that Kenfield had no illusions about tam¬ pering with the league supremacy of Harvard and Penn. In terms of the record, though, the Indians were not in fact an improved team. The season’s ledger dropped to 5- 7, and the long journey to Philly for the ISA Champion¬ ships was all but wasted: the boys finished 9th, and sophomore Wade Judge earned the dubious honor of Class C Consolation Champion. Williams jolted the Big Green in the season’s premier by 5-4. After the M.I.T. victory, the Tribe plunged into a four match tailspin, losing consecutively to Harvard, Army, Yale and Amherst. They halted the skid with four wins over the lunchmeat on the schedule, sandwiching easy encounters with Ivy doormat Cornell and hapless Bowdoin between victories over non-Ivy opponents Wes¬ leyan and Rochester. But the racquetmen dipped back under .500 with campaign-ending losses to Penn and Princeton. Captain Geoff Scott, one of the East’s top operatives, occupied the number one position all year and displayed a fabulous assortment of shots en route to his winning season. Playing at number two, Jay Stanley suffered some heartbreaking losses, but notched an inspi red five game win over his M.I.T. counterpart. Jim Smith, who shared the number three spot with Dave Miskell, posted eight triumphs in his first ten matches. Terry Shumaker, Wade Judge, Bob Lider, Jan Opsahl, Ted Littwin, and Lloyd Ucko were also consistent contributors to the Dartmouth cause. 342 Wrestling Well, the wrestling team was 1-9 this year. That rec¬ ord may look bad, but actually it’s an improvement. Last year it was 0-11. What’s wrong with the Big Green grapplers? The problem seems to be a lack of interest. Not many Dartmouth students want to wrestle. The admissions office is letting in more creeping weenies and freaks than ever before. Just look at the atmosphere of the campus: Saturday, March 14, the day before finals. The heavy, wet snow was rapidly accumulating. It was ā€œgood- packinā€™ā€ā€™. The tensions of hard studying had been piling up. Food-throwing broke out at Thayer. Conditions were good-to-excellent for the annual spring riot to break out—thanks to the God-sent, heavy, good-packin’ snow. But nothing happened. A few bands of renegade snowballers roamed around, but went unchallenged. Everyone was either studying or freaking out over a snowflake. What ever happened to the days when they had to detour the traffic away from the green because of the mob of snowballers? It must be the admissions of¬ fice. Another problem is the attitude of the Big Greeners who do manage to slip through. Wrestling takes dedica¬ tion, and weight reduction. How can you wrestle with a hangover, or a beer gut? All of this adds up to a short¬ age of wrestlers. Combined with a series of crippling injuries, this shortage cost the matmen usually at least 10 paints in forfeits. With only nine weight classes and a total of 45 points possible, a forfeiture of 10 points brings even the strongest of teams to its knees. One of the squad’s standouts this year was Bob Elliot in the 134 pound weight class. He won his first five outings, three of them by pins, and went on to have a fine season. The freshman team had much talent, pro¬ ducing two New England champions in Ted Thompson (177 lbs.) and Wayne Gregg (unlimited). This augurs well, because many of the forfeits this year were in the 177 and 190 pound weight classes. Mr. Gregg, with much of the aforementioned dedication and weight re¬ duction, should be able to move down to the 190 class next year. With the return of many seasoned grapplers and the talent of this year’s freshman team. Coach Gol¬ den’s wrestling team should have the talent and the all- important depth needed to produce a winning season, despite the efforts of the admissions office. Winter Track Indoor Track for the winter of 1970 was the season of the weight events. Four men combined in an assault on records that changed the college standards in the shot put and the 35 pound weight throw a total of eleven times. Bill Dinneen provided the most excitement with his 62 ' 5 winning 35 pound weight toss in the Heptago- nals. A dual meet at Yale was the site of Ted Modddy’s excellent 57 ' 3 put. Captain DeWitt Davies was the most consistent performer and breaker of records. Ver¬ satility typified George Remmer who established new marks in both events. Behind the top four were several others pushing them on and stepping in when there were injuries. The efforts in the jumps were commendable. Jesse Spikes notched a career best of 22 ' 6 in the long jump. Always right with Spikes was Jim Lyall. In the high jump, Steve Hoverman earned important points in near¬ ly every meet. He cleared 6 ' 2 on several occasions. Steve Johnson and Jeff Blomstedt waged a weekly war near the 14 ' level all season in the vault. Both men went over 14 ' 6 and were close to the college record of 15 ' ’  • The short distances found Pete Elliott in the sprint and Kim Krostue in the hurdles as Dartmouth’s best. Don Knezek followed Elliot closely all year and Dan DeSandies, Vic Anderson, and Scott Yeager challenged Krostue week after week. The 600 and mile relay became the best running events for the Green. Steve Ewart. Bob Brown, and Tom Miller ran well together in the 600 to defeat sev¬ eral good opponents. Their times ranged between 1:13 and 1:14. Bob Brocken was the fourth on the relay team until an injury forced his replacement by Knezek. The team had a best mark of 3:23.8. The middle distance and distance runners were weak at the start but quickly developed towards the end of the season. Dave Ullrich ran the 1000 alone most of the year and managed only one victory. His best time was a respectable 2:15.3. Dennis Cullen led the way in the mile and established a personal best of 4:18.1 in the Brown meet. Mark Hamilton provided extra strength in the mile, and Bob Livingston became the mainstay of the two mile relay team. The quartet of Ullrich, Miller, Cullen, and Livingston erased a 26 year old standard in the relay with a 7:49.6. The 5-6 dual meet record is deceiving. With any good fortune, victories over Colgate, Northeastern, and pos¬ sibly Yale could have been realized. The sixth place performance in the Heps and the six points in the IC4A ' s represent the best championship showings in years. Coaches Weinbel, Wallin, and Benjamin in their first season together generated much of the team’s suc¬ cess. The foundations for an excellent spring team are set. The freshmen compiled an excellent 10-1 record, and featured some stellar individual performances. Wayne Moody and John Leibert were especially strong in the shot, as were George Leach and Larry Roberts in the jumps. Rene Esquerre was the fastest in the sprint, Dave Anderson in the hurdles. Greg Mayberry, Randy Spydell. and Clark Judge made for a good trio of 600 men. Larry Krol, Bob Varsha, and Tom Shiland led the way in the longer running events. 344 DCAC Managers Cheerleaders L I Fraternities Alpha Chi Alpha We finished the field stone dome over AXA just in time for Key (It was easy! Seriously!). Safe inside, we had a chance to think back. Slink (alternately disguised as John Wayne and Spiro Agnew) was an awesome 6-er fan. Diamond sat in a chair with the tube pulled over his head, and only came out to play tennis or sprout trivia. Fay floated down from the ceiling and landed softly in bed, where he dreamed of being President. Haag played house (-manager) in the barn, and began independent study on the effects of smoking. Mean¬ while, back at the Hayride, Arab leader Ed Youssafaki Habeef thought about the five foot icicles growing in his bed. Chumway majored in back-step humor, and fi¬ nalized plans to become the N.H. State Weatherman. Waldo Vikro returned from Guatamala with 101 new recipes for creamed snappers in tuna cassarole. Said Waldo: ā€œUh ... hu ... hu ...ā€ Mo found out it only takes 14ā€˜ 2 minutes to go to Colby (if you leave at 12:45), and Dick Hall thanked him for his rock samples from Guatamala. Belly (affectionately known as Green Mountain Bill), who almost had an interesting alterna¬ tive to the draft, found out the true meaning of a Better Chance from Cal Brewster. Hurricane (H.N.) Hurd trained rats (not ours) to sing Dartmouth Undying for the Glee Club after graduation. Jubilation T. Cornpone (Dart. Col.’s answer to Easy Rider) rode. And Roger the Doger became resident counselor at Dana Library, and foretold the end of the world, while leading the hockey team on. And yet there remained some unaswered ques¬ tions about the ' 70’s: What if... —Schad didn’t have any authority to delegate? —Hillas had leaves in his car? —Shineman P. didn ' t have a bent ear? —Zimmie didn ' t have Kalhua ($5.75 qt.)? —Walsh didn’t have so many dates? —Ernie lost his crown? —Bloomstedt didn ' t have his pole? —Palmer wasn’t so honest? —Shineman B. could dance? —Ed didn’t have Otis? —Werre had more than one move? —Stoney didn’t have any skis? —We didn’t have any field stones? —The tube had died? —We hadn’t gotten enough new furniture this year? AXA wasn’t green? ? ? ? 347 Alpha Theta Diversity? Blue Angels. Kemeny in the South living room. Good fences make good neighbors. Brewster in the North living room. The Dynamics. A little dog that nobody owns, but everyone owns. Charades. Road trips to Skids. Bay Area Bombers in Concord. Kim and the Keg Klub. Eggman—46 eggs and passed on the steps. The Emperor and the red-haired beast they call Jamie. Lou does his thing with a quarter. Tack—an intense person. John V., keep watching the board. A smooth and slow talking Armenian. The Tiger. George recruit¬ ing tall pledges. Betsy for President. Denny in Boston. Wee Willie Wendell. Dickie 1 out the tube room win¬ dow. Mr. Brooks, director of Silver Throats and Pearly tones. Cleve and a low-keyed rush. Our house advisor, a Mr. Harrington? Bill Lee’s popcorn. An All-American swimmer. Zooman in Albequerque. 6 ' 7 and 1000 points. Diane’s culinary delights. Wealie, general repair¬ man with a Joyful wife. A tree-like form that visits from the Med school. And other memories we all have—burn¬ ing yesterday’s Times in the fireplace. A colorful wag¬ on that we’ll surely return, maybe tomorrow. A nap in the hammock on the porch. And ... friendships. 349 Beta Theta Pi Bones Gate 1st Row: Jim Smith, Brian Goyer, Rick Wottrich, Nick Nikitas, Jeff Locke, Gary Okey, Rod Morgan, Bill Holm, Pete Elitzer. 2nd Row: Brooke Carmichael, Gary Jordan, Pete Broberg, Pete Geary, Skipp Jenkyn, Charlie Aalto, Dari Layton. 3rd Row: John Eaton, Pete Areson, Charlie Nearburg, Peter Wilcox, Tom Wilkins, Seppo Sormunen, Jack Galley. Cindy Galley, Walt Hinton. 4th Row: Dick Krant, Jeff McElnea, Jim Finch, Ben Upper, Tom ā€œFaboaā€ Charles, Charlie Smith. 5th Row: Dow Stewart, Dick Wooster, Dave Noyes, Charlie Bingham. Pete Hutchinson, Joe Cardoza. Pete Thomson, John Nelson. 6th Row: Doane Arnold, Thom Jenness, Scott Perry, Ron Hoffmaster, Steve Bessc, John Wolf, Craig Bentley. Jack Smith, Scott Mitchell. 7th Row: Rick Mather, A1 Gabbard, Dave Krakoff, Craig Sullivan, Al Larson, Jay Worthen, Bob Doerr, Tom Shade, Doug Urban. Missing: Tom Baer, Chris Bean. Denny Bell, Bob Cordy, Rick Dills, Don Eberly, Paul Pabloā€ Francis, Steve Meyer, Bob Packer, Sue Packer, Rich Poirot. Hank Ricklel ' s, Sue Ricklefs, Robin Stewart, A. Janitor, Bob Valkevich, Marc Victor, Mitch Wallerstein. Only ten survived three years of fog-cutters, Sunday parties, football games, road trips, coed weeks, Snite’s and social awareness. We nevertheless managed to add three decidedly older men to our ranks, as we raged ahead to new vistas of irresponsibility. We, the ten-plus- three surviving seniors of Bones Gate: John (ā€œoh, greatā€) Wolf, cow-killing Swanson TV dinner, is saving it for 15 grad schools, wants to be a lawyer like Fred and Peggy ... David, always prepared No-yes, romps au naturel while sniffing for more poon-tang ... Pete Geary finds Fezzo’s old red coat hangers to park his beads on ... Walt Hinton takes pictures of everyone else having fun and looks to better times ahead as a Neapolitan used-watch dealer ... FBOA, the good-na¬ tured money-changer, leaves a trail of thinking, shafted girl friends behind him ... Cecil ā€œthe Missing Likeā€ J.L. 70, lubricates the green machine to cries of ā€œYou’re the only oneā€ ... Spiro ā€œCommanderā€ (she made me do it) Wilcox trades red truck for Porsche, exchanges Hanover for Blood, sweat and Waikiki ... Rick ā€œthe Dukeā€ Wottrich. retiring lord of 3rd-floor Sado Palace model¬ ing agency, writes long letters to 200 ā€œclientsā€ ... Paul Francis, D.M.F., Mexican wetback warlord taco king, embezzles social fund after massacring entire brotherhood in Boston, Mass, saloon ... Scott ā€œWinnieā€ Perry, our upright leader, convinces the Col¬ lege Bones Gate really isn’t going to pot ... Joe ā€œChi- Chiā€ Cardoza, though Tucked away during most road trips, seems to be around the house whenever the bar is open ... Bob Packer, returning from out of the dim distant past, shuffles and deals the days away between dinners of grits and black-eyed peas ... Dow ā€œBun-eeā€ Stewart, frustrated grease monkey, comes back a married man but wiser now, to drink away his last year at the Big Green. At the end, all seemed ready to go out; being a col¬ lege man during the war years isn’t easy. No one among us can claim any brilliant deeds in four years, but we laughed a lot, drank a lot, tripped a lot, and found the all-necessary guts. Where will our cherished Dartmouth Experience lead us? Most shudder to think. 351 Delta Kappa Epsilon 352 353 Well, we made it through another year! Several of the old traditions failed, but some new ones were begun, as the Chi Lodge moved into the I970’s. With tears in our eyes, we witnessed the passing of the ' Gator, despite all T.J.’s valiant efforts to revive it. The Fire Engine rose miraculously from the grave, only to fall prey to the legal authorities of Hanover. But we still had Cutters for Carnival, and ā€œtruckingā€ is rapidly making everyone forget that the ' Gator ever existed. There were many comings and goings this year: Ros- coe came back: Duncan thought about leaving, left, and then (to nobody’s surprise) returned; McCulloch split for Santa Barbara to find the true meaning of life; Judly spent a term polluting younger minds in Washing¬ ton D.C.; Half of the pledge class went to France for the winter. It was an interesting year for those of us who stayed around. Rodman unexpectedly ascended to the presi¬ dential chair in a mid-autumn coup, as the house moved slightly to the left. Then, to add a little ethnic color, we chose an obscure Mexican named Hillenburg (?!) to be his top aide. Digby divided his time admirably among various functions, serving as Rush Chairman, then Jock Chairman, playing Santa Claus, and provid¬ ing material for Underground Doodlers. Lush served as Grand Cherry and was a source of spiritual inspiration to all. Stanley continued to reside in the most perfidious and obscene room on campus, and LSD was the least tripped out of us all. Beach and Dawkins led a group of twenty unsus¬ pecting pledges into the fold. Ping Pong became the national pastime, and J.C. reigned over all. Erich man¬ aged to tear himself away from Twig long enough to serve as Social Chairman. Deatherage was proud to be an Okie from somewhere-or-other, and Speers proved that a weasel can make a pretty good janitor— sometimes. The Hawk was horrified by Rothmonn’s fre¬ quent antics on the front lawn, and T continues to be the only one who knows the whereabouts of the sole copy of the Underground Doodler. As graduation approaches, the seniors reflect on three years that prove truth is stranger than fiction. We leave the house in able hands, and truck on down to collect diplomas. Who would ever have thought??! 354 Harold Parmington Foundation 355 Leper, Baxter, P. Butler, K. Hale. Rummy, R. D. Berger, Breedlove, Big Henner, Scotty, ?, ?, Wheels, Kruse. 5th Row: Siman, Grit, Graves, Oops!, Hud. 1st Row: Dickie Sam, Friend of Dickie Sam, Another Friend, J.B.. D. Hill, M. Hills, Tildo. 2nd Row: Danny, Beach, Maxi N. Brooks, B. Borofsky, T. Choate, 3rd Row: O ' Nee, Allie Mac, Roger, E. Nat, Hanley, Dix. Bag. Miskell, Henner. 4th Row: R. Proctor, F. Nitscholm. Heorot Kappa Kappa Kappa Ah, yes, a year to remember—Our Admiral nearly managed to sink the ship, but the brotherhood was not to be ā€œchecked (in) offā€ so easily ... Ratts to you if you don’t think you can go from Grand Cherry to Make- Out King in one night (in the living room?) ... Our ā€œWhittyā€,debonaire, devil-may-care social chairman nev¬ er allowed us a dull moment ... One Fed got ā€œbaggedā€ for obstructing traffic (we never knew it could evaporate) ... Fa(s)t Carl spent a week in soli tary ā€œin the interest of scienceā€ (Hey,Hey,Hey)... Warren spent the Winter learning his ABC’s ... Petie-Pod proved he was not one to turn his back on a quick puck ... One ā€œDayā€ had his ā€œMouseā€ full in an embarassing pledge raid ... And, yes, Black Tony is finally in love (sure hope she likes gross war stories)... Can we forget the return of Heir Dirty Swivel-Hips Dale? (Like a cherry for your drink?)... Cleaver took a Left turn and wound up in a court suit ... Big Bob spent only two terms, but left enough puss for genera¬ tions to come (How’s that. Dudes?) ... And Sam-The- Man—one of the most classic, all-time bluggers to fire around the Lodge ... At 175 pounds, no one could ever ā€œLadā€ the job of college linebacker (Who’s going to tell him?)... Our representative to Concord kept us ā€œgAuk- ingā€ at the latest in legislative happenings ... With the Guru ' s background, is there any wonder why he wants to be a doctor? ... Someone says there’s a brother from Jacksonville ... Rob showed us he was no slouch when it came to handling little balls ... The Southern charm of our president somehow got him more bell-bottoms than belle’s-bottoms ... Andy provided us with nu¬ merous punch-party performances ... Our Mr. Bass- man always provided an ā€œaireā€ of sophistication ... And what’s that about Dwighti wanting to grab some¬ one’s bass? ... And, finally, but by no means least, to our Hot-Dog King, we owe an apology: your Rush ad¬ vice was sound, but we’re paying for our mistake ... Yes, men, a year to remember—as you go through life, we hope the memories of Kappa will remain with you ... And Men—Tui Filii Dartmuthensi Tuoque Hon- ori Fidelis (whatever the hell that means) ... Kappa Sigma Kappa Sigma, 7 Webster Avenue. Cleanup for rush. Will Sunshine return? What ' s a Parker? Seventeen pledges ... who are those guys? They’re very good. Lou and Sue. Pete and Gina. If you find a Nasty under your bed, KILL it! Will Captain U-Trou ever be forgotten? Probably. Is Moby disappearing? BB The Sage bloc is Alive and Sick. Football Players (Boat, Flea, Williw and Russ) keep training as Gav breaks it and Cig cheers on. Whatever happened to Boat’s Goat? It went to Church?? Fffffink. What animals—Parker. Flea. Young Bull, Nasty, Gretchen (RIP) Otis, Snake, Wiley, Bear, and Cat. Pay your dues—cash only Art. Gravey and Har-tar chase a pig; the house eats a pig; Cig dates a pig. In the long run in the final analysis, the only thing that matters is that it don’t count. Round ball starts and so do Pick (Captain), OB Dico, and Sven. And on the ice, Dunning screams 15 you Stink!!ā€ Thank you. I appreciate itā€ replies Dart. Ben returns and Pee Wee flees. Dirck + Screw = T + Sue. Shanaman jumps. Spar boots, SJ rags, Ralph follows suit, and life’s a con¬ ditional pass fail. We may have lost the Queen of Kappa Sig., but we’ve gained two Kings. Fifteen new brothers. When Tony. Burkey, and Mac fall, they go Boyink. (Ooooh). Muss gets the Chet’s Bar award. Spar and Bryn. What is a missing Link? Does Spencer have ears? Let’s go swimming—Pooley! The house B-Ballers are again awesome—even Cliff, Weaves and Forman can play. O.J. Tothes a salad. Pledge raids were great— remember Nico? Now that Stef and Hoops can name all the brothers they don’t need a Friend. Ha Ha. Pork-her- more! We need Oz because he’s Good. Another Ha Ha. BROWN BAGS FOREVER—just for TPO. cause ya gots ta dig it, goddamn it!!! 358 Phi Delta Alpha The scene is 1990, as the Phi’s, led by Squash-Head peddling the latest edition of his pornographic series, ramble into the remnants of the crumbling Phi Palace to celebrate their twentiest reunion. Funky and Pigeyes bolt immediately to the pit to play ā€œwarm puppiesā€, anxiously anticipating the start of the Browns exhibi¬ tion season. Jet and No-Slouch, perennial bachelors, de¬ bate furiously over who will be the first to grab the upper bunk. Foxy and Snarl, co-headmasters of recently chartered Banlon Prep, find time away from their ef¬ forts to make TD a grandfather to congratulate Dave Grassi on his recent publication, ā€œTrustbustingand Extra¬ marital Sexā€. Dr. Merrick, who took time off from his efforts to develop a surgical procedure to immor¬ talize Payne’s Pleasure, warmly congratulates Dr. Fagin on his recent appointment as Surgeon General, a posi¬ tion forfeited by Dr. Groove E. Al, whose insatiable proclivity for dropping rags in the operating room lost him the precious position. After hours of hearty celebra¬ tion and blissful reminiscing, the surly crowd stumbled out, led by Luke, still lusting after Rusty’s sixteen year- old daughter, toward Baker Lawn, where ex-rodeo clown turned B G man Willy-man made final prepara¬ tions for the weekend’s highlight, the long-awaited gradu¬ ation of the perennial Phi, Puppy Doig. ' Gerholm re¬ turned from a magical mystery tour with ā€œZā€ just in time for the ceremony, and left shortly thereafter to join Fred, as they drifted off together into the caverns of their minds, with the latter joyously proclaiming, ā€œI am the Skyā€. 359 Phi Sigma Psi Despite a prodigious FIRST TEAM effort, Colby Jr. survived September. Mai and Junior received cordial introductions to Campus authorities Penn Weekend. Oink. Rush was summed up as follows: ā€œI’m in complete faculties control of my.ā€ Moon singlehandedly kept the tradition of the H. Peter Norstrand Room alive. Stoiber got egg on his face. The FURNACE PEOPLE hung around the Zoo. Tit owned the Zoo with Gradu as trustee. After Moosilauke Moshe Bad One said: ā€œMy actions speak for ourself.ā€ Anticipating another Takeover this spring, the broth¬ ers travelled en masse to Orfordville School for a Christ¬ mas Party and riot drill. The trip was headed by Dun¬ can Goodfellow. Terrorized by the January deluge, Mario attempted to build an Ark but ended up with only a hockey rink. The Jet is competing with Snoopy for skaing honors. Now the bar opens ... We are ... PHI PSI 360 Phi Tau 361 362 Pi Lambda Phi 363 After he had finished clearing out the straggling rem¬ nants of the previous year’s lecherous legionaires, re¬ moved the body (but not the smell) of the half-crazed Albanian cretin who had passed and died in the cooler beneath our sacrificial altar, added a fresh coat of paint to seal the mystery of graffitti allegedly scrawled by the phantom booter, assisted in picking our Nordic neo¬ phytes in hedonism (many were called, but few were chosen), and stationed his pet wolves, Freki and Gregi, as guardians of our pagan portals, ODIN smiled down upon his Hanoverian hellions and proudly asserted, ā€œThis is Good!ā€ Memoria in aeterna of Boot 364 365 r— Sigma Alpha Epsilon 16 ā€œThe Class wasn’t spectacular, but they got the job done—I’d give them an 8 ' 2 ā€ā€”A1 Derogatis, BFHO. This is the true story of Haiphone-Mekong-Delta, a house that drank 217 kegs and lived to talk about it. ā€œWho are those guys?ā€ Nobody can—not 14 times in one day. The Painoran Bed Bed Fry lives, and the Beagle’s rug will never forget him. Amazing, incredible ... ā€œHoney, what’s for break¬ fast?ā€ Isn’t that a parietals violation? Fitchburg’s stak¬ ing its future on the little fat kid that looks like Bingo? Cornell will never forget the Red-Headed-Cheer- leader. He’s got two winter sports—skiing and tobog¬ ganing downstairs. How can anyone with a terminal case of Fraser Feet be so good at everything? He’s not exactly the pussiest guy in the house. Mad Dog will drink anything, but what really happened to that after¬ shave lotion at Harvard? The Black is the epitome of suicide scrod. Foley will never forget him, but neither will the chocolate donut. Gary’s spent the year abroad at Green Mountain. What is an O opstairs Beagle in 50 words or less? The world’s fattest Golden Gloves champ trains on frozen turkey pies and Green Goddess Salad Dressing. Ralph is a living Math 16 program and the smallest dorm chairman in the world. ā€œHey Paino, where’s the beer?ā€ The only thing more obnoxious than a Celts fan is a Vikes fan and everyone knows they lost to the Giants. Watch how you talk about the Greasy Spies. ā€œI’ve got the serial numbers ..Hedges taught his pledges everything he knows, but Hedges doesn’t know anything (It’s written, it must be true). But he is a music lover. We’ve got a new image this year—everyone’s going to have dates a lot. Miss Golfside replaces Phoebe as SGC of the year. The rug will be here a week after the TU gets fixed and two weeks after the Juke Box gets here, which will be two weeks after the Duper hits the real world and two years after Paino and Oopstairs goes out for Rugby. Anyway, it doesn’t matter because at 4 a.m. all the songs sound the same and anyplace can be Room Seven. But, ā€œit’s all overā€ and just remember that the GAU doesn’t mean anything in the real world. 367 Sigma Theta Epsilon 368 O goes to Smith ... three casualties ofā€˜Nair’s prover¬ bial punch ... Sport and the Insect Woman ... Where’s Senator Clearly? ... Seymour who? ... Will fixes juke box but not his ’vette ... Ted wins ā€œPresident of the weekā€ ... Spring and tennis and jungle ball ... Ned Nougat and the Goose ... Young white liberal ... Creep and Fat Chaf run the marathon ... Soft Jack by the river, in the river, under the river ... Billy lets the whale loose ... Dierdre returns ... Ginger bread mind ... ā€œAnti-Social Chairmanā€ and Killer ... Harry on the other hand ... Key and goldie oldies ... Ferd, Warren, Slammin Sam, Migs ... Seniors get their awards ... Running naked across Wellesley campus at dawn ... Friends leave, memories remain ... A great Rush ... The Hard Core takes a beating ... A B C starts ... Young has a locked door and too many friends ... Sink night sunk a few ... About time Oz—after playing the field ... Skippy, Barbie Doll and other assorted heart¬ breaks ... Last of the Hard Core as Soberg goes home ... Skinny dipping ... Harry and Oz lead the singing ... Fire extinguisher fights ... Overnight mixer with the Groin ... A great football team, a hard loss, more than a keg to forget ... Hell Night ... Rage at Smith ... Jack and Jorg tobaggan down the stairs ... Chuck vows ā€œI’ll never date another Colby girlā€ā€”then it gets blown out of proportion ... Coach Lewie’s team pulls them out... Can O’Bag destroy Carnival... Do-nothing ad¬ ministration does nothing but have fun ... Hard Core rallies ... Will little feet grow to fill some big shoes ... O dies at Smith ... Only one year, but one to be remembered among brothers. Tabard ā€œLike the paranoid, the person with Hebephrenic Schizophrenia suffers from a delusional system, but it is a somewhat different one. His delusions are often con¬ cerned with bodily functions: he may believe ... that his brain is melting. The major symptoms of Hebephre¬ nia are silliness, inappropriate smiling and laughter, strange and disorganized ideas, and neologisms—the in¬ vention of new words.ā€ ā€œYou’re surrounded by crackpots, nothing but crackpots; you live with them two or three years, and little by little, without even noticing it, you become odd yourself. It’s inevitable.ā€ —Anton Chekov GOD. HROTOR, save the Tabard!!!! 369 Theta Delta Chi r?Tpi .pĀ Ā« v Zeta Psi 371 Advertising CLASS OF 1970 Congratulations On A Job Well Done. Our Sincere Thanks For Your Patronage. May We Continue to Serve You From the Far Corners of the Earth As We Have In Hanover. NATIONAL BANK MIMUI HDE1AI OlfOJIT INSUtAMCC COifOtATIOM OF HANOVER , N. H. BEST WISHES AND CALORIES from THE CAMPUS SUB Carl Compliments of CARL LARSON AND SON BANK. SCHOOL AND OFFICE SUPPLIES 125 North Street Stoneham, Mass. 02180 Call Avis Rent-A-Car ini ) • ā–  tall System A — John C. Manchester, Inc. 73 South Main Street Hanover 643-2617 CAMERA SHOP HANOVER AVIS rents all makes of cars .. . features PLYMOUTH. AVIS rents all makes of cars ... features PLYMOUTH. c 0 ? gifts are NC Sfi at the 3 Ā£ oVā€˜ peĀ«altp Ā£ fjop — anober across from the post office y 4 V2 t SUPERIOR COFFEE CO., INC. CONCORD, N.H. INDUSTRIAL COMPONENTS CORPORATION Electronic Supply Specialists Serving the Broadcast, Educational, and Industrial Users in The New England States (413) 596-3854 No. Wilbraham, Mass. 01067 SHOP THE WORLD IN NORWICH VERMONT Visit Shopping International’s new World Handicraft Center where you can shop for over 10,000 different handi¬ crafts gathered from the furthest cor¬ ners of the earth. Over 70 nations are represented, with everything displayed in a series of exotic shops and bazaars, all decorated to take you inside each country as you shop. Come and enjoy a unique shopping experience as you examine what is undoubtedly the most varied collection of handicrafts in the world. WORLD HANDICRAFT CENTER Rt. 5 Juat South of Norwich, Vt. 375 HANOVER HARDWARE THE INN GARAGE Seniors: Best wishes for the future! We have enjoyed doing business with you. Allen Street Undergraduates: We look forward to serving you again in the future. Hanover’s Only Full Service Garage BLUE PRINTS OZALID SALES SERVICE DRAFTING EQUIPMENT SUPPLIES SPAULDING COMPANY, INC. 710 Elm Street—Manchester, New Hampshire—03101 RAPID OFFSET MULTI-COLOR WORK COMPOSITION LAYOUT TELEPHONE COLLATING BINDING (603) 624-4025 PHOTO COPYING NEW HAMPSHIRE FENCE COMPANY WIRE FENCES AND ENCLOSURES Route 101 Raymond, N.H. Tel. TWinoaks 5-3300 376 Congratulations to the Class of 1970 We appreciate your patronage over the past four years. Yours is the 99th class we have been honored to see graduate. Consider us your bookstore for future book needs as you join the ranks of Dartmouth alumni. 377 WE ARE EXPANDING PHYSICAL EVIDENCE OF OUR CONFIDENCE IN THE CONTINUED GROWTH OF OUR AREA MAJOR LINES WAREHOUSED IN BURLINGTON AND WHITE RIVER AND ST. JOHNSBURY, VERMONT • Complete American Standard Line • Williamson Total Comfort Systems • Slant Fin Radiation • Oil Septic Tanks • Goulds Pumps • Medalist Tanks • Fiat Showers • Orangeburg • Pipe, Valves and Fittings White River 295-3178 St. Johnsbury 748-8101 Burlington 863-3473 •WHOLESALE ONLY TO THE PLUMBING AND HEATING TRADE — We Specialize in Estimates — Plans and specifications of Heating Jobs. Bring us your floor plan sketches — We will do the rest. Commercial Industrial job take-off — a quotation service available. 378 THE GOOD CHOICE IN PAINTS Kyanize. KLEEN Laundry Dry Cleaning Services, Inc. ā€œTobacconist to the Collegeā€ Quality KLEEN Linen Service, Inc. a WEBSTER SHOT Tradition 35 South Main Street Hanover Smoke Shop W [ Gourmet Foods lA Leathergoods iPar Fine Gifts Formerly: Williams Ldry. Cleaners, Lnc. —on the Campus corner The Aegis would like to thank the following sponsors: ALBERT LE MARBRE, M.D., ' 43 MARTIN L. KILLGALLON, II, ' 70 380 Compliments of M SCHESTr.Ā When you leave Hanover We hope you will call on us to continue to serve you with the ā€œold standbysā€ you have enjoyed. a Hanover New Hampshire SOULE GLASS PAINT CO. Our People Have Enjoyed Doing Busi¬ ness With The Men Of 1970 During Your Undergraduate Years, And Hope That You Will Stop In To See Us As Returning Alumni. c i F i 4 i 1 THANK YOU AND GOOD LUCK: PHONE 603-643-2615 MANCHESTER ' S GULF SERVICE 73 S. MAIN ST. PROPER CLOTHING EXPERT TAILORING FINEST SPORTS EQUIPMENT WWfUt m THE DARTMOUTH 381 382 The Aegis would like to thank the following patrons: MR. AND MRS. G. MICHAEL FRAWLEY MRS. GEORGE HAY KAIN, JR. MR. AND MRS. L. PAUL FRANCIS JOHN D. DRUCE HAROLD W SMITH MR. AND MRS. N. B. LIVERMORE, JR. 383 Follow the boys to the VILLAGE STORE Groceries — Beer—Beverages Open from 10 A.M. to midnight Monday through Sunday Acknowledgements The 1970 Aegis extends thanks to: Jeff Kelley for the tapes we never used. George Kain and the D.O.C. for Outing Club pictures, HJ for a football picture. Mr. Josh Hill, adviser to the staff. Mr. Jim Williams of Stevens Studios, Mr. Durant and Mrs. Chamberlain for help with the faculty section Mr. Ross Farnam of Wm J Keller Inc. Production Notes Senior portraits were taken by Stevens Studios of Bangor, Maine. Faculty por¬ traits were supplied by the Dartmouth Photo Bureau. All remaining pictures were taken by Dartmouth undergraduates, with the exception of Air Force ROTC. All photographs were printed on Agfa 1. The 1970 Aegis was produced in an edition of 1200 copies by Wm J Keller Inc. of Buffalo, New York. Type faces are 30 pt. Optima for headings and 10 pt. Times Roman for body type. Paper stock is 80 lb. Navajo Opaque, with color printed on Ivory Sunray. Cover material is Columbia Colonial Linen. 386 Aegis Staff DIRECTORATE: Editor-in-Chief Robert J. Scheff Editor Emeritus R. Preston Conklin Photography Editor Stan Phaneuf Business Manager Donald R. Balcorn Managing Editor Steven T. Patterson STAFF: Sports Editor Douglas M. Lehman Seniors Editor James W. Nellen Fraternity Editor Bruce Suzuki Associate Photography Editor Henry V. Allen Photography Staff Charles Cogbill Pete Erspamer Russ Fink Mike Heeremans Scott Holland Dick House ’69 Doug Perkins Carl Strathmeyer Brad Sullivan Sports Staff Rand Burnett P. S. Gray John Howard Charles A. Monagan Lloyd G. Ucko David Ullrich John E. Walsh Secretaries Nancy Hokans Brenda Born Advisor Josiah Hill 387 Index A Acknowledgments Activities Advertisements Aegis Air Force ROTC Alpha Chi Alpha Alpha Delta Alpha Theta Aquinas House Army ROTC B Bait and Bullet Band Barbary Coast Baseball Basketball Beta Theta Pi Bird Bladder Ball Bones Gate Boots and Saddles Dean Brewster C Cabin and Trail Casque and Gauntlet Cat Cheerleaders Chess Club Commencement Cows Corinthian Yacht Club Crew Cross Country D The Dartmouth Dartmouth Christian Union DCAC Managers 345 386 Dartmouth Conservative Society 284 266 DOC Directorate 268 372-386 Dartmouth Society of Engineers 283 308,387 Dartmouth Symphony Orchestra 100-102 300, 301 Delta Kappa Epsilon 153, 352 346, 347 Dean Dickerson 240 111, 348 President Dickey 238 118, 119, 349 Dragon 292 298 Ducks 91 302 21, 272 49. 149, 276 278 170, 322 14, 92-93 113, 115,336-337 65, 350 189 48 87, 351 279 240 E Environmental Studie s 273 F Faculty Fall Sports Records Film Society Foley House Football Forensic Union Fraternities Freshman Mixer 236-265 327 280 353 7, 31-34, 50, 55, 58, 328, 329 286 346 78-79 269 294-295 152 345 278 183-187 92 285 165, 325 53, 332 161, 316-317 287 G Gamma Delta Chi Geological Society Glee Club Golf Graveyard Gymnastics 62, 354 288 84. 103,275 324 390-391 39, 290 H Handel Society Chorus Harold Parmington Foundation Richie Havens Concert Heoret Hockey Hopkins Center Ushers Horses 61,275 69, 355 151 25,26, 160, 356 83, 89, 114. 338,339 150 140-141 388 I Inauguration Index Injunaires Interdormitory Council Intramural Department J Jewish Life Council K Kappa Kappa Kappa Kappa Sigma President Kemeny Kiewit Computation Center L Lacrosse Ledyard Canoe Club Libes Gordon Lightfoot Concert Little Girl M Herbie Mann Concert Mountaineering Club N Laura Nyro Concert Navy ROTC New Mobe P Pep Band Phi Delta Alpha Phi Sigma Psi Phi Tau Phoenix Pi Lambda Phi The Players Production Notes Psi Upsilon R Rabbit ROTC Demonstrations Dean Rieser 241 120-121 Rifle Team 296 393 Rugby 38, 333 57, 277 6, 28, 29, 289 S 291 Seniors 190-231 Seniors not pictured 234-235 Dean Shafer 240 299 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 75, 366 Sigma Nu Delta 90, 367 Sigma Theta Epsilon 131, 368 82, 357 26, 130, 358 119,239 106, 107, 282 Ski Patrol Ski School Ski Team Soccer 270 270 11-12, 87-88, 124-127, 147, 274 36, 330,331 Spectators 113, 132, 169 326 144, 306-307 73 96 30 Sphinx Sports Spring Sports Records 293 318,345 320-321 Spring Track 168, 170, 326 Squash 342 Dean Stevens 240 Swimming 10, 94, 95, 122, 123,340, 341 43, 100 272 Tabard T 110, 369 Tennis 163, 323 151 Theta Delta Chi 64, 370 303 54 W1ET W 297 WDCR 60, 108-109, 277 134, 359 116-117, 360 162,361 135, 362 74, 363 13,98, 99, 281 386 Wife Dean Williams Winter Carnival Council Winter Sports Council Winter Sports Records Winter Track Wrestling 128-129, 164,304-305 315 240 80-81, 85 271 334-335 344 343 364-365 Young Democrats Y 287 152 Z 174-175 Zeta Psi 86,371 389 390 391


Suggestions in the Dartmouth College - Aegis Yearbook (Hanover, NH) collection:

Dartmouth College - Aegis Yearbook (Hanover, NH) online collection, 1962 Edition, Page 1

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Dartmouth College - Aegis Yearbook (Hanover, NH) online collection, 1963 Edition, Page 1

1963

Dartmouth College - Aegis Yearbook (Hanover, NH) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

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Dartmouth College - Aegis Yearbook (Hanover, NH) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 1

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Dartmouth College - Aegis Yearbook (Hanover, NH) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

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Dartmouth College - Aegis Yearbook (Hanover, NH) online collection, 1971 Edition, Page 1

1971


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