Middlebury College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Middlebury, VT)
- Class of 1979
Page 1 of 184
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 184 of the 1979 volume:
“
le Chateau long Field C olvfT - (Jbb c r M 1 d d 1 e b u r y c o 1 1 e g e M i d d 1 e b u r y To Portei Field t V e r m o n t mil 11 PLACE 2 PERFORMANCE 24 PURPOSE 72 PATRONAGE 152 PARTING 176 KALEIDOSCOPE 1979 MIDDLEBURY COLLEGE $n $33 ■' .2 2 PLACE There ' s an old New England story that goes something like this: A New York City slicker driv- ing a white Cadillac pulls up in front of this little, backwoods farmhouse where this white-haired, pipe-smoking, overall-outfitted farmer is sitting in a rocking chair on the front porch, and the slicker asks, Could you tell me how to get to Shaleton? Aayup, the farmer says, and he proceeds to rattle off the most detailed and convoluted direc- tions you could ever imagine. After carefully writing down every word, the slicker goes barreling off down the road and three and a half hours later he pulls up in front of this same little, backwoods farmhouse with this same white-haired, pipe-smoking, overall-outfitted farmer sitting in a rocking chair on the front porch. What am I doing back here? the slicker asks. I went exactly where you told me. I thought you were giving me directions to Shaleton. Did, the farmer says. Is this Shaleton then? the slicker asks. Aayup, the farmer says. Well if you knew this was the place, why didn ' t you tell me before? the slicker asks. B ' cos, the farmer says, you didn ' t ask. Don ' t ask. We ' ll just tell you. This is the place. PLACE PLACE : - k — 4 PLACE PLACE 5 The difference in the way two or more individuals define a particular place is largely a matter of per- spective. For example, while it is true that many of the people here start from the very beginning with a broad overview of things, and that others will climb any ladder available to them to attain that kind of overview, it is also true that some of us are perfectly content to remain on the ground with only our heads in the clouds. On the opposite page: things that are out of place. The couple wrestling in the grass are actually Dart- mouth students. We included the picture to serve as a reminder of the difference in sexual relations between us and those people down there (see p. 14 for an example of us). The artistic shot of the Science Center is obviously an accident since any Humani- ties major knows there is nothing artistic about sci- ence. And the woman holding the clipboard is a cross-country skier and a sophomore — which makes her out of place almost anywhere. 6 PLACE PLACE 7 14. 1 ufefi ' « 1 ■ri.itW ' ■T 3 • r - jm fc % flPWi ff iW V 8 PLACE PLACE 9 ■.• ■S m 10 PLACE . B ui U U U ED D.B..-B si ® -i I 1 n PLACE 11 12 PLACE PLACE 13 Contrary to appearance, the man in the picture below is not dead. (The library textbook on the ground next to him. however, has been diagnosed as terminally boring.) Neither is it custom at Middle- bury for men to kiss women on the top of the head. Kissing on the elbow is the normal practice. And unlike the woman on the next page, most spectators at soccer games look toward the action, not away from it. On the other hand, it is true that some people here take pictures, although they probably wouldn ' t if they knew the kind of demeaning remarks we plan- ned to make about their photos in our copy. It is also true that empty boxes are often used to hide the awful truth that no one receives a loving call from home when one is most needed. And it is certainly true that people in the College kitchens wash dishes. In fact, leftover soap film accounts for most of the taste in the food , --% -« 14 PLACE X PLACE 15 _ ■— i ii ' EROS -c j . rt M h ss - $t 4 - • 16 PLACE PLACE 17 N K I % i k %■■--.«. -. ...v 1 1970-1971 From the files of The Campus and Kaleidoscope, words and pictures to recount the decade which has almost fled. Pictures: Peace . . . the look of the early seventies . . . gaining focus . . . former Middlebury College President James Armstrong. January 22, 1970 The Board of Trustees has voted to increase the charges for education at Middlebury College by the amount of S250 and to adopt the concept of a Com- prehensive Fee in 1970-71 . . . This single fee will take the place of the hitherto sep- arately stated charges of tuition, room, board, the; general fee, a multiplicity of course fees, and the graduation fee . . . After re-examining the entire fee struc- ture, the Board decided that a Compre- hensive Fee was in keeping with the essence of a residential community college . . . January 29, 1970 On Wednesday. March 11, Middle- bury will begin its three day Conference, The Liberal Arts College — Special Education for the Elite . . . the series of lectures and discussion groups will explore the snob elements within the college, including talk on what separates it from the rest of the society and what alienates certain groups within the col- lege community itself . . . February 26, 1970 Paul Paletti, editor of Kaleidoscope, has gathered more than 500 signatures Middlebury College students congre- gated on a sunlit Proctor Terrace to organize the first significant protest in Middlebury ' s history involving student entrance into the downtown area . . . With posters uplifted and leaflets in hand, the restless draft protesters headed down the hill toward the Municipal Building, home of the . . . local draft office . . . Upon arrival, Middlebury stu- dents were informed that only a small portion of the 250 demonstrators would be allowed to enter the building at one time ... a change from the authorized parade route . . . call for a gathering of forces in the downtown green area. Protestors peacefully proceeded toward this destination, offering leaftlets to curi- ous onlookers along the way. Chants of Hell no! We won ' t go! and One-two- three-four, stop the draft and end the war! heralded their arrival in advance . . . Downtown traffic was halted as stu- dents either sat or stood in the intersec- tion opposite the Battell Block . . . April 16. 1970 To the Editor: This letter is addressed primarily to the young man pictured in last week ' s Campus, carrying the sign Kick the Ass of the Ruling Class . . . Did it ever occur to him that he was insulting his own father and mother? They must belong to the ruling class (i.e.. Establishment?) or he wouldn ' t even be in Middlebury . . . The point being made here is that if he is a man and not a wet behind the ears juvenile, he should publicly apologize to his parents, as well as the parents of his friends and fellow students. Signed: A Protesting Grandpar- ent national strike originated in New Haven the weekend of the Panther-support demonstration at Yale, the movement at Middlebury was largely a response to the Kent State and, more indirectly, to Presi- dent Nixon ' s Cambodian decision . . . October 2. 1970 We are the intruders in the town of Middlebury. We come here for thirty- two months in order to receive a college degree. Our lives center around the col- lege — we reside on a hill above the town, and for the most part, stay there. We come to town to see a movie, buy some clothes, cash a check, get a book, but rarely enter the life of the town. We see the townspeople only as shopkeep- ers, P-ladies, secretaries and members of the buildings and grounds crew; we have very little interest in them as people. To the residents of Middlebury, we are strangers who wish to remain strangers February 21. 1971 An Open Letter to the Student Body: Since the Strike last spring, a great silence has fallen on the nation ' s cam- puses. Here and elsewhere, students and faculty have failed to maintain an informed discussion of America ' s foreign and domestic policies and are no longer working to influence the decisions of American policy-makers. If the show of concern and flurry of activity in May is to have lasting impact, members of the academic community must resume the Vietnam debate. Opposition to the war began on college campuses and now, more than ever, it must be revived there from students who support the continued existence of the yearbook . . . The peti- tion calls Kaleidoscope a valid and important part of life at and after Mid- dlebury . . . The petition further asks that funds for the book not be cut off or diminished . . . the Senate has dis- cussed replacing Kaleidoscope with a photographic annual . . . March 26. 1970 As anti-draft demonstrations were held throughout the nation, some 250 May 14. 1970 Students and faculty members at Middlebury joined thousands of others on campuses across the country in the national strike against the war in South- east Asia, university complicity with the military, and repression of political dis- sent . . . The strike here began early on the morning of May 5 when several stu- dents circulated a petition protesting the killing of the four Kent State students by National Guardsmen and the U.S. inva- sion of Cambodia on April 30. Within several hours hundreds of signatures had been collected . . . While the call for a March 11. 1971 Student government will probably undergo a major change next fall, for the fourth time in four years . . . Tradition- ally plagued by a lack of student interest, student government has never thrived at Middlebury. The new proposal, it is hoped . . . will focus student govern- ment more on the academic function of the College . . . The Student Forum would be the general student govern- mental body with the power to appoint students to join student-faculty commit- tees and to determine the allocation of the student activities fee . . . PLACE 19 PLACE 19 ZS : §ya M 20 IM.ACK ' f A A 1 T ft. l ' I.ACK 21 — I I 22 PLACE PLACE 23 Sfcrar- : ■H ; J £2 33 24 PERFORMANCE The thing I remember most about playing in the school band when I was a kid is that we always spent what seemed like a thousand times more hours rehearsing for a concert than we spent play- ing the concert itself, and no matter how we played when the big night finally came — whether we sounded like the New York Symphony or like a New York subway — our parents always came backstage afterward and took our hands and said my, what a marvelous performance it had been. After a while I reached the point where I was more excited about the rehearsals than the concerts, because I knew in rehearsals that I couldn ' t expect somebody to walk up to me automatically after I finished playing and say, Gee, that was marvel- ous. When I came to college, I thought things would be different. I figured college people would be more critical and mOre honest about things like that. I guess they are a little. But it ' s still basically the same story, only now it ' s classmates instead of parents, and the language is changed. You guys were excellent. I loved it. So rehearsals are still my favorite part. PERFORMANCE PERFORMANCE 25 7 r i;iTr r ■' i .61 ■? s qra tta jS 3 Midd. o P , Score 22 Colby 21 12 Williams 33 7 Tufts 10 14 Trinity 28 23 Bowdoin 19 19 Hamilton 53 Union 13 24 Norwich 14 Won — 5, Lost — 3 26 PERFORMANCE Football The Panthers were expected to take it all in 1978. The 1976 and 1977 campaigns had led to Division 111 National Rankings, and even Sports Illustrated was predicting success. The team produced a record of five wins and three losses, but to term the season unsuc- cessful would be inaccurate. An opening day, come-from-behind thriller over Colby set what was thought to be the winning pace, but successive losses to Wil- liams, Tufts and Trinity placed the Panthers in their worst slump in over six years, and people were beginning to wonder. A victory over Bowdoin on Parents ' Weekend started off a chain of Panther triumphs. Hamilton was the next victim, and after an annihilation of Union, the Panthers ' record stood at four wins and three losses, with the final game against Norwich to decide the Ver- mont State Championship. Led by co-captains Matt Winslow and Skip D ' Aliso, Middlebury drove to victory and salvaged what could have been a disastrous season. It was pride and poise that held the team together during the downfalls of the 1978 season. The Panthers ' performance showed them as a group determined to win and to maintain a sterling tradi- tion, one that is sure to continue. PERFORMANCE 27 , • II 4 % X Midd. Opp. Score 9 Greer Mtn. 5 Castleton 1 1 U.V.M. 3 3 Keene 2 2 Skidmore 3 J Williams 2 Dartmouth 3 ■1 1 U.V.M. 5 2 Boston St. 2 Williams 2 2 N. Adams Won- -3. Lost — 4. Tied — 4 2H PKRFORMANCK Field Hockey The field hockey teams didn ' t do as much winning as they had hoped, but the season was exciting nonetheless. The teams finally left the soggy confines of Battell field to move to a luxurious new site adjacent to Porter Football Stadium. Lisa Hill was leading scorer for the second straight year with nine goals. She was followed by Betsy Conger with eight and Sue Butler and |oan McKenna with three apiece. The offense was strengthened by the addition of McKenna and Conger, a pair of freshmen who wasted no time joining Hill, Butler and co-captain Meg Dana on the starting front line. Anne Luginbuhl, Julie Ewing and Helen Ladds handled the bulk of the half- backing chores, while Pam Blake, Holly McConnell and freshman Lissa McKinley filled the fullback slots. Co-captain Katy Weidman had another great year in the nets. The future looks good as nine of the eleven varsity starters will be returning next year. Kathy McNamee, Carol Zuber and the co-captains will be lost in the May parade. PERFORMANCE 29 Midd. Opp. Score Springfield 3 Plymouth Williams U.V.M. St. Mike Norwich Amherst Dartmouth Pittsburgh U.N.H. N. Adiims Won — 4, Lost — 3, Tied 1 3 (1 1 4 30 PERFORMANCE Soccer ■' m + i ■Few observers thought the Men ' s Varsity Soccer team would live up to expectations after witnessing the start of the 1978 season. Slowly but surely, however, each individual player put a hand on the rope and pulled for the team as a whole, and the outcome of the season was not what some early doubters might have predicted. An outstanding spirit of camaraderie characterized the team, a spirit which resulted from the effort it took team members to learn to work as a single unit. It also took the tireless perseverance of co- captains Bruce Boyd and David Emery to set team sights on victory in the face of defeat, and by the final games in November their determination paid off. We were unlucky on the whole, one player commented, but it took a lot of team spirit to come back and win. ' i PERFORMANCE 31 I musl confess I was .1 bil iifraicl In so sec Larry Carlton in concert ... I had he. ml that hr had .1 new album out, and 1 smellcd commercialism in the air . . . I ' m happy I say thai the concert was much bettor than Ihr album. The keyboard play was .1 little choppy and the drum- mer didn ' t do anything special, but the bass player was pretty funky, and Carl- ton — well. 1 can ' t remember when I last saw such a hoi guitarist. — Stu Alden. The Campus. Sept. 27. 1978 Oh, yes — MCAB has done it again! Weather report last Thursday was the best conceit you ' ll see in Vermont for some time to come. As tightly knit as a band can be. they glided effortlessly from one tune to the next. They covered tunes on al least lour of their albums . . . and there was enough original, spontane- ous playing to satisfy even me. — Stu Alden. The Campus. Nov. 8. 1978 Perennial favorite Impulse performed and held a jazz workshop in November. :)2 PKRFORMANCK PERFORMANCE 33 The Mischordsare A musical troupe. But we would simply prefer We ' re a group. We ' ll sing almost anywhere; Prep schools, on beaches. At Disney World. The Bandroom (just pray our van reaches). All American Girls — Count ' em — ten in a van. And if you think that ' s bad — We have even stayed friends. So, cheer on Mike Rafones! Many thanks DAR. Thanks for the memories And the best times by far. The D-8 reached its thirtieth anniversary this year, an amazing feat given the ad hoc nature of the group, and the side effects of prolonged meth- ane inhalation. The current group (Lips. BT1, Frodo, Stench, Kennie, B.D.. Buff Puck, Wilton, Vinnie and McQueerie) is perhaps as dissipated as any in recent history. Some of the highlights included road trips to Faneuil Hall in Boston, the Williams Club in New York City, The Playboy Club, and multi-college jamborees here at Middle- bury. The group also cut an LP, The White Album, which promises to reach the top of the charts (!), expanded their repertoire in many directions, and sported more beards than ever. These credentials, however, belie the true charac- ter of the group. Organization was attained only by administering various behavior modification techniques, notably the Wedgie. Overall, it was a good year, and the D-8 lived up to its tradition of being just a bunch of nice guys having fun. Now aren ' t you all glad we didn ' t ask the col- lege orchestra to write its own copy also? 34 PURPOSE PURPOSE 35 Midd Tennis 9 5 Won 7, Lost 3 Midd Swimming UVM Skidmore Russell Sage Amherst Dartmouth Colby-Sawyer UVM Williams Union Hampshire Opp 101 Skidmore 66 UVM 85 Green Mtn. 81 Platts 68 Keene St. 71 UVM 1st of 5 in Grn Mtn. Invitational Won 6, Lost 1 4 2 2 9 2 1 9 Score 22 65 28 41 45 60 36 PERFORMANCE Women ' s Swimming and Tennis Eleven years ago there was no women ' s swim team at Middlebury. But during its most recent season, the team proved that it now has firm hold on its place in the Middlebury sports program. The season saw the women fall only once, that defeat coming at the hands of a powerful Dartmouth team. Ten team records and one pool record were established during the season, as co-captain Sue Foiled ' 80 outswam and outclassed the competition again and again. It was a really together team. co-captain Kathy Kohlbry ' 80 noted. The 78-79 season was a success in every way for Middlebury ' s swimmin women. The Women ' s Tennis Teams ' ladders reflected the fluctuations of a group of players constantly improving and advancing throughout the season. Most often mentioned by players in reference to both the A and B teams was the high level of competition, both intercollegi- ate and intersquad. and the terrific opportunity to get to know people fast and well because you work so hard together. PERFORMANCE 37 Men: 3rd of 3 vs Williams. N. Adams . 3rd of 3 vs BU, UVM. . . . beat Si Lawrence. . . 3rd of 3 vs Amherst. Coast Guard. . . 10th of 21 in East- erns jm Women: Beat Williams. . . beat Dartmouth ... 1st in Amherst Invitational . . . 2nd in state meet ... 1st in Albany Invit.it lortals ... 9th in Easterns THE CHRONICLE nl About iIk Saiiu ii w.n i Vthlt ii s Uun Men Government Will TeU ( nllcgo ! . . l -- t 38 PERFORMANCE vpp f,T« ? . .W Cross-Country Middlebury ' s cross-country teams had another great fall, with enough sunshine to make up for all of last year ' s rain. The women had fun and victories while the men had fun and. well, more fun. Karin Von Berg expanded her silver collection by taking first place in the Albany Invitational, the NESCAC championship and. her big- gest yet. the New England championship. Alice Towner and Tara McMenamy took turns following Karin. while Anne Leggett. Edie Bennett. Kathy Connor and Kate Mooney filled the remaining scor- ing and displacing spots. Men ' s captain Henry Heyburn made a big improvement for his senior year and wound up sharing the front-running duties with Junior Peter Horowicz. Heyburn had some great showings, includ- ing a fifth against UVM and BU and a 61st in the NCAA Division III qualifying meet. Freshman Art Knight took uncontested hold of the number three spot and Tom Hirsch came out of the closet to post another of his unforgettable finishes, this one against Coast Guard. Jim Renkert showed everyone what a little work will do. and Jeff Clarke and John MacKenna kept everybody loose from Johnson to Boston. Editor ' s note: The absence of Women ' s Cross-Country pictures on these pages is a matter of most unfortunate circumstance. The women had no meets at home this fall, and the yearbook had no photographers on the road. We tried other sources, but to no avail. Sorry! £  PERFORMANCE 39 . . . Lisa Simon referred to her non-credit, one-act project (Doing A Good One for the Red Man) as an intended learning experience. In that respect, and in many others, the play was unquestionably a success . . . The stereotype roles and their inherent contrasts were portrayed well by Simon ' s troupe . . . For both Lisa Simon and the College theater-going audience, Red Man opened this year ' s theater season on a very positive note. — Mark Corsey, The Campus, Nov. 10, 1978. . . . Director Doug Sprigg was acutely sensitive to Chekov ' s art and, at every opportunity, he set up the audience for the juxtapositions and contrasts that sug- gested to us some hitherto unknown detail or point . . . No effect was produced that had not been worked for . . . For the most part, The Cherry Orchard was filled with good, strong acting which at times might have been called superb . . . when taken as a whole, The Cherry Orchard was a stunning success. — Rick Weston, The Campus, Dec. 7, 1978. The Fall Term Dance Performance covered every- thing from Saturday Night Fever to Sunday afternoon ballet to Monday morning blues. Judging from audience reaction, the performers could have danced all week. ■1(1 I ' KHI ' ORMANCK PERFORMANCE 41 Dana Holby ' s Coincidance Company and the big band Sound Investment performed for Parents ' Weekend audiences. The other folks who appear on these pages, however, did not dare show themselves until long after parents had gone home. Coincidance. under the direction of Assistant Music Professor Holby, was formed in June 1978 and could be termed a you-name-it-we-dance-it troop, having mastered, as a company and as individuals, techniques ranging from classical to what Holby her- self once called weird. Sound Investment, on the other hand, deals exclusively with music from that bygone era characterized by a little swing, a little zing, a little jazz, a little pizzaz, and a lot of class. The Hall-o-ween people were caught in the act at the 1978 Chateau Hall-o-ween bash, which was com- plete with massage parlor, dungeons and a $2.50 ticket price. Everyone who went said the massage parlor alone was worth it. We ' re sure it was! 42 PERFORMANCE PERFORMANCE 43 44 PERFORMANCE Women ' s Soccer, Rugby, Ultimate Frisbee PERFORMANCE 45 Midd Men I 60 106 82 76 92 76 86 77 47 81 86 61 66 81 71 78 84 Unio Castleton d i s Platts St. Ansel ms Bason Lowell Thomas Col Clark Univ. Bates Colby Norwich Brandeis Williams St. Jos. UVM St. Mike Nichols WPI mherst owdoin Norwich 70 75 43 82 71 67 69 69 78 99 91 85 Midd Women 44 Williams 30 Dartmouth 56 UVM (B) 60 Castleton 50 Skidmore 61 Norqich 40 UVM(B) 63 Johnson 64 Platts 47 St Mike ' V 6 70 72 67 67 :0 i 46 PERFORMANCE Men ' s and Women ' s Basketball PERFORMANCE 47 Midd m Opp Princeton U Mass. Salem St. McGill Univ Hamilton Holy Cross Maine Colby Williams Amhers uv: Norwich Anselrn AIM Colby St. Anselms Boston St. Babson Williams Bowdoin Lowell Norwich Platts Won 16, Lost 6, Tied 1 i Score 6 2 4 2 3 2 2 6 4 3 4 5 2 111 PKRIOKMAV H Men ' s Ice Hockey The men ' s hockey loam overcame I lie loss (if four defensomen and two starting goalies to retain ils position as one of the top teams in the Northeast. The Panthers ranked second in the ECAC West with a Ki-4-1 record as the playoffs neared. In an earlier Associated Press poll, the P. inlhers were ranked number I wo in the nation in Division II. Freshman Mike McNamara Tilled the vacant goaltending job with style. I lis 2.7W goals against average ranked him among the three best in the ECAC. Defense looked like ,i trouble spot before (he season began as only [off Angers and Frank Nelson were returning from the 1978 squad. Ski]) Weinbel, |im Davis, and two freshmen. Robin Gahagan and Chip Clark, moved in and solved the problems. The offense was never in question as ,1 strong corps of returning seniors led the way. Chip Hagy, Mike O ' Hara, |ohn Watson, Turn I larris. Perry Bahcock and Tom Plant made sure the Panthers always netted their lair share. Uppen l. issmen Roger Nicholas anil ( :.n 1 Erdman also turned a lot of heads, particularly those of opposing goaltenders. The highlight of the early season was Middlebury ' s victories in the Maine Holiday Classic, over Maine. Colby and Bowdoin. SPl-J s. PKRKORMANCK 49 A Midd Squ Opp Williams Dartmouth Skidmore Trinity UVM Amherst Smith Harvard Score 7 5 7 3 5 12th of 18 in Howe Cup Won 4. Lost 4 50 PERFORMANCE Squash, Women ' s Ice Hockey The women ' s squash team endured the proverbial building season this year after losing nine-and-a-half of last year ' s top ten players. Only Sarah Lincoln was back, and she graduated half- way through the season. By the middle of Febraury the team had a 3-5 record, after passing Vermont and healing Amherst and Wesleyan in the latter college ' s tournament. With Lincoln graduated. Anne Vernon was the only remaining senior in the top ten. With the- younger players improving all the time. Coach Ron McFaohen can look forward to belter times Starting from close to scratch, the women ' s hockey team made great strides with each game this season. By the end of January, the team had registered resounding victories over Exeter Acad- emy. Williams and Wesleyan. As the season progressed, the offense got on its feet and began to produce. The experienced first line of Mimi Polk. Anna Gebelein and Mary Porter led the scoring throughout the season. Freshman Sue Lyle wasted no time in establishing herself as a scoring threat. The defense squad was put to the test in mid-season when injuries whitted its number to three. Five seniors and coaches Toby Davis and Andy Woolford will be marching out in the May Parade. PERFORMANCE ' 51 ■= 52 i PERFORMANCE ■H- Skiing A large transfusion of freshman blood helped make the ski teams as strong as they have been in years. In the first two major carnivals of the season, the men ' s team finished right on the heels of Ver- mont and Dartmouth. Rookies Rick McGuire and John Tormondson joined with |im Goodwin and )im Renkerl to make the cross-country team as strong as any in the East. Freshman Jeff Nichols made a reputa- tion for himself by taking first place in the slalom at Dartmouth. The Alpine team was placing consistently among the top three or four. Jamie Hutohins. Tom Calcagni. Chris Beal and Rich Bissell teamed with lone veteran Chris Axelson to give Middle- bury a compeletive jumping squad ll becomes harder each year for Middle- bury to compete in that event because Vermont and Dartmouth recruit jumpers from Scandinavia. The women ' s cross country team took the losses of Lindsay Putnam and Liz Carey without breaking stride. A rich crop of freshmen helped the squad remain the best in the East for the fourth season in a row. Sophomore Alice Tower was the top skier on the circuit at the halfway point, followed closely by fresh- man teammate Tara McMenamy. (lid folks Karin Von Berg and Anne Logged also skied well in the early carnivals. Sara McNealus was one of the top alpine skiers on the circuit for the fourth year in a row. leading a strong, young. Middlebury contingent which gave coaches good reason to enjoy the present and dream about the future. PERFORMANCE S3 s — ' .1 I ' KKFORMANCK PERFORMANCE 55 «r t v ' 3 U- 1972-1973 Pictures: Sitting low on the hill . . . movement . . . contemplation . . . still- ness. March 9, 1972 The Roving Reporter: What do you think of Middlebury food? . . . 1 think it ' s about as good as any in any large institu- tion. I think it should be kosher, though ... It rots. Too starchy: you can never get hold of a decent piece of meat, the vegetables taste like water . . . I think it ' s horrible ... I don ' t eat too much of it. It ' s okay. They try hard . . . The lunches are pretty raunchy. Get rid of grease . . . More brownies and ice cream; ice cream every day ... I think it is excellent, not excellent in the truest sense, but excel- lent in the non-plastic, non-artificial sense . . . It ' s not important. As long as you ' re alive, what the hell . . . March 23. 1972 In a 1970-1971 study comparing the Middlebury College Library with 39 simi- lar institutions with average enrollments in the 1000 to 2000 range, the Middlebury library is shown to be below average. The survey . . . includes such colleges as Amherst. Bowdoin, Williams, Smith and Swarthmore. Middlebury College has considered itself to be on a par with many of these institutions — according to the 1972 admissions catalogue, If the search is for academic quality irrespec- tive of size and social environment, Mid- dlebury may be considered along with the major ivy institutions or the great state universities . . . The library, often agreed to be a primary academic source on any campus, does not appear to meet these standards of comparison . . . April 27. 1972 A bar well known to college students, the Alibi, has remained closed since March 25th when the Middleburv Board of Selectmen suspended its liquor license for fifteen days. Cited as causes for sus- pension were several violations of state liquor control laws including sale of alcoholic beverages to minors . . . Police Chief Robert Van Ness recommended the revocation of the Alibi ' s license because of a considerable number of complaints by residents concerning breaches of peace . . . also cited . . . were traffic problems created by customer parking May 4, 1972 The highlight of this year ' s last fac- ulty meeting held Monday. May 1, was the passage of a resolution condemning the renewed bombing of North Vietnam, and the evasive statements the gover- ment has used to justify its conduct. In an apparent reversal of its decision on April 27, when the faculty voted to adjourn its special meeting without taking a stand on the war and the strike being con- ducted at that time, they approved this resolution 46 for, 12 against, 28 abstain- ing . . . October 5, 1972 Old Chapel Notes: Rumor: The col- lege will have to flunk out a number of freshmen in order to eliminate the over- crowding in the dorms for next semem- ster. Truth: No, the rumor is not true! Signed: Erica Wonnacott. Dean of Stu- dents. November 16. 1972 In what has to be considered the most successful fall in Middlebury athletics, five intercollegiate teams (A and B Field Hockey. A nd B Football, Soccer) com- bined for a truly studentdous 30-0-3 slate! . . . such remarkable seasons are truly engineered by comprehensive team efforts, perceptive coaching, and above all. a persistent will to win and an unfal- tering pride . . . January 18. 1973 On the fifth of January, the Commu- nity Council reached an important deci- sion concerning the membership of women in college fraternities. The major concern of the Council was that women should be allowed full membership in the fraternities, including the option of living there if they so choose . . . September 30, 1973 The Midd Summer News, a publica- tion sent to students during the summer to notify them of changing regulations and policies of the college, largely dealt this year with the issue of fraternities. In a letter from President Armstrong and a statement from Dean of the College Den- nis O ' Brien, it was stated that in the opin- ion of the Administration the present fraternity system can no longer be con- tinued. Dean O ' Brien has suggested meetings with the Community Council, the Student Forum, the Interfraternity Council and other concerned groups to discuss the problem. The solution he offers is for the College to assume full control of the present fraternity facilities and property . . . December 6. 1973 The Student Forum, in meetings on November 11 and 18. called for the impeachment of President Richard Nixon . . . Forum passed the resolution stating: Resolved: That we. the Student Forum of Middlebury College, demand that together with its investigation of the Watergate affair and related crimes, the Congress shall include the following within the impeachment proceedings: The ITT scandal, the misspending of campaign funds, the illegal bombing of Southeast Asia and other war crimes, the military take-over of the Allende govern- ment in Chile, the establishment of a secret police force for five days in 1970, the harassment and imprisonment of political dissenters, and the impounding of funds appropriated by Congress (the Hospital Funds). . . . PERFORMANCE 57 Tin 1 two biggest student organizations on campus: The Campus and WRMC-FM. WRMC is about to become! oven bigger, boosting its power from 10 to 100 walls, just when we were getting used to those outrageous microwave promos they ' re always broadcasting. The Campus this year kepi alive its string of Mon- day nighl all-nighters, and managed to produce a weekly issue despite continual break-downs . . . whose we won ' t say! You ' ll notice in the group pic- ture on the right, however, that one staff member obviously has a different concept of layout than everyone else. r .H t ' KRFORMANCK Ojf tYHtftlfburp Campus End of frtitenim ilining ttlalcil for June 1. l ' WO Clarification sought on grace year policy ■easeopp PERFORMANCE 59 Can you guess which of these people is actually a faculty member trying to conceal his presence in an acknowledged student hang-out? io H 60 PERFORMANCE PERFORMANCE 61 Tin ' fraternities are soon to lose their dining option. We don ' t see why. Cheez, they even do their own dishes. How many Proctor diners can make lhal claim? 62 PERFORMANCE PERFORMANCE 63 The French Club ' s Medieval Din- ner. Zela Psi ' s Toga Party and The Bread and Puppet Theater ' s annual performance . . . costumes, cos- tumes, costumes! 64 i PERFORMANCE PERFORMANCE 65 We ' ve placed t WO of the College ' s mosl infamous institutions on the same pages: Ihc Food Service and the yearbook. The Food Service pictures — necessarily — speak for themselves: no one else h.is much to saj on the subject. Oi perhaps everyone ' s mouths are j usi lull of . . . what was that? The yearbook claims In be making a comeback; we ' ll see. In any case. Ihc pic- lure of Ihc editor is appropriate enough. He always was good at pointing out the waj for others while silling on his ass himself, resting beneath his credentials. Titles: Donald Desbiens and Chip Hoch (photo cd). Jennifer Lanes and Teresa Mansfield (assl cd). Rick l.egro (ads). Clary Mascilis (sanity). Susan Schoff and Susan Sondheim (sr pics). |im Tenner (bus) PERU IRMANCE Photos: Stove Ahmann. Tom Areidiacono. Sue FollcMt. Line Jack- son, Marty Kimball, 1 lenri La .nrdi.s. | • Lovering, Roselinde Tor- res. Tom Snil er Layout: Liz Bisbee, Pamela Cross. Mary Kale Foley. Man 1 ' ran gakis. Sue Greene. Cindy Merrill. Kathleen Milmore, Cind. Pid goon. Brian Roddinglon Art: Fred Andresen. Rlaine Bresnehan. Caroline Gale, Marion Taylor. Vicky Valar Cope: John MacKenna. George Marderosian. Kris Mix If I had il to do again, I would proba- bly wish I had il lo do a third lime, and then a fourth, and then . . . Why bother? — Mark Corsoy PFRFORMANICF. 67 68 I ' KKKORMANCK Kurt Uhlman Leo Geary Atlantic PREPPIES i A A. Preppio Of .ill the clubs, organizations ind institutions here ,il Ihe College, one of Ihe most exclusive and least favored by the Kaleidoscope staff is the . . . Late Seniors Club I [ere are pictures of I his year ' s members. Pamela Abouzoid PKRFORMANCK 59 Susan Huffman Perry Babcock Wendy Menzel Baird Gourlay -n PERFORMANCE Carol Yeomans Dierdre Browne Russell Bracket ITie Presence ol Walker Evans A Portfolio Whos Afraid of Math .. .and Why? Atlantic Skipping through COLLEt illllll Reflections the Decline of liberal Arts Education Sue Whitton A. Liberal Artist PKRFORMANCK 71 . k - ' ■' •■•■! ' • • ■■' •. t M ( ! m 72 PURPOSE The College has been forced to be self-reliant because it could not take easy borrowings from close academic neighbors or major cities. The books, the gadgetry and the people which make up a college have been brought to Middlebury for the sole and single purpose of undergraduate educa- tion. It was not the natural and easy course to found a college in a Vermont village in 1800, it had to be a matter of conscious choice. Education at Middlebury continues to be a matter of choice, not drift. This will to education creates a particular spirit and pride which stamps Middlebury, for all it shares with others, as unique. The lines above are taken from the 1978-1979 Middlebury College catalogue. And you thought the stuff we ' ve been coming up with was bad! PURPOSE PURPOSE 73 Foreign Languages Foreign Languages FRENCH 76 GERMAN 80 RUSSIAN 82 SPANISH ITALIAN 84 74 PURPOSE Humanities VF. ' W  • f l f r ail prfrr fcwl — • C ' lic5 cisiofc(BIotic | United Stales to r ™fciw China Jan. 1 Sh i WUn b tnj bilk — who ran -In luni ■■( ii Hall topics: The Bl and salaries Humanities AMERICAN UTERATURE MM AMERICAN STUDIES 91 ART 93 ENGLISH 96 MUSIC 103 RELIGION PHILOSOPI I Y 105 THEATER 107 IMJKI ' OSK 75 French Faculty: (rear) Simon Barenbaum. Susan Hay ward, Laurent Patenolte, (front) Bethany Ladimer, Karen Maguire, Mar- tino Prieto, Carol Rifelj, (on leave) Ed Knox. Nancy O ' Connor Margaret Battaglia Holly Kelsey 76 PURPOSE Susan D. Mochi Ellen Perkins Green Sue Greene Jon Prime Carol Youngs-Cremades A liberal arts major is a liberal arts major. Period. — Mary Neal Phythyon PURPOSE 77 Basically there ' s not much difference between the Mid- dlebury College of my freshman year and the Middlebury College of my senior year. Different people, similar insan- ity. In four years here, however, people have still not learned th.it my name is not Mary. My name is Mary Neal. You ' d think they ' d learn. — Mary Neal Phythyon Lori Tannenbaum :• ' . iMiRposi-: Martha Miller Roshmini Yogaratnam Beth Sandel Stranded in the Eiffel Tower: Robert Sasse. Anne Saunders Dorrie Fuchs Debbie Mohr PURPOSE 79 If I had it to do again, I would get A ' s! — Kerry Wing German Faculty: (1 to r) Van Horn Vail. Kimberly Sparks. Connie Kenna, (seated) Thomas Huber Lost on the Autobahn: loyce Steijn John Berg Kerry Wing Patton Darbishire Dean Davis HO PURPOSE Marjorie Rauon Lynn Martens Andrew Berman (right) Karen Reynolds The college itself hasn ' t changed since my freshman year. The people within it have. They seem now less involved wilh the outside than four years ago, and yet now there seems to be more spirit, more energy, more enthusiasm. The main change is myself. I have grown, become more mellow. Now I can handle things in better perspective and appreciate my friends. The change has been good — but I feel tired of thi:, piace, time to move on. It is too easy to lose touch and perspective with the really relevant issues in life. — Marion Taylor Vicky Valar (Geog.) Marion Taylor (rear) PURPOSE 81 Tina Ball Russian Faculty: (1 to r) David Bclhea, Jane Miller, Rob- ert Baker, Alexandra Baker (on leave) Thomas Bayer. Being a Russian major at Middlebury Col- lege is like dancing before the Ark of the Covenant, or perishing! — Peggy Rice Peggy Rice Jir- Paul Benda Is it true th;it Russians shower and brush their teeth with Vodka? Absolutely not. Russians neither shower nor brush their teeth. — Tina Ball John Kassel 82 PURPOSE Beth Ackerman Katie Driver Marsha Sabourin Sharon Flack Melanie J. Hessinn If I had it to do again. I would do it exactly the same way. In four years, one realizes one ' s mistakes — but after all, that ' s what learning is all about. — Beth Ackerman Each year, the attitude of the Administration toward student life seems to get more and more conservative. I wouldn ' t be surprised if they reinstated house mothers. — Sharon Flack PURPOSE 83 Cheryl Rodrigues 1 Andrea L. Vannelli «5r Susan Weinberg Glvnis G. Ramos Spanish-Italian Faculty: (l to r) David George. Alicia Andreu, Jon Strolle, Rene Priele. Giusepe Faustini, Gloria Vaglio, (on leave) Roberto Veguez If I had it to do again I would be an economics major with concentrations in several languages . . . — Susan Weinberg 84 PURPOSE fl MvV BBqr Hi £ 1% fe « rr? t fc ' JI H w T M SL ■VW II B .. A 11 •-, f _,. itf JKBi V r A «1 Grace M. Zanichkowsky Tracey Thompson Andrew D. Blank A Leonard Kraus Marcey Rawitscher Being a Spanish major at Middlebury College means having the opportunity to go to Spain for junior year. It means really immersing oneself in the Spanish culture, accustoming oneself to the environment and learning to speak the language. I believe that having gone to Spain is the greatest fulfillment I have received as a Spanish major. — Che- ryl Rodrigues On siesta: Sarah Lincoln, Marcia Smith Eileen Skudder PURPOSE 85 , v. 1974-1975 Pictures: The mid-seventies, black and white . . . Midd kid . . . gravity stone . . . College Street. January 31.1974 As with death and taxes, we can be certain of the fact that institutions like Middlebury College will continue to be characterized by a largely homogeneous student body. Given the high cost of lib- eral arts education, Middlebury ' s rigor- ous entrance requirements and the elitist nature of the College, it is not surprising that Middlebury tends to attract a certain ' type ' of student. To be admitted and to succeed as a student, it seems one need possess certain attributes: intelligence, a reasonable amount of family wealth, and a willingness to stay in line . . . March 21, 1974 The recent information available on tenure appointments at Middlebury makes it clear that the college may find itself in the near future in the dangerous position of having well over half of its faculty on tenure. The complacency of veteran, esta blished members and the constant upheaval of a rapidly changing younger constituency, without the stabil- ity of any intermediate group, would be a disasterous threat to the quality of aca- demic instruction at Middlebury . . . October 24. 1974 To the Editor: This afternoon while passing by Proctor I became very tired of looking at all the bowls, trays, plates and mugs that were littering Proctor Terrace. So I did something about it — I picked up every last tray, mug, glass, etc., threw out all the paper plates, napkins, cups and garbage, and took it all inside where it could be bussed. However, that was not the last thing I did. Before 1 took leave of all that junk, I counted ... 10 glasses, 26 mugs, 4 small bowls, 3 larger bowls, 8 salad bowls, 5 plates, 8 small plates, 7 trays and a large handful of silverware. I think that is a pretty damning indication of the inconsiderateness of some stu- dents at Middlebury College . . . Appar- ently Mrs. Wonnacott once went out when everyone was on the terrace and started picking it up. People had the con- siderateness to lift their feet so that she could get at the stuff!! . . . One thing I left off the list — a broken glass. For those who like to go barefoot, splintered glass is not that fantastic. Signed: A student (name withheld by request) . . . November 7, 1974 Dr. James lsbell Armstrong announced his resignation as president of Middlebury College on November 4. Armstrong will leave Middlebury August 31, 1975 to accept the presidency of the Charles A. Dana Foundation . . . It is my judgement that the time has come for new presidential leadership of Middle- bury College . . . The College is, I believe, strong in both human and finan- cial resources . . . My successor will find at Middlebury a community where, in my view, there is a healthy unity, where there is mutual trust and respect among students, faculty and administration and where there are things to be done and the will to do them . . . December 12, 1974 Middlebury College administrators say the college is in a tight financial situ- ation as a result of the nation ' s economic slump, but they see hope for the future. The bearish stock market has made potential contributors reluctant to give, and inflation has hit Middlebury as hard as anywhere else. But the College is not doing too badly, all things considered March 13, 1975 Lately there has been a lot of talk on the Middlebury campus about a far-off place called the real world. In the past several issues of The Campus many letters and commentaries have appeared on this subject of the real world ; all try to make it clear that Middlebury College has no relation whatsoever to it. One pauses to wonder. If everything around us is the real world, then logically we must live in the unreal world. It would further make sense that we live in dream time, much as did and do many primitive cultures. Time for us is regen- erated each year, the whole of history is composed of overlapping four year cycles which all end in armageddon, the millennium, the coming of Anti-Christ. Graduation, that is . . . May 8. 1975 Olin Clyde Robison, Provost and Dean of the Faculty at Bowdoin College, was unanimously elected thirteenth pres- ident of Middlebury College by the exec- utive committee of the Board of Trustees, Sunday morning, April 26 . . . Dr. Robi- son is a foreign affairs and Soviet-Ameri- can relations expert who served Wes- leyan University, the State Department, and the Peace Corps before going to Bowdoin. He was educated at Baylor University, Southwestern Theological Seminary, and Oxford, where he received his PhD in Church History . . . Robison praised the great discretion and thoroughness with which the Search Committee conducted their work ... I don ' t have a blueprint for Middle- bury College, Robison said, adding that he does have some good ideas of things that go together to make up quality lib- eral education . . . The Bowdoin Ori- ent, the student newspaper, has called Robison a superadministrator and pow- erbroker. When asked if he considered himself an administrator or an educator, the president-elect said, You shouldn ' t find it surprising that I don ' t want to choose one or the other. He added that he has worked as an administrator in education . . . October 9, 1975 Editorial: Before Middlebury ' s Honor System took effect several years ago, stu- dents were forced to take their exams in the old fieldhouse. They sat in every other seat watched over by bored Proc- tors. The Honor System lent a sense of dignity to test-taking by letting the indi- vidual assume responsibility for his own honest efforts. And it still accomplishes that purpose, tattered and soiled though the code may be. But a special committee has found two major factors corrupting the Honor System: ignorance and cyni- cism. Ignorance is relatively easy to cure, and the committee suggested several good ways to teach new students and teachers about the Code. But cynicism is something else. It means something has gone wrong . . . PURPOSE 87 Annie Glidden Mike Miles Dave Emery (Geog. American Literature Faculty: (I to r) Gayle Pomborton. |ohn Slatin, Stephen Donadio. |ohn McWilliams (on leave) Horace Boi k Vacationing al Walden: Louis Bacon Douglas MacGregor Marv Kay Commins mi PURPOSE Being an American Literature major .il Middlebury ( !ol- lege is like giving Advance notice to your local unemploy- ment bureau. — Jeffrey T, Somple Jeffrey T. Somple Gretchen Hund (Geol. Carol Bracken Mary Porter (Geog.) Daniel At wood Carol Hubregsen Mario Reid PURPOSE 89 If you could tell one of your professors how you truly felt about one of his reading assignments, what would you say? Moby Dick is a bore! — Grade Desha .er Maureen Phaver Karen Silverang Gracie Deshazer 90 PURPOSE Ann Jones Sandy Levine Laurel Macaulay Kristin Harris Bill Harris American Studies Studying Americans: Margaret Brewster Kevin O ' leary David Salem Jeanne Sutton Craig Wells Beth Mooney PURPOSE 91 kalie Woidman William W. Markland Stephanie Dickson i. ••- ' We M Anne B. Groten AnneTippett Marlv Peale •12 I ' URI ' OSK Anne Orrick 9  John Barmen Dave Gustafson (Pins. Diane Olingnr Art Faculty: (I In r) Eric Nelson. llonn Andres. Robert Rciff, |oh n lluni- s;ik. Charles Colbert. Mark Rtrndlc- iii.m. David Bumbeok When you ' re up hi your ass in alli- gators, it ' s sometimes difficult to remember your initial objective! was lo drain the swamp. — |ohn Barraco Being an art major a! Middlebury College is like being! — Sara Ann McNealus Sarah Ann McNealus PURPOSE 93 When I was a freshman. I thought Olin R was a good guy. Now I ' d like to hang him by his toes and feed him Proc- tor food. — Gary Schiff Artless: Megan Battey John Cahill Chris Eaton Anne Hedberg Rosario Robert Andrea MacRitchie Sally Kireker Steve Nelson Serena Furman (Double: Anthropology) Sandra Kunhardt 94 PURPOSE 1 Gary Schiff Nancy Karlson Maura Flynn David Colbert H 1 H t ! 1 ' dr - i, ifev w P pr 1 ,1 4% A l I • 4 - - J J Wendy Wright If I had it to do again. I would say: ' Was that life? For Zara- thustra ' s sake, very well! Once more! ' . — David Colbert Joseph A. Pierson PURPOSE 95 English ■nuiilty: (scaled) David Price (standing, 1 ii r) Kli .nhclh Napier. Thomas Moisan. Raymond Carney. |ohn Heilnlmi. Peter iriidin. Kli ahcth Mansfield. Henry ' in keitl (nnl pii lured) David l.illlel ' ielti. Robert Hill. Kilward Martin. Paul aibela. (mi leave) Thomas ( !a in. Roherl ■ai k. lohnKlder ' Being an English major at Middlehury lollege is like signing up on Cleopatra ' s targe for a pleasure cruise anil ending up loing I hi! rowing. — Riek l.cgro ' Being an Knglish major al Middlehury lollcge means being among a vocal min- orily who air op| ost!il in extra credit for aln nurses. -Catherine C ( ) ' Brien ' Being an Knglish major al Middlehury ollcgc is like hnl cloys al Coney Island . . bought by millions but hard to chew. — Sarah |ane Sloane • mmo«ii i -v rLAlliNVa WITH INVISIBLE TCn Kristine Kim Kate Thayer Maggie Paine 96 PURPOSE ,: Robert D. Lardon Sarah Jane Sloane - Catherine C. O ' Brien Rick Legro I ordered my horse; to bo brought from the stables. The; ser- venl did not understand my orders. So I wen I to the stables myself, saddled my horse, and mounted. In the distance I heard the sound of a trumpet, and I asked the servant what it meant. He knew nothing and had heard nothing. At the gate he slopped me and asked: Where is the master going? I don ' t know. I said. just out of here, just out of here. Out of here, nothing else, it ' s the only way I can reach my goal. So you know your goal? he asked. Yes, 1 replied. I ' ve just told you. Out of here — that ' s my goal. Franz Kafka Robert D. Lardon Kathy McNamee PURPOSE 97 Being an English major il Middlebury College is like getting only X ' s .md Q ' s in Scrabble. — Peter K. Christianson I h,ul il to do again, I would not. — Laura Goldberg Martha L. Hagner Peter R. Christianson Susan King Laura Goldberg Nancy Joan Limbacher 98 IUIKPOSK aW Joel Werthman Scott Geiger Andrew Woolford Martha Coneybear Val Havas If I had it In do again, I would ' ve done it as a blonde. — Jeff Anderholm eff Anderholm PURPOSE 99 Mary Gilles mWSOSfM % j Ellen Kramer Bill Keller Asa Phillips If I had it to do again, I would: 1) be an Am. Lit. major, 2) not do it again. 3) cheat. — Rob Meldrum Rob Meldrum 100 PURPOSE Mary Beth Folia Skip Daliso I have lost my Mantra. Cynicism crushes the flame of being into lifeless dust, ashes and cinders. Because I have braced non-being I read into the world my own deadness. — Hamish Blackman To be or not to be: that is the question. Might as well stick around: that is the answer. — Gillian Scharff Richard Howes Long j to Hamish Blackman Gillian Scharff Carol Van Alstine PURPOSE 101 ■■. Dede Cumminys Amy Meeker Alison McCuaig Deb Himmelfarb Andrew Smith Waiting for Godot: Adrian Bcnopc Macy Doherly Fox Stepehn Gilbert Charlotte Glassor Andrew McColough ]ane McGarry Michael McGloin Christopher Merrill Mark Piscilelli Jonathan Rodriguez- At katz Dirck Roosevelt Jeffrey Shane Richard Marine PURPOSE Edie Magnus Stove Carmichael Majie Zeller Music Faculty: (1 to r) Emory Fanning, Dana Holby, |ames Griesheimer, Vilo Imhas- ciani (on leave) George Todd Skipping a heal: |ohn Farmer If I had il lo do again I would skip college altogether and make a living as a professional organ donor. — Lora Schofield PfKI ' OSK 1():t Rave Lynn Merver The difference between Ihe Middlebury College of my fresh- man year .mil Ihe Middleburj College ol my senior year: 1978.5 HI74 = 4.5. — Sara Payne Lora Sehofield Sara Payne - f Maggie Cohn Janet (ones 11(4 I ' HRIHISK Meditating: Arthur Boulay Kim Harvie nhn Henderson ohn Slingerland Yoji Yoshizawa Religion — Philosophy Religion Faculty: (1 to r) Robert Form, Chaplain Charles Scott. David Eckel. Steven Rockefeller Ann Callahan f Ma rv Lee Susan McCafferty PURPOSE 105 Denise Brown § Douglas Brooks m ur ' j t Tiffany Nourse Philosophy Faculty: (1 to r) Jan Wald, Stan- ley Bates, Victor Nuovo. Lynne Baker Cathy Senzel 106 PURPOSE Theater In the wings: Andrew Weiss Faculty: (1 to r) Douglas Sprigg, Richard For- man, loann Klein, Frank Pilo, Chandler Potter Rick Weston (Double: Eng.) Ted Panicucci Debbie Fish PURPOSE 107 Natural Sciences Natural Sciences BIOLOGY 110 CHEMISTRY 115 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES 117 GEOLOGY 118 MATH 120 NORTHERN STUDIES 122 PHYSICS 123 1IIH I ' CKI ' OSK Social Sciences Social Sciences E CONOMICS 126 GEOGRAPHY 132 HISTORY 135 POLITICAL SCIENCE 141 PSYCHOLOGY 147 SOCIOLOGY ANTHROPOLOGY 150 INDEPENDENT SCHOLARS 151 PWRPOSK KM Peter Gottesfeld Nelson Lerner Biology Faculty: (1 to r) George Saul, Wayne Scott, Peter Wimmcr, Wayne Bell, Christopher Wat- ters, Mary Lynne Corn. Randall Landgrcn (not pictured) Howard Woodin, William Sinew alt (on leave) Duncan McDonald Daniel Novak l.ani Nicholson 10 PURPOSE p. Herb Kantor Wendy Grant Dave Hayase Brad Armstrong Sarah Jennings (right, Joint: Geog;) Kassler (left. Nor. Stud.) nna Davo Barton purposk in Sara Ellen Avery Michael Sirois Jennifer Cross Elizabeth G. Marsh Nina C. Lian W Li ' « £NTR HCtr Have Gilrain (rear ctr.) 112 PliRl ' osi: Betsy Clark Douglas Elson Robin Yurkevicz Randy Minard v ! _l . John Hecklau Wyn Hill Lost in the Carbon Cycle: Seott Corbett Elizabeth Gilles Richard Holvvay Stephen Kessler John Lyons Mary McHale Martha Merrows Margaret Olin Jonathan Sandman Priscilla Walker Andrew Watt Diana Westney Tedd Williams PURPOSE 113 Kate Pilsburv Carrie Goliger (Joint: Psych. Keith Johnsen Probably the best move I ' ve made since freshman year was to become an active member of the Middlebury com- munity: bartending at Seven South, joining the Lion ' s Club, living at Lake Dunmore, etc. I ' ve made a lot of good friends and had a lot of good times in this town that I ' ll never forget. — Keith Johnsen Ellen Abrams Paul Miniter (left) Tom Creighton 114 PURPOSE if Chemistry Faculty: (rear, 1 to r) Robert Gleason. Harry Evans, Edwin Pool, David Bennett (front, 1 to r) Charles Tatum, Grant Harnest, Kirk Roberts What is the biggest difference between me freshman year and me in my senior year? I ' m five years older, five years wiser, and 825,000 poorer. — Ellery Cadel Stuck between valence shells: Thomas Dux wL 3 ' Nathaniel B. Whitcombe Cindv Tolman Melissa Hancock Carr PURPOSE 115 Job Wallace Jonathan Glass Ellery Cadel ' You have two choices. Jamf cried, his hist lecture of the year: . . . slay behind with carbon and hydrogen, take your lunch-huckel to the works every morning with the faceless droves who can ' t wait to got in out of the sunlight — or move beyond. Silicon, boron, phos- phorous — these can replace carbon, and bond to nitrogen instead of hydrogen — move beyond life, toward the inorganic. Here is no Frailly, no mortality — here is Strength, and the Timeless. Then his well-known finale, as he wiped away the scrawled C-H on his chalk board and wrote, in cmormous Idlers. Si-N. Thomas Pynchon — Nathaniel B. Whilcombe Brian Calhoun 116 PURPOSE Alan Brown T T T Anne Buck Vernon Joshua Schimi Judith Russ David Foster Environmental Studies I came to Middlebury to be an Environmental Studies student. I learned something of phints and man, and kicked over a few pebbles, and thought I found some prelty crystals of thought. And yet I may be now more of a freshman than when 1 arrived. — Tom Smith Asleep in the ozone: Gwendolyn Blaine David Howell Elizabeth Johnston Philip Mann Wendy Menzel Richard Wiswall PURPOSE 11 Anne Todd Geology Facully: (I l r) David Claguo. Brewster Baldwin, Willi, mi ( llasslov. Thomas I). ivies Tom Smith T T T T T II I h,nl il lo do again. I would do il a lot more oflen. — |ason Rubin Grant Cushinf Charles Frank , ' fason Rubin mi PURPOSE - - .- wvrwwwwvvv ■ .- ' W ' 1 ' % Mark Mauriello Lisa Senior Chip Oaks Doug Esten Deborah Blank Being a Geology major ill Middlebury College is like floating in a humungous mug of Genessee draft accompanied by seven mutant goldfish and the second string of UVM ' s women ' s water- polo team while the sun is setting behind the glorious anortho- sites of the Adiroandac.ks. — Doug Esten Climbing everv mountain: Russell Bracket! Robert Matthews Michaels (Joint: Phys.) PURPOSE 119 David S. Besse Math Faculty: (1 to r) Ronald Bielli. Bruce Peterson, William Beckman, Betsy Bennett, Robert Martin (not pic- tured) Lee Badger (on leave) Michael Olinick. John Emerson Chip Hoch Douglas C. Pollard 120 PURPOSE Eiiliny pi: Michiirl Weaver o I Larry Petzing Kathleen M. Gregan (Eng.) Barbara J. Burnham Patricia A. Fox Kathv Bvr Richard Morris PURPOSE 121 ■r Elaine Corwin T T It T lack Marrinan T T If I had it to do again. I would have chosen any major at all that didn ' t require a thesis. — Mary Mackenzie Trina Kassler Mary Mackenzie Northern Studies If I had it to do again. I would have started Northern Studies junior year, gone north before 1 graduated and spent more time bushwacking through nearby forests and bogs. — Steve Martel Steve Marte 122 PURPOSE Gary Powell Skip Reith Julie Peck David Gustafsc Sam Carlton Physics Faculty: (1 lo r) Richard Wolfson, Robert Boyle. Robert Gould. Robert Siddon (on leave) Patrick Coonev. Frank Winkler. What are these other bums doing on the same page as me? — Gary Powell PURPOSE 123 O r T t r y li.Mi r kil) i—li mil ' r pi S 1976-1977 Pictures: The strength of the hills is hers also . . . hurrah! . . . the Treehouse . . . face to face. March 11. 1976 ' The Middlebury Women ' s ski team won the national championship held March 5-7 at Boyne Mt.. Mich. Undefeated going into the competition, they totalled 291.46 of a possible 300 points . . . May 6, 1976 The faculty approved Foundation Courses and Concentrations at Monday ' s meeting. Foundation Courses passed by an 83-21 margin. Concentrations passed by a vote of 77-27 . . . Paul Waterman ' 76, Stu- dent Forum Chairman, reported on stu- dents ' reaction to the proposal. He said the Forum approved Foundations by a 21-11 margin. Concentrations by a vote of 18-14 . . . Waterman also reported that in a stu- dent referendum, both Concentration and Foundation proposals were rejeeted. 884 students responded. 326 approved Founda- tions, 531 disapproved, and 27 were unde- cided. Concentrations were defeated by a 250-590 vote margin, with 44 students unde- cided. . . October 27. 1976 Jimmy Carter is the winner of a presi- dential pool conducted among a random sampling of Middlebury College students last week. The former Georgia governor was favored over incumbent President Ger- ald Ford by a margin of ten percentage points. Of the 77 percent who said they plan to vote November 3, 41 persent said they will cast their ballots for Carter, and 31 percent said they will put the IC next to the name of Gerald Ford. An unusual out- come for two weeks before the election, 23 percent said they were as yet undecided. However, national polls also indicate a sub- stantial number of voters currently unde- cided. The remaining five percent who said they will vote in the presidential election preferred candidates other than Carter or Ford. The most commonly named other was Eugene McCarthy who is running as an independent. One other vote was cast for the candidate of the 1976 Tuition Cut Party November 3. 1978 ' The Town of Middlebury ' s Transporta- tion Committee has proposed re-routing Route 7 so as to by-pass Middlebury village. After three year ' s of study, the committee ' s majority report recommended a Westerly by-pass which would re-route the highway through Middlebury College land . . .If the majority proposal were enacted. Route 7 would intersect Route 125 at the Bottom of College hill. This would mean that the high- way would cross college land on the wes- terly side and be clearly visible (and audi- ble) from dorms with western exposure like Hadley. Milliken, Kelly and Pearsons . . . November 10, 1976 I am siek of rain! All it ever does here is rain! Muddlebury College! And if it is not raining, chances are that it will either be snowing or gale force winds will be blow- ing in sub-zero temperatures. Certainly for S6000 a year students should be able to get better weather than this! . . . March 9. 1977 ' Three senior tenured faculty members recently submitted letters to tbe Board of Trustees expressing serious discontent about the manner in which College Presi- dent Olin Robison is running the college. The letters . . . expressed grave concern on certain matters about the way in which the college was being run and on President Robison ' s leadership. Robison discussed the letters with both the faculty and trustee members of the Conference committee, and after a subsequent review, the Board of Trustees claimed to find little basis for tbe complaints. . . March 9. 1977 Editorial: Many people these days are quick to claim that college students are rid- den with apathy — especially in regard to politics and public policy issues. Overall, we believe that simply isn ' t true. It ' s time to step away from the majority view and look at students from another angle. Students are involved. Perhaps they aren ' t caught up In the fever of political demonstrations and presidential campaigns, as they were five or six years ago when the Big Bad Issues of Vietnam and Nixon were around — but they ' re nevertheless working on commu- nity projects such as the United Way fund- raising drive, the Bristol Summer Camp, and the Big Brother Big Sister program. The energy and concern expended by stu- dents in those areas should not be ignored. A focus on local activities isn ' t as exciting as a focus on national issues and politics, but its importance must not be disregarded. The foundations of our society live with the individual, in his or her local sphere. Stu- dent involvement in WRMC-FM. the Wom- en ' s Union, and the Middlebury College Activities Board (MCAB) is just as signifi- cant in creating the substance of our society as are. perhaps, decisions made in Wash- ington. . . November 2. 1977 Close to 200 people squeezed into Mun- roe Faculty Lounge Sunday night to discuss the pros, cons and future of Winter Term at Middlebury College . . . Possible calendar changes for Winter Term, how much time should be devoted to a Winter Term course, grading and Winter Term ' s relation to the regular semester were some specific sub- jects discussed ... a group was formed at the end of the meeting to draft a Winter Term proposal ... It will be presented to students at Ail College Meeting Night . . . Depending on students ' reaction to it. Forum will give the proposal a final vote of approval . . . and then submit it to tbe Edu- cational Council . . . The Educational Council is currently evaluating Winter Term . . . members of the Council. . . said there is no disposition to do away with Winter Term, but that there was some dis- satisfaction with it among faculty and stu- dents. . . November 30, 1977 To the Editor We hate to ask an indis- creet question, but whatever happened to dating at Middlebury College. It does exist at other colleges, and we think it ' s time we took a good look at the reasons for its absence here. Is it the size of the school? Maybe there are too few people to choose from. Is it the homogeneity of the school? They say opposites attract so maybe we are too similar. Is it the living arrangements? Maybe the coed dorms breed indifference to people of the opposite sex . . . Another possible reason is the workload. There is a lot of pressure here and perhaps that leaves too little time for dating . . . Guys have sug- gested that girls ask them out. Although in these liberated days this is indeed possible, many girls are still hesitant to do this, hav- ing been brought up with the traditional view that guys should ask girls out ... if members of both sexes would just make an effort, maybe casual dating would be redis- covered. Signed: Names withheld by request . . . PURPOSE 125 1 . y J i Mi J ms Don Parsons 1 Kim Ulrich er-:aue WINE Economics Faculty: (1 to r) Kenneth Guentner, Paul Sommers, Michael Claudon, Klaus Wolff. |ohn Craven, Richard Cornwall (on leave) David Smith feff Karam Douglas Tucker Jenkins 126 PURPOSE Marilyn White Russell Lowe Jim Levasseur Mike Souza i -. ' Tom Leblanc Being an Economics major at Middlnhury College is like well, uh, sort of , . . well, you know . . . — Mike Souza Frank DeLuca (Double: Span.) Edward Russell (Poli. Sci.) PURPOSE I 127 Darren Zecher Jay Newberry Jack Sanderson (left) Ken Peters George Varga Peter Mandei (Eng.) Mark Nejame Jack Walsh Everyone looks a lot older than they did freshman year — no longer like the ID picture taken when we all had hangovers after the terrece parly! I guess il ' sgood — I look terrible on my ID. — Darren Zecher 128 PURPOSE Ol(M E „ s James Higgins (Double: Ital.) WF I Tom Harris Alessandro Guerrini-Maraldi (Double: Ital.) Eric E. Chnrashore James Daukas Crashing on Wall Street: Donna Alfano William Clark Mark Forsyth Baird Gourlay John Hunt Richard Johnston Michael Kann Michel Lepeltier David Littlefield Sylvia Lyche John Morine David McCallum Richard Morriss Frederick Morser Richard Move Peter Savitz Sometimes the lights all shining on me other times I cm barely see; lately it occurs to me what a long strange trip it ' s been! Grateful Dead — [amcs Daukas PURPOSE 129 Being an Economics major .it Middlo- burj College is liko rating a raw fish. — John Pardee Wright Dave Magida Rob Rowe Peter Briggs S ii k .. Michael Minor Stan Glass John Pardee Wright 130 PURPOSE Laura Lee Schaefer Allan F. Rau Jeff Blauner Carol 1 lolmes Geoffrey Anderson For I am convinced thai neither death nor life, neither impels nor demons, nei- ther the present nor the future, nor any powers, neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God thai is in Christ )esus our Lord. Rom, ins li:2H- 29 — Ceoffrey Anderson ohn McDonald purposk i:u . G e o r a P h y Gen Howe Chip Hagy Faculty: (1 to r) Robert Churchill. Wallace Elton, Perry Hanson. Barry Glick (on leave) Rowland Mick If I had it to do again, 1 would save the frats. — Chip Hagy £fc .r. j?  3fV  V%MV Anne Millar Skip Weinbel 132 purpose I J; V William Phillips Porter, Jr. Kerin Malmstrom (Joint: Chinese) Noel Quinton ' Reading National Geographic: Ronald Biederman Elaine Daughtry Stepehn Leahy lim Mcintosh Sherill Sanderson Being a Georgraphy major at Middlebury College means never knowing who your advisor will be the next year. — Vicky Valar Marion Taylor (Ger.) Vicky Valar 133 The students and Administration have become verj conversative in the past four years. It ' s hard to say whether the change is for better or worse. All I r.an say is it ' s nol half as much fun. — Rob- ert McLaughrj Karin Way = ID I H ' l ■■' ■■1RI ■I ■B ■I « : IS ink JB ■ibis ' t ■r ■iii f ■i a o|.| b ■i m inn -  ' i ■■■-■■Tom Howe Dave Emerson Robert J. McLaughry Steve Vorhees (ri ht) 134 PURPOSE Keith Trauner History Faculty: Travis Jacobs, Nicholas Clif- ford. John Spencer. William Catton. John McCardell (not pictured) Thomas Cox, David Macey, Pardon Tillinghast. Marjorie Lamberti If I had it to again. I would enlist in the Marines. — Keith Trauner Being a History German major at Middlehury College is like a beanstalk . . . isn ' t it? — Peter Hollands Pat Durkin Jeanne Goldman PURPOSE 135 .. 3 David Lauten Pamela Cross Randy Trumbull Suzanne Witt John MacKenna Why wasn ' t I a phys. ed. major? I was too busy at WRMC, The Campus and Sunderland. Besides, it would give me no answer to people who ask about my future, while now I can say I will open a diner of historic foods and cogitate the meaning of men ' s lives on a time line to eternity. (It stops them cold.) — Pamela Cross I ' m the wrong guy to ask what being a History major at Middlebury College is like. History and I have not kept serious company. — John MacKenna Peter Hollands 136 PURPOSE Karen Cassedy Randall J. Sabia MEg Dana r ' ffY Jay Moore Matt Winslow (Psych.) When it comes down to it. what was the best thing about Middlebury? The Rosebud! — Nicholas David Morgan Line Jackson Nicholas David Morgan There ' s a feeling of camaraderie between History majors which you start to notice and appre- ciate around junior year because of the seminar requirements and which continues through the rest of your History courses and especially the dreaded thesis. — Karen Cassedy PURPOSE 137 Wasting time: Perrin Babcock Lee Geary lames Goodwin Mark Gordon Peter Kenyon Earle Litzenberger Evan Lucy Timothy McCarthy Neal McNealus Sarah Nichols |ohn Whitton Whitney Wilcox Carol Yeomans Jan Mahony Donna Brewer Carolyn Shears Kim Collins Mark Collins Jennet Walker Doernberg 138 PURPOSE Henry R. Heyburn. Jr. WHITI from t Ann C. Pagnotta f- J -.- | Peter Greene A m Michael Parker Being a History major at Middlebury College is like staring at the bottom of a mug. after swallowing your last sip of beer, and realizing it ' s time to open another bottle. — John Coates If I had it to do again. I would do it pretty much the same way. It was a great time, and believe it or not. I learned something. — Michael Parker € Otto Matheke PURPOSE 139 t : -3  . Susan Peters Pam Woodward John Kenneth Sowles Terry Jones Jenny Skoble Karen Sweeney (Double: Am. Lit.) 140 PURPOSE Bill Watlington (right) T T ▼ T Andy Gyory Tom Conant (Eng.) ▼ ▼ ▼ T Political Science Faculty: (standing, 1 to r) Hugh Wheeler. John Keeler, Murray Dry. David Rosen- berg (seated. 1 to r) Harris Thurher, Paul Nelson. Andrew Dunham Julie Robbins - 78DnilJ ■f .. jyWB 3ti Bill Grassie PURPOSE 141 Being .1 Political Science major ;it Middlebury Col- lege me, nis losing your sense of humor when it ' s time hi Till (ml one of these questionnaires. — Teresa Mansfield Teresa Mansfield Nancy Grant ■■■■■HMU Elizabeth G. Stouder 142 PURPOSE shua Holleb Vicky Stein s Michael J. Elwin WW ' John B. Goodman Curtis Singleton Susan Sondheim Rob Kirsch Tim Harvey (Physics) Tom Porter PURPOSE 143 i - - Kim Fenton Rob Downing Darcy Bonfils How do you make a million dollars easily? Tell everyone the alibi is closing in a week. Ihen sell outrageously expensive T- shirls. memorial photographs, raise all your liquor prices — and never close down. — Darcy Bonfils Susan Bonder Dan Jacobs Anne Barney 14-1 I ' llRl ' OSK Mary Weidlein Terri A. Dumas 1 Maryann Preskul Anne Tomasello rs i- William Whelan Joanellen Sullivan PURPOSE 145 Campaigning: Pamela Abouzeid William Brower Jay Davis Susan Huffman Theodore Kramer John Putnam Elanor Tillinghast Jeffrey Tucker Thomas Plant 146 PURPOSE , Gilbert P. Martin T T T T Greg Tinker Psycho- logy Faculty:??? Jeffrey Eaddy Jeff Jonathan PURPOSE 147 Lisa Johnson Roy Gerstenberger Kathryn A. Jones (Joint: Bio.) Free associating: Kurt Uhlman Abigail Wilson Alice Lee Jim Douglas (Joint: Bio.) 148 PURPOSE Leslie O ' Hare John P. Cooke Lenore Alston Joan O ' Brien Tom Snitzer Peter Rittenhouse PURPOSE 149 Dili DHUMtlf mss. ! I 1 ' ] Lrrnimin I Hi tCHING s o c • i o 1 o g y Faculty: (I to r) Rudolph ll.inlr. David Andrews. |amcs McGough, Peggy Nc son ■S Geoff Sather Grog Birsky 1! Brooksie Stevens Betsey Flanagan Socio-lizing: CharlnsGill, Lit Hill. David Martens, Jonathan Shadd 150 PURl ' ONK !t im7 •ft • i [ mm m Jack Sutherland (ec.) John Watson (Hist.) Mike O ' Hara (Joing: Psych.) Caren Paul (Double: Psych.) The biggest difference between the Middlebury College of my freshman year and the Middlebury College of my senior year: I now know how to knit. — Lisa Salyard Carol Zuber Independent Scholars Striving for greater independence: Glenn Cray ' Ned Farquhar Richard Tarlov (Env. Stud. Mary Ann Hayes PURPOSE 151 ; .?:■■■•■-•■' £ a; 152 PATRONAGE a (T ( you may be wondering how we plan to sneak some reference to patronage into the witty of phil- osophical remarks that appear on this division page. For a while there, we were wondering too. But then we figured, why bother? What really is there to say? The town keeps the college in busi- ness, isn ' t that the way it ' s always been? It never fails that once a year some ambitious reporter for the Campus (usually a freshman) feels inspired (if not obligated) to write an article on town-gown relations. Every year the article reaf- firms that the townies like the preppies, that stu- dents aren ' t thought of as strictly a tribe of beer- guzzling, noise-making, spoiled, rich brats, and that Middlebury College and Middlebury town should expect to continue to coexist peacefully for at least another year, until the next ambitious, inspired freshman reporter comes along. Like we said, why bother? Unless, of course, you ' re one of those people who takes seriously the criticism that Middlebury students rarely get to know the town at all during their four years here except in a very superficial way, and that nine out of every ten of us stays locked away in our own separate, little world up here on the hill. You ' re not one of those people, are you? PATRONAGE PATRONAGE 153 The Road Not Taken Two roads diverged in a yellow wood. And sorry I could not travel both And be one traveler, long I stood And looked down one as far as I could To where it bent in the undergrowth; Then took the other, asjust as fair. And having perhaps the better claim. Because it was grassy and wanted wear; Though as for that passing there Had worn them really about the same And both that morning equally lay In leaves no step had trodden black. Oh, I kept the first for another day! Yet knowing how way leads on to way I doubted if I should ever come back. I shall be telling this with a sigh Somewhere ages and ages hence: Two roads diverged in a wood, and I — I took the one less traveled by. And that has made all the difference. in +he %W o£ AA.ddlebury, Vt. 1M I ' ATKONACK S EARS ■HBJSRSrv. ' v ' I ' ATKONACK isr Steak House ' sAh Steak House 7 SOUTH 1 27 muuLLKVizy inn mf B 4fl i a. i m ill III 111 EMCAULIFFE OFFICE SUPPLY CENTER 156 PATRONAGE NT FARMS DAIRY CARUSO, ...„. AGLIA PATRONAGE 157 MIDDLEBURY COLLEGE FOOD SERVICE 158 PATRONAGE n DESABRAIS i LAUNDRY F. R. CHURCHILL AND SONS INC. •V I ' i I.-: ■i M. PATRONAGE i 159 The first thing that flashed into my mind the very first time I saw downtown Middlebury was: Wow! A whole, brand new downtown I can explore, and it ' s so small not even I could get lost in it. After four years at Middlebury. I think I can safely say thai I ' m at least somewhat familiar with every store and establishment in town except one — the bank. By the time I finish making the rounds at all the other places, I never have any money left to deposit. (F ' lease don ' t sign my name if you print this. My mother would explode if she knew.) I remember the very first time I came to Middlebury (from Boston) ... a worker from the Admissions staff came to meet me at the bus station which was then on Route 7. As we turned onto Main Street up by the Congre- gational Church, she said to me: This is what ' s considered the downtown area of Middlebury. If you yawn, you ' ll miss it. I kind of get a kick out of a resident Vermonter hav- ing that kind of a s ense of humor, so just as a lark I went through this great, melodramatic yawn. When I opened my byes again we were parked in front of Proctor. I don ' t remember exactly what I said, but it was something to the effect of, Jeez. I think the Admissions worker kind of got a kick out of that. S l i Msj m EE ' S RADIO AND TELEVISION SB THE CREST ROOM AKERY LANE FOOD shop ; 160 PATRONAGE !fa FOSTER ■COLLEGE STORE BIKE SKI TOURING CTR. MOTOBECAHE NISCOUNr RALEIGH PATRONAGE 161 M: MIDDLEBURY OFFICE SUPPLY L AZARUS department store Slag ►:♦; ! M m CAR WEYBRIDGE FOREIGN AR REPAIR C GS Jfi 162 PATRONAGE PATRONAGE 163 THE DOG TEAM a x FACTORY OUTLET STORE DIRECT FROM OUR FACTORIES FAMOUS NAME BRAND MERCHANDISE LADIESWEAR • MENSWEAR • LUGGAGE SAVINGS UP TO 50% AND MORE ENTRANCE ♦ bUTLET ENTRANCE 164 PATRONAGE if • F3 l_L ' re 4I « n  1 - vvmbtL. K L 1 H i lu ! rs. WBW ■' S ■m-l £- . . r -rer The Lyons Place Burn. For Survivors ' iy Dogs: w Breed i Allen PATRONAGE 165 :s they o v are don ' t -guess . CARRARA Ml..- ■h JOSEPH P. CARRARA AND SONS, INC. 166 PATRONAGE COLUMBIA CHASE CORPORATION PATRONAGE 167 MS - ,, .-as- • aP  5; B I-QHl£V ' £ FOLEY ' S LINEN SERVICE 168 PATRONAGE SNOW BOWL PATRONAGE 169 BREADLOAF CONSTRUCTION Where Industry and Environment Meet 170 PATRONAC.K ' TO] alley oice Fire Consumes Mister Up ' s Restaurant Anon pOft«biMy umim ' ittv  ti | tlOn Tenure Decision Stirs Student Junk Food Protest at Middlebury College j S( ; n ° o1 -- . What To Dn f BUSINESS PATRONS ALL GOOD THINGS BENJAMIN BROTHERS DRY CLEANERS CHAMPLAIN CONSTRUCTION COLLEGE TOWN SHOP THE CUPBOARD HENRY F. FAGAN WHOLESALE INC. MAPLE MANOR MOTEL QUENSOL LAUNDRY SEVERANCE CITGO STORE II STOVES ' N - THINGS PATRONAGE 171 Parent Patrons Jean Bruce Ackerman Mr. Mrs. Grover Ahmann Mr. Mrs. Walter Ancey Mr. Mrs. Harlan Anderson Mr. Mrs. Edward J. Audett Mr. Mrs. Howard Baetjer, II Mr. Mrs. Morton Baum In Memory of Mr. Ernest Belville Mrs. Jean F. Bevans Mr. Mrs. James Bonfils Bill Janet Boyd Dr. Mrs. Timothy F. Brewer, III J. M. Brock Mr. Mrs. Henry S. Bromley, Jr. Mr. Mrs. Lloyd W. Brown Mr. Mrs. William F. Bucher A. L. Burridge Mr. Mrs. J. F. Byrd Mrs. Gladys P. Campoli Dr. Mrs. Keith Clarke C. J. Cole Mr. Mrs. Allen V. Collins Mr. Mrs. Lindsay Collins Mr. Mrs. James H. Cooke Mrs. Elizabeth Corsey Jane L. Cray Ruth Robert Cross Mr. Mrs. Thomas Culp Dr. Peter K. Cunningham-Dunlop Mrs. C. Curran A. M. Currier, Jr. Mr. Mrs. William D. Dana, Jr. Mrs. Gloria J. Davis Mr. Mrs. Robert Davis Mr. Mrs. Cleo Deregibus Dr. Mrs. Martin W. Donner 172 PATRONAGE Mrs. John Emery Mr. Mrs. Malcolm Fish Alton B. Flack Harriet R. Frankel Nancy Ben Fraser Dr. Mrs. Rowland B. French A. Friend Mr. Mrs. Daniel B. Gale Mr. Mrs. Robert L. Geiger Nancy Jim Gladstone Mr. Mrs. Herbert Haft Robert Brenda Harnish Dr. Mrs. William Harris Mr. Mrs. David W. Hay E. M. Hayden, Jr. Dr. Mrs. E. F. Hecklau Mr. Mrs. John O. Hedden Mike Betty Hetternan Mr. Mrs. James E. Houlihan Mr. Mrs. Richard J. C. Hoskin Mr. Mrs. David R. Howell Mr. Mrs. Gerald Hoyt Mrs. George Jenkins Mr. Mrs. William Johnson Mr. Mrs. William R. Jonathan Charles Ruth Jones G. Jorgensen M.D. Mr. Mrs. Frank H. Kettle Mr. Mrs. James D. Lafferty Mr. Mrs. R. A. Loveys Mrs. Russell T. Lowe Mr. Mrs. John J. McCafferty Mr. Mrs. Donald D. McCuaig The McNamee Family James H. MacCornack Mr. Mrs. William S. Magnus PATRONAGE 173 Mr. Mrs. John Mansfield Virginia Harry Martens Dr. Mrs. Raymond Mercer Mr. Mrs. Evan Miller Mr. Mrs. Robert P. Mooney Patricia A. Moore Dr. Mrs. Harry H. Moorhead Mr. Mrs. Seymour Morris Mr. Mrs. Bruce Nicholas Mr. Mrs. John D. Noonan Ambassador Mrs. Donald R. Norland Mr James J. Nyberg Mr. Mrs. Joseph Novak Mr. Mrs. J. Philip O ' Hara Colonel Mrs. George K. Osborn, III Dr. Mrs. James I. Peters, Jr. Dr. Mrs. H. Petzing Mr. Mrs. Harry J. Phillips Mr. Mrs. Frank W. Plant, Jr. Mr. Mrs. Harold J. Pohlad Mr. Mrs. Frank Porter Dr. Richard W. Porter Mr. Mrs. John G. Power A. Blaikie Purvis Mr. Mrs. George B. Rittenhouse Mr. Mrs. Donald Ritter Mrs. L. N. Robbins Mr. Mrs. Charles Rockwell Eugene Iris Rotberg Mr. Mrs. Murray M. Rubin Steven A. Ruggiero Mr. Mrs. Edward J. Russell Ruthie ' s Run, Inc. Mr. Mrs. James Sabia Mr. Mrs. R. L. Sandman Mr. Mrs. W. H. Schilling, Jr. 174 PATRONAGE John L. Schimel M.D. Mr. Mrs. James S. Schoff, Jr. Mr. Mrs. Charles F. Schreier, Jr. Mr. Mrs. Robert Seavey Charles Joann Senzel Paul T. Shannon Mr. Mrs. Robert Shealor Dr. Robert N. Shears Dr. Mrs. Raymond J. Sirois Mr. Mrs. H. N. Smit Mr. Mrs. Stanley R. Souza Dr. Mrs. Burt D. Stern Mr. Mrs. William F. Stifel Michael Studdert-Kennedy Mr. Mrs. Vincent Sullivan Lois Strater Ridener Mrs. Annie L. Tabah Alvin Tarlov M.D. Mr. Mrs. Moses Taylor lb LisaThomsen Mr. Mrs. John Tokolish, Jr. Kristen Traff Mr. Mrs. R. Trauner Mr. Mrs. David D. Wallace Mr. Mrs. Joseph J. Walsh Mr. Mrs. Thomas E. Ward, Jr. Mr. Mrs. Howard Warren Mr. Mrs. Sidney J. Watson J. A. Weinberg, Jr. Mr. Mrs. James Whitton Arthur Doris Woodward Mr. Mrs. John R. Woolford, Jr. L. P. Wragg Mr. Mrs. K. Zakuta Martha John Zeller PATRONAGE 175 ■176 PARTING Davis Atwater Le Chateau f-. Old Chapel ' Administrative Offices J s i P Voter Hall tortg F. ld M 1 d d 1 e b u r y c o 1 1 e M 1 d d 1 e b u r y v e r m o n t
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.