Princeton University - Bric A Brac Yearbook (Princeton, NJ)
- Class of 1961
Page 1 of 320
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 320 of the 1961 volume:
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w 1 rw: M MW 'A . ,wwf 95 1, 3? i . ,J if af .w,k.--, L in ' - 2? bf -. I' H Oi I . M4 , ,M A Q, I Q! Q .f ! 1 I 'Q i :I M I 1 , I l J 4 F. Q v J A' .. X 'E --Q - S .vip 1 p, Q 0 4 .I '5.,5 7 ' I X 5 V i ,gs ' '. Q. . tl i f A 1,7 , A pg-4 A -' .W yr , . , f 5 K Q ,Q 3 My , Qu, U If N A 04 Q, mf V -vm-R. ,g.w3fi.s-AT 'hx f. . N94 , J 1 9' fu-4l'x.,. 4--P1 gm' F , M N - lm W 1 p 531. I ww wa ,r ff- 4 ...D . ' 4, W- Lv' l 'Q g R- .c' 'Q 'X 'n + K QW 1 4 , ' ' I , i X :fi . 1 QW W 1 wwf'E2ff.xif, ,.-,, 4 ...J THEI9.6I BRIC-A-BRAC VOLUME LXXXIII PRINCETON UNIVERSITY STAFF John Bevan John D. Muzzy Franklin G. Browne John H. Clymer Stuart L. Harris Eugene' L. Martin Richard A. Curtis Edward M. Holland Co-Chairman Co-Chairman Business Manager Executive Editor Managing Editor Managing Editor Subscription Manager Advertising Manager rf' 1 4 .. v, , 1 .1 t l L Lute this spring as another class tlvstcntls the steps ol' Xztssun Hull an rotntnenteinent. l,l'llltt'l0ll. like thc: newly gil'1ltllllllt'il Seniors, will be entering zt new em in its history. The University will ht- striving with cu-ii grczttet' ellotts to live up to its nlotto ol Hl71'll1CC- ton in tht' Nation s serxlce . In the llltml issue ol tht: lim-ztflirrrz we liztvt- zlttcfinptetl to 1't't'ot'tl this tfrezttei' m cinphztsis. XVL' hztxc also tried to t'2llJllIl'C the Hl7l'll1i'C- ton lfXlJL'l'lt'IltK'HfllS lleeting llI0lIICIllS1lll4l its timeless- ness. In these tztsks we do not cluiin to haue set flown at complete 1'et'ot'cl hnt here yon will lincl :tt least Il stah :tt what liztplmetictl in llltitlftil. XXX: hope that yon will hncl the 1061 Hill'-Il-lgltll' not onlx zu source ol hztncly llll0l'llI2lllUIl hut also at tztngilmlc' ntetnento ol the iezny containing within its pages inznn pleztsznit nienlories now :intl in veins to coine. Y Q m l n .Q Be' agp yi sr X X 52 W 'mi 5 ix a 3 il N-Nw., Ei es -V x 'ff' W-...WM V X X 5 , Ri ,X R W, , K , xi H5 X x QNX xx? X . K wi fy lx M Q Y, nf 5 ff I x RN Wx L i X xg Q , Q Ng W W f 7 , .WL W X33 K if f za ff x ,S 2 X 9 'iffy R A N wwf: A 6 'n ,1,-Wmfgg Mme if M as X 5 K 5' ft .- In nge- T fl! 7 -A 7 ,,,,,MV. 5 if , 5 H 3 EK I t 2 D gs 5 5 L1 53 .Q 5 5 an E , 5 21- M -.ef ik .',, Q 5, L 4 DEDICATION ADLAI E. STEVENSON Princeton has produced many outstanding public figures. In recent years the most outstanding of these has been Adlai E. Stevenson, '22. Mr. Stevenson has a distinguished record as a politician. He served as Governor of Illinois from 1948 to 1952, and twice as the Democratic candidate he ran unsuccessfully for the Presidency of the United States, once in 1952 and again in 1956. In 1961 newly-elected President John F. Kennedy, '39, appointed this famous Prince- tonian to the post of United Nations' Ambassador. The aggressive, two-fisted stubbornness of the politi- cian, the acute legal insight of the lawyer, and the deep personal conviction of a great liberal have all been mixed in the character of Adlai Stevenson. His political friends and enemies alike attest to his sin- cerity as a politician and to his dedicated, effective leadership of his party through some of its most trou- blesome years. He saw himself as the leader of the opposition, and he gave his political foes ample evi- dence of his scrutinizing presence. He is one of the few modern ofiice-seekers who have been able to com- bine intellectualism and political popularity, and maintain even in defeat a devoted personal following. These qualities enable him today to fit admirably into his United Nations' Ambassadorship. This yearbook is not dedicated to Mr. Stevenson with regard to his political affiliation or with regard to the ideas and ideology of his party. Rather, by the dedication of the 1961 lirir-a-Bmc to Adlai E. Steven- son, we would wish to emphasize the admirable record of this man as an outstanding example of Princeton in the Nation's Service. IN MEMCDRIAM . his f M Q at , s Q 1 , . ff. -lwsf i H as 'Zg fia l 51 V A .L,1', fm-' MICHAEL C. KOPLINER 'l'odav's undergraduates, proceeding naively on the assumption that they have devised a novel brand ol hell to raise, would be sadlv dellated to learn that one reason a proctor appears so proniptlv is that Mike Kopliner has seen it all belore, in principle, at any rate, at least twice. This was said concerning Michael Charles Kopliner, a Princeton University Proctor lor thirtvhseven vears, and head ol this non- unilorined force lor the past lilteen. who died on -lulv 2l, l960 ol' cancer at the Princeton Hospital. A veteran ol two wars, a fornier nleinher ol the Princeton Borough Council, a tennis and squash rac- quets enthusiast, he was known to thousands ol' Princeton ahunni as Nlike . His service to the Uni. versity spanned the administrations ol' Presidents john Grier Hihben, Harold XV. Dodds, and Robert lf. Goheen. Under the last two administrations he was in charge ol the cainpus proctor lorce which has as its responsibility the maintenance of discipline on the Princeton t2lIll1JUS. Active in nianv civic activities. including the direc- ton of the Playground Program, Boy Scout work and the First Aid Unit, he was a strong advocate ol all types ol recreational facilities. He participated enthusias- tically in vouth ventures, and sponsored the Knights ol' Columbus, iXinerican Legion. and other organiza- tions. Until a lew years ago he played squash alniost daily and was particularly concerned with the develop- nient of President Goheen's game. Mike was a Princeton landmark. His presence on canipus was deeply lelt lor thirty years, and his loss is a great one to the thousands ol undergraduates that he helrieiuled. 7 X N i- E WVNN - E C gf X, D X W EN E Qi E X um if EM WR!! W RM! I ' f 52 J 5, ...J I l'lm1uln lzlilallmcllm Xli'lllil'S THE PRINCETON SCENE .. 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A ,. 1A A ' fn '1.: 1 1 i 1 gag 3555, if The pinnacle of Firestone Alemorial Library is the most recent example of Tudor Gothic architecture on the Princeton campus. Within this Gothic shellv are what President Dodds considered to he the three fundamental elements of a zmiversity: faculty, stu- dents, and books. Faculty offices and seminar rooms, miles of lI00kSh6l1lC.Sf, and hue hundred student carrels are united under the roof of this humanities labora- toryv to give the student body an opportunity for integrated learning in a stimulating intellectual en- vironment. 4 4 1 ESQNIVERSITY v CL Wi 62313 PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRINCETON, NEW IERSEY PRESIDENT,S xzooM May 1, 1961 To the Class of 1962: This 83d edition of the Bric-a-Brac records, through a series of telling glimpses, much of the wide variety of life and activity that marks current-day Princeton. As such this Bric has a great deal more than nostalgia to offer its readers. -- No individual can sample, during his undergraduate years, more than a relatively small part of all that Princeton offers. Even the most perceptive can catch, while in course, no more than a fraction of the sweep and flow of vital activity -- of intellectual searching and testing -- which characterizes the various departments of instruction and extends their outreach widely into the world of our times. The University as a community fosters the full life and embraces therefore for its students the values of play as well as of study, of self- chosen extracurricular as well as curricular pursuits. But at the center is a commitment to the life of the mind, in the free pursuit of truth, for the benefit of mankind. And it is here that a university exercises its most indispensable role in times of world-wide strain and tension such as these -- namely, by drawing on the best of the past to push forward our individual and collective capacities for forward looking and responsible action in a future where so much is unknown. This large and essential view is mirrored throughout the Bric-a-Brac and as such it provides a valued service to the University and to its readers I am therefore most happy at this opportunity to commend the editors of this volume of the Bric, and to recommend their product to all who may pause to peruse this-page. Sincerely, RO THE PRESIDENT BERT FRANCIS GOHEEN, PH.D THE DEANS DR. lcRiQxtlAi1 S. l'llNlll-l became Dean ol' the College in 1955. Previously he had been a member of the English Department and during XVorld XVar ll served as both Assistant to the Dean ol the Faculty and as Secretary ol' the Committee on Scholastic Guidance. Under the direction of his ollice lalls the administra- tion ol' all undergraduate studies and various com- mittees and agencies which are concerned with the development ol the academic side of undergraduate activities. .Xlong this line the Dean ol the College is responsible lor the enforcement of the rules and standards connected with scholarship. Beliore joining the Princeton laculty, Dean Finch taught in the Department ol' English at Cornell Unia versity, from which he has a Master of .Xrts degree. He came to tl1is university in 15136 and alter the war served as Executive Secretary ol' the Princeton Program lor Servicemen returning to college. On the extra- curricular side, Dean Finch has been active on the Borough of Princeton's Board ol' Education and on boards ol' several other Princeton organizations. DR. lJoUc:1..'xs likown, Dean ol' the Faculty, came to Princeton as a member ol' the class ol' llllil, earned his Masters and Ph.D. degrees here and then joined the laculty as an instructor ol Economics in l92l. AX member ol' President Hoover's Emergency Connnittee lor Employment during the early years ol the depres- sion, he was later one of the economists who aided in the planning ol the Social Security Act ol' I935. For several years he served the Government as an expert consultant on labor and during the war advised the XX'ar Department and the Secretary ol' State on James Douglas Brown matters in his lield. In l94ti Dr. Brown succeeded the late Dean Robert, K. Root as Dean ol the Faculty. He continued as Director ol the Industrial Relations Sec- tion in the Department ol Egonomics and Sociology until W55. As Dean ol' the Faculty he is responsible for the coordinaticni ol' curriculum, stall, and policy among the many academic activities ol' the llniversitv. Dean Brown also has authority over the departments ol instruction and other matters insolar as the el'l'ective- ness and duties ol the faculty are concerned. -IOS!-Ql'll CI.llf'l'OX lirotx, a member ol' the faculty since 15329, was named Dean ol' Princeton llniversity's School ol Engineering in l95fl. Dean Elgin realizes the importance to an engineering curriculum ol a broad base of both science and liberal arts as opposed to the approach to engineering through specialized technologies and skills, and the programs ol' study in the school reflect it. Alter receiving his Master ol' Science degree from the l7niversity ol' Virginia, Dean Elgin came to Prince- ton, where he earned his Ph.D. From l939 on he served as Chairman ol the Department ol' Chemical Engineering and l'rom l95l to 1954 was ,-Xssociate Dean ol the school. During Hlorld Il he served the government as a member ol the National Defense Research Committee and while on a leave of absence from the university, worked at the S.iX.M. Laboratories ol' the Manhattan Project. Dean Elgin is a Trustee ol the Proctor Foun- dation and is an active member ol' several national scientilic organizations. etennah St tnton Finch, Ph.D. Ph.D., Litt.D., L.H.D.. l,l.D. joseph Cllilton Elgin, Ph.D. 1X'illiam D'Olier Lippincott, AB. Ernest Cordon, B.D.,S.'1'.M. Donald Ross Hamilton, Ph D When XX'i1.1.1Axi 1J'Oi.i1-LR l,IPPliNCO'l 1' was appointed to the newly created office ol' Dean of Students in 1954 he became one ol' the youngest Deans in the Univer- sity's history. As Assistant Dean of the College for the live years previous to his appointment, he had been in charge of the Administration's contact with the extra- curricular organizations. ,Xs Dean of Students he supervises the non-academic activities, including undergraduate social lile and stu- dent behavior. Chairman of many faculty committees, Dean Lippincott is best known to the undergraduate body as Chairman of the Faculty Committee on Dis- cipline and for those halted members of his oflice, the prof-tors. A member of the class of 1941 and an honor student in the Department ol Modern Languages and Litera- tures, Dean Lippincott went from Princeton into the Army and served as a second lieutenant in the Field Artillery. He saw action in the Pacific and rose to the rank of Major. Off campus he is active in many local organizations. After one year as Presbyterian Chaplain of the XVest- minster Foundation, IQRN1-3s'r CoRDoN became Dean of the Chapel in 1955. He spent his undergraduate years at St. Andrews University and did graduate work at Edinburgh and London University, Hartford Theo- logical Seminary, and Clasgow University. Author of many articles in theological. educational, and popular journals, Dean Gordon has written a book ol' sermons, A Ijwirzg Faith for Today. He was a captain in the Argyll and Sutherland High- landers in Yllorld 1Var Il, and spent three and a half years as a prisoner of war after he was captured trying to escape from Sumatra. During this time he taught and served as a lay minister to his fellow prisoners. After the war he continued his studies and in 1950 was ordained a minister of the Church of Scotland. In the past years Dean Gordon has conducted special Religious Emphasis Meek services on several univer- sity campuses. He is also the founder and lirst Presi- dent of the Church Service Society of the USA., a Fellow of the Victoria Institute, and a member of various academic societies. In -july of 1958 DoN,xI.n R. l'lAXI1LTON succeeded Dr. Hugh Taylor as Dean of the Gradute School. Since 'joining the faculty in 19-lli he had taught both undergraduate and graduate courses in physics as well as conducting a variety of research projects. For two years his ability in his lield earned him the position of Cyrus Fogg Brackett Professor of Physics. Dean Hamilton came to Princeton in the Class of 1935 and won Highest Honors in Physics qualifying for membership in both Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma Xi. He took his degree at Columbia University and spent over a year in the Society of Fellows at Harvard. The war followed, during which time he worked on high- priority research projects at the M. I. '1'. Radiation Laboratory. For a while connected with the Sperry Company, Dean Hamilton worked on the development of a special type of microwave vacuum tube, tl1e klystron. More recently he has been interested in the theory and observation of beta decay and with atomic-beam inves- tigations in the spins and moments of radioactive nuclei. He became a full professor in 1955. Bari: Rona' Kirkland, Hills, Osborn, Leelm. Yan Duscn, Supplce, Carton, Wright. Fmzrllz Roux' Blakc, Hungerford, Lonrie, Love, Yuorliccs, Williams. SIIYQIQJC, Billings. Thin! Row: Ripp, Case, Berry, Sflnillingcr, Oates. S1'mnrl Razr: Kerr, Bufhanzin, Medina, Mold, Daiifurcl, Finnev. Front Roar: Gulick, Bedford, Belknap, Helm, Prcsimlcnl Golieen, Matlicy. Sl. John, Corbin, Pcnick. THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES ROBICRT CLXRRTTIVI' JOHN S'l'l'.XR'I' P.'Xl'l. BICDFORD CHNRLIQS H. NIC1I.lYAlN JOHN G. BUCHANAN il'INIO' ITHY N. PFEIFFICR HAROLD R. NIEDINA RlJlSLlR'l' F. flOHEIiN Prmiflzfizl of the U11ir'1'r.si!r HAROLD H. HELM Clmirnzarz of tlzrf lixr'r'1zt1'zfe Conznzillmf Doxi-xI.1m B. KIPP Clvrk of the Board TRUSTEES EMERITI .VXLFRI-QIJ'li,C1.XR'I'ON STIQPHIZN I . YOORHICICS .XLLIQN O. XYHIPPLF IJORDYCIQ ll. Sl. JOHN FRIQIJERICZR H. OSBORN lf. S. YYELLS KICRR TRUSTEES EX-OFFICIO COY. ROBIQRTB.M1iYNliR ROBERT F. UOHICICN DIQXN Nl.X'l'HliY HliNRY l'. VAN DLSICN JOHN D. ROC1KEF1iI.I.liR, lll HARYICY S. FIRFSTONIQ. JR. liRNliS'l' Ci. SAVAGE HAROLD H. HFLM ICVGICNF C. BL.-XKIC ICYI-IRI-1'l'l' N. CASE lYlLL.XRD NVRIGHT CHAPTER TRUSTEES HliNDliRSON Sl'I'l'I.lili. JR. CIAIORGF G. FINNIQY N'lLLl.-XXI .L RIRKLXND S. B.XRRSDAI.li PICNICIK, JR. RVIJOLPH N.Sf1HlJl.LlNGFR ill-l.Xl'NilIf.Y BICLRNXI' DOl'GI..XS HORTON DONXLD B. LOl'Rlli DONXLIJ ll.XNlfOR'l'H BRI.-XN l'. LICICB TERM TRUSTEES niyxx .x. cz1..xRK s. WHITNEY iixxnox ALUMNI TRUSTEES H. ClH.Xl'Nl.XN ROSE ruins M. S'I'l'fXV.'XR'l' jmiias w. 1.1431-1, II LEWIS H. mx m's1eN, JR. 22 DONALD B. KIPP CQICORGF P. BERRY HARYIZY MOLI-1 R. GXVIN FOLLIS JXNIICS F. OATIQS, JR. PICRRY li. HALL imiyxx .x. CLLARK ,ymrs H. LIZMDIX OFFICERS OF THE ADMINISTRATION Alexzmclcl' Lcitch Rig-girdo A-X. 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C1111'1'1'111l1. 111111111g 111l11'1' 11r1111'1ls, l11- is 11111'l1i11g 1111 ll l11111I1-l1'11g1l1 1'ss111 111'11l111l1l1 1'111i1l1'1l ,l111i.1.s111' 1111 Ihr' l'11lili1.1 of lfllllfln' 11111l 1111 ll 1111111-11l111i11g 1'1'1'111'1l of 51111111 Ill' I1is 111111c I'111111111s 11'1's1'. His 111ll1'11i1111s 111' 111111111 1111: i1111111l 11111l1'1 1l11' 11111-s f'ill7ll1 lf11'1l1111',1 lirfiglzl, 511111111 ll'111'!11, llllkl 'III1' 11111111 I-f11111111'1111. l Speaking about Professor Ciytuos Bykt-1k's renowned eritieal work on lletningyyay. I11'l1lir1g1t'r1y, The Il'riIr'r 115 Jrlisl, the Heralcl Trilutttzf said: this is that exeellent kind of rritieisnt which. tthether or not yye agree with all of its eonclusions. helps everywhere to Clarify' ottr reactions . . . Baker has done a tnajor joh of literary reevaluationf' Professor Baker's hook on Hemingway is perhaps his hest known work, hut this hook is just one of a series frotn the pen ol' this teacher, eritir. author and IJUCI. Presently Professor Baker is following up his first widely aeelaitnetl novel, .1 Frizfntl in l'rm'f'r, with a second, Thr' 1,1nnl of R1tn111elmt'. His sonnet t'On Getting Back to .Xirplane Spotting .Xtter len Years was included in Iiryl l'o1'm.S of 1956. Professor Baker is also completing an anthology' of Hemingway eriticistn entitled HI'II1fIIgIt'Ily' and his Critirs: ,-In lnternztlionztl .lnlltologyx On CZIIIIPLIS Professor Baker is known for short, concise, simply stated and easily understood lertures. Dr. linwncn IJt'nt.t-,y Hryni jouxsox, a former Rhodes Scholar, was elevated to his present rank of Associate Professor of linglish in l952, His primary' field of interest is Vietorian literature. In his under- graduate course, ulinglish Literature of the Last Hundred Years, Dr. .lohnson explores in his penetrating lectures the ratnifieations of Yietorian prose in rontetnporary society. In addition Dr. lohnson has written ntunerous articles for scholarly periodicals, and in 1952 rotnk pletetl Thr' .llien l'1.yio11 of l'i1'lori1n1 Poetry, a study' Of the works of Tennyson, Browning, and Arnold. .Xt present he is engaged in research for a t'ritit'1tl analysis of the lflth century linglish novel, which he hopes to eotnplete in the next three years. Rttzttutn M. Ltmwte, Associate Professor of ling- lislt, is printzlrily' interested in Anteriean poetry and the .Xtnetiean novel. Clhairtnan of the Special Pro- gram in the Hutnanities. Professor Ludwig is cur- rently working on Thr' .Sz'lef'ff'fI Imllety of Iforrl Afznlrlox lforfl. A twentieth eentury linglish novelist, Ford is hest known for his novel The fioorl Soldier. In IEI59 Mr. Ludwig puhlished the fourth volume of A l.iI1'mry' History of Ihr' United Staley covering all .yrnerieanv literature. In two courses in Atneriean literatttre, Main Currents of .-Xmeriean I.iterature and 'iytneriean Poetry, Professor Ludwig con- sistently delivers Z1 high quality of lecture. mingling deep literary penetration. riske anecdotes, and amusing quotations. , e , . , . . C.r1ku.n luynrs BliN'l'l.l'Y, Irolessor of langltsh, is a renowned editor of play anthologies and historian of the theater. At present Professor Bentley is writing the sixth and seventh yoltnnes of lrzroltenzt ami Caroline Stage. a work ronsidered to he the definitive study of the development of the British stage tluringg the seventeenth century. ln his underu graduate eourse, linglish drtuna, Professor Bentley devotes his attention not only to the ideas in the plays stttdted, hut also to the deyeloptneut of the stagts on yyhith they were originally acted. lliguiiied, yirile. and an entertaining lecturer, it is said that Professor Bentley is the only Professor in the l'niy'ersily who Can appease lashion-conseious under- graduates and yet wear a double hreasted suit to class. i1 5 1131.119 ii . 'U o' 1 1 A 1111. lf, XHM11 l,l'KIllCNiUl' H. W. Ylrxinic l.xNc.i. xxliuse nizljor lielils of interest eenlei' znnnnil Goethe gincl Gerinzni xinil c-oin1Jzn':ilix'e lilC1'2lIllliC, hm In-en cliziirmzin ol' the Deparlnienl nl' Germanic Languages ' 11 - ' . ' . ' 1, Lintl l.ilei':iI111'eS sinre its KlC'1lIl0li in IUSS. Cinienllx' workin on ,ixx .x IXIX. nmx inxn xtc in Ile .inline 1 1 1 1 . 1 111,11111g 111,11g1.11111 111 111.11111.111111 111.11015 111111 111C ln .lzzllmlnevv of lnzzmjwzii Lilwwlx' iiI'IllFl.Sll1, he hams recently 1Jlll'1N1Nl' nl' the xlmil xttnw ix tu ghe 1Jli'1lNll1'Q1 111111 t'UIll1JlClt'tl The Hzxlmx 1:1 fifflllllll I.llr'i'r1111rr', l.X'?H-lU?U. linlh 111,1.,1,111 111. 11 111111111 11 111111111 1111111111111,1 1111111-11 of lhexe ixorlv are l'l'l1IlCil l0 his CUIIINLN on fiCl'lIlllll l'0Ct1'Y :md - H. 1 . . . . , ' 1115 11, 115 1111111.11111 8111110 5111111 51111-111s 111111.11 N111 the f1L'I'lllllIl novel. .X ll1lllYC nl l,ei1mg, Gerinuny, Professor 0 l aml.iin lincls tlislineth 1Jlt'1lSllI'1llJlC. ln his own lilllgl' mls Iwi elglll ?l'f iS1l'4X1 l'1W'1'-11l'f31l1lCl, fimlllilll, f0l' UIC Nllllll stories. Nli. fylfilllllllll linclQ Cl11OXllll'lll in College l',llll'lIIl4'C lzxgnninzilion Bozlrcl. XVith his kiinwleclge and 111.111111Q 111-111,1. 11111 111 1110 11111115 111 0161111111 1111, interest in the fieltl nl' tlllllPfl1'1lllV.' lllClilllllI'C he is 21 ezipzihle 11111 111 1-X111-0551113 11111 1111111 111 11111101-,111 11-11115, 1116 lllliillllllll nl' 11 SlllJ'tUllllIllllCC of lhe Ciunncil ni the lllltiianilies n ' 1' - -' X - - ' ' '- whith ix enclezixnrine In nlexelu 5 ll l'i'inielnn J1'cw'1':1lii in this area. i.1 fl A 1. .1o.nn 1, mmm 3 oiint in 115 m U nitiu lrelnncl. He lx ciitieiilh writnig ll nmellai hqgnn in the spring' nl' 1060 :nnl il series nl' zntieles lin llnliclfn xillgllllllth e0ncei'neil nith the lIIl15l'CS- xinnx nigiclc ln ilillerent .XlllL'l'lli1lll cities on the ,Q , ,, , , , . 1 1111.1,11,111,1 ' S13Ctl.lllllllQ in l-iench lllClillllll'l' ol lhe Rmnnzinlii' :intl 1JI'C- 5 Rnni.inlie perincls, .Xiuixxn IIOUI1, Nlereclitli H. Pyle Professor of Ifrenih. ix ll pmlific' miiliezil lllltl crezilive ix'1'ile1'. Ciiirrfiiilly 1 worlting un his thircl nmel, Prolemsm' lloog also finds time to Ili' hu O. Whnf, john N. NVcimlIniIl l'mI'essm' of Mmlein lffllllliilllllt' to nnnierons wrliolzirh ioinnuls. The inowl recent of I IHQIIZIQCS nnil Iliiertm' oi' the Speeial l'l'4lgl'1lIll in 1'ilIl'01DCIll1 i,I'OliCSSlJl' lluogfs triliczil worlas, :in :nliele on Nizneel Proust, is Xllllilllflll. is nn UlllSlLlIltllllg llllllllllily on Yoltxiire :intl ziwziiling piilmlicziticni. f3lllt'lZ1IltlI'L'iCl'XCtl in nizinneiphc keeps tighleenth t'enlni'x l'il'L'IlCll 1Jl1ilmn11l13, .Xnllior of IllIIllt'li0llS :in t'Xll'l'lIlL'lf hug scheilnle. teziihing lllllll gilltllllllt'1llltll1lltlCI'- nlxe nn these siilmieels. Di. Hlule is c'ini'entl3' 1Jl'C1l1lI'iIlg two gmiliiaile KUIIINCS, llespile l'1'oft-Sault Ilongk :11J1m:n'ent modesty, IlllIlllAll'l1JlS, one on Ynltaire :intl his 1uliilow11Iiic'zil lJ2lCligI0llllllS, his liI'e hzis heen :in ewnlliil one. Dining the Semiitl XV0l'ld intl zinnlher on the 1Dllil0S01Jllf' ol' the liiiliglitenmeiit. In his YV:n', NIV. llciog wus ziwziitletl the Cimix ile Cineiie. FfIlllCC,S Ilnee ileczirles an l'i'inc'elon. he hzis heecnne ai lzivorite lL't'lllIil'l'. liigliexl tlemrzitimi. in remgiiitioii ul' his work in the Resistance. His uminwes in l'.llIU1JL'llll lllL'l'illllI'C. espeeiullx 'tlfrmii Hinnzniisni in l'iXlNlCllli1lll8lll,u :ne zininng the nioxt 1iU1Jllllll' on unnpus Piiwiillx lLN1JUllNllJll im thc snuess oi the Sllillll Pmgl ini in l lIl'U1Jt'lIIl Cllvllllllliflll, IJr,NYz1ile ienuiins genial :incl iinzissnniing. Soon lo he pulmlishetl liy the Nlrklillan Company in a series ol hooks deyoted to the prolessinns is .l1r'l1iIr'r!. 'l'his y'olume is heing written hy the llireetor ol' the Sehool ol' ryrchiteetttre at Princeton, Kontakt W, Nil,l.Xl't.Ill.lN, lu. In addition he is tnaking a plrotograpliie index ol' l're-Cioloinhian lll'l'llllClfllll'1ll and settlp- tural monuments found in South and Central .'xIllCl'lt'2l. l'I'UliCSSUli B1CL11llglllill is the professional atlvisor on 2ll'l'llllCCllll'C for the Associate Professor ot Sculpture josigtfti BROWN is wending his way' across Europe and ,Xsia on a six- tuonth iourney sponsored hy the State Departnrent. Professor l5rown's fine statues and statuettes ol athletes in action. seyeral of which can he seen as trophies in tlte Dillon Gym loliby. hrought him to the attention of the goyernment. which is haying him do statues and hnsts ol numer- ous foreign athletes and statesmen. Not content merely to portray' athletes, l'rol'essor llrown has put his liaclcgrotitul as a professional hoxet to good use eoaehing hoxing at l,l'illCClUll, His interest ill chil- dren linings him to the l'rineeton Summer Clamp each year :tml has led him to try' his hand at designing fascinating, even artistic, play- ground equipment. New York Port ,xlllllOl'lly'. lle was in eltarge ol' the competition t held to choose the designer ol the new terminal htnltltng at ldlewild International .Xirport. llis primary' lield is Pl'Cli1llJl'lClllCLl 2ll'C'llllCi'llIl'C. Dr. Rrxssityik yy. Irii. C.ltairman ot the Department of ,Xrt and ,Xrel1aeology. retttrtied to the llllllifllill faculty in FCl?l'lllil'y of 19515 as the Howard Clroshy Butler Nletnorial l'rot'essor of the History of .yrtliiteeture alter spending twenty'-liye years at other edueational instittttions. Dr. Iree, on leaye ot' ahsenee during the hrst term, is in the process ot' writing a hook concerning the Since 1955. Professor ol' Classical .Xreliaeoiogy liiuis SJOQYISI has alternated hetween leaching' duties and directing the Princeton .yrcliaeological lixpeclition to Sicily along with l'rot'essor Ricliarcl Stillwell. the latter ot' thest two tasks is an especially' familiar one tor l'l'OliCSSOl SUIUQNISI, who seryed in a sitnilar capacity lot a Sweclish expedition. 'l he present project is an attempt to trace the development ot' a typical Greek town trout the sixth to the second century ll. ll. and is expected to shed significant 7 light on the Hellenit' eiyililatinn. l rotessor S-ioqyist, one nl the lew classical areltaeologists lelt. has pointed out: Ulixcayatioiis are the prinripal means of I'Cl'OllSlI'lll'llllg and reinterpreting the past. Without them. artliaeology and seholatship in the art. history. and language ol' antiquity would heconte unproduetiye, stereotyped, and SlllJCI'iltllll.i influence ot' the Italian poet 'lortiuato 'lasso on the history' of painting. It is a study' ot' the cirtumstantes arising when a great poem is written and suhsequently' depirtecl in paintings. His lield ot' special interest is the history of painting in linrope from the sixteenth century until the eighteenth l'Cllllll'y', including the Renaissanee. Klannerist. and llaroque periods. Professor .XRtiu'R Mixmi., Cihairman of the Music Department, is an expert on the Illllsll' ol llach. Presently he is editing thoral works for the .Vette Brtclt-.lu.ygrtlu'. In his edited text Professor Mendel tries to capture the true quality of the music as determined by research into its original sources. Although he is interested chiefly in Nath, Professor Xlentlel docs devote some tinre to the study of Renaissance music. He is the coeditot' of the renowned lincll lfcrlrlzfr, a major contribution to the academic musical world. l'roI'essor Mendel also tleyotes tnuch of his tinle to mttsical organizations outside of l'rinceton. He has been a member of the lixecutiye lioartl of the .Xmerican Musicological Society. and for tnany years was conductor of the Cantata Singers of New York. M'illiam Shuhael Conant known composer. At the project of his life, a three act opera based on the conquest of Mexico. lt will be called Morilrfunta and will concentrate on the period from the landing of Cortes to the death of the Altec etnperor. The text, written in linglish by the famous Italian novelist and scholar Borgese, is poetic drama, and Professor' Sessions has had to cut large portions of the original script in order to fit it into normal opera time. The opera is scheduled to be completed by the end of the suirnner of 1961 and will be performed. probably abroad, in May of lfltii. Professor ROGLR Hl'Nl'lNfQlllX Slissloxs, l'rofessor of Mtlsic, is an internationally present titne he is working on the biggest 28 CARI. lvl-iIXRlllll, Director of Music at the Princeton Chapel, is a famed organist. He is known especially for his performances of Bach and is presently engaged in recording the complete organ works of Bach in twenty-five long-playing records. Mr. Heinrich pioneered the movement which advocated a retutn to the tvpe ot organ used by liach and his contemporaries. This movement has had a revolutionary effect on the building of organs in recent years. Mr. Mcinriclr also has a great interest in contemporary music, especially that of Schoenberg. As they leave Firestone Library just before closing time, many students like to stop in at the Chapel and hear Mr. Weinrich play' the organ. 'l'hese in- formal concerts are restful, and because they offer a pleasant escape from academic worries at the end of the day, they are greatly' appreciated. When one enters .Xrtist in Residence Hvnti Sot.oyiox's studio in the tower of Pyne .Xtlniinistration, he finds himself surrounded by sym- phonies of clanling color. Large canvases lean against the wall covered with beatitiful compositions of bright pigments arranged so that no color, no matter how bright, ever clashes with its neighbor: everything blends into the unified artistic whole. After some moments of study, the viewer begins to project himself into the paintings and they seem to attain a personal meaning for him. Only later does the visitor notice the quiet, unassuming tnan who is the creator of these works. Hyde Solomon seetns to prefer standing back, not saying much, so that his paintings can speak for him. Technically he is somewhere between abstract impressionisni and expressionistn. Best known for his land- scape abstractions, his major exhibition this year will be at the Poindexter Gallery' in New York. I'r'ol'essor 'l'. Ct'y'r.i-.rc Yotixrs ol' the llepartrnent of Oriental Studies is currently' working on a book eoneertred with the appraisal ol' l'nited States poliey in Iran in the period between the Seeond World Xrar and the present. Professor Young has deyoted a large portion ol' his career to promoting Near I-'astern and lslanric sttrdies in l,rirrt'eton and in other colleges throughout the nation. He is also aetiye in organizing the latilities ol' the l'niy'ersity lor the teac'lrir'g ol' Near liastern languages during the eonrirrg strrurner. l'nder l't'ol'eSs0r Young and his prederessor, Dr. Hitti, I'rint'eton has become the renter' in .Xrneriea for studying the lslanrie world. Cilassits l'rol'essor tLroRt,r-' liersr r. llrczrmokrrr has long been interested in Greek and especially l.atin literature. For seyeral years he served as Prolessor-irr-elrarge ol the Sununer School ol the .Xrnerican .Xtraclerny in Rorue, and in 1956 he was eletited President ol' the .Xnrerican Philologieal Sotiety: llaring' rerently' published 'l'l1e Xrtlztrv' of lfomrnl Comezly' and hffllfllllllf l,Illfl'lill.Y nur! l'roj1orlior1.y in l'irgil's .lr'n1'i1l, he has ttrrnetl to tr project which will tlernonstrtrte the possible irrlluence ol' Sanskrit epic' on the .lr'1n'itl, Now in his l'orty-lirst year with the l'rriy'ersity', l'roI'essor' lluckworth is currently leeltrrirrg courses in Ronran tlranra. Yirgil, and Horace. Wnrrxr-.y lrxxtxes Uyrrs, .Xndreyr lflenring West l'r-olessor ol Cllassirs. his a distirrggtrislred scholar who CllllJll1lSllC5 that 'there is no aetiyity in a urrirersity' which does not lraye its lrtrruanitarian aspeitsf' .X graclrratie ol Princeton, l'rol'essor Oates was largely responsible lor the establishtnent ol l'rint'e- . tons Lountttl ol the llurnanities in limit. He was also the prime initiator ol' the Woodrow Wilson Fellowship 1'r'ograrn wlrich sponsors students interested in a career in college teaching. An authority in the lields of Greek drarna and ancient philosophy, Prolessor Oates teaches courses on l'lato and ,Xr'lstotle. and is a pelerrrrtal layortte preteptor and let'- turer arnong senior students. sf Xlusgrare Professor ol' l.atirr atrd former Dean of the College. Classics l'rot'essor Ifruxtzls R. B. KQUIJOLPIIIN is a well-known lecturer in seyeral Greek and Roman literature courses. He ttornbines a warnr personality with the acadernie diligence and drire ol' a wellslauown scholar. Whether he is talking to a student itr his olliee or delving through aneient rnyths, Professor' Godolphin always seems interested and concerned with what is bel'or'e hitn, Hoping to aelrieye a more poetic presentation ol' aneient nrvths, Dr. Godolphin is t'ut'rently' editing an anthology' of classical tnytlrs told by' Greek and Roman poets. 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I'111111u111111 51111211 f1112lIIQl' Ill XIll1IL!I'Il ,XN1llH 111111 is ll 111111111111 g110sl 101111101 111 1111101 s111'1111 w1'i0111'0 111111x1-Q 111-111111g 111111 I1Il' 15111 111191. 1 11011110 1Il1lIIIIg I'11111011111k II1s1111'1 I,C1J1l1'llllClII 115 .1 I,l1lJ1l'NNUl 111 11152. I11. 111 1,11x P111119 1511111 1011011 111 1.I11l'IIlI1llI 111 1110 l1ll1Xl'IN1IX 1111 1110110 101115 111161 111111011 ll 111211 111111' 111 1111' 1J12IIlII1IIQ 11f1I7110s111110 I.1111'11111 I'11110v111' 11111111 11111111 111'11110111i1' 111101'0s1 11 .XlIlL'I1K'lIll 111111111111 ZIIIKI 11111s1111111111111l 111911111X 111 111C 11110 l'1g1I1l'CIIl1I 101111111 111111 1110 021111 11111010011111 1L'Il1lll1, XI 111050111 111. 1511111 11 11011111110 1111 11111118 111111' 111 10s0111'111 1111111011011 111111 T110 P11j101'.1 111 'l'l11111111.1 l1'111'111111. II 52-1111111110 11111111011111111 11111011 is ll 111111111010 11111'lllIlk'II1lII'X 10111111 111 1110 1111111 P1051- 110111. Sillil' 141511111101-11 111I111110s 111' IIIIS 111101001 111110 1lL'ClI 11Il1l1IN1ICl1. 1 -44,11 'il i 1 .153 ,X jvf, A ig. 7 S13 W1 ff V M Q 'V 1, I 1 1 Q1 in . A - Tab 1111 1115 l1L'NIx 111 Nus to , 1 EZ' K1 in 11 ' 1 11 1' 1 2 1 'W ' A . R11 1111111 11, 1,111111x1.111. .XNNISILIIII 1101111 111 1110 c'ilI1L'QL' .11111 .XN5Ul12l1l' I'111- I1-NN111 111' II1x11111. 11001011 11111 1111111 1101111111 11 1111111111111111111s 11110 111 1J2l1JCl'11'Ol'1'i llll H1111. 11111111 lllll I 1111111g 111 1111 1111110 111111-P H011111g11CLI 11111111111011, 4'I'111 IINIIIQ' 111 111110 ll 11111111 1111 1110 11111111111 11s1101'1s 111 11111' 1II1J1fllIIll1LX 1101-011 18111111 Xxlll' f,IlC.H .xIIICl'1lllIl 1Ul'L'IgIl 11111111 2llll1 IlI111llll'1 111111111 1110 1111' 1101111 I,l'U1C9N1lI c11I2l11L'IICI' is 11111s1 1lllCI'L'N1L'l1 III, 211111 111 his ilII1'CllI 1111111 111' IN 'lIlL'lII1l11IlQ' 11,1 Il'lI4'L' 1111: 11L'Nl5IU1JlllL'Ill U1 1TUO1X'l'2lll0Il 170- 1110011 Ulll' III111llI1'f 111111 1111111111111l11t se11100s. L-IIQOIIIIF, s11111 1'1111110111l11111 is l1IIiClI 1111' 131111111011. 11lll 11 11119 11111 IIIXYLIFS 110011 so. '1110 110111011 w1l1l H'1lIK'1l I lllll 11111sl 1111100111011 1xl1l11I 1111111 15101110 1911. I1 1111s 111011 111111 1111' lll11112ll'X 11011111 111 110 11111s11I1011 AIIIK1 11ICII' 11111 , A 1101100 11111111 11111 1I111111111111,1' l'0I1. 1111111 111s 11111111-111111 11111111111s11111110 111111 ICllLf1I1llg l1ll11Ci, l'1'11I'0ss111' f11l2lIIl'IlCl' is ll busy 1111111. Illll 1111011 111s s111111 iQ I1111s11011, it will 110 ll 11011111110 1111111111111 111 11115 111101111 11111 IlIlIl1I 110111001011 2ll'C2l 111 l1IIllCl1 SILIIUS 1115111111 11.11101 Ill R0x1110111'0 ill 1110 f11'lil1Il1llL' 111111000 111111 11111111110 l'111l'0ss111 of k1111'1, 111111111 I1lI'XI 111111011 1110 I'1'11110l1111 111111111 111 12117 ll111CI' l'L'C'L'1X1lIfJ,' N I'11.l1,111,1111111s 1111111111111 IIIICYCSICL1 III 1110 0111111111111 111511111 111 l:11111110, 1163 11 IN 111111 1111111111g' NUIIIL' IIIIIL' 1111 111s l.111'1l11111l I'1'r111111l 111 I111.111'11 1111111 H10 UNL I11 1111' 10111 1.1'11l111'1', 1110 11111111 is 1111 1lIIlI11S1N 111' 10111111111 l'l'11l114llli 111 Russia 1111111 1110110Q11111111Lg11I 50111111111 111 11s111111I1l11111 111 18111. I11 1111111111111 111 writing '1111110s 111111 10111111 1111111 111110 111 111110, I'1'111'0v111' I11llIIl iw 1'iLT1Jl 1111s1' 111' 111s 11111105 1:1 l1C1llII'I1lICIlI1lI I'l'11l'CSC1Il2lIIXC Lllll1 t'UIIlIIlIl1l'K' lllClIl11t'l' 111' I1lL' 511001111 I'I'l1Ql'1IIlI 111 lx111111101111 111111111111 UII. f'g.f'-'iv3,,- tus. hats ai uult' lllllgt' ol intcrcst in llllL'l' nzitionzll politus. cspvciztlly in tht' licltls ol lflil in RH It S, lit xx, thc .Xlhvrt CL. Nlillmnlx Professor ol' llllk'lllLIll0ll1ll I,lllX :incl lllllllltil lflflllll :nul .Xnu'rim:in lorcign policy fllllll' to l'llllL'ClUIl in l?l5l to mlircrt thc llCWlf' L-stzthlisllrcl fil'IllL'l' ol lntcrnzltionznl Hauling lirccl in l'llltlll'C, hc is llilltlllilllllf Sltulit-s in llll' Wootlroix' Xlilson Sfhool ol' l'nhlic :nul lllll'l'll1IllUll2ll .Xll1lll'S. .X grzulnzitt' qlizllillczl to wrilt' Lthoul Fl'CllC'll policy ol l'l'llll'L'ltlll, l'rolit'ssor llunn luis st-:wil on X11l'l0lligUXl'l'lllll1'lll1ll monnnillcvs ztncl is llu' from thc l'iI'lTIli'll iivwpoint. He clocs this guithor ol svwuil hooks znul 1Il'llI'lL'N iiultuling his most I'l'lk'Ill isork. ll'nr rlnrl llrr wcll in his most rt'ticnt hook. lfmmw: .llimlx nl .ll1'n. Professor Ilunn is turrcnth clcvotihg' his tinu' lo ilu' illlIllllllSll'1lllllIl ol 'l'ro14lJlwrl .lllr-Ill' C2flullf x' Hl'l'lf1lQr' mul ilu' C't'nlt-r ol lntcrnzitionzil Sltulivs :incl in writing ai pztpui on 'lohn lfosu-r Ilnllcs' iolt- Pro.s'pf'r'lx, wliith wus puhlishetl ln' Hztrpci in lllt' signing ol' thc .lzipzincsc l't'1u'c 'I rcatly. This pzlpvr uill lu' iiultulcil in it rvgulzn in -I2lllll2ll'N. ltllill. l'roI'cssor lfurniss is pulmliunion ol' thc Center. fi ton. is at spuriztlisl in pnhlu 1lllIllllllSll'lIllUll with llllllCltQlllllll1llC KULIINL' Ull lllC gUXl'l'!llIll'Ill Ifgllllllltlll hnsiiuws znul two glllllllllll' NL'llllIl1ll'N illlllCl' tlu: hczuling ol .XIllCl'll2lIl l'olilits. During ilu- xuzulcniit' SCZII' lfllill-lfllnl lu' is on lt-uw ol zihsciutc lo stiuh st-w1'1il lcclcrzil progiu ins than ltgllllllt' luisnicss cntcrpiisv. llctatiist- ol his llllCl'L'Nl I in tru- zulnnnisirztttxc aispt-tis ol goxvrniiufiil. Dr. Bvrnstcin llllN st'IXt'tl Ull l2llilUll9 gUll'lllllll'llllll llllllllllllcfls llllll lN lllll'l'llllX tlu- onli noir-lziixwr nu-nilu-r ol' the Ulgllllllllf tionail tonnnittvc of thc l,lL'NltlL'lll'N fl0lllll'l'Clll'C on .Xtln1in- isirzltiw llllJtCCllll'C5. Ili. Xl Xlillk ll, lglRXNll lx. luolvssor ol' Politics zu Printv- witlc cxpc-ru-iuo in goxcrimicnt on ilu' slzilv. nzllionzil :incl intvr- llllllfllllll lmcls. llrolcssor lSc'rnslt'in I'l'QlIl1ll'lN tczuhcs .ln ol' Llll'l'CIlllN viigztgvtl in reusing .lniwlrflrl I or1'ign l'olir1x', llhuh hc to-at1tlio1'L'tl in lfl5l, I-lining tzuight in Meri totirsc in his tlcpznlnu-nt in international politics ll1fC1'll1lllUlllll lzlw. anul intcrnzitionzil or- gftnimtion, lu' is currently tencliing 'llu' Great l'owcrs in llllCl'll1lll0l1l'll lloliticsv ll coinsc wliicli lu: introtltu'cd, :intl ,'XIl1ClL'l2lIl l'i0lL'lgll l'oliu . xlKf.lll'llllC'li Professor ol lllll5lJI'llllCllK'C .XI,l'llII'S 'I' Xlxsox is currently inrolwtl in at llll'l'C-FCIII' stiuh' ol' thc olluvs :nul powers of thc filiicl' .luslicc ol' the Suprcnu' tlourl. Supported hy ilu- Rorkclcllcr :uul Ford Fouiulzl- lions. this sttuly will l'Cillll in :it lczlsl one YOlllIllC. .Xn cxpcrt in the liclcls ol: .Xnu-ritzuii fltlllslllllllllllfll Law znul xlllQ'Ill'2IIl politifall thought. lu' hats ixrittvn lllOQl'2lIJllll'N ol lnstirvs lll'2lIlllK'l9 :intl Stonc :ls ixvll Lis lcxts for his LUIIINCS. llis t-xccplionzil tpiatlitics :ls qi lvtlurcr anul prctcptor :nc pt-it-nigllli I'l'tUgIlllCCl hr lllltll'Igll1tlll1llCS :ts they nizikc' his f.UllSllllllllJIlIll lIllCllJl'l'l1llltlll l'UllliiC OIIC ol ilu' lztrgcst in thc politics ClC1J1ll'llllL'Ill. ,I Fimuxic S. Fl izxiss, liz.. Professor ol Poli- Llillliliilll lu' 111111111414 l3ll1'l lillll' 1'cw111'c'l1 in lhc ut llIlL'llIIJlUXIllL'lli Ulllllllfllsllllllll Llllll thc lltllllf illxplimzxlium ni' im analysis ul lllif IJYUIJICIII. Dr. lflullmlflzlrili H, 1'1XRl5I5UX, I'mfc'sso1' of l'itUllOlllitS and lliwclur nl' thc Illlllhllilll Rclalliolls 5CK'liUll ui' lllc I7l1iYC1'siLy, is sllldyillg IIILIIIIJOXVCI' 111141 Cilllilllillll Llllll their rclzlliml lo cumomic QVIINYIII in YL11'irvl1s Hlllllll- oi Aim. Xillld, :xml Mmuth .XlIll'l'lC'Zl. ll11s study is bcmg clone Ill umllznlncmx- liilll xxilll IJI'UfL'NQUl'S from IIZIYXQIIU NIIT. :md thc lflliversilx' ul Clzlli for Ililll :mal in uvllllmliolm hilll this work, Dr. llzlllmison nmkvi www! ll'i1JSllfL'1lI'UlIl ui' llxc lfllillwl Sl1llL'S. He is Clll'l'LflllIy thc mzmpowcx' zuclvism' tu the c:UllIlIliS9iOll on Highcr lidmzltiolm in Nigurizx :md Il IUCIHITUIR oi thc Bozml nl' 'I'l'11slCc's ol' thc AIllLTl'if'1lll UIliYL'l'Sil, :IL Cairo. In 1960 fQUYCIl1UI' ul Xvxx' lclxcy znlmlmixllccl l'l'ofcQxfu' llzurlmisoll lo thc pm' ' ll1c lll0ll of Chllillllilll ul' lllc' New KICTNUY Slllll' Xfcdizition Brxzxnl. llis IHOSI 1'L'Ltc'l1I hu is cmillul 'llllllKf7l,!llfSI!l nm! l111Iuxlri11l Han, wrillcn in co1labo1:1lim1 V' Kilznkk KU1'l'. f.l11llkll'i A. Mins. :md john F. Dunlop. xllh 1Jil'C'l'l0l' ol' thu Oflicc ol' I'0pulz11ion RSSC2llglil1 and l'mI'c-wan' ui' lic'onmnic's, Dr. .Xxsl.l-,Y ml. C0-u.1c ii an expert in ilCIll0g1'1lllllf', 1110 slulisliml study of populzllirm. VI'l1uugl1 working Ull IllC0l'iL'S of QIROXYIII :uni nga: clisu'ib11lim1 ul' lllllllllll popula- tion, D11 Klmmlc iQ looking fUI'XY2llkKl lo the study his oilicc mill do in Africa this yn-ur. Since this Continent. is slill lIlfSlCl'iIlllS statistically. the mouumcnlzll population slumly that will be clone will cnznlnlc 1110 United Slulcs lo direct its for- eign :aid :xml political eilorls lrm'z11'd the most profilzllmlc m-mls. I11 additiam, thc statistics will bc of mlm' in um' flllllll' soriul, l'i'0llO1l1iC, or polilifzxl Qluclx ul ,Xf1'icz1. M Aff' iz' cmd W . QX qv . , l'1'uI'4ww1' R. .X. Illxrl-lc. ul' llxc limlmolxlirs llc- lJLll'llIlL'Ill. ix KIIIYCIIIIX nmking ll book-lcllqlll illlih ul lllll'IlllJIUXlIlClll LUlHlDL'llNLlllUll. P11115 ul thc sluclx lmw Ixccu lJl'iIllL'll zu articles ill 'l','11' fllffllXfl'I-II! I.n!mf l?f'!fll1'1mx If1'wir'xw :mal 'l'llf' lfm'fif'11' of 1'..I'lIlHllHj1X um! .Slali.sli1:x. Since' IEISS he Ima In-cn filmznirmzxu ui' lllc l:lll'!lllJl0fl1lL'Ill St'L'll!'ilQ Ciuumil ul' New ,lCl'NC'f, ll group xxl1i4'l1 mukcs lL'lUlIlIlll'IlLl1lliUllS lo llu- fQOXCl'HUl' :xml lfglillllllll' zxml hclpe lo mllaxll lc'g1xl:1t1u11. In Innluxllhal R1-lnlions Sljllillll ul llmu l'l1iXClkSilX. HN Ilhlill iwlnl ul interest is lll1'Ci'0llUIIliChllllllll 111. Umm XIuRc.1-xnnkx. l'mln-ssm' ut Puliliuul l'-.COllO1llY, is Clll'I'l'l1llf clirc-clm' ol' thc limmnuctric Rcwnlrll l'1'og1'z1m, which li C'UIlK'Cl'llL'il with a xxidc RIYCZI of pmblclus in IlllllIN'lll1lliC21l lccll- niques in lllc llll2llfSiS ol' CC'UIl0IIli1' 111110 series. Dr. Xf0l'gL?IlSlCI'll IS1llSUWUI'lxiIlg0l1 21 non-mallImcmzllicul inuomluciliun lo the theory 01 g2Illll'S LI SllIliCCl in whirl: llc: has Pl'CYi0llSIy pulrlishcnl Z1 book :lx un-ll :ls zx Study rm thc pmblclll of our cxpzlllmling' economy. His num lcrmll book was 'Nm Quvsliou uf ,xvllffffllllf Dzjfc'11s1'. 111: N11,1,11s NI. ll1'N1IX, .Xssociatc 1'1'111'1-ss111' 111' S1111i11I11gy, l1llS 1111 I 111 1111 i111l11s11'i11l s111'i1'11'. ,X g1'111l11Z1tc oli thc l111i1'1!1'sily 111' NVis- 1111 111 s111111111'11111111 111 l'llL'1'IU Rico 31111 is 111 111'1's1'111 1111 11-11112 111 1t1111- 1111 ll1JSlI111'Cl1 i11 Usl11. X111'1s11x. His l1111g 1'll11QL' sl111lv is l111sc1l 1111 1111 11111 111 Ill i1 1'1'111'11ss111' 0111111111111 111111l1i11cs ll s1'l111I111'lx. 111'111l1'111i1 1111l11'11111l1 wilh l1is , 11111 xism' 1111- l'l'l'1Illl'11llX sought 111 g1111'1111111'11111l 11g1v111'i1's 111111 1'1111q1cssi1111111 sul 11'c1111'1111'1l l1is s1111lv i11 thc 116111 ol 1l101'1llC 111111 1lc111111'11lil11li1111 1si11, 511. vllllllllll 1iL'CC1XL?1l his 1loc1111'111c 111 N111'1,l1w1-s11:1'11 Ulli- 'si11. Slllll' 1953 111- 1111s 110011 Lhc 11i1'c1'1111' 111 ll Sllltly 111' s11ci11l 11C his Slllllf 111' s111'i11l s11'11tiHcz1ti1111 111 11111 i11s1i111l11 1111 81111111 1111111'111i11' Illilll'l'llllN 1111111 11111612111 1J211'lg 111' 1llQ 11'111'l1l, Dr. CxR11N1i11 1'.x'1'1'1f11s11s, P1111fCss11r 01 FC111111111ics :11111 l,l1'C1'l01' of thc NV11111l1'11w XVils1111 811111111 111 Public 111111 I11I1'1'1111li111111l .Xll11i1's, is 1111 1111111111111 1111 i11l1'1'11111i111111l cC111111111i1's Zlllfl l12IS s1'111:1l 1l1L' g1111'1'11111c11l 111 1111'i1111s 1'11p111'ili1's 11s 2111 c1'111111111i1i 111l1is111'. l1L'll1JI'l' c11111i11g 111 l11'i1111'11111 111 111111, he was :1 l'11i11-11 S11111's llI'1'llS1l1'X 1'cp1'1's1'111111i11' i11 X11llll 1Xl'1'i1'11, lhc Nli1l1llC lfllfsl. NY11s11'111 l'il1I'l7lJC. 1111- 1111ll11111s. 111111 C11'1'1'1'1'. 1111 1'11tte1's1111 1111111i1'11s1s l1is i11I1'1'1'sL 111 i11l1'1'11111i111111l 1'1111111111i1s i11 the 11111 g1il1l1lllllC' Nl'l11111ill'N 11l1i1l1 111' is 1'111'1'1'111lx 11'11111i11g. 1'1is11111y 111' 1'iCO1101l1lC '1'l11111g111 111111 A'11111'11- 1111111111111 l'.1111111111i1' l,l1l11X.l. .Xt p1'CsG111. P1'11fcss111' l'111l1-1's1111 is Nlllllf' ing 1110 11111'1111111i111111l NI1111c1111'1 17111111 a111l 1111111s 111 1111111isl1 21 11111111 1111 his l'L'Nl'lll'4il1. , , ra A , ' 11Li11g, IN 11111s11l1'1'1'1l 111 11111111 111111'1hcl11's1 11I1111'1'1l11ss 111111's1t 111 1'1'11111111111s 1- lllillllllll 1'x111-111-1110 111 g111e1'11111c111 s1'1'1i11'. llis s1'1'xi111's 11s 1111 CTUIIUI 11111111 ' 1 3 1' ' ' , ' 111, J' 1 : , Jing 1.111111 111' 1l11' 1'1'11111111111l 11111111 111 the li1111li Ill, lh1' l'11il1'1l Sl11lcs. I11sl111 X. K.11xs111.111. f.llLl11'I111l11 111 1l1L' l11'1111111111'11l 111 lz111111111111s. is 1311 1'il1 11111-1'1'sl1'1l 111 1111- 111-11111111111111-1 111111 l11111ki111f. His 111lI1NC. NI11111'x Illlfl 1101111111111-1's. 11111 1'1'1111'ss111' Cll111111ll111' is slill ll l1111li1i1i 1v1'i11'1' i11 lhc 110111 11111s llls llllsl 11111111 1111110111111 81111115 flllllfll I'11nlr1 1s 1 l 1 1Y1l.1,IXX1 11. CxRx11CHx1,1.. flTlPlJl'1' .xislSlZll11 l'1'11- 1'1'ss111' i11 1111- li1'111111111i11s 111'I1111'11111-111 111111 1'111g1'11111 .X1l1is111' i11 1111: YY11111l1'1111' XYiIs1111 S1l111111, is XIII 1-xl11-11 1111 lhc 1'11lc 111' g111e1'11111C111 i11 1111- 111'1111'111l 1lNL'S 111' 11l11111i1t L'11CI'g1. 1J111'i11g 1111-s111111111'111I' 1111111 111' 110111 111 l'1lI1'11lJC 111 Sllllly 111x l11'11l1l1'111s i11 ll11' l .111'11l11'1111 fltllllllllill All1I'1sC1 i11 11is Clllllltilf 11s 1111: lll'il l1lI'l'L'lUl' 111' llll? 1ixpc1'i111c111111 1211101101111 Sl11l11l1l'l' R1'9l'1lI'1Tll 1'1'11g1'11111. 1 i1c Sll11QlC11lS l'l'01l1 l'1'i111'1'l1111 llllll lC11 1111111: 11111111 11111121 colleges a171111111111111ic11 111111. 1X1'Ulll1ll thc 1'1'i111'c11111 c11111p11s 1'1'1111-ss1111 C2l1i1l1l1'l1llCl is 111111w11 1'111' his i111e1'cs1i11g, i1111sl1'11li1'c I1-1'1111'1's. 1-In is 1111 1111112111 1Jc111111'1'z11, 211111 11111-11 i11 his 1'11111's1fs 1112 sl111'1s 11111p11g11111lili11g111111111 thc Now 1f1'11111i1'1 ' 111' some 11111111 11111'k11c1e1l De111111'1'11li1' 1'1111'1111'111'11. 1111 1111 .1152 2111 , r '2: E1g. ' 1 151113 W1 411, 131 1 In 31113113111 11 -1-11 55 121111115111 1'111l1's1111 11 11 111 1119 111'111 111 1111 111 1'IlI11l'1lll15 Slll IIN 11111111111 111 1111111 lflm 11111 111111 X11 1 1x11:11111111 lll 111111 111 111111 11111111111. 1111 111111 11111I1. 111 1111 l1lXlNl4ll1 18 11111 1111ll1l11l1L'l 1 111111 :11111 111 1l1N 1111111 lllll 111 1111 Xlllllll Ill 11111111111 51111111 1111 1111111 N1 21111 111 111111111 111111 111N 1111111 1111 gl 111111111111 1111 111 1111111 1118 11 11.11111 111 1111 111.1111 11 1111111 1 17111 111111111 1 1 111 111111 11111111'1111111 c, 5111 11111 RI 1 11111 111 1111 111111111111 1.1111111 ll1 11111 .11111 1111111111 1118 1 111111111111 1 111 Nll 1 lll 1 I11111 111111 141111 lll 11112 111111 111 1111 ll 11111 1 1 1 111: 1111 111g.q 1 . 11 l'111I 1' ' 1lII1 111 1111111111 11111 111111 llllll 1111 11111'1'1111 111.11 1111111111111 111111 1111 11111111 111 1 11111 111111111 N 413111111111 1 1 111111111 IN 11111-11111 111111111111 111 LX 7111111111111 11 1111111l1:11111111 111 11111111111 1111 1 llll1Il1l' 111111 NI11111 111111'z11v 117111111 1111111 11111 111111 1r1'rl'I111111111l 1 1011111111111 l'l1 1111 IN 11111 1511111 11111 11111111 1111 1111 1'11 , ,E 1 171. 1111.111-,11 111.1 111x1 1. 11 1111-111111-1' 111 1111. X1111111111 .11-11114 l'I11si1's 1'1'il'1Il'l'11 1-1111 111 51101111-. 11114 21NNlll1ll'11 1111- 1111s1 111 C111 1111111111 111 1111- 13C1J1ll'1l1ll'1l1 111 1'111111-11111 11115 10211. 111s 1'111'1'0111 1111 s111111 111 11111 g11s1s 111 1111-1111s 111 If4ll1C'Cl'l1i ' .' 4 1 sI1111'11 ll117Ci. 1110 1111111 11111111111-11 lll 1111s 11Ul'1i 111-1'111111s 111 1111' 111111111111111 111111 111s11xs111111111111 111 111111011111-s 'I1111 li 1113- 11I11'11I110 111 1111- 1111-11s 111 11-1 1111111111s11111 111111 1J1'lil112I 1l111S11S. 1110 111111 1111 Ll 51111111 111111- 1111I1111'111111'1 111101111111-11 1111111111: 1111' 11L11', 5111113 1111-11 111- 11218 1111111011 L1 L'U1lN111L'l'I11J1l' 1111111111-1 111 g1'1111111110 s111111-111s 111 1110 1111-11s 111 1111111 11111.111111s 111111 1s. 1111' 11111 111 15111111111 s 1111111 111111111111111111 111 N111'11L1' s1111111 1121NCN. . -1 - ll ' is 111s 1IlL1lSlll1L'111C111 111 1111' 11-111111111111 111110 111 g11s1-s 111111 1-s 111 111111111 g11s1-s 11111111111111 1-1111111111111111. i 1m 1'.11.1X1 1'1l 1, X111.x1-11. 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Sluuu RL'NL'Ll!'tll lfm-llmwllip 1 Im llw lhixcl COIliClllliXL' lXXU'fl'.ll' prliucl. 1313 Nlilmu is gixing Y .4 gllllllllll' Ndllilllll' in Xlmw lIlL'UlX. llln' IIICUIX ui ilu- xl1o1'lL'sL Dr. Ht'miR'r N. Allstar, professor of Chemistry, is a scientist, a teacher, and a teachers teacher. A perennial favorite lec- turer among students at Princeton, he has also lectured at universities aml expositions all over the world. Interested in improving the methods of teaching chemistry, Dr. Alyea is at present developing an overhead projector by' which chemical reactions may be directly' reflected and enlarged on a screen. Toward this end he is recording l,000 experiments that may be demonstrated with the projector. Concerning independent re- search Dr. Alvea has concentrated on chain 1'eactions, inhibitions, and surface potentials. David li. .jones Professor of Chemistry, CIfIARI.rs l,lllCI.l'S Sxtvin is an authority on the electrical properties of insulating materials and the structure of molecules. A member of the Alsos Mission, the wartime scientific intelligence unit, he was awarded the Medal of Freedom for his help in discovering Uermanyls progress with the atomic bomb and in capturing the head olf the German Research Council. Elected to membership in the Na- tional Academv of Sciences in 1955, he is currently' conducting research on dielectric behavior and the structure of matter. He is also working with graduate students on microwave absorption and dipole moments. Chairman of the Department of Chemistry, l'roI'c-ssor llox vm lf. Hokxm is primarilv inter- ested in physical chemistry' and chemical physics. Ciurrentlv, he is directing several graduate stu- dents and l'h.D.'s in an extensive research pro- gram pertaining to the structure ot molecules and molecular reactions at extreme temperatures, l'rol'essor Hornig is one of several Princeton scientists who worked for the Manhattan Project during World XVar II. lilected to the National Academy' of Sciences in 1957, he now devotes much ol' his time to his work as a member of the l'resident's Science Advisory Committee. This committee is concerned with scientific re- search programs, graduate education, and the role ot science in foreign ailairs, among other problems. Une ol' the best liked professors in the department, Dr. llonx 'l't:Rkicy'1c1ii, lingerie Higgins Professor of Chemistry, performs many ol' his experiments in a darkened room with his eves shining, looking for all the world like a mad scientist. He consistently' keeps his class awake by' explod- ing pop-bottles of hydrogen. The showman in him shows through in experiments such as the one before the Dart- mouth game when he turned orange and black chemicals green. Keenly' interested in US.-Soviet relationships in science, l'rol'essor 'llnrlyevich has been our science attache in Moscow and is now scientilic adviser to the Secretary' ol' State. His primary' interest in catalysis and the pro- duction and properties ol' line particles has led to studies ot atomic fallout and atomic energy. ,f , Iculx lxllla lhvxxilz. l'ml1-Nu' nlg liimmlngx, i4 lusrillzllccl willl Qlimc- nmlcls, In iilcl llu' Ql'l'llll'l lull ui lux mm- IN Llcumlml lu lhv Nlllrlx lln-Nc flllimlx l'H'lllllll'N. lllv nmicc' lu thc ilclcl ul' biology might haw mlimcullx in wc-ing mln Such ll pwwlmzulrlu- lllllll an Ilr. Iirmm' 1111011-mIL'LI 111 than KIIIIIHIIIN NUIIIHIIHQQ lllm 1 wmllld hm ' ' l ' gx. 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Cluux S. l'l I ll XIPRILII, l'roIcsso1' oi Biology, hm hulll cluing msc-xllmll 1111 thu nlixiug clofks ul illlllllt pllysiulugiull Yllflllllh in l7I'Q1llIiNIlli ulmicll :111 l'L'glll1l1L'll by pL'1'im1im siguzlls fl'UIIl lha- Ulllwillt' xvrmrlml such .is thc 1llll'lkIl1lIiUIl of day mul night. llc lllli Ifllllll, that 111 lhc LIIJNCIIPL' ul' lhcxc NiQ'lllllN :r -.llNlJllllNillH ul' loss of plmsn' 1'cl11lim1xI1ip Ivxlllls. ullirll mm lxc ut umxidclxlhlc siglliiicximc in 11111110 spaxfc Iluncl. 'lhiw wan' Dr. l'iL lvmlrigh gmc the IIINI -luhu NX'illll'INI1UUIl lrcllllcs. newly KUllC'L'iXL'Cl In thc ll-Cl Ulu Slillllllllll' llIl1ll'l'gl'LIclll2llC ill- lcllccluzll alclixily. In uflcl' llln' lllllll'IkgI'2ltllllllL' tllillzlfl with 1'1'1mc1m1x IIIICNI lK'1lC'llL'IS. :xml lu llClIlUIlSlI'1llC uxldcr- gluclllzlln' ICNIJCL'l Im' IIILNC muon. .Xmmw who has lllkldll HIl!lI'UKIll4'lUl'X liiulugxu will lL'ilha' lu 1713 l'illL'IHll'igIl'S IJllIllll1II'ilN :xml lu lm I,2lNA'illllliIlg :ami lurid l1'4llll'c's on lllc llllltlilllltlllillx nl lllu. Ull. llll- Having devoted a lifetime to the study' of hearing, Dr. liniviisr G. XVLVFR, Professor of Psychology, is an internationally' recog- nized authority' in his field. A pioneer in the study of the elec- trical potential of the ear, Dr. XVever divides his time between clinical and experimental research. Recently, he completed, in collaboration with Ur. A. Vernon, a project concerning the hearing of bats. In this study, an attempt was made to discover some of the peculiarities of the navigational abilities ol' bats flying in groups. In the field of clinical research, Dr. XVey'er is a member of a team attempting to locate the causes of such disorders of the ear as Nlaniere's Disease. Before coming to Princeton in 1958, Professor of Psychology' ROIilf.R'F NI. Cfvexr had done extensive research in the field of experimental psycliology. yVorking for the Air Force, he was involved in a project analyzing human performance and skill attainment relative to complex weapon systems. Continuing in the same area, Dr. Cagne is presently' engaged in a study' of the learning of mathematical concepts at the high school level. Assisting him are departmental sttldents, who carry' on field work in the Princeton School System. Dr. Gagnes aim is to und methods of improving the classroom presentation of mathematical concepts. In addition to his research, Dr. Gagne lectures in graduate and undergraduate courses on the psychology' of learning. Cenial and outgoing, Dr. Gagne is the antithesis of the ideal, unwordly' type of research psychologist. Cviuaori. CURXICI u's Pkvi r, Professor of Psychology, is well known for his work in psychophysics and perception. .Xt present Dr. Pratt is working to prove a correlation between perception and aesthetics. His purpise is to find out how a work of art conveys and arouses emotiotts in the subject. This work and his course in aesthetics are well correlated. Professor Pratt also teaches a graduate course in perception. Although he believes that his greatest contribution to the study' of psychology' is his proof of a dehnite relationship bctween stimulus and perception, he is presently' more interested in the study' of aesthetics. He is well known as a visiting lecturer in Introductory' Psychology' for his amusing anecdotes and risque stories. joux Lvos Kicxxtcnv, Head of the Psychology' Department. is most. famous for his work in the field of social psychology. He ree cently' initiated Project Sobig, a study' of planning behavior rising a simulated stock market environment. The purpose of this study is to describe, predict, and control the extent to which a person successfully carries out the plans he makes. The students in the project compete with each other and with the market to earn the largest profits. '1'o provide the proper incentive , Dr. Kennedy adds drvly, 'Awe make one half the course grade dependent upon the student's final batik balance. The morality' of this may be J problem, hut in the real world, performance tends to be cared for in much the salne way. 42515 y .ms f .Www ,X 111011113011 111' 1110 1'1'i111e11111 1'111ss 1111 151111, 1Xss111-111111 1'111l11'ss111' S. S111-11.1111x ,11'11s11s is 1111 0x11011 1111 1111- g1-111111111 1111111111111 111' 1111111 211111 1s 1'U'2Ill111U1' 111' 1110 11'111e11' 11s011 11'x111111111, l'l1V1'.1i1'111 lL1'r1l1111'1'. .111i11111g 1,111I1L'LF1Ull 1'11i1'01s111's 13C1J1lI'11l1L'111 111' 1101111101 111 1955, 1'1'111'1-ss111 111111s1111 11r111t110s 110111 g1'1111111110 211111 lIll11C1'f.f1'1lC11l2l1C C1J1I1'SCS, 1111'11111i11g 1110 F1110 111 1110 1'12l1'l1l,'Y 111 111111 11L'1l11l'l11lC11l. 111' 1111s 11111011 112111 i11 1111111e1'1111s g011111g11t 0x1101111i1111s 111 1110 l'1l11Cf1 S11110s 111111 1111s 1111110 0x1011s11'0 ex11111111111111 111 1111? 11111- 111S11'11'1 111' 1'1'1111'111 1'1l'2ll11l'. f111I'1'C1ll11' 110 is 11'1'11111g 21 1'1'11111'1 1111 1110 10111111111 111' g'1'11111g1' 111111 11111s11'11I g1'11g1'1111111 211 1110 1'1'1111'011111 1-x1'11111l11111s 111' N11l1'g11ll111l21, 2111 1ll11'1L'1l1 010011 C1151 111 511111. 131 .11111x Q, S11-'11'.1k'l'. 21 111ClH1JC1' 111' 1110 15l'11I1l'lI1lL'l11 111' .xi1l'1111UII11' 111111 11111011 1111111111 1111' 111s 1'111111'11111111111s 111 ll XlI1'1C11 111 s1'11'1111110 111'111s, is 111111-11111 11111111110 1111 1'0s01111'11 111 1111- lIl1l11Cl'll 11CNC11l1JIl1C11I 111' s1111111 1J1l1S1CS. 11111111 seeks 111 21111711 s11i01111111' 111i11111110s 111 11111111111 1111'11i1s. 1111111-ss111' 510111111 is 111'i111111'111' l'Ul11CI'11L'11 1111111 S1L'1J2I1'11I1I1g 1110 1111111111111 1110111'0111'111 11111101'11s 111' n1'121NN11'111 11111511811 1111111 111011 111I1111'1111111 1'111111'x1 111111 11'Z1l1S1Cl'1'11lg 1110111 111 s111'1111 111111 11111111111 s1111110s. 111. S11'11'1111's 1050111111 1'1l11gCS 1111111 1111? 0x110111111'11111I 111111 1111s01111111111111 111 1110 111e111'e111t111. H0 11218 11111111s11011 111 El g1'0111 Y2lI11L'l1 111 111-111s i111'11111i11g 11l21g11C11il11. s111-11111 s11111111s, 1111111111 111 011s1's. 11111111 111' 91301111111 111105, 81111811111 111'11's, 11111'1'11'11110s. 211141 01'1111s1's. 1'1'11111ss111 N1XRlIX 51:111111Rzs11111111, 1-Q11g1'110 Higgins 1,11U1'CSSOI of ,1Xs11'1111111111, 1'1ll'l'Cl1l11 11011115 :111 11111101'11111i11g 111 high 11111111110 11s111111111111 111111 1110 211111 of 111111111111111 1111111-111-11111111111 11s111111111114 11111 111lU111g1'L11711S 1110111 1110 s11'11111s111101'1-. 111 1111' 11l'1'sC111 1'1'o1e0t S1111111s11I11-11-. ll E111-111111 s111111' 1010s1:11110 11111 111' 1'111'1'1011 11110 the S11'1I11IN1J11l'1'C 111 llll 1111111111111e11 111111111111 111 111146 111111111g1'111111s free 11111111 1111' 111s11111111g 0110115 of 1110 Cl1l'11l'S 11111111s11111'10, 1110 1JllI'4 1111s1- 111 1111- 111111111g1111111s 11111 110 111 111111 1111111 111. S1'1111'111'1s01111d 11-1111s II11SS1l1g'u 1111111013 f11111111111'111g 1111s1'11'11111111s 111' s1111' move- ll11'Il1S 111111 g1'111'i111111111111 11111111111111 111 111t1t111'1l11111'0 111111 N011'11111's 1,.111s. 131. S1'1111'111'lNL'111111 1111s 11ss011011 111111 1111110 is 1111 more 111111011111 111 1110 1'1s11110 111l1YC1'SS 1111111 1111s 1101-11 s1'1-11 111' 1110se111 11111 11-I1-s111111's. H0 s1101t1111110s 111111 1111- 1111I111'1111'11 111111101 1'1111s1s1s 111' 1-11111-1' 21 111111 gas 111' 111111110011 1111111-11111-s 11111111g1111111 1110 1111i- 1 11'1s0. 111 1111111111s 111' 'K1'1111I s1111s, C11l1l1111g' 111I'1'11-1011 110,111 which 1 1 11111111 111'111'11'1110 1110 e111'111's 11111111s11111'1'1'. 111. 1.11111 11, S1'111Z1 11, 1111., C11l2l11'lll1l1l 111' 1111: 11C1Jll11lll1C11I of ,M111111111111 111111 1111011111 111' 1110 fJ1JS1'11X21l0l'1, is 11111011 1111111111 1111' 111s 111101111111 111' 1'111101'1 N11lI1C1'111Jl1l. 1,1'11l1'L'lllI1'N 111'11g1'11111 111 1111 I1l11Ll1 11111111111111111 ll 1' -' 'Bill' 1'es0:11'1'11, 11111111 is 11L'1Ilg 1'1l1'I'1CL1 101- 1111111 l1l111Cl' 21 111s1 l'C11111J111'SC11lCl1l 11111111111 111-111'1'1'11 1'1'1111'01o11 111111 11111 .X111111i1i 1'1I1C1'g1 C01111111ssi1111. '1111' 1'111j0111. 1'11111'01'11ed 111111 1111- 1111101111111 1JC?1K'C111l1C 1150 111 11111111111011 111l11'Ug'Lfl1 111111'01', 1111111's 111 lI1'1l1CNC 115 g11111 111 IIICLIIIS 111 11 S1111f1'1'-111111011011 11011130 1111111111 11s 1110 S101111111I111. 11111111 is 0ss01111111l1 ll I11l1g11L311l' 1101110 1111 1'1111111111111g 111l11'UgC1l 1lllC1C1 211111 111'111i11g 1111-111 1111111 they 1 11150 l1lQ.l'l11l'I' 111 1101111 11C111lI11. 1'1'111'0ss111' S1J11lL'1' 111111115 11111 111111 ix 1110 s111'11'ss 111' 1111s 1111e111111 111111111 1Jl'011l1C 1111- 11111111 11'1111 21 11111111111 llll 1111 1 1 s ' ' 1 ' 'x 1' 151110 :11111111 111 CIICIQ1. l't'mn his uiluc ut thc ltlp of tim CIIOIIIIKHIN ihghts uf Stztirs in tht' Clictiiitztl liugineeting lkuihling. Pmiicssm likxi sl I-Q luilxstmx tztn set' the rising strttcltttc ui' thc nvw lillgilll'C'liItgf2ll1lliI'1lllgil',WilifilhCil2lSill'ilJCiiliCNigll. lhis SCIIICSICI' ht' is ntlsu initiating tt new cotirsih 'l'hu licotitiliiitis ol' flhctnicatl l'i'm'c'ssc's, ln ztclclition hc lct'lt1l'cs unclL'i'- gi-:ultuttc zuui gmtltuttt- ctmtusus in thcrnimhunuuics, :unlu- mzuic ln'm'c-ss mutmls, :uid thc zinzilysis ui' unit uppzrzuions. HN llllCl'CSl lll lilClIllUiiNIl1lllllCS Zlllli ll'L1lISlJ0l'l IJl'OlJCl'lICS of systctns tztkvs hint to 'Fotrcstztl llCSC2lI'l'il fiCIIlC'l', wiicrt' ht' ls l'lll'l'l'Illii uutlsiiig txtth 1't'0lcct NlllllCl'illH'll. In ti0IlllL'tliUIl ixith this pmicct. I't'0i'Cssut' loiinstm is ulso SlllICl'YiSillg lituu' gtzulttutt' ,students in thcili' stuclx ui' iusctl hthuuu still Mslttlts. Pcriizips thc niust stzuthug nl his pmjctts is in 'thc iichl of :tutoinzttic pivwss mtitimlg iu this sllltiX ol thc thtizttnits of non-iinctu' systcins, l'l'c1l'csso1' luhusrmis ultitnatlt' guui is thc cwtitmi ol' tht' nzltituiul ctuttmnx hx tiixuliim-sl iills Xlll l'm s 1 O O S llllll 4' n g I n e e ng U.,i.t,,t. W. .nt 1 t 1 t i Clhztitnizui ui' thc lJL'p1u't1t1C1it of Nicciixtttiuii i'illgiIl0l'l'- ing. l'mlit'ssm' Rtusikt XI. Dkxki- l'CIJl'L'SClllS IJ1tI'l ui thc young l'L'QilllL' thut hats initiated ll new Cligilllfflillg t'mit't'pt :tt l'iint't'lon. liciknt' rmniiig to l'riiu'cloii in 19519, Pm- fvssoi' Diztisc mis atssuciattcci with thc iXii'c't'ztI't Gus l'ui'hiuc llixisiun ui' fil'IlC'l'1li lilt:c't1'it7. Hc stresses thc usg' ol' ungi- uct-ring uuzilugivs in his t1t1cict'g1'ziclt1tttc courses sinrc hc ktiows irmn pcrsuitztl experience thztt niost ciigiiufvriiig pruhlc-ins ztrtr not ctniiiticcl to one hrzutcth oi' Cllgilllfflillg ztlonc. llc- is cxtrcnicly WCiiAl'0L1l!liCCi in thc cnginccriiig Iicitl, :ts his spcfiztltics are ttcmtiztttticztl CllgiIlL'L'l'illg, hcztt trziiislm. .uul ituiiivci gms mechanics. Hts slutlcnls clizuuut- lCliilL' ilis il'l'llll'L'N :is n1Ctit'ul0us :intl i'zttl10l'h in that hc- is zthlc lu uunhinc highly precise illttstrxtttw cirztwtttgs with it clctztiit-tl. czisih tttiticistood ticliwrrx. Xy'hy should it tztke ine loin' honrs to lly front Clztliliornini to New York. :incl then take itnother liye hotns to go sixty iniles to l'rint'eton? exflztinietl .-Xssottiztte l'roI'essor llwin tl, Hxzi-is in his Ifoitestaul Ollice. 'I'he solution of siinilzn' prohleins hy' the use ol' low speetl z1irt'rzil't lot inztss trztnsportzttion over short tlistztnees is Professor IIZIIUIIVB ehiel concern. Currently' he is tleyoting nnifh of his time to atnztlysis :intl iniproxing wind tunnels to test his ziirtratlt. Representing neznly :ill phases ol the .Xeronztnticctl lingineering llepztrtinent. l'rol'essoi Hzilen is :nlyiser to itll depztrtinentzil stntlents. gintl teacher ol' hoth grzitltuite zintl llIltlCl'gl'11llll2llC courses on strutttnre :intl itetoelatstirity. .X I'hi lietzt Kztppzt inetnher ol' the tlziss ol' lEllH. the genial Professor Hzifen eztn nsnailly he Iiouncl tluring ollice hotns tztlking or joking with two or niort sttttlents. Prolessor Htkky' Hxylyloslx lllss ot the llepztrtlnent ol, Leology hats t'ont'entr:itetl his study in the lieltl ol' 9lllJlll1ll'lllC geology. yyhile serying with the l'nitet'l States Xztyy cltiring N'orltl Ny'1triII, l'rol'essor Hess tlis- toyeretl at new geologicztl Pllt'lIUIIICIltlIl'ffll2llfl0PlJCCl tnountatins fltltlll to titttltl iiCL'l helow the surlzice ot' the seat. He nznnetl these clroiynetl islzrntls CQnyotsi', one of whitth has heen nzinietl the Hess Guyot in his honor l.ztst yezn' Proliessor Hess pulilishetl at hook lor the Nlinerztlogitztl Sttttly' oi .XIIICVILXII entitled .SI'1Hit'Il1l'I' Igmfouy t,on1j1If'y. .lIor1l11mt, :intl ill pres- ent he is working with lllllllllllli' stntlents in the c.l1I'llDlJL'1lll on the rt ptohlent ol the islztntl tire. llxtying rereixetl lns 15.8. trotn Mile Ltntl his grzttlnztte clegtees from l,l'lIllL'l4lIl. he teznhes Optical Xlineiztlogy :intl ,ytlyttnretl General Geology. Dr. I.tIt,I ylxiuo tikotto. Prolessor ol' .XCl'UIl2llIllt'Hl lingineering :intl the infinnhent in the Rohert H. Goal tlztrtl Clhziir ol let Propulsion, is one ol' the worltl's lore tnost :ttithorities on iet propulsion :intl gals tlynznnits. hzty ing worlxetl with rotlxets since his uiitlergizttluaite tlatys in Ronte in IQZS. His interest in inissiles inyolyes hint with the prohleni ol re-entry' :intl to tleterniine the lmest sile itntl tlistrihntion ol' weight znnonff zt lIllSSlll'lS strives. Ile ' 1 H U t cause ol' our continuing progress in the lieltl ol, spatee trztvel, l'rollessor Clrocro helieyes his heltl will require at growing ntnnher ol' tztlentetl reseztrrhers. .Ns Z1 result, he tries hztrd to stinnilzxte the interest ol' students in this :neu :ind to eneourzige then: to inyestigztte whirl goes on insitle rocket. 'Ihere wars zi tiine when the only hniltlings on the site of ltorrestxil Reseztrrh Center were gl'CL'IllltblIV.'S. hut the T00-loot long hniltling ol corrugzitetl steel neur to the r l'rineeton-lenn :tcrellerzttor hears stnztll reseinhlzintje to its predecessors. Here Professor A1.rxysink .X. NIKOLSKX i :intl his grzttlnxtte stutlents Conduct tests with 550,000 W niotlels ol' lieliropters :incl yertiextl tztke-oll :intl lzincling tY'Ii0l.j ztirtrztlt. lXl0lllllCtl on at lnoying ztrnt running on xt trztcla the length ol' the hniltling, the inotlels cztn he nizttle to 5lllllll1llC tree flight with the tiitl ol' eoinplex ortlers issuetl Iron: :intomzitirztlly-controlletl txipes. lnlot nizttion from at series ol tests is eurrently heing ronipztretl yyith lnll srztle plaine flights to tleterinine the relzttiye :1t'ct1t':tc'y ol' pretlietions. Proliessor Nilxolsky 's gtrtiy e tesearell W is an exznnple ol' the reinxtrkztlnle energy he inziintatins :ts chxtirinzin ol' the seleft .Xriny Seienfe Pztnel :intl us one i ol' the inost iinportztnt tnetnhers of the .Xrniy lrztnspot l txttion .Xclvisory l':1nel. .X pioneer in helicopter theory he currently' teztehes this snhjeet att the grzitlnzlte level. S 3 . 2 1 at A jg A H gf t C1U111l1lI111Qll'1' Wxlll-'ll C, 1Sl.xl'lxlxxs. .xSSOCl21lC Professor ol' X11N11l St'1C1lK'C. lwilie represelllell lhis 1101111111 ill fjlllllliilj fiX1111121SllL' C'01111JL'llll01lI ill 1918 :ls llI1 l1l1C1'112l1C 1021111 1110111- her llllll ill 1952 LIS Il 1'lll1 ll1C111lJC1'. .Xl'ler Worlcl lvill' 11 the Cf71l11111lI1llC1' look lliglll lrzlillillg zlllll servecl oll the FSS Iioxer llllrillg llle KOYCIIII lxllll' llyillg close glifjlllltl support lllissiolls. Hzllillg 211161111011 the Nlllzll Xvllli Col- lege, lle 1'CUl1'11Cil to ,x111121lJUl1S lo lezlell AC1'Ullf11LllI1lCS allcl Bleleorology ill 1956. Before l'0111l11g to l,1'111CCI011, Com- I112l11ClC1' Blfllllllilllll serlell :ls .Xir Ollieel' U11 the USS Hl1l1I'lJI11. 1-le czlllle lo P1il11K'C1OI1 ill 1960. Military Sciences clllllflllll l'14X11SlR1UX Sill Ii1XR1l, l'1'UliCSSU1' ol' N21Y1ll Sei- elllie. llzlrillg gl'l1ll1l21USQl 110111 .X11112l1J0l1S ill 19-11, was zlllzllllell Ille Silver S1111 for liUll1'11gL'OllS :llilioll llllrillg the llzlllle ol' Xlfllil filllll ill lhe Pllilippilles. Alter llle Xk'2l1', Cllptzlill Slllllllillill serlecl ill lhe Neill Bl11'C2l11 ol l,C1'SU1111Cl lol' llle XCZIFS Ilelore zlllellclillg the NL1V2ll Vvlili College. 1.111011 he serl ell :ls Ullllllllllllllllg0ll1llC1' ol' the Rzlllzlr Piekel Nil-lll'l1CI'N 211111 of liscorl SCll12lLl1'0l1 18 O11 the xxlllllllll' H1l1'1'1C1'. Prior lo liolllillg to 1'I'1l1C'Cl011. he was exeelllile ollicier ol lhe Nllllll .Xir Sllllioll :ll Kel West. COl0l1Cl lv11.l.IXM 1-1. CoRllr'rl llectrlllle Professor of Military SClC11l'C all 171111001011 ill -1111, of 1958. He llzls heell 2111 ollicel' ill the l'Cg11lZ11' xxfllly sillee his g1'21Cll12lIlOl1 from the U. S. Nllllllllf .'Xii2lllf3l11l' ill 1938. Alter his lollr ol duty illlllledi- 2lIClf following glililllilililll, he l'CI111'IlCil lo West Poilll ill 1913 WllCI'B he Kllllglll lillglish lllllil 1947. F1'OI1l 1918-51 he SIIW zlelire flllll' ill jzlpzlll, SCl'NlI1g with the liiglltll Afllly. Wllile lllere, he served :ls Chiel' of l,1'0SCCll1U1'S for llle XVzlr fl1'lI11CS rl-1'l21lS. After El llrief tour of :lull ill Korea ill 1953, Colollel Corhell wus zlssigllell lo llle Ollire of the ,XSSlSf1iI1I. Clliel' ol' Stall' ill Xlllsllillgloll. He llelll lhzll 1303111011 lllllil his 21lDlJUl11l11lC11I at 1'l'illl'etoll. Stllllellt, lllelllllers ol' the Air Iforce ROTC :ll P1'111CCI011 rezlclily agree lllzll Ll. Colollel 1l01S1iR'1' C. RilC114,RS, 1'ro1'ess0r ol' Air SC1Clll'C, l11l'l11lllCS1S El very outgoing PCI'SU1121l1Q. His Air Science classes zlre ctollcllletell ill all liKl110SlJl1C1'C ol' l:l'lC11llly 111l'UI'1112llllf. Colollel Rogers is 21 1'Cg11l2l1' ollieer :lllcl holder ol' the 1'21ll1lgS of C0111111l1l1ll Pilol zlllcl BOI1l1JZl1'lllC1'fN1lYlg11IO1'. He hlls lllllll his Bzle1le1or's Degree ill Sciellce :llld his Mas- Ier's Degree ill 1-Ieollolllilis 211111 Politics and is 21 g1'21Cl112llC of llle .Xir 1fol'cte's ,Xir Cilllllllllllil 211111 Slzlll' College zlllll .XC2l4lC1111C l11SL1'l1Ll01i.S School. Prior to jflllllllg the 1'rillceloll l'11ClllU', Colollel Rogers sellell ill Hzllrzlii 1111111 1916 lo 19,18 and ill lfllglilllll 110111 1956 to 1959. Hnrk Rrwzv: S111li1'1111, Is6111an. Front Row: Lfl1jfl1i111C, Lane. SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS Darwin R. 113112111116 ..... ..... I Jresident blames L21116 .... ....,. 1 i1'1f-P1'es1dent '1CI'C111l2111 M. Sullivan .,.. ..,.,,S61'1'ela1'y Yw1'Cl,lS1l1'6'1' Mi1'11216l D. 1501112111 CLASS OF 1961 T116 16111111 1111111 S1111111161 was di1111tul1 101 s01116. T116 211ia116111i1' 11111 111 .1l111lO1' year 10011 sixteen 110111 Ulll' ranks, and 11111616611 11111116 i1 only 11111161 sur- veillance. The easiest 1ra11si1,i011 was Fred Kr6is16r's, w110 l'CIU1'11LTC1 11'O1ll a Sl.1111111C1'iS 16s6ar1'l1 i11 Vienna 111 161't6iv6 1116 Milbank Awa111 as 1116 l'21111i1Ilg University scholar. 116503101105-O1 2111011161 kind-were 110u11116ss 11111161- 1ak6n 6ls6wl16r6: -101111 Cl'OWV1llC1' 211111 111611115 l1a11 1314611 Triangle 111 1116 fl011llllC1lLI 211111 1111111 Cu111y, '110111 Havens, and M1111 Ri1116 were sai11 111 112116 taught English 1.0 geishas. Tl1is was 2111 early view 01 .Xluinni Spirit, 1111111 1116 lJ1'1l1CC1O11 C1u11 01x1a11a11. There w21s 21 116w 16e1ing 21110111 1116 111a1i6 as '61 11101611 i11111 1011111211 SL11J1'C1111lf'1' 0ve1 1116 lil'6 111 the 1ian111us. H. 111211161 D11dw6l1, SC1'Ul'lly O11i1t61, was i11- lrodueed 21s gll21li2lll101' 01 peace against 1,116 111016 l'211I11Jl1I1Cl10l1S r611111166s, 11111 El S20-2111-110111' 11116a1 di11 l1101'C 1.0 g61. things 011 111 a s11116r s1ar1. 1110111 111616. 1116 year passed 11111611111 Under Ca11121in 13011 KfJ1'111'll11llJl'-, 1116 i11i111'y-11l21g11611 6161611 played 11111 21 s11o11g season, 61611 i1 111111 Yalie 2111l1OllI1CC1' 11i1111'1 agree. A1111 la16r in the year P616 C2llHIJ13Cll 1611 the 1121sk6111a1l6rs 10 Cl1arl11116. N. C. 101 1116 win11u11 01 21 16111111 season. S111 H111111111 led 1116 1irs1 assult O11 1116 1111611611111011, as 1116 C. F. D. l1a11l611 i11 a YCCOII1 1ak6 wi1l1 512.711, 111 1116 LII1L1Cg1'21C1U2lICS CUI11l'11Jll1l11g. The second, di- 16121611 by P211 131111115011 211111 Dan -121CliSOIl 211111 1111051611 by 1116 C11C1'gy a1111 wisdoni 111 G111111111 Sikes, surpassed 1116 d1iv6 111 1116 1J1'CCCl1l11g 16211-XN'1ll1 Cap 211111 Gown leading i11 1121r1i1:i11a1i11n. T116 1110s1. fiery issue 01 1116 year was 1116 in116li1ia1e sn11111i11g 132111, 111 save 6xc6ss spending in 1116 1J1'OOIl1 budget, and its XV2i1'l1lC1' sequel: C0111116ll6d 10 1111 l1is s11111king 116hin11 1116 1J2i1'll, SOIIICUIIC got 1721111611 away. S0 11id 1,116 ilaining Sl1'l1C1l11'C, 10 1116 1161igl11 111 21ll O1JSC1'YC1xS. .PX S01lCl'C1' issue was 1116 Pr6si116n1ial 1:2n1111aig11. The inside 110116 along 1116 way 6211116 110111 Ronald George, wl10 11u1wi116d all-1116-Harvar11s-11111-loglher 111 116601116 21 0011111011611 K611IlC11y 1r0u116. Dave 1Vl12l1'10f1 and 11111 Kellogg got a 0116-week 1111111 on 1116 COP's 1VC1J CLASS DAY KLONINIITTICIC: I.C1V1ll, KU1'll1'11l1lIJ1i, XVi1'k61111611, M1'C1111n611, Ewing. 1:10111 111111: Cr11w11161, Nelson, 1VC1S1Jl1l1l1, 1VC1JS1L'l', Runne. Slairilccl xc-11io1's lJ11ilt ll 1xi1111i11g lillljllllill lC:1111. days Clll'liCl' co-1'c1iIJic11t with R. lJz1x'icl ,Xl'II1Sll'Ollg ol' the F. S0011 l'lilfgCl'2llCl .xXV2ll'ilfXV2lS clroppccl l-l'0Ill his 14111111111 ll'w'!:ly 1-ol1111111. 'l'hc- issue was his iIllCl'lJl'Cl2l- tion ol' WcllcslL'y l,l'0iiCSSOl' hlilIlCl'lS views on 111o1'z1li11'. lIlS1Jll'CCl Lo i111c's1igz1lc thc: p1'ohlc111 lol' 1111-111scl1'cs. 5ClliO1'S sought llll'il' own i11LC1'lJ1'c'lz1Li011s in thc FCC Illll1'1'i2lgL' louise. This was ID2llillK'lll2ll'lf' ill1lJ01'I2lllI with HKJllSClD2ll'liCS Wvek so 110:11 211 llilllll. Xvllllt l1'z111sl1i1'1'1l cluring thc' yczn' was Hlllfll lilac 5152113 lnclmcr. hum i1 was ours. :mal our last. 'lhc l-llllll'C posed IJCl'IJlLTXlllg' llllebllfllh, hiulccl at in iIlICl'YiCXX'S and L11J1Jli1':1Lim1s. Don 1flIllIlL'l'SOIllS P02106 Clmmips ncws was Ol' imcrcsl IO lllillly, lllltl swim- saw i11 its lllflll' clomcslic' l'oc'11s Lhc only 110110 lm' XX'ilcox Hull. lu 1 Lll L uct ln llllll el I1 h 15 ' 1 sv sc wx ww 0 -2111: c .0 -zu wmwin ff :md a fllllllglllg lJl2lCCilJClliIlll. Blll our lmfscfimcc here had llllllll' its l0llllWilJUliOllS, :mul l'11t111'c years would Neck amd ollvl' lIl0l'C'. . . . xziriccl. fzzsm, Iifnlc Roan' lYatts. Rlllll'llQl'I'. lftrmi lflllll' Ilond. Xlagargee. lll'XIUR CLASS OI lflCIliRS lX'illiatn B. Bond ..... Pt'c'.wiclc'11l llilliant S. Nlztgargec' ...... I'fccf-1'i'c'.riclc'rzt llaxid R. XX'atts ..... ..,.... S cfcrelccry lX'illiatn S. Iiallenger .... ...... T rcfc1.s'1n'c'r CLASS OF l962 Over seven hundred tanned and rested nteinhers ol the Class ol l9fi2 returned to Princeton in September with mixed emotions. 'l'he beach parties, sailing. and swinnning were over. hut the challenge ol upperelass independent work and extra-curricular responsibilities and the niythical attraction ol club Iile provided acceptalmle substitutes. .Xlmout one hundred kind and tzttttc-rely keyceptors rushed hack early to help 'Athe hest lreshnian class yet adjust to the peculiarities ol the Princeton enxiron- ment. Sagely they dispensed their Imits ol worldly wisdom: the one-uptuanship ol the precept. the lutility ol' the arerage mixer. the lmaiting ol the Swedish goxer- ness, and on until the beer ran out. XX'hat with ntoring lurniture, laying rugs. and catching up on sutnnter news, the lirst three weeks ol' classes didn't seein like school at all. I-'ootlmall season and its enthellislnnents postponed until alter '1hanksgix'ing the prospect ol' dusty hours at Harrefs Place poriug, oxer toines and monographs 'S lor that unmanageahle Iirst junior paper. Suddenlx 1 . , the llartntouth game was orer. The soccer team. spurred by juniors ran .Xntc-rongen. Kitson. aucl lug among others. cropped the lxy Crown. and the lootlmall teant looled everyone else ln' compiling a T-2 reeorcl with the help ol' Nlessrs. Craig. Large. liornrose. Weihetnnater, and their hard-working classmates. In spite ol' irnpencling ,junior paper deadlines and neg- lected courses. the 'lriangle Show played to packed houses, a hit lor the third straight year. lmelore juniors and their dates wound their way hack to the library fto pick up utulmrellas on the route to Prospect Street. Like the pulsations ol a blllflilllllllllllfl' final exams soon passed and the ever deepening snow, the in- creasingly cold weather serrecl as a rentinder that the prelude to spring was at hand: liicker! XYith the year hardly hall oxer and many ol' our cluhniates still almost strangers. clulnnen had to choose compatible QIINIOR PROM C10XlXll'l'I'lili, lfrlcl: How: Luna. lYoIl'orcl, Xlunson. Helmholf. Ifmut lloax' Kllxmer. Weinstein. llarttnan, C-et lJL'l'. ng eating' companions lor the next year. Bicker dragged, hut incisive Character analysis, inspired leg-work, and clogged determination In the sophomore hicker coma mittee proved ellective and a natural, successful hicker resulted. The second term had harelv begun when the Class ol H3152 played host to the rest ol' Princeton at one ol the most successlul iunior proms ever. Under the able direction ol' Mike Hartman and Phil X'Veinstein almost nine hundred couples shook. jumped, twisted. and even danced to several rock and roll groups and Les l3rown's Band ol Renown. The nucleus ol Clamphell. liaemmerlen. and XYhite- house led the basketball team to its second straight lvv Championship and through the lirst round ol' the NCAA tournev in New York. Despite continued re- solves to get going on thai second junior paper QXVhat a long' drearv task it looked like after the hrstlj, there were lew lamiliar lages around during spring vacation. 'lhc lreefing rain and slcet and snow the week helore seemed to he that last straw which broke the resolve ol many would-he scholars and sent them scurrving south. inexplicably, the weather improved during' the last liew weeks ol classes and the experimental reading period was iused to the end ol' the term hy the inter' vt-ning Houseparties XX'eekt-nd. Except lor a hundred hapless pre-meds. predictions ol shows , last great l l juniors svmpathelicallv welcomed their new sections. drunks, and most amiahle girls ran true to Iorm, but juniors were getting nostalgic. One vear left .... X leehle stah at junior Generals, a lew finals, the usual highly organized period ol room dismantling and packing. and the class disintegrated. Nlanv, the tweedv stars ol' grey flannel summer job interviews, headed lor air conditioned niches in National Corporations and Big Banks which their more adventurous classmates shunned. All. however. would soon he comparing notes again. manv lor the last time. and laving' rugs. moving lurniture. . , . 'l'his vear the Class ol' '62 lelt at home in the cluhs. if' jack, Williams, Meeks, NVhite. SOPHOBIORE CLASS OFFICERS Richard xkvlllllllllx ,. ...... l'rc'sicIc'rzt Rand I . Jactk ...,. .... I 'ict'-l'1'c'.s'ill6I1t l.ouis B. YX'Ceks, lll ..... S'cfc'rcfIc1ry liclwarcl XVhite, .. ,,.., 'l'rr'c1.s'11rc'r CLASS OF l963 Anyone could tell we were sophomores. Xye knew which place had the cheapest haircuts and which OIIC had the cheapest hamburgers. XX'e knew the dirlerence between keyceptors and preceptors. We shut up about Bieker. Xye knew that everyone gets his laundry from . . . XVe knew that you always shop around lor lurni- ture. XYe dicln't huy banners. XXX: could tell you where ,025 and eyen XValker were. XVC alreacly had our date for the l'rince -'l'ig'er. And we could tell you what it was like when there was heaclshaying. lint then. why did the lreshmen keep coming up to us and asking when we had our lihrary tour? This year. we came hack to l'rinc'eton to see that lew things had changed. XYe did haye some trouble rectogniling our l renc'h instructor who had grown a heard during thc: summer, remembering the Iirst for lastj name ol' the guy who liyecl ahoye us last yfear fyou know. the one with the German hayonnet oyer his fireplace who used to wear a loularcl to lunchj. or reconciling oursely es to thc- teahouse with the llags on top which had hc-en huilt in the nncldle ol the tennis courts. But once we linally got around to beginning the year, it was a slow il' not downright sloppy start . . . XVe skipped the extra reading, we clicln't take down the instruc'tor's ollire hours and we clicln't think the first week's assignment was important rtilyztiny. The noticc- that we expected at first came linally when sophs like Barry Schumann. lerry Conroy. lack Heinrich, Brad Urcyultart. Dick Lemkin. Danny Ter- pak and Daye Goulden sparked l'rinc'eton's unexpected gridiron wins. rXrt Hyland helped to giye Princeton the lyy Basketball Clhampionship and Alolmny Cook along with seyeral other sophs led the way to a good hockey season. Austic- Sulliyan. another member ol SOl'llOXl0Rli BICIKIQR CIOXlXll'l llflf. 191111: lime: xllltlllllllll. Stallortl. Crane. lrister. liorocl, Icrfml lfozct' fblitlll. lack. XYil- lisnns. Weeks. Sclntncth. .lIi,cyitt4c5.' White. Smith. The sopltotnores tttatured in tnztnv respects. the tlass, was elected hoekev captain. In tlte surprise showing ol' the switntnittg teatn, sophs gave support to one of tlte best seasons in tears. And of the four selected to compete in tlte National Collegiate Switne tning' Nleet in Seattle, three were soplts-Gardiner Creett, .lint Crifhth, and Class l'resident Rick XVilliatns. Slowly, bttt surelv, we entered liieker. There was a tlass tneeting, an art'hitec'tttral tottr and several pre- tepts in whith the senior would never be more definite than or club. 'l'ltere were several diseontlortf ing facts-we were tlte largest tlass to go through tlte calling period in some tears. ,Xnd tlte letter which ar- rived tlte dav before liictker didn't ltelp tnueh eitlter: lf you find yourself' with only three or four clubs after tlte first tltree davs . . . lJon't believe the rutnors . . . lie tahn . . . ll' you fiitd yourself' witlt no bids on Open House ttigltt . . . lX'e were all reassured, however, when Klint Iiurnltant explained in his eolttnttt, One Point of ll1iI'Zl', tltat it was all at ntatter of ec-ottotnies antwav. .Xnd ICC Cltairtnatt l,ee Gardner eut short the period bv one day. XX'e bought our ashtrays, filled our water pitchers attd waited ..., -X t the end ol tlte run. we had aeltieved a natural lflflfff Bieker with- out rutttting into overtiine. And XVilliains ltad lost botlt weight and sleep. The Sophs had all been recognized. XXX' approached tnid-tertns with abandon and left for spring vaeatiott a week earlv. Both, however. caught tip with tts wlten we retttrned to find not only a 'A I in the sure course. but a S10 bill front Blakelev. Sontethittg at tltat ntontent ltit us and ltl0Sl of tts realized tltat we werett't sophotnores any longer . . . but almost juniors. XYe begait to think about a nta-jot' and a sttntnter job. XVe were, in fact, serious about ntattv things ttntil Houseparties. .Xnd. then. all of a sttdden. we berante Sophotnores again and anyone tottld tell you tltat. 1fR1i5HN1.XX CIO1'XCI1l,, 111111: 1111117 N1e1'1111. K1111111, -11l111lS1l1l. P11'ss11, F1751 Ifmw: 11illl1'N. 1,1'111l1. X12lX. YY111'111!. Winn, CLASS OF 1964 Unlike 21111 l1111111'1- 11, 11111 Class 111 1911-1 was gn-e1e11 111 1'1'1n1ie111n 111 El w111111111. 11e1' name was llflllllll, 111111 she was 21 1101-1f'1Il1JCl'L?l1 1111111 lady 1J2lC1i1llg' winds 1111 111 S1Xl1'-1XVO11111i'S 11131 11111112 Many El 112l1'1i 11111111 hung Ill 1111: slq 111111 111 1l1e 111111115 111 1he 11'L'S1ll1l2lll 1'111ss l1l6l1l1JC1'S 111111 111'C2l1'1' 511111111113 1Y2l11i11lg' 111'1'11ss 11111115115 llI11i1C 116011 111 1111111 1'2l1'1'11I1g' Il 15611 1111s1 1111s 111111111 1111- 11i1'1111'e 111 college 11111 1II12lg111C11 weeks l1e1111'1' 111 1111: s11n111 112115 111' s111111111'1' x'111111ion. 111116 11el11'1s 1v11s s111111 11111 111 1he XVII? 1111111g 111111 1111' UGC 1ll1C1'Y1CXVS, s111'1'1111's 111 Vllys, 1-iC11'C1Jl 111e1'1111gs, 111111 111is1'e111111e1111s g111111'11 111111 1111g11i111f11 111111's 111 K'll11l1Jl1S 1'111'11111es. .X s11e1'1111 issue ol' the H1,1'1111'C,' 111111 11ss1n'e1l 111e 11'CS1l1llC1l 111111 11131111 S1l2lY1llg w11s11 1111111111111 111s1 111 111e 132151, 11111 11121111 111111111 11111 111111'1'11'1s1- 11s the s1111l1111n111'1's 1'1-1111'111'11 '11'111l 1he11' 1'11L1,11's 111111 11111111 121115 l111111s11111e 11211111 112l11'1'll1l111Q, 111111 make 1111 1111l1s. Cane S111-ee 51111 11 111-111 s11111'ss I111' 1he 111611 111' '111 11s they 111s1 1hei1' Lillilllli' 1111' 11111111 111 21 1111111111' ll12l1'g11l 111 111e 111s1 lew l111111s 011121110 X1'l'L'S111llg. The endless 1111111111- 111 521165111611 1111111: 111111 w1'111 leaving lll1Sl1S1JC1'L11lg 110511111011 1i11111ih111g l1ee1' mugs, lD2lll1lCl'S, l'C1'C11JlS 1111' SllIll11'1' items, 111111 ll111J2l12lIl1'CC1 1J2l1l1i 111i1:o11111s. '1'he Fl'CS111I1Cl1 CI111111111 swung 111111 111111111 lll111Cl' 1111.11 111811.01 111 1 R1QS11N1,X1X CLASS fJ1'l1'l1f 1RS 11111121111 N1211' I fllllllllflll 112111105 1,e111l1 .... . I 111 1111111111 R11l1e1'1 XY111111' .. S1111 1111 fX1'1 11211168 l1111s11 C1111111111ns 1'11is the leadership ol' Bill Blur, -lim Leztch, Art Hanes, and Bob Xllarde. The council held two dances during the loothztll season, one Zl lllllhitll' Zlllilll' on the hztlcony ol the gym l'ez1turingDicky Doo :ind his rockin' Don'ts. ' the other on Sziturclzir night ol' the Hzn'rztrd weekend in the Student Center lor the lrosh who had by now started counting the days to the sociztl revolution ol BlLliCl'f-IUSI zi little over lour hundred dztys to go. Xmidst the hers' ol' sociztl zlctixity. the lreslnnen got some work done und hegzln to live up to their ztclrzince notices zts the snutrtest hunch ol ligers ever. Micl-ternis. linzils. and the szune sequence all over again lound the hl men grinding toward their sums :lt XX'oodx' XYilson. the 5IJCt'llll Progrzim in the lwllllllllllf ities. or just getting thztt The gridiron :tt Goldie. the hoztrds :rt Dillon. the ff? QR 6'-l lS RAH G Much spirit, less weight. ice :lt Baker. and the starting blocks :it the pool lound lreshmen working hztrd. winning some, and grzihhing it record or two in the process. -led Cruel' reeled oll' ll couple ol' new nutionztl lreshmztn swimming mzirks while Don XVeeden llipped in twenty-six goals and rolled up lorty-tln'ee points to set 21 new lreslnnun hockey scoring record. Tragedy struck in lllill-l ClJl'll2ll'y as the l'1l'CSlll112lI1 Prom was lorced lirom its usual Dillon site hy the annual Alumni Associzttion meeting. The lfrosh Council dicikered with the grads, got their reunion tent, El dance lloor, :ind 21 site at Osborne Field lor the first outdoor lrosh lling on record. Swinging to Basie and the perennial Flumingos, lighting oll' uppercluss bird-dogs and equally annoying hugs, the lrosh danced for the first time on Prospect. As the yezn' ground to an end, the frosh lound bermuda shorts and nothing much else to be ll uni- rf 35 clo l'nutlly the truce. lorm: slslle heer :ind linatls to he the order ol the dztx fic mons 'nerzlllx wiser. none the worse lor ll yezn' ol' cc cuisine, zthout lilly per cent lll love, :ind at len members less. the lrosh had lought through it alll lost then' coclcmess. :tnd regzuned some ol it. C.hc t . musing 21 major, liicker, opportunities on rzlrsitx tc.nns. :uid resolutions Zlllillll wait 'til next rear. mz will :ill pziss through the minds ol' the newlr ordztincd sophs t . during the summer :is they more one stcp ser to the lestixities :tt .Xlexztnder Hull in 1961. lrcsluueu retord lioldels Clrziel' and kennetlx led couch Nlickex Yogi 's ll'llIll, Jlll Whig and Clio Halls represent the Neo-Classic re- vival in architecture of the late nineteenth century. Originally placed on an axis with Nassau Hall, West College, and the former East College, they were to have completed the .symmetrical layout of the old College of New jersey. Vlfhen the University started building in the rarnbling Tudor Gothic style, how- ever, formal symmetry of buildings became impossible. Symbolic of a respect for classical learning, the Halls themselves are copies of Greek temples, altered some- what to fit their modern function. Even though they face north, following Greek practice, it is for their symbolic value that they are appreciated, not for an accurate representation of their predecessors on the wine-dark Aegean. 'Om QC-x ima aa. ..,,, .,v, , kxvffl - . 'Y-wr, . ' W W v X Nixwx x , 4 ,X ,X .X ,X .. - . . . ... - .. . ....... .... .. 1 NW , XKNN-M ug-Xu' q uguxv, X WX 'Mi-M X xx NN ., 'x 1x... Q NN ' Claw: ..,' I , W Q Tx M I fx l 4 V ' 1: . '- - -. . ' ' . vxnxs ,,.1:...- K Q X x . M , ,, . ,. r x ml ir 4 424 ' 7 ... 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K 1 QW RGANIZATIONS Service and Political Organizations limi: lime: Xian. limitl, Xiztgztrgee, NVillizims, liaitte, Ilziek, Lezuh. lfmnl llmw: I.:ih:tt'lhe, Ciztttltier. Grzilxer. Sulliittti, l.llllllX. UNDERGRADUATE COUNCIL The l'titlei-gt-zulitztte Clmiittil. the stucleht gmerii- tug hotly ol the lltiivetsiti, this yezit' in-1'lo1'it1ecl the tt'zttlitiott'tl liiitvliotts ol 't wmetttiiiw Uiwtiip :is well as ' ' ' ' m ' h m itticlertztkittg new zttezts ol testmttsiliilitj. lhe fiillllllill teptesettts stutlettt opitiiutt zttttl serves :ts ll liziistm between the attltttitiisliuttiott ztttcl the student body on issues ul mutuztl crntcerii. The metiibers ol' the Cloumil im-little the presicleiit, :md the x'ice-president ul' the lout' classes, the Clltztirutzttt ol the ll1KC1'ACll1b Clomttiittee, an ztppoititetl 1llCTIllllC1 2ll-lZl1'gC, and four elected oilieets. llmlei' the leziclersltip ol' Clliztirmztu -Ierrolcl Grziber, 'til. Vice Clliztirmztti Lelzuicl fi21I'tlHC1', '61, Sectretary- 'lieznsiitet' .leremiztli Sullivan, '61, and Executive Sec- retztry qlosepli Liimly, '62, the Council begun its activis ties cluritig' lfieslittiztti XVeek intcrviewitig and selecting at iiittefmzui lfresltiiiztti flouticil and zi lifleeti-man Un- llCl'gl'2lLlll2llC' Cloum-il Stull: the Stull works closely with the Clouticil tlimugltoiit the yf3Zil'. Nearly half the tnembet-s ol' the Cllztss ol' 1961 turned out for the inter- xtews. llutttttg the 5llIIllIli'l' the Luutttil hzicl ffllllllfll to ezttli illiotttittg lreslttttzttt zt pzxtttlililel tlesctibing the ttizuiy CXll'2lI'lll'l'llllllll' ztttixities on the czmipus. 'lhe llutttitil is mttstztittly l'UllLCl'lil'tl with matin- tziittittg :mtl liIl1Ji'UX'lIiQ the high illlllllly ol' the Prince- 1011 Rxperietice. llIlilCl'gl'2lKlll2llCS are tlesigttztted by the Cuiiticil to sit with ineitibets ol' the lfzuiilty :md iXcltttittist1'zttirm rm the llistiplitie, ,'Xc'z1cleittic', Athletic, zutcl LlliClCl'gl'2lllll2lllC l,il'e Clmtmtittees. lhese C0111- mittees l'ClJ0l'l bztck to the Cloum-il iii many itistzuices with helpful tifmtttmemlzitiotis. 'l'limugli the ellorts ol' the Cloutieil the Atlttiitiisttxttioii zitloptccl at plain by which mzttty stutletits' l'ut'nitui'e will be moved free of i'll2ll'gC over the suttmier. 'l'he success ol this trial pmlject may lezicl to the ztcluption ol' at plan whereby the ljiiiversity will move all llllllCl'gl'2lllll2llLTSl lurniture in lollowing sears. Ati evztluzitirm ol' the nietliocls and prot'etlii1'es of class elections was included in the CIOu11c'il's discussions. lYith the iclezi ol' giving llllLlCl'g'li2llllllllCh 21 clianee to lieztr lzttnltt inentlmers speztk on their special lielcl tlte Connell in tlie lztll by nztrrztting the niories ol ol study ontsitle ol their regular eonrses. and to con- l'rint'eton xittories the week ztlter tlie gznne. 'Ilia trilmnte to the intellettnztl lile ol the L'nix'ersity. tlte Clonntil ttgztin sponsored zz low price tliztrter lligln to klIlllCl'gl'2lCllllllL' Clonntil estxtlmlislietl tlie llolin Xritlier- linrope. Ilie ntatrriztge course. ttntler Clonnril spon spoon l.ectttre Series. 'lille qlolin XX'itlierspoon l.ec'tnre sorsliip. wats xery sttetesslttl. as wits tlie Stalls wt Cloinniittee. totnposeml solely ol nnclergrztclnzttes ztncl on xt spetiztl typing course ztncl it lirst ztitl eonrse, tclrisecl In at senior lzttttlty tnenilxer, chooses two ln at cletxtiletl report zintl sttttly. tlie Clottntil pto ztcnlti tnetnlmers eznli rein' to lmetoine Alolin XX'itlier' posetl to tlie Ifzttnlty Cotntnittee on Vticlergrztclttx spoon l,ettttrers. one in tlie lztll :intl one inthe spring. l,ile tlrztt tlie present nine o'c'lot'k cnrlew lor wointn lt is liopetl tliztt lztettlty tnetnlmers inritecl to give tliese in tlie tlorniitories lie extentletl until niiclniglit. 'llit leetnres will tonsitler tlie inxitzttion as uiiclergrztclnztte lfzttttltt ilonnnittee tiztrelnlly eonsitlerecl tlie propo recognition ol tlieir stliolztrsliip :incl stitnulating per- :intl pztssetl it on to tlie lrttstees' Clonnnittee on llntltt i sonztlity. Dr. Clolin 5. Pittenclrigli ol tlie Depzirtnient grzttlnztte l.ile lor at linztl cleeision. 'l'lie Clonncil in t ol' Biology lmetznne tlte lirst Alolin XVlll1Cl'SlJOOll l,et'- new xentnre estztlmlisliecl ll senior essztr contest. l.:ttt tttrer in tlie lztll ol llltitl :incl tlelireretl at liztseitlztting in tlie spring seniors now liztre :tn opportunity to series ol' tliree zttltlresses on 'lixing Cllotksu. Dr. lrzt sttlnnit seriotts trititlnes ol any pzirt ol their l'rintieton O. XX'zttle ol tlie Spetiztl Progrztni in European Clirililzt- experience. .X lmoztrtl ol ittclges. eoinposetl ol zttlniints tion wats tlie spring lettnrer ztncl clelixeretl tliree liiglily traitors ztncl senior latcttltj nietnlners. will serre ts sttctesslittl lectures entitletl ln Seztrcli ol Klan . :tn reztclers ol tlie esszlfs, inquiry into tnotlern lnnnztnisin. liotli in its perlorniztnte ol trzttlitionztl responsilnlt liesitles tlie Witlierspoon leetnres tlie l,YIlllCl'gl'2llllllllL' ties :intl in xenttnes ol new responsibility. tlie l'ntlti Clonncil :intl Stull sponsored lettnres by l'z1c-ttlty nienif grztclnatte Clottticil tlisplztyecl ltigli leztclersliip :incl itn bers on tztrietl sttliietts tlirottgliottt tlie year. Dirk ttginzttion. 'llie Clottntil again wzts at signilicztnt lotta Clolinztn. liezttl lootlxtll coanli. ztgztin eooperzttecl witli in tlie lile ol tlie l'nix'ersitr. l'XIJl'RC-R XlJl'.X'l l' C.Ul'XC.Il, S'lQXlflf: limi: IZoit':CZl1en,l,i, lYille. lllllllllgll, Iilielotlt. Hopkins. ,Nt'!11IIIl lfoxtx' Okitnoto. Xewlitltl lloslonglt, lxllllll, C.r1ttie, Yeztl, littrl, Seannxtn. Flon! lfmtx' Nlills,ll1tns, Spnnling. I.ttntlx. ilrztne. Stztllortl, .Xrery til t. ORANGE KEY i lhc twenty-lililh scar ol the Orange Key Soviets, spa-tial attention was given to aclvising thc: lireslnnen tht' largest antl one ol thc- tnost 2llllXCL'Xll'2l-C'Ul'lilliLll2l1' ahont. tht- ways they coultl hest htfnclit, lront their groups on catnptts, was ont' ol tht- husiust in its history. l'rint'eton etlntation. with partit'nlar emphasis on llntlcr the leatlvrship ol l'rt'sitlt'nt, l'erry li. Clark. 'lilg the inlorinal llllflllff'-SlllLlCIll relationship. Sonttfeigllty- Yitt'fl'resitlc11t llonaltl Spaitgciilmcrg. Alr.. 'tilz Secretary liw latwtvptors participatetl in tht- program nntler the Clilhtlrt l'. High. 'li2: antl 'l't'e:tstt1'e1' Roger ll. tlircttion ol a steering connnittve ol liltevn seniors liolgartl. 'lil. the lit-fs eight operational connnittecs hc-atlecl In Clhairntan Jerry H. 5ll2llllllli. 'til. continnctl their hroatl prograin ol st'l'ritC to the lfni- il ht' Cinitle Service. the tnost actixe ol' the eight wrsiti conntntnity. operational ronnnittucs. is Ul'g'llllllCll to tontlntt tours ln atlclition to tht- tratlitional program ol the Kei. ol tht' tatnpns lmoth lor clistingnisltucl xisitors ancl pros- tht- Soziety printccl the sctoncl ctlition ol tltcl'i'ii1rt'tm1 lJL'C'llXt' lrc-slnnc'n. l'ntler the leatlt-rship ol Cliairtnan flIllI'H!lfll', tht' t'ngagt'nit'nt photo talvnclar startetl last liclwartl .X. lontlinson, Wil. antl Ylll'-fllI2lll'Illllll .lohn year. lts popularity on catnptts has ntaclt' it an annttal XY. il hotnpson. 'til. the Cinicltf Sc'rx'it'c gate tours l pnhlitation. lht: traclitional Big El Spree . presentt-tl to oxer eight thousand visitors lront all the states and on llarxartl weekend, was hc-lcl this year in the Student lrotn niany lore-ign nations. Nlctnlmers ol the Service Clentvr. lt was hailccl hy nntlc'rclassn1t-n as one ol' the wcrt' slationctl in Nassau Hall each clay to explain the host tlantes ol' thc' year. l'nix't'rsity's history to visitors, antl gnitlvs also stalled lhe Keyfcpt Progrznn. perhaps tht- Refs tnost ptlh- tht- Orange Key Campus lnlorntation Ollirc- every clay l litifvtl linnction. attempts to lantiliarife incoming ol the rear cxtcpt Christtnas. lrcslnnvn with the l'niwrsity anal its way ol lile. Operating in conqinnttion with wontt'n's colleges Cironps ol approxintatt-ly nintf lrvshnien meet ton- tlironghont tht' East. the lntt-rrollt-giatc Clonnnittee tinnally tltronghont the year with a ntenther ol the sponsorvtl ntnnt'rons tnixers during thc' year, hoth at innior class to tlisxnss their t'espc't'tix'c prohletns. likes. Princeton ancl at other sthools. lhe annnal l resh- antl tlislilecs tonc't'rnc-cl with l'rintt'ton. This year. man Nlixvr. heltl again this tear in Dillon Grin, l l lxlaXf.lal' I ORS. limi: lfoax' Clzttsptwlwli. llatnvll. Sranlon, Scliiclen. Uarratt. Rvnclrll. li2lCllIllll'lilCll.H1lllll,Xll'Il2lllll'. Xloriison. Nlathews. Santa Maria. Nlorris. lfnurlli Ilo11':C1atllnan, lligh. Cllctnent. Clhappt-ll, Nllllllll. liisscll. Pyle. Klarolan. .Xtlxlvy Nlvltosu, banth. Hollancl. iianr. 'I'l1ir1I Ifmr: XYang. Oratn. ilalhonn. Nlacl.t'an. Frec'cllJt'1'g, ilattliionc. Langan. llallengct. Cratlt. Wt'instt'in. Gooln. Clhanihcrs, llaxis. litlwartls. 'lritnlilt-. Swonzl limit lltwtlon. Ringcl, livans, hlatohs. llatlwt, Iftwgtisoii. Stiller. llallow. klonvs. iltawlorcl. l'anitZ, Loupe. Rohlcn. Ifmzil lluax' lltulc-ll. Ilitl. R4'ntstIilt'r, Pierson. Ilarkvr. Slllllllllls. llaxitlson. lSrnner. Clrahcr, llllll. Niner. fill Floor: lfislicr. lirantlellc. fiilllilllllllllll l'IaIl. llntgctt. l't-itslcx. Srltaherg. Ilulntholf. -w1 li-uw. --i s--sf. f as A- ,V -.11-wf:-M it-we-imflsalrf.f5wuf.,1sym vv-an-iffss W W 1 111 ff 11s 1111 8111111111111 1 11 11 1 11111 111s11111 1 1111 lN Cl 1111 I31111'.' XL11llI 11 s 111111111 x 5 1 1 1 IN 11111 1111 1111, S11cpp.111l 1 1 11111 111 11 s 11111-. 151111 1011111111116 1s11 11111111 s11 1 111111111111 111111051 i11 111c 6161115 'I111' 1121113 S11111111s C1111111111111 ll 11 1118 111115 S. 1.11111 111 1111 1111111 1 u11111s 111111 1111 X1ll1I11ll .11111 1111 X s11111111 1e111es11111111x1s 11111111 111111111 11s1 1 s11111 111 111c1'1 1 11 1 z111sw111' 111s111111s ' IIC 11 ll 1 121111111111 111f111111 1 9168111 1 IX s 1 U 1 5111111115 11111 s111111 11s11111 111111111 111s s ll 111111111011 .111111131 11112 111111111 1 11111111111 we 211111 1111 CL s 1 Cl 11 JI 1311 s C1 ll1ll1Cl' 1x1111se 111111111111 l1lL 111 lllll 110115611 118 111111 1111111s liX1iI11f 1 1 11111 s 51111111 1311111111111 C1 1 IJ 1 11 lll 11 ll 111s 11111 1 11 High, 51711114 11 1 5 S XI ll C11 Iiucl: Icom: Davis, l5111't1e, Nlzithews, Swain, Llllldy. 1'iI'Ul1l Ifmzx' Rentsclrler, PZIVSUIIS, Hlltllllll, l1lII'lI1l1llll, Allt1Cl'SUll. CAMPUS FUND DRIVE Tl1e 121110 Cznnpns lrlllltl Drive, lllltlCl' 1111- t'112lll'll12lI1- ship of Stewart S. Hlltlllllf '61, 1o1le1'te11 llll 11npre1'e- 11e11te11 527,151 for t'l12ll'lQ' work SlJ1'C2lCl 11111111111 tl1e wor111. T11is yiT2ll'yS success 1Il211'1iCt1 1111: lirst tin1e si11ce 19511 that 1111' 172111117118 clrive 112111 gone over its projectecl goal which was set at 820,000 this year. Tl1e s111'1ess111l clrive was one of tl1e 11111st skillfully O1'g2lI1llCt1 tlllllllillglls ever 1'111111111'te11 1111 11111111118 with fewer 1112111 20 llIltlCl'gl'Zlf1U21lC5 not l12lX'll1g at least Z1 so1icite11 opportunity t11 t'0llf1'l1Jll1C. .-X l'Ctit11't1 5121.8 per cent ol' the llll11Cl'gl'2lt1U2lI6 b111ly gave 521.177, Tl1e rest was collect1f1l 1i1'OIll the faculty, 2lll1IlllllS11'2l1lOI1, 211111 gfiltlllilltf school. T11e fI'CSll1ll2ill class 112111 the highest IJCYCCIIIZIQC lJ2l1'1lt'llJ2l1l01l with 96 per cent coiitributing to tl1e drive. Helping H11111111t with tl1e pre1in1in21ry org2111i1ation of tl1e 11rive were Charles li. M. Rentschler 1111, Vice- cl1airn121113 llziines Y. B11r11ha1n '01, 'lll'C2lSll1'C1'I Lester Parsoiis, Ill '01, SCC1'CfZll'f'Q Li11woo11 l,. Davis '1123 Michael S. Mathews T125 Harvey liartle, Ill 162: YVillian1 1Xl. Swain, -Ir. '62g 211111 Joseph R. l1llIlC1y '62. Luncly was i11 t'1l2l1'gC of llIlC16l'g1'2llllI2llC 11111111 solicita- tions 111111 togethei' wi111 Hlltlllllf Ol'g2ll1llCtl il nucleus of 35 11orn1 captains 111111 over 200 entry solicitors to con11111tt the f0lll' night canvas. The Canlpns l'lllI1Cl Drive is llllltlllt? 1111 tl1e campus as it is tl1e only 1501111 of general t'll2ll'lfy solicitation per111itte11. It is e11tire1y organiyed 211111 COllC1llCfCC1 by l1HdCfgl'2ltlUllfCSffl'0lT1 the selection of 1'll2ll'lIlCS to the c11n1luction 111' solicitations. The 111ive originated as a 1neth111l to collect funds for tl1e Sllplltlft of the Princeton SIIIHIHCI' Camp operated at Blairstown by undergra111121tes. In recent years, however, it was de- ci11e11 t11 cornbine 2111 111211it1 so1i1tit21tion i11t11 1111e big 11ri11f 1'UIltlLlt'1.Cll Zlllllllillly i11 the filll. The 1060 clrive was SlJt'2l1'llC21t16t1 by tl1e slogan Ul,l'lllt'ClOll Serves-the ftllllllllllllly, tl1e nation, tl1e w111111. ln 1i11e wit11 this, tl1e lixecutive Co111111ittee chose 1'1121rities 1o1':1t1'1l 1111 21111111111 tl1e worl11. Each t'112l1'lff chosen to re11-ive CFD l'llllClS 112111 il specific lJl1O'lCt'f for which Cll111IJll5 11ollars 11111111 be 2l5t'l'l1JCCl. lfor ex21n1ple, 111111161011 lll1t1Cl'g1'fltlllZlICS bo11g11t, 2111 x-ray 1n21c11i11e for Nzigpnr College i11 I1111i21 Llllllllgll tl1e XY111111 University Service: 110111611 to support Il pro- fessorial chair at Fllllllglllll University Illltlllgll the 1'rinceton i11 Asia IJl'0g1'2llIl1 11e1pe11 resto1-11 tl1e library for tl1e An1eri1i21n l'1ll1'lll School i11 Greece: 1'lll'1llCl'Ctl l'l'SC2l1't 11 i11 1116111211 he21lt11 througli tl1e National Associ- ation lor Ret21r11e1l fillllt11'CIl1 211111 transp11rt1r11 East .-X1'ri1'2n1 high school 51ll11CIlES to the United States lllltlllgll 1116 A1neri1'2111 l'1lCltl Service. ln a1111ition CFD 111111118 were given t11 tl1e l,lilllC1CI0I1 Sunnner Cznnp and tl1e Stuclent Christian JXssoci21tion to further t11eir work i11 the New jersey 21re21. lftll' tl1e second year i11 El row, tl1e CFD 11rive was sin1p1i1ie11 through tl1e use ol' IBM 1iar11s 211111 1111si11ess lll2l1'lllI1CS. Richarcl L. gXllC1CI'SOI1, assistant to the Registrar, worke1l i11t11 tl1e wee ho11rs of tl1e morning witl1 tl1e co111111ittee l1C1IJ1Ilg t11 process the cz1r11s. 711116 use ol' IBM P1'0CCSSlIlg has Clll tl1e aniount of 1ileric21l work to El Illlfllllllllll, allowing extra 1112111-l1OllI'S for personal solicitation. Tl1e personal approaclr 21n11 the extensive prepara- tory organization before the campaign were two of the principal reasons for the tremendous s11ccess of the drive. PRINCETON SUMMER CAMP The Princeton Summer Camp is a distinctively Princeton social seryicefnot only is it run and stalled completely by undergraduates, but it is financed by the Campus Fund llriye and Princeton alumni, and ably adyised by Howard Stepp, the Registrar. Every two weeks about seyenty enthusiastic underprivileged boys from the surrounding cities descend on its beauti- lul site in Blairstown, New jersey, and the fireworks begin. 'l he liltitl session, ably directed by 'Ifom XX'ertheimer 'till and Bill Bomp '60, proved to be extremely reward- ing both lor the city-cramped campers and the book- cramped Princetonians. XVertheimer, at the cost ol a lew gray hairs, did a line job in keeping' errant campers and counselors in line without spoiling' the lun had by all. Clolorlul personalitiesfnot lacking on the stall' with joe Moore, O'KieIle, and Cheese-were abundant in eyery camp session, ranging lrom the pantomimes of a little Puerto Rican kid named Oliyer Hardy to the great mail robbery ol' the l2fyear-old Brooklyn blond, -Iimmy liscue. Overnight hikes to Sunlish Pond, com- plete with rainy night pow-wows in one tent containing ten campers and an equal number of shelterless girl- scouts provided vivid memories lor an amazing per- centage ol the stalll iylidnight expeditions to the Golden Chain and the XVhite Lake lnn were popular counselor diyersions. Best-Shack honors were mo- nopoliled by the irrepressible junior counselor from Philly, Stretch Garner. Along' with all the lun, howeyer, the counselors tormed mutually rewarding' lriendships with the kids and learned quite a bit about slum-crowding, family problems. race-relations, and the down-tovearth prob- lems olten ignored by privileged Princetonians. Late- night sessions ol' the stall' belore awards-day were eyidence ol its concern to provide a high standard of character and achievement lor the campers to shoot lor. ,Xnd behind it all was the hope ol combining meaningful seryice with an unl'org'ettable goodtime. Attempting to carry on this tradition in lfltil will be the new directors, Glenn Edgerton and Pete Baiter. Back Rrmf: Bale, Johnson, O'Kiell1e, Fran! Razr: Cheeseman, lidgerton, Baiter, Riyinus. a lxXlzK.l IIX la Kill Xi.Il,, llzlflu Ifmr: IIIUIII. NIxllc1'. Nlflxilf. SIOLUIIIQIC. l l1IIIf lfrma' Ilugczx, l',1l11l1m'sn11, l'1mlil1s, xvl'iNi. Ilzly. WI-IIG - CLIOSOPI-IIC SOCIETY The ,Xn1c1'i41u1 Xvlligfcilillbilllhil' Smicly ClllC1'Cd its lf?-llh yflll' on thc l'1'imc-mmm l2lllllJllS under ilu' leader- ship ul' Howzml G. I'cmlius '61, l'l'esiLlunt: Drmald R. , .. ,. . v' ,W l'.llllllCl'S0ll lvl, X111-fI'1'c'slmln'11L: :mal llcmhn Hcms lxi. SCllXL'llll'X. 'l'l1c Sonic-Lx lmlzu' l'0lIIlJlL'lHL'lllS thc Lfui- x'c1xilx's lurmzll zlnzulclxlim lbl'Ugl'lllIl ln' Illlhilullg in IllL'L'lillQ plana' lm' IIlQ'll with Ulllllllflll inmcrcsns in il1ICl'- llllliillllll rclzllium. public zillzlirs, :md tl'L'2lIiX'C writing. fill !LlIlll2lI'N ti, ISIUH. ilu- lxmx' XX'l1iQ,1CIliuuclmillislrzl- . . 1 lion lDI'C'5CllU'll its fil'sI NIM'2llil'l'. 'l'l1C H1blllJl'2liJ1C Sir Hugh cQl1iI5kL'H. lu Il Htllilfilf' ZillCliClllkC in KIc'Cfos115ll. lixzlrlly UIIUXCLII' lzxlcr mlmmlmi11ix1m1im13 l11srCQeucrnl .Xssvmlmlx NlJl'2lkL'!'. 2llllllUl'CNS .Xxn Rzlml. S1JUkC to z111oLlu'1' Iilll IIUIISL' in Nllflflxll 50, IiClxx'c'c'n 111850 two cxcnls. lllt' ISHN XX'l1ig-Cllicm 50215011 sam' ll Izruncssioll QF mlislinguislmcal xlwnkclx zmcml :mal clcsceml the steps ol Xxvllig Hull, .xlllllllg IIICIIII 11111103-lr111gL1L'Ll 4J1'ZlIO1' ,Xmlaun CIIZIYIUII l'm1wcll: Nlimlliwzllfs zlilzllmlc lmw-l,i6cl ex- , D QOYL'l'll0l'. mm' lliililillg' l'l'L'SidClll Iielmllcclfs State UCIJQIIUIICIII .Xl'1'ic':1 LUYIJS. Ci. NICIIIIQH XX'il1izlms1 l.lllli5i1lll2l'5 SIILIXC CXJIIQIPSSIIIIIII Hills Boggs: law- lll2lliCl'yS zumlyxl, .Xllvn l,l'lIl'yI lJ2ll'lillg ol thc Right William liumklcvz Cixil Wzwrim' Mz1r'liil1lz1y IQZIIITOYQ lUllQll-lIIiIIllCll Iflll Impvclm' William Sullivan: elclcl' X SIZIICSIIILIII .Xll' lklllllillll llliglll young NCW Jersey SCHZIIUI' ll2ll'l'ixIJll XX'illi:lms: lJL'lJIJL'l'f' Ohio SCIIZIIOI' Stclmhcn Y0llIlQ 12lllll l'1l'llL'l'2ll'lxlk2lllC c:0IIllIliiSi0I1Cillllif- mzm lizlrl KillllH'l'. Vlhlll' yawn' mzxrkccl llll' l'l'Nlllgl'CIli0ll ul' Mlfrllll fm'r'iDIv Blair lklxllmxmrllm zmml his QIHNICS Nlzulison Asscllmlnly. 'I'I1c' lzlllvly :mlicl slwulx ul Hc'zu'! lIL'zu'Y and lm 0lC'2lHi0lllll l5zxIclc1'clzul1Y . czum' lu thc momlusion that Llxc lIIiSSilCg1lIJXX'2l5Klil'ClllN lJl'fllJIJlkliUll2ll lu the Eisen- IIOWCI' gzip. 111111 1111' l'ni1c'cl Staten dcwrxvd Rit'l1H1'C1 Nixon. and that .Xxulc-riuln lcnmlcs clicl not clcscrvc Zl collcgc eclucaliun. The Hznllmzlrk. XYl1ig-ClinI1m1sc'm'g:111, kept the 550 IIICIIIIDCIN iIll0l'IIlCil oi Hznllx cwnls :xml ollvlul them a clmzlllu- lUllil'Ll1k'il'gliIbL's in print. 'lkl1c'Scx1z1lC. dupli- lillillg its lJcllc'1'fk11cm'11 ll2llllk'S2lkC. clclmlccl such head- linc issllcs als lcmlcrzxl zximl to c-Llumallirm. cixil rights, mc'clic'z1l 11111' lm' thc zlgcfl lll!llCl' so: izll SL'CLll'ily. Nixon xx, lin-11114113 fkt'llllL'1lf was lllc' Xifllll' lay ll llll1'l'OXY 1Illl1'giIlj.1lllil l'1'i11zc'lun's lam lmslifm ul Imzul1clo1'l1o0d, thc I1illCfJ'll0lk rulc: I-110llllClkl11lIiUll2ll Rvlznlium Kllulm. Lllu Dclmlc Panel. :xml Llle SlLlllCI!l'l'121llIllf lll'i'i'L'I7lN lIl2lilll2lillCll ll full IJl'UgI'lllIl ol zxclixiliu. 'l'l1v Xllwllll l.ilCl'2ll'f Nlugzuinc enhzmcccl in pmilirm zu llw only Ullfi1llIllJllSlllllliflffll' serious llIlllCl'Q,l'lllll12llL' writing In clmzumging its format to X'L'sl-1JOLkCl Sill' :mal cslzllmlislming ll Hlslll fiIl2lI1CiZ11 z11'1'u11ge111c111 with mln-Sofia-1y.'I'l1c Pl'illikCl0Il SlJCIlkC1'5y Bl1I'Cilll was w.1u'cc'sai11l CIIUIIQII lu :ask lm' ll third of ezmlm lll1llYlllll1ll spa-znkc-lm ln-Q to hc l'Cllll'Ill'll to the Hlll'L'2lll Lu lIlCL'l lllc most nl cxpzlmlccl 2lC'liYilf. SUYCIIQ' spcechcs wn-rcmlcliu-1'L-cl locix'ic'1lml ckclllmlimlzll groups in ilu: New .jersey am-zu on Lupils Hlllgillg l'mm the political pmlmlcllls ul .Xiricaz lu lllCllilhLlllliCSlJlkI1l'gOli- z1ling1'z11Jicls ill Zl l'1lSl. lmgilmznnmc. One ol' thc fC1lljS must 1m'mm':xImlc- L'Yl'llillgS began on Nme1nlx'1' H. 19430 lu thc mlznllcr oi' am .Msorizltecl Prcsx win: ilu' lllkflllif ul llll-vu' al1'11lL'gin:1lly placed lclcxisicm svlx. llu- rmllc' ol' umilcn- cups. the quick llfiiil of Nlzlrk SlI2likkll'lOl'4l 215119 mmvcl about llil'ClkLil1g olJv1':1lizm11s. :md tha- Nllflllb. ul livlnlvcly zmcl Nixfm lJlll'li51lIl5 :ls they Willillvtl their l'CSiJi't'liXL' Ilcmcs go, the lXUl'l1lCl' lu Xiklfllf, llll' lzlllcr lu clclbzll. XYPRB IJIXUQILIKIISI lmm ll SUIIJIIC' QIIZIIIIIICI' mum littered with paper and people, aucl crucial announcements re- garding the upfto-the-minute electoral situation were bellowecl via loudspeaker lrom the Executive Ollice to the living room. Roughly 500 students aucl laculty members participated and the next mornings tired. tight-lipped k11ot ol students who had loregone sleep to see Nixon concede that he wasn't about to concede anything bore mute testimony to the success ol the evening. Three days later a Hilonlerence to Review the Chal- lenge to American Youth from the XYorld's limerging Nations opened in Princeton under the Societyls auspices. linown as the 'iPoint Four Youth Clon- l'erence, the twofdav parley attracted l50 students aucl adults from 40 Eastern colleges and such organizations as the U.S. Mission to the UN.. the Alfl,-CIO. the Carnegie Corporation, Radio Free Europe, Crossroads Africa, aucl the Institute ol' International Education. This was the first largefscale attempt to bring together student, business and academic leaders to discuss what has since developed into the Kennedy Administration's 'illnited States Peace Corpsfl The Conference set up a Steering Committee, including Halls Yice-President Don Emmerson, to lurther the idea ol' youth work DEBATE PANEL During the past year, the Debate Panel has con- tinued to be among the most active subsidiaries olf XVl1ig-Clio. Participation in 15 debate tournaments, totalling well over l00 debates, and in many match debates bears testimony to this. Jonathan Day, '62 became President ol' the Debate Panel in February, l0ti0 and served in that position until elected President ol' XVhig-Clio in December. YVilliam llacicthus, lti2 and Sheldon Zabel, '03 served as Yice-President aucl Treasurer, moving up to President and VicefPresident respectively when Day vacated his ollice. As usual, the most interesting highlights of the Spring Semester were the Annual Triangle Debates. held each year in late May. Last spring' Princeton broke even on the topic Resolved, that Richard Nixon should be elected President ol' the United States. winning on the negative against Yale at Princeton while losing on the all'irmative to Harvard at Cam- bridge. Freshman Triangles, held two weeks earlier, also produced a three-way tie. The fall semester started out well, as a bumper crop olf debaters in the class ol' ISHS-1 added much strength to a rather depleted varsity squad. Early in the debate season, lrosh Hayden Burns aucl XVilliam Smith won the Amherst tournament. A little later, Alohn Clancy aucl .Iellrey Tamkin were selected as best United States Representative Frank Bolling discusses the world's problems with Whig-Clio members. abroad and ollered an excellent example ol XX'hig-lllio and Princeton in the uation's service. The year ended on March Ili, l9lil at the Sociiety's l05th annual banquet, when retiring President Pontius passed the gavel to his successor, Jonathan Day. The outgoing administration's Iinal speaker, New .jersey Governor Robert li. Meyner. addressed the assembled members, and another year ol' Halls history was ollicially brought to a close. negative team at the Tufts tournament while leading Princeton to a Slfl record, good enough lor a Iirst place tie in percentage and a third place in total speaker points. lliill Bacichus aucl David I3eckedorl'l added support to this encouraging perliormance. Other notable perl'orman1'es were turned in by .lolin Clancy and tlon Day in placing as top allirmative team at William aucl Mary in early February and in winning the liarnard-Columbia tourney later that month. In addition. Princeton participated with varying degrees ol' success at Miami, Northwestern, NYU, Pittsburgh. aucl other tournaments. Day and Clancy were chosen in a runoll' to represent Princeton at Sectionals and Nationals. lirzclr lffmx' Burns, ttntluidge. Smith. Clancy, Haley. Aldrich, Dorris. lfronl Row: Dorlinan. label, Day, Baeclius. Treclick, limi: lime: lloskey, Stanley, Sieglrietl, Dale. Secourl lfow: Riddle, Nliller, Dworkin, Ganibee, Hixson, lfisher. ISVUIII llow: Davis. Morris. Nlcfllellan, Rogers, l.uria. INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB NASSAU LITERARY MAGAZINE McMahan, Armstrong. Dillingham. ,lli.s.siug.' Oppenheimer. 'lhe International Relations Club had a very active year in lfltill. It began the year by representing Chile at a Model General Assembly. Six other conferences Iollowed at Mount Holyoke, Barnard, Boston, Albany, and two in New York. The second New York con- ference was chaired by Dan Rogers, Vice-President of the Princeton l.R.C. On campus the club sponsored appearances here by United Nations' .fXmbassadors from Iraq, Israel, China, and the Philippines. Oliver 'l'ambo, Deputy President- Ceneral ol' the South Alrican National Congress man- aged to make it through December l2ls big snowstorm to speak on An Alternative to Disaster in the Union ol' South African, but the highlight of the year was a ,joint meeting with the Sarah.Lawrence International Relations Club. General Noel Parrish spoke at this meeting and all agree that both General Parrish and the girls were extremely interesting. Liaisons with the International Relations Clubs of Douglass and Finch were established, as Princeton I.R.C.'ers traveled to those colleges to listen to speakers that the girls' clubs had scheduled, joel McClellan did a line job as the President of the Club, and he was ably reinlorced by Dan Rogers as Vice-President and jeffrey Morris as Secretary-Treas urer. The Nassau Literary Magazine has had a very long and distinguished history. Surely this year's issues, edited by Paul Oppenheimer, David Armstrong, and Mark Rose, will be considered in years to come as high points in that history. Included in the year's accomplishments were the reprinting by the New York 'l'ime.s' ol' several poems by Paul Oppenheimerg the appearance ol a third story in David Armstrong's cycle about the rise and liall ol' a noble Italian Iamily, the lirst two of which, K'Tiberiol' and The Fields at Pescheiril', won widespread attention on campusg and the debut ol a freshman, Peter Moscosso-CLongora, whose story, 'KNothing , began as a projected three parts, has since become four, and threatens to become a lull-length novell 'l'he new administration ol' the 'KLit , headed by lan McMahan, Tom Dillingham. Norman Levine, and Dave lliorburn, has pledged itself to maintain the very high literary standards of the magazine while at the same time trying to put its rather shaky linaneing in better order. Among its Iirst acts in ollice were the lirst appearance ol: l,itl' on local newsstands in many years, a local and national subscription drive, and a vigorous renewal ol' the l,it's', advertising campaigns. Everyone on campus joins the editors in the hope that the Nassau Literary Magazine, through a wider audience and a more stable financial base, can regain the place it deserves as Princeton's oldest and most distinguished publication. Publications ond Communications 3' f 'Q-f ,- ,.,, 2 fix- 3 - :i 'ii' I . 2 NCE l Xthen li. l-'rank Ilelortl 'til took over as thairman graduate on XYashington Roatl. 'l'he l,l'lHt'1'lO7Ifll7l miclwav through the vear. ltltitlftil lookecl like the vear followed in successive weeks with a series of cletailecl nothing woultl happen at l'rinc'eton. 'I'he perennial etlitorials on the dangers ol' the situation. goatling the prohlem ol eve-rv new Senior lsoartl, where to hntl various governmental agencies l'or their inaction and fresh. interesting news anal leature material, appeared soherlv evaluating the suggestions lor improving aggravatetl hv the latk ol anv news whatsoever. As in unclergraduate saletv on Xvashington Roacl. previous vears. however. the l3oartl's worst lears were The biggest storv, however, was the result ol earelul grounclless. the newsworthv tlitl happen, and all in all sleuthing in the time-honoretl newspaper tratlition. the vear provetl an exteptional one lor the 1Il'l7ll't'- Onan anonymous tip that there was clissatisfactiott in tonimz. the Arcthiterture Department over the liniversitv's Clhiel' among the vear's achievements was the lact huilcling program, l'rince reporters spent several that more pages were printetl tluring the term ol' the clavs interviewing memhers ol' the tlepartment and olf lEltSl Senior lioartl than in any comparable periotl ol' the 2ttl1I1lIliSU'2iliUIl, with no results. lfinally one the paper's history. Regular circulation rose hy almost vounger faculty member suggested a look into the 200 suhscriptions to a new high, advertising revemte latest issue ol' L-1n'l11'Irf1'l11mI Iforzznz, which reportetl toppetl all previous vears antl several special issues the resignation ol' one memlmer ol' the Princeton De- appearecl. partment in protest and carried a lull statement on Unlortunatelv. the lirst significant event ol' the new the matter hy Presiclent Coheen. .-Xu eclitorial a couple lnoarcls tenure was the tragit tleath ol an untler- ol' clavs later, entitletl Values in -Ieoparclv , sharply Burl: lime: Nlunson. Nlinet, llatmon. I-oztrlli Ilona' I'avlor. Pitkmau. lfishlmein. Xxlerotl, Fisher, Brav, Nvltite, Nlalhevvs. 'l'l1ir1I Roar: Sonnenhetg. Xvltitelaw. l'tit'e. Helm. Nussbaum. Lulvens. .Xlternian. Lilley. ,Swfrlrirl Ilona' Hale.l Hawes. Ilotles, lilatlv. Stonehill, Rossman. I,apitlus, l'elton. lfrmll Rout' Sltamhauglt, liwing. Rentsrltler, l'iCl'l'L'I'. XYanklin, Green, Xvilson. Cindv shows an intrigued undergrad a Prince notice on coming social events. Prinrt' photographer engraves a hot picture for the morning edition. reminded the administration of its obligation not to suppress what was undoubtedly news. Each Thursday Deford wrote a review of Life M aga- zine, entitled, unimaginatively, Frank Deford Looks at Life . Unmoved by the gravity of his task as critic, the Chairman dwelt at length on the deterior- ation of the magazine since the days when their features were homier-and perhaps cornier. Hlilliam S. Rukeyser '61 took part of the editorial page one Thursday to present his own version of Deford's column: Frankly Bored Looks at Luce . A series of letters from a mysterious Darien S. Greenwich Ill kept the editorial page humming for almost two weeks. Greenwich complained that the presence of 'Atownies in Harry's had so lowered the cultural atmosphere of the place that he would soon be forced to take his business elsewhere. Two high school students replied in behalf of the townies, and Greenwich only reiterated his charges, while main- taining his SCCI'6Cj'. A state of open hostility was avoided finally by an agreement that the townies would teach Greenwich how to spell-he had spelled a word incorrectly in one letter-and he would improve their manners. The editorial page was again inundated with ma- terial when a group of Princeton undergraduates and one faculty member picketed lVoolworth's in protest against its policy olf permitting segregated lunch counters in its Southern stores. The Prince strongly deplored the actions of a handful of students who had tried to break up the picketing by force, although it questioned the eflicacy of such picketing and pointed to its bad effects on Princetonis name. For almost a solid week the editorial page printed letters and columns on the action of the pickets, and many more were received. In the late spring a l'rince,' editorial, entitled A Blow for Freedom , appeared one morning and that night almost a thousand undergraduates, responding to a fire siren, left their dorms, milled around for two hours on Nassau Street and down at the railroad station and did S500 worth of damage. The editorial simply pointed out how quiet the spring had been. During the latter part of the summer, however, Chairman Deford decided, for personal reasons, to withdraw for a year from the University. In a special election Jose M. Ferrer III '61 was elected the new Chairman. Charles E. M. Rentschler, who had been the Managing Editor during the spring term, moved up to the Vice-Chairmanship. Yllilliam H. Ewing, who had been Sports Editor until he took a leave of absence half-way through spring term, became Managing Editor. H. Harris Funkenstein remained in charge of the editorial page, while Henry A. YValter became Sports Editor. The Business Board, however, remained its organ- ized, eflicient self. Frederic M. Wanklyn as Business fxlanager and George S. XVilson as his assistant con- tinued to handle policy, while XVilliam B. Green rode herd on the advertising desk, the chief source of the paper's revenues. lfrederick Fisher III initiated a successful drive to increase the paper's circulation, while Michael H. Stonehill answered the phone for classifieds and Ronald E. Rossman kept the office in order. XVhen the faculty outlawed smoking in lecture halls, the fPrince' responded by doubting whether that much money would be saved, substantiating its charges by an interview with an assistant superintendant of grounds and buildings, who later took back his words, and by deploring the failure of the university to consult the students. The most telling editorial comment of all, however, was made by an alert Princetonian pho- tographer, who photographed President Goheen, shortly alter the faculty meeting, smoking in the room which the Trustees had barred to smokers three years ago. The telling photo was only one of the efforts of the hard-working fPrince' photogs to visualize the news. The staff, headed again this year by Philip Shambaugh '61, does everything to the pictures from taking them to engraving them. But the 'Prince' wasn't just sitting back and waiting for the news to happeng it was contributing its own share. Two presidential polls reported on undergrad- uate and faculty preferences at the beginning of the campaign and then again just before Election Day. The 'Prince' came out behind John E. Kennedy for the presidency, remarking that he offered the best chance of meeting the challenges of the next decade. A power- ful 'Prince' juggernaut challenged all comers in touch football, soundly trouncing the Press Club, scared the Harvard Crimson sufficiently to prevent them from showing up, but finally bowed to a more powerful WPRB squad. The perennial problem of the nine o'clock rule was again considered by the Undergraduate Council in late fall, and the 'Prince', pointing out that the issue of would sooner or later have to be faced by those who were advocating a change, came out behind a revision in the rule to no one's surprise. At its annual banquet the 1961 Senior Board Award for Excellence in Newspaper XVriting, a new award, was given to XVilliam A. lXIcXVhirter '63, for his amusing columns entitled Pipe and Pencil , his consistently good straight writing and a feature he did on the death of the mute Princeton boot-black, Elias Scudder. just before Bicker connnenced, the paper published its 'fCynic's Guide to Psickerv, thumb-nail sketches of the sixteen Prospect clubs, to aid the conscientious sopho- more in making his final decision. But if one year had passed successfully, there was promise of an even better year, as a new Senior Board took over in February, 1961. under the Chairmanship of Lester E. Munson, Jr. 'fi2. Chairman-elect Lester Munson scans one of jose Ferrer's issues for pointers. Lapidus, Mathews, and Evans mold the copy for the new board's issues. Gaping Prirzcff staff members shed their reportorial indifference for a little en- thusiasm at the annual cocktail party. T H. 7 as 3' mf g. lk 1 nw LW M wg. w ,. K 2 ,Qi ,Z FV X A wg., ' jg, s -lr 'Hz Eg QA Q, 3' 1. : QA Q? ' :,. K I, ' ' 1 ' . -:V :I 1 , :sm-..' ' VZ. ' fl ww - f? ' 1 w' Y AK Q gem 5 Av 'I -W :I K I, , A ,W lzz. 1- K 25 17i'Ql.'lQf, ,. , 'LH if si 1, Qi 1 S xi 9 i x ' - .' . X V2 , W- 1 K E25 -'Z wk , W I In 45 : :- . sg ,, Q, W ---S - 'eg 5 ' Q ii 3 Y if gp ' We- iss, V ax . : , --1 'f' y ,'5x S: 4' - 'z - 21. - X . 1: 13' 1 6 1 Q9 Q - ,fuifv 'j 5, X ,, ,Q Q., as x S WF ,ga Q , Q '25 K 2 45233 , x 2 5 1 2 52 X t ., ' 'fieieiigffr ffm I -- 1 gg Q 3,1 11Q,i lszi 1 M ' Qf ffifwis ' 16 5555549 4 sx.ges.Are, Iz srgaszl- F7 -5562355 Q - We' V 1' Q' fr fr Q, 1 me 4 . 5 i W 1 ,W 3 A f 1 G 1' ,if 9 be 'fi' H J 5 mg, K Barr, and Head Announcer Bob Astarita strived to maintain a polished sound, but one distinguished as that of college, not professional radio. After recruiting willing personnel and mustering the necessary drive, the management added two hours to air time, thus putting the station on the air from seven in the morn- ing until two in the morning. The spring candidates' session Hooded the VVPRB studios with ninety prospec- tive members, leaving the station once again with the frightening prospect of choosing personnel on the basis of talent. Finally, after years of lesser efforts, WPRB turned out a program guide which was accurate, attrac- tive, and on time, the mailing list passed four hundred in the first month and continued to grow. The spirited technical department, under Doublier, kept the station on the air nineteen hours a day, send- ing the signal out over much of five states and a little of the campus, and set up public address systems, most of which functioned properly. Assistance and ideas from sophomores Roy Minet, Hurst Groves, and Rox Stewart kept the station driving when it threatened to lag. Many all-nighters, innumerable Cokes, and fre- quent early morning breakfasts at the Balt helped mold the technical department into the most closely-knit crew on the station. Meanwhile, Bob Posner and his staff in the business office struggled not only to balance the budget, in- herited by the incoming board with a S1300 deficit, but also to pay the debt due on the new transmitter and antenna. Local sales and national advertising rose to make this possible. X'Vith no project such as the increase to 17,000 watts to attract the interest of the staff, XVPRB has had to look elsewhere to maintain the freshness which brought it over 150 candidates in 1960-1961. This year's management worked at instilling in the mem- bers some of the old HPRU spirit,'l which might mani- fest itself in a newscaster's solemnly reporting the proctorial search for a six-foot orangutan, which was located in his own room, or in the revived institution of the station peak party. This was not a digression from the attempt to put out polished sound, but rather a rediscovery that the station was for the student as well as for the listener, that a student joined the organ- ization because he liked the people and the work. VVPRB's ability to compete on commercial grounds as well as its uniqueness as a campus organization depend on its ability to transmit the impression of a group of college students enjoying themselves, while working together for something they consider worth- while. 1 2 , :Q 1 sf r - ' :. QELEi5f'ff'W i fl-' Hmm If we mf, ,W NH fill me vp,- fix' t Wfww , 325' ,yr Mk sr uv? Ziggy, ' :infix fairs QWM Y 7' iw K ' 1 sim g M mr W r' if M, - ' ,As 1 su f . Wm!-, ' , ...Qu W -nf , ni-V fi , - as MW Ayr 'H --N, W nw: ..., x,f.,, A newscaster scans the teletype for the latest news. A technician adjusts the mix for the news. L... limi: lfmw: Sthutt. item-ns. Smith. Nlzncr. Yrwnzrl lfmr: Gt-tnifk, llagci, Mdllain. Ha-Inv. Nlznhtin. Vsson, Katz, I-'mul l?uu',' Harris fllXIIlL'I', Nluuv, Hman. lirownc, Curtis. THE BRIC-A-BRAC This year the lirit-a-lirac tlccicletl to c'xpanclAantl in tht- process XX'L'1lllll0Nl pushetl oursc'lxc's out ol' exist- ctlcle. ln a passion ol early spring optiinisin, the newly clectvtl lioarcl alt-tiiclttcl to acltl F52 page-s to the hook. ivvisc' the Faculty Station. aclcl a pictorial intro- cluction, ancl huilrl a clark rooing all at tht- saint: time lttlitois Cflyniui' antl Martin chop up nlatvrial lot' the Xxlilllkl' Sports Section. WH! llll XVI lhc' Septenthei' optintisni soon turnetl to conlusion. .intl the tonlusion to anarthy. with thc' result lacing what ls ht-lore xou. lo atlncve this task we liCNUlX'k'll to coiulttct the lnggest I'C't'l'LlllIIlL'Ill anml sales campaign in the history ol the hook. Our l'L'i'l'llllIllCI1l clrixe was not suctesslul in quantitx: hut tht' l'1l'CSllIllCll enticecl up to the lirit s ollict-s Open House Night tlicl gnc us a line tleus to carry out ntost ol our plans. NVQ' then turnetl to selling the hook ancl. untlcr the clic'tatorsl1ip ol Business Manager Franklin Browne .incl Suhscription Manager Richarcl Curtis, an ener- 1 gvtic sales stall swarntul over the rantpus seeing every lllL'llllJL'l' ol the stutlent hotly at least onte. The result s the niost sttcclcsslitil campaign in the history of the ok. Over 9tt'j ol the unclergi-alluates stllJsc'l'ilJCtl1ll1il a total ol 2650 copies were soltl. surpassing the recorcl ol lll5ll hy over 200 hooks. lht' early season harmony hvtween tht' liusiness and lwlit Iioartls then hc-gan to wane. Browne ancl .Xclvers tising Nlanager licl lflollanfl IDI'U1KCCLlCll to concluct the t inost suctc'ssl'ul aclxertising campaign in the hook's history while Cio-Clliairmvn .john Bevan anal ,Iohn Nlllllf. with cnthusiastit curiosity. continually loulecl thc- works hy snooping in the lilvs to clistover just what the husinvss stall was planning. liy inicl-year lirownels patience had worn thin as he threatened to stage a fonjz rl'wlnf and replace the nosey Chairman. Un- dauntecl, Bevan and Muzly scolled at this abortive revolution and continued to play havoc with the Business l5oard's records. On their own side the two chairmen ran the Edit Board in a similar casual manner. They decided to build a dark room lor their weary photographers, Val Mayer and Tuck Henry, who complained about walking up the lour llights ol' stairs in Cuyot Hall to its antique photography lab. So the project began -and what was to take a lew weeks took two months. This delay set us back in our major undertaking: a revision olf the lfaculty Section. Led by Executive Editor .lack Clymer and Managing Editors Stu Harris and Ilene Martin. the stall worked feverishly to meet the deadline: but. the time spent in tracking clown the evasive professors lor personal interviews and in- formal pictures carried us two months Past the dead- line. The printer began to worry, Dean Laughlin began to worry, the business stall began to worryg while the chairmen. tmdismayed, continued in their dazed manner to edit the book. XX'ith two months to go to completion and with the biggest headaches behind them, the staff tackled the organization section. Coming to the aidol' the harried executive board during their time of greatest need were three Sophomores: Vic Katz, Charlie Stevens, and XVynn Smith. Finally settling down to serious efforts, the board divided itself into two divisions-one to handle the editing on articles and layout ol' the book and the other to acquire the necessary photographs and articles- each led by one of the chairmen. In the short space ol six weeks nearly 200 pages had to be completed in order to give the printer enough time to have tl1e book back lor distribution on campus before the end of the school term. The lioard's task was lessened considerably by the contributions of numerous photographs by Alex Lilley, Derek Storm, Tom Miner. and Pete Hale. The dividers were planned and drawn by Perry Neubauer and the Going Back section came under the direction of Bill Kincade. XVith these additional efforts, the stall was able to devote more time to the other innovations that had been plannedg the introcluctory section and a four page week-end sequence. The last week came. Martin and Clymer argued over whether or not the legs of students should be cropped out of pictures. Bevan began to droodle on the walls. Harris ran around in his bathrobe and Muffy complained about the lack of organization and neatness-the deadline was met. Through all the Bricfs harrowing trials and compro- mises, the Chairmen leel that their major goals were accomplishedg the photography department has been established on a sound basis lor the future, the business board has grown up. and the book has enlarged its breadth. giving future stalls a more than adequate foundation for more new and startling innovations. 12111-I1 l11!11'.' 1111111111-1-gg I-111111, H1111-11, 111-l11'1k1'1, 11CY1lIl, 1411111 I-'111-1. XC1l1Illlll, 1I111111g. P011-1. S1-1111111 R1111'.' XY1-155, 11111111051111, 111116, lfllllll, SW1Q2l1'1. 1-111511-111. Nl:11111115. X111111111-1111, Sll111CI', 1111111111. 1011111 l1U1l'.' 511111. 1I0lJIJCl1, 111111 1111-. N1-151111, J111111511111. XY1-115101, Bright. 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The 1111111 l'11111'1-1111111111 1111111-11 211111 11111-11 111111111 111e ap- 111111-111 11' 5lIlJC'l'111'1Zl1 11111111163 111' 111e 2ll'L1C11CS 1111 1x'yLe11gue 1'111111111g 111111 New Y11111 ll1g11l 5111115 w1111'11 1111110111011 1-11-11' 1111111111, 11111 N1-151111 1-1 111. 011111111111-11. .X1'Il'l' 1111- 13010111111-1' 1-1011i11115. 1111' new S1-111111 B1111111 1111111111111011 1110 1ll21g2ll1llL'.S 1051g11111i1111 1111111 1110 5011111 51-1. 211111 W1-111 111111 1l1111llg. 111 FC1J1'll2ll'1' 1111-y 0111110 out 111' 1111- 1111111- with 1111-11 11l'S1. 1S5llC, 111111111 111-w 111 11111- 1-0111, l'1l01'1i 11111 11'1':1111111115 211111 2111 w111k, 211111 1:0111- Cliairnizni Nelson employs expensixe secretary to utilize idle funds. pletely liresh in lormat. Handsome young Chairman elect. Steve liroll with his trusty Editor Rod Burton led at meeting ol' the new board in which they prayed to the l'r'i11u'lor1ir1r1 lor a favourable review. And. behold, on the next day. .Xrt liditor Charlie Mathias, Managing liditor llohn Helme Dunn, Circulation Manager Paul Epstein, .Xdyertising Manager Bruce Neuman. Business Manager Bill dellecker and Associ- ate Editor Rob Swigart were all rewarded with Il praising editorial lrom the hatchetmen downstairs. The Tiger Board ol' 'lirustees called the February issue the best they had seen in ten years. Letters of con- gratulation poured in from former Senior Board members, and even campus reaction was favorable- despite the lact that the average beer-guzzling under- graduate has no idea ol' the dedication and hard work that goes into the planning' and execution of the Tiger. A new era was opening, but the old problems res mained, nagging. Recession still hampered national advertising, circulation could go just so far, and Board Members could spend only a few hours per day at most on a job that seemed to require forty a week. Burton and Swigart introduted new departments, The Tiger 'licker and New Campus XY1-iting. Mathias took charge ol' adding more and better art work to the Tiger. liyerybody tried to sell advertising. Everyone, that is. except College Ni2lglllll1C'S Incorporated, the aclyertising serxice supposedly supplying the Tiger if Plush banquet eats up Tiger money. with ads. Meeting alter meeting with the Trustees at the University Club in New York didn't seem to bring about a workable solution to the problem. An ellort to combine lorces with the Hrlrwlnl IJIIIIIIUUII and the Yule Ifrwnzl in search ol. joint national advertising met with little suctess when Nelson tried it, and at this writing it is dillicult to tell whether or not the lfltil lioard will have better luck. .X liaxorite campus pastime has always been criticiz- ing the 'l'1'ger. And a favorite Tiger pastime has been rolling with the punches. All we have exer needed is money lor our bruised egos, Subscription, anyone? Tiger olhciztls Nelson and Hebster get New York tips from johnny ll1llil'1ll'llllLliS group at the .Xfriean Room. ll. vs s t X11R1-x11111115. K1-111-1, Rllllllll XL'l11Ulll'. 111115111-lg. R11111-5. NASSAU HERALD '1111' 151111 .X'11.1'.11111 II1-111l1l 111511110-11151105 115011 1110111 1t5 1Jl'CllC11'S5UlXS 111111 111 1111- 111111x'i1111211111 111 1110 lIlC1l1- l1015 111 1111- 50111111 112155. .X5 11215 1111011 1101-11 11111111011 11111. 1111- ll1'111111 15 21 11111-111-1101-11 1111-1111101 111 21 long 1151 111 5LCl'f'lll1'1JL'11 1'Ol1l'gl' :111111121l5. Y1-t, 1111 1-211-11 g'1'2lL1Ll- 2lL1Ilg' 1-12155. 1t5 ll1'1'11111' i51115t1111't11'1-11 115 111111. '111115 11-211-'5 511111, 11111-111-11 111 116111611 R. R1111110, ENGINEERING COUNCIL 1111- 1'IIlg11lCC1'1l1g 11111111111 15 2111 Illgllllilkllifbll 11111111 IS 1'CS1J0ll5llJ1C 1111 1111- Il12l11J1'll1 O1 CXll'll-1'l1l'1'1L'll12i1' 1li'IiY1ly 111' 1111- 1f1l1g1IlCl'l'lI1g 511111111. lt i5 11111111115011 111 11-1111-51-11t:1t1105 ililllll 2111 111111513 111 Cfllg1ll6L'1'1I1g 211i1ivi1y, 1111'l1111i11g 1110 1'l12l1l'lIlt'll 211111 -111111111 l'C1Jl'SSC111llI1YCS 1111111 1-21111 111' 1110 1111111-5511111211 5111101105 111 1110 501011 B111-I1 l1UTl'.' 1l111't1111, ll1112111, .-xV1lIXY, ,'x1CXZlllC1C1', link, Diaz, Cl21rkC. 1'lI'0lI1 lf1111': f1ll1lll', l.111't115, 510101, 1'1UI'llCY, RC11lillS1T11. f.1I2lll'II12lll. llffgllll 115 11-111-14 III .5C1Jl1'lll1J1'1' 111111 Rl 121111 21111-111111 111 111110 2111 51-1111115 51-111-111111-11 1111' 11l111t11g1-211111 511l1llgN, 1,Cl'51'XL'l'2lII11' 1111 1111- 111111 1J1l.X1lll1 S. CL11151101g, l,1l11l1Jg1'211Jllf .X55151z111t. f'XK'll1ll2lll1 1D1'1lllg111 1101i1111110111 112155 1110111111-15 11111 1111 111011 121111-15 111111 1111 111 1,1110 .XC1l1Illl1Sl1'2l110ll igllllllillg 1111010 1110 1J1l0l1Jg1'111J11C'11'S 11-115 1'211J1ll1'L'l1 111211 13121812 51-111111 1111111 1-171 1111511-1111. 111110 H1'1'1111l'5- CI11111 1ll'Ill'lx5Cll11l11105, lllll1Cl' 1110 wing 111 1.111115 NCT1l1'11ll1i. 1111111 lf1111t1l', 111111-1111-11 1111111 1110 501111115 1111150 110151111211 121115 11111111 t111-1' Lllilllglll 11101 111111111 11140 111 501- 111 1111111. l111l1111111211 11i11g1z111l1i1-5 XVCYC 111011 1-11111111l011. 111-111011. 111111 111-05111111-11 lIl111L'l' 1110 5111111111 1111 1.0111121111 Ri1111-5, 1.l1l'l'lll'1' 1i11it111. 15111211 Oligllllilillifill 211111 Illlllllllllg 11215 1111111- 111 1121111111 li11it111, .1111111 140111-1. 1X11 1112111111110-. IVl'111Ilg, Zlllll 5l1i111i11g ol' 1-1-5111111511111111' 11-215 1111110 1111111-1 111C XX'2ll1'1ll1lll 1-1-0 111 1.012111 N1K'RCX'llOlllS. 1i111t111-111-111111-1. 111116 '111 H1-1111111 11:15 111-1111-2111-11 111 l'105i1l011t 111111011 lf. CL11l11-011, 111111 01111-11-11 11111111 1110 1111110 111' l'1i111-0t1111'5 5lXlCL'llIll 1,1'CS1llClll 111 15157 YVllCll 1110 6112185 111' 19111 2111111-11 1111 L'2lllllJllS. 'l'110 lllClll1JCl'S 111 111C ,YIISSILII ll1'111l1I 8121111 112110 0111111011 t111-11 XCZII' 111 1-11l12111111211io11 211111 2111- 1111111-1111 111211 1111- '111 ll1'1-1111! will 501-1-0 to 051211111511 ll l2l511llg' lllIll,1 211111111g- 1111- 111011111015 111' 1,116 1112155 111 19111. 111-1115 111 Cllg11l1't'1'1llg lilllglll 211 l1l'lI1L'Cl1111, 1110 EXCCII- 1111' 512111 111 tl11- l'111111-11111 li11g1111'1'1', 211111 111-5111112111 211161 51111l1111111110 11-111051-11121111 1-5-211-121100 1-11115011 111' 111011 10- 51101-ti10 011gi111-1-11110 1121551-5. lJ151'1155i1111 1111111-5 12111g0 1111111 5110111111 1111111101115 t11x'1-11111110 1112111111105 1'1l'C11llCf1I I1lL'C11Ilg5 2111' 110111 111111 1111- 2111111i11i5t1-21111111 1111110 Engi- 1101-1111g 511111111 111 11121i11121111 111111111111111'211i1111 1111 111011- 101115 0111111111211 1'0Il1il'1'll. 1110 C1111111-11 511111151111-11 1211111115 11111.11-1't5 t1111111g110111 1110 511111111 XCZIT. .-X5 1110 1'Il11,1llCCl' 1111151 1101-1110 1111 one 111 1110 51-1011 111-1115 111 Cl1g1llCCl'illg 211 1110 01111 111' his 1105111112111 1-0211. 2111 11111-11121111111 111111110111 11215 111g2111iz011. E211-11 11C1Jlll'llllCIl1. 110111 ll 1'Ol'lIlll l1CS1g'llCL1 111 111050111 it5 1-111111-11111111 11-11111 1111111 1110 1211-11l1y 211111 111111011-1215s- 1112111 11111111 111 vicw 111 illLCl'CS1C11 1il'CSlllllCIl, 111115 011- 21111i11g 1110111 111 1-11111150 1llCiI' 11011211t,1110111 wisely. .XIlO111Cl' 1JI'Og1'2llll w215 1111111-1121111-11 ill 11111111111-111111 with 1110 New 10150-y Ii11gi110015' C11111111i1100 1111 Student C11i1l21111-0. 111101051011 111011111015 111 1110 111111111-11 made 111-111 111115 111 110ig11l1111i11g lligll 5111111115 111 11151-1155 1110 011gi111-1-1i11g 111-11105511111 YV111l 1111010511-11 5IllC1CIlIS. 111118 111111015 111' 1111' 1'1IlglIlCl'l'1llQ 11111111111 11115 YCZII' 11010: 15011110111 XV. A1C1'l'l' '11l, f1ll2l11'lll2lIlQ CL2111- M. 111111115 '61, Yic-0-CI1121i111121111 CQ. 1,2lY1l1 1'10l'llCy '111, S0010- t2111': 211111 R. .-X1lCl1 Zilllk 112. r11l'C'2lSll1'C1'. limi: l1ou'.'I.andau, Ridgway, Kutrlelm, Newman. Scca1z11'Row.' Moore, Oestreich, Alonso, Johnson, Palmquist, Fort, Peterson. Front Roan' lvlllllll, Avary, Crane. 'l'hatcher, Tompkins. PRINCETCDN ENGINEER The Princeton ElIglIIl'f'l' is the only magazine on campus that is prepared to publish science and engi- neering articles on either technical or newsworthy subjects. In the Fall term of 1960, the subjects covered ranged from a purely objective explanation ol the Molecular Beam project to the highly controversial subject ol unions for engineers. ln covering the de- batable topics the Ijrigineer has provoked a great deal ol discussion aald an awareness ol the non-technical problems ol en gineering. The l':l'IaQ'1i7'1!f6l' is also the only student magazine which appears faithfully every month of the school year, lt is circulated without cost to the engineering students. ln addition, it has a large circulation among alumni, laculty, and corporations. The lffngirzcrfi' oilers to its stall valuable experience in assuming the responsibility ol producing quality work under the pressure ol' deadlines. It also gives them the opportunity to learn to write and at the same time to become acquainted with numerous subjects not otlered in their normal curriculum. The officers who published the Ijrzgineer in the Spring and lfall of 1960 consisted of Editor-in-chief Neil A. Crane, itil, Managing Editor Scott Avary, Jr., '62, News Editor Myron F. Uman, '61, Feature Editor Richard B. Tliatcher, '62, Advertising Manager XVilliam F. Tompkins, '62, Circulation Manager john B. Moore, ,623 Art Editor Richard Kutzleb, '62, and Copy Editor Al Uestreich, Til. Each ol the ruunerous ollicers of the lfrzgimfer has a definite responsibility in the process ol publishing the magazine. There are many positions to be filled every year, and there will always be room for pro- motion for those actively participating on the staff. The future ol the lirzgirierr lies in a closer contact with Princeton, both in covering the nunierous projects on campus and the news ol particular interest to the engineering and science communities ol Princeton. Ilrlrlr Rrmu' Ligltttlale, lewis. Kelley. Parsons, Xliller, Greenwaltl. lfrrml 1fHIl','SIlllIIl.SflXL'SlCl', Rttlaexser, Sulnberger, lhorburn. PRESS CLUB baske tball leillll wltilmpetl llarrarcl 71-59 in Dillon Ptinteton. X. Nlartlt IAl'rincetott's rarsitx' Cmnt to recorcl its seiontl straivht lu' l.eafftte Chantf O . H lnonsltip. .Xnrl tlte llttivetsitx' Press Club was there I to coxet' the zutton. ln the next tlat s Pape-t's an inter lhorbut'n autl toltorts stnezul tlu- latest leak to the New Yo papers. , . xiew with -lean Nlaaclulu l.uxwe1o anal .Xntlre Xllslllllil- o uni' wo. 'nrt on s ut en s 'rom te 'lnw'o. z - IJ I ina PII et t l t I tl Cc N U pearetl in the news sc-ations. while the amount ol' the basketball victory ran on the sports pages. That night, a slteeclt by Iortner Sec'retat'y ol Labor llantes P. Mitchell in the Nassau Inn was eoveretl lor the Mon- clay papers. 'l'hus. in two class, tnetnbers of the Press Cllub hfcl coverecl anal written artieles about three ntakior e'-'ents lor area newspapers. For more than 60 years such has been the case, as the stnall group ol unclergrzuluates stationed in 92-A Nassau Street work as prolessional corresponilents lor various newspapers. covering sports, speeches ancl news breaks. The Press Club also acts as liaison be- tween its clients and the l.lniversity's Public Infor- mation Department. lfourteen news outlets are serv- iced by the Press Club. including The New York 'l'imf'.s', The llzfmlfl 'l'rll1zn1r', Associatecl Press, Time lllfzgftzizte, and the United States lnlorntation Agency. Heading the Press Club this year were seniors YVil- liatn S. Rukeyser anil Nllarcl Sylvester, as President antl Vice-Presiclent. respectix'elt'. Other tnetnbers in- cluclecl David lf. lhorburn, '62, Presitlent-elect: Nelson Sntitlt. '62. Vice-l'resitlent-electg George Nliller, '63, Pat Kelley, '63, Hob Lewis, '63, Bill Parsons, '63, and lon Clreenwalcl. '6-1. Theatrical and Musical Organizations PRINCETGN TRIANGLE CLUB .Ks 111C l'1ll'l2l111 rose to revezil tl1e 119111 21111111211 pro- hiinsell 21 ot1e yC2ll' 1112111, took i111111e11i21te 111111111211111, dnction ol 111C Pl'1I1tL'UJll '1'1'i2111gle c1ll11D i11 B1l'fi2l1'1C1' 111111 10gL'1111'1' with 1J211i1l c1l12llI11JL'1'S 712, 211111 -1111111 i1illC2i1l'L'. the general lfXl3Cl'11l110IlS were those ol an Sinton 1121, hegztn writing the sl1ow wl1ile with 21 5111311 2l1lCl1L'llC'L' wl1i12l1 111111 1111110 to see the results of 21 1e211' edition ol tl1e '1'ri2111g1e 1111111 i11 Europe L'lllC1i121lIl111g ol H1't'lJll11l11lly,-I. 111 the ti111e 111211. tl1e 11111121111 112111 tl1e Artity troops. 151' tl1e tinte the sehool 511211 had des1'e1111e11. these 11o1111ts were dispelled Zllltl long 101- hegttn, 1'S1'1'e11111e w21s 1111621111 well llllC1Cl' w211'. gtJ11Cl1,lllll1H,X NIi11s11111111erNigl1t S1ire21111e was l121i1ed Y1i'L'-1ll'1'Sl11L'IlI -lzty Keyser 'til 1111151 21lso he cited lor 11s the 111'st1111olQ sl1ow 1Jl'01lllK'Cl1 111' tl1e talented 111111613 his solid dire1'tio11 i11 the 'pitf -12113 21 10111 16211 1112111 gr21111121t1's Nllllk' 111C war. it1 1110 Cllnh. took 1111 the 112111111 lor the lirst titne 211111 lhis seetningly in1t1ossi11le s111'1'ess tnttst he 1're11itC11 le1l ltis or1'l1estr21 211111 1'21st 1ll1'0lIgll!lOllIl 8111101118 score. to the diligent ellorts ol 2111 the people 12ont1e1:te11 with wl1i1'h llosh 1,lJg2lIl terined HlJl'l111Llll1 . . .1211 112111111611 this 1111135 IDl'0C1ll1'1ltlI1. lllll 21s 2llW21f'S 1110113 were tl1e 1110 inlri1'21te 211111 1'le1'er 11111519 211111 11'ri1's H'111l the lew dexoted 1121111 tore wl1ose t21l1'11ts 111111 cionstattt 111111111111 111 2111 tl1t1f11lllC1'. interest were 1hiell1 resl1o11si11le lor sneh ll large IIICZIS- lJi1'l1 Ni11e1-'til 21lso 2lSSlllIlCl1 111s position 21s SLflil'L'1H1'3' tire ol 111C s111'12ess. 211111 1111si11ess Nlllll11gCl' without 21111 prexiotts experi- llohn Clrowtlier 'til. l'resi11e11to1tl1e Clllll, 1211'e11 the ence. .Xssisted 211111 hy .loe 131111 '62, l1e 111211111011 the 9110111111118 t21s11 1,11 org2111ifit1g l1is ollieers llllll writers. 1U111' wl1i1'h i111'11111e11 111C t1s1121l lJC1'101'Ii1ZlIltL'5 21t New 111081 ol wl1on1 were new tot111'it't'CslJ1't'ti1'C111168. llohn, York, XY2lSll1llg'IOll, Cillllllgfl, c1lCYL'12lIlC1, 211111 the tr21- Ii111!1 lfoxer Sitnon, liztttlett, 5181111911 G. Sinith. xvklllS1Xlll'1ll, Nliteltell, Winslow, 112lllCIlf2,Cl',Cll21lIlllCl'S,.IUllIlS0l1. 'l'l1ir1l Hozv: Nelson Sobel. S1llI1lll1Nls1. .-Xhee. Young. Xloss. f1lll11llCli. Dodds. 1le 'I'111'1'11n1', 811111111 lfoief lietnp. Rile. Nleistrell. Roth. l1or11ne1', Hersey 111'ttlllil'l. 1-'1'ol11i1l1 Xl2llSl1Cll. lfronl lfmzx' Kl'l1llCC11. ,I-ll0lIllJSOIl, N1i11t1111. KL'1NL'l'. C.ro11tl1er. Xiner. lidson. Rttdell, 11111. 1111111 f1lUlX11l1'I' IIN S11 W11111-1' R.11c1p,11 111-1111 Q111-1-11 1511111110111 1-11111l111s1- 1 .1ll,1ls11f111111'1 Xiqglffx lJ1'1'111f1. '- 1 - 1 - 1 N1 - . 1.1 151 1--1. -1 -' 1' 1 Ll 111111111111 slum' 111 1411111011-1' 1111 NC11' x1'2ll'N 1311: 11'1f 'Am Iumllll mu 'H lu' WMU In MON N 1 a I . . h x11I11p1111111x 11-.1x1-. llllg11' 111s11 l'L'llll'1ll'11 111 xl1lll11'11lll', Xxl1llllllQ'l1Jll. lll11S' lllllgll. f.lll11llIlLI1l. 1.11111111I111s. 111111 111111111111-. 111 111111-1' 111 x11x'1- 11111111-y. 1111- 1111111 1111111-11 1111 111'11 11115115 1111151 111 1111- 11IlI1'. XX'1l1111 N111111- 11-11 111 111- 1111- 1-1f11'11g1- 111' x11111C 111xp1111111e 111111. 11111 111'SlJ1lk' 1111- 1111s1-s 111111 1111- 111111111I111111111g 51111113 llll' 111111' was Ll l1'L'll1Q'1ll1f111N 11113 111111 11'11i11i11g 111-xx' 11181 IIlL'Ill1lk'1'N was 11111111-111111'1y w111'11-ax 1111' 1111111 11151, 116111 111111 11111111-11111 ll 11111 111-11 lllllllkllll 11118 fkflll' 11s 11111-1111 1111'111111:1'n w1-1'1- 111s1 1111111 11111-x11-11 111 111' 1111- 1111gg111'1l lI11'Il11J1'l'S. 1111 1111111111111 11111111- lllf' 1111-xi1111s 12151. 1111- 511111-as 111 1110 x1111w every- lll1' l1llll' 11111111111 1ll1lll'1 1111- 1111- 11151 1i1111- 111 lllllllf w111-1'1-, l11C l'1'Y1CW51ll 1111- w1111ws, 1fsl1C1ti1111y 1110 1'11vCs xc111's. 111 111111-11 .X'f'I1' 17111: 'l'1'1'1111111'11111111- 111111 111211111 ',1'e1'1'y, Ol 1111111's1'. 111 ll 1'c1111i111i11g 1422111 1111- 111'llX'lC5l 131114 111111 1111? Clll1lll512lSlIl 111 1111111 1111- 11181 111111 1111111011176 111-11 I1111w 1111 1110 13111-1-1111, N11111111 151111. 111111 11116 11111-N1 111 1111-11' 1111111111-11g1' 111 'll1'11111g16 111111 111 f11C1l' f1111ll'1'Ogl'2llDlltfl', l'1-11-1 l'111111i111111. ,141l1'll' 111511 111 11111055 11111s1111111i11g 11111-111 111 1111511 I11-111w. .layB1'11we1 s111'1'11Cs- Nl1I1'l1'lI1Il1' Illllgx 111 1161-1' 1111 111c 111111, 1 lihkbmi ' Q 1 5' 1, Goocl Qttccu Iivss 1'i1l1's i11 1111 II1111111 'l'11111l111so11s 1111tt11ls trzttious wvrc llIltlLllL'l' ol thc lll2lllX UlllSl2lIllllIlQ t'Ul1ll'lA II11- f2lIl'l'Il 1-spost-tt: .lt'll Smith. lJllIlt7Il5 to thc' show. lhc f'USllIlIIl'S 1lcs1g11111l hr I11111 hl.ittlc Nlothc1 ' Yllllglllllll 1'1'upt1'1l i11to th1' guy. t'tJltJl'- lul. 111111 exciting l'1llllllJt'lll2lIl xituliti which typilietl l.1't's ljfilllsiv. tht' 1Xxo11 li2lll4'lH. 'ANlg11lm11tl1 guul the whole show. l'1':1isc must ztlso hu gircu to thc Henry the Eighth witl1 z1ll thc xitztlits lylblfill ol llllsctll IllCllllJt'l'5 ol' thc t1'1'h11i1:1l 1'1'11w whose trllorts, 'liiztuglc pro1l111tio11s. ht-111l1'1l hi Stztgc Nlz111z1g1'1' .loc lJ1'l1'li11l1l. rcsultccl i11 Now its the 'l'1'iz111gl1' Cluh looks l'o1'wz11-1l to tht lixCly sCls 111111 lighting. tOlIllJlllllCllllIlg thc 1?ll1'1rts ol Retiuioli shows, its lIlCIlllJL'I'S look l0l'XX'2ll'il with p1'i1l1 thc 1z1s1, to presenting AX NllClSlllllIIll'l' Night S11'cz11111 '. 111111 -Iohu filiUXX'llll'I' as thc hoist1'ro11s Sir Xvillllfli Raleigh when they z1111l those who sztw thc show look hztck upon 'i0lIlCCl witl1 ,lcil Smith 'til in his lirst 'l'riz111gl1' show it. thcy will I'CIllCl1llJClk 11111 21 ycztr ol ul'L'lJlllllllllg'i hut 21s thc 11c'1'1' to hc litll'gtJlLL'll fA2llL'Cll lflifzthcth i11 witty o111- ol' 1'L'S0llIllllllg suutcss. Llillltlgllff L1111l song 218 thc liuglish tiohility. Szuuly KCI1llCllX. l'rcsi1l1'111A1-l1-11 111 his tl1i1'1l fC1ll', wats Ll t'll21l'llllI1g' lmtimpkitiisli XX'ill Sl12lliCSIJL'2ll'C who sang and 11211111011 his watt throtigh iil,UIltlUIlN. ll 111t1si1'z1l high- Hf1fl1111f1f11S- it 1 1 1 . . o Ill 111111 moth llll lt sn ll 11 s it 1 2 1 INIIIOI' . 'I .1 ' AX so 'lllllbllg' 1 1111 mls wut lox ll . l lf oot11l ll Sli 1L1sp . 1 XX lllliltl IC 1 Sll2lliCSlJC2ll'CvS llifllll-Slfflllg, CllilllHCl-Swllllllllllg 11111 111111 JI 1 1 to ls111 151111 1 1 1l 11110111 z1 .tr ' 1.li1 J I 1 su11Lss w 1 xl Sllllllllg .1 z111'i11 ' 11' 1 cs 5 1 r I Jrolcss 2 lI'IlIlC'C. . ' ' -111 f' 1111 0115 Qiuther 1 1'r. ' vw 1 's ' ' N 1 's o 111 ic. I cxwood Sohcl, 1 1 '. 1 ' '1'111 '. '1 ll YVz1rre11 XX'ius ow 'A ' ' H ' 1 rolli1' 0' xxtsx - Q ,N apr :xii w at' ff X . Q .. 1 Nd ns Xa K K ligl hy .lim lJo1l1ls 132. Htgl l3'1rtlctt 'lllll l Sit . l i11 thcir s1'1'o111l skill' with 'Ira g ', SI iC1l thc 'Ilf through nSLl'C2llllL'u with tl1c1'l1fx'1-1' E.'1'1u'1l' ml 41 tz1l H11111x thc l 'gl1thl. lx . 11 thi pri lg 9 '-1- l 1' Y1 lllgk 11s thc llg'llI.lll ll 1'1l. light- l' f .XII Q 1 cxtrc, 'llll l31'rt ' li il, ' ther. Spi 1 'z1isJ lllllSl z1ls1 hc giwu ' f 'hier 'tifl z1111l lioh llL'K'll 'lil wl1o w1'1'1f uproatrious as hillt- hetl Zll his wil'1', 1'1'sp1i1tix'1rly, in Si111o11's ' ' patr- 1hl ANI ll? Nltltllilll ot Nl.11 llc 1il'1'. N1 ' 'riztuglc show Ullllll possibly lic 1 . 'ith- out th11 llillll working chorus 1' iosc g' 51' 'iid 111 g 1 o 11l so llllltll ol thc C luhs 1 llllllll tppc. 'I'his 31.11 Bill l5.1ll11 g11. D 11,1111 C1 ,Bill II s13,.l111l XI1it1cll.lI1Il Ins . l R11 I I -11.11 lflllls 111 I11 1111 .1 1 l ltlllllllll thtoughout tl e king 1311111 lfnux' Nlelltn. flztllzutl. Sthuuiztn. llilIst1om. tilztrke. lfrnrzl liouz' Klein. Coupe. l1eNYi11. Schieren. Kelsey, Nlttts. NASSCDCDNS One might hztve encottntered 'he Nztssoous zthnost zmywhere tl1is yezng lor tl1e Nztssoons prohzthly szmg and trztxeled more in llltil lllllll ever helore. 'lihe Nztssoons. with their lite pzrrt hztrmonies :md complex 2llil'2lllgClllCllIS. are not ntere entertztimnentz their tonf certs relleet, hoth the tztruztratderie und tllSll2llIlL'5S ol El group ol' l'l'lllt'Clllll ttndergrzuluzues. Zlllll the quztlity hred hy the daily reheztrsztls held i11 their llllll Hull bztstion, the Nztssoon Room. 'l'he heginning' ol' szhool brought lfreslnuztn Week 1 1 1 tryouts. Alter llllltll heer und little sleep, the xoices ol Nlessrs. Iutlx, Hughes, Nlullikin, Sethness. :md rllllll . , 1 Szturel were zulded to the unique Nztssoon hlentl. Yztsszu' and Bennett. ullluent Yztllutllzts ol the North, provided good ztudienees :md ntzmy tztkers lor the gl'0llIJ,S lJl'2lIlll-IlCH' record. 'l'f11' .X'11.v.s'oo11.s'-l061. 'l'he loothztll seztson llltlllglll nrztny eluh :md ztlumni e11- gztgements to the Nussoons, amd the everfpreseitt inlorf mztl gzttherings lllltlCl' '79 1Xrth lor Zlll hour or so ol SI7UIlI2lllCOllS singing. The ztnnuztl toueh loothztll gzuue zu Yule with the XX'l1ill'enpools ended witl1 the Nlorys slightly zthezul, 3-2. However, the 'Soons were not :lt lull strength, with lleet-looted Iilztir Iilein tztking Lztw lioztrds. :md ilztllurtl :md Sfhumztn hzuing an ztppointment that ztlternoon with Messrs, Pyle und Singleton. Following ll stteeesslul LIIJIJCZIIIIIILI' 211 ll Cornell song lestirztl, the 'Soons took il long weekend North, visit- ing Nlt. Holyoke. Smith, XX'ellesley, llztnzt Hull llllfl liriztrtlill along the wzty. Alter ll SlllI2llDlC period for recovery lrom the excesses ol ilhristmas vztezttion, and with hztrelr enough time to dig their eztrs out of the snow. the Nassoons heztcled South lor 21 trip to Coker College i11 South Clzrroliuzt. with pleztsztnt stopovers ill llollins and llElIllltllllll-Nlllftlll. Spring xztezttion wzts spent :tt the Nassau Bezteh Lodge i11 the liztliztntztsfwhere the groupls theme song, 'l'igertown Blues, seemed lIlt'UIlgl'll0llS. Then hztck to l,l'lIlt'ClUIl lor junior pztpers, theses, zmd exams, where the theme seemed more ztpropos. The single l'l'CSllIll1lIl voice ol' lirunf wzts added ut spring tryouts. l'residing over tl1e group this year were President Don l.eXX'in t XX'e have an oller here lrom Lake Erie College thztt reztlly sounds z1ttrz11'tix'e. j 3 Music Director Clztrl StklllCl'CIl t l'rineeton to Randolph-Nlation? Let's see. Xhout SW llUlll'S.HDQ Business Nl2lIl2lgCI' .lay Coupe . . then we leztre lor Houston on Friday morn- ing . . . j: and 'l'I'C2lSll1'Cl' Buff Kelsey Cwllllllll assets: 138 eztses ol' liud :md 21 couple thousztnd unsold l1l't'0l'llS.Ub Don l,eXVin. 21 lour year maui. and Blair Klein, mztrried :uid tanned. heeztnre Natssoon ztlunmi after the lztst ol the group's numerous Reunion engagements in the spring. 'I'hey join tl1e more thzm one hundred grztduztte ,SU0l15i2l unique hotly united by their devo- tion ztnd ztllection lor one ol l,l'll1t'CI0ll,S finest, musical trzulitions. 1111111 111110: D. 1.11111 NICK11I11l. R111111'1'1'111'1l. S-I'1'lHlfI Rfmx' Slxllllllllll, I,01111111. l1llYNIllll11. Nllfllllk, l51'1-11511-1', R. l.1111, F111111 1111111 K1i110. H1111115, 1'.1111:111L5. lxCl'l'. R0011, XY11111. TIGERTONES 1.111113 Sfjllg' 15 1-11111-11, 11111 1116 1110111111 1111g'1-15 1111. 1110 11g01'111111-5' 1111-1110 51111g' 1Zll'l'lK'S lllilfly 111011511111 1111-111111-105 111 lllC 111151 11-111. CS1JLT1'l3lly 1111' 50111111-5 Luke XXE1111. H111111-1' l'l1111. Hllgll 811111, 111111 B1111 116611. 1110 11-1115 5111-111 111111 1111- 11'lgi'I'I0l1C5 111110 111101-011 03011 1111111 l1lC 1'l'1Cll11S1l11J 11111010111 111 Il 111150-111111. g1'111111 111-11111-11 111 1111' 1J1'1'1,Cf'll11I1 111 111150 1111111111111 5111g111g1. 1111115 10211118 1111111 111g1111g1115 111111111011 SlllQ,lllQ' OI1 12111111115 ill 1111- l'1'115111-11 S1101-1 1-111115. 211 1Jl'1Y2llC 1J1ll'1lCS, 111 21 I-'111-5111111111 111-11 1-11111. 211111 1110 CI11110 811100 11-51111- 1105. .1116 11g1-1111111-5 Cll1'1llC11 1110 l'1'i1111-11111 511111111 111 111'011111'111111'1 211111 l11g11 51l1o1115. 111'1x'1111- 1111115 111111 1161311- 1111111- 11211'111'5. S111g111g 1111' 1-11111-1' Il 1-11111-011 ll 5011g 11-51. 111' 21 11111110. 11101 11'01'0 111 110 110111111 C1l1flX1llQ 1111- 11CIll1l11' 11121111118 111 XV1-l105l01. 1,1116 1X12lIl0l', 1,Clll1Jl'O1'iC, X11. 11111111111-. 111111 N12lXN'1'. N12ll'1'11l0ll1l1. B12lllll1lI1ZlIl- 11111-. lil15SL'll 511g0. 111111 121882111 1l'2lX'L'l1Dg' 111 1111110 511111111-1-11 11llIll'S, 1111-1 521110 111, XY115l11l11111111 C11111-110 '11111 , m ra n ' XII, XL'l'llOIl 111111 111011 1111 1111' 11111' 11111111 111 1111- f1Zll'0- 1111115 111 1111111-1. 1v1lllll1'1J1J. Sllllflll. 111111 Cl1j111x'1-150 C011 l1-g1-. l-'111' 1110 111111-111 1C2l1k 1ll 21 1-1111: 1111- Y111gL'I'10l1CS W1-10 11J1'1llll2llC Cllfbllgll 111 1'IlICll11l1ll 111 BCllll1lI11El.S 11011110111 BI1111111' H1111-1 11111'111g 1110 5111'111g' V11111111111. 15011110 111111 1101111-1-11 5111g111g- Zll 1111- 1-1111411111 llfllll' 111111 1111- 110111' 51111111 1111-1 111111111 l11L'll' 111111x11111f1l 11101151111-5 111 goll, 511111 111v111g', w11101'5111111g', 5M'llIl1Illllg', 111111, 1101'1111115, 1111110 IlO1'lll1'll2ll 11111511115. 1.11110 1V111'11 XVZIS 11w111'd01l Li 111111-1'11111 5 51121114 111110111 1111' 1111111' 111-11111' 1110 1'111'11l 1'1'C11. lid 1,1-1115 l'C2ll11 11111111-11 11111151-11 21 511111. 211111 H1111101' 11101 ll1J W1Il1 1110 111111110111 111 140011111g 1115 1wO- 1111111111-1l-111115 11111111115 1111 Il 1111,11o1'111111-. 7111113 111111111 151111111-1'5 111' 1101111111121 011101111111011 1111- V1-l0'1'l'1OI1Ci 111 D 11111111 11111- 11111 211111 111 161111111 1110 1.21101 1110 l'1'1111-011111 g-1111111 5110115111011 1111-11' f1OlllIll1ll2l w00l101111 111111-011 111 .XlCX2lIlL1L'1' H111l. 1,1151 11111 1110 l'l'l'51lllICll W1-10 1111111-11 111 111C l1g01'- 111111-5' l'Zlll1iSZ 111111 RllIl1Cl'1'lll'11, R1111 l1l'CWhll'1', E111 IA01111111. .11-1-1-1 N1Ci11I12l. :11111 131110 l,11w. .XI1111 KCTI' 11'111'l1011 1111- g'1'111111 11111'11, 111111111g 1'O1'1111g0 Nlo1111 . '11 C111101' 1111? XV1111-1'l'1'11111 , XVl11-11 1116 XV11111 11115 C11'C1'I1H. 211111 1110 lIl2l11l'1g2l1 l'l11'1-0 ll1lXCl15H 111 1110 10111-1'11111'1-. 1.111550 111-11' 51111g5 will 110 11021111 1111 1110 g'1'111111'5 IICXI, 12 lflllg-1J12l1'1llg' 1'01'111'11, 1111- l'1'1111-011111 'l41gC1'1Ul1L'N 111' l911l . 111 1116 x12l1'11l 01011111115 1111-11g1-1111111-5 1111011 111 111110 1 1Xl2l1'1i 1ill1J2lll1iS 511110011 151111 110011 115 1,l'C5l1ll'lll. Xlllll B1155111111111 111111111' H1111101' l'l1l11 115 151151111-55 N12ll1flgCl'. 111111 .Xl1C1Y 111-111' 111 111111111110 115 11111' 1-x1-1-110111 A111511 lj1l'1'l'l0l'. 11111111 1'C2ll' ll 11-w g-11111111111-11 'l'1g1-11111105 1111' 111155011 111111 IICWN' 111105 111'1'110. 11111 1111' g1'111111 10111111115 0551-111111111 1111- 5111111-. 111116 1ig1-11111111-5 5111111 11111 111111 111.21115 11111 12lSl1I1g 1'1'1011115l1111 lllllflllg 1111- 111011111015 11111 111511 1111111111-5 1111' 1'X1112l 5111111-11111111 1v1111'l1 11:15 Q'1Yl?l1 llllf 101111111111111 111 Illllllllg 110151111111111 111111 5111g111g. 1'61Jl'l'SCIll1llg l'1'1111'011111 1l11'1111gl1 51111g wl11-1-1-101' 111111' gli. 116111 l111z1'.' 111111. 110111. Hlllgllll, 1'1IIl11'1. 1i1111x. B011. 11ll11lllll. .111111 1 1 11111 X1 N011 I. 1,1lX1Y. Xl. Il111i5, 11. M1111-1',1I111'1'1, 1'1llIl11'l', 8111111111-15, .l1l1i1'lIl2Ill 11111 1 1181118 I 1 1 11111112111 12111111111 v1'11'1gg1ll'. 111. x11'R1'Xl1lJ111N. I1llg111'S, 11ll11'Il. xx1111l1kl151'l N1111115 1 111N J X 11 111117 1 l31111': 11l1QllI1. R1151-111111111. 11111013 X1111'g1111. 5i11101'111'1111x. I,1111'011, 511111 1111 1 1 1 L 111 5 1 11l'll11117l'11. 1511-11111111 Tl1i11l l:1l11'.' 15111111011 N11'1'1'l'l'2lII, KCIIIIC111. 11111111 11111 111151111 5 1 Ll 155 111151111 H1111 1'1llllX. 1Y1l1ll'l1Hl, K1I11CI', NI111111. YIYIIIIII Row: X12lI'l1l1. 1l111'11011l1'1'. X1 1111 111111111 l1II1N1J1l X11 X1l11ll11 11111111115 1'1lg1l 1 1111111 11111 1'11II1'l. I'1'1'11 1111111 11Clll'11. 11111111 11lll11, S1111111. 1D'N1-111. k1llllSIl1'l1. GLEE CLUB 15111 1110 1,I'1Il1Cl1JIl 11106 1I11111, 1111' 10111111 11llIll1J1'1' 111 111111111111105 w1111 1111511 11111 111 SCIJl1'lIl1JCl' 11115 il 1111111110 111055i11g. N111 111111' 11111 11 21551110 11111111101 1111111101 5011- 51111, 17111 11 111511 11111111011 1110 0x111111511111 1,11 1110 1'11111'5 11101111101511111 111 1111101y-1116. H2lI'111f' 1111' 1101111111 11111 62115, 1110 111111 11111110 115 1911117 19111 1,I'1ll1'1?l1lll 11011111 111 11111 111111011 1l111111111111i11 1111111118 S1T1'17ll11 .XIlIlll2l1 11651111111J1'S1Jllg1ll111111-1J1'l01J1'l'. cJI111'1' 1111165 111111111011 111 11111111 S1l1'1iCSS11lll. 1I1151111g 1111' H1111'1111l C100 1111113 111 1-111111111161 H1111 111111 115111110 Y1111- 1ll New 11111611 11111' 1111- 1111111111111111 1711111112111 111111' 1'C1'l I'1X'2l11'1' 501165, 1111' S1I1g1'l'S 2lgll1I1 PCl'1'0l'll1C11 111 11111 111111565. 191' 101111512 1110 1L100 C11111'5 111111'011 811111111116 11115 I'1TlJ11'lC 111111 1111135 111 11'o1111'11'5 1'11110g05. 41111111 11111' 1k1'l'lS ill 81111111 111111 131111111111 ZllJlJC21l 1T11 111 110 1111- 1JCg1Il- 1l111g5 111' 11 1111181 CI1l11J12l1J1C 1111111111111. 11111111 x1lll'11l 51111' 1116 S1llgCl'S 101110 11111111115 ill Ill111I11g1ll 1111 21 1111111311211 1111 Il 5111111 111111'-11111' 51110-111111511111'11' l1Jlll' 1111 511111 11111011 Y11'g11l12l 1115111111111115 21N K12l1'1 111111111111 1111115110111 11111111 .X11111I1Q 51111 2lll1Jl.1l1?1' 11181 111 115 1151 1J112l1'111CX1'- IIICIIIS, l1lC 11100 C11111 1llY1l1'11 1111 1'X11'111?lll W0111-5101 111D111'g1? 11111111 111 S1Ilg' 211 ll S111111111' 2l1111'1'111JfJll 111111011 51111115111-1-11 111 1110 1'11'11?ll115 111' M115i1i ill 1'1'11111-11111 211 N11c12ll'11'l' '111l1'1lI1'l', 11-1112 111111111 X1'1l1'111 111 1111' 501151111. Club, conducted. So successful was this performance that the singers traveled to Hlellesley in April for a repeat performance of the work in addition to another concert at the Thayer Academy in Boston. A repeat of last year's spring vacation tour of Puerto Rico highlighted the season. Spending nine days in the island paradise, the singers made five appearances at locations ranging from the University of Puerto Rico to the Caribe Hilton Hotel. The tough rehearsals which preceded the KOUI' were well rewarded by rum, sun, women, and sand. Returning to the campus scene once again, the Glee Club reintroduced the May Houseparties Con- cert tradition, this appearance date having been switched to the Freshman Prom for the past few years. A truly representative campus organization with twenty-five states, the District of Columbia, and two foreign countries fNorway and Urundij represented in the membership, the 1960-61 Glee Club continued the same highly varied and representative repertoire which has proved so attractive to its audiences in the past. From the vigorous motet Buccinate in neomenia tubal' by the eminent seventeenth century German composer, Heinrich Schutze, Hfteenth century British carols, and late sixteenth century dance-love songs by Hans Leo Hassler, the repertoire went on to include interesting selections from Schubert, Haydn, and Modeste Moussorgsky. Notable also in the list of selec- tions were three Negro spirituals arranged by the Director, Professor Nollner, and featuring some of the Glee Club's soloists. The anonymous, humorous glee, f'Amo, Amas, 1 love a lass and a patriotic song par excellence, He ls There by Charles Ives, were also sung. The program included as rousing Hnishers, a novelty piece for pith-helmeted narrator and chorus called Bestiare Singuliern Qboasting of the naturally superior attributes of the Tigricus Nassaunicusnj and the Princeton Football Medley. Many concerts meant many more rehearsals. YVith one record already out, the Glee Club spent the last few weeks of the season rehearsing and record- ing still another release. A commercial recording contract was also offered. Enjoying a newly won reputation for its efforts of recent years, the Glee Club had more than enough invitations to sing this year and is looking forward to singing with still other colleges and in other locations next year. Officers for the year were F. Allan Hanson '61, Presidentg John A. Brothers '61, Vice-President, Gil- bert P. High, Jr. '62, Concert Manager, Xvilliam F. Clayton '62, Tour Manager, and Michael V. Olds '62, Publicity Manager. Spring vacation in 'Rico . . . and Vassar too! Pmncsmn vnssnn . 111111.' Roxzx' NYA111111. Whi11'. f12llll11lll1. L1-l11', ll1111611. N11lll11Zll1, K1l1lb11'1U111. 1511111-11111. R1-11s1-11. Gilpin. l14O11l11llS1111. 11211111-11. F11111'Il1 JIOILT l':1111-1's1111. 1-'11111-s. 1:11111-1. SI16111111111. 11llI1I1. Young. l111I'1I1111l, 111-11ki11.1X'1-111-s, l3os1111111. 1'iIi11l1l. S1'1X21l1. K1-11111. 1N'i11i11111s. N1i1C116ll, 111lC1iC1', 1N'111111s. 'I'l11'11l I111z1': 1-'1-111-1', 1-111ll1111111'1'. R, S1ll11l1.Xl1lll1ll. 111111111-1'. f1I1lC1lIl, 'l111l1s1111. 1111l111'11. H1-i111'i1'l1. Ri11g1-1. '111111-, Os61'11I1, C1111611, 111Il1Nl1. 1'1'I15l1'X. 1-'1111ll11's. 141'11111l, h1l1I'Sl1Cll. N11111'1s. .S1'1'0111l 111116: C161-11111-1'g, S1I'11110l1. XY. S111i111. S1111111s1111. 13:11'1'1. S1l'1l1l1, Nlinich, l'111l11-1. x11l'l1l'lNU11. R111s11-1. 11111-sl1-1. Tl11111111s1111, 1vl11'1'llT1', 111111is111, DCIIII. I-11llis, 131111, f1011l1l. l i1'.1f lfllllh' .X1161-. M1111-1111, 1111w1611, 111111111-1. CQ11-1111-11, 1111s1-. 'I'. 1111111g'. 1.1-11116. XV1111. 1'i1l1'll1lll11. Xlll1'lll'l', K1-1111-13 Olscn. 1Y11gl1t, CI11111s1-1. B111.lIlI1Ql1l1I1. kl11l111s1111, S1'l111ll111f61, lx1111l1111, l1L'I'lx11ll111111111011 lx'111'1-11716: H111'lll1ll1. R1111111-1. l'1111li 111111111 Sl111l1. 111211. PRINCETON UNIVERSITY BAND 1.1111 13111111 2lg1l1l1 s1111'1-1-111-11 111 111-1-11i11g s111il6s 1 . . , , 1 1111- 1'11'L'N 111 1116 s111- 1111111s 11ll1'111Q 1116 1111l11s 111 1111- 111111111111 QZIIIICS 111 191111. N111111116 1-111111111-111 was 11-111-11 1111 1116 13111111's s1111111- 111 1,1111y CLo11ix'11. playing 111 131- 51'Cl11Q 11111 111 .-X11 1116 O111 1211111111111 1,l11L'CS Sl'Yl'l'21l sl111ws 11-611 11611111-11 111 1116 1111-11 111111-111 1-11-14 111111 1'11111l1111g11. .xllllflllgll 1116 11211111 111611 111 11111121111 111111111'1i11l, sl16Q1111111's 111111-11 ll 81112111 111111111111 111 11111111- 115111 X1'l1L'1l 1116 13111111 s11111l1 up C,11l11o111111, 1113136 1 c11l1111fU 11s 1l1C1111'1111'SOl1g11l N111 Nixon. R1-1111l11i1.111s 11'1-16 s111111-1111111 11ss1111g611 wl11-11 1111- 1311 1 . M 1 -. 111111111 sign 111111 1111111-11 Oh. 116 .11111 C 1111 11111111-11 .1 L111 ll 112l1'l'i'l X 1l'lI12l1L' illlllllllllhl 111-1-11s 1111- sI11111 1111. 111' N1111161'l 111 11011111 111 B111 li1-11116111. ,-X1161 1.0111112111 s1-11s1111, 1111- 11111111 lJ1iL'llliS 1111w11 into 21 SO111C1N'111lL s111111161' group 111211 is 1161111611 111 1I101'C s1-1'i1111s Cll11L'21X0li5. '1'l16 C11111-1-11 13111111 111 l1111l1's lI11ljO1' 1111111-161116111 V115 1111- p1'1'111111-111111 111 ll IICXN' 111-11 LP 1'C1'U1'11, 6111111611 Going 13111-11 , wl1i1'l1 lil'2lIl11'CS songs 111 SL'YC1'2l1 111' 1116 111' 1.611g111- s1'l111111s i11 1111111111111 111 1111- 11111 1311111611111 1'11x111'116s. 'l'11is YCI111111' 111111611 suc- 110581-111 11s 1111- 11-811116 1111s 16111111611 1JO01111I1g s11l1-s. WI11-11 1111- cl11Ill'Cl'1, 13111111 1v11s 1101 i11 1'1-11Q11'11i11g ses- si1111s. 11 s111-111 11s 111111' 111 111111i1111i11g 11s 11111g-s1111111i11g 1111111111111 111 1'11ll1'L'1'15 111. XV0lI1Cl1i5 111111-g6s. i11l1lf gioup wus WCl1 11-11-11611 211 XVi1s1111, flC111Cll2l1'1'. 111111 V11ss111' l11s1 spring. 111 r11l11i111111, 1111- 1'1'i111-611111 1'111111111111ity 1111s 11'1'2lIt'11 111 two S16I1s C10I11L'1'1S i11 1111111 1,11 Nassau 111111. 1'1X1ClJ1 1111 11116 1'L'l1C2ll'S2l1 1161 116611 111111 N111 141113611 1.6isl. 1116 13111111 is 1'l11.ll'C11' s1111l1-111-11111. 'l'111'1111gl11'1111 i1s l111i11s611s1111. 1116 13111111 was 1611 hy 1'11-si1l6111 1,61111a111 1361-11111. '11l. R1-s111111si1116 1111 w1'i1i11g 111111 111-111i11g 111' 1111- 111111,-111111' s111111's was 11111111 111111111 111111 R1ll1C1C1, 112, 11ssis1611 111 1l1'111lIl1lS1LTl'S 12111-1 1'1'111l, '62, 111111 R111111y H111-111111-1, 1151. K1-6111-1 111' 1116 s111111-111111-s 1igl11 1111156 1111s ll'CHS1l1'L'1' 1'l111X'1ll'll '1'111111i11s1111. '11l. HL12111 N12l11- 2lg'l'1'l2l1 1111111-s w1-16 fllllllllly 111111111611 l1y 1121111 1Y11111611, 1111. ,X111si111l 111l11i1s 111-16 111111111611 111' CI1111111111111' Rob- 611 S111111. 'lil. 11ssis11-11 111' 1111111-s 111211. '61, 1.1l11'a1'y 11111i6s 11616 11111161 1116 111111111111111 111' 1311111116 13111161, '61, IJ11lJ111'11V 111 1.611 l'1l?11Cl', '63, 111111 1116 112111-111111? an- 111l1l111iC111l'Il1S 111 K1111'1i11 Xvlllblbll, 'l11. ORCHESTRA The Princeton University Orchestra presented three concerts this year, giving university musicians an opportunity to play good classical music and to make a significant contribution to Princeton's musical life. The programs utilized Princeton talent as soloists and composers. Under the able direction ol Nicholas Harsanyi, Vincent Reale '63, violinist, was featured soloist in Beethoven's A'Violin Concerto in D Major at the lirst concert on November 27. On the same program the 'flacobean Suite by Nathaniel Burke, a Princeton graduate and resident, was presented, as well as Fresco- baldi's Toccata and l ugue . The second concert on February 26 included Handel's Overture to Rode- 1inda and 'l'erpsicore Ballet Suite. Hlalter Nollner ol Princeton's Music Department was soloist in the Mozart Piano Concerto Number Twenty-live , and Strauss' Kampf Und Sieg was presented in its hrst American performance. The third concert was pre- sented on April twenty-eighth. This year's oflicers were Robert Sholz '61, President: XV. Bennett Rose '61, Vice Presidentg Arthur R. Leder- man 162, SCCT6'lHl'y'-Tl'C21Slll'C1'I and Steven S. Teich '62, Librarian. SAVOYARDS Although the Savoyards of Princeton are a rela- tively young University organization, they have been firmly established as the area's Hnest Gilbert and Sullivan troupe. From a humble beginning in 1956, the Savoyards have gone on to enjoy phenomenal growth and increasingly great popularity. By combining high professional standards with the enthusiasm ol an amateur group, the Savoyards have been able to delight audiences with the gay arias and subtle satires of Gilbert and Sullivan. This year's ambitious production of The Mikado brought great acclaim to the Savoyards. Other highly successful productions of previous years include The Pirates ol Penzance , The Condoliersn, Iolanthe , and H.NI.S. Pinaforeu. The Savoyards utilize the talents of the entire Princeton community. Representatives from the local secondary schools, the YVestminster Choir College, and the town at large blend their talents with those of Princeton undergraduates. Thus in this past sea- son's production of 'The Mikado , former Triangle Club president Munroe Yllade '31 and Vernon Bou- shell of the Hlestminster Choir College served as direc- tors, while local girls were transformed into dancing choruses and Princeton students became ,japanese nobles, guards, and coolies. Indeed, it is this en- compassing aspect of the group's personnel which llarsanyi conducts the orchestra. makes the Savoyards unique among Princeton organi- zatious. The production staff this year was headed by David H. Johnston '61, President of the Savoyards. The other ollicers of the company were Francis A. Towne '61, Vice-President, David L. Marshall '61, Secretary, Arthur C. Smith, Ill '61, Teclmical Director, and Edwin A. S. Lewis '61, Business Manager. liack Row: Adams, Dunham, Grant, Dutm, johnson, Kurz. Sccoml Knut: Mcililvra, Ponisi, Blair, Sehildein, Steck, Curfman. Mack, Hlidman, Rosenthal. Frmtl Row: Ives, Diener, Marshall, Johnston, Towne, XVhite, lismay. limi: Ifmtu' Ritltlle. lllllllllllg. kiinatian, Perry, Kennetlr, Ilain, Duiis. NTZIIKCIIITC. l'ro11l Ilona' llill. Kiholoclenko, Glitkler, T'lSlllCl'lZ!ll, N'right. l.ortl. lilantliartl, THEATER INTIME l'rinteton 'l heater Intinie. the Princeton lfnirersity stutlent tlrzuna organization, has enclearoretl in the past years to provitle the tainpus with the finest in theater entertainment. liast spring the worltl preniiere ol' XY. H. .Xutlen's ,-Igf' of i-lrixirly wrought one of the greatest sutcesses ex er to ottur in l'rinc'eton. The poet hintsell' attentletl several ol' the rehearsals to guide the plays tlevelopinent. lntiines retiring presitlent. .joseph Fitthett, proclutetl this pre-liroatlway showing. Another spring highlight was Montgomery Davis' protluttion ol' CL. li. Shaw's 1,011 .limit in llvll, which was presentetl in the University Chapel. The proclue- tion was sent to New Haven where it was entered in the annual llraina Festival at Yale untler the auspices ol' Intinie. A trio ol' one-act plays, l'I'UfI'SSUl' Tarfnzmf and Rem!- lr'r'lz'm1.s by Arthur Aclainox' antl 1,Il7'gYlf0T3' by XV. B. Yeats, was olleretl as the lirst lall lJCl'li0l'1U2lllL'C. The Atlainov plays were tlirectecl by lloseph lfitche and l'urgnlory by l'aul Ciliclter. The setontl ol' the l'all presentations was Cliristopher Marlowe's Thr' bleu' of Mzzlln. Paul Clicker produced antl Montgoinery Davis clirectetl this Elizabethan masterpiece. Ralph 12sinerian's superb characteriza- tion ol liaralnas. the tlew. reteivetl aetilaini throughout the tainpus. Outstantling renclitions ol' lthainore, Baralmas' stheniing slave antl lferneye, the governor ol Malta, were tleliveretl hy Bill llarnian ancl Frank Carr. respectixely. Over the Junior Proin weekentl. l'rint'eton Theater lntinie presentetl its long-awaitetl protluetion ol' George Buethner's psytliologital tragecly, ll'0y:e1'l:. The cli- rector. joseph lfitthett, incorporatetl into this rarely perliorinetl play inany novel technitptes, intlutling the use ol' proxjet tions whit h serwecl to reinforce the feeling ol' unreality which C'll2ll'1lL'KClillC the work. Peter Nichols was the procluter ol' ll'oyzr'f'l:. The current presitlent ol' Theater lntiine, Ralph Pfsinerian, has lorniulatecl a three-point program for the touting year, which will intlutle the strengthening ol' the organization, the renovation ol' lntiine's phys- ical plant, Murray 'l'heater, antl the hroatlening of seope in the selection ol' plays. The lioartl of Direc- tors is conscious ol its coininitinent. to the Princeton untlergratluates antl has tletlitatecl itsell' to the presen- tation ol' works which can he protlucetl realistically antl elliectively by lntiine lor a inore general auclienee. The thenie underlying Theater lntinie's plans is well expressed in the wortls ol' Samuel johnson: For we that live to please, nuist please to live. CHAPEL CHOIR The Chapel Choir holds a unicjue position in the ntusical world ol Princeton. An organization ol' ap- proximately sixty voices, the Choir's primary' luiiction is to provide the anthems and choral responses tor the Sunday services. Beside these regular weekly' ap- pearances. however, it participates in a number of large joint concerts with women's colleges both here in the Princeton Chapel and away' at other colleges. The Choir also sings at a number ol' special events on campus. Thus. the Chapel Choir perlorms a reg- ular weekly' service and, at the same time. enjovs a full schedule ol' concert perlormances. The direction ol the Choir is under Carl XVeinric:h, worlcl-lamous organist and XVestminster recording artist. His spirit, enthusiasm, and dedication do much to sustain the interest and high spirits with which the Choir attacks each perlormance and rehearsal. It is through his encouragement and direction that the Choir is able to undertake successl'ully its varied and intense program. lfor the anthems sting at the Sunday' morning serv- ices in the llniversity' Chapel. the Choir concentrates on the treasury ol' sacred music written during the sixteenth and early' seventeenth centuries. Some ol' the composers whose works were sung this year include Handel. Praetorius, I.assus, and Bach. The Choir also perlormecl. however. the anthems ol' a variety' ol other composers ranging from Schubert to Cone, thus giving their repertoire a cross-section ol the sacred music written lor a male choir. The Choir was especially' honored this lall to sing at the United Nations Convocation service on Sunday, October given in the University' Chapel in observ- ance ol' the Iilteenth anniversary ol that world organi- zation. 'lfwo anthemsfone by' Clarke. ,Yo Mun ls An lslftlzfl, and another by' Schubertfwere performed. During Advent the Choir sang in a joint Christmas Yesper service with the Sarah lawrence Chorus. The service in the University' Chapel called for a number ol' anthems to be sting by' each group and included the works ol Praetorius, Lassus, and liralnns. The two choruses joined to perliorni the Nlissa Brevis by' liuxtehucle. Unlortunatelv, the Choir was prevented from traveling to Bronxville the following day' by' a snowstorm and thus was unable to complete the ex- change ol concerts. The climax ol' thc: year lor the Chapel Choir has traditionally' been the Elilabeth Nlilbank Anderson Memorial Concert, a large undertaking which includes the participation ol' a professional orchestra and solo- ists from New York Citv, a women's chorus. and the Choir. Sting this year with Mount Holyoke, lirst one weekend in South Hadley' and then in Princeton, the concert l'eat,urecl Sc:hubert's illrtss in E Iflnl and Mo- 1art's litany in B Flat. The ollicers ol the Chapel Choir lor this year have been: XYooclburyf .-Xnclrews, President: Gary Nlcflown. Yice-Presiclent: Peter Flessel. jack Myers, Robert Noble. and john Sanclsted. junior Managers. limi: lime: Wood. Martin, Lvman. Meacham, S. Kannytischer. Sydor. Iienclann, Hughes, Kruckemeyer, Marshall. Grant. Fifth Row: lfaulkner. Prindl, Freese. Mann, I.. Kannwischer, Hunter, Kinsley, I,c:wis, Welch, Miller, Ross. Fourth lfozv: Pairfielcl, XY. jones, Torkelson. lsallantine. YYeinricli, Driscoll, Causev, Berton. Rogers. Platte, YVetherill. rflilffll Role: .-Xllleck, Fogt, lisser. Morales. xlohnson. Schmidt, lf. jones. Rothrock. Lathrop, Yroombout, Dunn. Snmnzl Icoze: Criliiths. Noah, Abrahamson, Fcrhl, Ritchie, Bozimo, Riddle, Gehris. Rosenthal, l'nger, lfrouf Rmtu' Bassett, Rose, Flessel, Anclrews, Dr. XVeinric:h. Nlc'Cown. Sanclstedt, Noble, Myers. Religious Organizations 'llhe Student Christian .Xssociation planned a full program ol events during the year in order to fulfill its part ol' the mission ol' the Church on campus. As speakers, it invited the contemporary theologian Paul 'l'illich to give two lectures belore a packed house in Nlcflosh 505 the scientist-turned-priest Dr. Xvilliam Pollard to speak in connection with Prince- ton's new Response program: and a series ol' pro- lessors to lead informal discussions in the Sunday Evening Series on Problems and Conllicts in Stu- dents' l.ives. On a more personal level, the S.C.A. provided three study groups-one lor lreshmen, one for sophomores, and an invitational study group made up of upper- classmen. ln the lfall 'lerm an exhibition ol' Modern Church .-Xrchitecture circulated by the Museum of Modern Art was presented under the auspices of the Associa- tion. 'llhroughout the year the traditional connnittees ol' the S.CI..X. continued to involve undergraduates from denominational and non-denominational back- grounds in social service projects, ranging from activi- ties for delincptent boys at Jamesburg State Home to Recordings lor the Blind and readings lor the in- curably ill in Princeton Hospital. 'l'wo active groups worked with the Y.Nl.C..-X. in Princeton and Ewing. XVL-ekly work was done at the Neuro-Psychiatric Insti- tute at Skillman to aid mentally retarded and disturbed children. .X book drive was held in the Spring Term for Asian llniversities. 'lihe Princeton University Chapel Deacons draw their membership from the junior and senior classes. The activities of the group, this year directed by Chair- man Phil Bruner, '61, and Blair Edwards, '61, are focused on the promotion of more ellective contact between the undergraduates and the religious activi- ties at Princeton. Sponsorship of several Parts of the Biennial Religious Conference, including the presen- tation ol' Doctor Fztuslus, were features of the group's program. During the year the council set up to coordinate the activities ol the Student Christian .Xssociation and the Chapel Deacons continued ellectively the work it began last year experimentally. .-X major goal of this arm ol' the Deacons is the establishment of a work- ing program more acceptable than compulsory chapel to stimulate unclergraduate participation in the Uni- versity's religious lile. Increased support olf confer- ences, speakers, and discussion groups has been sug- gested. Plans lor the future include the contacting ol freshmen in the lall to acquaint them with the religious program ol' the Chapel and whet their in- terest in it. Imcl: Rout: Ratbin, Palmer, I'illfJ'Clil0ll, Ogden, Blcfflellan. Second , - 5 5v A limit: Nlorton, lfewster. lwtclvy, Burnes. NN eene, Robison, Rosner lfron! Roan' lfairlield, Roberts, Hutlnut. Davis. Brandon. STUDENT CHRISTIAN ORGANIZATION CHAPEL DEACONS Iiarik Rout: Woolley, Henley, Nabers. Third Rout: Sebring Barker, Mack, XVickenden, Matthews, French, Clarke, Mcflormell Srfonfl Roux' Fewster, Rantlel, Davis. Robison, Noble, Cluvler lfairheld, Reynolds. lfirsl Note: Garrett, Shattuck. lidwards Bruner, Webster, Brandon, I.ane. wsz,f1i1' -sw f--wwf-uf 1 l Hll i Rr WIQSI XIINISTICR lfOl'NlD.X l ION. 131111: linux' SL-luring, lic-Clouril. Nil'Rl'lllUlllY. Nmoflrl lffmx' High, Nlosu. Xlllllill, 1lll'll.Il'LiS. Nlzimhlex, lsimoiit. l'ilsl Idozv: l'.ligK'l'lUll, 'Ilia' Rey. R. xiUlllg0lIlCl'f, Nlcfllellzm, Rolrvrls, DOWllillg. XVL'l1vi. Sli. l'.Xl'I.'S SOCllli'l'Y, 151117: Rrmu' Kerr, Rey, liclclx. Shorter, Rexellv. 1'iI'0IZl' Ilona' liilmzilll, lfziiriielcl, l,LlIllll'l','RlfNlllliilS, l'zlllcrsol1. Almwt: Kluylcr, Simmcrs, Wright, Mcilomiell, Boml. .I.lnl.. lirlzlc lfmiz' Demi. Xoimg, Stiles, Nlislmlow. Srronrl mx' Yullin. Sniiivr. xlllllllfll. SClllllllK7iiL'l', Romer. .XSCIILI l,llll'IlIl. l'Vl'l.Yl lfowf Scllexill. lxicisleip lil. lrwy, I.4TNlI1C, DENOMINATIONAL GRDUPS lhe XX'vsl1ni11ster lfoumlzitioii. nuclei' the clireciion ol' Rc-ycreml Robert l'. Momgomery, serves the Presby- l.Cl'l2lIl, Rclormecl, :incl CO1lgl'Cg2lLiOl12ll students of l,l'illlClOll. lLs 2lL'llXiliCN imluclv iUCllllC2lliOll2ll Sunday In-eaiklzists, lllldC1'gli2lIlll2llC slucly groups whicll C011- cc-illiute on such tolmims :is Religion 111111 Sl'il'l1l'Ci,, and Weclnesclziy morning cltllllllllllllllll services. Two au- mizil events :ire the l'i0llIld2iliUll lizinqucl, which is hc-lcl in the spring. :mal ll lfrcsliinzm BZIINILICL in the lull, :il which new siuclcnts me zihle Lo become aci- llllllilliifll with the zlclivilies ol the Ol'g2lIlll2lKl011. All lfoundzition sludems reecixe lihe Xewslelleiy, 11 pixlaliczilion tiflllfllilllllg' not only news ol' the Founda- tion, but zurtic-les on timely lopiis in liclcls such as llliristiun cLl1ic-s. The work ol' Lhe XX'estn1i11slc1' Foun- llllllflll is clireclecl by il Clounc-il ol' liltecn lllltlC1'gl'2ld- ll2lILxS. This year the ollicers were .loel CL. NlaClclluu Wil, Presiclc'i1L3 Steve Rolmerts lil, Vice-l'i'esicle11tg and Siolt lJOKX'lllllg' '62, HL'tl'Cl2l1'y. l'l1dCl' the 4li1'c-cstoisliilm of Rzilmlmi Leycy, the Prince- Lon Hillel lfillllllillllllll luis slrixen to promote stimu- lziliou in three zispec-ls ol' ylcwish l'llll,U1iCI thc: religious, the imellcmluzil, :incl the sofizil. lIillel's czilminel fled by Norm lmyiiie, l'1'vsiclent: Nlimhael lireisler, Vice- l'1'eside1il3 :xml Nlzirlin XXYCIDCII Sccrctaryj loses, ratlier than isolates, these three aspects. By HZlX'Ol'illg' its tru- mliliouzil lfriclziy evening services with tllSi'0ll1'SCS by Dr. l.eym-5. student speakers. gucsi lec'Lu1'crs, open lmncl dismussions, 115 well :is 2111 Ofillhiflllill Oneg Slizihbzll l'Cl'ClJl1lOIl, the lfounclzilion has fememed this lusiou. The 11111111111 l'IZlllYill'il-YZ!IC-P1Ai11i'l'l0I1 Collo- illlllllll-llllS year cmillecl Israel :md the Americizin llc-w Asc'l'x'Ccl Lo supplcimfnl our home P1'Ogl'2l1HS. In zulclition, mixers :incl discussion groups wilh various girls colleges were 2ll'li2lllgCLl. cll'Illl'2l1 lo the lfoundu- Lions progrznn is ai l'nitecl jewish Appeal lund drive, the proceeils ol which help ncecly -Iewish lzimilies in both lsrzlel and the rest ol' 1116 lure world. The Sl. l':iul's Society, the largest clenominzilionzil Ul'g2lI1il2lll0ll on czunlmus with over eight llundred lipisciopzil slucleuts on 115 rolls, 15 goyeruc-cl by 21 cabif uct 01 lililecrn SUILICIIIS. This body supervises the yairious zutiyities ol the Society: groups which work in nezirhy missions, LllSt'llSSlOI1 groups, regular services 01 worship in the lliiiversity 1111211301 throughout the week. zm :icolytes guild which serves Trinity Church as well as the churc'h 011 campus, ll newsletter, and an 21111111211 llmcl drive. The fund clriye, in which all the members ol the Society cooperate, this year raised money to establish El physics library at the Cultington College in Liberia. The cabinet also serves as a ready means lor the Episcopal chaplain to keep in touch with general currents of opinion in the student body. At the beginning of the year the Reverend Rowland Cox replaced the Reverend YVilliam Eddy, 42. The ollicers ol' the cabinet were Richard Palmer, '61, President: Spencer Reynolds, l6l, Vice-President, and Thomas XX'right, '60, Secretary. The Lutheran Student group active at the Univer- sity is the Concordia Society. The Society sponsors joint discussions with students from Trenton State Teachers College, and, this year, under the direction of Rev. Dr. Richard Leuke, it discussed a variety of topics ranging from The Protestant in Politics to Sociology and Campus Moralsf' Members of the fellowship also formed a Bible study group which met on selected YVednesdays to consider the Gospel of St. john. Special events this year included the animal Reformation vespers service in the University Chapel, an evening of Christmas carols to entertain the sick and shut-ins, and, in the spring, an outing to the New jersey shore. XValter C. Schroeder '61 was this yearls President. He was assisted by Arnold Zwicky l62, Vice-President, Marvin Mueller '63, Secre- tary, and John Barr l62, Treasurer. .-Xt Princeton, the XYesley Foundation is the religious fellowship for Methodist students. The Foundation is primarily seen as a fellowship where the Christian student can come to understand and exercise his faith in terms ol' involvement in campus life. Small study and discussion groups, prayer services, and intercollegi- ate contact with students from XVesley Foundations throughout the state help to accomplish this purpose. Among the activities lor the year have been monthly dinner meetings and participation in two events of the New Jersey State Methodist Student Movement, a square dance in the fall and a retreat in the spring. The XVesley Foundation is not only concerned with Methodist students alone, lor it reaches out to establish lines of connnuniciation with other faiths and denomi- nations as well. The Reverend Richard H. Thomas is chaplain of the Foundation. The officers this year were Fred Morton, '62, Presidentg Andrew Robison, '62, Program Chairman, and YVilliam Burrus, '63, Publicity Chairman. The Baptist Student Fellowship includes students from the University and XVestminster Choir College meeting at Calvary Baptist Church both Sunday morn- ings and evenings. Sunday morning the Fellowship participates with the congregation in Sunday church school and the worship service. The evening program this year has centered around three program series. The lirst was on church and state and dealt with the interaction of religion and politics. A second series was religion and the arts. An off-Broadway actor, an architect, and a musician discussed their particular arts and their religious implications. A third series centered on the idea and nature of worship. The Fellowship approached this as part of the Church, reali7ing the centrality of worship in a Christian faith. To raise money for a student missions concern, the Fellowship baby-sat and donated their earnings. A CONCORIJIA SOCIFTY, Iiafl: Roni: Pfalfenroth, Hancock. Sfconrl Row: l'nger, llutlill, Kordons, Kogler, McClain. Frou! Rrmx' Rev. l.uecke, Hlaliter, Schroeder, Barr, Nlueller. XVliSl.liY FOllNlJ.'X'l'ION, liufrk lioaf: Olsen, Neubauer, Hurllntrt, Bell. lfronl Rozy: Robison, Morton, Thomas fiChaplainj , lfoulkes. BAPTIST STUDENT FliLLOXVSHlP, Hack Row: Stockard, Meneely, llayis, Morgan, Rey. Dannenhauer, Front Row: Bickford, Neil, Fewster, Fawthrop, Bradley. Cl-IRISTIAN SCIICNCF, Bark Roar: livans, Williamson, Lynn, Nlyers, Smith, Xvelllord, lN'att. Front Rozv: Walpole, Day, Connor, lintin. COlClll21Il. FVANGIQLICAL FFLLOXVSHIP, Back linzu: llerernko, Young, Chiao, Fdmonds. Scconrl Row: King, Bryant, Burnhain, Petlinger. Bryan, Bolton. Ifronl Rout: Frame. Campbell. Dr. Fullerton, Y0llIlgliCIl, Riches. AQIFINAS FOUNDATION, Burl: Razr: Folda, Alonso, Galla- gher. Front Roux' Claverie. Cildea, Valdes. spring retreat and a field trip to the Bowery to observe tl1e work ol civil authorities and the church in its social missions were major parts ol tl1e program. Tl1e Clll'lSl.l2lll Science Organization, formed in accordance with the Manual ol the First Church of Christ Scientist. encourages Christian Scientists within tl1e University to IIICCI together and aids those stu- dents desiring to learn about Christian Science. The Organization holds weekly meetings on Tuesday evenings i11 tl1e Conference Room ol Murray-Dodge Hall. These meetings, conducted by student metnbers, include readings lrom the Bible and tl1e Christian Science Textbook, Sc'l'I'III't and Health, with Kvy to ilu' S!'7'Ii!IlIll't .S', by Mary Baker Eddy. Also, at each meeting. time is set asidc lor Testimonies of healing and remarks Oll Christian Science from the floor. This year tl1e Organization held two public lectures on Christian Science. These lectures were given by mem- bers ol the Christian Science Board ol Lecturesltip in Boston, Massachusetts. The ollicers this year were David Entin and .lim Day, Co-Chairmeng Jirn Cole- man, Secretary-Treasurer: Forest XValpole, First Readerg and Mr. B. Harrison. Advisor. The Princeton Evangelical Fellowship is a non- sectarian Christian organization on campus recog- nizing the Bible as tl1e uniquely inspired Hlord of God and Jesus Christ as the SOI1 ol God, the only l,ord a11d Saviour. To lurther a knowledge ol Christ Zllllflllg students O11 the campus the Bible is studied i11 two classes a week taught by Dr. Donald B. Fuller- to11, D.D., 'l3. Other activities include several con- ferences a11d special meetings Clllflllg tl1e year, and teaching Sunday School at Ilarnesburg State Home for boys. Speaki11g at the annual lall conference in 1960 was Dr. France Steele ol tl1e North Africa Mission. and lC2lfllIlg the missionary conference i11 February were men representing Africa, Taiwan, Brazil, and Quebec. Directing the activties this year were Donald M. Youngren, President: A. Barton Can1pbell, Secretaryg Illlll -Iohn M. Frame, Treasurer. The Aquinas l'lOllIlLl2il.lOIl provides 2111 opportunity for undergraduate and graduate students to participate i11 tl1e liturgy ol the Roman Catholic Church, and serves as the center lor Roman Catholic thought on tl1e Princeton campus. Occupying a large brick house o11 tl1e COFIICI' ol Stockton Street and l,ibrary Place, the Foundation is maintained by lllff Diocese ol 'll1'CI1lOIl and is administered by a full-time chaplain, Rev. Robert P. Murray, and an assistant chaplain. The Foundation integrates its undergraduate and graduate school activities. For example, members of the Sunday choir are drawn lrom both sides of Uni- versity Place, and weekly undergraduate and graduate student discussion meetings have bee11 combined. Lectures are scheduled throughout the year and iti is hoped tl1at this aspect ol' tl1e Foundation's con- U'llJllllOIl to tl1e University will be enlarged. The group also sponsors dances with nearby won1en's colleges, such as Vassar, and organizes an annual week- end retreat in tl1e spring. Special Interest Groups ENGINEERING SOCIETIES The members ol the Institute ol Aeronautical Sci- ence at Princeton are representative ol the conscien- tious effort exerted by student, as well as practicing, engineers to maintain an awareness and understanding ol the many revolutionary projects emerging in the aircraft and missile industry. It is the objective of the IAS student branch to answer this need lor knowl- edge and, lurther, to acquaint the enthusiast with some ol' the many lacets ol aviation. This is accom- plished through lectures, movies, and held trips. Among those who lectured to the IAS during the past year was Robert Northup of R.C.A. Mr. Northup spoke on the U. weather satellite, Tiros I. Kenneth XV. Meyer, Chairmanz Richard XV. Conger, Vice- chairntang Tim S. Ellis, Secretaryg and Rodney L. Burton, -Iunior Representative to the Engineering Council, were this year's otlicers. The Princeton Chapter of the American Institute ol' Chemical Engineers tries to lamiliariye student chemical engineers with recent happenings in their future profession. AICE programs in the past year have included a speaker from the Standard Oil De- velopment Company who lectured on the instrumen- tation problems ol refineries, a scientist from Proctor and Gamble who spoke on tlte synthesis ol fatty alco- hols in detergents, and Professor Bryce Maxwell ol Princeton's plastics laboratories who spoke on the engineering properties of high polymers. This year the AICE ollicers were: Edward V. Farkas, '61, Presi- dent: Costas G. Gogas, '61, Vice-president: Geollrey R. Nlyers, '62, Treasurer, and Gerard F. Vetrontile, '62, Secretary. XVarren R. Christensen was the Represent- ative ol the Class ol' 1963. Through its varied programs the American Insti- tute ol' Electrical Engineering acquaints undergrad- uates with tlte mtmerous careers in the Held ol elec- trical engineering. This year representatives lrom the Bell Telephone Laboratories and Kearliott, a sub- sidiary ol General Division Corporation, spoke to the organization about high speed transistors and navigation systems, respectively. ln addition, the group heard Prolessor XVi1liant H, Surber, Air., of the Electrical Engineering Department. discuss hi-Iii and audio systems. Ollicers lor 1960-61 were David Forney, '61, President: Timothy XV. Mygatt, '61,Vice-President: -lantes C. Blair, '61, Secretary'-T'reasurerg Richard Chappell, '62, IRE Secretary: and Andrew Hall, ,62, AIEE Secretary. To strengthen ties between the student and the prolessional worlds. the ASCE conducts a varied pro- gram. In the fall a study ol the elements ol' a pre- IAS, Huck Row: liogh-Henrikssen, Carlson, Hall. Second Roan O'Nt-ill, Cullen, Wallace, Nentecek, R. Burton, Florsheim Dersham. Front Noir: T1u1rber,Conger, Meyer, Ellis, Morgan fjll lfloor: Parker, INI. Ilurtott. AICIC, Huck Ilozti: llunter, Haunt, Iucchesi, Swan, Hanintoncl Spangenlic-rg, Harris. Tltircl Roar: Schwendler, Bittner, Luks Ryland, Lewars, Mckenzie, Burt, Christensen. Second Rott' Hlilkinson,Schoellkopl, Reusch,Caltagirone, Robinson, Reiner Kline. l roiiI ltrmu' Yetromile, Cogos. lfarkas, Myers, Blyler AIEE IRE. Back Row: jaramillo, Gabel, Cullen, Sampson Record, Hlilson, Schroeder. Front Row: Robison, Mygatt Forney, Hall, linger. ASILIC, liaclr limit: Gibbons, Klzinsner, Y1l112l1li11Cl'. lisser, Conroy, Marsliall, l.atta, fiU1l'I1l1ll1, 13171111 Roux Dunn, Robinson. Dial, Nlzinning, Marino. stressed concrete pier was made on a lield trip to Pier -10 in New York. At OIIC ol its monthly meetings the society viewed a lihn illustrating the building ol a pre-stressed concrete bridge. The club also heard a representative from t11e Perini Corporation discuss l1is experiences as a chemical engineer in t11e construc- tion field. T11is year's o1'1ice1's were james R. Diaz, '61, President: Richard lXlanning, '61, Vice-president: Thomas YV. lJlll1l1, '62, Secretary-Treasurer, and George Robinson, '61, Engineering a11d Gouncil Rep- resentative. The purpose of tl1e Basic Engineering Program is to give to t11e student who does 11ot want to specialize in any particular field a broad background applicable to the sales and administrative end of engineering. The Basic Engineering Society provides its members with an opportunity to obtain knowledge about this broad profession in an inlormal manner. Throughout t11e term speakers from botl1 the University and in' dustry discussed the various phases and operations ol engineering. Graduates ol tl1e Basic Engineering program 11ow active in industry spoke about theories and problems i11 sales engineering and marketing, patent law, advertisement, and advantages ol graduate school. The society's President was Gary M. Loftus, '61, and the Vice-President was Edwin XVeihen1nayer, '62, The student chapter of the American Institute of AIMMPIC, Back lirmu' Vreeland. Young, Stewart, Cadman. Frou! Roni: Dunne, Wofford. Rll11y'311, Smith, French. HES, liarl: Razr: 1.l1C1S!'11C1', 1Ving, Chatnberlain. Seconrl Row: Cznnpbell, Carpi. McConnell, Laws, lsoysen. Weinstein, Sloan. l 1'rn1t lime: h121CKC1171C, Greetiberg. I.o1'tus, Sliznnbaugli, Yan Atnerongctt. Mining, Metallurgical, and Petrole111n Engineers at Princeton tries to further botl1 the i11tellect11al and social life of all those dedicated to tl1e study ol earth science. At monthly meetings t11e program varies from 111ovies such as The Petrihed River, the story of uranium, to talks by prominent professors. Typical ol' some of tl1e work L10I1C by this group was the trip made by Damon Runyan, '61, President of the chapter, to the Do1ninican Republic where he con- ducted a gravity survey. This year's oflicers were Damon R. Runyan, '61, President, George T. 1Vo11ord Ill, '62, Vice-president, and James S. M. French, '62, Secretary-Treasurer. The American Society of Mechanical Engineers fainiliarizes its I11CII1lJ6I'S wit11 the numerous career cpportunities in the professional world. Fostering a close relationship between professors and students is also one ol its basic aims. To accomplish those ends several businessmen and professors spoke to the organization. Richard Ecker of Public Service and Utility in Newark talked to the group about nuclear power plants. ln cooperation with Proctor and Gam- ble Corporation, the society sent lour members to tl1e National ASME meeting held i11 New York in November. The Ollicers this year were Frank I.. Alex- LiI1C1CI', '61, Presidentg George Gray, '61, Vice-President, Allen S. XVhitehead, '61, Secretary, and Richard 1Vo1lmershauser. '61, '1i1'CZ1S1lI'C1'. ASME. Back Role: rl-01l1'1IlC1', Burchill, 1Vood. lfronf Rona' YVollniershanser, 1V11itehead, Alexander, Gray, Jacobs. DEMOCRATIC CLUB The l'1'imclm1 lvIliYlf1'SiEf' 1,Cl!l0iI'2lLil Club has lllllllflgfllli? ll llkillhiliflll during 1110 past yczu' from 21 100881f'fHl'g2lIlilCI1 group fllllilifjllillg only during elec- tion i'1llIllJ2ligIlS lu 21 collcsive body with il ycfzxl'-romld 1Jl'0gl'2llll. Despite the loss of Vinci-l'1'cfsiclc11l. Gerry Xvilli1llIlS zmml SL't'l'Cl2ll'y Philip lY,'xI'lllS in llunc, 19430, the Cllulm cnqjoyccl the most zulivc pmgrznn ul' :my political grmnp on czunpus during Llu: lull l,l'CSiilCllli2l1 lllllllilligll. l,l'CSillL'Ill Stephen Sclmcllcr zmcl vl1l'L'2l5lll'Cl' Paul Dcl'1'c:f pzwlinipiltccl in thc Dcnlonrzxlic Nzllionul Clonwnlimx in lluly. xpcut severzll days on llle num- Imigu lrzlil wilh cxmdidzllc John 19. lienncdy, and utlcmlud ilu: lnzmugux'z11io11i11Jzlllnlury. Dzlvc XVl111rlrm was znppointvcl lay the l,CI1lUl'1'Z1IiCT Slam Clmmnitlec as New Qlersc-5' clllllhlllllll of thc SIUIICIIIS lm' licnncdy and Jim Kcllogg was CIIUSCH as Stzllc clilfllllilllllfll' ol the Clullcgc Young DC111ou'ats. LIIICICI' lhrlllrmwzllic Club 2lUSPil'CS, Il Stuclems for KCIHICKIF' group was organized at Pri11c'cto11 with Cllzmrlcs HCM :xml Bill Peltou as Co-cllzlirmcn. The group 51111115121-cial scx'e1'a1 faculty talks on the issues of the filllllliligll and :111 Issues C0l1fCl'C1lC'C in which scxxflul IJl'Ol'CS5OlLS and politicos dimusscd 1110 stands of both czimliclzltcs 011 the major qucstimls of the L:zu11puig11. In :xdclitiou it collductcd Zl l'2llllIJll5-XK'idC REPUBLICAN CLUB XViLh lust NOX'Cl1llJCI'yS defeat on our 1'CC0l'd, we of the Repulmliczul Club can only look forwzml to greener pusturcs. Such El diS3.IJPOiI'1tlHCHl is usually suflicierlt to l'0IllIJ1ClC1y demoralize our band, but thc mcmbers have TCI-IISCCX to lose interest and much enlllusiasm has been ll1'llIIHllCd up with 1964 in mincl. The cou- sC1'x'z1Lix'es have been working hard to clic-il support for Barry Goldwzitcr and, if all of us arc not equally clltllusizlslici, there is great activity to persuade us. Having had much political experience Lo draw 011, 1110 Club is looking forward to ll 1111111111110 of new activities. There is the New jersey f1l1lXII'Il2lIOI'i2ll cunlpuign sm for next fall which will provicle jobs for numy of the members as poll-lukcrs, IJl'Cl'ilH'l workers, ctr. In the more distum fllllll'C, thc 1962 clUllgl'CNSi0Il2l1ClCC'IiUIlS will keep the LlllSlSlil'1'CdllIJ. In l'OIlLillIlK'li0ll with actual cizlmpzxign work, the Club will lmw 21 multiudc of Speer-llvs and nlclmtcs which will p1'm'iclc llll insight into thc mzlchillzltiollh ol' polilics. This. ZUICI' all, is the main purpose ol' our cmlgzlnmifznlirmlmflcm train and iIlU'OlllllC thc new WJICI' to llu- lllklll' ol' polilicul zlclivilies. 'l'l1is past yczn' was am intcresling 11110 with its cnlirvly new 1 llrzrlr Iiuw: IICII, lk-I'1w. SlI1llCfkCl'. Pcllmm. XYlm1lm1. Ifmnl Rmb: RCIIIICKIN. Qlulnmm. l'Cg'iSl,1'2lliOIl ml1'ix'c'. sc'x'c1'z1l iliSl1'ibllli0ll5 :md dvlllmlf SI.l'2lli1JllS all luollmll gzuncs, :md Il full lJl'Ugl'2llll of student 2lsSiSl2lllL'C :nl town l1C2lllllll2ll'IClxS. Slwccllcs lay fOl'IllCI' DClH0ikl'2llii' Nzllionzll f:l12ii1'l112iIl Paul Butler and COI1gl'l'5SlIl2lll I'il'2lllk 'l.hOllllJSO11, were also premcnlccl, 115 wus zu clvlmtc with thc Rcpubliczm Club. Since thc clcnlicm. thc Club has 110111011 in thc f0l'lllZlliUl1 ol' Zl New qlcrscy IMJIIIOCI-Zlfif Stuclcful Fed- eration and smlu-11111111 ll number of activities lm' the spring and the lllbllllllillg gllbC1'l13IOl'i2l1 Cllllllllliglll. type of 1'1'caiclcmiz1l cznnpaign, an ifldiiliilillll ol tho treulemlous power ol' youth :md vitality in our Il2ili0Il'S politics. This 5011111 is what we seek Lo serve and our lesson lm' 11115 yuan' was one of pe1'severCm'e :md refusal to give- up. The lkllllllif must surely hold Illillly Republiczm victories and the Princeton Republican Club will bc illSll'll1llCIll2ll in their zlchievemcul. Back Row: CIlz1xc1'iL', Hillglllf, Cllllilllll, Hutcheson, Bowen. Fustur. Frmzi Row: SL-guru, SlL'W2lI'l, Tmlrl, Pulling, JCIIIICF. PRE-MED SOCIETY 'lhe l'rinceton l're-Kledical Society was loundecl in lil-lil lor the purpose of lurthering understanding of the varied aspects ol' the medical prolession. Since l'Rli-Xllill SOCIlli'l'Y 0l l lCIl ,RS: lfieltls. Falk, Godsick. PRE-LAW SOCIETY 'l'he l'rinccton l'rc-l.aw Society is dedicated to the proposition that anyone who thinks he wants to be ll lawyer needs helpf-legal help. that is. 'llhe 1960-61 llztclc Ilotw: llaxis. lfzecr. Rosen, Nlacliax, Scl1ulho1'e1'. 'l'l1irclRoa'.' Ross. Sieglric-11, lfry. Sands. Rode. While. Shane. Clorex, .SKTOIIII Roan' lborrfs. Cline. lleydou. Nvitllcrspocnt, l'anit1. Cltalit. Le1Yin. l.eil'ct. l'lta', I-'foul limit: C.eotgc-. liohoracl. lleancx, C-reenwood. C.:'cc'nualcl. llarrison. Ilax is, its inception. the Society, whose membership is com- posed entirely of undergraduates, has grown steadily and at the present titne includes two hundred students lrom all lour classes. The then1e ol' the 1966-61 program, Medicine in Our Changing Societyfl was presented in a series of eight lectures which covered topics ranging lrom the present state ol' medical researclt. both biochemically and surgically. to tl1e problem ol' ntedical care for the aged. The speakers were men who had acquired outstanding recognition in their respective lields and included such figures as Dr. Selntan XVaksman, Nobel prile winner lor the discovery ol streptoinycin, and Dr. George l'. Berry. Dean ol the lfaculty ol' the Har- vard Medical School. All the meetings were followed by informal question periods in which members had tl1e opportunity ol talking personally with the speaker on more specilic aspects ol' l1is lield. Another function ol' the Society is to serve as a link between the pre-medical undergraduate and the advisory faculty. 'l'o this end. the Society sponsors a Fall Ineeting lor l'lY'CSllIllCIl at which faculty IHCIY1- bers oller advice on Curriculum planning and a Sprittg meeting lor .luniors which concerns the pro- cedures lor Medical school applications. Society invited people lrom many branches ol the law to visit the campus and speak to interested mem- bers. ln the Iall lCl'Ill representatives lrom most of the leading law schools discussed the advantages and requirements ol their schools both i11 lormal talks and in individual conl'eret1ccs. In the spring term lawyers ol special interest to the members were in- vited to speak about their various lields ol' practice. 'l'hus. the tnajor lunction ol' tl1e Society has been to give prospective lawyers Zlll opportunity to accluaint themselves personally with the actual challenges and opportunities ol' the law. In command ol' the Societys 156 budding barristers were President Robert H. Crcenwoocl. '61, Yic'e-l'resi- dent Robert N. lioltoracl, '61, and Secretary-lrcrasurer John Hopper, '6l. lhlichael CLrc-enwald, '61, took over Alohn Hopper's duties i11 the scconcl term when illness lorcecl -lohn to withdraw temporarily from schoolj 'l'he ollicers. in addition to arranging the year's programs. tried to maintain direct contact with the members ol' the Society and to serve as gatherers and distributors ol' inl'ormation regarding the nature of Zilltl application procedures to tl1e various law schools. The Socic-ty's very capable Zlllil popular laculty ad- viser was once again Professor XN'illlam Heaney ol' the politics department. LE CLUB FRANCAIS Le Club Francais h11s its C0llEilKfl1I2ll linger in ll con- sider11ble n1n11ber ol C1llll1JllS pies. It prese11ts tl1e finest in French cinema monthly ill Mcflarter r1lllC2lL1'C, selecting recent classies witl1 21 typically Gallic eye lor the corps as well as, to be sure, tl1e ffsjxril. It pro- duces El weekly radio program over XYPRB. 'l'he French tl1eatre stages periodic revivals in inlornlal play readings and l111s eve11 bee11 known to llOll1'lSll i11 tl1e i11ti1nate 2lU1105pllCl'C of ll lullfscale M11rray-Dodge production. If the nascent joyezzx Imllzulirfs ever find 11 F1'2iI1C'0PllllC wl1o can 11lso carry ll tune, group tll1llII.S'0lI-Sillglllg will join tl1e repertoire. All this versatility is quite apart lrom tl1e fortnightly meetings wl1en members gather in their salon in Pyne Administration Batiment lor a v11riety ol' reasons or for no reason at all. Here, over the IJIIIIIIPIIQIIE of bottled beers, they he11r Z1 lect11re o11 o11e of Fl'2ll1L'ClS ever-topical jirolllenzes acizzels, engage in 21 formal discussion, entertain itinerant 1If'111o1.w'II1fs from neigh- boring F1WCIlC'll Clubs. or merely liste11 to Ifrench records and exercise their French in a delightfully ungram- matical atniosphere. lhe Plillli'L'I0ll Gerinan Club, composed of botl1 undergraduates and interested townspeople, has en- joyed its most stutcesslul yCll1'. Not o11ly 1111s lllC mem- bership increased tlireelold-to 93 membersabut also its activities have found widespread support. lfour international award-winning films l1ave been showng among these were The 'fllnfffjifflllzy Ojwrrz and The C011fe.v.s'im1.s' ofI 1'l1.v Krzlfl, Der Deutsche Verein also sponsored ll trip to New York to see the Hamburg ensemble i11 their lJl'0lllll'llUIl ol Goethe's Iffllljf. A tradition ol' presenting CiCl'IllZ1ll plays has arisen over the l11st decade 11t Princeton 11lso. I11 December this tradition was continued i11 tl1e PSl'liOl'lN2lllCC ol two plays by Brecht, produced Zlllll directed by stu- dents. But not everytlnng tl1e club does is so aca- demically oriented. 'l'hat liflllllililtiflll ol' German CiVlliZ?lllOI1-lJCCl'-Zlllll blo11d German girls h11ve been encountered with great C11lllllSl2lSIll. The year's e11d beer party w11s S1J2ll'Cll from ollicial retali11tion only by tl1e possibility ol' dainaging illKCl'll2ltl0112ll rel11tio11s. It is this spirit ol' fiI'1IIll!'lllfl'lllH'?.l which this ye11r's ollicers, Andreas R. l'rindl, 'til, Nlarron von le lfort. '61, and Howard Pyle III, '62, l1ave tried hardest to preserve. rl: Rr:11'.' I,igl1td11I1-, lkosak, Bell. Rithards. 15771111 Ii0Il'f Mit kenlie, Sthulf, fi1lI'1JCllll'l', Goldsclnnidt, Cllaverie, DER DEUTSCI-IE VEREIN Srrzlwrl: Williamson, flllilllg, .llJIglfllSCll, l'1'indl, Plalte, Yroombr Jlll RESPONSE Response is a New Dimension in Princeton life. Officially entitled 'l'he Princeton Symposium on XVorld ,Xll'airs, its purpose is to respond today as tomorrow's leaders by fostering direct contact with those who make todayls decisions. The theme of its first weekend forum in April was America: 'lihe Question ol Creative Survival . Hy 'lCreative Survivall' the Committee means an exploration into what lies beyond mere physical survival, bombs and missiles, it means an attempt to determine the dynamic elements of our society and the creative individual's role in it. The approach to the theme is the New llimensiony' -to present the views of distinguished public citizens in direct lashion through lectures, dinners, and in- formal discussions. By doing this, Response will involve the students ol many colleges in an ellort to mobilize student concern and will go beyond the academic environment by providing a vehicle through which the college student can re-establish contact with the dynamic lorces ol the present and luture. Response and the idea ol a weekend built around it originated last spring when its present Chairman, Edward A. XVeisband 'tSl, obtained a charter lrom the University. At this point the Committee obtained limited financial assistance lrom the University and later a S5000 grant in International Allairs lrom the M. Kaplan Fund in New York. It then proceeded THE MISTAKEH Establishing an unprecedented precedent twenty- Hve fcount 'emj lucious lassies in a successlul attempt to smash tradition rendered our editors incompetent and thereby inserted themselves herein. These com- muting partiers from our northern source in Hackettstown lelt that since they played such a large role in alleviating the Princeton HIZIIPS dubious isola- .X little dablll do ya .... Back limit: Macht, Stuart. Stallord. Ifronf Row: Buxton, Gurofl, YVeisband, Nelson, Webster. to arrange lor speakers who could talk lorcelully on the theme of Creative Survival . It obtained three US. Senators, plavits QR-lY.Y.j, McCarthy QD-Minnj, and Saltonstall QR-Massa, Governor Bleyner, C. Douglas Jackson Qpublisher ol' Life ilIug'azfm'j , Sargent Shriver tllirector ol' the Peace Corpsj, XVashington news analyst Edward P. Morgan, Dr. Jerome Frank QDirector of Psychiatric Research at Johns Hopkinsj , and the Rev. Albert C. Outler, Chaplain from SMU. The speeches lrom this weekend are being published by the Princeton University Press, along with supple- mentary interviews. pictures, and faculty commen- taries. 'llhe Committee will hold one or two forums next year and may initiate a new magazine entitled Resjyorise. tion, it was only litting that they be justly acknowl- edged. 'Trapped between Pinkerton and the car rule, these gals buck all odds to wage constant war on the Tiger's apathy, to put Firestone Library out ol business, and to cause general confusion in the mind ol' the con- cientious student. From Rutgers to Houseparties they're ubiquitous on the campus, therefore, take heed all you grinds-you can't lick ,em so you might as well join 'em. P. E. B. ATTRACTIONS 1'. 11. 11. .X'1 1'R1XC.'1'IOXS 15 2111 1111111-1g1'11111111l0 111'g1111i1111i1111 1l1JL'1'I111I1Q l11l'0l1L111 1111- 1111102111 111 81111113111 1 1 1 .X111. 111011111111111111111115111 101111f1. 111-1110, 111211111 11111 , 1 . .X. 111111-1101, 11. 1111- L1L'S1gl1CC1 111 1111111110 CI11C1'1ll1Il1I1CIl1 111 5111111-1115 1111 1121111 110011011115 111111, 1,1l1'0llg11 111011 lJ211'11lL'1'S1l11J. 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X1'1L11 11111111115 .'X1'1iC1'11l2lI1 1'111111111'1111Q 2 - , 1 1 - - V , I V V- - - 1 1111- .1111111105, 1111111-1121. 1111113 1101130011 11111111111 1,11Cll ll 1111111111111 111 0101111-1110 111 131111111 c11Ill. 1110 501111111 w115 P11111-1-11111'5 11181 1111-11 '11 11111 1111111-1'1. 1110 5110 211111 1-11111115i215111 111 1:2115 1311111111115 21111111-111-0 11115 ll 1'1Cll1' 1111111 21111111 111' 1111- 1111102151115 111111111111'i11' 111 11115 111i111i1' '- 111111 5011511111 1111-1111 . 111 2111111111111 111 51111'1i11g 011 1116 501111111 101111 111111 R211' 6.11.1111-5, C, 111111 1x 111050111011 111111110 1110 10111 lll 111011511111 111111111-1115, 5111-11 115 111111101 111111 IDLIYC 11l'l11JL'1'1-5 111111 P11111 131-5111111111 211111 llll 211101 5111111' 1121111 211111 11111 101521111111 111111 11111111115 SL'11L'1'l112lll 211111 R115-01' 8055111115 1 U IW 111111 11151 11111 11111 1CllS1. 1111-10 15 1110 11111 111 1110 11111115- 1111 , So, 1111111, i1'5 1111115. 1 f1l'211JCI', KI'0t'gLTl', Craig, R1155011 h1i'ci21l'IC1' ,111lC2l1l'C 1110 10111111 111' S12111101' 11111111w11 s 1111--131'11111111'111 1111011i11g 111 I.11I.lgl1.S' 111111 Ull11'1 lfzfwnls, , E1511 1.11111-111-511-1' 1610115111011 by CI11111105 1.1111gh11111j, S11 11111111 f11C1g1ll1 111 1110 X1'OI'1l1 1110111101 111' 111111- 111111 lhfalll, IUNLI' C111-111 111111 1115 51121111511 B211101, 1111- XV21151111' P1111- 111111111111i1 f,1'1'1lCS11'11, 111111 14 P11111 11-1111 151-111' 1111111111-11 111111 .-11111111111 f11't'1'II. 111111' 111151111-551-5 111110 11111 110011 11111111111 1111-11 11111'1'11w- 111g 111111111-1115 1111 1111- 11111 112111111-15: 1111' 111110 1110 CIlI11'C gflll 11115 511111 11111 111111 1110 141110511111 11111 11111111't 1110 High 1'1-11-51 11111151-11 : R111' C11211105. -101111 Cllkiig 1111-51-1115 1111' 1411111511111 11111 111111 ll 1111111110 1111111111-111111' 111i11g 111011 ll1J1J1'1ll'll11L'l'. E 1 Recreational Clubs RUGBY CLUB The Princeton University Rugby Club, along with the liastern Rugby Union. has increased its strength since last year. The Rugby Union now has a member- ship ol' eighteen cilubs, an increase ol ten oy er last year. The Union has been divided into three Divisions, and each Division has been named alter a prominant mem- ber ol' the Rugby world. Princieton has been honored in that the First Division was named alter Honorary Coach and member ol' the Princeton Politics Depart- ment, l'rol'essor -Iohn B. XYhitt0n. The Rugby Club's record in both the Spring and Autumn ol 1960 was its best in many years. In the Spring season under the captainey of Don Morrow, the Club compiled a 6-0-2 record. The two drawn matches were against New York and Dartmouth. During the Autumn of 1960 the Club lost only to Yale, while beating Dartmouth lor the first time in a number of years. The Spring season ol' 1061 promises to be a very exciting one. Thanks to the hard work ol' Captain Jerry Shattuck, the lfirst Team will be going on a tour ol' the San Francisco area, where it will play the College ol' Pacific, St. Marys University, and the University ol California. .Xt the same time a strong Second Team will travel to St. Louis, where it will play three games. All this lruitlul activity might lead one to think that the Club has started to succtumb to the pressures ol' the recorcl book and creeping commercialisin. Far from it. Rugby is still being played at l'rinc'eton in an atmosphere ol lirienclship and good hard competi- tion. The competing teams still get together to rehash old battles, to have some l'c'heer . and to sing a few traditional Rugby 'lanthc-ms . California tourists. Cracked heads prevail Hclcl: How: Hodges, Green, Nleelian, Tilton, Cobbs, Robbinson, Mygatt, llangel, Oster, Ncucns inf cton l min Ties l'ic es White. Scwnzcl Roni: Schrock, Ikeeton, Burchill, lNlorrow, Professor Whitton, 0'Neill, Ciabei C rclmf c i lxrtci mer. Nlolasky. Crossnian, Swain, Hollman, Shattuck, High, Dover. OUTING CLUB Though perhaps somewhat erratic, the 1960-61 season ol the Outing Club activities has nevertheless been on the whole a fairly active and increasingly rewarding period. Conforming with a general trend in other Eastern colleges. this year the Outing Club has suddenly become surprisingly busier. '1'hroughout the lall there were olten two and three trips during one weekend. These trips indulged in the various traditional sports: canoeing, hiking, camping, spelunk- ing, climbing, and, later, ol' course, skiing. Next year there will be increasing activity in the areas of lumting, fishing. and skin-diving. The Club also wishes to expand its program ol' day trips. There is always the attempt to encourage members to develop any interests ol their own, however unusual. 'Iihe traditional co-ed activities-camping trips and square dances-have been greatly enjoyed this year, and the enthusiastic response lor these activities among the Club's membership has insured that they will be continued in the future. This year Paul T. Schultz III, '62, took over as Presi- dent lrom Stuart Tullnell, '6l. IVilliam F. Isherwood, '63, becameTreasurer, relieving Douglas Kerr, '6l. The new Trip Area Vice-Presidents are: Frederick Bates. '63, Hiking, Hunting, Camping, and Co-ed Activities, XVilliam I . Isherwood, '63, Rock-Climbing, Roger XViegand, '6-I, Spelunkingg jellrey Miller, '63, Canoe- YACHT CLUB ,-Xt lirst glance Lake Carnegie seems to be an inappro- priate place to turn out line sailing teams, and the eight 'l'ech dinghies are certainly the wrong ships lor this: yet the Princeton University Yacht Club team with skippers Dick Rose and Bill Cox and crews Jim Beattie, 'I'im Scanlon, and Spen Kellogg won the Oxford Trophy and came within one point of winning the Morse Bowl and its lirst intercollegiate title since I9-ll. In a dramatic linish to the series, Coast Guard edged out the Tigers in the last race. During the regular season, the team successfully de- fended the Owen Trophy, emblematic of the Eastern Championship, from Navy and Coast Guard, and hnished behind Navy in the America Trophy race. Gay Smith. sailing a 44-loot Navy yawl, gave the club a second place behind XN'illiams in the McMillan Cup. Over the summer, Rose, Cox, and Denny X'Vright spearheaded an American invasion of British sailing waters which turned out to be more than successful. 'I'he loss of Rose and Cox was keenly felt as the sailors won only the Knapp Trophy for the Big Three Championship with IX'right and Ned Hall sailing. Kellogg, XX'oody Greenberg, and Bill Harris took a X Back Row: Young, Huebner, IViegand, Richardson, Stanley, Plant. Front Noun' liwing. Fisher, Bates, Shultz, lsherwood, Sylvester Kellogg. ' ing, and John Allis, '64, Skiing. Filling two new posts were Kenneth Krukemeyer, 763, as .-Xdministrative Vice- President and Raymond Young, '61, as Publications Vice-President. James Boskey, '6-l, became the News Editor of the POC-Kit, the monthly bulletin. IVorking on the ever active Car Committee were Mac Odell, ,6I, and Hlilliam Hollinshead III, '6f1. 'I'his year George Pidot, '61, was the organizer ol the square dance. second, third, and fourth in the XN'ar Memorial, Danmark, and Nevins Trophy regattas. Olhcers lor I960 were: Co-Commodores -Iim Beattie and Tim Scanlon, Vice Connnodore Bill Harris, Rear Commodores Bill Cox and Spen Kellogg, Secretary IVoody Greenberg, and Treasurer Derek Storm. The faculty adviser was Robert L. Johnstone. Baci: Roan' Brant, lingel, Chamliss, Barrows, XValters, Hall. Sfvfomz' Rout: 'l'rowbt'idge, Penslev, Cook, Cropsey, Loomis, Newhouse. Front lime: Kip, Greenberg, Scanlon, Beattie, Kellogg, Cameron. lirzclc Noir: l'll'2lltilll'l', Cox, I1if'll2lI'llSOIl, Ernst, lztylor, Florsheim. Ifronl R'rizt': Hans, Kettler, Bailey, Stubbs, Lord. FLYING CLUB In his wheelless stztte the Princetonizm searches ceztselessly lor thztt conveyance most snowy, most quick, und ol' course. legztl, which will take him to thztt which is most lacking in his existence!women. Partiztl suc- cess hzts been ztcltieved by some in this direction with results ranging Irom bicycles to Hertz. However, 21 tnztjor breztktlnough hzts generally been accredited to the select group ol' undergrztduzttes who comprise the Princeton Flying Club. No longer challenged by the .Xustin-Healey ol' either Cztntztb or Yztlie, these men mztintztin the Princeton outposts ill distztnt Yztssztr. Smith. XX'elleslex, ztnd on occztsions. find it necessztry to reluel :tt Holyoke or Sweetbriztr. Surprisingly enough. however, despite their obvious good lortune. these lortx-five ligers do not clztim such expedienct zts the bztsic purpose ol' the club. lfor them it is the loxe ol' lireedom, speed, :md perspective -the detztchment ol' flight-which thev seek. Some 1 1 halve even been known to nnplx' thztt ll one hzts :tn ztirplztne. who needs zt girl? lhe club operzttes out ol the l'rmceton .Xn'port, :1 Xml then there uc-te two . . 2 t turl strip three miles north ol town. NX'ith two Aeronczx Clhztmpions ztnd :tn ztll-metztl Cessna ITQ. lull training, both bztsic and instrument. are ztvztilztble. Although proud ol' its history ol' turning out line pilots, the group is even more happy over its excellent safety record. .Xside trom zt lew busted props. znt occasional ground-loop or an atbortixe attempt to llx under some enticing bridge on the Delztwztre. the club's log books are cleztn. XVhen there are openings, undergrztduattes ean join by buying' El sltare in the corporation. liztch member, therelore. owns one lorty-filth ol three :tircraft and about it tlt7llll1-'S worth ol. the elub's 'lil lford Coupe, Upon grztduation the shztre is resold by the member. Monthly dues are required to llllllllllllll the fixed ex- penses such as the hunger, insurance. :md inspections- lfuel. oil ztnd orerhztuls ztre pztid through low hourly llightftime rates. Ifor the third sean' the club hzts ztwztrded lour under- grztduztte scholarships estztblished in the memory ol' lhomzts A-X, llorl, '58, at lormer member. Contributions by his lztmily and lriends have mztde it possible for these scholztrship students to own at club shztre without hzning to meet the purchasing expenses normally inxolxed. .Xlthough the spring ol lll6ll was wet, the liztll windy, ztnd the winter sztw sererztl leet ol snow on the ground from eztrly December until late l eln'uztry, the club's cross-country Clessnzt touched down att points from Quebec to Nliznni. und lrom Boston to St. Louis. Successlullx guiding the club in whztt must be con- sidered one ol' its most dillicult tears wats Howard Edson, '62, :ts President, seconded by lidwin Bailey, '62, :ts X'ice'l'resident. .lohn Stubbs. '6fi. mztnztged the Secre' tztrfs post. while Clhanles Hohenbt-rg, '62 toiled, over the complex Iinztnciztl problems. Prolicssionztl advice cizune lrom Mr. lhomzts Sweenx' ol' the lforrestal Re- seztrch Center. The remztining lortyone members spent their time defying nxtturztl lztws. RIFLE TEAM The Princeton Rifle Team, regularly one of the best in the Ivy League, compiled a 4-2 record in indi- vidual league competition for the 1960-61 season. At home the Princeton marksmen remained undefeated, decisively beating Columbia, Brown, Harvard and Dartmouth. But on the road the team lost twice. The Iirst loss came at the hands of a very highly rated Cornell squad. After a long ride to Ithaca and a bad night's sleep in unfamiliar fraternities, the Tiger rnarksmen were no match for their Big Red counter- parts. An excellent Yale Squad and poor Tiger shoot- ing accounted for the loss to Yale. On February 24-25 the Princeton Rifle Team, 1960 Ivy League Champion, traveled to New Haven for the 1961 Ivy Championship Match. Princeton put up a highly respectable showing but could only place third behind the very high scoring squads of Yale and Cor- nell, both of which had defeated the Tigers earlier in the season. This year the team was captained by XfVard Smith, who, with the help of Treasurer Sandy Xvilliamson, introduced new ideas into the team's activities. For the first time the Princeton Rifle Team flew to an away match, a practice which, hopefully, in the future PISTOL CLUB This year a trend was seen in the Pistol Club that is very disheartening to the idle Romantic. No longer does tI1e Single-Action .45 prevail. No longer does the fancy gunwork of the polished slinger delight the multitudes. The barbed wire has been strung across the range, and the newer, more accurate automatic weapons have driven the mustachioed Iiandito from our YVashington Road Spread. This change is easily evidenced by the lack of alarms sent to the sheriff that a disreputable-looking hombre was aloose. Now the trail to the range is peopled with good-citizens carrying their accurized automatic in a boxl Elmer Kieth him- self would roll in his grave if he knew the last bastion of the leather-slapping deperadoes had fallen. Menfand this appeal is addressed only to the hard- hearted, calloused-palm cowhand-do not let the legend die. Strap on your rigs and be counted. They may have the magnum, but who can withstand a concentrated hail of slow-moving .1l5'sP YVho would even question a two-gunned gringo with that look in his eye? This menace of the accurate, serious, well- dressed handgunner must not be allowed to drive us from our frontiers. Is the Princeton Pistol Club to join Jesse James, the Dalton boys, and Black Bart in a moldy grave on Back Note: Cook, Plant, Gabriel, Stevens, Vroombout, Puchtler. Frou! Rrmir Avary, XVIHIHIIISOII, Smith, Pfaffenroth, Florsheim. will lead to more matches along the entire Eastern Seaboard and, perhaps parts of the Midwest. The Team also set up a better program of rifle instruction for freshmen and other undergraduates who are inter- ested in becoming members. Boothill? I think not, for this is only a trend, and with a concentrated effort, TV will continue to have a strong ally in Tigertown and Paladin will have a tough time maintaining his title of fastest gun in the XVest. Ifft Io Riglzl: Lamont, Luke, Huebner, Ferry, Jordan, Todd. Non-Academic Diversions SHOWER CLUB One ol' the lesser known organizations on campus, tl1e Princeton University Shower Club has come to be an indestructible institution. Initiated three vears ago Sfnmliug: Hilliard. Creen, Xvelch. Barlv, lily, .Xrmcutront. Moran. lv'nr'r'l1'ng.' Crillith. Sw11l1'rl.' cillllllllll. Cleist. S P O RT DIVING CLUB Skindiving, with all its excitement and adventure, made its appearance at Princeton in the Sport Diving Club. Now in its second year, the Club has seen both an increase in interest and in membership, reaching a total ol' about thirty members from its original live. Originally chartered as the Princeton Underwater Alpine Society, the Club ollicially changed its title this year feeling the new appellation to be more exemplary lizlclc Rout: Dunn, Smith. Mentl, Greenberg, Stoneback. Front Row: McLaughlin, Moran, Patrick, Sussman, lfreer. by Huthl' Creist, Steve lily QMorale leaderj, and Jim Beattie tCaptain-Emeritusj, the Club was organized to lullill a delinite lack-our trainer is given to the lootball team during the autumn season. The function ol' the Club is mutual aid lor pulled muscles and torn ligaments. The necessary materials are purchased lrom a joint lund. The Membership ol the Club has grown lrom the original three to eleven coveted positions. All three varsity classes are represented. Of the notable Juniors in the Club this year, few are as distinguished or as distinguishable as 'l'om XVelch, the Vero Beach teen- queen. xluniors Hills Hilliard, spark ol the Vero Yamps, and Colden Arni Moran, leader of the Hoogs, represent thc sweaty'l contingent. It's rumored that both ol these touch lootball clubs have challenged -I.l .K.'s boys. David Barry ol Man-ol-XYar lame rounds out the '62 section. Hank QPigmyj Cutman, easily the tallest of the short, was the first ol' the new. Gardiner QGU Green, fragile 6'-1 .Xllen .Xrmentrout, and 'Seal' Grilhth, indeed an imposing trio, close out the yearling mem- bership. NVe ol' the Senior and first graduating class salute our younger brother members, will them the responsi- bilities ol the Club. and hope they maintain its traditional majesty. ol' its activities. Leading Princeton's skindivers were Stuart li. Patrick, '61, President, David T. Moran, '62, Vice-President: and Robert Freer, jr., '63, Secretary- 'l'reasurer. At the center of the Club's activities were the semi-annual training programs, a requirement for all new members. Ilmphasizing the rules of water saletv, each program began with instruction in the proper use ot the mask, the snorkel, and the hns. Then came several training sessions on the proper use of the aqualung, followed by chalk talks on the effects and precautions of air embolism and rapture ol the deep. The final test lor the new member was to jetison his equipment, surface, and then return to the depths and don his equipment. All training sessions were in Dillon Pool. The highlights of the season were the Spring trips to Bermuda and Nassau. Other trips, sponsored by the Club but at the discretion of the members, in- cluded a good part of the Eastern seaboard, with the more exceptional ones being coed. Some trips were with SCUBA Qself contained underwater breathing apparatusj and others involved spearhshing by free dive. The annual cocktail party plus the ample dis- count on all equipment made tl1e small assessment seem more than worthwhile. The Club members agree: for a weekend change of pace, nothing beats the venture to the murky depths. THE LOCKHART 1..A1'R 'l'l11f 1'm1nl'1111111.s' lJ1'1'1111'111i1111 of 1111' 'l'11'1'11ly-0111' lf1111111n111l1'.s of I.11rl1l1111'l Hall: 11111011 111 1116 11111156 111 11111111111 61121115 11 11611111165 11L'1'1'SSZl1'f' 11111' 11116 111111 111 11155111113 1116 5111111115111 1111 11111111 51111111i1C 1116111 111 1116 U111v61511.v 111111 1,11 11551 Zllllllllgl' 1111- 111111'1:1'5 111 1116 1'll111171lS, 1111? 51-111111116 211111 1l'l1511'2l111lg 5111111111 lI1 XY111111 11111 121115111 112111116 21111 1l1l1.1l1'K'.'5 11110111118 1111116 111111 1111111111. ll 116111111 1051 111 1111' 1111111111115 111 X111 115115115 1J15111'y1111111 1611111165 111111 11115 111111 511111? 1111' 111161 1V11l1'11 111115611 111611 11111111111- ' n 111111. XV1- 1111111 1111-511 11111115 111 116 SC11'lIY111Cl11. 1112 11 1111 11115 11111' 1 111' 1611 1,l'1ll1L'1Oll1ll1l5 1111: 11111 Cil'C211C11 61111211. 111111 11161 ll1'C 1 not L,lH1OwU1 111, 111611, Hprinfe 01- 1,l.USlx,l.l 11,1111 Burl: Rmr: 1111115 1111111111 110115, 116211. K1l1g,RClSL',1'11'1lllk. 'I'l1i1'1l U . H f U U I20112' X121ll x12IlI, 11:11, lf:11'1', 1J11111'5, 'l'111111y. S1'1'11111l 1:U11'f .Xxc l'lg'1115, 111111 l'2l11l1'1' 111612116 011111111011 WlL11 gl'1C1,g2lS, B11111, f11l2l1'11L', 1,?'lICCll11l'g, S11':1111111. H41X111ll 11, 1il'l'l'l'l'l1. 1'.I'UH 211111 1111? 1111151111 1111'l'L'O1', 111111 111 11111111 111651: 6111111112 1fUff1'f111111'11 '1 7- lllLf111S, 511111 1111115 2ll'C 116111611 lllllllllg 81111101118 11C1'1V1Ilg 1011- 111611 111151 111111615 1111111 1116 12lXN'S 111 ll2111Il'C. 111111 wl 1 1-161 21111 5111111115111 11151111111011 11165 111 13111-0110 11 ICSC 1116 'IT 1'1'1111'11. I 1'11111111'1111'1115, 11 15 1116 115111 01 1116 5111111'111. 111 2lg2l1llS1 511111 11'111'1116111'6 211111 111 11O1'l1lll1ll1L1 ll 111rw 11 12l11Ilg' 115 111111111111111115 1,111 511111 1111111111165 215 111111 121116. 111111 lllglllllllllg 115 111111615 1111 511111 1011111 1'lf1JL'111fJll, 218 111 11113111 5111111 566111 1111151 11111-ly 111 SC1'l1l1C 111611 XYOIIICII, 1111111 111561, 111111 111611 611111111116111 111 511 1 11115, wc 1lC1'C1J1' 115511116 111111 11118111111 5111111 11111 112111: 1111611 1'11f:111'11 111 111111, 111111 111211 11115 U111v61511y 11111161 CL11l111 5112111 1l21Yl' Il new 1111111 111 111S1Il'l'C1'l10ll, 11111, 211111 g'1Tl11'l'2l1 1l1l'1IlO11. 211111 111211 11111 111511111111111 111 111111111 111' 1.01'1i1l2ll'1, 1111' 1.111'k11z111 5111111 11111 11611511 1111111 11101111311 111 1f1111'111'511y 11111611115 '11111' 5111115 11111111 111x1. 1156 115 1111, 1I111'15l111:15 111 1111? 1,211'1'. RIGI-IT WING CLUB lfllfk R1111'.' 111111111-1, 511111. 1-Q11o11211'11. 11111. 11111111 111110: Mack, ROCKEFELLER SUITE 131101: Roxr: x111v1l1Illl1i'. 111gg1115, SIXZIII. N11ll1', X100115, 111111111 7 111110: 010011. W. xl'1X111l. 'lf xL'X1'1111. NL'1NUIl. 11112ll111. 1111011 11115 gl'fJl11J 11101 111 112110 115 111111110 12114011, 5111110 111 1110 g111'5 who 11'010 5111111115011 111 111- 111 11 112111 2111021111 1011 1111 1111010 2111 1110 1111101 111115 2110. 11111211 11111110 llI2l1iCS 11 look 215 11' 1,l'1l11k1'10ll gl11'5 211111 Olll' 111105 001 111C 11021111 111 1110 g111 111111 11111111 111010. 13111 that 151111 IlC'1'C5S2ll'1l1 111190-51IlC'L' XX'C'1'C 11111110 1111151 111 1110 111110. S1111121111'111111' 1J1111l11C'l2l1i1I1g171111111 111 Ho111'11'oo11 15 1110111' 111111110 211111111 1111211 15. 13111 11'0 112110 21 11110 1J111l11'C-12l1iL'l' 111 1,l'1ll1ifll7Il. H15 11211110 15 1111011 11211-11f11111 111111112 1110 0211 11'1111 1111' l10211'y 11111101 1111. H0 S2115 110'5 11111 11111 111111101111 you 11011010 11. C2151111g' 511011 2111 1111011110121111111 11111111 1110 121115, 11111101 01. 15 21111121111 11'l1C11'X2lIl1. 11211155 11112111 13111 11115 111111 111111111 112110 11111 lllllllf' I1lCL'l1IlgSI 11111' 1'11'51111'111 11215 21 11101111 111 111116 12121115 '1110 11121111 1111ng 11115 111111 111105 2ll11111H1' 15 110011 H111150 1321111 1YCC1iCll11 1lllI11J1llQl111 12110 S111111211, 511111- 110 11111111 112110 1110 111110 211111 111111101 111 11111111 11 1111 11110 1111150 g111'5 1121111 111 1900. 11'5 21 11111111 Clllll XV1lCIl 11 1110015, 211111 11'5 good 11111 111211 111211 i511'1 11111 1111011. Which 111105 111 show 111211 011011 l12l1'1i 15 215 good 215 1fo11 1,211111011121l0. 1X5 111 1'C2U'S 112151 1110 R111'1101'0ll01 511110 10111211115 1110 12151 11215111111 111 1ll1L'11Cl'1ll2l11Slll 1111 1110 1,l'1ll1'C10Il 12111111115. 11115 1'C211' 21 112111111111 0xi510111'0 11215 1311111111611 llIl11L'l' 1110 g11i1121111'0 111 Olll' SCl'gC2lI1I-211-:5xl'Il1S. X1'1l1i21111 N1-111111, XY111 E. N1111111 215511111011 1115 logical 111151111111 215 Olll' 1302111 1114ll1I1lllCl, 2155151011 111' 1115 X'll1Cl 1111110111 .12lll2l101'10. '1'111'Ollg1l 11 2111 1111711 1311111111 H1111011 211141 111111111110 f11'1'2l1l1, who 1101115 QUZILN, 112110 1011121111011 211111111 11111616 11010 11121115 111a110 1111 ll lIl2l1'1'12lg'C 1101110011 lCl'1I1S 11111 11101 0x111o11011. A 11111211110 1111111il11111o11 111 logging 0x11011150 11215 11121110 111' N111 S11'2111. N1C21lNN'1l11LT, h11'C1iC1' 15 51,111 111 1111110 111 g01 1111 1111 111211 8:10. 11115 1'0211's 1'111'C1gII 5111110111 11'215 111211 1011-1102111011 .... 11'11110211'51111111 1,1111 CL1l211111. 1115111115 1111Jg'CfI1CS WVZIS 1'C1l11'2l1'112llCf1 as H11150 111111011 0111 il 1111' 11111111111 1111501 111111. 11 51111 110111211115 21 111151011 215 111 111111' '1'. lf. g2111101011 1110 012155 2l1lK'l1I1il111'C 10111111 1111110 111111111111i11g 111 N011' Yfllkk 1 1'1I 110 1J2lC1i lfilllglllnf 211111 1J1l1'1211i1I1g' 111' glllllCS of 111211110 11121111 21 11og11i101. 1110.11 1011101111101 21111'211'5a01g111 1'1g2ll'L'111' 11111115 011 11110 211111. 11111 511111 1111. 21 1101110 111 21 1112111'01. 1110 1111150 Sl12lI1'1Il'1'. 5h0'5 21 11110 g111, 5.11. 111111. K1111111-1111111-kAi1'5 1111211. 11'0 11010 111181 1CllX'1llg, 01111111 Il101'1l1l1g CI211111, hey 1J1gg2l 11111, 1 11.151 1011 11111111115 11115 11001101111, 12110 01'011111g 1l1551'1-1211111115 1111 1111' 1111111101115 111211 11121g111: 1111111211111y, 1111' 111S1'1'C1J?l1l1'y, 11'11o'5 goin' 111 H2ll'l'1 S, 121l1oo, 1 IICVCI' 1111 21 gill 111 1111' 1110. 51102111. 1110 lX1'1S1. 11111 g12l11 1110 111l1J1S 1JZl1'111g for 11115. .X1111 218 1111' glI2l1l11lll0l1ll'l' 115011 111 5211' . . 21 CLUB The 21 Clluh, a kind ol hereditary doppelganger to a certain middle portion ol Prospecst Street. entered the Hair-ollthe-dog phase ol' its long history this year. The accent was on drinking. This oldest ol' Princeton social organizations yearly lurthers the spirit ol' serious qual- ling. meeting on call in the 'Xex in the tradition ol its wild-eyed lorehearers. .Xlso the cult has olten heen seen to commune with the spirits in rather large wassails which lrecptently spill out onto the lawn ol '79 Hall. This year was no exception. and our hoary preclecessors would have heen proud-though Dunn and Bradstreet may have conclennned our credit rating. VVhether severally or individually. tlte members ens dorsed the platlorm ol jolly lack llarleycorn and spread the lost precept ol' gentlemanly conviviality throughout the year. Xve consunnnated the season with a lull-lledged Medieval-type yioust in May. perhaps the most frenetic hacchanalia since the days ol' Yore: from which the hangover, it is said, vaguely remains. The President ol' this year's aggregate was XVild Bill Jarman. a connoisseur ol' line Tecluila and high-low split pots. Vice-l'resident was XVylie Sheldon, ol' Coors' proclivities and Cluha lame, completing the western Sweep ol' the executive branch. .-Xlex 'l'orrefl'asso lent his nohle lineage and his card-nimhle lingers to the funds ol Secretary-Treasurer. .Xlso worthy ol' mention was the milk scluad, comprised ol Rick Ahhot and Iiaclc Roze: Houck, Butch, liurgc-rl, Sprague. 'l'ltirtl Ilona' 'l'orre- Tasso, jordan, lirnin, White, Hartman, Love. Scconrl Rout: Ahhot, Pyle, Fisher, Jarman, Sheldon, Dupree. lfronl Row: Davis, O'l5rien. lVi.ssing': Welch, Dorsey, llernuth. Ulcer, and Dickie Butsch, who met the recluirements through his lingering Indian twobstep disease. The gathered opinion ol the local hoocheries and the Clulfs beloved members was that this was truly a vintage year. ROCKY MOUNTAIN EMPIRE CLUB This year it can verily he said that the Rocky Mountain limpire Clluh accomplished a sterling coup uneclualecl in the long and lruitlul history ol the Great YN'est. Under the leadership ol Cactus Pablo Ruhincam as President. The Indomitahle Nloya as Yicefl'resident. and Xvylie the Hoss Thiel' Sheldon as Secretary- Treasurer. the Sons ol the Xvest moved the center ol fashion and culture lrom New York to the peaked heights ol' the Rockies. To wit. l'rinc'eton's elite this year were not seen in the traditional tweeds. Herring- bone weaves. or pinstripes: rather. the aristocratic easterners sat up and took notice ol' what we Range- riders have heen toting since the days ol yore fllosiah Peahody, '89, Xvest Hoghack. lXlontanaj. XVith a sell'- conscious emulation ol' our traditional regalia, the Urhanite llandies hedeckecl themselves in Levis, eowhoy hoots, somhreros and other such gear native to the Great Xvest. lflowever. we are pleased to report that the imitation was only skin-deep. lfor. heneath the cover ol' Xvestern threads, the soltness and timidity endemic to the seahoard prevailed. No amount ol' effort could match the 1'llU'U'Cll1lCSS upright t'll'll li'lCl', an . K cc masculine iucliviclualism, and straight shooting ol our H'estern hrothers. This planting ol XYesternism as well as a couple or three really notahle Donnyhrooks were the primary functions which kept us in touch with CLod's Country this year. ln short. we proudly upheld all the dedicated principles ol' Kit Carson. Clhiel' Curay. and lfreclerick Jackson Turner in highlalooting style. Iinclc Roux' Nlatleucci, Lorclon. Stallord, Swan. Case, 'I'l1inl lime: Boyd. Chang, llenious, lsiacs, liordous, Kelley. Roluinson. .Secoizcl lime: Curry, Childers, Nloya, 'I ull, Newton, Clliue, llall, Fmrll Rare: llaccluis, Wang, l.asater. Ruhiucaun. SlJllllgCllllL'lg'. Reynolds. AIIICSSS. sstswmmmwiwwWwwwsa21.tr if , , . TEXAS CLUB 111111: Rflxtx' lfreucli, Bishop. blzuux, Conrad, llllll. Rouiney 1 Tltirfl lttfllf' Nlat. liourland. Lilpini Xcttsotnc, loues, Burrow, Klieloth. ,NKTIHIII lirmx' Sorkin, l'. Peacock, Conner, llc-nrx blaramtllo. C-reaten. Smith. klzn'tu.tu, Leigh. Ifmnl lt'm1': Ripley Cannon. llutcltc-son, KN. l'e:uotlc. Pugh, llall. Lohcn. CALIFORNIA CLUB lhe thirty land some oddj members ol the Cali- lornia Club maintain that a breath ol the l,ZlllllLi lroni their broad beat land is all this button down world Bark R0r1': XVeinrich, Cftnpsey, Friedman, Hill, ll1ll'lIl2lll. Ewing, Flaherty. S1'1or11l Horn: 'llex lfink, fllilllltllll, l'Iaut, Heinrich Groos, Fowler, lkierman. lftrml Row: Cullen, lex S. Lunch Ycllin, Perry, Hayes, Gervers. Howe, 9 lhe 'lcxas Cllub entered its second year ol service as the ollicial 'lexas limbassy to New jersey with he- man vigor and a new policy ol telling the Dean about its parties !H'fiUl'I'I1fl7IIl. Drawing on their extensive backgrouncl in state history, the Lone Star men staged soirees on 'liexas lndcpendence Day and San Jacinto Day as a fitting memorial to their brave lorelathers. lhey were so stucesslul that some ol the celebrants are .vlill trying to remember what happened on those claysfand some ol' them are still alraid to go into the ll-Store. lhe only sad aspect ol the gatherings was that due to lack ol' availability, Budweiser had to bc substituted lor lione Star Beer. l7ndcr the panhandlc ol .lim QxvCLlDllC'lib Dial and Walt Qlall in the Saddlej Conrad, the club member- ship passed-tlie lorty niark, that is. l,l'Ugl'CSSlX'lSl11 was shown also as the lexas Club became the first organization to schedule a lblltly during the reading period. Most ol' the members agreed since it wouldn't be much ol' a loss anyway. and the two or three who were planning to learn to read gan e it up on hearing the news. .Xlso on the agenda. as a warmrup lor the above mentioned advance on the NUM'l'i1'OI1tlL'1'.lS2l1ffl?Zl'lIC'T0 1fl'l'fIlffII.S'f on Saturday morning ol Houseparties XX'eek- end. In trite range tradition the ten gallon toters will eat bacon and eggs. beans. and weekfold collee with their dates. needs4 Ilow bad is this, lyy man! Under the capable anarcln ol' Ace Charles Perry and Deuce Bill Hayes, they have written a new chapter in Princeton's history, based on their dc-sire to preserve Caliliornian lolkways in their purity lrom the inroads of narrow liastcrn cosmopolitanism. lfor here in this atmosphere ol' decadent culture there survive a lew green and golden Californians: Ili in the class ol '61, 22 in '62, t K 1- if in '63, and ill in 'ti-1. At this tate ol increase, the club anticipates a comfortable'majority of the school within a century. This inevitability was Hrst made public at a meeting tat which the founders were suspiciously found elected to the only two ollicial postsj , alter the pandemoniurn ol' which it was discovered that the club had accepted a Michiganian who had never been so far west as Utah, and who had merely come in the room to in- vestigate the noise. Once organized, the members Went lorth to petition for Clalil'ornia's separate recognition in the UN and the New Jersey concession for Lucky Lager beer-working side by side, the Southlanders and the Bay Area crowd were united by the conspiracy ol' indillerence to their ellorts. This alone, aside from the undeniable justice of their claims CA Californian thought is a good thoughtnj, justified the club's ex- istence. THIBSTY THURSDAYS 'ACentlemen, I am overwhelmed by this great honor Sidclown. you havent ex en been elected yet. .Xncl so, with the usual spirit ol gay camaraderie and good humor, the Thirsty Thursdays settled down, like the head on 1'iel's beer. to another chaotic weekly meeting. It was chaotic' because, at the second meeting, alter electing' a presiding oHic'er in the person of the Most High, we had permanently abolished the ofhee of Parliamentarian. so nobody knew what the rules were. This lelt our august leader tsicij in a dilliciult position, as he was opposed to maintaining order by hitting anyone with a bottle. This problem was eventually solved by the Printed Minister, who made a habit ol upsetting his brew tat least once a meetingj in the direction of someone who was-or wasn't, as the ctase might be-making noise. Similar organizational prob- lems, such as the repeated laek oi a cluorum, and an all-panchos, no peons situation, were solved by the elections of a Quorum and The Membership. .-Xlthough this is apparently the lirst time the Thirsty Thursdays have appeared in print Casicle from indi- vidual XX'anted postersj. the organization tracies its origins lar back into the beer-splatterecl past, when men were men and women were rare. As they still are today. fXX'hat is so rare as a clay in lIune?j In lact. that is the reason lor the existence ol this revered, G2 SOCIETY The C: Society is not a mathematics c lub. No matter what members may tell you. the organization has little to do with intellectual endeavor. On the contrary, the group exists with little purpose at all except. to get its name in the Iiric-.fl-lirccc' and to shame Dial Lodge during' liicker. Its only other purpose is to have fun. ln spite ol' the lact that the elub is latuous enough to relish a group picture. the C3 idea came about spontaneously enough. Legend has it that a Dial Lodge senior 'till asked a rather naive girl up lor Houseparties weekend last year. Not wanting to shock her, he asked his c-lubmates to please relrain lrom any oli-ciolor re- marks. lnevitably. his roommates posted a sign on the club bulletin board calling' lor gross-minded students to come above ground. .Xn encouraging turnout labeled themselves the CL tlor grossg Club. The exponent, was added later lor prestige. This year the group went big-time by banding together in a C2 suite H901 Hallj and selecting new members. The organization bug extended to the election ol oilicers. Chosen as leader was Doug' t Baci: lime: Connnissioner of .Xll'airs. -lunior Rep., llall Shot. Nfartyr, Warnionger. Scfemzcl Rome: Shorty, Ytrite in a Year, All Shot. Frou! lime: l'toc'urer, Yiee l'rocurer, Lover, Niost High, Senior Representative, Quorum, l'rimc:cl Minister, 'I he Member- ship. il slightly sodclen. group. Tln'oug'hout the years, thesis- weary seniors and a lew prematurely aged juniors from Terrace Club have met inlormally at the Annex on Thursdays to drain a lew and c-ommiserate on the almost total lack ol' female contpanionship in this town. However. it is only this year that we have decided to come out in the open. liisenlelcler. who had always wanted to be the head ol' something. Picked as his lelt and right hand men were Cc-orge lirakeley and Barry liosak, respectively. The olliccers' titles are unprintable. Suppressed by Dial Lodge, the CF boys have graclu- ally deelincrcl into something almost resembling gentle- men. Caught by the Princeton atmosphere ol' apathy, the group can only abclieate to this year's sophomore section and receive their diplomas as sops. lictrk Hore: l.il'e Saver, Hoyle. The Duke. .Xrrovvy Miller, Crem. lfront Note: The Brakes, ICISY, llol, Bruno. 111 .-llaserzlict: xitililllglllill, Nleliwen, Klein, Corwin. .-Icltfi.vor.' Axel. ., .nW-M.,.,.M.w.,,. fW,.,..,......W.M,.....f.,,m,,,Ey M... .... sts-,..,.WMmm'5,,, ,m,,cw,m,a.s, .stsQ,f,,,.? SEMPER FIDELIS SOCIETY l'h1- SCIIIIJCI' lfidelis Sm icty was est11hlisl1t:dz1l Prince- to11 ll11ive1'sity i11 H159 to l'JI'OlllUlt' and lllilllltlllll i1111'1'c'st in the Nlztiine Cloips. fylilglllllllf. students wl1oi11tt'11cled l0L'lllC1'Lllt? l'11ited51z1lt's Bl111'i11eClo1'ps :ls olhters constituted the lIICl1llJCl'SllllJ ol the Society, hnt this yezn' Zlll Nlzirines i11 the l'1'i111elo11 Ullllllllllilly welt' illvited to join. Nlllifll' Brian cllllllllllllgi lfSNlCl. the 111'n' Nlztrine oll11'L'1' in the lYRO'I'KIunit.isthez11lx'iso1'ol'tl1eSociety, Zlllll. ill his suggestion, ll liOl'lIl2ll KL'lClJll2lllUll ol the lN.71IlI z11111ixe1'sz11'y ol' the lflllllillllg ol' tht' Nlanine Corps wus held in Nox'e111l11'l'. 1Xc'co1'cli11g' to Iliiltlllllbll. the nuke was out hy the youngest and the oldest lXlzn'inCs plvst-11t. Xvlllllllll l'lZi1IllL'1', Il H1l'llllJC1' ol' the Platoon Lez1cl1'1-s' Class, and Brigttclit-1'Gt'11e11z1l lf. P. Henderson, USMC Qretii-edj. Xt the seveiul g1lfllL'l'lllg5 l1eld Clltll 101111 knowledge ol tht- Xlllflllt' Corps is lIltl'C21SCll und f'sj11'1'l'l 111' rorjis is n111int11ined lllllillgll tz1lks:111d111ovi1-s. Clank XX'oolley was the l,1'CblilClll ol' tht' Soiicty this year, assisted by Ri1'l1z11'd Snow RIS Yice-l'1'csi1l1'11t, llllll Henry l.llI'g'C, the Set l'L'l2ll'l -'l'1'cz1s111'e1'. 1 1 111 Mttks l istnst 1dt XOHIIIN 6 1l111el lI11 hu. lioskvx, RlC'l1ZlI'il5lJli. flicks. 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F111111 15113 111 1917 11111111101 1211111011 was .XNS1N11lIl1 1'1'111'0sS111' 111' 1i11g1is11 111 111C 1'11i1011 S1l111'N NIi1i1z11'x .X1'Zl11C1llX. 111 111111 110 wax LlXKLi1i11C11 111C ,X11111 111JIlIl1I1'11111l111JIl 11117131111 111111 111011111 11011- 11z1111. 111 11151, whilc :1ssig11011 111 1110 1 Lll 1'11lS1l'l'Il 1lo111111:11111 i11 .121pu11, he was aWa1'111-41 1110 131'11nu1' S1111' M011111. In 1953 and 11151 111J117Il1'1 1f111'111'11 was 111 K111'0z1, 111Q1 s01'xi11g :is B:1l1:11io11 1111111111:1111101 211111 111101 11s 11111'ps .X1'1i1101'1 fJPCl'L1I11lI1S 011111'l'. 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Lf r'-rfsv'l1v1zz,e1Q1x.z1l'1 am COMPANY NBII CCMPANY NAII COMPANY HCV john IJ 11111 s 1 ll ln11'l'z1cks Ch. of Sur lilusstex loud chlts mth X141 Cen I 5 C 11 Ig Deputy PRINCETON NROTC UNIT The accomplishments of intensive research during the last few years have brought with them dynamic changes in our daily lives. Much of the impetus for such research has come about as a result of the pres- sures of global conflict and the cold war. As such, a substantial part of the scientific progress of the past few decades has been either directly or indirectly the result of military endeavor. Recently developed weapons systems have not only played a vital role in the realm of power politics but have also called for considerable renovations in military thinking and pol- icies. An outstanding example of this was the development of a nuclear powered submarine capable of hring the Polaris missile. The potential of a submarine for launching a subsurface nuclear attack, coupled with its ability to remain submerged for an indefinite period of time, poses a threat which has made and will con- tinue to make military thinking and ensuing military policies as dynamic as our weapons development pro- grams. Failure on the part of the next generation of military officers to evaluate military potential accu- rately and to coordinate power and policy would undoubtedly have dire consequences. The impending threat of such consequences presents a challenge that must be met by those who are to forge our military policies in the years to come. It is the purpose of the Princeton NROTC unit to prepare men capable of meeting this challenge. Realizing the degree of proficiency demanded of the Naval and Marine officers of today yet aware of the limits imposed upon naval training within a university Passing in review. 4 1 , if! curriculum, the Navy has designed as comprehensive a program as live hours Z1 week will permit. The course material is organized in such a manner as to give the midshipmen a working knowledge of the basic rudiments of military procedure in addition to an insight into the strategic and tactical signihcance of naval operations. The first naval science course encountered by the incoming freshmen is Naval Orientation. Topics dis- cussed include military courtesy, ships' characteristics, and other information of general nature regarding the Navy and its role in world affairs. The latter aspect is brought out more fully in the second term Naval History course, in which the feats and defeats of naval commanders from the time of Lord Nelson to that of Admiral Bull Halsey are discussed. A very popular course among the 'fmiddies , the study of naval history has also been found to develop more fully the individ- ual's analytical and critical faculties, in addition to providing him with a realization of the complexities of strategy and tactics. Studies during the sophomore, junior and senior years cover more specific phases of naval science, such as gunnery, military psychology, naval engineering, navigation, naval operations, and naval leadership. The military psychology course is a comparatively recent addition to the curriculum. Its inclusion was warranted in order to provide the future officers with a broader understanding of discipline and similar per- sonnel problems. i Laboratory periods, held every WVednesday and Thursday afternoon, supplement the classroom ma- i Ji ...4..-P' 'W 'bw.a. Getting acquainted with the boss. terial and provide the midshipmen with an opportunity to exercise practical leadership. The maintenance ol: a well dehned chain of command permits each ol the luture Navy and Marine ollicers to experience simultaneously Hgivingl' and receiving aspects ol' leadership. Competitive close-order drill and personal inspections, perlormed under the critical eye ol Major Cummings, serve to encourage personal achievement and to instill esprit de corps within the regiment. XVhen winter transforms the marching field into a veritable tundra, the Navy retreats to its McCosh classrooms or the armory, where exercises in such basic skills as ship handling and navigation take place. Princeton NROTC activities are not, however, con- fined solely within the township lines. The month of May is synonymous with cruise orders to most of the campus sailors. Ship assignments range anywhere from tin cans of XVorld XVar II vintage to super carriers of the Forrestal class. During this past summer, Princeton midshipmen visited ports ranging from the Mediterranean to the Arctic. In September, the juniors return to campus laden with the perennial tales of the mother-less sergeants of Little Creek and the exotic Mexican border towns within a weekend's leave of Corpus Christi. Marine option students generally re- turn lrom Quantico in a true Tiger lashion, conhdent ol their physical prowess and overcome by an obsession lor getting those lreshman platoons squared away . A vital dimension is added to the luture Navy and Marine Corps ollicers' training programs by the on the spot instruction that such summer cruises allord. Although drill and lormal instruction constitute a major part ol the NROTC program, extracurricular activities have played an increasingly signihcant role in the past lew years. Social activities with a dash oi salt rate top priority with the Anchor and Chain Society. By means oi cocktail parties, dances, regi- mental athletic activities, held trips to nearby naval Captains all. establishments, and just plain ol' sea story sessions, the Society permits the undergraduate to become acquainted with their instructors on a less formal basis and at the same time promotes interest in naval allairs. Also, tl1e Bengal Rifles, complete with snappy white spats and bayonets, put on a line performance and placed second in their division at the Villanova Com- petition last fall. Every aspect ol the NROTC training program is tempered with one purpose in mind, that of developing within the midshipmen those attributes characteristic of a good leader. The presence of a crisis in the world today makes the demands for leader as well as the demands ol leadership increasingly important. XVith this in mind the Princeton unit has and will continue to produce Naval and Marine olhcers whose perform- ance can be looked upon with pride. Acknowledgements: The unit extends their thanks to the Boston Uni- form Co., the Heilborn Shoe Co., and N. S. Meyer, Inc. for their contributions toward the NROTC section. liliot Ness would have gixen his right arm for one of these babies. ifmmti ' i fll-- N? xzvfvfff'-ww fNU'H-N COMPANY- muff NWI'-' l 'v'1rwK01'f'ffHS' Rif 'f ' ISRNYO CIONIIFXNY. llrlrlf How: Hoods, Singnizislcr, Otto, Swin- Bllllf.lillflllllll,Niillilfil.fiil2lIJIJCii.fiiiliC2l,U2ll'lillCI'.RiCilCI'. hum' wright- Mom-l.! R' Wood. Bclmmv RWM' Howard, Ruhcy 5f'f '1'1 RW -' Uullnglwf- Hiuiiwd- Mcclain- I1i'w C'NiC' Klziss. 511111141 Row: cillllillg, Slirzikc. Ciallimiilli, Iililis. l'ill1'IllCl',1lllQ'2lIl, 1451112 K 5 V- Sfmt- uihilf- uiillkmf Xvfighl- l 'i f R U'-' 'llioni:1s. Olsen. l'lliillil'l'. Iflliot.l77'rn1l lfmr: Sivgcl. Xalpi-25. XVoml, DL-rsliami, Spziiigcnherg. Bowcrs, Ilxikcr, Xvi1iiillS0ll, Diaz, Rxlumil WOUHUY RIN.. l'Hgl.l. Hum' Hlwmmuh ' NIo1'1'1s. l.zmson. MIDSHIPMAN REGIMENT CIH.XRIilla CONIITXNY. lifirilf lffmx' Bilflillli. Sexton, XYl'i7l'li. C,iiIo1'cl. Hicks. l I'Clliil, .XlUX. lSzn'1'ow, Nilli2liCCl'. I l'lliiCIi, Nciiicrlwy. Samir! lfmr: Irciiliowcr, .Xslicz lianvs. XYCilill'l'. Niiilc. Nlclczili, B2lilCIi, l'ciIon, Sloan, l3cck,lQ1znlx'. Ifruzzl lion-: link, Rulmincznn. lairobs. jackson, KUl'llI'll!lllD-ii, -johnson, Maloney. fiiillllblill SlQ1llllllIl.i rr: Ill-.li I .X 1.0511 The Nlimlsliipnizin Rugiiiiviit is the lorinzil orgzuiixzitioii of the NROTC niiclsliipnicn and is ziclniinistcreci by ilu- scnior oilicers. It nonsisls oi' IWO bzillzilions oi' Lwo conipzinics czirli. ll clrill Lenin. :incl ilic Iizittzilion :incl iicgiinciilzil staffs. Oflicei' positions 2111- l'lJllllCii Cach scnicstcr in orclci- lo gixc czuli senior ziclclitionzil lcfziclcrsliip Lmiiiing. This is czirrieri out niziinly in lilC12liJ0l'2ll0l'f lmcriocls XVCCIIICSKIZIY and 'l'Iiui'sclziy ?liiICl'llO0IlS. XXXY. limi: limit XN'lii1l11kci, lhoivil. VIIIOIIILIS, Oxnizln. Xccscnixniii, johnson. .Xllcn, Ilvssmi. Xonng, Sfilillllllllll. Swmzirl Razr: Scuaill. Slllilil. ihieblol, filllllll, Iillllill. Roslxorongh, Ili-f.zui'c I'lllIi-illl. Mills, I.cig'h, Nforgzni. lfmnl linux' l'liiiS,.lUi1IlSllll!, f.ilIlSlUiiLISUIl, l5ll!kL'iCf. .XICXZIIIIICIQ NIc'Wl1i1il1i1', Dryden, clclSi'icl', llivnci. 5 ,,, - .R.,,v,..,,.,....:,f-.- U 'Niv- XIIIDSHIPNIXN CJI'iI ICflfRS'-I IR9l lI .RKI, lirlfl: llrlzzx' I'1IIIC'Il. NIIllSHIl'NI.XN C7I I IC1lfRS SIQCICJXIJ IICRNI. Huff: 1111.10 xI'IC'ICC'IllIL'Il. Hcnlcy. Wuml, .ICYIIIISUIL CLrcc'l1wuml. 'lilzinl Rrmx' Millgrv Lang, Cgmy, Rlmguls, Rippin. .Sffrrnzzl limit' I.z1kc'. IQIIITIIICQIIII, I.11nL'. AICXVIIIIIIIIC. XRIIPIUY Fiicgcl. Cilillf. IYOUIICX, Petrziilis. IiIn'cns, Rcrlrcrls, liriksvli. l'iI'1HllICUII'.'xICCiIIIIlY, XIIIICIIICR, Snulzrl Rrmz' NlmCLinili. lillix I.:nx'sm1. IIzn'wi, xvC'IlSlCl', G1-Qcllwooql. Hcnlgy, lfillyh. vluliimnx, Huey. lwml limzz' IVIIQUI, lIl'uk1'lL'i, SITZIIIQCIIIJCTIQ, Robinson. Snllixun. llzukcll, 'l'I1ic-lmlul, EIRICUIN. REGIMENTAL AND BATTALION OFFICERS FIRST TERM SECOND TERM CIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIQ Uflirwr- Mimln. Clzlpt. CL. S. Robinson CIIIIIYIIIIIIIIIIIQ C2fl1f'f'l'4- Micln. Clzlpi. I.. S. Cil'CTCTIlM'0UtI ff.X'1'!'lll1'T'f' Oflizwrf Micln. Clclr. M. Sullivan lixm-zfljwf fjfjiw,-A Kliglll. C1113 13, R, I-lg-1114-I Cjjiflliflfjflllh' C1ffI!'l'I'- Mimin. I.l. ClcI1'. Y. Iiowcrs Oj1f'r11Iirn1.s' C,ffI!'I'I'- Nlimln. I.i. Clclr. II. NI. I.z1kL' l.ngi.s'!if.s Ciffllflf Nlicln. I.l. R. Cl. -Izicolms 1.r1g'i.slif'.s Uflirwrf Micln. I.I. XY. lf. l'cn'ziilis .vlrljzflfzrzlf Nliiln. I.l. R. H. Unger plrljzzlffzzlf Nlicln. I.1. Qmi.g.jC1, Ii. Ilolx-Tis .-11l11li11l'.sln1lix'r' .l.x1xi,sl1111l-A .-lfln1i111's'fJ'r1fizff' .I.s'.s'1'.sl11r1lf Xliiln. I.l. qi.g.j .X. 'I'I1icl1Ir1L Nlicln. l.l. qigy CL. I.. lilnvnx l'11f1lir lzzfffwllfztirnz C1ffIl'I'l'fxIICilI. I'1IIS.Ci..X.Igl'2lIiC'iCff' l'11!1l1'r' lIIff1I'1llIlfl'UIl OIITMTA Cffll-f'f Ijwlly Cllflfflin -- Xlinln. Cll'CJ II. NI. ICUl'lll'lllIIlJI Nlimln. linx. X. CJ. I'II'IICNC'll l 1'T.sf lizlflrzljmz C.'UlIIHl1HIIl'!'I'l CIlf1'f'fl'f'fly Oflifw-A Nlicln. CQPO I. I.. Ilzukcll Nliiln. Cfclr. IJ. 'lf 5lJ2lIIgC'IliJI'l'g l 1':'.s'! l3f1fmIjr111 Ci0HIIlHIIIIfK'lf XliiIn,Clil1'. l'. li, Ifincli Skfawzfl liflffflfl-Ull Cjffllllllllllflfl' - .Slfrfnld Iiulfnfinzz CiUHIllIlHIKlI'I f Nliiln. CIcl1'. 'lf I.. IILIRICGII Nlicln. Clclr. lf. NIcCQinili qlflblfrl Cfrmzfnmy C.'fm1nl1u1flf'1'f Xlicln. I.l. lf. XYIJTMI .lljzfm COIIIIHIIII' CiUIllHIfl?IICI'I' -- limxw C:UHIf1fI7IY CJUllIHlIII1!ll'I'f'f Nlicln. I.l. R. IS. XYIIICIIISOII Nlicln. I.l. XY. XYIC'I4C'IICIL'II lilwwo Cfllllflfllly CJUIIIIIIIIIIIIIT' Clmr'l1'e' C.vUIll!JIl?1iY CIHIIIIIIIIIIIIITT Nlicln. l.l. CI. II. XYoolIcf5 Nliiln. I.l. H. I. NICXYIIIIIIIIC Cluzrlfr' Clllllfllllly Cilllillllllllllflf Dalia llfmfjmm' C.vflIllIlI1lIIICI'I'i Nlicln. 1.1. IJ. NI. IiflI'IIl'llllllJi Nlicln. I.L. I'. l'. Rubincuni IJHII11 CUHIIHHIY C.'UIllIlIIlIlf1z Ii- Ihill IIIVIUII Cfrzlzzfzlfzzzrlwkf XIimIn.I.l.XN'.C1. Hzirwi Nlitln. I.l. I . I.. .XlL'xz1nclc'l' Drill Team COIlIfIIIlIIllI'I'i Nlidn. I.l. XY. CI. Hzlrwi lJRII.I. 'liIi.'XNI. Iiarl: lfrrrr: Cfnrlix vL'IlllIlIL', lflinl. Tllirrl Rain: Ilurn, Clmnxul. lfwuc-, Iiznrl, Clznnplwll, Wana: Mccllmtk. Scmrm' 1CUIl'.'.lC7iIIISC1lI, XYhilv, VICIPIIIIISIRR,,IC'I'C'IIlIx0, I'l'OlJSl, Kuhn, I!nl'0IX'Il, RII I.Ii 'I'li.XNI, Ihlrl: linux' IIm'n, I . limwn, R. Brown. SIIIZIIIICTS. lfruzzl lfmv: NVC'ililC'I'. Sillvrk, CZIIITI, Slizircr, Gilpin, lfrmit lfrnv: Cilllllilii, Sillfllllllllll. -IUIIIISUII, l'lll'I1llCl', Tull, lixuns. Hznwi. Mntflluin. I 5 1 i I I I pw R: :Tv 'Ne -bww... ,gi .. R NR F.,E..'-.- I . E31-,c.,..v R. f ,-.. A L-? W X-: 9-m-annwgf ...iv-I NROTC UNIT STAFF HIIHIKUIKIIIIQ Ujjzfm' cIlllJI,21Ill I'C1nIJe1'Lcm Suu1I1zuQcI lxwzzfiaw' Uflifm flrmllllxlllclm' XX'z1Ilc1' Cl. BIZIIIIIIZUI TEACHING STAFF XVHIIUJ' l11xH'11rlm' I.l. llclr. YLTIIOII Il. Rust, IIIIIIIUI' l11,slr1nfrn' 1.1. .Xllmert .X. CL:1IIoLta Snlbflmrzrwf' lmlzrzrlm I.l. hlulm ll. ZIIIIITICIUILIII l1'ml11f11111 l11.vfr111fm I,l. Qj.g.p IJz1x'icI E. ZWQIIQI Ilffrfnr' lmlrlu fm' Nlujrn' III'I1lll CIIIIIIHIHQS Xllm QILRIKIIIZIIIUII, llu- IIl'l'l. I nmzmclcl IX' Cl. IIIIIIIIIIII :ml 1 lhlllll I' SUIIIIIIIAI XIirIsI1i UI IIlL'lI' Imvlx' 110 IJIIIIII UIIIKCIN su In II lI11l IIII In Ill kll 1 xIlI I Imu lm-zu lung Nlzuil. ki W x 'll if 9, O ' 4 fs 9 XVl1y I think thc Nuvfs just about the mmt clzlrliug lilllc oulm I halve CSCI' scan. Today Pl'illLiCl0ll, IOIIIOITUXV thc world. A SCIll2llkCl1 :max middle, 8, fa COOI'dillHIi0I17S0lllC hme it, others d011't. The brass, 0- Af' TL? This gargoyle, one of four over the Dillon Gym- nasium entrance, represents the athletic facet of Princeton life. The gymnasium as it stands today replaces the one built in 1903 which was destroyed in 1944 by hre. Constructed to harmonize with the sur- rounding dormitories, the irregular Gothic architec- ture is well suited to shelter its diverse athletic facilities. From fencing balcony to swimming pool, the gymnasium stands a living symbol of Princeton's purpose as originally formulated by President Wither- spoon: the education ofthe whole manf' .Q mx ln, pn- Y ,. E '-f faeT:fe52a:ae3.5:'.:wa1 ?f3?!'aQ3f2 M Sig, x x K X gt 551 gzgggggzgg. t gf. sxw xy' N xx Q wg xi ,l 2. sa: x 553 agt5.g.'.3I3:5g:5gt,g343215 gf X . ,, ' 4 x X .,... . Rx 3 fl l- '1 +h 1 A- N X X : . x xx x x ' '- . X 5 :-s x .-iw 1 l sera ZAV X xx ,ili : j fJ .5517 'AA. '. , A ' ' ...,,, . X -' , , ,. X X X ,,,,-1? IIA- .,f. 1 I' , ' W .,'. ' 1. A- D X N ,f b . ,, x , ,, f. XX ...... ,,.,,,,,,. ,... S x X .,,., ,X -l,, ' . pb -Z .4 X X , X ,, X Q' Q-.-.Q X N xx x ,i t - XR k .' +.,. ,, X -X x xl X X Q XX ' hQ ' 'AS. . , X x xx A ......,x .,.., Q X xxxx x x ., X X N ..,.,, ,QQ X Q X X xx x X 'W --vxx xwx Q- , . Nw- xixwxwl X ' xx x X X X SSea:-:zs:1?S:::gia1H:z-:xmasfy Q- X 5 XSS xx x , x fx xx g 'XN x X x N .x x X X X X X x NSQsess:aazimizzimzisiiassssz-S.--+N X ..,.. A .X U X X X X X X xx xx xx x x X .... . . .. ,. Lui-'. .'ie.b.'.'a.-'- 'lvAx'.v!.'.'.':NN. w.v.-:,- n . . . , X X xx x ' ' x , X . x X I, X X N N X -.'.-.',','.'.-.vs yy.-'f.g.'v.'e Q Q wc: 1 'Qg1o'q'gg0v:fgQ n -,guy xyg - Q -'vQ'ie's'e14'e1-'x'p,vn1-jrca,-'a'o -ya wx-.3.'.:,v,',v 1 , ,rx x x P am '.'w.-11.-.-:Q:fr-:Q-iw:.-.-wav-wzmzvwgvs. -sum-asmf-:-z-:Oz-:Q . , X RQmaysgmzewemmspitcle-I-2-mthxem-:mt6:Zebt.:a+:q't4as.'2:ls-20.Qzisrzx-tlizffrelztbmftibgszizlzif. x Y Q Xx X xx X X XX s 44x THLETICS 1211111 11IIIl'.' 111111111311 1i11n1'11v, Sflllllllllll. Tlzirrl l11J1l'.' li1'111'e11l1. I.Ill'g'1'. l1en1'i1'h, T111'111'11s1', Rilev. L21i1'11, 1.111111li11, l.1'1n14in, 1liCl'lJ1l1l'i. vzrnlfl l1r111'.' NI1111es 1l1lllll1lg1'1'1 1,111111n2111, xl1l1'XlllI'1'2l1. filkllig. ls1-1111111. 1-121gst1'11111. N11l'lUl1, Xyt711llCX. 1l17llIlLl11 11211211111. Fmnl 131111-5 1111111111-13 511111. l1lll1l', xY1'l1ll'IlIl11lX1Fl', K1Jl'Il1'll1lllJ11. 1111. 811ll1v2111, l1111111vin, 8l121llgl1l1L'SSX. le. sll1l1XZ'lI1. F GOTBALL N 1l1e snnnner 111 191111, while 1n11s1 l,1'1l11'Sl1Jll1Z1l18 were either lJ2l81ilI1g' 111 t11e Cape 111111 snn. lllllllljillg wine 111 ll l'21ris 11istr11. 111' running 1,111st2111e 1'1111rses 1111' 11111'1e 821111. the 'liiger 111111112111 802181111 w21s 2111621111 llIl1l1'1'XX'2l1'. In an lIlllJl'C1'1'1lL'I11C11 211111111 111 ll varsity 111111112111 1'21pt21in, 1,1111 K111'nr111np1 wrote 111 C2li'll pros- pe1'tive player 111 tl1e 1111111 811112111 urging 111111 to stav i11 111111 physical 1t111111iti11n 11lll'lllg the v211'211i11n. The resp11nse w21s 11nani1n1111s. XVhen the 11-21111 l'1TlJ0l'lC11 to l3l21irst11wn 111 the Iirst week 111 8epte1n11er, the 1'02l1il1C8 were UX'1'l'XVl1Cl1HC1l 211 tl1e sight. Even 812111 111111111111 211111 M2111 i1iOlJ1'lllC1' were 1101111 111 their playing weights. 1121pt21in K0l'lll'llllllJli 112111 111211111 21 8lgl1l111'2il1l 111111211 step lOXV2llN1l8 1Jllll1llIlg' El winning 111111112111 te21n1. 11111 l1111'nie's letters 11111111 not lill 1l1e gaping holes 111 tl1e l111e 211111 tl1e 11211'11liel11. C1l'2l1ll1llIC1l 1111111 the 19551 starting eleve11 were 1'21pt21in 211111 1'1'll11'l' 1512211111 8vete1'f. tw11 All-Ivy 81'lL11'll1Jl18 111 t21z111e 1L11r1lie l321t.1'l11'll11r 211111 121111121111 132111 8a1hs 211111 21 IJlC1llO1A2l 111' 1-1111s lIl1'lll111l1g 11Cl11'll8lYC st21111111111 E11 Kostelnik. Ivv l.e21g11e 111111112111 lJ1lIl1l1lS were so 1ll8lll2l1'C1l by tl1e l'ri111'1'11111 l11sses 111211 thev lJl'0g110S111IZllC1l 1l1e Tigers 1X'1Jl1l1l 1i111sh 11121 1J1'111?l' 1112111 sixth i11 1l1e 121110 Ivv l,C2lgll1' fllllllllllgll. 111121111 111111 11011112111 211111 l1is te21n1 111' experts were 11111 1l11ite s11 111Sf0Ul'2lg1f1l. 'l'he neees- 198 82111 11111' lll2l11'l'l2ll w21s 21vai12111le. l112l1l'8lOYVI1 XVZIS 111 serve 218 11 lC8l1llg'-gl'1Jllll11 where 1l1e 111111 w1111l11 be 2188011111611 211111 p1'1'p211'e1l 1111' lllllllflllllg in P21ln1er Slilllllllll. 'l'he line XV2l8 t11e site 111 111081 111' 1l1e 111211111' repairs 211111 renn11v211111ns. 11111 1111' jini l1l2l1l', Ll holdover 1111111 the YVCZlli8l1lC C1111 111 tl1e 1959 eleven, gl'2111113l1OIl 112111 virt1121llv wipe1l 11111 tl1e 1r211ies 111 Zllly other e1111s. 112111131 CZIPIDOII plie11 his 11111113 211111 l1ll1j0YC1'C1l tl1e new strongside 111111. 1111111112 H211111 1.2llAgC, 21 f0l'111C1' -IX' l'11ll112111l1. XYi1h 1111 IJl'CX'101l8 experience 211 1l1e p11siti1111, Large s121rte11 everv gznne 1Il 19110 211111 11e- 1'2llIlC eneiny lllllll1JCl' 11ne 111 the 1llJIl1J81llOl1 st21ti11ne1l 111 tl1e path 111' 1l1e 11ev21stating l,l'1ll1'CU1I1 en11 sweeps. 'l'w11 111211111' IJl'0lJl1'lI18 existed i11 t11e l11lC1'101' line, 211 1'1?llIC1' 111111 12l1lilC. Einerging 21s 111p 1'2iD11111Z111'8 211 1e11ter were .Ierrv Sllll1N'2ll1. vonnger 1J1'O1llC1' 01 A'8il11v , 211111 Dick E1'11l'el1l1. Ylill1fl1' 121101118 1311011511 s11 l1C1TC88Zll'y 1111' tl1e s111i1'1-ss 111' 1l1e 811112111 111211 they were 1'Ol2l1C11 111111 011161181113 211111 1l1'1iCllS1VC 2l881gllIll1Tl118. The t211'11le 21l1Q'IlIIlC111 l'Jl'1llJl1Tlll w21s s11lve11 11v shilling Stan 1121111- XX'lll 110111 l1is 111551 g1121r11 post. -1171111 Craig, 21 lignre Ill0l'1' l'2il1l1ll2ll' 111 the 112111113118 218 the l1IlP1'CSZ11'1O of 11-11 ll1'O11111'1l1Jll8. 1121il1f1l 1l11wn the 11tl1er tackle sl11t. 'li1l11l'1ll61', filling 11Zll1lWK'1l1yS Y2l1'2lll1'y, 211111 812111 Shangh- nessy, the lronman of the 1959 squad, captured the starting guard berths. The pre-season backlield picture corresponded to a coach's dream. At tailback, tl1e two SH boys, Jack 'fSilky Sullivan and Hugh HCreat Scott, were back to terrorize Ivy League defenses for one more year. Kornrumpf, amply complemented by the defensive and kicking abilities of Brewster Loud, nailed down the starting fullback assignment. No less than six men including seniors Mike lseman, John MacMurray and Ron Goldman and sophomore Dan Terpack made the wingback the most richly endowed position on the field. Sophomore jon Henrich was tabbed as the starting quarterback with Jon Hagstrom and Penn Laird in supporting roles. The unit, repaired and assembled, left Blairstown two days ahead of schedule because of inclement weather. The campus wondered if the premature departure was an omen of good or had results from the launching pad. Rutgers, 135 Princeton, 8 Two costly Princeton errors in an otherwise almost flawlessly played defensive football game, gave Rut- gers the margin of victory, 13-8, with four minutes of playing time remaining. After Rutgers had assumed the lead on an 83-fard run from scrimmaffe in the 1 0 third quarter, Princeton roared back under the sails of Jack Silky , Sullivan. Late in the fourth stanza, Silkyl' gathered in a Rutger's punt on his own 40, picked up some downfield blocking, and in patented Sullivan fashion twisted and turned 60 yards through a flabbergasted Rutger defense for the Tiger touch- down. Then on a win or lose gamble, Sullivan flipped a pass to end Hank Large and the Tigers were in the lead, S-7. The Princeton ecstasy over hero Silky was short- lived. In the next series of Princeton downs, the -1 Stalwart tackle Baldwin reflects the team's solemn determina- tion to bounce back after their loss to Rutgers. pint-sired tailback fumbled the center snap and Rut- gers recovered on the Tiger 31. In three tries at the Princeton line, the Rutgers forces could make no more than two yards. But in a fourth and eight situ- ation, the Raritan quarterback Bill Thompson coin- pleted a soft pass which miraculously eluded the out- stretched hands of three Princeton defenders to fall into the hands of Rutger's end Paul Bemke on the 15. Seconds later Scarlet Knight Sam Mudie crossed the goal line on a one yard sneak to give Rutgers its third victory over Princeton in as many years. Scarlet quarterback Sam Mudie surprises the rushing Tiger 1i11e with a screen pass. X11 tele games are won and lost. I thllIIl2IX rctciyes a spanking. Princeton, 495 Columbia, O Conquerors of Brown, 37-0, high-riding Columbia arrived at Palmer Stadium drunk with the praise ol' New York press notifies. Coach Colman commented, lVhile we wish Columbia well, we're going to do everything in our power to burst the bubble. XVhen the fray ended, Columbia's bubble was more crushed than burst. ln a devastating demon! stration of offensive might, the Tigers gained 2-13 yards rushing, 88 yards via the air route and tallied '19 points while holding the hapless Lions scoreless. No sulking for 'lSilky this time as the tailback ace set up one touchdown, scored two and was honored as back ol' the day after the game. ln the lirst, quarter he returned a punt 83 yards lor the second 'l'iger tout hdown, dancing his way through the entire Colum- bia team. Later, tailback running mate Hugh 'lCreat Scott, having caught the scoring lever, passed to llim Blair lor one touchdown and then swept I9 yards lor another. XX'ith Coach Colman rapidly emptying the bench ol' rt-serves, the game developed more and more into a team ellort. Substitute quarterback Penn Laird ran back an intercepted pass 35 yards lor a touchdown. Greg Riley. an expert pass delender. took over the tailhack duties in the fourth quarter and barreled over lor another touchdown. No Princeton mistakes, no Columbia points. Sullixan slips through lor a touchdown behind Captain Kornruinpl s guidance. iV1n ! - ,W 420 yu. ,vmgwu .L , , . ?k?,q:Q,ix!1fj,qa'?tg V' ,rf . A 4 5 J V 2 K A 1 3e,, efvgS?iggf' If af, , 5 ,gi .H mf - , , JH M 5 '21 ' P73 '15 nf mmAV gif WL? 7 . ' 'f N' 'W fm t W 29. , W i mi? T, -W ff I .Ma V ' , ,A 15655 :Q , QW 3 ,. M V qv 'W ' A ' 1 4 -A - -. S ,, 'ff ,223-gurvx if, 'gLM::..f'E,77fq'Mf zf,s? ?i, 333 , ' y K 'F 'is 1 ' A Q X' G , m , Q f ,f ,Q Q 155, -5 7 x gy: vm ' W I,.,l l . A , A 7. KA Q 9 Q fgfgl, Ji 5115125 f ii gg' 'ff ' V . Q Z - I , ,. ,, , . , :Www 5 ,WMq,,W,,M, gg, i4m , Y' , fw K N Qrw f Q. 4 'fi' 2. 0 f ' - 4 , J 4 .p Kia? . g.yzL1:, . , Y, W fy, A ' 'V 1,1 yy 3 ' a WT ' , V QW g I 'L A L'-Lf ' V' 1 fii 1'L 1 fy, 1 V J .- A - ' N , A , ' M' . LLLAL if- ' Q W - , '53 1 up ' , dy 5 , ,.f - k , J M 4 . NH. 5 A 41A f' f sm .1 X A , VA-kLf M Q V, , Q' ,mv Q, ,' L4 1 QW My A.A-- 'Q' . : Q A V A ff k'L-' ! 'jf,ap'fQ' .. . A 7 N 1 ' - , A ? .nfl K .,-' 'K 'Q wg ' --X , -4 W t i ' Q v K W. 5 lf, J , , K ,P t -I V,-, E A V, Q y 1 4 73,2 6 Z, . '- 0 ' ' .. f , A 1 ' ' , 1 X Q ' ' Q , 4, k,,, . J , ' V Jffi ,. Mi.Qj..+.?,a D 5 .igi we Q' N- f P. . I ' if q ,IK -I H, , A mt .. AL xg, 6 ly K , A bw, gwj. K ,,5: I ':h' t H151 I x H N W 'A x 'qffi 1 Q' ,ffqkff W -it Y A V. 7 ,f-'Hua w . JM v , ' A , ,, 4 ' ---v Wei! R N Q ,giigiilfiigfw .:, W, , . ., . W ,H . .-, ff :-fuwf,,,.e 7 A wr., -M ,mf - ,fy W ... QMM f M N, H--M-M, V - ' 1111 1 Snllixan slipx, allen 11111- 11111 Illlllll llx'iSIN. 111 1I111 sadis1i1 1JlC21Sl1I'C nl a Colgate end. Princeton, 365 Colgate, 26 lYi1l1 two very llIlIJl'CSSlX'C xi1t11ries meer 111 League lJlJlJOSlllOll 1111 s111'1-1-ssive weel4e11ds. l'1'i111'e11111 LUIICCTII mer tl1e llIllJClllllllg Colgate contest was barely notice- almle. 'l'l1e Red Raiders were a 11011-lC2lgl1L' ol1po11e11t llllll i11111111'Ia111 league L'0IllCIltlC1'S were just al1ead. 'l'l1e Clulgate lil'2llllC of mind was not so Ulllllllllllfflll. and inliniiely inure ClllllgCl'lJllS. Alter ll1C Tigers l1ad l'L'i0YC1'Cil ll punt Zlllll s1'o1'e1l Zlll early lirst Qlll211'lCl' lOllL'llCl0KVIl, the IIIJSCI-llllllllL'il Colgate eleven lorged lllllb tl1e lead. Red Raider .lack Alllllbllily, a nemesis 111 lll'lIlL'Cl0ll all 2lllCl'll00ll, sped 24 xards for 1l1e initial six points. I11 tl1e segond illllll'LC1'llWS'1lS Malfmiiei again alter a Colgate delender l1ad picked oll a stray l,l'lI1CC- Civlgales Qgll-llllllllll ll'I'l'lH', -lake Klz111lx11111o11. w1111'111nl1s 111 the 1111'1i1l lanlxliiig 111' lxiclter Dare CL1111l1li11. Lon pass and l'6lLl1'llC4l the ball to tl1e l'1'i11ce1,o11 live. Later lll the second lil'2llllC Scott tallied the second Vlllglfl' touclidowii, but ll1e startling Red Raiders owned a one-1101111 edge, lil-lil, and seeined 1'ClllCl.LlIlI to give it 1111 as tlie lirsl hall' ended. l'1'i11ce11111 CXtl12lllgK'll tl1e delicate lead three more times i11 the second half lmelore finally beating the New Yorkers into s11l1111issio11. After spoilsport Ma- loney had l'2lllC11CLl the Colgate lead to ll seveil-11oir1t bulge. 'I'l1e Tigers roared back to regain the lead, 2l-20, with lack S11llix'a11 and 1,011 KfJl'Il1'1lll11Jii at the 1'r111t1'ols. llolga1e 1'e1'11x'e1'ecl tlle 21LlX'llIll2lgLT onre more at 21321 lJCli0l'L' the Tigers cr111x'e1'1e1l lIllIlll1lClll defeat into a e011vi111'i11g x'i1l.o1'y. lQlJl'lll'llIlllJi' l1111's1Q Il11'1111gl1 i'11lga1e's lJOl'UllS line I111' a11r1tl1e1' l11111'l1clow11 i11 ll1e lllgll-SCUl'lllg game, 'Tiger leads Nassau Cheer. Princeton, 215 Cornell, 18 A mighty offensive performance was overshadowed by a virulent attack ol K'lumblitis as Princeton nosed out Cornell, 21-18. Scoring its third Ivy League vic- tory in a row, the Tiger eleven amassed a total ol 410 yards passing and rushing, Scott and his sidekick Sullivan accounting lor 157 and 139 respectively. Nonetheless the vaunted Tiger backfield committed seven fumbles, live recovered by their loes. Although the Cornell offensive attack lell more than 150 yards below that ol Princeton, the lthacans were able to convert two Tiger fumbles into touchdowns. 1Vere it not lor these miscues with the elusive pigskin, the Princeton margin ol victory would have lar exceeded .1-In -lohn Craig, outstanding at tackle all year, prepares to plug up a Cornell hole. the three-point dillerence. As it was, the Tiger was not lorced to punt until late in the third quarter, whereas Cornell kicked out ol diH'iculty seven times. Princeton tallied twice in the opening period on a lour-yard run by Silky and a 42-yard pass from Scott to Hank Large. Sullivan capped his plunge with a two-point conversion while sophomore Dave Gouldin kicked the PAT alter the Scott to Large aerial. In the third quarter, Princeton scored its Hnal touch- down on a passing strike lrom Dan Terpack to senior end -lim Blair. Terpack, a sophomore, had taken over the Hrst string wingback duties alter his highly com- mendable performance in the Colgate game where he excelled on both ollense and defense. Sullivan steps oil another long run. XVhen the Tigers could hold the ball, they were eilectixe. F' in 2-1 f'j ?, if 1' ' ff 32, -f 3 2 1 , ,r v I M , S W, Qgzgif' H , ,, -.S ...Avugffgng :fx ff. . -:,, , Y Y, r.- MW Mg, kms. 1, I f w'..'.: 4 fm.-,,,, -f y , 9 - H ., , fvff Milf, 4,1 . v fag ,Q QQWY ev? T, iff . A y.409ryg'4 ,gP17',. , '. ,,.Fv1 .,:, f.5+ A-Y H f . -Q' an er fr Aw. nf' f Mi'-' L, 4 1, 4 S V., 1 L :fi Y' f , ,nvawg .f... .Q udfym fm' Be mx w,,,,,f ish? 'QU L ax M WM, I V., Q.. 15 5 5 , f iw ,- , ,, ,x , , f-gms I 1 'ff' S4 ff 'F ,' f, Y - w1I 1, fxdiu :JM 1 , ,, ,V I ww 1. ,H H xl N.pUw,m4 Q, QW 'f , ,k,,,,f':'f-fS 'g-K K ,,,,,,,w 'fx ax, is? , 'FLW Princeton, 545 Brown, 21 Before the football season began, it was a foregone conclusion that Brown could do no better than dead last in the Ivy League. The Tigers gave punishing support to this prediction by whipping the Bruins, 54-21, for their fourth consecutive league triumph. Scott again emerged as the leading ground gainer as Princeton attained a third position in national scoring rankings. Tallying three touchdowns, Brown ac- counted for more points than it had managed against four previous lvy League opponents. Tiger defenses would have to more stubborn in the future in order to pose a threat to the high-riding Elis. In repeating as the Back-of-the-Day, Scott amassed 191 offensive yards, plunging for two touchdowns, while accounting for another pair on 28-yard and 12- yard aerials. Fullbacks Don Kornrumpf and under- study Brewster Loud vaulted the line for the other Princeton tallies, Kornrumpf scoring two and Loud one. Although most of the squad saw action in the con- test, Coach Coltnan cited several players as particularly encouraging. Seniors .Ion Hagstrom and Brewster l.oud were singled out for special praise. A substi- tute quarterback, Hagstrom was on the receiving end of a six-point aerial, making most of the 28 yards to the goal line on his own. Of Loud, Colman said that he was 'fdelighted to see a senior come along and pick up the slack. Princeton, 14, Harvard 12 An ecstatic Palmer Stadium crowd watched tensely as the Cantabs lined up on the goal-line for the con- version attempt. The entire game had been an uphill struggle for Harvard, but with scant minutes of play- ing time remaining, the visitors had capped a des- perate 85-yard march with a long touchdown pass. just two vital placement kicks separated the teams as Harvard quarterback Terry Bartolet faded back for the two-point try. The Tigers were ready. XVhile tackle john Craig crashed in on Bartolet, wingback Ron Goldman covered the intended receiver like a rug. The pigskin had barely left Bartolet's hand when Craig deflected it to the ground. The threat had ended, relieved Princeton fans rejoiced over the 14-12 triumph and an unblemished Ivy League slate. Princeton had won its first important football game of the campaign. A preseason loop favorite, Harvard had entered the contest with a national ranking in team defense. Against the stubborn Cantab forward wall the highly-regarded Princeton offensive machine stalled time and time again, scoring only two touch- downs after running up 49 and 54 points over Co- lumbia and Brown. W Though the Princeton defenses were equally inpene- trable, the Tigers were not burdened with the dubious pleasure of halting hrst string Harvard quarterback Charlie Ravenel. The fabled f'Riverboat was out of action because of a leg injury. Brewster I.oud unleashes one of his heralded leaps to draw the Tigers within inches of the goal lineg however, time ran out. Yale 435 Princeton, 22 For the two tutclelezttc-cl, untied titztns ol' the Ivv League. the Yztle liowl sllowclowu wats thc' clitnztx of the season. 'l'he outcorne would decticle hoth the Big 'Ilhree Zlllil lvv l.L'2lgllC chztntpion. lllltl in the event ol' 21 Yule victorv, sztlelv assure the lilis ol' their first undeleztted eleven in F41 veztrs. AX sligl1t litvorite. Yale was given the edge on superior ntaupower in the line, an explosive lulllaztclc in Bob lilztnchztrd. und 21 niltv passer, 'lioin Singleton. ll nzune Tiger lztns will lind it hztrd to lorget. Front the opening kickoll' the hztndwriting wats on the wztll. Failing to lull on the lree lmztll until the lztst ntoinent. llrinceton gained possession on its own two-vztrd stripe. Yule wus aggressive and opportunistic and unless the plztgue ol' iniscues sulliered in previous gatnes wats elintinzttecl, 'liger hopes wottlcl he in vain. If Zlllyllllllg, the llllSl2lliCS lmecztnie more llllgllllll. Four tintes the liger ltunlnlecl, ztncl on three OtiL'2lSlOllS the Elis ccmvertecl the lapses into touchclowns. Equally opportunistic' on ollense, Yale tztllied twice on long zteriztls with hztrelv Zl response lrotn the porous Prince- ton pztss defense. YVhen the gznne had ended, Yztle hztcl won all the marbles, tnztinlv on the ellorts ol' cltlztrterlmztfk loin Singleton, who hurled three touchdown passes, while running lor one. But with the exception of Singleton, the Tigers had played on much more even ternts with the lilis than the score would tend to indi- cate. The l'rinc'eton ollensc' speztrheztded bv Hugh Scott und .john Sullivan tied Yule in first clowns and ztctuztllv outrushed the lilis by uhnost 50 vztrds. Even in the line. the outweighed Tigers had held their own. Cited lor special praise wats Stun Bztlclwin, who cotuplc-telv outplztved Yule guard Ben Bzthne. an All- Atnericztn selection. The llarttnoulh safety lIlllllC a countervailing plunge to nullify this Tiger wetlge play. Princeton, 75 Dartmouth, U Scoring in the last 1,33 secontls ol' the ganle, Printe- ton rehounclecl alter the Yale cleleat to wliitewash Dartmouth, 7-tl. The victorv was an especiallv grati- lving tribute to seventeen seniors who were gracing the Paltner Statlinnt tnrl for the last time in their l'rinceton careers. Together thev hatl cleliecl pre- season predictions ol' sixth place in the lvv League rate. to estahlish thetnselves as runners-up with a highlv connnenclahle recorcl ol' seven wins and two losses. l:U1'IllCl'lIltJliC the victory over Darttnouth was the lirst since the N57 Tigers had won the Ivy League championship hv turning the satire trick. llartniouth was a typical Green teatn, cautions ancl The llartnionth line was rough, hnt the Tiger linenien were just as ellective. WK stubborn. This was the acicl test olf the niettle ol' the Princeton lorwarcl wall ancl the line canne through Ill2lg11lllCl'llll5 heating Dartmouth at its own gznne. XX'ith two exceptions both teatns were unable to niake a serious penetration into the territory of the other until the tonchclown plav. The two exceptions, Z1 clrive luv the Tigers and one hv Dartnionth were suc- cesslinllv repnlsecl luv goal-line stancls. XYitl1 nnnntes remaining ancl the Tigers in posses- sion, it was apparent at I'rinceton tritnnph clepenclecl on a score in that series of clowns. Frantically the line 'opened up gaping holes as Silkv ancl Scott rippetl off the varclage in large ehunks helore bringing the hall to the Darttnonth 23-varcl line. Then with 53 seconds reniaining, Stott launchecl a perfect strike to another with 41.5 secontl leit tn the game. XlacNIurrav preparcs to take Scotts package into the previouslv untouched entl lone. could ll0l overlook two tailhaeks, Hugh Great Seott and jack Silkvl' Snllivztn. wl1o have etched their way into tl1e 'liger 1llClll0l'f' lor Illklllf years to eo111e. Ever since tl1e Penn gznne i11 tl1eir soplioinore year, the boys were the lilllgllllh in the Prinzeton haeklieltl. Silky will he I'CI1lCIlllJCl'Cll lor l1is lightening reflexes while clznit-ing through hel'11clcllecl opposition and Scott, 21 three ti111e All-Ivy seleetion, lor his workliorse PC1'litll'Ill2ll1t'C and reli:1hilitv whenever the chips were down. It is iinpossilile to suv enough ztlmont these two tziilhzttks, who z1c'l1ievetl Il2lllOll2ll-l'llllllgS i11 rushing ollense periotlieztllv tlirongh their senior years. Scott closed ont his l,l'lllt'l'l.0Il football eztreer hv estzthlisli- ing 2111 :ill-time lvv League ollensive recortl with 93,1 yztrcls. Both were nznnetl to first string lill.-XC berths Illllt' :incl ti111e ztgztin over the llll'l'l'-fl'2ll' span. ln tl1e entl they will prohzthlv he re111e111l1eretl as one C0111- liosite loothztll pluver whose giltecl ability knew no liniitzttions. lhe tnisnng heroes ol the stletesslnl IWW eaiiipztigii were the hztrtl crore ol' senior lineinen :intl lllCll' capable nticlerstnclies. klini lilztir. who stzlrtetl :tt entl for 27 consecutive gzniies ox er llll' tltreefveztr period, extelletl ollensivelv :intl tleliensivelv throngliont tl1e season. C1oh11z1n praised l1i111 :ts one ol the best encls i11 tl1e Exist. 'Iihe other lIll'lIllJCl'S ol tl1e Old Ctlartl ol' tl1e H359 l'Cglll2ll'S. Stun lizthlwin anal Stun Sliatighnessv, were zigztin eolnnins ol strength i11 the lorwzn'cl wall. llttptzuiii lion KOI'llI'lIlllIJli wus 1111 inspiring teznn leatler. He tleserxes ttetlit for npselling the pessi111istit' L'XlDl'lli. a limi: Ifmr: Hurt, Stu-t'clrmt'slar. Svcmtfl Row: Pulhnztn, Smith, R. C. l'iI'1HIl' Ilona' Xlixhzrlow. llurlxliuttlt, llttxurlgt At t'Cntt'r, Z1 big tlucstioninztrk licliort' thc scztson, svn- iors jerry Sullivan and Dick Ecklt-lclt ztlternzttcd on offciisivt' :intl tlcliciisivc zimignntcnts. Sullivan, hobhletl by at variety ol' injuries, cotirztgeottsly hrzivccl the pain, winning :tn ECLXC1 hcrth ztltcr thc Brown gzinie. Iilmcwlicrc in the lint-, john Craig :incl Matt 'l'obriner never lzrilctl to turn in at sttrztcly pcrlorniztncc. At thu trzulitionztl hzntquct lohiintfr was the recipient ol the Klztltlwell Cup 115 tht- tnost intprovetl player on thc tczun. Plating ht-hincl thc lirst string line and oticztsioiiztlly chosen lor starting zrssigntncnts were at long list ol' othvrs without whonc rontinuzil clcvelop- ment zi 7-2 watson would never have ht't'n possible. 'lilttfy intlutlc svniors -lorry Norton :intl Clark XVoolcy, juniors litl XYt'lllL'Illll2lyCl' zincl .Xmly Connor, :incl oophoniorc Ditk l.t-tnkin. lhe szunc depth cfxistetl in thc lmzncklitrlcl wht-rc sopltontort? qtt:it'terbzu'k jon Hun- rich was spcllccl hy strnior -lon Hztgstrom zincl junior Pcnn Lztirtl. .Xt lullhzuk lirewstt-r l,oucl was an inval- uzthlt' LISSGL to thc tcani lmchintl Clziptztin liornrunipl. XN'ith such tztlcnt at witighztck lichincl stzirtcr Dain 'fcrpzuk inclucling seniors Ron tiolthnan, ll tlclensive hcro in the Hzn'rzn'cl gzuuc. Miki- lscnian, :intl john hl21t'Nllll'l'2lf, Cioltuatn was hlessctl with an ztssortinent of harks which wvre equal to any challenge. ,-Xt tht- loothull lDll1ltllll'l thc trzttlitionzil transition lroin pant to luturc wus nizrtle. -lint Blair atntl Hugh Grunt Scott wtfre ztwzmltwl thc l'ou Cup, ctnhlematiti of than player or players who liztvtr contrihutctl most to lj1illlt'CLOl1 loothaill. whiltt Captain Don Kornrunipl' lizuicltftl over tht' Hfllls to lCtl YVt'iltt'titi1z1yC1', cziptztin- elect. ol' thc 19431 l'rint'cton loothztll ttrant. It was tht- hopc ol :ill than with tht' reins. wont also thc spirit which lict'tiic:ttt'tl Livery nttttnhcr ol' thc 1960 l'rinCGton loothztll tczun. -MHIQNRY A. XV.-XI,'1'llR, jk. xiii' ltgvi lx f.ll2ililL'S Stn-plwtix 19111-lc lfrmx' Smith, clreenyyoocl, Vogt tcoaclrj, Vaughn tcoaehj, 'limm tcoachj, XYrighl, Leleyer. .S'r'r'muI Roar: Nlctiinty, lfisher, Roh. len, Schoenleld, llalnilton. Lewis, Hoflman, Marcy, lowers, Randall. Front lccrzw: Brown, llactkson, vlilltkkCl', xllllitlllld, Nlc'liyyen, Rubin- cam, Gilmore, Cralt, Nettrour. 150 LB. FOOTBALL la5l'll11 Loacli Dick X'aughau's optimistic lore- casts, the Tiger 150-Pound loothall team hegan its season on a dismal note, losing its lirst three hall games. Howeyer, Cloac h Vaughan. not easily cliscouraged, took a hold step to get the lightweights into the winning column. Despairing ol an inconsistent ollensiye at- tack, he adopted a slotfl' lormation. heretolore un- known in the annals ol Princeton lootlaall. This -seemingly rash switch proyed a charm lor thc- Bengals, who wrapped up the season with three triumphs. lhe opening contest against .Xrmy was a study in the power ol lulnhles. lfnahle to get rolling conl sisteutly, the 'tigers threw away what chances they had hy the hall-dropping route. .PX hright spot in the 245-ti deleat was the Princeton delensiye line. which held a highlyfftoutecl Cadet eleyen to two touchdowns in thc' lirst lilly'-lour minutes ol play, only to see the XX'est Point gridclers push across two quick scores in the closing moments ol the game. In their lirst away appearance, the lightweighls lell to a powc'rl'ul Navy team. ln a penalty-ridclled game, the Tigers, laeking ollensiye driye, were deleatecl by a 20-T szore. The lol- lowing week, it was once again the lumhlc' that pre! vented the l'rinc'c't0nians lrom posing a serious Chal- lenge, as they played host to Cornell at Gulick l ielcl. The loss ol lullhack Boh llralt in the Navy game cost the lightweights a powerlul otlensiye weapon, and an inlerior Big Red squad turned the game into a 25-7 rout. 'lhe only home team score came on a E55-yarcl pass play from tailhack Don Marcluet to end Gardner Marcy. Desperate lor a yictory, Vaughan initiated his heret- ical slot-'I' against Pennsylyania, top lightweight teani in the liasrern Intercollegiate League, The result was amazing, as the ligers rolled to a ll-S yictory. Paul Ruhincani accounted lor the lirst siore on a 'lf'm-yard pass play lrom Marcy. Alter icing the game ln the second hall. the ligers gaycr up a lone touchdown in the closing' seconds. Especially hrilliant was the PCI'- lormance ol thc- line, led hy Captain Nlchwen. Alter the game, Coach Vaughan attributed the yictory more to improyecl morale than to the new lormation. Once again employing a 'I'-lormation. l'rinc'eton outscored Columbia in a wild and woolly game, 35-22. Taking an early lead and keeping it, the 'Iigers were neyer pressed as Paul Ruhinc'am's running sparked the yiftory. Clapping their resurgencc', the Bengals closed the campaign by haudily trouncing Rutgers, 24520. In a powerlul ollensiye ellort, Ruhincam Z'tCCOllIllCKl lor three scores and lullback l,c'w Nettrour lor one, with sophomore guard jerry Coleman chipping' in lor the filth on an interception. Led hy Captain Mc-liwen and tackles Don 'l'uc'ker and Fd Brown, the Princeton line kept the New lirunswiek gridclers lrom threatening the 'tiger lead. f Y? - . .. t Baci: Rome: West, Mead, Diller, Cass, Wbrthington, Ibbeken, R. Burruss. Secoml livin: Stockton fcoachj, Lahti, lagoria, Haigh, Swinburn, Sussman, XVl1itc-head. D. Hall, Asher, Donovan fcoachj. Ifrvnl Rortx' llellrier, Soniers, liisenfelder, Matthews. Trout, Ryland, KJXIXIQIII. Santanlaria. l. V. FOOTBALL Hli .lunior Varsity lfootball 'learn had a disappoint- sixteen points to Harvard's six. Bill Merlini was the ing' record this year, as they' won two of their contests star for the Bengals as he scored both of Princeton's and lost four. They did put up a good showing in touchdowns. ln the opening quarter he went over inost of their defeats. however. and certain prospective right tackle and ran till yards for the 'li.l5. Later in yarsity' stars turned tip with good individual perlortn- the game he scored again with a 7-yard drive up the ances. iniddle. 'l'heir first gaine was with Pennsylvania in Phila- ln the last ganle of the season, the contributed delphia on October eighth. 'l'he first half was Penn- their share to what turned out to be a disastrous week- sy'lvania's, and the Quakers piled up a sixteen-point end for every' 'l'iger teain. They' lost to Yale. 27 to 16. lead over the young ligers. liut in the third quarter Before 'judging the won-lost record too harshly: it the tide shifted. Princeton stored two quick touch- is wise to take a good look at the reason for the exist- downs for fifteen points and then scored another when ence of -lunior Varsity Football at Princeton. 'Iihe tackle liill XVright intercepted a Quaker pass. escaped purpose of lfootball is to give depth to the Varsity: his pursuers. and ran sixty-five yards for the touch- Nfany players forni the bench reserves of the down. ln the final quarter, Charles Philips got through Varsity and are often called on to fill gaps in Varsity' the Quaker defenses and stored again for the 'l'ig'er ranks. 'learn nienibers gain experience by play'- teani. 'l'his last touchdown nullified Frank Lanrbertls ing against the teains of other schools. and they' use final score for the Red and lilue and gz-ve Princeton this experience when they' are called up as substitutes the ganie. 35 to 30, in Varsity' play' or when, benefiting lroin their period On October fourteenth, the young Bengals went to on the squad, they' step up the following year to New Brunswick and niet defeat at the hands of' their lull nienibership on the Varsity. Rutgers opponents by a 28 to 22 score. This was just The won-lost record cannot be, therefore. the stand- one ofa series of disasters for the teain, and in the ard by which a 'learn is judged. lt niust be judged following weeks it lost to .Xriny at XVest Point. 28 to ti, on the aniount ol' experience picked up by' the future and to Cape May Coast Guard, 23 to 7. Varsity' nienibers who conipose it. and in this respect XVhen victory' finally did coine, it was sweet. 'l'he the season ol' the Princeton lfootball learn was ligers niet their Harvard counterparts at Princeton 3 Success, and upset the previously' unbeaten Cantabs, scoring l-fl g Back Row: Hatch, Michel, Zug. Second Row: Perego ftrainerj, Patten finanagerj , Matlaek, Stanley, Bishop, Rifkin, Pierson, livans, Reid Qeoachj. Front Row: Denniston, Reineman, Kitson, YVadsworth, XYickenclen, Hicks, Low, Yehslage, Van Amerongen. SOCCER ED by Captain .lim XVickenden and star forward Lew Van Amerongen, I'rinceton's varsity soccer team fought its way to the Ivy League championship for the second time in six years ol' Ivy competition but could only take a second to Yale for the Big Three crown. The season started slowly against Rutgers as injuries kept three first-stringers from playing. Still, the Tigers put up a good light in overcoming two early Scarlet linight goals before losing in overtime, Al to 2. The Tigers came to life in their first Ivy match by crushing Columbia. Goalie Mickey Michel celebrated his return to the lineup by shutting out the Lions, while outsidefright Kirk Kitson celebrated his by scoring the first goal. Van Amerongen, -lim Hicks, and Bob l.ow also scored in the 5 to 0 rout. Continuing their high scoring, the Tigers avenged last year's loss to Haverford by walloping the visitors, fi to I, as XVickenden scored three times by head tap-ins and once using his foot. Penn fell next to the surging men from Nassau as Wickenden and Van .Xmerongen scored two goals each to defeat the Quakers, -I to 25. I'rinceton's scoring punch disappeared in the next H2 game against Swarthmore, but the Tigers' defensive line ol' Chip Hatch and Ilan Rifkin contained the Garnet while XVic:kenden scored the only goal early in the fourth period to give the Tigers the first of their three I to fl victories. The Big Green from Hanover were the Tigers' next victims as Yan Amerongen garnered all three Princeton goals in the 3 to I ball game, which wasn't as close as the score indicates. But Cornell gave the Bengals fits at Ithaca on a slippery field. Jim XVadsworth scored the only goal in the first period, and defense was king t.hereafter. Big Red goalie Scott Holmes stole several goals while Tiger fullbacks Rilkin and Ilatch again contained the opposing forwards and Nlickey Michel made several spectacular saves. Nleeting the Brown Bruins on a muddy field for the second conseeutix e year, the Tigers reversed the outcome of the previous season and won E5 to I. XVickenden was unable to start but scored the game's first goal when he entered in the third period. Brown tied the score late in the quarter, but the defense again contained the Bears while Van Arnerongen scored his Ivy-record-tying goal late in the final period. lying on his side. 1 i l i I But, where is the ball? The Tigers clinched the Ivy title a week later against Harvard with a whole team effort. Jim Xtlads- worth's first period shot alter a pass lrom Bob Low was too hot for the Crimson goalie to handle and resulted in the game's only tally. Hallbacks Jim Zug and Steve Vehslage stopped two Harvard drives in the second period while the Tiger ollense controlled the hall through most ol the second hall. But Yale's Bulldogs broke the Bengal win streak with a 2 to 0 shutout on that Black Saturday in November, as the 5+ Shall we cut it in half? Then we'll both be happy. Princeton ollense could not get untracked. One of the many factors contributing to the Tiger championship was Coach Jim Reed's manipulation ol players like a chess master. In addition, Hatch and Rilkin were outstanding at lullback, XVadsworth was ''biohnny-on-the-spot against Cornell and Har- vard, and l,ew Van Amerongerfs nine goals provided ollensive power. But Captain .lim XVickenden was the key to the Tiger attack. His presence alone, according to Reed, was a great lat-tor in victory. GOAL! ! I F fi If - A.. ,aw CRCDSS CCDUNTRY OACH Pete Morgan was optimistic about the lflfifl Cross-Country team, cleeming the scjuad as one whose Hprospects are much stronger than in the past several years. Howeyer. despite consistent perform- ances by Captain Mike Kingston and sophomore Pete Hoey, the final record of 5-'f caused Coach Morgan to call the season a disappointing one. KVith the construction of the junior faculty housing center near Lake Carnegie. it was necessary to reroute the cross-country course. The first meet of the season against Seton Hall was run on this longer and harder distance. Kingston and Hoey, finishing neck-andfneck, led a Tiger sweep of the first five places and a l5 to -18 yictory. ln a triangular meet with N.Y.U. and Rutgers, the Tiger harriers finished second. N.Y.U., a new oppo- nent for Princeton, garnered first place. The final score was 34-4I-ffl. The Tiger runners were the underdogs in their meet with the strong and well-balanced teams of Ford' ham and St. lloseph's. But Kingston and Hoey took first and second. senior Dave Fitzgerald added a fourth, and Princeton, with 28 points, ran off with an upset. Fordham and St. Iloseplrs finished with 358 and 57 respectively. .X week later on a wet and sloppy course in New Yorks Yan Cortlandt Park. Kingston once again came home ahead of' the pack in a meet with Pennsylvania and Columbia. Nevertheless, the Quakers' balance was the Tigers' and Lions' downfall. The score was Pennsylvania 28, Princeton Columbia 40. Princeton came in a discouraging third in the Big Three cross-country meet. The closest Princeton man to the winner, Yale's jack Bachrach, was Kingston, who took a fifth place. He won the meet last year. In the dual meet scoring, Yale beat the Tigers l9 to 38, and Harvard won 23 to 36. Once again the harriers ran at Van Cortlandt Park, this time in the Heptagonal Gaines cross-country cham- pionships. As a team. the Tigers placed eighth, 89 points behind the winner Army. Kingston finished fifth out of the field of 70 runners. On November 14 in the fifty-second annual IC4A cross-country race, the scjaud finished about 20th out of 34 teams. This mediocre showing was in a large measure a result of injuries sustained by E5 of the top 5 runners. The IC4.-X meet marked the end of the season. YVith the exception of' Fitzgerald, the '60 version of the Princeton barriers was composed entirely of juniors and sophomores. Looking to next year, Coach Morgan can again be optimistic. lf' no undue bad breaks befall the 'til scjuad, it could well lire up to high hopes. Hack Row: Nichparenko, lilliot, Amy, You Blake ctrainerj, Morgan fcoachj, Carr, Shenk. Ifmul Roth: Hoey, Rose, XN'atson, Kings- ton, Fitzgerald, Mcelobb. tif' nl... ,, nt.. Burk Roux' Levisay, Khouri, Keely, Meeker, Manno, Furlong, Machledt, Mitchell, Clarkson, Porietis. liolander, Hughes, MacMillan Sl2lI1SlJlll'l' tcoachjv. Tlzirzl Roni: Kutsko, XVright, Berkowitz, Cerhart, Crano, Kufller. Kieselstein, Costello, Russell, Miller. Fuller klohnston, NTCC3.1'fllY Kcoachj. Second lime: Howard, Kober, XVilkot'. Swenson. Richardson, Hiehrli, Dohau, Skoning, Cuedel, Springs Bourland, Schwesig, Sinkler tcoachj. Frou! Row: May, Cox, Demarest. Nfetl, Rockenbach, Griffith, Delong, Rothschild, Walker, Parenti Nlarr tcoachl . FRESHMAN FOOTBALL LAGUED by a porous pass defense, Coach XValter Pep McCarthy's Freshman gridders completed their season with a record of two wins and four defeats. In their opening encounter, a strong Rutgers teain defeated the Freshmen by 28-l2. The Tigers showed a good oflense but were unable to contain Rutgers. The Princeton touchdowns were scored by Corky Hughes on an 85-yard kickoff return and by Norm Schwesig on a l-yard plunge. Next Columbia, for the first time in twelve years, defeated the Freslnnen in a heart-breaker. Columbia's 7-0 lead in the second quarter was reduced to 7-fi at the hall as Princeton scored on a -13-yard pass from Hughes to -Iim Rockenbach. Then, with three minutes remaining in the final period, Hugh MacMillan booted a l0-yard field goal, giving the Tigers a 9-7 advantage. However, Columbia fought hack and scored on a pass play with 23 seconds remaining to win l3-0. Overcoming a lff-0 deficit, the Tigers defeated Cor- nell for their first victory. The winning siiore was a 5-yard touchdown pass from Hughes to MacMillan on a fourth down play in the fourth quarter. The Tigers outplayed their opponents more than the lff-lil score indicates, outgaining them by two to one. Prince- ton's weak pass defense hurt on one of Cornell's touch- downs. Then, in the third quarter, Mort Fuller bulled over from the one for the Tiger's first score. Pete Porietis then ran for the two extra points which were the margin of victory. The Freshmen trampled Pennsylvania the next week by 27-7. The Princeton offense, led by Hughes with two touchdowns, MacMillan with l touchdown and three extra points, and Fuller with one touchdown, amassed a total of 295 yards. The defense was good, too, holding Pennsylvania to 31 yards rushing. Trail- ing 7-fi at the half, the Tigers scored twice in the third quarter and once in the fourth to win. Five fumbles and a weak pass defense contributed greatly to the Freshmau's 20-8 loss to Harvard. The Tigers' lone touchdown was scored by Hughes after his 35-yard run set it up. However, Harvard's success- ful passing attack helped them establish a 20-8 half- time lead which they kept in the last half. ln the final game of the season, the Freshmen were badly outplayed by Yale, who won -l0-lo. Poor pass defense hurt again as Yale scored three times through the air while building a 20-0 half-time advantage. The Tigers' touchdowns in the second half were scored by Porietis on a short run and -foe Russell on a 25-yard run. 'I iger blocking uncorks workhorse Corky Hughes. y The Opening Jump. BASKETBALL Even Coach Cappy Cappon was optimistic. XVith so many lettermen returning, how can the picture not look bright?T' he asked as the season began. XVell, he was rightg the picture turned out bright. After winning five of seven non-league games, the Tigers took over the Ivy lead in their second league game and held on without much trouble the rest ol the way. Led by all-lvy selections Pete Campbell and a greatly improved Al Kaemmerlen, the 1961 Tiger squad was the first in Princeton history to win an NCAA tournament game. Sophomore Art Hyland and captain Don Swan, as well as Andy Higgins and -lack XVhitehouse. were also instrumental in the Tigers' I8 and 8 year. The NCIAX championship tourney was the high point ol' the season for the Tigers, as they traveled to Madison Square Garden on March lil to face the Southern Conference champs, George XVashington. The Colonials had rallied strongly to take their league crown, but the Tigers were ready for them. Reversing their form of' last year,s game against Duke, Princeton outrebounded a taller team while holding down the George XX'ashington ffast-break. The loss of Captain and Bunn Trophy winner Don Swan by a concussion after only two minutes had elapsed only fired up the Tigers. Though the lead changed hands several times during the first few min- utes, Princeton finally pulled ahead to a All-34 half- time margin. A1 Kaemmerlen then came to life in the second half, scoring' easily against 6'9 Bill Ingram, while Campbell continued to hit his long shots and driving lay-ups. The latter's 27 points were the deci- sive lactor in the 84-67 victory. The first Ivy team since T942 to make the seeond round of the tournament, the Tigers traveled down to Charlotte where they were outscored, but HOL out- hustled, by two of the nation's finest teams, St. Joseplfs and St, Bonaventure. Though Princeton went into the game against the Hawks as 12-point underdogs, they outlought and outrebounded their taller opponents during a nipaand- tuck first half. Never ahead, the Tigers never trailed by more than five as the half ended St. Joseplrs, however, began to live up to its press notices in the second half. Controlling both the ollensive and defensive boards, they also began to hit lront the lloor ztnd slowly huilt up an eleven-point leztd. But tlte 'Iigers refused to giye up, even when ll tluestionzthle ehztrging call plll .Xrt Hylttnd Olll, ol tlte gztnte. Behind hy eight with less thztn two ntinutes to plzty, Princeton closed tlte gztp to one point on at juniper by Drew llylztnd with 352 seconds to go. But ztnother questionzthle walking violzttion against. Hyland :tlter he stole tlte hztll gztye tlte Hawks the hull ztnd tlte hztll gztnte witlt zt linztl score ol' 72-67. still not disheztrtened, tlte Tigers broke lztst lront the opening' tztp-oil tlte following night to open up zt lilteen-point leztd ztgztinst st second-rztnked nzttionztlly, ntuch tztller St. lionztyentttre live. Hut tlte lionnies ztsserted thetnselyes in tlte second hztlf its tlteir lone dt-lense entthled thent to repezttedly steal tlte hztll ztnd score on lztst hreztks to bring tlte linztl tally to 85-137, ,Xll-.Xnterieztn lont Stith led St. lionztyenture with 29 points, ntost in tlte final hztll' ztgztinst at visibly tiring 'liger stlttztd. Pete Clztntphell wzts high for Printeton for tlte setond tonseetttiye evening with 24, while Don .Swztn wats ztgztin grezttly ntissed. Still, tlte Tigers won the respett ol' tlte Sotttltertt lztns ztnd showed, :ts tltey hztd done ztll seztson, thztt they were zt teztnt to he reckoned with lhe ehztntpionship seztson opened on Deeenther flrd ztgztinst Lztlztyette zts tlte 'liigers hegztn an ttndeleztted yeztr on Dillon hoztrds. tif!-50. 'lhough Cztntphell wzts told lor one ol' tlte lew tintes this season, Kztennnerlen ztnd Higgitts statrted oll well with 20 ztnd l8 points respeetiyely. kztentnterlen, in ttddition, showed his greztt itttprtnetttettt, oyer lztst yeztr hy pulling down 27 rebounds, lti in the Tigers' second-hall' drixe. 'lientple's Owls were tlte next inyztders. hut Cztntp- Klein etlen. Iiztrlt lfuttu' Sinklet ttrttittery, ll. Ilylztnd. Cdttttphell, Kttennn ttdless teoztelll. Burton, .Xdzt Swztn. Whitehouse, .X, Hylzt Cmttpltell drites pztst tt ptessittw Yatu delense hefore at tense 'Ii .- , get ht-ttelt, hell ztttd .Xrt Hylztnd were ecluztl to tlte task. 'l'he lornter regztined his I959-till lornt :ts he pottred in 26 points including ll louls while tlte lzttter ciontrihuted IS to tlte 7fl to til victory. .X tight l'rineeton delense lteld lentple to at filffi shooting ztyerztgeg tlte 'l'igers sunk l7'1 ol' their sltots. 'lhree dztys latter lll'lIlikCl0ll conquered its third con- seetttiye opponent :tt honte as tlte Nliddies front ,Xnr nztpolis went dowtt 8572. One ol' Clztppon's ntztgnili nts. lit-enttgttt. Pttsztlis. Clttppon ttottcltb, Ryter tntztnttgerj. Front Rottt: nd. Higgins. s .X lclt lo the jaw diverts CIamphelI's twiste - K mg Iavupg hut clraws a foul. cent substitutions. in comhination witl1 llampbells accurate shooting. won the contest. lack Xvliitehouse came into the gaine with fourteen niinutes remaining and dropped in a point-a-minute while Campbell poured in 22 from the floor a11d nine from the foul line. 'l'he win streak came to an end at Yillauova, how- ever. against a highlv-regarclecl hut. as it later turned out. overrated Xvildcat. scluad. Looking very unsure of themselves, the Tigers were unable to contain tl1e last-lmreak OlliCI1SC ol llulmie NYhite. kfim llugigard and company. Only Swan and Hyland remained cool, while the Cats just coasted to a 75-18 victorv. Xt New Brunswick two davs later, the ligers lost a 20'point. edge hut managed to hang on to beat Rutgers in overtime hv ffl-92. Captain Swan tied the score just hefore the huffer while suh 'l'om Adams iolgales fl thinks foul call stmks. ffauikzw ' Q: Xdams unleashcs his patented hook. dropped in the winning basket with eight secioncls remaining in overtime. In 1111111110 for tl1e New Year Queen Ciitv 'l'ourna- ment. the 'l'igers finished third, losing to Canisius, 79-73. but snapping hack to top ci0IlllCL'IlC'l1l, S8-76. ,Xl lsaenniierlen. the only starter who hit consistently against the Grilfms, scored 28 points: hut it wasn't enough to nullilv a Iii-point firstfhalf deficit. Clamp- hell and Whitehouse. though. came to life in the l'C1onn game to give the Tigers a sixfpoint half'-time advantage. l,arrv l5rennan's eight clutch points late in the eomest cilinched the game for Old Nassau. A severe lack of offensive rebounding plagued the 'l'igerS in hoth games as it was to do in later NCAA tourna- ment games. .Xlter a dav's rest the quintet took on Colutnhia at New York to open the Ivy l,eague season. ,Xlter a closely-c'ontestecl first hall. which saw the lead change hands contimtallv. l'rinc'eton opened up a fifteen point lead on Kaemmerlen's scoring early in tl1e final half. 'l'hough the l.ions installed a fone press. strong foul shooting. as well as 21 poims from tl1e big center, gave the Tigers the Tli-lili v ictorv. lwo days afterwards at Ithaca. l'rimeton took over the Ivv lead. a position from which they were never to he disloclged. l7sing their customary weave, the Tigers took an c-arlv lead hut saw il. disappear with five minutes gone in the second hall, .Xl Kaenmierlen, though. again proved the diflerence as he scored ll m the final half. Returning' to Dillon gvm after a long' absence, the 'liigers mntitnted their winning ways, beating Brown and Yale the weekencl helore finals. Art Hylancl's strong clelettsiwe play ltighlightetl the games while his storing runtinuetl high. Alter a tightly l'Ol1ICSlCll ltrst hall against, lirown, the 'ligers pulled away to a six-point lead whimlt they linally upped to the Tl-till store. Swan antl liaeininerlen 4jO1lSlSlLTIllly out- relmottncletl the taller Bruins to l'OIlll'll3lllC greatly to the Victory. Yale tn-ver led alter the lirst two tninutes ol the gante the next exening. while Princeton scorecl lreely to huiltl up a llliICCll-Ibtblllflllllli-lll1lCCllgC. Art lflylantl held the 1ili's leacling scorer, Bill Madden, to three lielcl goals lmelore he lirntlecl out. as Clatnplnell letl in point ptmtlttttitmit in the 78-tif? rout. The Tigers sulleretl a blow between tertns as coach Claplay Claplmfnt was lnmspitaliletl lay a hearti attack. Assistant toath Jake Nlttlantlless took over. but Clappt was surely tnissetl. I In Nlcflantlless' ltrst gatne as tuacli. .Xrtnfs SUI'- Inising tlatlets ttpentlecl the ligets, ti'lfli2. l'ritn'eton letl tlnettgh tnost ol the gznne. lntt, the Black Knights mertouk thetn with almuut lite tnintttes lelt antl linally lrufe the lmall lot' two tninutes lmelure storing the cle' tttling basket. C,antplJell was again lugh lor the 'ligers with 255 points. In then' ltnal nun-lxt regular season game. the ligers me-rwlieltnecl the Retl Raitlers ol' Colgate. 75- 524. Art llvlancl stattecl as he repeatecllx' stole the hall while racking up l-I points. The ligers' I5-point hall! titne tnargin was wiclenetl to 213 hc-lore Nltflantlless startecl sentling in the subs. Returning to the Ivy wars. l'rinc'eton truslted a highly-regartlecl Pennsylvania live in what was prob- almly the tnost iinlmortant gatne ul' the season. The 'liigers ,itnnpecl tall' to a quirk ten-point leacl. then Captain Swan tlraws a lteatl on the lmaskel. --um:-up-rqt mm'-u a, ff -nmfmawv Hltith nat tlitl he gn? taisecl it to twenty early in the settnicl hall. anal easilx' heat back all Quaker ellorts to win bv 77755. liaeins 1 ' ' f t tnerlen eil the swrtttg with Z2 anal consistent 5' out- n ietl l't-nn star Holm Nllluj while holclinp hint to tit. 5 IC IJUIIILS. 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YCI 111 H11111: fl. 111'l11l'y. lilll l'1'i11c'e1o11 solved 1l11' lJz11'1111r1111l1 deleuse l111c'l4 Hylzuid :md Clziinpbell lIClCl.lllJ 1111- sc'o1'i11g Cllil lOl' 1l1e 'ligclx 1vi1l1 20 Zlllil 22 poiiils 1'esl1eCtiyCly while K2l1TllllIlL'l'lCIl did z111r11l1e1' line ClCl'L'I1SlYC job 011 llillll- ' 'l'l11- lyy l.C2lgllC C'l12lllllJlUllSllllJ was l'1'i11ccL011's on llllIlllJCll ll1C Tigers 88-63 ill Zlll zitlempt to show who the clizuiips slmuld lx: XVi1l1 ll llC2ll'ly llllIJCl1Cll'2llJll delensc' :md ll sluirp olleme lc-d by Sid A111i1'11 Zlllll Bula Nllkyy. the f,2ll2iliL'1'5 Qillllllllfll ull' to llll Carly lead Ylillk' llIOSl ex1i1i11g IJZII1 ol' Ilic wumii. 1l1o11gl1. was l'.llllllll'lll ligci' l1111s llftlllllll mucd l'lll'Cl'lL'lllll'l'N lolloxxiiig XCQXX '1 J limi: 1ftlIl'.'c:lllllXlll. Nlztck. llXl1lllll.Sl'llXX1tlIl, l,Cll'liSUll, 'lotltl. llill, .NITHIIII l3rm': Wootl tcoattliy, Nlocktitlgc. Ilviscy. Xlit'ht'l, Dztvis Cook, Xkattlswortlt. Xl1ll7lL'lHll tllI2lIl1Igi'l'l. lfmnl Roar: Scott. fiorclon. Sttllixatn, Yann fivthig. Klillc't'. Cfltatptnatn, Ilztll. HCDCKEY Un lDt'cc'inlJt't' setoncl tht' llllllttxltlll Yansity Hofkcy to cattch np. lhcy haul hc't'n catnght natpping' atnd licann tt'atx'c'letl to its lirst ganna' ol thc' scatson lnll ol lonling' in thc lirst pcriocl. atntl ,Xtnnis tln't't'-point high holmes atntl cxpcctattions. .X strong group ol lcttet- initiatl lc'atcl wats inortf thatn Clltlllgill to win it. tncn ll'UIll last yt'att s sclnztcl hattl hvcn t'c'it1lot'Cc:cl by atn ll tht' ligets wett' clisatppointing in tht' .Xrnn gannt otttstatntling'hnnrh oI't'x-lt'c'slintc'n. 'lihc c'xpc1'tsIJlatc'etl thvy tnattlc np lot' their hatcl showing hy putting up l't'in4t'ton ncan' tht' top ol tht' Ivy l,t'atg't1c' with Hattvattxl atn cstcllcnt light ztgatinst Nliclcllt'htn'y on lJC1'C'llllX'l ats thc'i1' biggest ohstatclt' to tht' thatnipionship. lint st'xt'nth in liatkct' Rink. .Xgatin thc'it' opponvnts lniilt things tlon't atlwatys ltatppvii ats thtw ant' snpposctl to. up atn c'an'ly lc'attl going into thc thittl pvriotl. lin atncl the lleciciiilict' sctontl ganna' statrtccl oil at scatson ol' this tiinc thc' ligers lmotimul hatck. Ontstatncling hittct' clisatppointtncnts. soplioinoic wing .john Cook tatllivtl up his thirtl goal lhe 'liigcrs hcgatn atuonling to c'xpt't'tattions. 'lhcw ol tht' gannc, atncl -lint Htlatncl. atnothct' sophoinort ll'0llIlL'Ctl Clolgattt' in thvii' olnt'ntft'. Nfl. lntt thc' ncxt stan. attltlctl atnothct' to tic' tht' ganna' up att ti-ti. Nlirlclle night they t1'atxt'lc'cl to XYc'st l'oint atncl 1't'aeix'ecl thcit' hint wats lltll to he clvnicfcl. llfJKN'L'Nl'li. atntl att II32 ol litst hint athout whatt wats to totnt' lattut' in tht' watson. tht' sntlclvn tlcatth oxc't'ti1nt', Nliclcllc'htn't's tight wing .Xgatinst .kklllf the l't'intt'ton sclnattl Inst tlisplanetl tht' Ic'it'nn Ift'tIJt't'gt'i' szotvtl with at shot lrotn tcn lcct Olll slow stan'ts thatt wc't'c to lmlatgtic' thctn tlnonghont thc' Long shots scvtnccl in o1'clt't' lot' tht' l't'intc'ton-Boston llltill-til loop. XX'c'st l'oint's llvwatt' atntl liilatlct' coin- l'nitt'1'sity tontvst :ts lioston took tht' 'liigt't's, -l-2. lint hinctl to scott' tln't'c' goatls lot' tht' Clatclcts in tht' litst Hylatntl stotctl onct' lot' l't'intt'ton with at twctttylive pcriotl. 'lihatt wats tht' hrginning ol tht' cncl lot' tht' loot shot in tht' lirst pvriocl. Init tht' ontstatncling shot l'igc'i's. .xklllfih liilatlvt' sto1't'tl atgatin, atntl Dolphins, ol tht' gllllli' wats Mtllt1t'tly's liorty loot stt't't'n shot lOl 1 atnothc't' Klatclct, atcltlvtl two tatllics oli his own, to givc' Boston in thc' strtoncl pt't'iocl. 'lltc' 'l'igc't's wcrrt' ttnathle , .Xtnn at ti-2 x'it'tot'y. lht' 'l'igt't's simply 5Cl'lIlG1lllll1llJlC to ntattch liostons sc'ot'ing', atntl slowly, atltcr at I-l tit lit-I ,, Q. ta-1-sv-- t 1- -Ziggy I in the lirst period, Boston crept ahead to win the game. The stickmen opened their Ivy League competition against Brown in Providence on December sixteenth. Brown had not won a game yet in the season, and they put up a tough battle. but Princeton was able to take the game in a suclclen death overtime by a 3-2 score. In the overtime period Dave Hersey picked up a rebound by -Iolmny Cook and shot a six-looter past Brown goalie Rod NIcCarry. Princeton was get- ting hot, and on the following night the Tigers upset a favored Northeastern squad, 5-4, at Cambridge's X'Vatson Rink. In a grueling contest, the lead shifted back and forth five times, with Princeton's outstand- ing Captain and goalie Barry Van Gerbig making thirty-two saves. After an eleven day rest at the beginning of the Christmas vacation, the Tigers traveled to the Rens- selaer Polytechnic Institute Invitational Tournament. In Troy the Princeton stickmen were trounced three times. The ill-starred tournament started for the Tigers with a game against New Brunswick of Canada. Princeton drew first blood with Cook's first period goal, but this was soon followed by eight by the Ca- nadians, who made the identity of the Canadian national sport only too clear to the subdued Tigers. Trying to forget their first tournament match, the stickmen went on to receive an even worse trouncing at the hands of R.P.I. The men from Troy rallied up eleven goals to Princeton's three. Returning to an Ivy League foe on the next night, the Tigers hardly fared better as Harvard beat them 6-I. After a rough Christmas vacation, the Hockey Team continued its lluctuating play by losing to Clarkson 5--I at Baker Rink. Brown came next, and for the second time the Bruins met defeat, this time by a 5-I score. Bill Miller, with two goals and an assist, and left wing Jim Hyland. with two goals, led the Ivy scoring champ Cook slaps a shot between Dartmouth clefensemen. :T c 4 as . , f . as-: sf-' mm I - vt. ww.. Cordon and Bnrgert swamp Brown's All-Ivy goalie. Princeton squad to victory, handing Brown her thir- teenth straight loss. The next game was supposed to be a disaster for the Tiger team. A highly favored and slightly over- confident Providence team traveled down to Baker Rink intending to hand the Princetonians another loss, but the Tigers would not play dead and at the end of three periods of play the score was tied 5-5. The game went into a sudden death overtime, and sophomore sensation Johnny Cook scored after -1:49 of play. The Tigers continued their winning ways by beating ill-starred Cornell 6-I. The Ithacans had lost twenty-seven straight games in Ivy League competition and were no match for the Princeton squad. The V if l l 0 l l l www V' N L, t l l AW lf-R ,ANRVA M gamer 1 i '.:..' A , N A J' I XVaidswortlt atttd Nlorkritlge tlispute relws decision in tlte Hatrxxtrd gatnte. 'liigers stored live goatls in tlte serond period with Doug Davis shooting in lour ol these. 'lihe Big Red squatd had outplatyed the Princeton teatnt in tlte lirst period. but goatlie Vain Cierbig and at tough delense limited Cornell's storing to one goatl. ,Xlter tlte lirst period, I rint'etott took complete control. Boston College tattne to liatker Riitk on .latnttatry twenty-eiglult. ttnd tlte Eatgles brottght disatster to their Princeton opponents. lhey rolled up at twelxe poiitt tatllw. atllowing tlte Tigers onlv two points. Senior . t t . center Bill Dailey atlone had three goatls atitd six assists. Toni Nlatrtin. atn .-Xll-.-Xtnerieatn latst yeatr, hatd two goatls atnd one atssist. The Tiger stluatd, crushed atnd out- tlatssed. neatrly went lront batd to worse two datis latter llatxis goes in lt: Iiteatk up lJtntniottth's plan. wlten St. Latwrentae repeattetl tlte Boston College shel- latcking. this time with atn ll-2 store. On lfebrttatry lottrth atlter at rough, snow-tattrsed bus ride to Hatnover. Verntont lroni Rutlatnd where they ltatd spent tlte night, tlte Tigers were in no ntood to latte at glorx-lntngrx' llatrttnouth stluatd batcked bv t , t , I tltousatnds ol XX'inter llztrnixatl speetattors. 'l'he Printe- lull stluatd delnntely wats planing below patr. ats Latp- tzttn Bob Moore led the Datrttnouth teatnt to at li-2 victory with his three goatls. ln the latst period the lndiatns broke at 2-2 tie with lottr ratpid goatls, out- shooting l'rinceton IRS with the puck ratrely in Dant- ntouth territory. l't-rhztps the sweetest l'rint'eton victory ol' the seat- son eatnte on Februatrt eleventh when at hot Yatle sttuatd tratxeled down to liatker Rink to tighten their grip on Iirst platce in tlte Ivy hockey race. The Tigers weren't in atn obliging niood. however, atnd led by .johnny Clook's two goatls atnd one atssist, tlte l'rineeton stluatd clatinied at flfl upset. In tlte third period Cook intercepted a patss ill tlte Tiger blue line atnd stored unatssisted for the l'rint'et.on insnrftnee goatl. Vztu Cerbigstopped thirtytwo shots. Only one Yatlit f eu shot wats atble to get tltrottgh tlte iron-t'latd l'tttt 1' til tlelettse. The win tied l'rittteton with Yatle lor second plzttae in the Ivy ratte. lfour dans latter at grottp ol ex-Yatlies atnd Pritttaeton nten took oll' lront their business homework to platy tlte Print-eton stluatd ttnder tlte batnner ol' tlte St. Nieholats Hockey Club. 'l'he old men did well atnd led tlte Tigers going ittlo tlte third period, bttl Youth s t t . bottnned batek atnd tlte businessnten. beginning to leel tlte stratin. relatxetl enottgh to let the Printeton squatd tie the game and then go on and win it 5-4 in a sudden death overtime. The bitterest defeats of the year soon arrived as the Tigers lost to Harvard and Yale in rapid succes- sion. Before the Harvard game Van Gerbig suffered a broken finger in the warm-up and had to be replaced by Hill, a sophomore. Princeton started off much too slowly, allowing Harvard to amass a 4-0 lead in the first period. For the rest of the game Princeton and Harvard traded goals, and the Tigers were left with the short end of a 7-4 stick. But the real heart- breaker occured in New Haven on February twenty- second. The Tigers scored one goal in the first period and two in the second. Yale tied it up and it looked like the game was going into overtime when Yale scored again in the last second of play to win 4-3. The Bulldogs had bounced back, and the Tigers were unable to hold their lead. On junior Prom weekend the Princeton squad pleased the packed stands by beating Cornell again, this time by a 5-l score. Princeton clearly dominated the rink as Cook scored twice and Hyland scored once and had three assists. Austin Sullivan, a defenseman, had one goal and two assists. Cornell's goalie, Ken- nedy, was kept in frantic motion as he amassed a grand total of thirty-three saves. Van Cerbig, ignoring his broken Hnger, saved twenty-eight. Princeton had the dubious honor of losing to Har- vard when the Cantabs clinched their sixth Ivy League title in eight years in Cambridge on February twenty- eighth. Harvard, trailing 2-0 at 5:25 of the Hrst period, tied the score at 12:52, added two more goals by 14:36 and another during a Tiger major penalty. In short, Harvard clinched the Ivy League Championship by crushing Princeton 9-2. As if the Tigers had not had enough losses at the hands of Harvard and Yale, the Dartmouth squad continued what now seemed to be a tradition with a very decisive 8-3 win over the depressed Princetonians. Johnny Cook led Bob Moore of Dartmouth by one point in the Ivy League l1igl1 scoring race going into this game. Moore tallied with one goal and three assists to tie Cook for high scoring honors. Cook had figured in all Princeton goals with two goals and an assist. lVing Jay Haerth of Dartmouth scored three goals and two assists to end up one point behind Wloore and Cook in the high scoring race. Dartmouth don nated the play throughout the game, and the I ut t squad Hnished up the season on a discouraging note. Thus the Princeton Hockey Team ended a 9-14 season. In Ivy League play they had a record. They had not lived up to expectations and on the whole the season had been disappointing. Yet in individual performances the Tigers had excelled. Johnny Cook was tied in the position of high scorer in the Ivy League with Bob Moore. Goalie and Cap- tain Barry Van Gerbig averaged twenty-six saves per Hill guards the goal as Mockridge grabs the puck. game. The exceptional spirit of Blackwell Cup win- ner Perry Hall and other seniors often rallied the team in the many unfortunate occasions when rallies were necessary. But perhaps the trouble was the fact that the team was filled with too many outstanding individuals. Often the sophomore stars did not work well together, and lack of teamwork fostered by the tendency toward outstanding, yet not outstanding enough, individual play led the team to a record un- worthy of its true talent. Many people have said that this was a year of building for the Princeton Hockey Squad. Perhaps the team, through one bitter season, has learned to work together to form a tightly knit, well-coordinated hockey squad. If all the exceptional talent among the sophomores can be fused with a very promising freshman squad, l96l-62 will probably be an outstanding season for the varsitv stickmen. D 1 St. Nick's businessman prostrates himself before a determined Van Gerhig. My .t I r e E I Iirzcl: Row: Bogli-Henrikssen, Hilliard, Gutman, Thomas, Beattie, Welch. Greist, Wilson, Hughes, Elv, Rhode, Clotworthv QCoachj. Sccoml Row: Pullman, McPherson, Armentront, Williams, 0'Kiellfe, Smith. llrakeley, Richardson, Bosak, Newhouse, Moran, Cibula. Front Row: Green, Grillith, XValker, Andrews, Curry, Tisne, Burkhardt, Barry. Missing: Par llernuth, Pete Bernuth. SWIMMING The Princeton swimming team is again a power to be reckoned with. Coach Bob Glothworthy said at the beginning of the season, I expect four or live of the standing records to go with little trouble. And those records did fall as the Tigers splashed to a 6-4 record, the Hrst winning season since l956, placed second in the Eastern Intercollegiate Individual Cham- pionships, and captured two team Trophies in AAU meets. Clotworthy's pre-meet prediction that NYU Confusion reigns after medley relay finals in the Eastern Regionals. E 'tshouldn't be too tough was conhrmed when the Tigers won 63-32 i11 their iirst meet ol the year. As an omen of the season to come, sophomore Gardiner Green became the second American to swim the 200- yard breaststroke under 2:20. YVith a line-up juggled to let everyone swim, the Tiger tankers captured eight individual wins and two relay wins. One week later alter a grueling bus ride to Providence, the Princeton mermen fell victim to a Brown upset. In the last event the Tiger 1100-yard freestyle relay team was unable to keep pace with their opponents in this hrst Ivy contest. Three new records set by the well- rested Bruins contributed to the 53-42 defeat. After the meet thirteen members of tl1e lreshman and var- sity squads departed for Vero Beach, Florida for a Christmas training session, an event unprecedented in the history of Princeton swimming. Alter the vacation, the Orange and Black swimmers regained their winning form when they defeated the Lions ol Columbia, 60-35. X'Vith a time of 2:ll.9, team captain George Brakeley broke his own record for the 220-yard freestyle. This victory was combined with wins by Jim Grillith, Jim Beattie, John Greist, and Tim XValker. A G0-35 victory over Penn gave the Bengal swimmers their second league win. The outstanding performance ol the day was turned in by the medley relay team comprised ol Chris Pullman, backstrokeg Green, breaststrokeg Jim Hilliard, butter- Ily: and Dully Hughes. freestyle. as it broke the var- sity record in its event. ul just couldn't helieve it, exnltecl Coach Cllot- worthy over his team's crushing victory over Cornell. 457-28. While the Tigers stroked their way to three new records. the hapless Big Red could only capture two lirst. places. The ellorts ol Rick XVilliams, Tom XYelch. Green and Grillith chipped ten seconds oil' the pool record lor the medley relay. l,ast year's lrosh captain, Grillith, lowered a long-standing pool mark in the hutterlly with a 2:l2.li. and junior -john Greist's Sl second H10-yarcl t't-wt,-ttf hroke the uni- versity record ol 52.2. On January 28, .innior Titn XX'alkc-r won the llunior National Diving Ghampion- ships lrom the one-meter hoard. Coach Cllotworthy did11't expect too much trouble from the weak Rutgers squad. His prophecy proved right as the Princeton tankmen smashed the Scarlet Knights, 71-255. Once again captain lirakeley lowered his mark lor the 220-yard freestyle, this time hy 2.2 seconds. Though Clotworthy was using his second- line swiimners, Rutgers eoulcl only grab two lirst and two second places. In the most thrilling meet ol' the season the Tigers upset Dartmouth, 52--12. for their fourth consecutive league win against no losses. Grillith turned in the outstanding perlortnance ol' the day as he lowered the 200-yard hutterlly recorcl by nearly live seconds. In other events haclcstroker XVelc'h, lreestyler Greist, and individual medleyist Gardiner Green each rap- turecl new university records. Although they did not win the event, Greist, Hughes, Dave Moran and Rick XX'illiams broke the university record in the -100-yard freestyle medley. Xvelch and Pullman are oll in the 100-yard haclastroke. l Tigers cheer on hreaslstrolcer Green. Princeton lost to Harvard, 55--10. But as Goacth Cllotworthy commented, lt was a great perlormance which signified the real coming of Princeton swim- ming power '. Once again the medley relay team ol XVelc'h, Green, Grillith, and XVilliams knocked sec'- oncls oll' ol' its record, ancl liralceley garnered a new university record in the --lslll-yarcl freestyle. Tim XVallcer won the diving while several other Tiger swimmers lost hair-ln'eadth races in their events. At Yale the following week, the Tiger mermen ran out ol' steam, losing titi-29. The tankers could only manage three lirst places. one each in the breast- stroke, lmackstroke, and diving. In their linal Eastern yltmior National Clhampion Walker displays his high-scoring talents. an-- 'P 'P' w if Ifreestyling Captain George lirakeley fcenterj springs forward at the gun. XX t't't'or'cl-br'e:rl4er' Green grabs the lead rn thc ltlll-yartl breaststroke during the liastern ionals. Intercollegiate meet ol' the year, Princeton sullered its third deleat in a row at the hands ol Nayy, 61-34. Howeyer, the meet was closer than the store indicates, as many ol' the races were extremely close. The med- ley relay teanr won, tlrrrs completing the season un- delealed. Xyhat happened in Dillon pool during the Eastern Intercollegiate Individual Championships had every- one talking. Not the least ol these was Bob Clot- worthy. who exclaimed, Hl,l'TIlikClOll swimming stock is on the risef' Ten records were shattered by the Tigers as they linished in the number two slot behind Yale. Among these was a new National Collegiate record ol l:llEl,9 in the 100-yard breaststroke by sopho- more Green. junior Tom Xyelch berame the first triple winner in Princieton Intercollegiate history, as he outdistanced the field in both the lllll- and 200- yard backstroke, setting records in both eyerrts. His third win came as he joined with Green, Greist, and Hilliard to capture the medley relay and another ret-ord. Divers john Andrews and Xklalker, lreestyler liralceley, butterlly ace Griffith, breaststrolcer Beattie, and the lreestyle relay team were also litralists. In the course of the year the Tigers picked up two trophies in the AAU Metcall Memorial and Diamond Chip meets. ln the latter meet Green came within two seconds ol' the listed AAU record lor the lO0-yard breaststroke with a time of l:02.tS. This, ol course, garnered him a university record. Coach Glotwortlry took his medley relay ICHIH of XX'elch, Green, GriHith, and XVilliams out to Seattle where they gave l'rinceton a tenth place in the N.G..X..-X. meet. Green swam in hoth breaststroke Iinals, tying lor third in the 220-yard eyent in 2119.5 behind Nliclrigarrs Ronald Glarles record-shattering 2: lil.-l and taking lourth in the lllll-yard race in l:O3.1, only one second behind the record-setting winner. The medley team finished filth in 3:-lo.-1. one ol' their best times, while Ohio State was breaking the American record with a 3:-10.3 cilocking. Princeton swimming fans could look lorward to next year with high hopes as all lour men would be back. Back Row: Conroy Qcoachp , MacRae, Avery, Nagy, Trimble, Smith, Kaplan fmanagerj. Front Row: Kitzen, McGuire, Vehslage, Zug, Cox, Davison. SQUASH lVith the two top men in the league, senior Steve Vehslage and junior Jim Zug, and a promising group of sophomores, squash coach John Conroy looked for a very successful '60-'61 season. At the end of the season Conroy had this to say, X'Ve wound up with a 9-3 record for the season, but the team could have taken just about three more victories. January was the Tigers' month as they squashed six successive teams. On their hrst weekend of compe- tition the Princeton racquetmen took a double-header in breezing by Fordham, 9-0, and putting down the Cadets of Army, 6-3. The inexperienced Fordham team suffered three game defeats in all nine matches. Since the Army match was played on the Cadets' home courts, the Princeton victory was a good sign of the season to come. In the number one spot Vehslage picked up a three-game win, while Zug, Bart McGuire, and Hilton Smith won in the two, three, and four spots respectively. On the following weekend the sarne story un-folded as the Tigers crushed inexperi- enced M.I.T. and Cornell teams in 9-0 victories. The Amherst squad was up for its match with the Tigers. Nevertheless, they ended up on the losing end of the 6-3 score. Next, a visiting team from Toronto fell victim to the Orange and Black raequetmen, 8-l. The Tigers' six-game winning streak fell at An- napolis. Despite three game victories by Zug and Vehslage at the number one and two positions, Prince- X ton lost the nip-and-tuck match, 5-4. XVith tive of the matches dragging out into five games, it was as close as they come. John Mendelson and Bill Davison took two of these live-game contests. A very steady Harvard team buckled the Tigers, 7-2, in a closely contested match. Only Vehslage and Zug won, both walking away with three-game wins to continue their undefeated records for the season. The team traveled North for weekend encounters with VVilliams and Yale. At N'Villiams the match went pretty much as expected as most of the Tigers took quick command of the court. The result was a 5-4 victory. But at Yale the racquetmen suffered their worst defeat of the season by a score of 8-l. Only Davison, playing his best match of the season, was able to win. Bouncing back from its stinging loss to Yale, Princeton shut out Penn, 9-0. The Quakers were only able to extend two matches into four games. In the last match of the season, the team out-slugged Dart- mouth, 7-2. Again the Princeton players picked up most of their wins in three games. Steve Vehslage defeated Yale's Ralph Howe, 3-l, to become the first man ever to win the Intercollegiate Squash Tournament three years in succession. The Elis, however, won the team title with I6 points to the Tigers, 14. Back Row: Forand, Sampson, Soare, Carfagno, Faisal, Kury, McDevitt, Sieja fCoachj. Second Row: Borda, Van der Aue, Wlood, Sands, Grady, Knoppers, Partridge. Front Iioun' Odo, Adams. Anger fCapt.j , Chapman, Wlitherspoon. FENCING The varsity fencing team compiled a creditable six and four record this year although three of the four losses were to Ivy League teams. Exceptionally strong in epee, the team was led by Captain Frank Anger and coached by Stan Sieja. Anger was backed up at epee by Bob Chapman and Ed Carfagno-a combination which gave the team strength in depth. ln its traditional match against the alumni the team was defeated by the narrow margin of 14 to 13. The captains of the past two fencing teams led the alumni to their victory. After Christmas vacation the team returned to defeat a weak Haverford squad, 19 to 8. Haverford gained most of its points in the lower positions. At Annapolis the following weekend the fencers squeaked past a tough Navy team with a 5 to 4 victory in Bob Wood's final foil match. Leading the team were Ed Carfagno in epee and Jim Adams in foil. The foil and epee teams both won while the sabre team was defeated. In New York the swordsmen were beaten by a very strong N.Y.U. team. Undefeated in three seasons, N.Y.U.'s team was the NCAA fencing champion last year. The score was 18 to 9. Two weeks later the team faced C.C.N.Y. in their first home match which they won handily 18 to 9. The epee team made a clean sweep of their matches while the foil team won 5 to 4 and the sabre team lost by the same score. Heavy snow forced the Colum- bia match to be rescheduled and the Tigers prepared to face Penn, their first league opponent. Princeton won in epee, 5-4, despite the shift of Captain Anger to foil, but they were defeated in the other two weapons. The final score was 15 to 12. The swordsmen defeated Rutgers the following week, 16 to 11, in New Brunswick with the Scarlet Knights giving the Princeton team more trouble than was expected. Encouraged by this victory the Tigers returned home to face Harvard. This second league contest was a vital one, and despite winning margins in two weapons, the fencers were edged out 14 to 13. Rolling up leads of 6-3 in foil and 5-tl in epee, the varsity found its downfall in sabre, which the Cantabs dominated, 7-2. Outstanding swordsman of the after- noon was Jim Adams who swept all three of his foil matches. After a two week postponement Columbia traveled to Princeton to demonstrate their league-leading talents. The visitors dominated all three weapons, taking foil, 6-3, sabre, 7-2, and epee, This victory for Columbia assured them of the League Champion- ship. In their final two matches the Tigers found their strength and defeated two lvy League opponents. Yale and Cornell both fell before the swordsmen on consecutive Saturdays by 17 to 10 scores. ln both of these matches the epee and foil teams continued on their winning ways. The epee team led by Anger, Carfagno and Chap- man compiled the best winning record for the season. The foil team led by Jim Adams and Frank Odo followed in the winning footsteps of the epeemen while the sabre team turned out to be the weak link. jim Adams compiled the team's best personal record. In the NCAA tournament, Adams, Anger, and John Sands scored 68 points to finish second to N.Y.U., while coach Stan Sieja was named coach of the year. WRESTLING A discouraging tl-Et record was all the varsity grap- plers had to show lor their ellorts in l960-til compe- tition. The teatn managed to roll up a meager 63 points against their opponents' 213. Shut-outs were handed to the Tigers on three occasions by Lehigh. Rutgers. and Penn. Losses to such lorniidable powers as Lehigh and Rutgers are understandable, but such a poor showing in the Ivy League is indicative ol severe weaknesses. Individually' the squad lared no better. Rick lickler in the IS7-pound class and liart Ferris in the H37- pound class were the only regulars to compile win- ning records. Continually unahle to improve their position. the matmen were constantly losing points on riding time. Princeton men ellec ted only three pins while they were pinned thirteen times hy opponents. .Xnother weak spot was takedowns. The opening takedown went to the Tigers in only I5 ol 81 matches. The opening contest saw the Tigers crushed by one ol the most powerlul Rutgers wrestling squads in recent years. 3534-tl. Seriously handicapped by injuries and exam pressures. the wrestlers dropped their sec- ond ntatch to ilolutnhia. 22-8. The only bright spots in this contest were provided by .lim Marks, who took a 5-U decision at l-IT. and Ralph Yan Fossen, who won a 2-I thriller at l57. Lehigh unceremoniously dumped the grapplers E55-0. winning all nine bouts, as only Rick Eckler and Gerry Norton came close to victory. In their meet with Franklin and Marshall the Tigers amassed their greatest point total. coming within live points ol' lf, and M. lfranklin and Marshall won the hrst lour matches: the Tigers bounced back with four consecutive victories in the next four weight classes: hut lf. and NI. came through with a lall in the hnal tnatch to deleat Princeton 2l-lti. Rick Eckler and Bart lferris won decisions, while Bill XYoodward and Dan llent pinned. their opponents. The tnatmen dropped their filth straight to Penn, 27-ll. This marked the third time that the grapplers lailed to produce a winner at any weight, class. .Xs they were coming close to their lirst victory, the grapplers were served a deleat by Brown, I5-l-1, in the closing seconds ol the heavyweight match. ,Xlter losing the first l'our matches, the matmen lought back to take the lead and retained it until the heavyweight match. Rick lickler. wrestling in the l57-pound class, was the hero lor Princeton as he scored the only pin at l:I2 in the third period with a bar and cross lace hold. Steve Nlacaleer, Bart Ferris, and Dan Dent also won. Sullering a I5-I2 setback at the hands ol' the Crim- son, the Tigers lor the second time in a row came within a narrow margin ol' victory. Going into the llll-pound match, Harvard was leading. I2-9. ,X split in the last two events wrapped it up lor the oppo- nents. l'rinceton's heavyweight, Gerry Norton, wres- tled an outstanding contest to win ti-5 on a penalty and a late reversal. Ralph Geer. Riik lickler. and liart lferris also triumphed, The winless varsity dropped its eighth match to Yale. Ill-IZ. .Xlter the Tiger lightweights and middle- weights had piled up a l2-ti lead. the heavyweights dropped three straight to dissipate all hopes ol' vic- tory. Coming up with his first victory ol' the season, Yung XX'ong, wrestling' at l23, gained a 5-E5 decision. Tom Bond at lfill also gained his initial victory' by a 5-0 score. Other Princeton winners were Ritk lickler and Bart lferris. Only a draw hy sophoniore Steve Nlacaleer averted a shut-out in the closing match ol' the season. as Cornell tronnced the Tigers 26-2 to hand them their ninth loss. lfacl: Roan' Reed tlloachi. Nlarks. Norton. Nlaealeer. Dent. delsrier. l'ickels. Holmes, Holt. Seconrl lime: lwigger. Landau. Geert lYooclwartl, lzcklet. lfetiis. lfmnl Ilona' Wong. Bond, Lasater, Keller lfelsenthal. Iiaclr Korn: XVhitton tcoachj, Morgan tcoachj. Frye. Carr, Von Blake ttrainerj, Day, xvlflllClllll2iyCl', Nledwctl fmanagerj, YVeiss tcoathj. Third limit: Kingston, Murphy, Cable, Hales, Gardner, Hugill. C. Phillips, Nlclrose. Scrum! Roni: Hoey, Rose, D. Phillips, XValpole, Herold, Xicliparenko, Sobel, Kotler flIlllllIlg'Cl'J. Front Noir: Manning, Baker, Hedgren. lidmunds, 'l'hurher, Azoy, Shenk. WINTER TRACK I.ed by Captain Dick Edmunds, the winter track team enjoyed one of its most successful seasons in years. The team set several new university records and improved in virtually all events as the season pro- gressed. In the Iirst dual meet of the season the Tigers crushed Seton Hall, 76-33, displaying tremendous strength in the middle distance running, an area in SKI TEAM The Princeton Ski Team this year competed in eight meets in the New England Intercollegiate Ski Conference, a conference composed of thirteen south- ern New England colleges. In the XVilliam A. Henry Memorial Giant Slalom at Cranmore, N. H., on Jan- uary twenty-ninth, the Tigers finished in third place in a field ol' ten, and live days later in the XValter I-'oley Races at Killington, Vt., they repeated their Clornwall, Straus, Kellogg, Pettibone Qcaptainj, Cohen, Yhay. which three records were shattered. Captain Edmunds smashed the 600-yard mark with a blistering time of l:l6.4. ln the 1000-yard race XVhit Azoy broke the tape in 2:l3.3 to erase the old record while the mile relay team set an indoor mark of 3:l9.2. The Tiger trackmen next defeated Penn and Columbia in the annual Polar Bear meet, NW-50W-l5, with Penn second. Again the runners paved the way, led by Azoy's 4:lS.2 mile. The thinclads continued on their winning ways in crushing Rutgers, Tlyl-375. On the previous night Edmunds came from behind to win the Buermeyer 500 in the lY.Y.A.C. meet. He became the first Princeton athlete since N34 to win in a major track meet. In the Big Three meet at New Haven, the Tigers were crushed by Yale and Harvard, fi51f3-1191,fQ-22Lf5, but accumulated more points than they had done in many years in this meet. Highlight of the meet, as far as Princeton was concerned, was the mile relay team's 3:l7.8 mile which set a Coxe Cage, Big Three, and Princeton record. The thinclads next participated in the Heptagonals held at Cornell and finished seventh out of ten in a meet won easily by Yale. In the final meet of the year, the lC4A meet, the team placed sixth, as the mile relay team pulled off one of the greatest upsets of the season, coming from behind to win. Led by Edmunds, Avoy, the mile relay team, and Charlie Mitchell, who set a university mark in the pole vault with several jumps of l-1', the team was undoubtedly one of the most successful that Princeton has had in a long time. previous performance by taking a combined third place, finishing seventh in the slalom on Saturday and second in the downhill on Sunday. Two weeks later, the Tigers faced poor snow conditions at Dart- mouth and slipped to ninth place in the giant slalom on Saturday, but they were able to move up to sixth place in the slalom at Hfoodstock, Vt., on Sunday. .X week later the Tigers barely missed third place in the slalom at Sunapee because of a technical disquali- fication, and poor snow conditions forced the cancella- tion of the giant slalom on the following day. The Tigers completed the season with a third place in the Tufts Slalom at I,aconia, New Hampshire, on March eleventh. This has been the team's most successful year. Spencer Kellogg finished third in individual standings and earned the class B racing status, while Captain Peter Pettibone, '61, Dick Cornwall, '62, Dave Vhay, '62, and Tony Jones, '63 were consistent scorers for Princeton. Pete Cohen, '63, Oscar Straus, '64, John ,q'klllS, '64, Charlie Kendrick, '64, Josh Beardsley, '64, and Larry Frank, '64 also raced well for Princeton. Buck lfnztz' Donovan ttoaclij. lfaust. Roberts. Krugman tiklgtyj Ifronl Ilozws liotnick. Kitch, Howard. Johnston, Powell. The H360-l96l Princeton lfreshman Basketball Team began the season with a llourish, slumped at the hall'-way mark, and linishecl strongly, compiling a 7-6 record. Inconsistency hurt the team consistently, and sloppy ball handling marred several good per- formances. Yet the over-all lrosh record was a good one, promising a rosy future lor Tiger basketball. In their opener against Trenton junior College, the lreshmen started slowly, and due to poor shoot- ing were down by two at the hall. Early in the second period, the Tigers, sparked by Rick XVright, who netted 22, pulled away to an easy 625--l7 victory. A week later, the yearlings again had a weak first hall, but came back to defeat a strong Manhattan team, 72-66. YVright and Dick Botnick paced the victors. The following night, the Tiger cubs repeated at Columbia, garnering a 78-68 win. Bill Howard and Bill Hunter controlled the boarcls, as XVright and Botnick con- tinued their scoring spree. The Orange and Black cagers began their slump at XVest Point, where they dropped a 72-60 decision. Close on the heels ol' this deleat came a loss to Rut- gers at New Brunswick, with the lrosh playing well below their early season lorm, Trying in vain to stop the sluggishness ol' top scorer XX'right and the team in general, Coach lid Donovan's lrosh hve bowed at Yale in a 65-53 decision. lili Rich Rominsky put on a one-man show. overshaclowing line performances by YVright. liotnick. and lfloward. Temporarily gaining momentum.. the Princeton freshmen repeated their deleat ol Columbia in an lt S5 uc,-9 ' - - - ' f ' ks--5- romp at Dillon Cym on lsebruary lr. I he I tger win was a team etlort. as the first and second squads ran at will over the hapless New Yorkers, who were without the services ol' high point man XValiansky. On the lollowing evening, the lrosh fell prey to a line Seton Hall ball club, 76-66. After staying with the visiting Pirates lor the lirst half, the Tigers cooled oll' and succumbed. Bill Howard starred in the losing cause. Travelling to Lawrencieville on February 25. the lreshmen met a tough Rider squad. Alter an early spurt, the Princetonians lacled to take an 82-64 drub- bing. Howard, Dick Chandler, and Rick Johnston shone in the loss. The yearlings came to life at Lafayette, as Dick Chancller's I8 points led the team to a 53-56 win. Chuck Powell scored the winning tally. Returning home, the lrosh avenged their defeat by Rutgers in a stunning triumph, leaturing a brilliant performance by Bill Howard ancl a 57-point second hall. On the lollowing evening, March 4, a tall Harvard live proved too much lor the Princeton team, as they cruised to a 67-57 victory. XX'right and Chandler led the losers' scoring. The spectacular climax to the season came on March S at Penn's Palestra. The Tiger lrosh had an erratic lirst hall, but remained in control until late in the game. XX'ith 90 seconds to go Paul Kitch put the lrosh ahead, but Penn countered with a basket, Then, fi seconds belore the Iinal whistle, Dick Chandler sank a 26-loot jumper to give Princeton a 69-67 edge. FRESHMAN FENCING lincl: Rnztt: Lands. Chapin. Slossberg. Childs, White. Meacham, Patty, Pressly, XVorden. Ifmul Rout: Page. Rampona, Boris, llocker. Hicks. Constable. Whiteside. Kabert, Sieja tcoachj. FRESI-IMAN SWIMMING Led by record-breakers ljed Graef and Dave Ken- nedy and coached by versatile Mickey Vogt, the freshman swimming team compiled an 8-2-1 record for the season. Yearling record-setter pled Graef, captain of the squad, shattered the national freslnnan inter- collegiate record in the 200-yard backstroke event. Teannnate Kennedy set a Princeton freslnnan and university record in the 200-yard individual medley. Y Hack Rout: Childers, Briggs. 'l hompson, Mayo, Snyder, Vogt tcoachj , Graef, YVal1less, Richardson, Lloyd. Frou! Roan' YValters, Iingle, Price, Lee, Kennedy, Mclferran, Golden, Doniger, Broder- ick, loll, Chambers. The freslnnan fencing team had an unfortunately weak season this year, winning only four of eight matches. Traveling with the varsity for the better part of their schedule, the freslnnen faced strong competition. Coach Sieja said that the group had strong potential but needed experience. Two of the frosh did quite well with their respective weapons and are fine prospects for next year. Doug Rampona led the foil team while Bob XVhite headed the epee squad. At Annapolis the swordsmen were soundly defeated by the Navy Plebes and at NYU. they suffered a similar defeat. After a two-week respite, they turned the tables at home and won a handy victory over CI.CI.N.Y. After losing to a strong Penn freshman team, the fencers were reorganized and came back to defeat a surprisingly powerful Rutgers squad, 20 to 7. En- couraged by this victory, the frosh went on to defeat the highly touted Columbia freshmen, 16 to 11. The frosh split their last two contests, defeating Riverdale CZ. S. and losing to Yale. Outstanding members of the team were selected to compete in the Eastern Intercollegiate Ifencing Tour- nament and the N.C.A.A. tournament alter the end of the regular season. The team got off to a great start by downing the visiting New York University freshmen, 52-42. In the next meet, Graef cracked the freshman and universityi record in the 100-yard backstroke as the yearling mer- men defeated Peddie School, 59 to 27. Resuming the schedule after Christmas vacation, the frosh tankers extended their record to eight Wins and no losses before succumbing to a mighty Harvard team. The Princeton freshmen swamped the Columbia yearlings, 70 to 15. Traveling to Pennsylvania, the freshmen invaders captured nine of the eleven first places, handing the Quakers a 57 to 57 defeat. Then at Pottstown, the still undefeated freslnnen barely managed a 115 to 41 victory over the Hill School. Returning to Dillon Pool, the mermen ousted their Lawrenceville opponents, 50 to 36. Then, after nolching their eighth consecutive victory by over- powering Trenton High School, 53 to the fresh- men swimmers faced a formidable Crimson power- house. Ilespite record-breaking performances by Graef, Kennedy, and the freshman freestyle relay team, the Tigers dropped a tense 51 to 4-f decision to the visiting Cautabs. Because of a lack of depth, a problem which hindered the team all season, the Bengals could only achieve a '13 to 43 tie in the next meet with Haverford. In the final meet of the season at New Haven, the spirited freshman team lost a tensely-fought contest to the Eli yearlings, 52 to 43. FRESHMAN SQUASH llnder the capable direction of Coach Dick Swin- nerton and with the competent leadership of team captain Bert Train, the freshman scjuash team hnished a winning season with an impressive 9-Z5 record. At the head of the squad was Gerry Skev, followed by George Boynton and Bert Train in the second and third positions. The Tiger ractjuetmen opened the season during the first week of january at XVest Point with a 7 to 2 victory over the ,-Yrrny Plebes. After a successful be- ginning, the yearlings captured a 5 to 2 decision from the Episcopal Academy and easilv shut out Hill School, 7 to fl. The three-game winning streak was brought to an abrupt halt as llaverford School overpowered the Bengals, handing them a 5 to 2 defeat.. Undeterred, the spirited Tiger scjuad rebounded and extended its record to six wins and one loss by crushing its next three opponents. Penn Charter, Navy, and again Penn Clrarter with scores of 6 to 1, 9 to 0, and 5 to 2. ln the next contest. facing what Coach Dick Swin- nerton called Hone of Harvard's strongest teams in FRESHMAN WINTE The 1964 thinclads revealed great potential in com- piling a 5-2 won-lost record this past season. Trernen- dous performances all season long in the hurdles, the jumps, and the sprints more than made up for weak- nesses in some of the field events. The thinclads opened the season by running the Seton Hall freshmen into the snow, 70 to 39. The following Saturday the team continued to show awe- some strength, especially in the sprints and hurdles, as they overwhelmed the Rutgers freslnnen, 79 to 30. The Tiger yearlings swept all eight track events and three of the field events, losing only the 35-pound weight throw and the shot put. The highlight of the match was jim Hartnett's 6'2 leap in the high jump, two or three inches higher than most jumps in the varsity meets. The team next traveled to Lawrence- ville where they easily defeated the Larries, 66 to 29. The Tiger yearlings swept hrst and second place in the sprints, hurdles and jumps and were never seri- ously threatened. Bob Bedford ran his finest mile of the season as he edged out a former I.arrie teammate in -l-:28.4. The freslnnan trackmen next traveled to New Haven to tangle with the perennially strong Harvard and Yale vearlings. Although the team placed third behind Yale and Harvard respectively. -WW to -UK, to -ll. the score showed considerable improvement over last 4 Buck Rout: Wellford, johnson, Skey, lXlacCracken, Symington, liognton. lfruul Rout: Gray, Singmaster, Train, Buxton, Young. twenty years, the raccjuetmen led 3 to 2 until the closing minutes when they were finally overcome by the powerful Cantabs, 6 to A week later, in a tightly fought battle, the team suffered a 4 to 3 loss at the hands of Haverford School. In the final matches of the season, the frosh team boasted a 9 to 0 victory over Yale and defeated the Penn freslnnen by the same score. The Tiger team rounded out a highly creditable season with a 6 to 1 victory over the Episcopal Academy. R TRACK year. 'Tremendous individual performances were turned in by Hugh MacMillan and Lewis Hitzrot. MacMillan tied a school record in winning the 60-yard dash in 6.35 seconds while Hitlrot set an unofhcial freshman record of l:l11.8 in the 600-yard run, although finishing second to Yale's Pete jokli. The '6-l track- men closed out the season with an impressive victory over Penn and Columbia, 73W to 495 to l2, in the Polar Bear meet. The thinclads captured nine of the thirteen events in spite of wind, rain and a soggy track. liaclt Roan' Dickson tmanagerj, Whitton tfcoachj. Morgan tcoachj, XVeiss tcoachj , Medwed Qinanagerj. Tlzirrl Row: .-Xrst. Summers. Harris. Meeker, Newens. Richards, Boslongh. Moss. Second Row: llankson, Most, XN'ilson. Pierson, Siegfried. Porietis. Taft. Frou! Roar: Dixon, Stockarcl, Bedford. Strother. Parming. liolander. Brown. MacMillan. liarlr How: Marquet, Trout, Blair, Hoit, Phillips, West, Cima ftrainerj. Second Row: jameson Qmgtxj, Karjane, Naples, Hunter, Finch, Hegner, Sampson, Whitehouse, Devine, Donovan tcoachj. Front Hmm Adams, McMillan, Douglas, Ippolito, Murray, Herrell, Mvslik. lx'11r'1'l111g.' lloh Sweeney, Colin l.eit'li, Dave Sweeney. comparatively young played on-andbil ball on secutive winning season. McMillan, Mike Ippolito, Naples lays down a sacrihee hunt during final Yale game. with sometimes brilliant, sometimes mediocre pitching by Dave Douglas and Mlally Phillips gave the Tigers a tour and live, Hfth place, E.I.B.L. record and a 13-ll record overall. Spring vacation saw the Tigers open the season in the Southland with two overwhelming victories sand- wiching a 5 to 1 loss to North Carolina State. Bill McMillan had seven R.B.I.'s in the opener as the Orange and Black crushed Elon 19 to 2, while jack Xllhitehouse drove in four men in a 21 to 6 victory over Georgetown. But against North Carolina State the squad could garner only three singles. Returning north, the Tigers extended their win streak to four games. Mike Devine's bases-loaded triple gave the team a 7 to 5 victory over Rutgers, while Lafayette presented the Tigers with four un- earned runs, bowing 6 to 2. C.C.N.Y. provided the opposition in Princeton's first home game, but key blows by Pete Crispo and Mike Ippolito along with seven walks gave the Bengals an 8 to 2 victory. In the next home game, however, Princeton left sixteen men on base and committed five errors to donate the contest to Seton Hall, 13 to 2. The Tigers opened their league season at Columbia with high hopes but, after tallying hve times in the hrst inning, did nothing for the rest of the game and lost by a run. Freshman Prom weekend saw Dave Douglas pitch the Hrst Princeton no-hitter since 1952 fd- to shut out previously undefeated Manhattan. Then Dartmouths Indians were clawed ll to 4 as nine Bengals crossed the plate in the sixth with Murray and Meklillan providing the key bingles. Villanova fell under a Tiger onslaught three days later when Devine and Murray hit circuit blows to lead the way to a IFS to 2 victory. The winning streak came to an end the following weekend in Providence when Brown halted a ninth- inning rally to win 5 to 4. But, on the next day in Cambridge, Dave Douglas held the Crimson to two runs while Mc-Nlillan and Murray were leading the Tigers to lour. The Iollowing week, however, the Orange and Black ran into trouble. losing to Rutgers 3 to I, to Cornell 5 to 2 in twelve innings, to N.Y.U. 8 to 3, a11d to Penn 3 to 2. ln this latter game, Douglas walked in the winning run in the ninth after lfl Tigers had gone down swinging. The Bulldogs of Yale invaded Tigertown a few days later, but Princeton was ready for them. Elmer Naples and Mike Devine delivered important singles in a threearun seventh inning rally to top the Yalies 6 to Army's Iirst place Cadets easily beat the Bengals 10 to 2, but Navy fell 2 to l before a 420-foot home run by Ippolito in the fourteenth inning. The Tigers crushed Fordham, scoring twelve runs on nine hits and fifteen walks, but bowed to Yale in New Haven when the Bulldogs tallied seven times in the hrst on four hits and four errors. Colgate defeated Princeton a few days later 7 to 4 as twelve Tigers struck out. ln the traditional final game against Yale during reunions. the Tigers took the rubber game of the season series by scoring five eighth inning runs to win 7 to 3. The most encouraging aspect of the moderately successful season was the good performance of many of tht- sophmores and juniors. Since lppolito, Murray, and Douglas were the only starters who graduated, the l96l season should be an even better one. McMillan's steal ignites rally in Dartmouth game. .tai Dave Douglas showing form that made him the first Princeton pitcher since 1952 to throw a no-hitter. ml? Tiger rally induces Bulldog strategy meeting. --. x in Barker's shot eludes harassing Hopkins goalie. Allen outmanenvers Cadet goalie for score. the League and dashed Yale's hopes for its hrst Ivy Grown since 1956. On a rainy, muddy lVednesday in New Brunswick, Princeton beat Rutgers for the Hrst time in three years due to precise teamwork and the line defensive play of goalie Cookie Krongard. The Tigers went ahead to stay in the second period and built their lead into a 9 to 6 victory. For the third year in a row, the lyy Crown was at stake when Princeton met Cornell in the last game of the season. Sophomore Bruce Nelson led the scoring with two goals, but Prineeton's linal G to 5 victory was due once again to a brilliant team ellort. Goalie Krongard opened the scoring by dashing the length ol' the lield in the hrst quarter to score in an exhibition that neither coach nor referee had seen in a total of more than lilly years experience in lacrosse. The team should well be proud of its line showing. Playing with key men sidelined repeatedly because of injuries and in a league where the competition is becoming stiffer every year, the Princeton stickmen developed into a coordinated unit whose spirit and determination earned them their championship. West Point defenders are caught Ilatfooted as Milling moves in to score. Standing: Iecouut, Bach. Kunkemueller, Hall, Sprague, :X1CX1ll1llL'l',RllIllCl'llll'il.g0llL'll lx'nz'rlir1g: Swanson qpfioxswainj. CREW NABLE to work on Lake Carnegie for almost the whole 1l1OI1ll1 of March, both heavyweight crews had to build up their pre-season mileage on dry land. After the ice cleared from the lake the crews were able to average seventeen miles a day during the spring recess. Although nine men had been lost from the previous year, Coach Dutch Schoch was optimistic as the team prepared for their first race with Navy. Both varsity crews traveled to Annapolis to take on the Middies. The 150 lb. boat nosed out a last ditch Navy attempt to come from behind and won the race. The lack of experience of the heavies, who finished a length behind their high-stroking opponents was evi- dent. The following weekend the lights traveled to New York where they met Columbia and Penn on the Hudson River. After all the shells were swamped by a passing Coast Guard vessel, the crews once again lined up for the start. YVith a strong wind Princeton led the Held down to the line, taking an easy victory. The following week, however, Al Povey's 150 pounders lost to a very fast Cornell crew by only .6 of a second. In the Chi1d's Cup Race, the Penn heavyweights rowed away with the trophy for the third straight year. Columbia came in a poor third, six lengths behind runnerup Princeton. In the XVood-Hammond Cup Regatta the lightweights faced the top-rated Harvard eight. Taking advantage of a brisk tail-wind blowing down Lake Carnegie, the Cantabs not only 175 Mrs. lfordue ll. St. john and Nlrs. Sallv Prescott launch crew son In ilirisleuingi lwo new shells. i Harvard edges out into an early lead in the Compton Cup Race. beat the Tigers but set a new record for the Henley Distance. Penn trailed behind the pacesetters for the entire race. One week later the 15th Annual Eastern Sprint Championships were held at Lake Quinsigamond in Worcester, Mass. Both the varsity lightweight and heavyweight crews placed fifth in the finals after taking their respective qualifying heats. In the lightweight division Harvard made a clean sweep, winning both the varsity and freshman events. In an upset Cornell edged out Harvard, winner of last year's Henley re- gatta, by flve seconds. In the 150 pounder's last race of the season, the Tigers faced Yale and Harvard for the Goldthwait Cup. The race, held on the Charles River, was a Harvard victory from the very outset with Princeton second. The only consolation for the Orange and Black was the JV's defeat of the previously undefeated Har- vard JV's. The same day, in Ithaca, the heavyweights faced a Cornell crew which had upset Harvard in the Sprint Championships. Despite the challenge made by Prince- ton in the final quarter-mile, Cornell remained a boat's length ahead to take the race. After the end of the school year the heavies traveled to Syracuse for the I.R.A. Regatta on Lake Onondaga. The representatives from the Mfest Coast swept the race. California took Hrst place and XVashington, second. Princeton made a weak showing coming in tenth. After a month of extensive practice the heavyweights returned to Lake Onondaga on the seventh of July to enter the Olympic trials. The eight man shell, after a poor showing against Syracuse in a practice run, decided to split into two four-man shells, one with cox and one without. In the quarter-finals the four-man with cox placed second to NVashington, and the four- man without cox placed first in its qualifying heat. Both shells went on to the semihnals where the shell without cox came in second to Lake Vfashington, beating Detroit. The finals for four-men without cox, resulted in a Princeton third place behind Lake llfashington and Navy. Slamlirzg: Hinchinan, Thurber, Marx, Roberts, McKenzie, Dyer, Cutler, Canipaigne. Kzzmfling: Shaflo QCoxswainj. 47' ji Y Ng Burl: Razr: Brown, fnigiij, Nabers, Cartier, Anderson, Huettig, Richardson, Coach Conroy. Frou! Roan' Carspecken, Tompkins, Ackley, Hartman, Williams. TENNIS ND rain fell upon New Jersey forty days and forty nights, and the Brokaw Field Tennis Courts were exceedingly immdated. Princeton's 1960 tennis team could practice not at all. So their coach, John Conroy, took them south during spring vacation. There they played matches with Rollins College and the University of Miami. The team managed only a 2-5 record on their southern jaunt. But under the Florida sun, the team picked up valuable practice and game experience. Back to Tigertown they came-captain Roy Anderson with fellow seniors John Cartier and Hugh Huettigg juniors Tom Richardson and Tim Scarllg and from '62's undefeated frosh team, sophomores Drayton Nahers, Dick XVilliams, and Sandy Ackley. Dwellers in l9l5 Hall weren't disappointed by the team's return, for they had only to he at their front windows in the afternoon on the proper days to see the Tigers compile all hut three of their twelve wins in thirteen starts. In their first match of the regular season the Tiger netmen, playing host to Brown, wasted no time in dis- playing their talents as they polished olf the Bruins 9 to 0. Led hy its number one singles player, Nabers, the Orange and Black met Colgate the next week and ran oll' with the laurels and another 9 to O victory. One ol the strongest welll run into all season, Coach Conroy said of the XVilliams aggregation. The Williams maintains perfect form in early spring match t . ! Nabers concentrates on risky mid-cottrt volley. men of Xililliamstown lived up to this prophecy and indeed put up a tough fight before succumbing to Princeton 5 to 4. XVhen the Nassau netmen encountered Columbia, they also had to contend with rapidly approaching darkness. Needing a minimum of 5 victories to win, the Tigers were in trouble despite a 4 to l lead after the first five singles matches. At last in a fierce test of ability and endurance, number two man, Richardson, won the requisite match 6-2, 8-IO, 8-6. The Tigers were now 4-0 in regular season play. Staking their reputation against that of four opponents it in a period of ten days, the Princetonians played a game of double or defeat. But the team was a sure thing and made the record 8-0, defeating Notre Dame 5 to 3, demolishing Army 9 to 0, and trouncing Dart- mouth and Navy by identical scores of 8 to l. The clash between the Tigers and the Fighting Irish, the first in history, proved to be the most difficult of the four. Captain Anderson, Cartier, and X'Villiams were instrumental in this victory. Against Army the Orange and Black captttred every set. The defeat of Dartmouth was not unttsual, for the record books show that Dart- mouth has never beaten a Princeton tennis team. At Annapolis, the improved Navy team was just not enough for the men from Nassau. The first two weeks of May brought many changes to the natural appearance of the campus. But no change was forthcoming from the varsity tennis team as it continued to win. The Tiger netmen dumped Penn 8 to l, beat Presbyterian 7 to 2, and won a hard fought contest with the Germantown Cricket Club 5 to 3. On May 18 the netmen met a very strong Yale squad and were swamped 14 to l. Courts l and 2 were the center of attraction as Nabers played Don Dell, rated nineteenth nationally, and Richardson played Gene Scott, winner of the New England Championships. Despite the loud support of a highly partisan crowd, Nabers lost 6-2, 9-7, and Richardson went down 6-4, l0-8. In their season finale at Ithaca the squad were vic- torious over Cornell 5 to 4. The match was closely contested to the last set. YVith the score tied at 4 to 4 the outcome of the match hinged upon the results of the second doubles contest. The combination of Hfilliams and Richardson proved to be too much for their Big Red opponents 4-6, 8-6, 6-2. ' Browns number one doubles team moves up to exploit gap left by Nabeis ind Captain Anderson. ., I ,,., ,V Y VYVY .2 7 -ff Y, N. ,Y Y Ifurl: Row: Neisner, Tornrose. Hedgren, Medina, Buell, llamilton, Hales, lfrve. 'I'l1irrI Row: Whitton tcoathb, Weiss Ccoachj, lscmzm, Manning. Day. tl. Watson. Tliurher, R. Watson, Phillips. Afov, Humphrey, Carr. Santamaria, Smith. Morgan Kcoaclij. Second Row: Shcnk, T'illlQ'Cl'iliCi. lidnntnds. YVagstafl', lfisher, Chang, llarrett, YVhite, Sec, lfcrnholtz. XYollmershauser tmgr.5. liellv. Front Rozw: Yan Blake itrainery. lfell. Melrose. Baker, Kemp, Kingston, Howlett, Weilienniaver, Xfagargcc. A TRACK l,TH0l'CLlI their 2-4 record was disappointing in many respects, the members of the Varsity Track Team did manage to turn in some outstanding performances in single events last spring. Alunior flash Dick Edmunds and his teammate Ed Thurber broke two school records between them. Dick, competing in the Olympic trials, set a Princeton mark for the 400 meters with a spec- tacular 0146.2 clocking. Ed broke his own record in the javelin with a 233' lu heave against Yale. The Tigers started off the season in line form, chewing up Rutgers 01 to 110 and finishing first in ele- ven events. -Iourneying to Columbia on April 27, the Princeton thinclads repeated their feat and again took eleven firsts. The Lions, beaten 88 to 47, had to con- tent themselves with wins in the high jump, mile relay, and broad qiumpg and a tie in the pole vault. The remainder of the season proved to be a gloomy series of losses for the hard-fighting Track Squad. Un April 30 the Princeton Varsity met Harvard in Palmer Stadium and was beaten 88 to 52. Harvard's Blodgett. alone copped three firsts and nineteen points. XVith a 227' titgf' toss Thurber broke Princeton's javelin record, a feat which became almost a habit by the end of the season. The Tigers traveled up to New Haven on May 7 to suffer their worst defeat when the Yalie thinclads crushed them ll8 to 22, The only really bright performance by the Princeton team was turned in by Thurber, who again set a new school record in the javelin. On May li the Heptagonals were held at Cambridge and the Princeton Varsity finished seventh in a field of ten. Yale won the meet. Two more dual meet defeats were still in store for the scarred Tigers. They lost to Penn 81M to 5825 and to Cornell 75 to 65. In the Cornell meet the Big Red set a Palmer Stadium record in the mile relay with a 3:16.23 clocking. The Cornell defeat, ended the season for most of the team, but a few outstanding performers journeyed to Villanova for the lCf1A meet. Edmunds managed his first defeat of Yale's Stack by placing second behind NYU's XVedderburn in the quarter mile. Thurber placed second in the javelin behind Maryland's Kovalakides with a 224' ESM throw. Edmunds went on to the NCAA meet and the Olympic trials in Cali- fornia and ran four spectacular sub 117 second clockings in the 400 meters, placing hfth in that event. Although as a team they did have a poor won-lost record for the season, the Princeton thinclads can well he proud of some line individual performances. XVith Edmunds, Thurber, and other key lettermen returning to the team, next spring should be a more inspiring one for the Varsity Track team. .Moy sprints with the vital package as Melrose completes his lap in the mile relay. W rx .... . 7. kwwk s'e?,J,w.., s E' T qu I,-,,..... hall! gu- r ,, Slaizrling: Ashe, Roman, Kuntz. Reeder, Kiunell tiitrziclij. Iiongson. XVa1ker, .-Xdelman. GULF HE 1960 Princeton golf team, after losing their first three matches. finished strongly and completed the season with a very respectable 9-fi record. Starting out the season on its southern tour, tl1e iron men definitely showed signs of being one of the best teams in the East, but were victimized by powerhouses, XVake Forest Hin to lflyl, North Carolina 29 to 7, and Mary- land 21 to 15. Much to the dismay of 1'rinceton's first man, Jack Huiskamp, XVake Forest's A.C.C. Champion, Ronnie Thomas, equaled the Tiger's eagle three on the last hole to win the match. The North Carolina match was just what the score indicates: lopsided. North Carolina's first three men shot 70, 69, and 71, proving too much for Huiskamp, Captain Chick Reeder, and Paul Earle. Had the squad been at its physical peak for the Maryland match, it might well have won, but several of the linksters had come down with German sore throatff The Tigers arrived back north to stop their losing streak and even up their season's record by easy vic- tories over Colgate, 5 to 21 Columbia, 7 to 03 and Le- high, 6 to 1. The winning streak was stretched to five with identi- cal scores of 6 to 1 over Harvard and Brown at a three team match at Rumford Country Club in Rhode Island. A 5 to 2 win over Rutgers and a fi to 1 pound- ing of Georgetown in t11e first half of a three-way meet brought the Orange and Black up against a crack Army team. In one of the best collegiate matches in Spring- dale's history, the Cadets squeaked out a 4 to 3 win despite the inspired playing of Hal Kuntx, Gil Johnson, and Lynn Adehnan. The linksmen traveled to Pittsburgh for the Eastern Inter-Collegiate Championships on May seventh and placed fifth in a thirteen-team field behind Army, Penn, Penn State, and Yale. Two days later l'rinceton's Hal Kuntz Hnished second, four strokes behind l'enn's Don Norbury in the individual tournament. Back on the Glory Road , the team whipped Vill- anova 5 to 2, before being downed by Manhattan College in the Metropolitan Intercollegiate Golf Cham- pionships. Defending champion Princeton, winner of the title seven times since 1950, finished sixth behind Manhattan, Hofstra, Iona. Fordham, and Bridgeport. In a very close match played on the Springdale course, Yale beat the Princeton teant fl to 3, and Penn defeated the Tigers 5 to 2 as Don Norbury fired a four- under-par 58 to beat Huiskamp, 1-up. Reeder's triumph, gained by sinking a long putt on the first hole of the play-ofl. secured victory over Navy, 11 to 3, in the closing contest of the season. K FRESI-IMAN BASEBALL PORADIC hitting, mediocre defensive play, and fairly good pitching characterised the play of the 1960 Freshman baseball team under the leadership of Coach Dick Vaughan. After losing the first game of the season to the Rider College Frosh, 2 to 0, the fortunes of the Tiger nine began to improve. A powerful ten-hit attack led by acting-captain Pete NVardenberg and Joel Daunic, both of whom hit doubles, enabled the Orange and Black to trounce Peddie School by a 10 to 5 count. In their next encounter, however, despite putting men on base in every inning, the Princeton Frosh were unable to drive them across, and the game with Law- renceville was called on account of darkness after seven scoreless innings of play. On the following weekend, the Tigers overwhelmed the Lafayette Freshmen, 12 to 5, but in their duel with the Pirates of Seton Hall, the yearling Bengals came out on the short end of a fl to 1 score. The erratic Princeton power came to life again as the Tigers thrashed the Columbia Frosh, 7 to 4, and followed this success by smashing out an 8 to 7 victory over Rutgers. The Orange and Black extended their winning streak to three games by easily defeating the Manhattan Freshmen, 5 to 0. Southpaw Tuen Schoolworth turned in the finest pitching performance of the year as he went the entire distance and amassed 14 strikeouts. XVith Jon Gibbons leading the attack with a two run homer in thelfirst inning, the Tiger batsmen provided the lefty with more than enough runs to give the decision to Princeton. In the Hnal games of the season, however, everything went wrong for the Freslnnen. Even though Coach Dick Vaughan brought in o11e hurler after another in rapid succession, they were not enough to stop Trenton High Schools 20-hit attack as the Princeton yearlings suffered a stunning 15 to 5 setback. Lack of defensive strength was the cause of a 6 to 5 loss at the hands of the Yale Frosh. After building up a lead in the early innings, the Orange and Black committed several costly errors which led to two Bulldog rallies and Tiger defeat. Two trips to Pennsylvania during the hnal week of the season didn't change the losing pattern. At Easton the Frosh played sluggish ball for the hrst eight innings of the game as the Lafayette Freshmen built up a com- manding three run lead. This proved to be enough to gain a 4 to 3 victory for the home team despite a valiant Tiger rally in the top of the ninth. In similar fashion the Orange and Black concluded the year by dropping a 6 to 4 decision to the Quakers of Pennsyl- vania. This loss brought the season's record ito 5 victories, 6 defeats, and 1 tie. However, the team's hot and cold playing did turn up several good prospects who will certainly improve the Princeton varsity in the 1961 season. Back Roan- Vaughan lfloachj, Revelle, Burns, Coates, YVardenburg, Mead, Margerison, Vogt qCoachj, Ibbeken, Campbell, School- werth, Rernley, Bordner, Dill QCoachj, Front Row: Lahti, Gibbons, Dagrosa, Schoenfeld, Reese, Davis, Daunic, Fudge, Donahoe, Lasky, Hartman. Burl: Row: Nlcliride. Keyes, Hamilton, Ifermer, Bunn, McCann, Markel, Crothers, Knoppers, Mills, Otto. Second Row: Pffngg fCoachQ , Hubbell, Lowry, Raymond, Schmidt-Navara, Williams, Moffatt, Clallard, Neeseman, Hodges, Kline, Nfeisel, lidelman, Conldin, Dreher, Clark, Clafiola fCoachj. Front Rout: Grad, Sloan, Hill, Hersey, Henry, Mules,Asher, Heffernan, Chase, I.eGere, Towers, Kent. FRESI-IMAN LACROSSE HE Freshman lacrosse team of 1960 compiled a com- mendable record of four wins and three losses. Al- though lacking in experience, they started the season in fine style by downing the Princeton lI.V.'s by the score of I6 to 6 on Goldie Field. However, the follow- ing week,Princeton's defense could not control Hofstra, and they were beaten 13 to 9. 'Traveling to Philadel- phia, they avenged their loss by holding Pennsylvania scoreless in a l5 to 0 victory. Returning home, they posted another victory by defeating the New Jersey Lacrosse Club 12 to l I. Trailing ll to 7 at the half, the team staged a rally and were able to score five goals while holding the Lacrosse Club scoreless. The winning goal was made in the final ten seconds of the hnal quarter. After compiling a mid-season record of three wins and one loss, the team suffered two defeats in the last half of the season. The team was beaten by Rutgers l9 to l3. During the following week, Princeton fought a furious battle with Yale before being downed by the narrow margin of I2 to ll. But the squad bounced back to finish the season with a winning record by trouncing the Plebes from lVcst Point 19 to FRESI-IMAN TENNIS As did past 'Tiger Freshmen, the l9G3 tennis team made a hne showing, posting a record of five wins and one defeat. The netmen served shutouts to the Hill School and the Army Plebes, 9 to 0. Also deserving mention are the one-sided victories over Columbia, 7 to 2, Navy Plebes, 7 to 23 and Lawrenceville, 8 to l. The squad was handed its only defeat in the last contest against Yale, 6 to 3. Tony Thompson, number one singles player, defeat- ed but once during the season, sparked the team. At the end of the season he was elected honorary captain. Right behind him was Hal German, second singles man. Tony Thompson and Bud Miller comprised the outstanding doubles team, rolling up four victories against one defeat. In addition Bart Maguire and Ed Felsenthal consistently turned in good performances for the Tigers. Coaching excellent teams is somewhat a habit of Dick Swinnerton. In fourteen years as Frosh coach his teams have compiled an amazing record of l08 victories and 8 defeats. Vle salute Dick Swinnerton on his brilliant record. Brick Row: Swire, Adams, Fisenberger, lidsel, Nagv, Gernrin. Ball, Kaplan. Frou! Row: Felsenthal, Cox, Thompson, Nfiller, Maguire. Cunther. .am The Princeton freshman heavyweight crew gained experience but had little success in the 1960 season. Opening their schedule on April 23 against Navy, the Tigers fell victim to a strong Middie eight. With an edge in early-season conditioning, the home crew was never threatened as they breezed to victory on the Severn. One week later, competing for the Childs Cup, the Nassau frosh placed second to Penn, who rowed to a comfortable le11gtl1 and a half win. The yearling Bengals stood off a late bid by last place Columbia to squeak past the Lions by a third of a length. On May 7, the freshman heavies trailed Harvard and M.I.T. while defeating Dartmouth in the Compton Cup race on the Charles. The E.A.R.C. competition on May lef once again proved the strength of Navy, as they came from behind to defeat Cornell in the final 150 yards of the mile and three-quarter event. The Tigers finished a disappointing last in the six-boat event. Again, at Ithaca, Coach Pete Sparhawk's oars- men trailed Cornell and Yale for the Carnegie Cup as they finished three and a quarter lengths behind a potent Big Red eight and a length behind the Elis. Victory again evaded the frosh heavies in the I.R.A. regatta on Lake Onondaga where Navy romped to an easy win. The Tigers did, however, manage a respect- able hfth place in the Syracuse event. L POVEYS freshman lightweights enjoyed a suc- cessful year as they garnered two victories in three tries in dual competition and took a first and two seconds in their multi-team contests. In their season debut against Columbia the frosh stroked to an easy victory. Traveling to Annapolis on April 23, the freshman eight were the victim of pre-race accident. Their shell split and sank after striking a bridge piling. The dampened Tigers had to be fished from the icy Severn. Later in the afternoon, rowing in a borrowed shell, they finished a scant deck length behind the Middies in a breath-taking finish. Returning to Lake Carnegie, Princeton met the Cor- nell frosh crew on the mile and five-sixteenths course. Standing off' a fierce sprint by the Big Red oarsmen, the Tiger frosh won by a narrow margin. Caining strength in mid-season, the frosh l5fl's next breezed by Penn and Harvard by five seconds. This was their best performance of the season as they lowered their time in the Cornell race by more than five seconds. After this thrilling climax to the season, the frosh were a slight disappointment in their two remaining events. In the E.A.R.C. finals, the Tiger cubs finished behind a much-improved Harvard crew. Again in their final tilt, Princeton trailed the Crimson, this time in the Coldthwait Cup race on the Charles. Still, the frosh will undoubtedly strengthen the varsity light- weights next season. Slamlizig: O'Keefe, Atkinson, Hooker, Beck, Frelinghuysen, Pugh, Mann, Sexton, 1x'n1fz'ling: O'Day fCoxswainj. FRESHMAN CREW Slmzfliugs Smith, I,ucas,Allison, Perry, Kirkpatrick,Burrt1s,Brown, Yeeder, Kneeling: Robinson Qcoxswainj FRESHMAN GULF HE 1000 golf team had a successful season with seven wins and only two losses. At the annual triangu- lar match with Hill School and Haverford. played this year at the Springdale Golf Course, Princeton started the season by defeating Hill, 6 to 1, and Haverford, 7 to 0. Princeton posted two more wins in rapid succes- sion by downing Union College, 7 to 0, and Lawrenceville, 0 to l. After this impressive start, the team traveled to 1Vest Point where they won their match, 5 to 2, against the Plebes who had defeated Princeton last year. Return- ing home, Princeton defeated 1.awrenceville for the second time by a 5 to 2 mark. At this point in the season, Princeton posted an im- pressive record ol' six wins and no losses. However, the team soon met defeat at the hands ol Yale by the score of 4 to Princeton avenged its loss by winning its match against Pennsylvania 6 to l. Taking to the road again, Princeton traveled to Annapolis where they lost by the narrow margin ol' 4 to 3. The freshman team was one of the best Princeton has had in years. Iinclc Razr: Brooks. Gilbert. Ifuhrman. Stuart. Worthington. Curley, Riley, Shindle. .Swvnirl lfoztn' Whitton ncoachl, Weiss lcoachj, Xvright. Peacock, llaiter, Phillips, limmerich, Herold, Smith, Freer, Williams, Morgan ccoachj. Ifronl Roni: Nloses, lloey, Rose, XValpole, Gardner, Mitchell, llivens, Xichparenko, Connolly, Scudtler. i , ' X' ',. ' 5 ' e, FW li' 1 ffft fa . ss A 2 ll-, tr 5. .e .Slunflingf Missel. Powell, Rudolph. Crowther, Kinnell ffloachj. Nlatteucci. Schwartz. Purkiss. lv'nr'r'ling: Petito. Seckel. Hay erland. FRESI-IMAN TRACK Opening the season with three straight victories over Rutgers, Columbia, and Harvard, 71 to 68, 91 to 47. and 82 to 58 respectively, the Frosh track team concluded with a live and two record. In other meets the Tigers swamped Lawrenceville, S116 to 3536, and downed Pennsylvania, 70 to lifl. The Army Plebes eked out a victory, 73 to 67, and in its only substantial de- feat the squad bowed to Yale, 87W to 5254. The cindermen's success can be directly attributed to the exceptional performances of Forrest XVa1pole in the I00 and 220 yard dashes: .Iohn Gardner and Pete Hoey in the quarter mile, half mile, and mile, Dan Phillips in the high and low hurdles: Charles Mitchell in the pole vault: and Byron Rose in the two mile run. Rose is the only runner, Freshman or Varsity, to cover the distance in under ten minutes. lfollowing is a review of the best times and distances of the season: 100 yard dash, XValpole, :l0.21 220 yard dash, XVa1pole, :22.3g 440 yard dash, Gardner, :5l.9g 880 yard run, Hoey, 2:01.93 mile run, Hoey, 4:28.6g two mile run, Rose, 0:47.53 120 yard high hurdles, Phillips, :l5.l: 220 yard low hurdles, Phillips, :2Al.2, high jump, Herold, 5'll : broad jump, Connolly, 20'3Wlg pole vault, Mitchell, 132 shot put, Xllilliams, f57'1W'g discus, Xllilliaias, lI8'9M g hammer throw, Gilbert, 1l9'M1 g mile relay, Bivens, Smith, Walpole, Gardner, 3:28.1. These marks set by the 19625 Freshman track team can be regarded with pride. SPRING 1960 SCORES VARSITY BASEBALL VARSITY GOLF VARSITY LACROSSE Princeton Elon 2 . . ,. . N Car Sine Princeton 1 North Carolina 29 Princeton 1 Princeton Phila. Club ' ' ' YVake Forest IGMZ Princeton 10W Maryland Princeton Pflflccwn UCOVSCIOWU 5 Maryland 21 Princeton 15 Johns Hopkins Princeton Princeton Rntgcr-5 5 Princeton 5 Colgate I 2 Navy Princeton Princeton Lafawue 2 Princeton Colnmlna 0 Arrny Princeton l Princeton C C, Y 2 Princeton 0 Lehigh 1 Princeton Pennsylvania ' ' Princeton 6 llroyvn 1 Princeton Dartmouth Seton HH11 1'1'111CC1011 2 Princeton 6 Harvard l Princeton Harvard Columbia Princeton 5 Princeton 5 Rutgers 2 Princeton Yale Princeton Mlmhamm 0 lgrinceton 2 ijeborgelown Princeton Sutgeyys . A - v 1 7 .l , . . i 1 Princeton Dartmouth 4 Pigileton 5 1, I lmceton OMR Princeton Villanova 2 Yale 4 llrincglnn 3 Brown Princeton 4 Pennsylvania Princeton VARSITY TENNIS Princeton Harvard 2 12111061011 '1 Null 41 Rutgers Princeton 1 Princeton Brown Cornell Princeton 2 lwlvlncclon Colgate N.Y.U. Princeton 3 Princeton Hlilliams . VARSITY TRACK .- - Pennsylvania Princeton 2 3111001011 30151111313 . ' f ' 1 o re atne Princeton Yale 5 . , ,11 ?C1O VX . . X W , Q. Q 9 Princeton 91 Rutgers 49 1l'1YlUi'l0I1 A 1111? rml 1 '1 LC1 '1 ' Princeton 88 Columbia '17 l'l'1l1C6l0I1 D?11'l111011111 Princeton Naxy 1 Harvard 88 Princeton 52 Princeton Navy Princeton Fordham 1 Yale 118 1i1'111CC1011 22 grlllcctou gelllrslgliqnm .- Pennsvlvania 8127 Princeton 5815 l'll1Cffi0l1 1135 JY 6117111 Yale ':'f CC'0'1 I Cornell 713 Princeton 65 Princeton Germantown C. C Coygmc 1 1111501011 1 Heptagonals:-Princeton 7th YH16 12111531011 Princeton 7 Yale 3 lC4A at Villanova Pl'1llCC10fl 5 C0111911 VARSITY CREW Navy-Princeton Cujnsl. Navy f9:l3.2l 3 2. Princeton. Childs Cup-1. Pennsylvania C8:43.1j 3 2. Princetong 3. Columbia. Compton CII!!--1. Harvard f8:35.9j 2. Princetong 3. M.1.T.g fl. Darttnoutll. E..f1.R.C.-l. Cornell 05133553 2. Harvardg 3. Navyg 4. Syracuse' Princeton: ti. Pennsylvania. Carnegie culkl. Cornell Cl0:11l.2j3 2. Princetong 3. Yale. I.R..'l. Rcgatla-1. California flG:02.2j3 2. Navyg 3. Hlashington 4fPrinceton lflthj 1 FRESHMAN 150-LB. CREW 1. Navy C7:2l.lj3 2. Princeton. 1. Princeton f6:5l.5j3 2. Cornell. l1'001I-Hummom! Cup-l. Princeton C6:46.ljg 2. Pennsylvania' 3. Harvard. E.pl.R.C. Rcgrrlln-l. Harvard K6:5l.2jg 2. Princetong 3. M.1.T.' l. Yale: Cornellg 6. Penn. Golzlllmvzil Cup-l. Harvard 56251253 2. Princetong 3. Yale. Y VARSITY 150'S l. Princeton tti:05l: 2. Columbia. 1. Princeton f7121l.4j3 2. Navy I. Cornell QG:33.2l: 2. Princeton. . Il'oorl-Hmnmmzri Cllflfl. Harvard Q6:27.6j3 2. Prlncetong 3. Pennsylvania. n l'f..l.lI.C.-l. Harvard f7:02.6l 3 2. Navyg 3. Cornell: 4. Columbia: 5. Princeton: 6. Dartmouth llolrlthzvnil rliupfl. Harvard f6:42.2j3 2. Princetong 3. Yale. FRESHMAN CREW .Ynzfv-l'rin1'r'lon Culbfl. Navy f9:54.8j3 2. Princeton. X l Chilflx Cup-l. Pennsylvania f9:02.3l 32. Prrncetong 3..C.olumb1a. Cunzplon Cnpfl. Harvard tim Q3 2. M.1.T.g 3. Princeton: 4. Dartmouth. IC..-l.R.C. Regain:-1. Navy C6:44.1l3 2. Cornell: 3. Harvard, -1. Syracuse: 5. BI.I.T.g 6. Princeton. CIll'lIz g'fl' C1111-1. Cornell f10:21.2lg 2. Yale: 3. Princeton. I.R..'l. Rl'g'!lflI1-71. Navy 110145753 2. M.1.T.g 3. XVaslnngton, Al. Syracuseg 5. Princeton. 3 FRESHMAN TRACK FRESHMAN GOLF FRESHMAN BASEBALL Princeton 71 Rutgers 08 Princeton 7 Haverford School 0 Rider Princeton Princeton Columbia 47 Princeton 6 Hill School 1 D I dd. Princeton Harvard 58 Princeton 7 Union -lr. College 0 111'111Cet011 I C le Yale 871 2 Princeton 52W Princeton 6 Lawrenceville Schl l princemn Lawrenceville Princeton 8115-, Lawrencet ille 35 25 Princeton 5 Al'I11Y 2 y A1AmY 11101105 Princeton G7 Princeton 5 Lawtienceville Schl 2 111'111CCt011 Lafayette Princeton Pennsylvania 64 Yale 4 Princeton . Seton Hall Princeton Princeton 6 Pennsylvania l . .I Navy 4 Princeton 3 1114111561011 Columbm FRESI-IMAN LACROSSE 1 '1 CCt0'1 Rutgers . , FRESHIVIAN TENNIS Princeton ltfanhattan Princeton Fr. Princeton 6 , Hofstra Princeton 9 Princeton 9 Hill School 0 TVC111011 HS- Pullfctoll Princeton Pennsylvania 0 Princeton 7 Columbia 2 Yale Pl-incelon Princeton Lacrosse Clb. 11 Princeton Q :Xrtnv Plelxes 0 D , Rutgers Princeton 13 Princeton 7 Navy Plebes 2 145111311 Plqmcewn Yale Princeton ll Princeton S Lawrenceville 1 pennsllwnia pl-inqctnn Princeton Ariny 5 Yale 6 Princeton 3 ' 185 F' 1 , Iirnl: llfntx' Rcctl. lfwing. I-lion! lFff.t': Young. Nltgntt. Httiskzttnp, Grctfnwootl. IN TRAMURAL ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION l'rint'clon's lztrgicst Ol'g2lIlll2lll0ll liront tht- point ol llICtl1llS zlrt' ztwztrtltftl each yuan' to tnctnlmctx ol' winning x icw ol' pztrticipzttion. tht' lntrznnnrztl .Xtlllt'lic',Xssoc'it1' tt-mms or winners ol' intliviclttul tonrnt-ys. tion qI.XlXj plans. orgztnifcx :intl clircctx moru than llcgitming' with and ll lcztgnc tout-h loothztll Ttltlll athletic contests throughout tht- ztcztcletnict yczlr. in tht' liztll. thc IAA season inclutlcs xnch sports EIS We-ll over hull ol thc xtnclttnt hotly pztrticipzttes in at liotlwt. clttws. hilliztrcls. pool. t-owhoy pool. howling, ltztst one ol tht' l.fX.X's ncztrly 20 xports. .Xhottt 250 hritlgtl, scpltuli. tzthlc tcnnis. ztntl hztskcthztll in thc wintcr. lhu xpring 545118011 l't':ttt1rt's xolithztll. golf, tctnnts. llotscslioes. :intl xolleyhztll. In zttltlition. thcre is it nztck tncct. at swinnning' tonrnztntt-nt. :intl at lonl I, throw cotitcst. Nlzlnx' ol' thc nports hztxt' hoth revulzn' l.otth.t. 1 fi lcxtgnt' compcrtition lor tt tcznn chztnipionship :intl also :tn inclixitlnttl tonrnznncnt. 'l'ht' l.X.X runs, hoth :tml li lcatgncs in the more popular sports, such as hztskcthztll. tonth loothztll, solithztll. :Intl vollcyhztll. .Xt tht' hcginning' ol' spring x':lc':ttion this ycztr, Clztnnon Cllnh ztppearecl well on itx wut to its lonrth tonst-c'tttix't- ztll-sporta chznnpionxhip. Rztcking np El totztl ol lffufl points hy thtt cncl ol tht' winttrr scttson, tht- Chun was IIS pointn ztltvzttl ol its ncztrcst rirztl, flznnpns. Clow hehintl Clutnpttfx llllfi wcrt' lowct' ' with lll.'mfl.l5i1tlwitl1 Ill-l7 :intl lihn with 992. lhe rest ol thc lcztgnc linccl np in thc' liollowing ormlcr: Quaid, l't'irztu'. lxy. 'l'igc'1'. Colonial. Clamp :intl Gown. Court, XX'ilson. illoistclr. Cottztg6, litfy ttntl Sl'2ll, :intl Clltztrttir. Clzninon notcht-tl El large pztrt ol' its whopping' mc'or6 through t'll2lIIllJl0ll5llllbS in hoth tottrh loothztll znlcl and B basketball. Qlhe 'AGun lost its soph section basketball title to Cap and Gownj. The artil- lierytnen also captured the pool title, and their nutn- ber one player. Sain Leisring. went on to capture the individual honors in that sport. The tnighty. undeleated Cannon touch loot- ball aggregation bore a striking sitnilarity to the uni- yersity's xarsity basketball teatn, starring Captain Don Swan. renter 'liotn Xdatus. guard Pete Catnpbell and lorward .lack Ythitehouse atnong its ntetnbers. Other regulars on the Iiring' line were Lynn .Xdeltnau, lflip Delilippo. Mike lieyine. Yiuee Henna, Bob Nlyslik and Eltner Naples. The Gun's loop basketball champs were led by .Xdehnan. Nlyslik. Kjell Kirsch, and XX'arren Crane. 'l'he HB squad. which topped Caine pus in a playoll. was sparked by Don Nlarquet. llill Langan. llaye Nlatthett. and .Xbbitt l.awrenc'e. George Rudolph paced Cap and Gown's soph section hoop ehatnps. scoring 20 points in the 48-TH final playoll' yietory oyer Tiger Inn. Holding down third and fourth slots in soph basketball were Cannon and lihn. I.ed by Legare Cuyler and XValt Connor, the Cap and Gown sextet downed all opponents in hockey eotnpetition. Also during the winter. a strong Cottage Club teatn captured the squash crown, but Pete Boysen ol the Gun and Steye Alalle ol' Carnpus shared the indiyidual title. Ihe lerraee Club keglers ntpped Campus tn a ntattth ol the utldeleated lor the It-XX bowling erown. and. in the process. 'l'erraee's Neil Crane eopped the indiyidual title lor the second year in a row. The rest ol the chatnpionship teatn was tnade up of Myron l'tnan, .joe Barone and Fred Lantparter. lower pref yailed in billiards play, as its Captain, Barry Xtlhittnan. gained his seeond eouseeutiye individual title. The table tennis award went to Court's powerful aggregation, headed by Daye Gordon, bttt Catnpus's Skip Hartmann topped individual honors. XVhile inost l.X.X eotnpetition is by club tezuns, the association also organizes lreslnnan inter-dormitory leagues in touch-l'ootball. soltball and basketball, as well as the annual lil'CSl11Il2lll-SOlJllOlll0l'l! cane spree. In lreshtnan basketball eotnpetition a tight rivalry eultninated when the Yankees UIJSCL the pennant-win- ning Eagles in a 13051-SCZISOII playoll, 70457. Shaun Sloane and George Phillips pared the winners. Other ntetnbers ol the ehatnpionship squad were Corky Hughes. llob Kuser. George Gilliatn, Bob Nolan, Klint Reichenbaelt and Steye Elliott. The Eagles and the Yankees had finished one-two in the frosh A league, while the Orioles and the I.ions led the HB circuit. ln the l.Xi-Ys unique erisst'ross playolls, the Eagles had defeated the Lions. and the Yankees ltad tripped up the Orioles. Running the I.X.X this year. under tlte direction ol' Coach .linnnie Reed, were 'liitn Mygatt QChairntanj, Lee Greenwood. -lack Huiskatnp, Bill Young, Bob Reed. and Bill Ewing. Coutottetl Soph leaps to blast yollex bill down oppout-nt's tht' Bridge bout hetu een Cap and lower. Quad scores. The construction of Blair Hall in 1896 began Princelorfs attachment to collegiate Gothic architec- ture. A reaction against the crude, pseudo-Gothic detailing of the Victorian style, the architecture is a direct expression of the residential concept of higher education and places Princeton in a thousand-year tradition of higher learning extending back to Oxford and Cambridge Universities. Blair Arch itself, oriented on the robust and massive facade of Alexander Hall, is an open invitation to the delicate antiquity of the Lower Campus. ew-1-1 - A CE- 1 . Hg, L- , , ,, 1 + 25, f2T 5 E f iisaf if is zizflitll-arsfzrafffig f.::1 ff Jize 2ef:ffiz1a JwY.iz:eegifzgzfiif1:wg:a,:fe:ss:3:s:z:f:zsmy 1? ?? il, 5 12 Y sly? 32 11: 2 ,,,- 1 ii 4 11 1- .AA, - v -A L'i '1' Q AA 'kv .N 2: -fi ,1 25 Q5-6 Q I' , ,,,, W 1 ,,,, .sy 1 g 'f 1,763 52 31 I, ii A ' ' ' ' if f xl if f ,-,... ,,., . jgzrlyfkg ...,' I 1 in V' .5 I- A3 if . W, ' ,-A ,:.' H 4'1.'f '-'-1 V -f, x'fU 5122 ---lf -ff' rr' wV: '-X ff-if,qsyiciz-fzrimgzf' .. ... f A-A' ffg 'AAA ' A' '-- f' -'-4 I,. l --'-i 1 1:' ' 'A L' HA Q 7 A,'ij'f ': .P T -1 4--- A -'-f '-.Q if A Eiga! A 4 gf 11 A X -. X .fy Z . ,, 1 1 4 j VL K Y v 1 4 I f l ' 1 X l in 1 JN , f' 4 . -w f' + 5 2.1, 3 1 i f . ' 7 'Iwo t fbi H g X xv I -.mf 1 X 2 X ,Y Y I . Ar X Xxx ?' . ,, :jfqy'-fQ. , -If m.- I ...fb .- - f . 1 X 'I .5 .X K fx r' N MY' '1 3 W I X , ' - A ' ' 5 l , f - - E2s25g,.Qr .f,, ., . 5 1 V'A,1W 1 , . Q 3 'ii ..- ll . QIVA5 ,.,V :Z 2 .,.VI,, V .V X ,X, Q X xX,X . X f wf,,,i3ig,:5fX if XX X X . f 'I' uf , E T ii QF - Q-i 'Cif52ii312- 122355322215 f -, - 1 J -QQ Q Q21 - -f -5 .ef 2 fl? if-gif 1:32 ifiiifi iifff lf53 f ,::ij-?f1 ? lei TVQ1 fqwi T: 'lgi Sgifgi g: 12g?i-:fa Esiiaflfi s:Q:1a: 2 Ei: ', flafji 43 Skijffig EE OCIAL ZR XXI -xv ' 1 1 111f+l1t hte lasx lo QCL to 1o11d11c1xe to long SI2lyS, CZll1l1JllS su 11105 11 11g 1ewec IDL llDOXC 1111101411 ilillli-XX'0likiIlg, not too lll 111s11st11 Ill s cr s 111ke1's. Some doers i11 las li. RlJI1l4',R'l'SON, '59 OFFICERS P1'esidc'11L Xrifil-ll1'C5iiiCl1t Scc'11cl111'y '1i1'L'2lSll1'CI' k-ua C11.x111,Es Q1'.x1NTANcR, JR- ' I'R1xNK1,1x C. XVAGNER ' Lowru. H. FLXVSTER PHILLI11 H, GINSRERG BOARD OF GOVERNORS Robert XY. 11iCi12ll'CiS Edward S. YVe1ch Rolmem Bennett i'11'2lllK'iS XV. Brennan 1711-de1'i1'k C. Field, J1 Edwin I.. Lcdbetter XVz1lle1' P. ,'XHCi1'CYVS Eng Albcrr H. Reese, Jr. Patrick C. Beattie Smith l30w111an Howard I.. Canoune XVil1is A. I.ebo111'Vea11 Richard McClelland Donald R. Hegstroin e11e M. Hating 7 -lznncs li. livznuic llllllll M. liizinclon lllbllll Dc'l'. Donn' -lllllll I.. liclwi' CAMPUS CLUB CLASS OF 1961 Dziviml 'lf llulcli lfzirisli .X. Alvnlains Douglas CL. licrlly Morton li. lirznnci' Eclwznxl IS. l.c'wis Rohm-ri Ii. lfwis Dzlvifl l.. Xlzliwlizill l'il'IlIlli LI. Xlic'licnc'i- Erncsi H. Xclmon. Robert I.. l'iakn-in Howzml CL. Pontius fllizirlcs Quzlinlznncf. Slcplicfil XX'. Rolncils XX'illi:nn H. Ewing Lowell H. lfcwsici' l'11'CLlCl'll'li S. lfislubi' XX'z1llcr lfowski Sleplicrn .'X. ci2ll'l'Cll. Ronald M. Clvorgnr Pllillila H. Cinsllcrg RolJC1'l H. cll'CCllXX'UlHl llrzunis U. C.lnlnIn-is hlolin H. Grcisl Xvlllllllll l.. ll1l2lS I . .Xllzin Hzinson Hzuix' li. Hoilgn' lllizirlex D. Ll4il'IlK'li l l'c4lci'ifl4 XX'. licck Rznlpli D. licinu-it Kcilli ll. llromlic Xorinzin D. liiown XX'illiznn I . liullonl hlolin li. lillllCl'XX'0l'lll XXvllllllCL' XXI Dwi' Donzllml lx. l'.IlllllCl'SOll lonnlllzln XX'. lfwing . Q CLASS OF 1962 Ricliznll .Xiclvn XX'illiznn D. li1ll'lllllS -lolin liani Rolmcrl llollon Roclncry l.. liui-lon Luc ll. Lzilmlwm-ll Kliclizicl S. Dunnv Cllizulcs l'iClLgllS0ll Xvfllligilllg' lfucisl Pzlul IS. licpm' Mzntin l.ZllDlClllS R. D. l.cCIounl. cill2ll'lCS XX'illizun Cizilizllt .Xl'Llllll' R. l.i'clc'i'in:u1 Donulcl Cl. Xlcllullocli Iolin .X. Xliflizuv .lznncs l.. Nlilfllll. Ill Slepllcn Nl. Xloc-lilinzin l.c5u'i' li. Xlunxon. .lip H. .luck Xlyvix Douglas Xxulrziu Xliclizlcl X'. Olds Rohm-1 Ihumr- l'zu'ukiilgc Czul lflslll l'l:lll liennclili H. Pliillilmm PCICI' M. Glass .Xiiclivw D. Hull .Xllicri Hzlncl Lewis S. Ll2ll'LIIl2lIl ljflllillll Xl. ll2lX'XX'lll'll Robert Xl. Hcnlu-ls l'Cu'1' X. llqclon llioinzis l.. Homlcll Cllunlcs li. LlUllClllJCl'g 'loscpli li. lrcnqls Stephen H. wlznlli- I. .X. C.:nnl:lmcll l'il'2lIllilXll CI1n'i' Dzlxul c.llllIIllJK'l'llIl luniu .X. Dan Ionaululn Dux Iolin lf. Dixon Clliznlcx Doiwll Rc-nu Doulnlici' llionmm XX. Dunn XX'illi:fnn S. Rlilxcysci' Cornelius .X. Silber XX'illiznn M. Sinnncrs Rudolf N. Stzlroscik .'X1'thu1' li. SLl'2lSlJlll'gC1' Cllizlrles Swigert lilvin ililllllll Ifrzuiklin Cl. XXVZIQHUI' Ricl12u'cl H. XX'cinsIcin mlolin Xl. XX'ilcox. .Iosuph XXvllllClkSlD!lOll Slicrwood lf. Young Donald Xl. X'ou11gi'cn Don M. Runclcl XX'illiznn lf. Ricliznxlson Danicl B. Rilkin Ilzunen lf. Robinson .lun Szirilecki vlil1OIl12lS Xl. Srzanlon. .Ii Clliznlcs Sciilnici' Hcfzuh Dulles Sebring Cllinrlcs Sliorui. lr. Dennis Dull Sicfwmi Cllizn-lcs Nl. Swili .Iolin D. XX'liilc-lim' Cicorgv .Xlzul XX'ilson Paul XX'ing Roy Young Iinvl: lfmiu' Xlgnxlmll, llzuul. l'ci'guxon. XXing, X. Daly. 5lCXX1ll'l, H2lll,l.L'fiCDlllll.ll2lXXX1llll,5l'1llll0ll.SlllK'I',l,l7llXX'. Sixllr Ihmx' SXXlgL'l Hull-Il, Alillllll, Dan. Rznulcl, Xlunwn, Lani. Rllkl'ysu'1'. llalss, Olds, lX1lCK'llllN. Xlihnllolli, llollon, S, Young. Fil'll1 lfrmw Iiiznulon lillon, Dunn. Ihonn. Xlovlilinun, Rll'll1ll'llNUIl,fi1llllXXK'll, lfiwlicr, CLz11'i'11lI. kcllx, NL'l90ll, YlDllIlgl'l'll, fillllllllJL'l'l11lll. llolicnlmcrg. Sclning Piilwiis. flllllfll Iirniz' lgllllllllx. l41n'r, Doulmlicr, l2nl'1llllL', ilrcisl, fl1llkI'Cll, licclx. SHIIIIICIN, XXll'lllilClll, Slioilcr, fillllllffi. Sxsilil. Doll: R. Xvllllllg. llculon. 'I'!1iwl lfoxr: Grccnwoocl. Xlwix. f.1lIlllJlN'll. Rillxin, Kcxwly XX'ilxon. Xldirzin, XX'liilc'l11w, Sz1i'nCc'Li. Cicorgc. llznuon Sll'2INlHlI'QCIi, lxlLIIlIL'l'. lining. Pliillips. Robinson, Suomi linux' Dixon, Xliclicnw, lrnix, XXvllllCliS'JUUll, CQimlmci'g. l CXXill'I'. flllllllllllllll nu Hlllllllll lillt lulunlin Pn nf ' ' ' .lLfIll'li. llKllIlC'li. Rolmciix. Cannes. l'llL'I'Nl. Howl llrmx' I-lalss. Dunnu. llllllllll. llUI'Nl'll. llomlvll. Nxulvz . L lrirlgc, Sriilnu-i'. S 'Q 1' -agr- --l-- ,,.,..f- ,45 f,-1- Q Q 111L'2ll11'NI 111 1111 11111 lllllh. Hugu 1111-111111-1111111 1:11111 1111111: N12l1'1lJ1J1'11 1111x111 111111 11111 1111111 1'l1llJ. 111111 1111116 1.,fX.,X. 11'11I11111'N. sul 11111111 11111115 111111l1z111, 111111111 .1 f 1 1 '. '. 11111 11'1s11l1'111 111111-1s 11 '11l11 1'111111111'11111 1111 1+'1-1111111111. C 111111111 1N11Ll11X 111118 . 1 1 1 . 1 1 1 1 sul 111111111s11l1111 111 Q11 111 111- 111111. 21111'llYN 111311111g. 1111611 111'c1'111'. .X11'1'21g1: g,111 211111 11'1'1gl1l 1l1JlJ2l1111lg. 1111- 5111111111118 11111 111 1l11' 11111111 L'llIklX. h . g1.1111iS 11. R11111c11'1s11N. '39 OFFICERS 1l1'CS1l1C111 S'111N1.111' S11.11'1111x1f.ss1' 111 Y111:-1'1'1's1111'111 IJANILI. H. lI,11:11s11N 1111'C2lSll1'C1' 1'1R1i111iR1C1K N111'1'1'11111ws 111 BOARD OF GOVEHNORS 1111211105 15. N121I11w 1511111111111 1. N111CI1i111111 13211111 R, .X1'll011l 11211111 15, 81112111 1121111211 CL. 111111151111 R11ssC11 S. X11N11111 '11111111121s N1. 151'1111'11 f1e111'g1-ll111111l11cs 1121111 M. 11115815 11111111111 lf. 111115, R11'11211'11 R. ZllI111C1 117111121111 M. R11-11211'11s11n, Ii. 1111111 Hz11'1'1s1111 R11'11211'11 S211'z1g1' 19-I CANNCN CLUB CLASS OF 1961 11111111115 S. ,'Xt12l1ll5 1,1'11n S. .X11e1n12111 ,'xlll1l0l1y XV. .Mkims 1,2lWl'Clll'C 11l'Cllll2lll Ree11 .-X. 15132111 Mi1'11211'1 13. 1gllI'U31l Eric' CI1111is1111161's1111 R013Cl'l 11. 131211, 1121111 If. 19111111 1111111 f1l'll112il1l CLASS OF 1962 1'11i11l1 S. Allen CLe11l11'ey .Xmy Cl1n'is1i2111 13111111-1' 11 Mi1'11z1el Hugh- HlfIll'11LSCTll 1,1'1Cl' 1i11ys1'11 511111 .X. 1gl'4lO1iS 511121121 CI. 11l'OXN'Il 1111113111215 O. 1121111131111 1,C1f'1' il. f12llIIl313C11 .x12lII XY. 11211151111 P. X. f1112ll31I121ll C111'is111p1161' f1l'2lI3gCl' -Iznnes R. Green .'XI3C1l'CW 1.. Higgins 1V3l'6W A. Hy1211111 1321111131 H. -1211-11s1111 11,1111 Kll1i11' Eugene 1.21ws1111 S2111111e1 .X. 1.eis1'i11g C2111 NI. 111111115 A101111 Cl111y1'1' -101111 Nl. 1111111111111 .-xIlt1l'CXV 1111111161 XX'211'1'1-11 R. f11'2ll1C 1 1'e1l61'i1'11 131-lfililmpo 31111121121 ll. 13CX'1IlC I 1'611e1'i1-k XV. 13l'C'1lC1'. 111 -1111111 13llg2lll, 1211111111111 13. f1ill111t, 11 1S211'1'1' 13. Goss 1 '1'21111'11t1 CQ1'is11'11111, -11 311111121111 A. 131311, 1f1'e11e11i1t11 M21l111ews 311111121113 S. 1NI1'Ke11zi1: Scott '1'. M1iXV11i1111ie 311111121111 11. Meeks Vincent 1310131121 K611111-111 Meyer NI1c11z161 CQ. Miller Rf313L?1'l Nlyslik -1111111 31. H211'1'is -1111111 15. 1'1e111'g11s 121131138 R. IIi1l1s .I21111es R. L1llll1Cl'. 13211111 S. Alenkins Henry M111111- KCllI1Cl1y, l16111'ey XY. 1Q11'SlL1l -1111111 12. K11111g111i:1s XY. XY. 1.z111g:111 E. .X13131311 1,z111'1'1'11111 E111161' Naples '1'116o11111'6 Newlin 4111561111 R. 1'1'z1111e1' 5211111161 C. 1l0131llSl3ll Stephen SC1l1'2lggC1' S12111161' S112lllg1ll1CSS1' Ri1'11211'11 11. S111'1w 13111121111 H. Swan N12lll11CW XV. '1'o111'i111'1 .IZIIHCS B. Lf'llK'1l 131111 31211111161 '1'1161111111'e N12l1'2l1ll3 13211111 YV. 31211111611 Kenneth .'X1't11111' Mills 311111121111 H. 13111113111 15111116 1Y1'1s1111 311111121111 R. Newlin 13211111 fJXl1l211I S. 14211161 S1111-111. 111 1'll1XV2i1't1 G. '1'11Ll1'13K'1' 311211161-121111 XY11i11'111111x1 111111: Ilfmx' 1111111 X1111111s. X1-1s1111, X1l'1Y1l1111l1L'. 5111111. R1114i1. ,13e11111'. 31iKL'11l1L'. bow. 111'111'g1'1'x. H1111 Ifrmx' lS11g11-H1'111i11w111 XI:11':11111. 111111111-1. 1Q1ISl1l, 1'11ll31L'I'. 3Y1l1ll'1lUlIiC. Higgins, fQ:111111. 11z11'1'is. 1 i111'11. 112l1Sl'L'll1'L'. fztbllllllllll. I'11111'1'l1 l31111': 1.z111g:111, N1l11'11111 11l'1'C111l3l3ll, 13ll'1IL'l'. R11l1is1111. 131111. .Xf111. Xlkiss, N1111l1'm. 1QC1111L'l1X. XI111111e11. x1l'l'1'xS, li1'11111w. 'I'l11'1'1l Ifllilf' ,lCll1i1lli. 51116116 X1'11l111 31111x.AX11'X1'l', 1111111112 1i111111111i11w, c11l1k1Ni31l. CI11z1l1111:111, fJXlI1il1l. 151.11111-1'. X1i11e1'. 5111111111 Ifmw: 1l1I111111, 1.111xs1111. f.1l111l3ll11. l111w1'11. 6.111111 1. Xeulin, xl1C'1ll1lI1l. Xlyxlik, 1311g2111. X1:11'1l111'l. IS1111111, KL1'is1111111. ,X11Cl1. I'-11111 lfmrf x1l'l1l1iI. S111111. lS111'l1111. NI211111e1xs. S11z111g11111wn ,1z1111s1111. l,1'ix1'i11g. l11l11'i11e1', 11l'Cllll2llI. This place looks alter its own, with the result that it is still lull as ever with Men ol God, good guys, and lirst-class doers. Has a har which is used more strenuously than some people think. Southern and mid-XYestern in membership, its men niarrv earlv, plav had bridge, know evervhodv there is to know. A little ol evervthing, hut cordial. -JAMES B. Ro1a1iR'i'soN, 59 OFFICERS President ROBERT H. CRA1f'r, JR. '61 Why are you taking this pictu1'e?'l - J Vice-President SCL'1'CK2I1 J'-T1'CHSll FCI' Henry R. Blvnn Bruce M. Ridgway James C. Healey Herman A. Hevdt, Clarence S. Lovelace Allred M. YVade Robert S. Mueller, Seymour Perkins, James C. Pitney Archibald H. Rowan Hlilliam hi, YVhitney Dana S. Lamb Seymour Morris John H. Maclfayden H. Blakeney Henry James A. Mead Malcolm Goodridge, Jr. Douglas Fairchild Thomas Fisher, Jr. Jinnis S. LANE '61 J1cRRoi.n GRABFR '61 BOARD OF GOVERNORS John K. Gurney XVilliam B. Harwood G. Seaver Jones Sidney Lanier Mead A. Lewis Joseph O. Rutter Henrv R. Sutphen Joseph R. Truesdale Leslie L. Vivian James T. Hlallis Joseph L. Castle Richard Gillespie Charles Anderson, Jr. Frederick S. XVonhani, ll John F. Mueller Laurence C. YVard David P. Adams David S. Hemingway Thomas YVilliamson CAP AND GGWN 1511111111 1,. .110x11111101 1121111 W. EZIY111 41111111 11. 1401101 1111111 1'11111'1i1l1111Il 11101111 S. E11gC11l1111 112111116 S. 1.21110 - .1l11gC1' 11111g2l1'11 112111 11. 19101115 11111121111 1'. 1.611111 1111111 P. 111111111 1,1'11'l' ,1. 11C11l'g1'S111l 1 I'1?11C1'11' N121111111121111, .11 11111111 ,1. 111111111618 11111'1S1111111C1' 11.1111111011 11111121111 li. N12l11111'11 1111111 11. 11111111111 l1C1'l'11111 C1l'2l111f1' -1111111 li. 112111l1cws 11141116111 11. 11111'1i1' 111'111'g1f L. 111211 .1111lI1 X. N111111I11l1'11. .11 1111111 11. 11111'1TS1'I1l2lll 11-1111111215 11. Hzlskcll 151211111 M. A1111g11?1 11111111 11'. 11121111 111111g121m 11011101 A111i112l1'1 11. M1115 1'1'1'1'1'11. 11111111 .112l11 11. I'11111':11'11 .1. H1'1111'lI 1111101 x1v2l11L'1' 15. 1l11111101 510111111 S. 11111111111 1111112111 19. XLWVCIIS R1111011 11. 1l121l't. 41111111 5. H111s11:111111 111111111111 1. X1llC11 111111111 11. 11111111111 CLASS OF 1962 1011111112111 R. 116111111 A111112l1'1 f1, 1121111112111 N1111112l1'1 11. 1111111111111 R1111Cl'1 11is111111 R11g1'1' 11. 111111 11111111111 1l211'11011t01 111111121111 11111111 1112111 NI. Hll11111'11l21ll A12l11.1'2l11, 1911111141111 111'1111'11C 11211111 11. A111llCS 11111111111 811111 11111121111 1lz11'1- 111111111 1l. .111l11'S A12l1'g1l1'g1'1'. 111 1111211'16N 1111'1Il1'11I. .f1111011 11'. 11211'1IllllC111Cl1 A111'112l1'1 S, x12lI11C11'S 11111121111 .1. 1l111'11s 1121511 11'. 1401501, -1111111 11. A111llIg111l11'1'1' 111'll1'C 11ll111'1' .1ll111'1'11' 11', 111F1'l' R111101l I . A1111'l'1S, 111 1.1'g21l'1' 11. 11111101 N111'11211'1 11111gSl1111 11'111i21111 11. A1111'l'1S111l 1,. '11. 1121111011 111?1111l'1'1 111181111 1:11111 11. x1111'11111 1J111lg1l1S .1. 11. 11211is 11111111111 1111111111614 1.211111 -1111111 11. A111111 11lIll1'S 1111111111110 1111501111 R. L1111111' 111111611 X11111C, 1'1'1Cl' S. I i10sl1111C 110111111 1'. N11l'111I1 Ri111211'11 H. 1121111111 N111'Ill2l11 11. 11110103 S111f1l11T1' R0y111111ls 11.1111111215 11. Ri1'11111'11sO11 1111111111115. R1l111'11 R11111'1'L 11. 1111111111 1111111 'If S10g0l -11111121111 S11211lgC1l11C1'g, .11 1'11111'2l1'11 11. S111l1'Q1'1111 lf. 1,1'1'l'1 'I'111111121s 11111111111 L. 112111 11. 11111121111 111113. 11 11211111 P. 11'111'11'I1 11.1111111218 11111111511 51.011311 50011010 111110 R. 51101111111 410115 .1. F1-1'111'1S1?ll 11011 H. 11.1111111101 11111111 R. 11'l'11ll1111' 11211111 Y11211' ,111111l11 X1Y1'1IlSl1'1l1 111111111 11'0111s10i11 12111115 1211111111 11. Rl1'112l1'11 111111211111 111 .12l1Il1'S 11'. lug' Il111'l: l1Ul1'.' 11111011 1'111'1111'11. 1121111011. 11'1111x1111N. 1101111-1. .111'X1l1l11L'l1. 11llL'Il111l1'11.l11l1. 1111111111 S 11llU11'1111, B1'11111'l. 11111111 1'1l1Il11l2l11. 51.1111 , 1 1 A l311x1': 1.11'!Il1'll1. 1'11l11IllI1.1111111'1'.fll1,,'. K11S11l1. 11l'1111'l1. 15.501-11e1g. x1111l1N11ll. H11s1101, 1'111g1'l'l1111. 111111'111'11, C1ll1'115. Ifllllz 1111110 v1'1'1l111111'. H111 1121111 1.0111g1w11110, l111II111'11, 111211. 1111111i1l111lll. 1112l1l111'11'S, 111111, 11lI11. P. 11l21111. 11'11i10. l'. 11'0111ml0111. N1'11'1'IlS. F11111'1l1 I11I11'.' L11111 X111.11Ill111'. 111-11, 1L111111111. 1x1'1Y1'l'. N11l1QllI'g'1'1', Sicgcl, 11. ,111llCS, v1.11l1Il12lS. x111I'I'1S, NIi10s, N1ll1'11l11llI111, BI'1111l1'1'S, 111111013 1,1'11'i11. Thin II1111': l1111'110, 11111ge11. 111l11111'11. v1'1'111'1N11l1. c1111111111', N11'1111l1I1C11. 1111Il1l1llI1'. 11111'1'N1'lll1lll, F1I'1'N1111I1'. A111ll1g11lIl1'11. s1lC11111Il, 11'1I0s. S1'1'11111 l1Illl'.' 1x111gx11111. I'1C111S. s112l1lgCI111C1'g'. 1111111'll, 11l'l1111II'. 111':11'l. 1.111112 11l'1Il1g1ll'11. Ri111z11'11x1111, 111111. Rl111C11. I-'ful lC1111'.' R. -1111I1'i. A111l'111l1 H111111. X1111112 RC1l111111Y, N11l11.1'l111. 1401501 R11111011, 11'l111011. 151 A x 3 li 1 7 7 flfsslgxn 9169 7l'j4f 'iii U K X .X .,g al LAX l LA XYl1C1'c :ill llie gang gow io lim- ii up. cliicllj lmcczuisc it, lizu Ilia Sti'Cfc't's biggest muilcling. most iiiilmmzikulmlc lJzu'i'omn, Most likely soilrfe ol' bridge pzlrtiieis and IXYO-llllg1llIllJlCl'S. Clizlilci' is fllflflifl-llll ul' lwccrly peoplefromwill-i'iif1m1'i-p scllools. llmvmlziiix lm' when za iiizullioiise. lmui wcckclziys are quiet. Fiiiiiliilmitecl. especially llllflllg tl1cii'mx'li. .l Ilumlf .nil-is li. Roisiliiusox, '59 l,l'1'hlilCIlI, 'l'lioM,xs I,. llI'I.LING Ylft'-l,I'CSlllCIll XVll,I.l.'XNl Cl. Bisifi QCi'l'L'l2ll'Y .IOHN 'lf XYOUIJKVARIH 'I'rczisui'e1' SIXCIIHXIR Hxinzil. -IR. BOARD OF GOVERNORS XX'illizm1 C. Riclgwziy. Rolnurt C. XYCM Oliver C. Rcynolcls Ccorge .-X. Yrmclcrmiilill Edwin H. Burk .Xllzm Danica .'Xrnulcl XYoocl. livclyn P. Lllilllifl' Alolm Nl. liziulliuziii Alolm Klcrrcll Xvlllllllll H. Sword joseph I.. liolstcr, 'Ii .john B. llc-:ily Hudson Leiikziu -Iolm D. Kyli- Howzml Slzmley william Simi J l 1'cclC1'ick S. Oslaomc llrmzilcl CL. Slziuglitcr Xvllllkllll XY. Sivwzirt. CI. Lcnlic Rice. 'l'limuzis lf. Huntington 198 CHARTER CLUB Cyrm .Xclzimx lflmvzml R. H2ll'l'lhllIl .lulm RIKCIIIUIK III Dzivicl S. BL-all Simlziii' Hatch. I.11w1'cm-CCL. l.zu-kin Dziximl li, lilzirla Cllillorcl XY. Hcnry -Iolm ll, IKIIJCI .Xnllimly S. Briggs xlll'll2li'l CL. Hulmziml Nicholzis Cl. H. NlzuXi'il CL. Nlcrrill HUTIUIT l'1l'l'llClkli'li I.. I'Iycr..l1-. .Iuscpli R. Nlygziii Xvlllilllll il. lilISll Hilton Nl. -lc1'x'c'y l'cIcl' XY. Nimlmlx XY. .xlllllllllf lllark .lolm XV. Rvlscy Dzlvirl H. l'i'lc1'wl1 Cc-urge ll. lillswortlx llznvicl XY. Kcnclzill, -lr. QI. LCSICI' l':1m:m. Ill Sl:-pllcn lily fllzuiclc li. Ropmwski 'liliomzis I . l'owc'i's Izumw CI. Ciicske CLASS OF 1962 XYilli1im ll. ll2lI'liL'1'. lnlm lszlcs liriicc l.zm'1'v1i:c' XX'illizim lg2il'llCS Slclmlicn Hzigci' Rolmcri .X. l.ul4c'm l3l'lu'c llralmlzileonc Louis l'. Hzm1lJul'gc'i' .lolm ,X. Nlziyci' Iolm R. Cooper llzivicl M. Hoopcs Ricllzml Nli'l'llIlll ,Xrnliiv llclmzirsli liclwzlrcl hlzicolis. Ili. Robert Nlvclinzi llmvzml liilson. Ir. .Xiilliom Ring XX'illi:im Nllxilllllllll Rliyx lixzms lll0lll2lS l., Pulling Riclizml CI. Riggs. Xvlllilllll XY. Roper. Ill l':1ul XY. SZIIIUUII I11 5 . Kvnilvili Cl. Sizmeru l'1l'L'ilC'lklC li H, Sliccflmiicl Huston 'lf Slllllll0llS Rolmcrl .X. Sizmgci' Rolwrl ID. Slllllll Rolmcil XY. 'l'c1wlx'1' R0lJt'l'l .X. l'rm1c'i' licrmil l'. RClIlL'lllliIl .Xllcn Sllcnk Russell XY:llson Kcnnclll xxllllllllllll NYilli:ml Xlitllll .Iolm NYor1ilw:il'cl limi: lfmr: Xhmmlmiicl, llClL'INlHl, Clank, lmpcl. .xillllllx Nlcclizm, llunrlll Ifrmz' lilzuk. RL'im'm1ui. l,1ux1'cmc, l'4llwm. lfllvlll, Shank NllNNlJ2IlllIl. lmxlcl. Tllizrl lfmw: lianiwx, Bl'llIlillllCUllC, hlnumlns, ll1IllllPlII'Q,Clk, Wliillizim, llzlrriwon. Ropcr. Hlllltlll, Xliltcm, I.ukcns Ilcmx. .Srrmirl Ifrmz' Sliccllzm. NlllXl'Ii, l'nsm'l', lixmis, llxigvr, NYul1l, Ih'iqqs,S:il1gL'1'. King, Hurgiml, lSz11'lxc1'. IVVIIIII Rmr: lin-zxll,Si111111um J lilx, Hush. lullmg. Hillfll, Siznugc-ii, llxlcr. Sc'11ssc1'1':n. Syl fill? Olly Full ol qlIlCl. clvcliazllccl lllL'll. Clointcr is lhn' most sc1'irJus ol ull the cluhs. RL'po1'L- cclly it has thc host lkmocl on thc Street, hut is nm over-lively on wcckemls. Mostly high sclxoolern, Clloislcr unclouhtcclly has lop number ol far permissions. ,IX Pmsl! O M115 B. ll0l4lCR'l'SON, '59 OFFICERS Prcsiclem Aloux S. S'l'l'l'Il '61 Vice-Prcsirlcllt l'1f'1'1cR 'I'. lf'k.fxM1a '61 Secrctzlrv .IAMIAA S. hlK1hllf1llAlCI. '61 rll1'C2lSlll'Cl' ROl5IiR'l' I . Bout, JR. '61 BOARD OF GGVERNORS XX'illizun P. Xyliglmt, Gorclmm S. cl2lX'2lll Ralph H. Hcnslmuw John XV. Ryzm Xvlllllllll Lcslic, Arthur Cl, liSLllLTlllkl1lC1' Oliver R. lirooks Xvlllllllfy Cl. Russell .Izuucs Czilhwzlllm, Cllzirlcs H. Slll2lCllCl , Jr. Doualcl XY. Yl'C4'l2lllil Tllflllllls R. Wilrox U0 CLOISTER INN CLASS OF 1961 1'1l'2lll1i D. 1-111g1f1' 1511111111 B11m1'lL 1111111211 19. 151110. 51CIJ11L'I1T. c1111I1lllIl 1111111 1. Cl1'11w111111' 1112111 S. f11I1S1JC1'g 112111101 11'. fL111111Cn011g11, 11111110 S. C1'11111111c 11'111111111 B. Green 11111121111 1.. 1J11111'1111w1'1' 41111111 Ives , . 15. 11111 15. 11 .1l11ll111C 11. 151-11111 1f1'Cl'11' 1,L'1C1' '1'. 1511111112 CLASS OF 1962 11111111 H. .1111'c R111111111 A. .111111111'sc .1111c11t S. 112111 1111111-1' 1-5111'11c. 111 R1111C1't C. 11511111121 1511111 15. 151151111111 1111111 C. c12l1'IJ1 11'111111111 F. c112l1'101l .'11li11'C11' 1. 1711111111111 0111111111 1211401112111 11'111111111 C. I1C1'11lC .111l112l11i1 L. FQ11, C. 15131111 Flesscl 412l1'US11l1' F1111111, 111 5101311611 E. C1'1t111e11 1.2l11'1'C111'C G1'c1i-111111111 11111111111 K. H111'1'1s 1101111 14. 1-111111111 1'1'le1' S. 11611110111 11111116 S. N1L'B11l'1l2lC1 1Sl1fI1111f11 11. 1'1111111s11y .1111111's 15. 1121113111 fl. 1,11l1K1i11C1' R11111'1'1s 1i11w111'11 11. Rose 11111111 11. Rom 11111111111 R. Rll111'2l1l S1cx'1-11 11. S1t1111e1e1' N13111 Ross CL1?111'g1v H. L11111s1111 R11111f1'l 11. Laws 1111111101 1.. 111'1'C1' 1112l1111'1l1i 15. 11111111 R1111111111111 S. N1111111' 1'11111 11'. 111111101 8211111101 N. 116111011 111501111 11'. Seg111'11 1511111111 S1lZlY1111JLlllQ11 111111111 C. S1C11'2l1'1. -1111111 S. 511111 1'1'11'11 1'1111111'1'w11'11e11, HC11111' .1. 11'111te1', 1111 RKJ11L'1'l. 15. 11'1114111s1111, .11 .1111111'1'w Cl. Ro111s1111. 11' -1111111 I . Sf'11111C1kC1N1, .X11l1'111 1'. S1111111. 111 N1'1S1111 CI. SlI11l11 11111111111 CI. 81111111 R1111c1'1 15. 11v2l1C1l1C1' 1511110 15. 11'c11111'111111 111111121111 11'cst11111 111111211 11. 11'1111111?1'11111 C11 1'-011111, 1l1l111111. 112111111111 1511111 lfflill' 1111:x11'1. .111g1'1'. RUSS. 1'l1l1lL'1. C111111e11. S11:1111111111g,11. F11111 1211116 1.11111s1,111. N. S1111l11. 1511155 A CL11111111111c. 01111-11111-111. K11111111111. lf11111'll1 Rr111': Le1'1111-. S1-11111111. 1511s11'11111. 1,L111N, R11111s1111, 1F121l1l1'l1. 1'111111c1'w11'L1-11, Sl'11llC11GlA. ,111cc, 111-S Rll1l1il11. Tlzirrl Ifmw: N1l11Cl1'. R, S1l11l1l. 11'CSlf1111, CI1'11wl111'1', C111111111. 11Ill'l15. 1 C11, C:11'l11. CL1'1'1r11, 15111't1e, 151111. 811111111 Ruin: 151155011 f11llS1JCl'g', 1lC11xL'Il, 11'1'111111111111, 111l1lIl1L'l111L11, fi111111c111111g11, Si'1111'C11iCI'1. .111l2ll1L'NL', Meyer. S1111111, 11'11k111s1111. 14111111 1111112 1jl11lC11011'CI .l2ILi'1l121l1, Rose. x1l'N11K11llC1, S11111. 1'1I'2l1l1C. 151116, R11111'1'1s, S1C11'2ll'1. 1 Tw ur 7 if I9 1 fX Q Ii11f1w11 lm' its lu11fIc1xi11g. sligluly z1cIuIcsr'1'11L prcppics. this chih 111z1i11lz1i11s thc host :14z11Ic111ic' 2111-1'z1gc's IlIIl0lIg the Illflllillll Ifixcu. Ilcfinitely sm1nI1 z111cI I1C'5IlxI' I,z111i11, with mfzlsicmlizll jzlhs :ll hig-time gz1111hIi11g. I,:11'gCIy l'I1iI:1cIc'Il1I1i:1 211141 XX'iI111i11gto11. with 111yslQ1'io11wIy wvank 111icl-XYCst c'c111li11gc11l. SIYCCIH lm111gI1Lwr lcla-1ixi1111 Lc:1111. -Ixxli-is IS. Rcxisiciaixim. 'SEI I WOIMICI' if thc lfl11111il1gm1c's Iuluw 21 fox-l1'ul. OFFICERS I'1'c-sicIu11t -Ixxii-.s IJ. C11.x10R1i 'GI Yill'-l,I'CSIiIl'lll Rom li. SH1aRP,R0c1K1c '61 Sr-c1'cLz11'3'-1i1'n-zu111'c1- I,1f1-1 X. Ci.XR'IiI R GI BOARD OF GOVERNOBS John XY. IX'111'Ls A101111 'I'. IJf11'1'zu1Ce Oliver A. Yieloi' ClI1z11'Ic's Vlw2Ig'g2l1'I 'I'I1cmIo1'e CL. Iium: .'XIcxz111cIe1' B. Toland IlI1ll2lI'lI Ii. I':1y111cf1'. III l'X1'1llIIi CI. Yclwlage I'iI'2lIlk CI. Bznkci' -IUIIII XV. York Fclwzircl KI. fiI'2lIli' llillllllll 13, Duane George A. Dczm '1'I1cocIc1rc Baily 2112 QW COLONIAL CLUB CLASS OF 1961 James B. Burnham Richard V. Butt Nicholas YV. Carper Lee A. Carter David A. Cole Garrett P. Cole Clifford C. Conway John E. Curby James H. Dolvin, Jr. CLASS OF 1962 Anthony Abbott David S. Barry Edward IV. Bartlett David B. Black David L. Chambers, III Samuel A. Chambers, Jr James Cutting Elliott A. Donniston Robert A. Epsen J. M. Ferrer III Alexander M. Forrester James D. Gilmore Henry R. Heek Morgan R. Jones James Kelley Julian XV. Kestler, Jr. H. Blair Klein Joseph L. Delaheld Richard Helmholz Douglas C. James XVilliam R. Kales Hal Kroeger G. Gordon M. Large Richard Luna David lXIeCabe Theodore A. Kurt J. H. Lewin, Jr. Edwin A. Lewis YVillia1n YV. Millsaps I'Villiam B. O'Connor F. Landey Patton A. Christopher Perry Charles E. M. Rentsehler Simeon E. Rollinson III Don MCLueas, Jr. John Minton Charles D. Morrison Daniel H. Neely Michael J. Paine Bruce Pirnie David J. Reese Bari: limp: Delafield, Sehieren, Ridgley, McCabe, O'Connor, Perry, Supplee, R. Smith Minton, Santaniaria, NIcI.ueas, Jones, Large. Fourth Row: Chambers, Reese, Pirnie Third Ifmw: Yehslage. James, Cutting, Thompson, Luna, Carper, Curbv, Abbott, Kales. Schmidt, Donniston, Kur7, Heck, Black, Sebaberg, Chambers. Frou! Horn: Kestler, Dolvin, Burnham, Sherbrooke, Gilmore, Carter, Conway. Butt, Rentschler. R. Layton Runkle Ross E. Sherbrooke Gaylord E. Smith Andrew R. Supplee Robert Thaeh John YV. Thompson, Jr. Stephen T. Vehslage Frederic M. YVanklyn Geoffrey YVOHI Xvlllllllll D. Y. XVII Thomas Ridgley P. H. Santarnaria Kevin B. Sehaberg Thomas M. Sehniidt Carl Sehieren, Jr. R. A. K. Smith, XVilliam lXI. Swain, Jr. Clarence Z. XVurts . Fifth Row: Kroeger, Lewis, Neely, Paine, , Wlurts, Patton, Klein, Ferrer, Hlanklyn, YVu Sammi Rozy: Swain, Morrison, Helmholz, A stunning building with a history ol' :XlIlC1'1i'2ll1 z1ristor1'zu'y, Ilznning collegiate xoulh, :intl tzrhle-stakes gznnhling. Claims 1'il1lgCl'2llll. Parties :ire helcl on several lloors, all likely lo be wilcl, with rock 'n' roll one night, 112111111 the next. Defi- nitely Big Five in reputation, it has highly selective, uggresmive Bieker Represents, illllflllg others, Texas, hut l11CllllX'l'5 keep to 1llClllSClYCS and their rzlstle. lunx klirnk llfllllh lil:-me the Cheese. .1 .XNIIVA 11. 110141-RTSON. '59 OFFICERS Preximlent G1-iolualc XX'.x'1'1aRs '61 Y1LiCAl,l'C5lllQ'llK XY. 1,1141-.xx XX'.rxRn '61 SCl'l'L'l2l1'Y lrezmxrer .Il-'RRY H. Sll.fX'l l'l'iIK 161 S1 ICYICN li. Rnoxns '61 BOARD OF GOVERNORS Williznn D. XVi1lia1ns George lf. Haekl llzlriil MeNlu11in111 li. Clztrroll Stollenwerek llonzllcl R. Atkin Hurry ll2ll'lJCC, CL. lfrecleric' Riegel George Cl. Fraser Henry S. Reeder llonglzis C. flUL'lll'll116 ,Xsht 0-1 XVilliznn St'llCCl'Cl' 111 Henry lfuller Meritt Ralph lf. Peters lirzulley Cl. llrowne H. Yzmlirunt N14-lieever john NY. 11lIllCl' XX'z1rren l'. Elmer Sidney Staunton Ruger Gilbert Chester Billings on 1-Izirx ex' COTTAGE CLUB CLASS OF 1961 Stanley S. Baldwin Alolin CI. Bennett, Alzunes C. Blair Pierce A. Cllizrniberlzrin III Page Cliarpnizril III Adrian .X. Colley lzuues .X. clel'eyster Stoll II. BI. Driscoll CLASS or 1962 .Xlexzrncler M. Ackley, IX'iIlizu11 S. Hallenger III Rolmerr R. Beck David fl. Bramlelte Paul H. Burgerr, jr. Davicl IV. Bulseli Rielizrrd I.. Eclnruncls Ronald E. Clolmlmzru I . Klzrrkley Huey Ilonelson M. Luke Iirewsier M. Loud 'Iierrenee Ii. Maloney Cllillorcl I.. Nlirliel George CI. Norris Lzrmre R. Oulilen HI Harold H. Czrrspeeken, John I . Carter, Linwoocl L. Davis Mark B. Eubanks III Alfred L. Evans -Iolin P. Grady I'. Ricilizrrcl N. Rzrncl, Hzrrlei Rzrnkin, Henry S. Reeder, hjr. Srexen Rliozuls Jerry II. Slrzrtlurk Gary Cl. Irout Donzrlcl NI. 'l'urker ISCIIIZIIIIIII II. 'liurnlxull Izuues NI. XY2lil5WUI'l.ll Ulricli I'Iz1lliuzrnu Robert A. Houck lfrank -Izrnuey james jordan C. Taylor Kew F. Stephen Larnecl Stanclisli lf. Meclinzr, .Xnclrews R. XVzrlker XY. Lukens Illrrcl Iolin XX'zrterlmry George H. IVZILCYS Pliillip XX'eins1,ein IDIIYICI XV. Hells blames XV. XX'ic'kemlen Clark II. Xllooller Robert I'. Ziegler llolin .X. Menclelson Arrhur B. Monroe Charles B. Stephenson Alexander 'I'orref1'asso Lewis YY. Van Amerongen Dennis B. IVrigl1r liurle Row: Blzrir. Wiekemlen, lrour, Clzrrspeeken, Bennett, Medina, Cllizrpinzrn, Hullmann. Fourllz liozv: Loud, Stephenson, XVo0llex Iorrlzui, Blenclelsou, Rand, Aekley, Walker, cleI'eysler. Thin! Row: Luke, Driscoll, Heck,lJ:rx'is,G1'1uly, Burgerr, Torre-Tusso, Llclinunmls IVells. liulmuks. Sffm1111Rozi'.' HllLTf,fi1JlllIIIl1lI, Odcleu, Bzrlleuger, llrrlflwiu, illlllflilfll Reeder, llsuns, Yun Amerougeu, Houck, Braun lerre. Ifmnf Roux' lhrvis, Nluloney, Ziegler, Wirral, XN'z1lers, Slnrtruek, Rliozulx, Wzulsuorllr, Michel. g Mime rdmfm ,-A,.u-15, A long walk to dinner, but bicycles are cheap. Reportedly has a rich board ol governors who are constantly making all kinds of new additions to the physical plant. Pool cues warped Qlike everywhere else on the Streelj. Top in number of afternoon cocktail partiesg next door to Knights ol Columbus. -JAMES B. RCJ13I'1R'I'SCJN, '59 What does Buddha say? Sectre l ary Donald L. Campbell Raymond H. Carter Philip -I. Engel blames F. Foothorap joseph B. Howell John G. Lord Pendleton Marshall Alan Paterson 206 BOARD OF GOVERNORS Arthur Bellinzoni, J OFFICERS President JOHN H. RIARINO '61 Vice-President-'Ireasurer FRED XV. IQAMSEY '61 EDWARD G. BURTON '62 Victor Preller Robert Rheinstein Herman A. Scilunitz Robert A. Sincierbeaux Pierre Stralenl Louis K. Timolat Hugh D. XVise, Richard F. Limoges Richard E. Neunherz CCURT CLUB CLASS OF 1961 Lee I.. Blyler Brice C. Cl0x 1121111 M. 110111112111 1112111111 A. l'1Cl'11I1C1' B12i1'1'011 CI. lfort R011er1 H. f1OlC1CI1 CLASS OF 1962 81112111 15. A1111 Gary XY. ,-Xlle11 ,xliill R. Class .Xll611 lierl11w11l 1i1lw211'11 G. 1111111111 .XI2111 R. CIl10l01le11k0 li. S. 111X11l1 .'X. XY. lf1'el12111 Robert 156111111111 1001 P. l'll'1C11lIl2lI1 11211111 H. f101'l111l1 11211111 H. -1111111811111 12111111 1. 1,e1l'er 1iC1l1l0l111 G. Luke, .1r. 1111111 M. N11iCl11CI1 1101111 H. M21r1110 Bennett G. CL21lel', -1r. 11211111 L. C1'01le 101111 S. 1-11l1s11l11112111 1'XI'1'l11C HC1X'2l11CS12lI1, -11' 1. M11'l121el l'1l'CC1111C1'g' f1l'01 gC 1.. -101112111 R11'llZlI'11 E. 1411111011 Ernest Kelly. I.. 1. 1.2ll1111I1l. 101111 lf. M11.2111gl1li11 111111121111 R. M1ller,1r Hurry P11110 1 l'Cl1C1'111i W. Ramsey 1101121111 li. R0ss1112111 1211 81111111 11I'lll111l11'i1 A. 111I1l1SC1' 121111es S. 1.1p11'111 A12i1l1CS XY. Merrick 4101111 li. M00re .Xllrecl Muller 1V1ll121111 XV. l,2lIU.?1'SOIl .10C1 1,l'IlSlCy R11'l1z11'11 H. Ringel R11tl1z11'1l RUSIICI' R0l1er1 ll. Siegel 111111 M. S1'11WV2i1'Il .1 11211111 H. Slel1l1i11g 1'10XV2l1'11 C. Sylvester Hurry M. '1'0ller1011 l'1l'2lI11'lS A. 'I'011'11e 101111 C.1V1'1gl1t, 1r. 1 . 10rge 1116111 1'11'11' 12ll11CS S1llI12lI1 H. .X1lgL1SI1lS '1'a1'l0r Yl'llC1111O1'C 111111 XX'21ll111e1111'l1 .101111 1Vl1ilele1' Hugh 11111111 11. XY. 1VOO1lllI'l1 l1'2l Yell111 11211111 N. Young .X1'l111lK1 M. Zw11l41' limi: 1flIIl'f Wl1i1ele1. 1yUlI111ll'i1. Kllll1L'l1. .XllCl1. SlCl111111g, Fort, 11l1l1ll, k111l111x1011, f1l1Ul0l1CIl1if1. CL1'011e, Muller. Ffmrtlz lime: 1-113111 Illllll. 1-1111 1Y2l11IllCl111l1. C.01'1l1111, Siegel. I':1t1e1's011. Y111111g, 1 l'CL'1ll11'l'g. 1.21111U111. 1'1l'Illll0ll, .11'I11, Riern, 1.11111se1'. Tllirrl 1111116 L01 L1 I1111111. 'I11Il1'1'11111. Kelly. l1ix011, flux. 'l'111v11e, '1'211l01', H111'l1llCS1llll, 1101'1'I11Zl11, S1I11x'111'lz. 14111013 .1111'ClI1l1. Srfrmzrl 1311112 N11l11l1Cl1. I 1111 1'.Cl'l1l1C1'. S:1il1-1, 1'1CCl11lll, 1'lI'1L'1llI1ll11, Y1-11111, R11s11e1', 1lUSSlY12lI1, I,111l11ll. M0011-, l1lT1'lI1W117. 1111111 How: 1vl'1gl1f, Ringel, S11I111l11, 1 1.2lllgl1l1Il. NlLlI1I1O. R11111Qe1, Sylvester, l'Cl1SlC1', 1511111111. M f Occupiecl ln :ill-Aineiicaii boys who play lots ol IAA hzisketliall :intl Solihull. Dizll Lodge is the z1l'tei'hi1'tli ol' XVoocli'ow XX'ilson's New Deinoimtic Non-Cllnh syslein. The wziitresses ure lllUIllCl'ly, :incl there is ll louclspeznket' system. Wieck- enrls :ire likely to he pzirkecl with toga lmzirties :incl enthusiastic' rocking. glxxllas H. Rtllil-ARTSON, '59 lfor so tlelifzxlc an 2111, CUlll'ClllI'flllUll is of lDl'lIll2ll'? iitiportzliice. OFFICERS l'1'esiclent X'ice-Presiclent Sec retzi1'y5l'1'ez1st11'ei' Clhzirles XV. Cook lznnes Q. llensen lilyllg Martine lfrecl lVIanc'hu 208 RONALD XV. Siiimrfw ,GI S'l'ANI.EY R, PANOSIAN '61 IUENNIS S. KARQIAIA '61 BOARD OF GOVERNORS Sinclair Hatch John T. Scott Bartliolomew A. Greene Peter E. B. Erclniztn DIAL LODGE CLASS OF 1961 Christian O. Basler Alun R. liendelius Stephen NI. Berger Robert N. B0llOI'2lC1 llolin Y. Bowers George Bl'2lliClC1', III Morton M. 1161111 james IS. Dill Ilouglus Eisenlelder Mason Iferry 'Iz1111es Greenberg CLASS OF 1962 Don Allison, Burton .X. .Xlter P21111 .'Xl'liClIl2l Barry Bosak 4101111 H. ClylIICI' .-Xreliie C. Conn, III G. 111110111215 Corwin Edward R. Doughty Thomas R. Frost, Ir. NIicl1z1el .-X. Goodfriend Gilbert Gordon Riel1z1rd F. fQI'CI11llIgC1' Gary B. HZIIIIIIIOIIK1 Nli1il1z1el E. Harris gxfflllll' XY. Hedgren, Robert G. hlzteobs Pliilip I.. .johnson Dennis S. K2il',l2llZl Douglas Nl. Kerr .lzunes XV. Klein .IZIIIICS R. If. KllllliCINLlCllC1' Riel1z1rd .X. Manning Donald P. Gril'l' Peter A. Hz1n1ilton Stuart Harris Herbert Henryson, II -Iay KZILILIIIZIII I.o11is I7rz111kli11 Kemp, Robert Koch Stephen Kroll IVendell NI. Kury .Iol111 B. Meilobb, David .X. lXIc'Ewen -Iosepb C. Messina I.o11is XV. Morgan Lewis Neisner Carl 'If Opclerlmeck Stanley R. l,Zll1OSlllII -lolin S. Quilty IIIJIIH S. Rode Xvillllfb IS. Rose r11llUlll2IS G. SZIIISOIIC 1.2lXVl'Cl1L'C XY. Sl1ields NOYIIIHII S. I.evi11e 111111121111C1.I.L?Yl1ISOII A101111 1,0VCl'I'O Oliver I.11ets1'l1er, III Riel1z1rd 1.11111 Henry R'1K'1,Zlllgllllll Gardner N. IXlz1rey Eugene I.. Martin XV11l12lIII lXIel1r Gliarles Miller 1101121111111 Shipinan XX'illard G. So111ers Dztvid B. Steiner Gerard F. Vetroinile -101111 li. Vries Alan 1X'ein 111111121111 B. XVeldon Sheldon Nl. XVilk Yung Ulong AIz1111es E. XVood, III 111111111111 XV. Young Arene Y0IIlIU'lJCI'g h Al21llll6XV Miller David R. Mislmlove Peter A. Moesel john O'liz111e Rayniond 0111111 Charles A, Pease George H. N. Riddle -john Roberts David Speir .Xlunson S1111111er BCTIIQLEIIIIIII I7. Troxell 131111: Roux' I-Iedgren, Wilk, NI. Harris, Hz1111111o11d. Clynier. Levine, Wood, KIll1liClI1IlCllCI'. Sixllz Rmv: NIr11111i11g, Kury, Moesel, Miller, Somers. Neisner. Iizisler, Loverro, Yoiingberg, H11111ilto11, fQILCClllJCl'g. Fiflh lfozv: SZIIISOIIC, Nlessinu. Nleflobb. S. Hurris, Ros Mislizilove, Boxvers. Dill. I.y1111, Bendelitis, fjflllll, Steiner, Kroll. 1511111111 Row: I.llClSCilICI'. NICllI', Jacobs, Cor11'i11, Roberts, Greinin CI XVeldo11, .Xlliso11, Troxell, XVei11, ll. Miller, Douglity, Speir. Tlzirrl R1111': Rose. 1,C2lSC.lIUlIIISOl1. liise11l'elde1'. NIc:Ii11'e11. Opderbeck, Denn Nliifflll, X'etro111ile, Nlurey. l5ol1orz1d, Frost, Riddle. S1'm1111 Row: I31':1kele1'. fl0OK1fl'1ClICl, Quilty, Pz111osiz111, Sl1ip111a11, Kz11'jz1lz1, Fein Young, HCIlI'fStlII. I 1'o11I Row: Vries, Shields, Kemp, Alter, XVOIIQ, Gordon, Killlflllllll. X rw W X . -. X X , J i... ' 1 X Q - - 1-H1 26 xXXN , 1 1 '- Complete with sunken living room and glass chandeliers, Elin has good parties Qbrings in talent like Josh XVhite, Calypso groupsj and secxond-class for This is fun and won't take too niuch of my tiineuj doers. Although opposite University Field, Elm inenibers cannot watch hzlseball through the windows. Reasonably quiet. -Jimriis B. llOlilCR'l'5ON, '59 Its all gone, Angel . OFFICERS President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Ralph A. Bullock XVillian1 Bonthron XVZIITCII L. Cruikshank I-larry H. Hoit Frederick L. Hyer 210 --.. - ei- --L... , yi 'V lu' 1 1 ' X iq hwy 411 'I ' XE ' Eli' il I .ir ,ng,g,...., . XIIQRNON E. CI.osR ' GARDNIQR XV. HFlDlllClK, JR. ' G. .XIAN KRABIFR ' IQICHARD XVUIALNIIQRSH.-XUSILR ' BOARD CF GOVERNORS YV. Allan Jansen XVillian1 F. Laporte lVzillacte C. L2i'1'0ur Harry Slevens, Jr. XVillian1 M. Throop, Jr 61 61 61 61 ELM CLUB CLASS OF 1961 Vernon E. Close lstvan Csekitev Robert C. Fuller, Ir. Nicholas Gotten, CLASS OF 1962 Robert XV. Astarita Henry H. Balfour, joseph Bycik Neal Carlson XYalter Corey Bruce Elliot Arthur H. Evans Gardner XV. Heitlriek, Stephen A. Heller C. Alan Kramer Thomas K. Everngain Ernest C. Frohboese Brian Bruce Galbraith Stuart M. Kotler Lance Lipitz Daniel P. Lund Lee Mapletolt John Lavagnino Peter -I. Marcus Rictharcl H. Nelson Lewis lf, Nettrour Frank Mcilonnell Lawrence H. Pantix Robert Leon Poster lXIic:hael N. Rosen H. David Rosenblooin Dan Rogers -joshua S. Roth Iiurlc lime: Whitaker. Rosen, 1'ill10l. Steinberg, Mapletolt, Carlson. lfourlh limit: liallour, Rick, Rogers, nino, Galbraith. Tllirfl Row: Astarita, Sehoellkopf, Roth, 'l'eit'h, Mtllonnell, litus, Poster, Stark. Szfroml berg, Kotler. Panitf, Suitl. liverngain, Luntl. Front Razr: Gotten, Heitlriek, Wolhnershauser, Close. Fuller Frank A. Novak Peter Rosenberg Richard A. YVl1itaker Richard 1V0ll1llCI'Sl121llSC1' David I . Scihoellkopf XValter A. Stark, Alfred David Steinberg Robert A. Sturla Kenneth KI. Suid Stephen 'leieh .Iohn C. 'liitus Peter M. Young Young, Lipitl, Evans, Laing- Rozw: llsejtev, Sturla. Rosen- , Kramer, Martins. lf, Houses thc most lcspecitzllmlu .jocks ou czmlpus. The local lJl'2llN'll ol SL. ,'xlltll0I1fS, Ivy has a srcminglj immulzlble top ruling, docs liulc lo lJL'1'lJCIU2lL6 lL uxcept sxorc in hickcr. Parties arc nothing to gut excimd lllllllll. Claims l.ippinrotL. Cllznims xloynu. Cllzlims Prillcc-lon. XCYCI' loudly. though. -I,xxI1cs B. RCJI5l'IIl'l'NfJN, '59 l'11r1ll1Cl', the ix? grows lligllm' in 'I'cxnS.U OFFICERS XVZUTGII Ingersoll 212 l1l'65lLlCI1I XVlI.I.I.-XXI A. NIc:NIII.LAN 61 SQc'1'CL:11'y CIIRlS'1'OPHliR I . Pool 'lll'C2lSll1'CT .form C. M,u:NIl'RR,n BOARD OF GOVERNORS l'c'r1'y Hall Bronislzu' Clzunpbell fihzxrles Mellon CI. Hatfield R. lferuzaml Billlllfll Clobson Cllunzm IVY CLUB CLASS OF 1961 C11-111'g1' 1'. 112111161 11111111111 15. 13111111111 11. 1i11'111 1111112 111110111218 11. 6111111-11 1111111-11 O. 111C111111 111011lc12l111lJ1JC11 I 1111111w f11lll12ll1 ' 1,C1'1'1' 12. 111111 1111211165 H11l111r111 1'l12lll1i1111 5. 01111 H1'111'1 11'. CI111111. 111 11. .1. 1.e1' 11l'gllC1' 511'11111'11 1.. 11111511 11111111111111 15. 1J11l'111'11. 111 1'11'CL1C1'11'1i 1'. 11111 CL1'111'g11 11. 1'111111. .11 111111111 11'. 1'11t1'116I1. 111111111 C. 1111111 C1111'1s11111111'1' 15. 1111111 CLASS OF 1962 li. 1'. 11L'1'l1l1111 .1ll1110111' 15111111 1'1'11r1' 1.. 1.11111'1t1e11 11111111111111 1'. 11111111 512111165 1'1l'CIl111 1111111g11111111'y 1.1'W1S lC1'11cs1 S. c112i1'1i. 111 11Cl11lll1l1ll 11. f1l'151X'1J111 11211111 11. N11.111J1ll 1111111 Craig. 51131111011 Cl. 11111151-11 111-11y11111 X2l1J6115. 111' 11111111111 lf. 1511110 R11'112l1'i1 1.. -11111151111 Cl1111s111111111c 112111311 1'1SIIlL'111Zl11 ,11CXZ1I111L'l' 1i1'11111r11y 1'111111:1111111111k1s 1111111 Cl. 1111111111'1'11x 1'1l111'2l11i1 11'. B1'11w11, 11. 112111711 '1'. C21-1'1' 11'111111111 ,1. 111511112111 11'111111111 H. 11111611 S11111111'1 5. R111 1'11'2l111i L. 1l1l111l1'l151J11 'l'111111111s R11l1i115, 111 511111116111111011-A111101 11llg11 C. S11111 1110115161 11. 1111111 1121161111 111111 CL1'1I11g. 151111114 CL. 11'is111'1' 11111111111 11. 11'1111111v11111 C. 1'11'1111' 111111011 11 f1111' R1111111111111 l111sc1111 S111'11g11c 11'. B. '11ll11i1'1' 1111112101 1'. .1. 11121111 111110111215 11. 11'1r1111, 511 11111011121511.1111'1g11l 111111: Ifmr: I.C11'1s, 1ic11111'11x. 111-11. l7111'sC1. Ci111'1'1'11, R11l1111. 11111611 R1l11ll'11llll1. R111x1'1'. Filllz ICr111'.' 'I111111. 1.z1111'11lc11. f1l11C. 11111111 Y:1111'1N. 111-1111. HCgIlL'11. 1111111'1', 111K11C1'. 1'11111'l!1 1111117 1is1111'1'i1111. C111ll'11. l'11l1111111111111111iN, l'111111. 1'1lkL'11111. 11'1x111'1'. Hz1111L'l11. R11111114. 011111 x11.111J1ll. 'l'l1i1'11 Razr: 111111s1'11. LI111111. 11C1'l111I11, 1111111, 11'1'1g111, S11111g111'. 111111, c11l1llID1JC11. 1111111111 Ifrmx' 01111. 1'11'l11I1, k111111s1111, 1:11511 f1l'L'l'. 111llI'l1. 1I1'Cl1i11111111, C1111111111, 1'1I111c11. Fmnl 11111115 111U1S'1l, H1ll. R11'1111111m1111. 11z11'11111'1'111. 1111Ii111111, 111101, 111111 C.1'1'111g. S1011 111111-1'. , V, ,. 1.-. .-x. U. shy. ... l.. ..,- Q .. , ivgliihuw-'w?,..'..,, l 5,,'Ii.Q4u7, l 'i'l.i'.lu.:Z511l...L,. 3 X . I awllli' - 'al NPO... .W l ,,- - I-:ul '- WW-:'1f.. ..'7Q5:vvl Q ' ti.,ix.Q'l .1 lr. , A X .mv l fJf42,v,x . ,... X 1 X' . NWN I fijliixlli xilvfxl N59 S N 'fl' il -Q 'X . .X N, ,V v: -.-3.1 .,,, i . - X P. 1s..g2f-1ff'alfusnf.. i' -X.-'igiizf . .N iii? EpX.-i. ls-w:is..wg.i1f.f QZQ . 1 E vi, NQQ' -Eff . 'fl if myxga'-i'34 ', fl. 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'iibklfz :Wi A, V, XX 5. ' . -' - Q .' 1 1 , :L I-f.: f H . ' if---'if N. ' . .:.I- .,.:41ggf1., : ' il.. i ' ' ulllflgwillv If 2. 1 l'lhj5, E3 - ,i jfs., -.3-f-gl E 1 A. fu' iMu-'- - 1-14. .,' .-Q-:ill 1' J .'.'i'f4ilY'i,.' F fiiiiitf-:--?: L 4.1154 TS li. .. . fl, M.. . .. .X . . ,ll . x gr .N -. .-. . W . . . - ..-4.1 . .. .- ull.. ' Wy i' -,JI , - 5 0-. .. , ,,, -- ,, 11J15ff,ri'i ' , ' IW . '- z.II.1'.f3.ii-Sm'., 'f24:,., S ... , .. A .f, . . ,.- . ..- ,.. 2 . .. .... i Fil... ii . .- . 1.15 1'-. . , I v ., U. ,,-4 i -1-v-,A . HM .01 I .-. A4 .,..':...,,.., -1 . 5 'ifr.,f'f 'J'-2 MHA - 'M,'2 'Ll'Yl - :Ei ' '1,i l'?ov. ' 1 x I .. 1 ' , '. 13 -f ,L-'gl ---- .. .xiii-',- ' 'hiji I m ' f I-T-.y j-.QNX ' ,E il. .-U3 fZ5iZ??-1.-725 g g','.1'.-E fl l'ii.4'v!.'.z .. :'- r... L 1 lgvfvigl 'in' 1-i:l'Sl'4l alllla iv,E:'w,1 li,!lilk'.lvg'mWgiFREStsg lmugggg ?i.+?.gEfQ1!'lf-AiqEQE '.5:.Q..'5 f'J - ff-1 -: A fi , 4 'XY ff I 'qi lllllli M f-M . 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L 31 i' ar -l - if .-.- m 2-Mei 1--1-'Af ....-::'i1-' ' P 13 l Vw 0 Q . Mad Q, Once liaml a wlcwarcl nanival Osman' who knew CYl'l'f'0llC lic had 4-vcr sccn QOsca1' now clccvziscmlj. Kei L'll2il'2lt'lCl'llCll lay a less-aloul' glhllll ol wild nicn. Onlv club ever um lap Heineken! on a wcelacncl. licx also spcnialifcw in mcklail parties wlncll may gut hairy. llznla clancc lluor. Sl1lllCl -llxxiiw 15. Roislckurmx. '59 i OFFICERS Pl'CSlllL'lll Vice-l'1'n'sialc11L SCL'lil'l2ll'l F1il'C2lSlll'K'l' William li. Sclniaull Bllllilflll H. Fry Frccl M. llllllflllfl' Henry BI. Stratton Esniolnl ll. fillllllllfl' Ricllai-cl H. llictfe Qlfl likuzic R. Cl.xRRic1K '61 -Il-.RONIIC P. XVIilss'1'1cR '61 Roluxxlm K. Kvczinii. '61 '61 Clifoififiuiv N. Sxirrn BOARD OF GOVERNORS Xvlllllllll B. Hallncr -lulin C. YVilliams Eincst E. Keusfli XX'illa1'cl A. Pale Olixm' H. Havens flcrn-ge .-X. Hamid. KEY AND SEAL CLUB CLASS OF 1961 Julius H. Anderson Vancleaf B2iCllI1lllIl J. Brooke Baker John B. Burt Bruce R. Carrick Ford C. Deopker Stephen Falk Robert S. Driscoll A. Charles l-'risbie CLASS OF 1962 Ricl1z11'd Abbitt Irwin .Xlte1'111a11 XX'illia111 YV. liarkes. H Hugh Bartlett Brian liate Sllfllllfill H. 132111111 -Itlllll C. Bender -ltlllll Blake llflllllltl L. Blotk Ritl1:1r4l Bowen Paul S. Clark ,jay Coupe llonalcl P. Delirier R. XV. lJeDet'ke1' Al2ll'Y1Il Dian1o11tl Robert li. Haines Robert H. Hall james N. Hewitt David B. Hinehrnan Peter XV. Hyde RlL1ll2ll'il Kersten John H. King Rolztncl li. Kurhel H211 l. Lackey Artllur D. Palmer xlOllll H. Dunn, Paul Epstein R1t'll2ll'll V. lfabian, Donaltl R. Foster -Iolin N. Hz1rn1an III Michael A. Hewitt Ric'l1a1'cl Hokin Dertl llowlett l,lllIllJCl'l .I:1c'kso11 lirrue Raplztn Robert lil'2ll'HS XX'illia111 S. Kearns SIJCIIKTI' Kellogg john M. Kirk, Geraltl l,lllJ2i XValter F. Petraitis Xvlllllfllll Ratlebaugh Rieharcl C. Rebeis Morton Rible XVillian1 H. Rough Herbert R. lllll1l1C Tin1otl1y R. Scarll' Clontee 'l'. Seely Geoffrey N. S111itl1 Newton 1.2llllSUIl Robert li. l,llXVlCl' David E. l.ee Galen Cl. li. Leong Stephen Levine Hugh CI. Alt'l,C1lll Charles Nlc'C1lellz111cl lll llavitl li. Al2lll0l1Cy Huclson Milner .Xlan AlOl'L'l2lllt1 lfrank l'i11tlyt'l4 Harr1 G. Poole Peter O. Price R:1nclolpl1 Reecl I.. M. Riclcler l'lI'2lllC1S R. Snodgrass Steven P. Stiles Alexander SLlIllCl'l2ll1ll Randolph NV. Taylor Peter E. Thauer Russell F. r1lfCl1l2llI1C clll2ll'lCS N. XVatson. -Ir Martin C. NVatson Jerome P. XVebster, Riclmrcl A. XVebster john RllIl1Cl'11ll'll, blr. .lobn lf. Sands -Iellrey Selievitz Stephen S. Scliwztrtz XX'illi11111 T. Sehentller Peter D. S111itl1 Mark Snicler .john Staul'l'er Guy Stewart Robison Swigart 1Y2lllCl' Nl. llllflllllll Robert H. YX'aclswortl1 Lewis Xl. 1110111510111 liuel XVl1ite -Iznnes Hloocls XX llllillll P. X1l'l'tlCIl lll 111111: lf'IIl'.' Leong. v11lNlHl'. W11tls11'o1'tl1, lllllllll, l,2lllIlCl', Stiles, Milner, Rllll1Cl'1illl'll. King. l'ifll1 Row: .XI1tlK'I'SIlll. 1Vl'CtlCl1. Nll'l.Cllll. H111 Illllll. Bitte. llelletket, Szuuls. 'l'l'Cl1lZtll1C, Snotlgrziws, Nlaboney, 1i1ClllQl'.l f1Vll'flI Rrmx' l.lI11'lt'l'. lfrisbie, Sf'l1XXL'IllllCl'. lllllllltllltl. Prime. Vlllllllltl Hziines, Pilulytk. Houlett, YYootls. l1CIlllt'l'. linker, 1Yebster. Thin! limit' lliltlllllllll. l.lllJ1l. lipstein, Cioupe, Bowen, Hokin. lleliritt .Xllt'lIl12lIl. Watson. llc-ijn, Blake. X1lClllSlL'lll, lfosler, Ste11':1rt. Swrnml lfozr: St'llt'1l1l. S11itle11. Xbbitt. llxtle. l.e1i11e. llllllll. Iiauku 5lIlllt'l'l2lIlll, Sulgult. Stznrll. l.:u'l4e1. Petrglilis, Reetl. Firxf Ilona' lleuill, lhlrtlett. Riblv, S111ill1, Carritk, 1xvCllSlCl'. R11t'l1el, Driscoll, 11111 Un l lIIUl'f S111itl1. Wl1ilt'. R11pl1111, Cllxlrk, Rellogg, Seely, Rtlllgll, Slziuller 11 21l1lN x111111'11211' ' - '1 ' . ' ' ' 111 111111111 1111 L 11111 1111111111111 111151111 51111101118 111111111111 111 Q112111. 1 'C 111 111511155 1111111115 111 1111'11' 1121501110111 C11Il1llg 11111111 111111 1111-11' 111-c111111'c. 51112111 1111111gw1111 21 Big H1f211'1, 1110 1112110 111115 1111 21 g111111 5111111' 211 H1111s1r11211't11?s. 1'1CL'1h 1 1111 s1l111U ,' ' -1 C11 11e1wC1r11 111 211111 C2111111111 211111 11215 1111 1l11z1111'2111g11'. 1111611 s11'z11s 111s1f11x11'1's 1111111 Big lfixef' 11N1w s11g111 111 11211111 1211 CXl'1I1IIQ 111' Sf1I1l1l11l11llg 111111c1111111111. 1115... mis 15. R11111iR1's11N, '59 OFFICERS P1-es11111111, 1l1ll1.11' L. ISRUNLR Y11c-1'1'1's111c11t R11111f,11'1' D. SCIl1NK'lilZ1iR SCC'1'L'12l1'X'-11.1'C3S111'C1' XV. 1,1111-1 1'11ik511N BOARD OF GOVERNORS 13111121111 fXg11ew 1V111121111 '1'. Ca11111111:11 1'11'ZlIl1'1S A. C0111st111'k 131'111111s 1-'C111111, 111 L111111111' S. 1'1OXN'1C1' 13111121111 NV. G1'111111 A. 1J1111g121ss H2111 1. 1l01JC1'1 H1111e1' E111x'111 1.. 1i116tlg'c1', 11' 2111 .Xl'l1ll11' Knox, 812111111311 F. N1Cl111lZl KN'1's1o11 C. 111111011 Hz1ssc1t111e Cl. Ray D. Recd S111:11'1, Jr. AI111111 H. 1111121111611 N1111111ct1111 CI. '1'1'a1n 111111111111 H. XX':11ke1'. 112ll'l'X 151L'1'1iCS, 111 QUADRANGLE CLUB CLASS OF 1961 Frederick E. Bishop Frederick EI. Brick Philip L. Bruner Lawrence I. Buell lVilliam A. Buxton Curtis Campaigne, 111 -Iames R. Cole Friedrich NV. Conrad, -Ir. John M. Cooper, Jr. james C. Dangel Blair S. Edwards CLASS OF 1962 AI. Buford Anderson Robert S. Appell VVilliam NV. Barber, III Harrv R. Battin James T. Benjamin .lack Bissell A. Carl Bredahl, Robert Burkhardt, David Cacchione John D. Cadman james B. Carolan, Jr. Richard L. Chappell Edward H. Clarke john B. Constantine James XVallace Cook XVilliam Cooper, Peter A. Godsick Michael A. Gould Lee S. Greenwood, Il Iohn H. Grimes Stephen Harrington Jon D. Hlalter John G. Hopper Douglas P. Hutchison Terry A. Johnston Justin H. Kimball Stephen Lerman Charles XV. Lynehan Harry C. Crawford Robert T. Degavre Ames Gardner, Jr. James C. Glasier Gregory Guroff Gilbert High, 1Villiam P. Hilliard, Jr. John B. Hollmann Edward McH. Holland Michael F. Holt l'Villiam Icenhower George Irvin P. XVilliam Kosmas Douglas H. Latimer A. E. Laurence YVilliam A. Lietzow Alan MacKenzie lfrank McGinity Charles H. Morgan I. XVilson Morris 'Ernest W. Pelton, II Peter Pettibone W. Lee Pierson XV. Hunter Platt Philip H. Pritchard lVilliam lf. Ramsay john L. Randall Peter Lindert joseph Dandridge Logan, Ill lohn H. lNIarburger, III David R. Marron Charles B. Mathias Anthony C. Moore David T. Moran C. B. Moya Perry R. Neubauer -Iohn M. Nuzum Alohn XY. Pearsall, III I-'rank E. Pelton, Ill Courtnay Pitt, Edward Rettig Craig H. Scott Paul P. Rubincam, Jr. Stephen P. Sachner C. Barry Schaefer George A. Scheele, III Mlalter G. Schroeder Robert D. Schweizer Arthur C. Smith, III James H. Stevens George NV. Taylor Allen H. XVhitehead, Jr. Marc G. Hlhitehead Richard Xvilliams Frederick Smith Kenneth B. Smith Turner T. Smith, Jr. John G. Stiller Peter Tisne XVilliam Fraser Tompkins, Ill George Van Der Aue I. Peter Vanneman 1Villia1n YV. Venable, lr. Timothy B. VValker I R. Dulaney YVard, Hunter 1Vare, David VVatts James M. Hlhittaker George T. lVollord Back linux' Smith, Hopper, Neubauer, Clarke, MacKenzie, Laurence, Cooper, Cook, Tompkins, Venable, XVare, Carolan. Sixth Ron' Guroll, Cooper, High, Schroeder, Scott, Ward, Bttell, Battin, Bishop, Nllllllll, Brick, Gardner, Chappel. Fifth Korn: Cole, Ramsay Dangel, Smith, Holland, Edwards, Bissell, Moore, Burkhardt, Moya, Latimer, Rettig, Sachner, Marburger. Benjamin. Fourth Koa' Marron, Smith, Williams, Morgan, Whittaker, Wolford, Cacchione, Degavre, Pelton, Logan, Pritchard, Morris. Anderson. Whitehead Harrington, Kosmas, Kimball. Third Ifouu' Godsick. YVatts, Lindert, Nlilligan, Holt, Lietlow. l'1liSlilllC, fili2lWl'UI'll. Mathias, Stiller, Holl' mann, Buxton, Icenhower, Van Der Aue. Secoml Row: Lerman, XN'liitc-head, Hutchison, Hlafter, Greenwood, Schweizer, Bruner Pierson, Scheele, Conrad, Pettibone, Randall. First Row: Constantine, Pelton, Rubincam, Cadman, Gould, Lynehan, XValker, Smith Bredahl, Pearsall. If fa N ,ff fli'giQ,':'+l1 ' . 4 g ' V i A T I' O O A S K I' I 9 5 S 7 X X! On the inuin drug fXV2lSlllIlg'lOIl Rozul. Llial isp, 'lcrrzue has color Lelcvision and pool sharks. CiCIlCI'2llly quicl, its members arc of Llic more intellectual ilk of Princelonizins, with pliysifs und biology majors sullcring only Z1 short walk to Llleir laboratories. Normal cnterlzlinrnent :incl food. Subducd. -AIAMES B. ROBI'IR1'SON, '59 'l'crrz1cc lwists. OFFICERS President Vic-c-President Secretziry P1il'CllSUl'Cf Lewis H. Boclinan Nlillon Nlcl. Brown YYilli:nn A. cllIlS0l11l Paul Nl. I-Izlrbolick Robert D. Hoclcs, Irving B. liingslorcl. Qlq C - 1 YVl1,1.lAM H. C1r..n roN Robcrl N. Ciilinore, JOHN T. DEINICR, FRANK V. Mlcxocsxx, Sri: vi IEN -I. Nnuiccmik, BOARD OF GOVERNORS .Xrcliibalcl DCB. lollnson XX'intln'op CI. l,Clll Robert li. Xcviascr Edwin lXl. Rhea l 1'CclC1'ic' NV. SCl'llllllllI1 Bcnjfnnin H. XV2llliCl' TERRACE CLUB CLASS OF 1961 David B. Anthony Stephen F. Babcock joseph M. Barone Robert AV. Barrowrlough Roger E. Bermas Leonard Berton llohn G. Bidwell Frank P. Boer .john F. Bright David C. Burnham Raymond Y. Chiaco .lames A. Chmiel Xllilliam H. Clayton Neil A. Crane CLASS OF 1962 Creighton XY. Abrams lll Ernest B. Adams .Iames Afllerk. ,lohn Bevan Peter K. Carlslon Cllavin B. Gotner Scott Downing David S. Durant Stephen lf. Dana lohn T. Deiner Edward M. Diener Edward I.. Dubrow Harold A. Falconer, -Ir Mark P. Finks David L. Fitzgerald Douglas G. Fong -lohn M. Frame Sidney Friedman H. Harris lfunkenstein David A. Gav Kenneth D. Goldin A. Michael Greenwald Martin C. Gruen David Elllllll Roger Frye Nicholas A. Gallo Robert Hazelton Edward M. Hirsch -I. Stephen Huebner Nelson Helm, jr. Hobart C. Iackson, Ir. YVesley I. jiolmson i Michael N. Kreisler Hugo Hilgendorf, III Michael M. Horn Iames B. Hunter 'Nicholas A. loukovskv Iohn M. Keller I 'Irwin D. liunlf, Ir. Frederick O. Lamparter Peter B. Loomis IV Richard G. Maximon XVilliam M. Michelson Frank Y. Mignogna .Iames I.. Munoz Stephen Nemecek Howard A. Olgin Gerald XV. O'Neill klames B. Queen Barton T. Lewis .lohn S. l.ewis, G. Lighldale C. Douglas Marshall Kim Parker Stanley Pryzby David A. Rahm Stephen L. Rieber Albey Reiner -Iohn P. Sandstedt Gharles F. Reusch Stephen R. Ryter David I.. Srhoch Robert 'l'. Sholz Ernest B. Smith Carl A. Taube Edward A. Tomlinson Myron F. Uman Paul G. Xllathen Louis li. XVerner Hugh D. XYharton ill Allred A. IVl1eeler XVilliam XV. Hlhite George S. NVilson David B. NVoo Kung Yao Robert B. Stock Thomas B. Stoel, David 'l'horburn Russell Trey: John IV. Van Zanten I John H. Yreeland Leo O. Vroombout Stephen XVanat Martin YfVeber Clifton Hlhite Hack Roan' Parker, Munoz, 1Yilson, Frye, Babcock, Carlston, Crane, Hunter, 'l'omIinson, Entin, Marshall. Fifth Razr: Wathen, Bai rowclough, Reusch, Horn, Barone, Sandstedt, Chmiel, Durant, YVhite, Gallo, B. Lewis. Fifth Row: Dana, Jackson, Falconer, Huebner XVhite, Gay, Fitzgerald, Berton, Queen, Lewis, Kreisler, Stoel, Aflleck. Tlzirrl Rom: Wloo, WVharton, Hazelton, Helm, Downing, Green- wald, Michelson, Gruen, Sholz, Fong, Johnson, Ralnn, Keller, Yao, Maximon. SFIFOIIK' Row: Frame, 0'Neill, WVeber, Bevan, Joukovsky Adams, Reiner, Trevi, Vreeland, Yroombout, Prvzby, Abrams, Vanlanten, Bright. lfirsl Row: Burnham, Rvter, Loomis, Mignogna Clayton, Deiner, Nemecek, Friedman, Anthony, Boer, Goldin. On lfluor: Stock, Diener, Finks, Bermas, Lightdale, Hlheeler, Hilgendorf :il1.ll7TlUlIll'llii1Fll iv lliilll umil mln sin u ,I ll ' ' 'F' A lrzulitionally lull of gone-to-pot athletic typcs who have :ln extra sport coat and shoot craps. lfoocl flikc Colonizullsj only zu'cmge. Likely ucvcr to have Lester l.2lIllll or :my society beat. but scc1'etly mzuutziins Big lfix'c status by hitting club partics during the lioliclziys, playing dissolutely at rugby :uid toucb lootball. Good guts, lull ol' earthly ideas. f.I,XNll'fS IS. ROI5I'1ll'l'StJN, '59 TXl'Icr I swzillouctl lbs goldlixb . . i OFFICERS R, Nlzumiug lil'OKVIl, Jr. 990 l'l'L'SlllCIll l.icl,.xN1m G. fi.fXRllXl'IR, JR. '6 Yicc-l'rcsiclcfut Nllciliixliili IJ. lsi-MAN '61 S01l'CI2l1'l'-'lil'L'1l3lll'l'l' .ll'RliNllAI'I M. Sl'l.l.lYAN '61 BOARD OF GOVERNORS llflllll XY. .Xitkcu 'liuylor XX'ooclward Roger B. Kll'lilJ2lI1'lCk C. XVzillzu'c 'l'it-riuau losclmb l.. bll'fi2llllllCSS Ricllzircl IQ. li2lll61' l'lllgC1lC Bl. Zwcibztck 411111165 H. .Xc'kt'1'111z111 l'z1ul Curvy George ,-X. Yzuigbu TIGER CLASS OF 1961 XX'illiz1111 lf. Blll'l'0XN'. D11x'i1l M. 1111111611 Ric'l1z11'cl H. Ecklivlmll E1lw:11'1l B. Ci2lIlII1llL' 1.1-lz111cl C. f12ll'illlCl'. lr. .Ion Hz1g5tro111 Robert I.. H111'1'iso11 Nli1'l1:1el D. lSClIlZlll CLASS OF 1962 Ri1l1z11'1l Balclwiii. Sicwen IJ. Rall lJz1x'i1l H. B1'11111l1:1ll XY. flllllll Bl'llXN'lll'lg'g l'l1ilip C:11'li11 Clmrles M. Cl2ll'l'0ll Rulmert G. clllZlIlllJCl'l2lll1 l r:111kli11 S. Cillllllll lJ:11'i1l COIIIICIN .Xricl DePo111et INN -fumes CI. Kellogg Ijfllllllll NI. KO1'Il1'1lUlP1 Fritz A. Rorlll Howzircl lil'Oflg2l1'Ll. YV. Nlitchell I,aNl0ttz1 H. 1XlCX2lIlllC1' Ley IH Eclxvzml lf. l,11ccl1esi Emlwzircl Nlzickey 1111111 li. lleilrick, Tl1c1111:1s R. Detlpret' flillilllllli' Dodd -12111105 ll. Erlwarcls Eclwurcl N. Elliot 132111011 l'111'cly Ferris, -I1 V1'll0lIl2lS lfisl1er Ill Barry' lfriccllmerg Elmer l'1C1'l'IIl2llll1, .lr FUQCIIC l'l2ll'l' Hll1I1IJlll'l'f' Eclwaircl 'l'. Nlc'.'X11lifl'C .lzuues KI. Nlczilulme 1Villiz1111 S. Miles, III 117111111111 S. Morse 5101111 IJ. O'Xeill xvillltl' NI. l'l1illips, .'X!lCll'C2l G. l'm1'l1ilo Robert Cl. Rvccl NN. L. 41111111411 I P lx'lX lI1'lQll Henry XY. l12ll'gC, l'll'2lllK'lS H. Love, Kendrick ISQ15111111 lNlclros1: 131121110 lf. Nli11111'1l, lll X. Xiclmlas. clll?l1'lCS .'Xl'llllll' Philips Howzml Pyle lll 1N'illiz1111 G. llUlJCl'l5OI1 ixlfilillllly S111i1l1 -112111-11111111 M, S11llix'1111 .lolm L. Slll1lY2lll hlflllll R. '1'o1'cll .Xlexz1111ler F. XN'c1jciec1l1owinf lllllll X. Xvtlllllllhll. l3ri1111 liOSlJ0l'Ullgll Russell '1'o1'11ros1' R. I.. Xv2lHI,C1'YU0l'l, Lewin R. Yz111lJ11se11. lll -Ion li. XV2111g Olin L. Ulest. lll liclwin A. 1vC1llCllI1l211'C1'. III XX'z11'1'e11 XV1I1SlUXV, Roy Allen Zink Iiurl: Ruin: Deiirick, l1o1111o1's, Toriirosc, Klzirroll, I1Lll'gC, K11v:111:1gl1, link, Love. Mmflzilme, lictkfelclt. Fmirllz Row: XVo11:1m1t, Ley Nlckinlilfe, HCI'I'lIl2lllll, llcuprec, Cihula, O'Neill, Biirrow, Pyle, lillioll, Melrose, l1l'llIl1ll1lll, 1vClllCllI111lfCl'. 'I'l1inl Row: Bulclwixx, Philips Nli11111'cl, Hall. flzzrlin. xl1lll11Cl'XU0l'I, l'1'111'l1ilo, XVi11Sl011', Doclcl, fll1IIIIlllL'l'l2llll, Xvllll lluscn, Smith, f12llIlllllC, Svrorzd How: HZll'l'lSIDIl Niclmlus, Fisher, xvllllg. Kl'0I1g1lI'Cl, 1'lilSVIll'ilS, l'1llIIlP11l'Cf', Ferris Ifriemllmerg, Kellogg. kI:11'1111111, DeP011tL'1, lfrmzl R0112' Mxlclccy, Miles K0l'lll'llIl1IDf, jo. S11lli11111, fQ2lI'LlI1CI', lse111z111, Ale. Sullivan, Korth, 1,1111 lllt. .J , YT X fog Zi do 551 4 J N 1-3 L ' -ot . A . R 61 5 ,1 Once quiet :ind reserved. Tower is moving up lust. Its own library, fwith car- relsj, and its own whiskey sours on weekends serve to make Tower sometimes seem downright p1'CSll1IlpIllOLlS. Especially when they detide they're an educa- tional institution and don't have to pay taxes. Solid membership, dark dance floor. -,lxmics li. ll0Iil2RTSON, '59 .VX dzlrk dzlnce. OFFICERS President Yic'c--President Secretary illl'CllSlll'Cl' BOARD OF GOV llvlllllllll Cay XVillizun Lztnning Norton li, Leo Hunter l.. llelzuour. Garfield Gifford, Stanley XV. Root, 222 ,I Tuoxrrxs R. H. HAVFNS EDWARD H. XVAGNICR Hiixlu' A. Sricrs IYAYID NIQWHALI. HI ERNORS -Izunes YV. Newman Robert B. Rock, Robert XV. liberhardt r. Robert C. Miller . Robert XV. Duff Gifford .Ioues TOWER CLUB CLASS OF 1961 1110011131111 H. .X1l11l'L'W8 1111111 .X. 15111161 R111111111 XY. C1111g,1'1' 1111111 1'. l3ax'111s1111. 111 8211111191 H. 1321111 .1111111'x R. 131111 111111111 1.. 121118118 1111111111118 8. 1f111s 14111111111 A. 1'1Il11'1'111i 1'.1lg1'l1C' L.. 1'l1i1' 11 1'111'111-1' 1. 15111111 13111111 N. 1715111113 CLASS OF 1962 1l131JL'111 L. .Xs11C. 111 13111111 R. 1111111011-8131'11lg 1. 8111111 .-XYZIILX. 113 14111111111 11. 1111111-1' 1111111 lf. Hales .xIl111'CXX' 1. 151'1'1'y N11111111-1 1511111111111 .111x1f1111 A. Cl1111111g11'1111e. 111 1 . 111111111111 11111111111 CQ. 13111111 1'1131'I1C1', 1 l'21111i R. 1,1'11'1s 111111121111 CI. H111'w1 X111 .X. 1.1111g51111 1111113111218 R. H. H21N'L'll8 -11-11101 XY. N1f31'g21l1 R11'1l2l1'11111. Hc11s11z1w 111 Roger Cl. A1131'g2l11 R11'112l1'11 411311118011 111111121111 1x2l1'1Zi11C. 11: ' ' '11N1.118C11C1' H. 11111121116 11111111115 13. Rlug 5181311011 li. 1i111'1111 1l1313C1'l .X. 1,1:1111111' R111JC1'1 NI. Kl1'11w1111 1l11'112l1'l1 1,. 1Jll1101Y R11111111 8. 1311111131311 -1111111 11. 1 1f1'g11s1111 11 412111108 H. 1 1'1ze1' 1111111-11-s NI. 1'11l1C1l .1111 11. G1-1'11e1' 13111111 R. H111 YY11111111111 XY. 1-11111g1 111111 NI111'1'1s 11111111111 li. XY. N11g1111 13111111 X1'11'111111 111 1321111 CL. C3'111'11111 R11111111 12. 1311111101 1111111 CL. 1121821118 51112111 l,1111'1l1Q 1111111 XV. R1111111111111 112111 R. 11111111 12111111111 R1'1'x'1111 R1111111 lf. 1.ll11g1ll X'1111'e11l .X. 1,1111- 1131111 1'. 1311'1v11111l1118,.11. P21111 li. N1l'11111'18f3ll 111211111 1. N111111g11111 Ge11111'1'y R. Xl1c1s Kl111'1c1' 1,21l1CIl 1Vf3111g2lIlg 11. 1'11111 CIW' 1161 1f11w111'11 1l111'11 Cl11:11'11-5 1111313111 CL1r111'g1' 8. R1111111s1111, 11. 41111111 51111111 P11-1'1'c 1. 86111111111 W11111 1. Sl111l11 1'1k'111'1' 11. 811165 N12l111'1C'L' R. 1112l11181i1 1.11w1'11111c 13. 1111Jl'I1CR 51111111 .X. 1111111011 R11y111111111 H. 1'11g1'1'. -11' 1111111111 Z8i'112ll1 111313011 8. 1191111611 R1111111111 R1'1111z111 N11111 13. 8z111111s1111. 411311 R. 81111111 1llT1C1' 81'111'11c111f1' -11-111111 X. 81111111- 1311111111111 O, Sll111Y2lll R11'11111'11 B. 111112ll11111'1' 1'CIl'1' XV. 111110111111 1,11111s VC1'S2lC'C limi: 1311116 N111115111. ,x1l11lL'1K'8. 81t11111l. 1'11811l'l', Rc1111cl1, Mycls. K1'1l1'y. Cl111wcI1, 81111111Q1111. Yvrsacc. lfifllz 11111115 1 11iC. F111'111'1'. S1ll'l3l'l1C1' ..,.. , ,. 1.l11lC1l. C1.111111,1111111. 81111111111. 131111111c1', S1l1lllC, .x111l1CllS13l'll1g, .1111111s1111, x1C11l11l111ll8, S11l111l. F01n'll1 Ifnzr: 1511111'1', L1111gw1111. .'X1'111'1' H111'11'1. C.1111ge1'. 111111, 1x1111'1111c. C3'1'11'11'11. 11'112lll'11L'l'. 11121114011 XY11111'I1-1, l.111c. 111111-N. 18110. Tlzirzl R1111': R11111111I1111. 13111111111 11l'l18111lW R11111i11. 81111111. 1411k1'1'. 1.1ll1g11l. 1-1111. R11c11. la1'11111l. O1'11w111'1, 131111. Kll1'1111, '11'1'11111l1. Rlug, 1'11I16I'1C'R. SI'!'1IlI1l 1311110 111115. 1'z1111'11, l'1L'1lCl' 11U1'111l111l. I.e1111111, K1'1'11111. R1111111s1111. Sll111121l1, H1'lC1g68, I'111I111. 'I.1111s111. 1311111 N11111lg11111c1'1. First 1111112 132111118011 1L1l1'Cll8. 811105 XY11g111'1'. 11I1NCIls, N1-1x111111, '11U1'IlC1'i. 111ll11l1l'11. N11g1111. O11 I 111111: 1'llL1ll1Cl3, N1CI1C1l'1Nl11l, 1'111g1'1', N1111'g1111. 1,1'w1s. N1111'1'1s. Ki .. 5 Q 4 ' 5 ' E ,L x,,fQ D' ' 2 hmA' gy . f 'L ., X Q Q , Q Q V N f m H A fa? I X Si 11 La? -. 5 ,,. , , K . 1 A 'ig f ' A .1 -' K K if F E1 E f X , g g s P? gs: K3 : -I V M K fx ' v x if X 1 P , 'j . .. 1 2 M- 5. - -1 - Eg V H V if 4' ,A . F fr H 33, , W? F A , Q Q ifaszf , . .,: .5 2,35 53 73 22 K . 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KLM , M fs iiii ffi' aa W it vwx- W , S V' - ' 1-is W ,ax ' : wx qs is e 2 5 W 5 Md ..':, z- K f QM is K X 8 if Q 4 k 1 'T' 12 4 Q r - Li , 5 Q W A M ' x W if . Q - : K ' it 9 - 'EEK 1 'E K A 1- - 24-.,A,,. 'L A m , , A ' 515555 ifjy- ' 4, M L' B 'a sf f f Q Vx rs 3 9 ' f ff ' I . , 4 , 'Q ,iffy Lf? -si , I - ,, H E142 .V f Q. ag if 'F Tf ' - - A 1 3 f f , 4 rv ug , -,Ryu sh y 24 Q 5 Q 2 4 K nf FX ' f 4 ff' gfg ,, ,QT ,Y,5,,mm L 1 3 1 f-. ,1 5 2' 1' ' 3, - Q 1 pv W 92 5 E we Q 2.-it , 1 1 K, I' ,, Z,i.: f-SLI? A lil lzllll' packages for thc Hlzlil' .X hmm WEEKEND W 2 , 3 0.5, A -as Qi? E is , 4' ws , 'nolhall highlighls nmmlime zictixilx. xvfllllllillg llHLlC'IgI'1li1llllL lwgllms to iccl llllllllllxill pm wh Hmm! lslw lrmkll-R ill thc! lmfk! Ban! um' ol Immlzlls. Nh' lust. WI , . . . llll Llul: dnl wc IUIII zmyx 1 C 1111 11.11 i1'111c11111'1l i1'lch1'1l11111 Jia-11' ul I1is111i11cl. Nl'IIllllN cllsuxwlull l'l1It'lN llu' 11'c1'k1'111l II11' l'l7OIIl IKCCIJN grming 111111111 lllllx 10111111 211111 111111111 ll Slll llllll' im' Ll lll'l'lkNll1llIlIlUIl Rmkcllcs, cillllllllh slylc. I'll lu- Im :wk IICXI wvm-L! i'll'I'illg lzlhlc luiwling 141:15 2ltlCI'llllllII :umm X, w I N'n....A, - L... K lx Q, ' , fi K S -if .egg M- Q Q? Wm ,? G-QM. fy, b ,pw .. . , , A A , 5 J' INTERCLUB COMMITTEE The lnterclub Clonnnittee this vear was primarily concerned with the achievement of a smooth Bicker in which everv Sophomore who desired a bid received one. Realizing that l'rinceton's social system is in a vital transition period, the l.C.CI. felt that l0tJ'2 must be achieved for fottr reasons: first, everv sophomore sltould be given the freedom of opportunitv to select and to join the social svstem at Princeton that would vield him the most benefit: second, XYoodrow XVilson Society. in order to fulfill its potential as a strong pro- vider of undergraduate social and intellectual life, must not consist. even partiallv, of men rejected bv the club svstem: third. the club svstem is strong enough to achieve ltltlfl 1 and linallv. a smooth Bicker would be in the best interest of the llniversitv from the standpoint ol' national publicity. The l.Cl.Cl. felt that Princeton indeed had an opporunitv to create a perfect social svstem which would, in the near future. allow a student to choose his upperclass path of de- veloptnent from two llourishing social svstems. Failure to achieve total integration of sophomores into the clubs would be a severe blow to this vision. Througliout the liall, the l.C.C. worked closely with a very line Sophomore liicker Committee. headed by l'resident Rick XVilliams and Vice-President Rand lack. Through a Bicker pamphlet. llicker precepts, and visits from the Sophomore liicker flommittee. information about the nature of Bicker was conveyed to the individual sophomore. For the lirst time a , class meeting was held in late November to present to the sophomores brief descriptions of uppet-class social life. The l.C.Cl.. in its atmual statement in December. lirmlv dedicated itself to the principle of total inte- gration of sophomores into the club system: commit' ting itself to making everv ellort to achieve lllllffl , the l.Cl.Cl. could Iltil guarantee every sophomore a bid to a club because of tlte essential unpredictabilitv of Bicker. During Bicker itself, the l.CI.Cl. received magnilicent cooperation front the Sophomore liicker Committee, which provided advice and aid to the sophomores and accurate, timelv information to the l.CI.Cl. liv the end ol Open House Night, February 4, every sophomore who had wanted to .join the club system was a member of a club. A natural, unforced WOW Bicker had been aclnevedapartlv through luck, but largelv through the ellorts of the Sophomore Hicker Committee, the club members, and the I.C.C. This vear the l.C.Cl. also attempted to improve the extent of faculty participation in club life. In addition to cocktail parties and formal dinners or discussions, the informal individual association of student and teacher was stressed bv the clubs. The 1.C.C. asked each club to appoint a committee to set an example in the club and to provide a more natural atmosphere in which students cottld willingly participate in dis- cussions. The l.C.Cl. also took decisive steps in enforcing the Gt-ntleman's .Xgreement. A suspension was issued to a club for ungentlemanlv conduct, and numerous indi- vidual actions were taken bv club ollicers. In this vital area ol undergraduate responsibility, the attitudes of clubmen in dealing with the problems of social stan- dards and rttles displayed a maturity of which Prince- ton can be justly proud. Iifult Rriai: Nlarino, Havens. Stitlt. Second Imax' tllose, lleiner, Ciartitk, Waters. Quaintance, Gilmore. Shipman. lfmni Rmtx' Pulling, flralt, Gardner, XIcNliIlan, Sltaughnessy. WOODROW WILSON SOCIETY The flourishing lIniversity-sponsored alternate to the club system, Xlloodrow YVilson Lodge returned to campus in September and was faced with the informa- tion that XVilcox Hall, its new dining, social, and educational facility, would remain unfinished during the school year. However, after a few weeks the present dining hall and facilities in Madison Hall were accepted in the same way as last year-as a place to develop a new concept in non-selective college life. Indeed, the first meal of the year inaugurated the famous Friday or Saturday night buffet, a savory inno- vation of the Food Services. The Social Committee, under chairman xjohn Paul, '6l, solved the problem of weekend planning with a voluntary social fee to cover major weekends and cocktail parties. The results, in- cluding square dance and dixieland bands, bodes well for XVeekends at XVilcox. Tyll van Geel's Educa- tional Committee sponsored a number of special programs for the membership, including a Faculty Discussion following a Nixon-Kennedy TV debate. X'Vilson had achieved feasibility during the sopho- more year of Darwin Labarthe, '61, and his classmates. This year began under a '61 administration, with Chairman Labarthe, Vice-Chairman Gil Omenn, and Secretary ,Xl Oestreich. In order to present XV.XV.l,. to the new crop of underclassmen, Labarthe and Omenn invited the members of the sophomore class to dine at Madison and to ask questions about the XVilson way, Fostering a community of scholars, an enthusiastic feature of Hlilson life is the faculty fellow program. Elected by the regular membership, these men are given complimentary full membership. They fre- quently dine with the members, participate in special programs, and show up en masse for the faculty fellow cocktail parties. At the request of the University administration. the members voted in December to change their collective name to the Xlloodrow Hfilson Society. Meanwhile. an embryonic constitution was presented to the member- ship, an associate membership was defined, primarily for non-club upperclassmen not eating in the Society: and elections were held between terms to provide the nucleus of leadership for the forthhcoming transition to new quarters as well as to achieve new frontiers in Madison, New Chairman is van Geel, long an unstill voice in XVoodrow XVilson affairs. Vice-Chairman is Terry Shultz, '62, and Secretary is Ian McMahan, '62, At the time of this writing, the Society has become an organization of which Mr. YVilson, '79, would have been proud. Members represent a wide range of interests, coming from the Congo, Nigeria, Hawaii, or Brooklyn. One week Dr. Gordenker leads a pro- gram on disarmament, another evening Professor Spitzer speaks about Flying Telescopes. Barely a meal fexcept breakfastj goes by without several faculty diners. A smooth Bicker, although irrelevant to the Society's aims, was a sign of a Society contribution to the totality of undergraduate life. This was a lively year for the Wloodrow Wfilson Society, but as the saying goes, next year in Y'Vilcox. WOODROW WILSON SOCIETY MEMBERSHIP CLASS OF 1961 Robert D. Armstrong .lack F. Berg Robert G. Chapman, Gerrit V. Crouse Gerald P. Dagenhardt I-Iarlord M. Davis George 'If Diller Eric S. Doten Neil O. Eriksen Victor C. Falkenheim CLASS OF 1962 Alonathan I.. Alder Peter Bacsak David I.. Beckedorll Henry G. Berg Milton E. Berglund Peter P. Berlow james A. Bryan Peter H. Brown Richard R. Cornwall Richard K. Cross 'l'hoburn A. Dadisman David Delgado Bruce G. Dunning Bruce Iilliot Richard V. Fabian CLASS OF 1963 Kenneth A. Ashin Charles A. Balestri Martin Boelitz Henry I. Bolinio Christopher H. Britton Charles M. Brock Henry S. Bryant George W. Chang George I.. Chilson l'. Edward Farkas Herbert I.. Gomberg Gordon P. Goodliellow Carl A. Gustalson Andras P. Hamori .Iames B. Hunter Richard M. -Iones David C. Kelly Frederic F. Kreisler Leslie P. Fairlield james F. Fisher Jaroslav 'I'. Folda Allen L. Ginsberg Elson 'l'. Harmon -Iohn L. Harrison Michael Hasellaorn Nelson Helm Christopher Henrich Cullen Henshaw 1Vesley l. 'Iohnson Carl E, .Iukkola Stephen A. Kannwischer Gordon R. Kelly Egbert G. Leigh Andre N.IS2llll2l Dolumingu George R. Donner David II. Feinberg Ronald XV. Furst Bennett I.. Gershman Hubert I.. Goldschniidt Paul D. Goodman john H. H awes Hou' many more in Madison? Darwin R. I.abarthe Richard B. Lavine Frederick D. lvIat'qnardt. Michael S. McAshan joel G. McClellan Alon M. A. McI.aughlin I.elan D. McReynolds Stephen C. Nemecek Alan E. Oestreich George A. Lenskold llames S. Lipton Robert F. Ludgin Robert YV. Mack james M. Merrick David S. Moore R. Hunter Morey llellirey B. Morris Ian D. McMahan Stephen A. Norton .john C. Ogden Alan R. Pearlman leremv Reiskind .john XV. Riehl .Iohn Sculli yjolm Ii. 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I'l11AIn.wjJll1' CIl1:11lC5 llzivis, ffllgllidl lYillz11'il 'l'l1i11'11. lfliglisll Nlzilc-c1l111 lJiz1111m111cl. lf1'lig'ir111 ll'1l llliclv. l'il'I'2I1'!l XN'illiz1111 l cllc'1'. .lIllflll'llHlflif'S Lltlllll lX':11'cl. lli,slr11'y Alc'11c'111iz1l1 l i11r'l1. 1117111 nl' Iliff Collage Rlbllcll lf. 1241110011 Qllfllltllxillj' lfvllowp . l'r'f4s'frlr'11! 239 PRINCETON LITERARY ANTHOLOGY Conforming to a long tradition, the 1961 Brie-a-Brac here publishes some of the outstanding literary efforts which have appeared in campus publications during the academic year. The Editors have tried to gather together a representative anthology of artistic en- deavor including poetry, short stories, editorials, and cartoons. The material chosen was selected by the Editorial Stal? of the Bric-a-Brac in cooperation with the editors of the undergraduate publications in- volved. CATCHER IN THE RAW E. Robison Swigart, '62, Associate Editor of the Tiger, specializes in humorous stories and articles. The story which appears here is an excellent parody of I. D. Salingefs novel, Catcher in the Rye. Everyone around here is leaving for Thanksgiving, which is sort of silly since vacation doesn't start until tomorrow. Already the room smells like vacation. I mean, nobody's made their bed and there are clothes scattered all around and soggy ashes in the fireplace and in the ashtrays. That's the kind of smell it is, like soggy cigaret ashes. And dirty, slightly damp linen. It's like nobody cares what the place looks like just before vacation, they just strip their beds and throw everything in the closet. It's very depressing. The reason I say all this is that it's raining, and I have to go to this debutante dance on Thanksgiving day and all. I mean, I've been to these type parties before and always there are a lot of big blonde Ivy- league phonies at them who stand around and drink Champagne and talk about football games and all. They always look sort of silly in their tails and every- thing drinking Champagne and talking about football. As if they actually played it or something. You'd think they were actually interested in it the way they all talk about it. I hate it myself. I never go to football games,,r and I don't care who wins. I mean, in five hundred years, who's going to care? It's very depressing that I have to go to this thing, especially on Thanksgiving day. Everyone will have just come from having big stully turkey dinners and won't feel like dancing or anything. All any of them want to do is to sleep for a few hours. But instead they all go out with a bunch of phonies and drink at some swanky night club, and then go to this stupid debutante party. Besides, I don't like the St. Regis roof much. That's where the party is, at the St. Regis roof. All with some silly society band playing all those old songs that everybody knows so much about, like who it's by and what show it's from. It's all so phony, everybody pretending that they are really interested in where those songs came from. If you can recognize the song anyway. The reason I have to go to this party in the first place is that my parents know the people that are giving it, and they think I should be nice to them because my mother works with this girl's mother in charity and things like that, and my father works with this man. My old man's all right, and makes lots of money, so he doesn't really need to be extra nice to this man, but they told me I had to go anyway. These people's name is Smythe, a pretty phony name, and I used to take out Cindy. That's the girl Whom the party is for. She's pretty damn good looking and all that, but phony as hell. I mean, I used to like her because she'd say she didn't like any of the society jazz, but I found out that underneath she really was like all those other phonies and liked all that stuff. It took me a hell of a long time to End out, though. She was intelligent as hell, and could fool me. Maybe that's why I liked her, because she could fool me. She wasn't boring anyway, at least until I found out she was like all those other phonies. Also, this girl's brother is my best friend, or was to be exact. This is one thing I can't understand, be- cause he's just about twice as phony as she is. He was a phony even in dancing school, which is where I met him. Actually, I didn't meet him, he met me. That is, he came up to me in the middle of one of those silly classes and said, Why doncha dance with my sister, hey? It wasn't really a questiong more of a command. The fact is I didn't want to dance with his sister be- cause I was just about to sneak out and have a cigaret. But the Countess was standing right there and gave me a dirty look, so I had to go ask her to dance. The Countess is what everybody called the dancing teacher. She was another phony, always running around talk- ing with a French accent or something, and looking like a decaying buzzard. She was actually from Queens or someplace. Anyway, his sister turned out to be damn good looking and all that as I said, but kind of awkward and a little short on personality if you know what I mean. Like, when I suggested we go out and have a cigaret, she told me cigarets would ruin my health. Imagine! So there I was, stuck with her and all the time dying for a cigaret. I mean, I was really in need. Finally though, somebody cut in on me, and I snuck out, and who should I meet outside having a cigaret but her brother. That's how that phony and I became such good friends. Anyway, I didn't see Old Cindy again until the first time I got kicked out of prep school, which is when I started going out with her regularly. It turned out that she was pretty smart after all like I said, and had started smoking herself. Only now she wouldn't drink. Girls can really get you. I mean really. I dated her all the way up until last summer, when I finally found out just how phony she was. Or rather, when she told me how phony I was, if you can believe it. All that time we never did much of anything. Any- thing really sexy, I mean. Not that I wasn't interested or anything. I was. In fact, I can get real morbid about things like that sometimes. It took me two years to get her goddam bra off, for Christ's sake. I coulda kicked myself. I mean, because she was so damn good lookin and all. Like I say, I can get real morbid about things like that. Anyway, I haven't seen her since then, and now I have to go to her debutante party. You see, the real problem is, I'm just about flunking THE MtWHlRTER REPORT VOL. William A. McWhirter is widely known on campus for his Prince Column, Pipe and Pencil . He specializes in a form of satire which manages to criticize without hurting anyone's feelings. THE McWHIRTER REPORT VOL. 1: Why there must be a wait in the Commons line. Last year there was a complaint from students who had to squeeze in lunch after a frantic scramble through the Commons line between an 11:40 lecture and a 1:20 laboratory. The problem, I'm afraid, has increased this year and the guys with a 1:20 are skipping lunch and carry- ing bananas to class. It's now the students with the 3:20's who are worried. Believe me, we were all mad the other day when the line started at the back door of the First Presbyterian Church. I ran around to the back of Lower Eagle and looked through an open window. The hall was immaculate. Every tureen was in place. A strand of spaghetti hung gracefully from a window sill. At the end of the hall the waiters sat glumly around a table with a deck of cards. Ernie, the thin one with hair in his ears, spoke. Gee, Merl, I'd like to let the fellows in, but you know . . . Shut up, the big guy with seamy elbows answered. You know the procedure. Pair of threes, Ernie said and jumped up on the table to peer out the window. Hey Merl, you ought to see them out there. Boy, are they anxious today. Sit down, squirt, Merl shouted, You want to be spotted? Deal. 243 out of this little college I'm supposed to be going to, and my parents don't know about it yet. They say I haven't been applying myself. Hell, how could I with this place filled with phonics and mean bastards. It's a pretty crummy place, but they're always kicking people out. I guess it's because they are always letting in a bunch of stupid sons of bitches like me. I'd run away west or someplace, but I can't because it'd simply kill my little sister. E. Robison Swigart Presently a small man with the faint aroma of vege- able soup came gliding out of the kitchen. Ernie threw down his cards. See, see what did I say? I knew he'd make it. I just knew it. Hey Arnie . . he cried and started to wave to the man before Merl clapped his palm over his mouth. You fooll You fool, Merl said, getting pink. You want to screw up the factory? The small man ignored Ernie and proceeded down the hall, looking at each table. He stopped to run his lingers over the edge of one table, straightened a pile of napkins at another, and flicked a mosquito from a pad of butter. Inspection . . . Ernie muttered. Merl kicked him in the shin. Presently the man walked up to them. I guess everything's in order, he said. The cream pitcher on the third table from the rear is cracked and a fork on the middle table over there has its middle prong missing. We lost several spoons last Saturday when some dates came in. Well, let them in. Gosh, thanks a lot, chief, Ernie gushed as he opened the big, walnut doors to the screaming, curs- ing, book-swinging horde. The small man pulled Merl over to the side. You know I've had my eye on you for some time, he said. I think you know the way I feel. Ya, chief, he answered. All these people and everything. It's upsetting. Damn shame, he said. Damn shame. -William A. McWhi1-ter HAROLD BE THY NAME Mark Rose, '61, was a co-recipient of the F. Scott Fitzgerald Award for Writing. He is known for his humorous and non-humorous short stories, and his work has appeared in the Lit and the Tiger. The anecdote printed here is a fragment from a short story entitled Harold Be Thy Name , which appeared in the winter issue of the Lit , Lew, get me a drink, will you? It was Myra. l'll apologize to Myra, he thought as he poured out liquor, slopping it over the sides of the glass. Indecent not to apologize. Obscene not to apolo- gize. He had caused pain. Even Myra did not under- stand how deeply he had hurt her. He would have to tell her. Deeply, deeply and such a lovely, lovely lady, he added drunkenly. He would have to take her out in the garden some very dark night and explain how deeply he had hurt her. Her face revolved in his head and mixed with those of Harold and Ethel Mertz and Isadore Mertz. Harold was wearing robes and a crown. He was grinning obscenely. Poor Isadore, Lew thoughtg poor, poor, Isadore and poor Myra and poor Ethel and poor Lew. Poor Lew. He had to urinate. With the drink in his hand he made his way to the bathroom. He bumped against a chair and the chair fell over. He did not stop to pick it up. He passed Harold with Ethel on his lap, Ha.rold's agent, talking excitedly to one of the critics, Mertz standing alone and beaten with a dead cigarette in his mouth, Myra sitting in a chair. Did you bring my drink? Myra asked as he passed. Can't stop now! he called cheerily back to her. Got to keep going while I'm ahead! He reached the bathroom door and fell against it, panting with relief. It was locked. He did his imita- tion of three wolves simultaneously baying at the moon -it had been effective in his high school days--to inform the person within that someone was waiting outside. There was no response and so he howled again. All right, old man. All right. The door opened and a fat Englishman came billowing through the jamb. Oh, it's you, is it? Nothing wrong I hope? Lew meant to put the gentleman's fears to rest by saying, Nothing at all, sir, but it somehow came out, Nice little parlor? Lovely parlor, just lovely, said the Englishman, looking not a bit puzzled. Lew stumbled into the bathroom and supported himself against the sink. The shower door was ajar and there, lying in the middle of the stall, her tail covering the drain, was Pomfret. The fat white Angora looked up at the intruder and meowed softly. Hello cat. She tucked her head between her paws and ignored his further greetings. Slight me, will you? Son of a . . . He stopped, realizing the epithet was wholly inappropriate. He went to the animal and petted her. Pomfret purred contentedly. He scratched her ears and the purring was louder. Nice cat, he assured her. Wonderful old Pomfret. The cat lay directly beneath the shower spray. Lew looked from the faucet to the cat and back again. He felt the first faint stirrings of temptation. Pomfret looked so peaceful sitting in the shower and so utterly ludicrous that the temptation proved irresistible. Lew chided himself for lacking fiber and then, crying The liesh is weakl like the Bonzail of a Kamakazi suicide, turned the faucet on full force. Pomfret screeched with surprise, leaped from the stall, and shot out the still open bathroom door. Rolling with laugh- ter at the creature's look of surprise, Lew tumbled into the stall himself, thoroughly soaking his head and shoulders. Still laughing, he picked himself up and followed the cat's water trail out of the bathroom, through the hall, and into the living room. In the center of the room stood the still amazed cat, dripping miserably, her long white hairs all hanging down. Around her was a ring of confused spectators. Lew saw Harold and Mertz and Myra. A few people were laughing. Pomfret meowed horribly and contin- ued dripping. The shower . . . temptation . . . Lew tried to ex- plain. The room reeled. He felt himself on the lloor with Pomfret and everybody was laughing. Lew was laughing too. He looked at the cat and at Myra: I have caused pain! he shouted, but his own laughter joined with the rest and his words were never heard. -Mark Rose ECIDUJERP Neil A. Crane, '61, was Chairman of the 1960 Board of the Princeton Engineer. The editorial which ap- pears here typijies the excellent quality of material which has given the Princeton Engineer a very high rating in national engineering circles. In some of the New York subways there is a sign stating UECIDUJERP is prejudice spelled backward: either way it doesn't make any sense. Being prac- tically synonomous with ignorance, prejudice is a problem basic in academic pursuits. Erich Fromm, a noted psychoanalyst, once stated that a man could be perfectly reasonable in dealing with all subjects except those in a certain realm in which he has a neurosis. It is in this reahn that the man has opinions imbedded so deeply that he substi- tutes rationalization for reason. This neurosis may be identified with a prejudice. As such, it is not merely a strong opinion. It is a psychic disorder, a mental disease. The word prejudice usually brings to mind racial and religious relationships. It is not limited to these realms. In academic pursuits, prejudice is also a real problem. For example, a person may have such a high opinion of Shakespeare that he closes his mind to all forms of persuasion that other writers may be better. Scientists may be so grounded in the belief of certain theories that revolutionary ideas are very slow in being accepted. Moreover, it is very seldom that an experi- mentalist is indillerent to the future results of his experiments. Contrary to human relations, however, a UTA She who was once so proud that herself never quite gave is now timidly waiting to cross the river of death. Qlt is said that the soul of a woman must be led across the river of death by the ghost of her lirst lover.j -Andras Hamori small element of prejudice in science is natural and somewhat desirable. If a scientist does not have the confidence that his theory or his experiment will have favorable results, he cannot be dedicated to his task. Moreover, without the firm conviction that the laws of nature are immutable, science would lose its foundation. Besides exceptions such as science Qand even then to a certain degreej, prejudice is a major academic problem in addition to a personal one. That the total removal of reason from certain relationships and iields of thought is a drastic mistake, most people will agree fat least, those who are reasonablej. Granted that reason cannot determine everything, I nevertheless maintain that it does not follow that reason should be eliminated completely from those realms in which it is not omnipotent. Reason can at least prevent absurdities and diminish the chances for tragic con- sequences. Prejudice, as the enemy of reason, must be dimin- ished. It is for the intelligent, who make a point of reducing ignorance, to take a lead in the struggle against prejudice as well. -Neil A. Crane TANKA The morning is cold and autumn winds are blowing, my Lord must depart. He must cross the distant hills- Could I but lend him a coat . . . -Yamabe No Akahito QTranslated from the japanese by Andras Hamorig Andras Hamori, '61, has published many poems in the Nassau Lit. In his shorter works he captures great delicacy and beauty with surprisingly few, well-chosen words. A COMMEMORAHON During his last year at Princeton, Paul Oppen- heimer, '61, Chairman of the Nassau Literary Maga- zine, continued to produce high quality poems for publication both in the Lit and in of campus publi- cations such as the New York Times. The poem Com- memoration , printed here, was published in the May, 1960, issue of the Lit , My friend awaited truth. It made me proud To think of him, then tall, the sturdy jaw Held firm against the wind, his figure bowed. I liked to think his mind had come to flower In pain and suffering. That was the flaw In him, you see, that gave his presence power. It made him real. The pain had sketched his face, Its lines like those the Venetians blow in glass- So wise, so crisp. And the slivers of disgrace Were there-the scorn, the secret fear, the anger. I liked to think of these and could surpass The bounds of envy, imagining pain the stronger A CHANCE AT GREATNESS jose M. Ferrer was Chairman of the 1960 Board of the Daily Princetonian. I n the editorial which appears here, Ferrer discusses the Prince's choice for Presi- dent. It is abundantly clear to us that this election year is one of the most important ever. It is unfortunate, in light of this, that neither of the two candidates is clearly a great man, for a great President is badly needed. He is so badly needed that anything short of a great President could prove to be a disaster from which the country might not recover. It is also clear, however, that a rejection of both candidates would be something akin to an ostrich burying its head. Therefore, it would seem to us that the task which faces the voter is one of choosing the man who has the best chance of attaining greatness. On this basis we feel we must support Senator john F. Kennedy. Vice-President Nixon, it has been said by both his supporters and his detractors, offers four more years of the Eisenhower administration. lfVe don't feel that Of influences on him. Or then the pleasure I got from simply knowing he had won- That was the best. It gave his image measure. For he had got his triumphg and, enraged, Accepted its trite fame, his labor doneg And suddenly his body's juices aged. He grew, I thought, much taller, growing old And, relinquishing, belittled the death that came- His mind's good fury, abatement from the cold, Protecting him as in high drapery. That's how he died: all proud beyond all pain. He took his leave-and left this memory. -Paul Oppenheimer more of what we have had in the last eight years is enough. Although Senator Kennedy may be guilty of exaggeration in his accusations, the Vice-President is certainly wrong when he says that things have never been better. The fact is that we have lost prestige around the world and that our rate of economic growth is not as high as it could and should be. Things have been worse, to be sure, but no adversary of the United States has ever had the power and the appeal that the U.S.S.R. has today. To combat this threat the United States must over- come the complacency in which it is now so happily wallowing. Early in the campaign, when he was not so conscious of the public eye, Kennedy gave some indication that this was the way he felt. In his ac- ceptance speech, he spoke of the demands he would make of the American people. This may not be good politics, but it is in this vein that the next President must think. The very fact that he has not elaborated on these ideas during the campaign might be regarded as an encouraging sign, for those things which he plans to ask of America may be a medicine too strong for the voter to swallow willingly. But even discarding this admittedly circuitous rea- soning, Kennedy has demonstrated a broader vision of America's role in the world. Nixon's protestations of his regard for motherhood, apple pie and America with a capital A have been as inexpedient as they have distasteful. First and foremost the Vice-President is a politiciang at no time is he so impressive as when T0 HIS ANNOYED MISTRESS Paul N. Wonacott, '61, has a knack for parody which has rarely been topped in Princeton literary circles. The poem which appears here, a satire using Maruell's To His Coy Mistress as a base, appeared in a late winter edition of the Daily Princetonian and set og a surprising chain reaction of similar poems which either rejected or agreed with Mr. Wonacotfs basic arguments. Had we but world enough and time, We'd party, lady, long past nine. fThat all assumes, of course, that we Not be on Princeton property.j We would sit and laugh at those Absurdities in moral clothes. Thou by th' Indian Ganges' tide Shouldst fossils iindg I deep inside Of Nassau Hall would thee excel In quantity and age as well. For if ten years before the Flood I'd dated thee, our elders would Have watched my cave until the night, When Axel's mien should come in sight. My vegetable love should grow Faster 'round twelve than nine, I knowg fBut gardens don't concern the Powers Who would not grant us three more hours., A hundred years should scarce sullice To show us where might lie our viceg Two hundred to adore each clause Of Princeton's own Victorian laws. All this we would resolve inside If I at school did not reside. But at my back I always hear Those leaden footsteps drawing near he is frankly analyzing the campaign. But the country needs more than a good politician. It needs a man capable of strong executive leadership, a man who has not only ideas but also the drive necessary to carry them out. That Kennedy's ideas are not uniformly good ones we are prepared to admit, but we feel that the United States must take a calculated risk. A mediocre course will have results as devastating and distressing as a course that is more violently wrong. We must give ourselves a chance at greatness. Anything less is in- sufficient. -jose M. Ferrer And yonder all before us lie Deserts of vast iniquity. Dean Laughlin's script I always see In dreams and daytime reverie: Probation, Dick-suspension, Bob. QLove that rule! It's meant my jobjf' And then the words of Sullivan: Innate depravity of man. You'll have to wait for worms to try That long-preserved virginity. The club's a fine and quiet place, But none, I think, do thee embrace. It's got a statute long decreed With every Gentlemen agreed. Now, therefore, lest thy youthful hue Evaporate like morning dew, Th' administration would suggest That Nature's tonic is the best. So we'll sport in their behalf. And when they read our epitaph, They'll learn that we by rain and wind Pneumonia caught, but never sinned. Thus, though we could not make the sun Come out, the rules we did not shun. -Paul N. Wonacott, Ir. TIGER 'TOONS joseph Mygatt, '61, is perhaps the best known car- toonist on the Tiger staff. He served as Art Editor on the 1960 Board. The cartoon shown here is one of a very successful Christmas series done by joe. ' . 52' the Txger durmg the 1960-61 academzc year Hzs com ment on the uncompleted dzsasterndden new Quad rangle speaks for ztself QW ENTERINC1 ISRAEL! 5 sefofz my 5.5, v ' Q UW - A , ts Y-,qlgl Bion Smalley, '64, served in the Art Department of ray Sao ' fel? WdUUUo02Bg2bqq 5, M A . l U 0 Ulf 900 Q93 ff? aiu li :gm , L' 0 Q' at 1 1 ' .Jifa Q' . iq :Q X g- ,:4: ' 1 .-,A K 74 an M- Li' 'r f 1 it 6 -fuss-M fe -. :gift-, 1- 'C h QfM- Q 1 'Sf . 2 -- fill' if 'Q A night to remember. .,,i,m The youllfs idol, Kennedy receives adoring but underage pupils from Miss Fine s By inidnionth this peaceful apparition has begun to change. The freshman engineering candidates, who filtered in at the end of August, have shaken some of the dust out of some of the buildings, as well as their minds, and in the process found a Stray senior who will buy thein beer for their revels with the slide rule. XVithin a few weeks of their arrival, the rest of the largest class in Print'eton's history, 827 strong, diseinbarked with Hurricane Donna, which was also passing throughg both were greeted by Presi- dent Robert lf. Goheen, '-10, and a group of self-saeri- lining seniors. The latter prepared to guide the guile- less fugitives from secondary school through the intricacies of Ifreshnian lYeek. The hurricane, how- ever, inade a bigger impression than the freslnnen, despite Dean of Admissions XVillia1n C. Edwards' ans nounrenient that the new group of novitiates was largely inade up of class presidents, football captains, National Merit geniuses and the like. One of the greeting seniors was heard to eonnnent derogatorily on the largest eolleetion of politieal and athletie has-beens this university has yet seen. Later in the same week Presidential eandidate Kennedy tried to duplicate the hurritiane's feat in a brief visit to Princeton, from which he might have graduated had it not been too tough for hiin. QSure, -lac-klj Far frotn being a political has-been, he was given an enthusiastic reception by a large group of students from Miss Fine's School. XVhile the eosino- politan grounds erew eleared the hurrieane's debris and the wistful freslnnen tried to salvage fond hopes of a country elub college eareer, the more seasoned ineinbers of the Princeton community returned to the lt's illegal and immoral but it's sanitary! grind. The upperclassmen and the laculty, each bear- ing its own brand ol' wisdom and experience, began to befriend and lrighten the less polished freshmen. lint they, too, were met with change: Chief Proctor Mike Kopliner had died over the summer. the end ol a line man and a 37-year epoch in the university's history, the tuition had been raised for the year 1961- 1962 as a 11l2tLICl' of habit: James B. Laughlin, '52, was moved up from assistant to the dean ol students to Assistant Dean ol Students, a change which puzzled even the keenest students ol the bureaucracyg -lose M. Ferrer, '61, took over as K'1'rince chairman from B. Frank Delord, ltil, who wisely took a year's leave of absence: and football priority cards were replaced by Cops 211111 lt UPS. lD cards, another symbol of administrative elliciency. On the back campus construction of the new dormi- tory complex, appropriately named Disneyland East, was bogged down by sloppy engineering and a series of accusations by builders and architects: Dodge- Osborn and Hlilcox halls remained unfinished and completion dates were shoved far into the future. But the two additions to Guyot Hall were completed and presented themselves brazenly to those returning along 1'Vashington Road. To the newly created position of security ollicer, a euphemism for big man with a hat, a former marine master sergeant and state policeman, H. lValter Dodwell, was named. Under- graduates held their breaths even alter he announced that nothing indicated a strong disciplinary crack- down on students. Almost before sides had been chosen for the 1960- 1961 infllfie, Undergraduate Council chieltain Jerrold Graber, '61, declared that a crew of his arrogant henchmen had selected the lreshman council for the year in the usual tyrannical lashion. One interviewer, after carefully separating the good guys from the bad, laid claim to the prize for the understatement ol the year when he said, ln trying to find the best men, we're sometimes justilied in being lousesf' Thus began the multilarious selective process that characterizes Princeton. And Bicker, on an informal basis of course, raised its ugly, many-laced head not many weeks alter. But interested doers had a minimal opportunity to reverse the routine ol' selection in the round of open- houses held by the extra-curricular activities. though some cynic pointed out that most ol the eager candi- dates were only seniors looking lor beer handouts. At any rate, everyone got in on the act ol choosing his in lieriors. .Xnd now l'or the kill . . . 1 arf-1,-M... - 1.1: . .,... ,. 'saws' - . 1- g..,,: The biggest selective prociess ol all, and nominally the universityfs rrtisort Ilifjflf, the academic doghght, slowly got under way. and several seniors were heard to remark that they intetided to have their theses 'lout ol the way by' December. Checking into their carrels in lfirestone Library, they were soon lrightened by the noxious green collins and lled in mild panic, not to return until the middle of lfebruary. Dean of the College .Ieremiah S. lfinch counted the number ol llunk-outs and revealed that a mere two per cent had been catapulted prematurely into the outside world. And Saturday' classes lor all lreshmen were institttted, to the joy' ol' no one. But lile was not all preceptorials and lectures and labs lor Princeton Charlie, 1960 model. Several abor- tive attempts to revive the glorious riot tradition pro- vided an outlet lor boyish malice. For the old head- shaving ritual. a sophomore group known as the Gentleman Sprayers substituted a variation of African tribal stigma applied with paper stencils and enamel spray cans. Despite the procitors' announceinent that this lorm ol initiation was as illegal as the former activities. thirty' freshmen and one hapless junior were reclecorated in the lirst night. In the week following the total shot upwards as upperclass agitators encour- aged the traditional rivalry between the lreslnnan and sophomore classes. The cttstotnary lirecracker, water- lilled balloons. and even hairclippers were brought to bear in hit and run clashes characterized by guerilla tactics. Juniors. despairing ol' a battle royal such as marked their own initiation ceremonies, resorted to tear gas and molasses and leathers in an attempt to enliven the repeated lracases. but tio riot included tnore than six hundred students, despite proctorial leniency, a paltry number compared to past exercises. .Xpparently the lood in Cotmnons really was improved. The modern Princeton student, moreover, had more serious probletns than lictional class rivalries to con- sider. And in another corner ol' the catnpus, the 'Iri- angle Club, llttshed lrom an eight-week tottr ol Army bases in Europe, regrouped and prepared to cope with the serious problem ol' writing. staging. and casting a new show lor the Christmas season. Somehow the student riots, small as they were, con- tradicted by implication the statement ol Dr. Jessie Bernard, visiting lecturer in sociology' during the pre- vious spring. that undergraduates are anti-feminist. Reporting in the ever-controversial .Xlumni YX'eekly that Princetonians as a grottp are derisive and hostile toward their courses. Dr. Bernard went on to say that 'IX woman in the role ol prolessor is probably more tainted with lamily symbolism than a man. She is a mother-image. .Xt this time, the enemyf' As a reaction to this llow ol pseudo-scientilic jargon, the derisive and hostile students, accustomed to a high level ol instruction. maintained their opinion that Dr. Bernard was a lousy teacher. , Z Later Kennedy enlarged the housing bill. Sotnetimes we ll'y to meet Princt-ton's high standards. W mlm' is lsgtw pennant l'2lfCS. the Primelon lbutlmll zincl soccer' tcm plat-ecl ll? czirtls in the lootlmztll ticket mess as CQ1i1'1'nic1u'Q. Hut the universilx' vnclnrecl such lJl2lSlh :incl went 1 ll1Ol1Ill5 lmnsiness ol cclilrzltiiig the creznn ol',fXine1'imzl11 xrmnth. which stoocl, Qllht-it iiiilunnviiigly. on the New lfrontier. Nluclslinging giew niort' hlrious as the elet llllll Cillllllillgll niovccl lIll0ll1Cllll2lllII0lllllS,lllllSlJlll'gll intl New York prepznctl linal attacks in their rcnpcntive lost l1C2ll'll7l'C21liC1'5 to Rutgers, and priority nurtlm re- the lllIlll11lSU'2lll0ll niuclc- il clrznnatin cllirieiicv l'CYCl'S2ll Rflllglllllg il. HIS Ifixe romns in the new lmusing project were con- clt-ninccl lor Olklllllillllly, which seeinvcl to be achling insult to injury. The romns. ztllegerlly potential lirc- trzzps. lattkccl 2lllC'l'll2llC means ol' escape, sznicl horougli engineer Arthur lirokziw, who nonetliclcss revealed 11 t'CI'I2llll 1J1'ej1uliu' in favor ol' the 1111ix'e1'sity when he elzihurzxteclz No llIlClCl'g1x1lClll2llC5, r'.x'j11'1'ir1lh' lJV1ill!'I'lUIl IlIlZIV?KQ'IYIflII!lf!'.X', should he sleeping up there. But new ocuipziiits ol' the Quzul were cmnpenszitecl lor this lIIK'0I1YClllCllfL' by the instztllzntirmn in czlrli suite of l IJliUllllSCLl. l'lL'lll'l 'lf Blilllllfl znul .lulius AX. Ouio, l'C- l cc-ntly 2iLlllllllL'Cl IllCllllJCliS ol' lllc sop 1o111o1'c c'11ss. l melc-l11'111ccl NlgL'l'l2lll lIlClClJCllilCllLiC, znul ll1C Suu 1 , l filll'lSIl2lll .xSSULl2lll0ll lllilgllllllllllillwly wnrlconufc ' l s1111'1'ing, llllllClilJlilX'llCgCll SlllClL'llIS. Fall liickei' opciu-cl Ugl!Ill0S,H ilulc-s11'ilJ11lJle t0lIllJlIlZlIl0l1 lJool4c'11sCs. 1'6c'o1'c l2llJlllCIS. tc-lc-xisionst111uls.111ul l1i-li 1111i1s. 'llu-sc 11 ing' case sifc-ml 11ll11i1's warn- lllklllilllllllf' in Ciliill sniu-1 l'llIllOl' lllltl il 111111 lllCf were ale-signed io p1'c1'enL 011-11- pznns l'1'o111 playing lJ11sl4Cll111ll in Llieir living rooins. 1-Xiul tl111s 1l1c l'11ll clrcw on: tlu- iXSSUL'l2lLlOll 4 ' - nliuing Airs. ilu- new l'L'5lllClll C'OllllJ2llly, opc ' NlcCl111-11-1' wi1l1 ll l11nl'111-e wlumo u-Ll 111 ln l'ClJl'CSCIll2l- 1111-sof1l1c C 0 - 1' - ,' - Q . -- 2lll'C lI1llIl1l', Zllltl o1l1c1' i111c1'cslccl ulllC2lll'C pcop lfoi' the next sew-1'11l I1l0llLlIS NIcC111'te1' VllllL'2lU'C cylu YN'llll l1111gl11c-1' 215 11 sC11so11 ol sopl1istic'11lc-cl 0011161-'. lnonglit IICXX' lilc lo llic 1'cl1n'l1isl1ecl lJfJZll'llS. Nixon 1'1. flX'L'l'Xx'llCllIllllglf s11ppo1'1c-cl ln l'1'i1u'e1o11 llIltlL'l'gl'2lt.l- :nes-an o111i11o11s sigfn. 'l'lu- 5555 Million lor lJlill1L'C illllllhlllgll, slill Inu-king Zl llllflllllllllg stork 111111 '. l111cl11 l1nu'l1co11, gave 2111111 ll swc111sl1i1'1, Zillll 2lllllOllIll'Cl ilu- lu-ginning ol 11 ncw pl1z1sc with 5250 111illio11 2lll'C2lllf' 111-w Ililllflll ol lien peopln-s with El loner ol' i'OIlg1'2illl- l2lIlOll. lfoocl lllll' .Xrnolcl 5ll'UllliOl'lD 2llll1OllllL'L'Cl 1l1C 11-11ppc111'111u'c ol' griiulcis. 1o 1l1e great s11LisI1u'1io1 on L'2lllllJllS lVllll linle oi' no l'11nl'111'c: it was pnnncnl Rlllll lolclecl 11l11-1' ll lew culling pcrionls. llu- l1ui11ltx' in iis L'llSlOl1lIll'f IJVOICSI IIIUYC 11s part ol' 1l1c CSlli2lllgCil i111cllc1'11111l c-lc-1116111 i11 .X1111-1'i11111 soc'ie1y, SlllJPO1AlCll l liCIlllCKlf' ou-1' NlX0ll-1lllUlllCl' oniinous sign. Anal R1-11111, slu- is11'1 1111 tl2llL'l SlllllCIllQ politicos sq11111'L-cl oll to sling ll lllllc nnul in ilu- 11111116 ol ll hotter lliilltlll with l'C5lJOIlSllJlC lezulcr- Slllll. f:XIJlJl'UlJlillllClf'. llu- l'CSIJOllSllJlC lczulci' of tlu: 1'11111p11s lJClllfJl'lilllll' Illifllllllll' was hiinsclli loo young Lo vote but plunged into llu- l'1'z11 1nul111n1l4-fl., 53 U11 ll1l'2U 511111 ll lV rn 'vi' ff- 12. ..-as Ji T' Xigp-1'i1111 Sllllll'IllSI Ohio llllil lllilllllll. S. 1121 e men and innocent maidens t'You like green peppers? Life Magazine, with its rrsual disregard for respon- sible reporting and for factual information, pigeon- lroled Princeton as Uno place lor the unsophisticated young rnanf' in an article designed to mislead and further confuse the prospective freshman, while the sophisticated borough engineer proposed escape hatches as a solution to the condemned room problenr in 1939 Hall. But controversy, without which a uni- versity is not a university, was given its biggest boot when the faculty approved a no smoking rule for lectures and classes. Quick to absolve itself from any attempt to legislate ruorals, the ever-practical faculty contended that the move was a blunt matter of dollars and ccntsfl Hardest hit by the new measure were the chain-smoking lecturers themselves and, of course, the local floor rehnishing lirms. Student reaction showed litte real oppositiong on the contrary, under- graduates accepted this opportunity ol' seeing the faculty in operation and laughed. Elaborate schemes for circumventing the regulation ended as jokes against the administration, which blithely continued to clarify and qualify its position out of existence. Hard on the heels of the retreating philosopher- kings ol' the faculty carrre the Great Barn-Burning Incident, which some viewed as the nrost appropriate protest possible. Once the residence of maintenance equipment and more recently the stable and coach- lrouse ol' a fugitive from the eighteenth century mas- querading as a Princeton undergraduate, the old barn burned conveniently, for the ruriversity had plans to tear it down. lt was attended in its mysterious demise by several thousand students and townspeople, all fetchingly attired in their nightclothes, Only YVil- liam lfaulkner was missing. In the entertainment world, Mort Sahl was sched- uled lor an appearance on Colgate weekend along with 'l'.N.'l'.'y 'l'ribble, whatever it was: Lester Lanin, Duke Ellington, Red Prysock, and the lflamingos were signed for the Prince-'liger Dance: C-K produc- tions continued to alternate with .X.l'..-X. in McCarter 'llreatre by presenting a varied list of individual per- formers inclucling Dave Brubeck, Elsa Lanchester, and the Kingston Trio: 'llreatre lntime had several one- Btlore: a nicotine lit . . . liter: only William lfzinlkner was missing. l SIllllll9llt1lIC4l tl1 t1ti11g-11111111 L'UlllL'lll. atterm i11 l'L'lll'2ll'5Lll. as well as Thr' jeu' Of Alzlllrt, a tiagetly ll11'Ili'll lane: llll' l,a1upligl1te1' lleaturecl local l guitar and Imauju LTIlICl'l2llllIllClll ill a lutile attempt ,Y , to ll1XK'2l1'l lJ2llllil'lllJU'yl aucl tcfu seniors were Illlll ' T ft 1 to I'l1i Beta Kappa. All 111 all. the llllllCl'gl'2lllll21lC was 3 f well 1111ox'iclecl lor. but 11r111e ol tl1e 111o1'e SII'Cllll0llS X .,W1,1,,,,,,,, autl expe115ix'e ullet-i11g5 l1lll'l attc-11tla11cie at the Play lmuxe 01' the Pit. .Xml Cops aucl XVUIJSU lll1llIllZllIlCll W .11.1 t,,t itsell' as a solicl l'ClJl2lC'Cl1lClll lot' 'iNl2lYC1'lt'lill on the i l7l'1llllH'llSll. Less costly e11te1'tai11111e11t was also pm- 'TN M11i'Wl'Ut Hf'llit 1 xiclt-cl li1'O1Il time to time: several llllClCl'gl'2ltlll2llCS 011 tlte 'flg'f'I'. a sptttitutw ltutuut' lIlllg2lllIlC clistribtttecl nettetly at 2llJl7l'0IJl'l2ilC lIlICl'N2ll5 llll'Ollgl1Olll the scllool year. tried to extend tl1ei1' I1UlJll5lllllg CI1llJll'C by ex- ltutuiug 11151 ,llugftzimx 'l'l1t-it ellorts were smuewltat less lllllll sttrtesslittl. l'il1l'Il1Cli l2lllgllSt2ll1lC wl1e11 Nassau Hall was uatuetl a lecleral IIl0IllllllL'l1L by tl1e Depart 0111: llllll XCI'lll0lllll . . . ,- :wt I U99 cans ol beer on the wall . . . inent ol the lnteriorg unimpressed authorities made no plans to erect a tnarker noting the laet that the largest academic building in the colonies was the national capitol lor six inonths in l7ti?5. Perhaps it was lelt that further tonunenioration on the plague- besineared edifice would attract neon lights and lrofen custard stands. the usual late ol' national mon- unients. ln sporting events, Kennedy shut out Nixon on an all network playing field, the Pirates took the Yankees tiixe nie a cage any flax. an 4. ,mym- azvewzfesmzrews-sas E199 fans ol' beer, in a clilf-hanger with Bill Blaferoski to the rescue, the Rugby Club opened against Villanova, and Princes ton, fresh liroin two shut-out victories over Penn and Columbia, looked lor a third victory over a non-league Colgate teznn. On the same weekend undergraduates nut loose on the lirst full-fledged party weekend of the year. The inonastic character ol the campus dis- solved as students gave themselves up to strictly un- inonkish activities and the PJ. gd li. trundled in loads ol' the opposite sex. The sophomores held their lall dance, a sound success, and the university came to look more like Catnelot on a tournament dav, coin- plete with pennons llving and all inanner ol strange costumes. The lootball team won a sloppy ball gatne, fiti-26, clubtneinbers enjoyed their lirst orgy of the season, the lreslnnen put a Volkswagen in Brown Hall, the sophomores tried to put a posstun in the national inonunient, and Mort Sahl proved that sick humor was dying il not dead. All in all. it was a routine allair. l'he monks returned to their sexless antics the lollowing Mondayftwo undergraduates, a .iunor and a senior, pulled the switeheroo ol' the year by leaving XX'ilson Lodge lor Cottage Club. The laculty, to coin- pensate for its no-smoking blunder, announced the institution ol' a two-week Hreading period at the end ol the spring terin. Tigers inade tentative plans for trips to the shore during said reading period and began buying paperback editions ol! current novels to read on the beaches. And Director ol' Food Services Strohkorb Qwho elst-Pj again captured headlines as the Hotel and Restaurant Employees lfnion, 1,otal Tll. A-X.P.L.-C.l.O.. inade a bid to break up his Coin- nions racket. But Arnie handled the opposition again. lic-hind the scenes Stewart S. Hudnut, '61, benevolent lf some ol those cans should happen lo fall . . . mastermind ol the Campus Fund Drive, planned his assault on the notably uncharitable student body, eventually announcing that he had won unanimous support and a sizeable check lrom the lnterClub Committee, a student lascist organization. At the end of the solicitation period, Chairman Hudnut declared that his drive had topped the 326,000 goal earmarked lor seven specific charities as a result ol unprecedented cooper ation on the part ol' his little helpers and the contributors themselves. Some speculated on Hudnut's rake-oil' Iirom the drive, but all were pleased with the unheard-ol' response. And a structural survey was completed on I'rinceton's own charity cases, Dodge- Osborn and XN'ilcox halls, which proved conclusively that someone had botched: corrective measures were undertaken on crumbling foundations, and comple- tion dates were again revised by a year. Meanwhile, Milton Lyon, 'liriangle entrepreneur and director of NlcCarter's Ifall Drama Series lamented the lack ol' attendance by the 'luniversity family, chielly the undergraduates, who were probably feeling the bite ol' the Campus Fund Drive. But even the Globe had its problems, and the dedicated thespians slogged on. U.N. XVeek came and went, virtually unnoticed by the undergraduate but widely remarked in the town. And a University ol' Georgia coed, Lynne Shirley, '64, did her part to improve North-South relations by proposing. in a letter to the Alumni Hleeklyf' a cul- tural exchange program involving herself and any interested I'rinceton Charlie. Dr. Paul Tillich, pro- fessor in the Harvard Divinity School, spoke on Re- ligion and Science and A'Religion and l'sychotherapy'l to students who had the courage to attend. Dr. Tillich found no conllit ts between the subjects ol his lectures. I1 TNURS. On the election scene, Ronald M. George, a senior in the XVoodrow XYilson School, continued the long- standing policy ol' Princeton in the nation's hair by posing as a press photographer and member of Ken- nedy's ollicial stall' in order to attend the fourth T.V. debate and to travel from New York to Kansas City with John Kennedy, Harry Truman, Stuart Syming- ton, and Carmine DeSapio aboard the Democratic campaign plane. Arch-phony George recounted his Sieg heil! rw: -f X U m ' I- -- .- A joy ride. weekends adventures in this rarilied political atmos- phere in the eolumns ol' the l'lJaily l'rincetonian, much to the delight ol campaign weary members ol the academic: Community. Llompared with the exploits ol' this enterprising senior, the TQSL ol the campus news was dull: minimum faculty salaries were raised as were board TZIICS in eight eating clubs. Construction ol the new S8 million engineering eomplex on and near University lfield got under way, showing' tl1e adininistration was un- daunted by the Quad liascog sophomores were given an opportunity to start specialiling in their major lield one term ahead of the regular schedule QOh boyljg the 'ligers beat Brown and Cornell thereby making lools ol' football prognosticators who picked them lor sixth in the league: XX'ashing'ton Road, l'rinceton's own latal labyrinth, claimed another vic- tim, who lortunately escaped with his lile. and Sandy Dixon. '62, began writing, editing. directing. and A well-deserved tribute. 'I he I,1'l1f Nlagaline approacli. producing a surrealistic art lilm el In Bergman as an exercise in the Program in Creative XVhat-nots. Harvard weekend came, bringing with it a lull slate ol high-priced entertaiimient, photographers lroni Life dIlIaQYlZlIlI', who got underfoot, war snplus bal- loons and candlelight ,jan in Dillon Gym, and an almost clean sweep ol' athletic contests by the home teams. including a victory for the football squad eked out, ll-l2, over the Ravenel-less Cantabridgians. XVhen wi, -f..,- was ff . ., K-Www , , , Q wry'swwl-1'-MMffA2wezwimac:smamrasaaiwmftmgswe-amwwvw1w4wwww1ww4.ewrH s -'1 m martini I l l i Tequila! the last of the booze had been drained aw: y and the last date had passed from Camelot, Princeton Charlie brought his jaded capacity for attention to bear on the big spectacle being staged in the national arena. The most partisan Republicans had to admit, as they grumpilv contested the election results, that it had been a smashing show right down to the photo finish. Beer stores went dry as soon as the polls closed, the computers went. berserk, the Prince announced an easy victory for at least one Harvard team in the most uncertain election in years, and the public rela4 tions industry in the U. S. scored the clearest and most decisive triumph in the whole mess by successfully confusing an entire nation of some ISO million people. Next minute the ants prevailed. Back to bark . . . No sooner had President-elect Kennedy consoled his worthy opponent and begun enlarging the bureauc- racy, no sooner had political analysts and psychoanal- ysts begun telling the bewildered populace what the Democratic victory really meant, no sooner had Dean Laughlin begun telling a would-be Pete Martin from the Prince what it is like to live next to the Kennedys in Hynannisport, than another event of national significance loomed on the horizon. Yes, sports fans, the Princeton-Yale game was but a few days away. And we could have wished it were years. The cheerleaders successfully whipped undergradu- ates into a frenzy of' enthusiasm for the game. though it was played on foreign soil in New Haven. But lhe l..X..X. was never like this. nts poison Tigers water supl l'rineeton lost: the Yalies won every contest hands down except the bicycle match and the less said about it the better. Xvith the 'l'iger hopes lor the Ivy League lootball crown went lilias Scttdder. the lamiliar l'rint'e- ton bootblack who had not missed the Yale game in nearly Hlty years and who died boarding the train lor New Haven. On the same weekend the Point lfour Youth con- ference was held on the joyless Print-eton campus. l'erhaps more hopeliul alter the liennedy victory, lor the l'resident-elect. himself, had proposed such a platt, interested politicians and idealistic students lrom sev- eral colleges met to promote interest in a plan whereby American youtltpower potential might be employed in the eause ol peace. lnttidentally. there was also the otttside chance that the tlralt might be evaded. Shortly alter the conference l.C.C. Chairman Ireland G. Gard- ner, '61, not to have his outfit overshadowed by the Point Four people, deliued dirty linker and thus provided a grim reminder ol' what was soon to come. As if anyone needed a reminder. And the Class ol' 1961 Memorial lfund Drive. sandwivhed as it was among more momentous happenings. lell short ol its goal. But there will always be time to give lor old l'.U. and give and give and give. . . . Dartmouth weekend, the last lootball spectacular ol' the season, saw Fats Domino playing to still en- thusiastic students and townies, and the University Orchestra produeed an encore to tlte weekend on Sunday. Listeners embittered female. posed birddogging on the front page soeeer erown was who know preler Fats. And an one Anne Oldham by name, ex, in the clubs in a newsworthy item ol' the l't'itu-e. The lvy League clinched by lim XViekenden and teammates, and the Tigers took the lootball game with a grandstand play in the liual seconds, seven to lip. Coach Colman and the team were treated to a well-deserved tribute on the lollowing Monday. 'llhen eante 'lhankswivinv' Y'lC'2lllOll, a rest for under- n o ' elassmen and a period of profound soulfsearcilting and Yalie lushf I .i . .Ar ' ' ' 7 fa M -'M,..A , Ay .u.......L.a... 511,95-t1.tJ.IJ. inner-criticism lor seniors, who saw the thesis deadline approaching more and more rapidly. Alter the vacation the first period of winter dol- drums set in. A lew events, however, helped to relieve the weary Charlie who lay already dreaming of the Christmas holidavs. President Goheen, in his monthly press conference, advocated the shortening of Bicker, a change welcome to all except those concerned with shortening it, i.e., the l.C.C. 'l'he Undergraduate Council began to dralt a resolution condemning the infamous nine o'c-lock rule, which curtails proiniscuity on the campus, and met with the liible-thumping sort ol' reaction from its own membership, a reaction one would not have thought possible in a place where there is no room lor the unsophisticated bov. But the controversy made good headlines, despite the silence ol' the administration, which hoped the resolution could be tabled into oblivion. In anticipation of a change in the rule. however, an enterprising sopho- more tthercfs always an enterprising sophomore to promote campus nonsensej introduced the Prince- ton Nighticf' complete with Tiger emblem stitched on the lelt breast ol' the Iilmy garment. At this writing, figures for total sales of this item are not available. Other sophomores. less enterprising and more intent on social status. attended a series ol' Bicker briefings run bv kindly club members and representatives of XVilson Lodge. Ifinally, 713 of the class registered for the Big Squeeze on Prospect Street. liut most of the news was made by personalities, a polite term lor a character with a good publicity agent. First came Bishop Homer A. Tomlinson, who as self-crowned King of the XYorld needed no agent but himself. Having failed to beat Kennedy in the election. despite his strong clean-living platform, he mt :at d'va mean, its nine o'clock? en tnv braces got caught in her braces a tg i i ezzikfilwi l5llIlIl1lllN fm' Ihv King ul thi- XYm'hl, clicl nut l'K'llI'C In pralclinc hix rcligicm :is NIV. Nixon lhilccl Slulw was ilCi'llilClll :incl licziclccl towzml grail- h.1cl Ilona' to lainiitiu' lam' hui rzllhcl' st1u'u'il on Il iizll KllSllllCgl'llllUll. Eswiiiizilly hcri' IIICSSZIQC was that lllIL'Cll'il2lf min' ol umllcgc LZIIIIIJIISCS in fmlc-1' in work ul' llislmlm FIOIIICV. lhough hvr plirzising :incl hcl' solu- .i miimlu in lhc lilcclmlil College. l2nCglIll1lIlg hix Il0I1xH't'l'l'lCS5tlll1llIll 2lIIillllhI7C2lllIlg. .Xml thcn thC1'e C'l'l1S2lilt' in l'1'il1cc'Lcm, wlicrc ClC2lIl-llX'lIlg is ll hywmml. was thc grail Slllllblll. who c'1'uss1'ml lwu lzmes of on- Ihc Bislmp was give-lcml hy tllllilliilll cxlnxpus'l'l1vui1'ut,s iflllllllg' llillllll' in his our on Nzusziu Slrccl lo make who sung thi- lnuimwiiccl, lmcmlacil, :mal hcghmhccl :I hiicl' hut apcilxiciilzui' 1lIJIJC2l!'2llH'C at thc lizih and lirulliei' llomei' llllkflllgll thc lily. Close rm hix hvcls llllllllf lu park his zullomolmilc' on thc llfllll M6135 of mme .xlll Ruml, llUXi'llSl :mal zmllwisl., who elm-ilzlrccl thc Ifilxl Nzxliunzil lizmk. His cxplzlilzliiml Ol' this in zi lllflll' mligllihcfcl :1ppc'z1l'zil1cc' in XX'hig Hull lhzll thc lJIlI'llllllZll'Sl2llCOli1lll2lll'S was :ls smpiilioiis :is had been mclsl1ulP No. jim lllllllllg, Slick gm nhl ll'lL'Illl.H those ol his more celebrated predecessors, Nliss Rand and Nlr. Tomlinson. The administration. with custo- mary anticlimax. announced the end ol' the orien- tation period lor lreslnnan engineers. .X tnore conscious variety ol humor was presented by the 'l'rianglc Club in its Shakespearean expose, A .llirlsttzlzzlicr .Yfglil Scrcrtnte, which was the center ol' locus in the linal party weekend ol' 1960. 'l'he show was well-received and compared lavorably with pre- vitllls successes. .Xs usual it improved with each per- formance, and those lucky enough to see .fl AIIDIIXIIIIIIIIFJ' Xigltl S1 rcnnzf' at the end of its run had nothing bttt high praise lor it, particularly lor the novel newsreel gimmick in the third act. So what tnore can you say abottt people when they know they are being lunnv? XYith the opening ol this year's ollering by Triangle came a record lti.ti-inch snowlall which paralyzed Princeton and the eastern seaboard and provided stu- dents and liaculty alike with an excuse to cut classes. XVinter apparel was trotted out, stories ol hardship were exchanged, and snowball lights, sled runs on campus steps, and sculptures ol' female anatomy were the order ol' the day. As the winter holidays drew closer, and visions ol sugar plums, champagne, and the Cedar Rapids Christtnas Cotillion danced in the heads ol' undergraduates, the I.C.C. in a character- istically ambiguous statement declared that Bicker had been shortened and that 104121 wottld not be forced. No sophomore was going to have a worry-free vacation il' l.ee Gardner and his crew could help it. On a more pleasant note: Miss Fine's School and Princeton Country Day were merged under the leader- ship ol Dr. Harold XV. Dodds, President Emeritus ol Princeton, a move which seemed inevitable and which doubtless pleased present students ol' both secondary institutions. ln transition: -Ionathan Day, '62, and XValt Slo- combe, '63, took over at the Halls, Les Munson, Mike Mathews, Pete Price, and Frank Pelton, all juniors. headed up the new regime in the 'lPrince ollizes, the Reverend XVilliam A. Eddy, '42, left the Proctor Foun- dation lor Episcopal students for his own parish, Sir john Gielgud returned to charm local audiences with a reading ol' English poetry entitled 'lLove and Death, and hundreds of undergraduates lled the second blinard ol' the week as the holidays finally arrived and transportation facilities were snowed to a halt. Only a lew worried seniors were lelt snow- bound in Tigertown, however, as the rounds ol' cock- tail parties, dances, and other holiday celebrations gave Charlie an opportunity to display his new tweeds and his patina of wit and sophistication. Princeton was still snowbound when the new year ,arrived and showed signs of remaining that way lor the duration. The 'lPrince greeted returning Tigers with its annual Foreign Policy Issue, bitt jaded under- graduates were hardly aware ol the issue and certainly -Q-rf' 'l'he seige ol' Withcrspoon-for what purpose? ki I - ....,.f- - Q Jw . ,,.,,,,, ura- aq lVho pushed mc? Not enough snow to keep the Professors away. ,wa-.-.swy t1'x'xS 1 I pledge nn honor :ts it gettlletnztn . . not ol loreign policy its they tried to rest up lrom ztrduous xztcations. lriztngle Clluh returned front 21 triuntphal tour ol' ten tities :ind at llliristtnas dinner in Nlztggies Diner. Zztnesville. Ohio. and chetlaecl into the inlirmztry M1 211z1.s'.w'. Students revised their Hang- over Quotient and lfztst Recovery lfatttor in the light ol stzttisticztl dzttzi gzttltered :tt pztrties during' the holi- dztys. And exerywltere the try wats heztrd, Oh, my Cod. was Qflliicztgo, Kztnszts City, XYiltnittg'tonQ Qdull, deztd, eoolj this year! 'lhe tnidwinter doldrums, ntztde hleztker ln the lllllllxlllllllg exzun In-riotl, ltzul ztrrtxed. lhe lllJl'2ll'X suddenlx hettune xerx husv. tn l1ut.zilntostzispopulxtrztstht- inlirntztry: :ind the Hon- Nl:n we stnolxe. Sir? Nlidwinter doldrums. orzthle .Xllrecl Nl. Landon. speztkittg on 'l'he XYorld Neau' at Climax ol' Decision in XX'hig llztll. wats vir- tuztllt unheeded by the student hotly. H. Hztrris lfunkenstein. 'tSl. liclitorizil Cltztirtnztn ol' A'l'he Daily lll'lIliil'lOlll2lll.i' was named l'rinc'eton's only Rhodes Snltolqtr. which wats encouraging only lor NIV. lfunken- stein. :ind the selection ol' Hymztrx :ind College Out- line Series pztperhzttrks in the U'Stot'e dwindled rapidly. .XS il' exzuninzttions weren't enough, liitkei' was just ttrountl the corner. every corner, in lzttt. l.elztncl Clztrtltter zttlx ised the sopltontores thttl the tluhs should he at golden Yztlliallzf' il' considered in the proper pt-tsttettixe. wltzuexer that might he. :uid well-wished them onto Proslmect Street where they were given the zutnuztl tout' ol tluh plunihing lztcilities In the smiling, ztilzthlt' tttettthers. Ralph Estnet-iztn. 'lS2. stan' ol' stage, screen. ztnd 'flu' Alert' of lllrtllft wats eletited president ol lhezttre lntime, liortnerly the dotnztin ol' klosel' for ,lost-lilly lfitthett. lil. Stewart, Hudnut topped the lhttly l'rimt'lo11i1o1 Prize at the 85th running ol the trztntptts ttewstmztpetk bztnqttet sweelmstztkes. 'l'he F. Stott lfitfgerztltl .-Xwztrtl Qztnyone who undertztkes to write this tongue-in-t'lteek l'Cli2llJlLl.l2ll.l0Il ol' the yeztrls events is obliged to mention the nzune oli l . Stott l'llllgL'l'2llll somewhere in the 11zt1'r1ttix'e1 this seemed its ltztrtnless :uid ttnohtrttsive Il spot its ztnyp lor outstztnfl- ing zultiexetttettt i11 c'rez1tix'e writing wats presented to Nlztrk Rose ztnd Robert D. .'Xrtttstrong. hoth seniors, while XYilliztm A. McgYX'l1i1'te1'. Wifi. :ind lltunes P. Sham- hztugh, WSI, were given the .Xwztrcl lor lixcellente in Newspaper XX'riting and the Ricltztrd lf. lfennelly Xwztrd lor Ext'ellent'e in Newspaper l'hotogt'ztpl1y rel spt-ttixt-ly. Security Officer lJod'l llodwell recovered Iortvom- huntlles ol' student shirts lroni a snowclrift on the edge ol' town. and everybody was happy with his prize. Darwin R. Labartlie. l'resident ol the senior class and Chairman ol XVilson Lodge, announced that the latter organization would be known as the XVilson Society alter til and wlienj it moved to its new quar- ters i11 the Quad and that it would admit clnlmiembers as associates, XX'itliin three days lie was replaced as Chairman ol the Lodge by 'I'yll van Geel, '02, and a military junta. lixams began. Reporting from Cuba. Ed Hirsch. a junior. noted that Cuban youths. especially girls, idoliled their leader, Fidel Castro. In fact, newsliawk Hirsch conducted a thorough study ol' how one youthful girl in particular felt about the bearded Premier. An impressive group of Alumni arrived in town for the Trustees' Career Conferences and gave seniors all the hot poop on lile in the out- side world and how to beat it. The Press Club elected Dave 'l'borburn, '62, to direct its newspaper monopoly for the coming year. An oriental studies program was approved by the trustees: two Congolese students, one a noted artist, were admitted for the spring term, and a survey ol' 400 eollege students by Mademoiselle re- vealed that there would not be a revolution in sex mores in Anierica as a result of the development of .Xnd more to come. ,Mx 'L un.. ,Q Q. ,r its Frosting on the Gothic. a foolproof oral contraceptive. The 1100 students in- terviewed eomprise the well-known, elite Four Hun- dred whieh meets in January ol each year to determine sex mores lor the country. Up in New Haven the administration relaxed its recent eight-thirty rule and allowed women in Yale dormitory rooms until mid- night. At home, however, authorities reminded them- selves that no one, not even illaclezrzoiswllr' had pre- dicted the last revolution in sex mores some forty or lilty years ago and that it had been a llop-authorities remained silent about the nine o'clock rule. But in order to give the student body something to think about, the administration, in typically communistie lashion, made all room rents equal at S300 per year. Students squawked and circulated petitions in order lfllllll here on il's all downhill. ,X 'HL s ' -N If he gets in this club 1'lI quit. It's a deal. he enemy. to prevent Princeton from losing its selective appeal. And the university got its comeuppant-e in the spring when underttlassmen signed up for single rooms by the hundreds so that they might get more spate for their dollar. .Xnd Mark Rose, creative writing award witmer, was dropped from the columns of the Prince- ton Alumni XVeekly for allegedly recreating the re- marks of a XYellesley professor about pre-marital sex relations. But anyone knows that an undergraduate can write better copy about sex than a Bible history pi-Utfssms from a woman's tollege, and nobody held it against Mark. Exams ended. Bicker began. President Goheen addressed a letter to the sophomore class. I,ee Gardner and Rick NVil- liams, '63, Chairman of the Sophomore Bicker Com- mittee, 'joined in a ten-day crash diet of coffee and no-don. The f'l'rinee published a humor issue hu- morously dated -january 26, 1971 and proved to the satisfat-tion of the Tiger staflers that, if they were inept, the 'fPrint'e was more so. Amid the rigors of the calling periods, the humor, what there was of it, went tmretnarked. As the trauma-filled profess of sele-cting tilubmembers and clubs wore on, three jun- iors left Prospect Street for YVilson Lodge QSot'iety?j and left their exfclubmates with an embarrassing situ- ation to explain. Names were dropped, purposefully and inadvertently, ineredible stories circulated. some of them funny, others not, and most of them untrue, tempers became frayed, nerves wore thin, and on both sides of Prospett Street the undergraduate veneer lost its gloss. At the midway point, bids came out and Bit-ker took on a new look. Optimism was the key- note of press releases by Gardner and XVilliams. On the lfriday before Open House Night the largest snow- fall of the winter, I7.-f intthes, was recorded: it had nothing to do with Bit-ker. Finally the big night arrived, and a glorious, naturall' 10051 was achieved, with only the slightest prodding and pushing by l.C.C. and Sophomore Bitiker Committee members. Every- body was happy exrept the weatherman and three Insanity. , ia, Q my . ' . a as , - 6 M. V 3-uw 2 Hx ' ,, ...N '- Aw ., ff' 2 V +V ' ' K fe , lui? -M Quin' 'g y A y at I t R .sf srl x C .,... Z M gay K J Q f I . as K E HRL'IllL'llllJl'li, il's 21 lIl2iflCli of CC'OllOlllll'S.H members ol the class of 1963 who froze to death try- ing to get to the club of their choice. Rick WVilliams was given a prize for Neatest Trick ol the Year, Lee Gardner was voted Luckiest Man Alive, and Jacque- line Kennedy became Playmate of the Month. With Bicker behind them and acres of dirty snow ahead, undergraduates plunged into what is laugh- iugly known as the spring term. Some, only recently arrived from ski slopes and beaches, plunged too late t'ls this Skull and Bones? Several cats catch soph canary. and were fined twenty dollars lor every class they missed. The record was S100 in lines amassed in one day. Ralph Esmerian, extending his artistic hege- mony, was elected to head the Arts at Princeton Com- mittee, thus proving that the arts and Ivy Club are synonymous. And no one showed any surprise when the weather slowed work on the new engineering quadrangle. As grades for the Iirst term came out, sophomores again championed the lluuk list. And 'l'he .Xlmoininahle Snowmen. . f ww I ,hw t ts X11. 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XY62111161 Ol' 11111, 1116 w66k1'1111 XYZIS ll 111211111116 1:112111g6 1111111 1116 12116-11111161 1'Oll1111C. N11 511111161 112111 11111111 11111461111 111'21w11 111 Zl 111156, 1112111 1111' 1'1l'L'S11l1l2ll1 1'1'11111 11111111611 111111 1111: 116211111116s. A Y1111 11111 111111 1L'1'l 111111 111 , , . 1 . 1,3 b 1 f 1 11 , wwf 111 I 11-11111 11111102 1111111111 11etwC1'11 II11' s111'111g 111C111111g 111' 1116 Nz1ti1111:11 1111111111 As5111-111111111 111111 1116 1'1esl1111:111 11z111cC 111r1'1fss1- 1111'1l El L'1lZlllg1' 111 l11z111s. 11111211 111C 1'1l2lIlgC was 111' 111111 116 1111 111112 was 1111110 s1111?. 11111 1110 gym was 11111 2111111211310 1111 11111 11111110 111111 1110 S1112 of thc 1:1110 Illlglf 1011121111041 ll 1UXX'L'1'1l1g z1I1z1111111'111 111111p111x 1111 1llll1lY 1l0l1SlIlU. 11111 H0 UNC 11111011 l'2ll'Cl1 2lllYXN'1lY, . P1 . 1 Xl'11:1 2111. 1-111111 was 21 lung wily 1111. O1 511 1116 llIl11L'l'- 11158111011 t111111g11l. 11111 111 5111111115 11 was 112lIlgCl'OllS1y IlK2l1'I 11101 N616 s1'1'11 l1ll1'1illlQ1l1 211111 11111 111 1111-311111-11111 , 1 1 1XL'2l1'1I1g 112l1'l'1C11 1111116 111 talking 111 low 1111165 z11111111g llg iIf'l'1UI11l1111LC. mf ' 15111111L' 11IllU. H1111 11'1 II111111' fillll' 111111111 1:111s ll11f1'c, 11111 lop ol the heztp. ut plentx ul nothing the stzteks. It wits all Loo lriglttening to he brought into the light, ol clzty. lint there was alwztyw time lor Ofgillllllllg at stin- pmintn or zt collocluiutn, :intl Prineetun ttndergrzul- uzttea were not to he lelt behind in the business ol tllglllllllfil worrtitig. lfor ll start the lfllil XYhig-Clio Princeton Spring Collmptitnn ehztirnten tnniotttieecl the thetne ol' their session: XVOrlcl Peztce ztncl the litnergenee ol' Science. St-hecluleml lor at two-week periotl lJCglIllllllg April seventeenth, this mlloqttiutn ollerecl such speakers tts Dr. Linus Pzntling. Dr. Oskztr xlUl'gC!l5ICl'll, Secretary nl the Air lforce Eugene Zuekert, and Dr. Charles lownes, all experts in sei- entilic' and clelense prohletns, Soon :tlter this revelzt- tion Etlwztul XYeishztml, 'lil, eounterecl with the I't'incettrn Sytnposiutn on XYurlcl Allztits. to he held lttmt .Xpril seventh to the ninth. Ol' his ztrtlully pulm- litifecl sytnpositnn entitlecl Response Cliztirinztn XYl'lSlJ2lIlLl xztitl, lt'm ztlmnt time we ztll woke up :tncl tlicl wtnetlting pmitixef' Not to be cntttlune In the unclergrztclttzttes, the l'1'it1eeton Nzttionttl .Xssoeizttion cleticlecl to sponsor zt i'OIllil'l'CIlCC on l't'ineeton in XYot'ltl .-Xllitiis: 'l'he cillilllvllglf of lnternzttirmnztl Rel sptmsilmilitiesf .M zt result ul' theme wmrtitig sessions 21 lot ol loose tztlla tthcntt tirezttive sttrviwztl went ztrountl. SAXNIQ tnzttle another ntztrtli on Ntitsltittgttnt. mul A-Xpril wats tlesignzttecl Nzttimtztl Do-lt-Yottrsell' Foreign Policy Nlnnth. 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S1Dl'1IlQ 111011- 1 111111 111'1'11'011. 1116 g1111 111111 1111114 10111115 1115111 51lllt1lQ 1111' 1'1lg1l1 111111 110111 11051. 211111 1110 111150111111 1011111 w0111 11111111. 11'1101'0 11101 11'01'0 11'OlCIl 11111 111 21 glllIlC 1111111 N111i110. A011111 1111? glflllffl' 111111 111 1110 50111111 011155 81211611 111 '1'1g1'1111w11 111 11111511 1111114 1111 1111' t110515, 111111 11115 111111' 11101 111011111 11. 11111 1111151 llllC1C1'g1'21C1ll2l1CS 1101111011 51111111 1111' 51111 211141 511111. V1-111' 11111110 111111011 114711111 111111111 1110 111115 111 F1111 1,2111l1Cf1'112l1L'. 11111. 0110 11111111 11l21I11i1l1111 5211 111211 1111 1'1'111:1011111111115 111101111011 1110111. .Xl 101151, 1111110 w01'0 111'1'051011. 1110 1'12lS1C1' 1111111112 1111' CL111111 H11111111' 1111111. 211111 1111101 111111101'11'111 11gll1'CS 2ll'1'1X'CC1 1111 51110111110, 111111 1111101 112111 11111115 211111 g1,111 1111115 1Jl'g2111 111 500 1111110 110111111 115 1110 1111111111111 1111110 111 21 111151-, ,X1111 1110 c1112l11'111llll 111 '1110 B111'-21-B1'a1', lI1ll1111J11l1g SOIllC11l1l1g 111111111 11111'111g 1115 111115101 1111111 111110011 1111 111' 111111111111011 110111, 50111 111C 12151 1111 111' 111111' 111 1110 1111111011 111116 111151111111 112111 1111111111011, 1111 11l1lI11iS 111 21 113111 XX'1l1LCl', 211111 1'1111110t1111 51111111 1111 1110 01100 111 5111'111g. 5111111 1111' 11'15101'111 111111 111L' 11111g111111115 w111 1111101 1110 11'1lgQ,'? 5111110 111 g1111111' 11111'11111111'11r5. A11111 will 11111 500 1116 01111 111 w111'111 1111111101115. 111111111111111115 1111 1111 101111- quiums, hut seniors will hand in theses on time, despite their year-long lament. Clark Montgomery will re- ceive a standing ovation when he delivers his lecture on The Art of the Bawdyn in the English Eighteenth Century course. lt will not snow on either Freshman Prom XVeekend or Houseparties, which is the safest prediction this writer can make, and neither affair will he any more or any less of a success than previous ones. The reading period in May will make little dif- ference in the year's schedule, though it may provide seniors and ,juniors a chance to recoup on a misspent youth as Generals and Comps suddenly become im- portant to upperclassmen. One way or another every- one will get through the selective process called mod- ern education, even if a few have to leave the hard way just to prove they didn't need Princeton after all. ,Xnd as in college every pressure period is followed by one of merryhmaking, exams will he followed by Reunions, hy Clonnnencement, and hy summer vaca- tion. The university will shut down for another sum- mer, a chance to gather strength for the next onslaught on the minds of young men. Some will come hack, some won't, and some won't need to. But no one will forget the hest of times and the worst of timesg no one will forget Princeton. fig4f?5t if QR: UNDERGRADUATE DIRECTORY A Abbitt, Richard F., '62 901 Riverside Drive, Newport News, Ya. Abbott, Anthony Almon, '62 319 Stenton Ave., Plymouth Meeting, Pa. Abrahamson, jon Hendrik, '63 23 AVight Place, Tenafly, N. Abrams, Creighton W., III, '62 HQ USAREIIR, APO '10, New York, N. Y. Ackley, Alexander M., jr., '62 29 Cross Gates Road, Madison, N. Acuff, YValter, 111, '63 318 Aubrey Road, YVynnewood, Pa. Adams, Cyrus Hall, '61 1430 Lake Shore Dr., Chicago, I11. Adams, Ernest B., '62 1985 Oak St., Pasadena, Calif. Adams, Glenn Rawlins, '63 4911 Longfellow Ct,, McLean, Va. Adams, jamcs Homer, 111, '61 3101 N. McKinley, Oklahoma City 18, Okla. Adams, Richard Glen, '63 3529 Stoner Ave., Reading, Pa. Adams, Thotnas S., '61 Smith Ridge Rd., New Canaan, Conn. 141160, 101111 Hanoy er, '62 290 School St., 1Vest Hempstead, N. Y. Adelman, Lynn Steven, '61 7111 N. Barnett La., Milwaukee 17, 1Vis. Adelman, Mark Robert, '63 200 N. Osborne Ave., Margate, N. j. Affleck, james R., jr., '62 Agus, Saul Gerald, '61 Albanese, Richard A., '62 Albert, jeffrey. '61 Albert, Paul M., jr., '61 Alder, jonathan L., '62 9-18 Stony Lane, Gladwyne, Pa. 1365 -18th St.. Brooklyn 19, N. Y. 299 Walnut St., Nutley, N. 101 Marion Ave., Albany, N. Y. 620 Dalton St., limmaus, Pa. 562 Florida Ave., Chester, XV. Ya. Aldrich, Michael Ray, '61 1616 Eleventh St., Rapid City, D. Alexander, Frank L., '61 1-108 Prospect St., Providence, R. 1. Alexander, lA1artin D., '63 3809 Vermont Rd., N. 1i,, Atlanta 19, Ga. Ali, Syed Hamde, '62 Embassy of Pakistan, Tokyo, japan Allen, Gary William, '62 ll live Lane, Rye, N. Y. Allen, Philip Schuyler, '62 586 Hunt Lane, Manhassett, N. Y. Allen, Richard Kendall, '63 302 Howard Ave., Passaic, N. j. Allen, Robert William, '63 111 High St., Seaford, Del. Allis. jolm Cotton, '61 33 Reservoir St., Cambridge 38, Mass. Allison, Don Alden, jr., '62 9398 Monte Leon Lane, Beverly Hills, Calif. Allison, Louis Spratt, '63 Livingston, Ala. Alonso, Kenneth Braulio, '64 3570 Eleventh St., Tampa, Fla. Alter, Burton lane, '62 311 Halsey St., Orlando, Fla, Alterman, Irwin Michael, '62 221 Landis Ave., Vineland, N. j. Ambinder, Edward P., '6-1 2-1 Colonial Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. Amesse, john G., '61 Anderson, james B., '62 115 Bellaire, Deliver 20, Colo. Sumner, Miss. Anderson, julius H., jr., '61 State Hospital, Harrisburg, Pa. Anderson, Karl Siebert, '63 2-1 King St., Hamden, Conn. Anderson, Roger E., '61 Anderson, 'Theodore YV., 902 52nd St., Brooklyn 19, N. Y. '63 3773 Lakeshore Ave., Oakland 10, Calif. Andrews, Frank Scott, '64 Andretta, Gage, '63 Andrews, john H. '63 1205 Champaign Ave., Anniston, Ala. 2500 Q St., N. YV., Washington, D. C. 1206 Monroe Ave., Wlyomissing, Pa. Andrews, 1Villiam Baird, '63 529 Shortridge Dr., Wynnewood, Pa. Andrews, AVoodbury H., '61 1908 james Ave., S. Minneapolis 5, Minn. 78 Anger, Frank David, '61 635 Lake Rd., Glen Ellyn, Ill. Anthony, David Benton, '61 R.R. 3, Xenia, Ohio Arden, Richard Coleman, '62 Applewood Rd., Branford, Conn. Arm, Stuart Bruce, '62 165 07 Grand Cen. Pkwy., jamaica 32, N. Y. Armentrout, Alexander V., '63 Susquehanna Rd., Ambler, Pa. Armstrong, David Robert, '63 210 Guion Dr., Mamaroneck, N. Y. Armstrong, Robert David, '61 Box 13, Sugar Land, Texas Arnold, Gordon G., '63 1522 99th St., N. Battleford, Canada Arst, Herbert, '61 3859 S. Atlanta Pl., Tulsa 5, Okla. Asche, Richard M., '6-1 650 Wlest End Ave. New York, N. Y. Ashe, Robert L., jr., '62 1811 Melrose Ave., Knoxville, 'l'enn. Asher, YVilliam Gerard, '63 26 Salem Ridge Dr., RFD 5, Huntington, N. Y. Ashin, Kenneth Alan, '63 82 AVoodbine Ave., Little Silver, N. Astarita, Robert W., '62 181 li. 73rd St., New York, N. Y. Athanassiades, T. li., '61 17 Douk Plakentias, Athens, Greece Atkinson, David Biddle, '63 119 Harborne Road, Birmingham, England Atkiss, Anthony AVest, '61 60 AV. Essex Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. Aufdenspring, David R., '62 -113 li. YVashington St., Belleville, 111. Auslander, Marc Alan, '63 120 Henry St., N. lvfassapequa, N. Y. Avary, james Albert, '61 RED -l, AVest Point, Ga. Avary, Thomas S., jr., '62 RFD 1, YVest Point, Ga. Avery, Richard M. '63 515 Warwick, Rd., Kenilworth, Ill. Axelrod, Lloyd, '63 215 39 77th Cresent, Bellerose, L. 1., N. Y. Axelrod, Robert Neal, '63 169 Kearny Ave., Perth Amboy, N. Ayres, Richard E., '61 60 S. li. Pinehurst Dr., Beaverton, Ore. Afoy, Geoffrey 1A'hitney, '62 25 Buena Vista Ave., Rumson, N. j. B Babcock, Stephen F., '61 150 Riverside Dr., Binghamton, N. Y. Bacchus, William Ivar, '62 -1117 Marble Ave., N. E., Albuquerque, N. Mex. Bachman, Yancleaf, '61 21 AVayside, Short Hills, N. Backes, William AV., '62 201 Ciadwalader Dr., Trenton, N. j. Bacsak, Peter, '62 1 19 li. 82nd St., New York 28, N. Y. Baggot, Atmore L., '63 15 Sussex Ave., Bronxville, N. Y. Baier, Donald Everett, '61 18 Frelnont Rd., N. '1'arrytown, N. Y. Bailey, Edwin Osborn, '62 527 Edgar Ct., 1Vebster Groves 19, Mo. Baiter, David Dumont, '61 138 Brookside Road, Darien, Conn. Baiter, Peter Baker, '63 138 Brookside Rd., Darien, Conn. Baker, john Augustus, '61 9 Brookside Ave., Fair Haven, N. j. Baker, joseph B., '61 180 Hudson St., Newark, Ohio Balassone, james AA'ork, '61 866 Middle Neck Rd., Great Neck, N. Y. Baldwin, Richard, jr., '62 31 Westmoreland Pl., St. Louis 8, Mo. 803 Adams Ave., Marshfield, Avis. 69 Laurel Rd., Princeton, N. 237 LaFayette, La Salle, Ill. 22 Reynen Ct., Ridgewood, N. 2326 59th St., Lubbock, Texas 5131 N. 23rd St., Omaha, Nebr. 15 Common St., Dedham, Mass. Baldwin, Stanley S., '61 Bales, john F., III, '62 Balestri, Charles A., '63 Balfour, Henry H., jr., '62 Ball, john Russell '63 Ball, Steven Daniel, '62 Ballantine, Thomas V., '63 Ballenger, William S.. '62 1801 XYoodlxnrne Dr., Flint 3. Mich. liankson. Llov tl, Ill, '61 Sachem Lane, tireenwirh, Conn. llanvard, Richard David, '63 13 l'erdiearis l'l., Trenton 8, N. , .., Barat. Donald L. ll.. 62 10 Deer Park Rd.. Rings l't,. Great Neck. N. Y. Barher. William W.. 111. '62 St. Marks School, Sontlrhoro, Mass. Barhonr, William H., jr., '63 Highwav '19 li., Yazoo tlitv, Miss. Harker. George 1'., '61 langlewootl llellona Ave.. Baltimore 12, Md, Harker. john Charles. '63 203 llallantvne .-Xie., N., Montreal, Que., Canada Darker, William H., jr., '62 701 llenston l'l., llaltimore 10, Md. Barnes, Kimhall M.. '61 llnrnside Farnr, Stevenson, Md. llarnes, William CI. Cl.. '62 111 Ridgewood Rd., 112llIllDOl'C 10, Md. Baron, .Xlan lrvin, '63 3711 lloarman Ave., Baltimore, Md. Barone, joseph M., '61 17 Brookshire Dr., Cedar Grove. N. j. Barr. .Klhert Stephen, '62 H22 S. .Nslrland Ave., La Grange, 111, 1ia:'r.jatnes l'anl, '63 70 Clrathanr St.. Chatham, N. j. Barr, jolnr, '62 20 Cooper 1'l.. Meelrawketr, N. Barrett, David M'arren. '63 6166 Grant ,Xve.. Pennsanken, N. Barrett. William R.. jr., '61 1311 l'rospet'l Ave., Plainlieltl, N. j. llarrow, lzdvvard M., 63 131 5. f.2!IllCl'lllC .Xve., La Grange, lll. liarrnvts, M'alter Loring. '63 212 Beech 'l'errac'e. Pine Lake, Wavne, N. j. l1lll'l'OWt'1Ollgll, Roherl NV., '61 212 1'asadena I'l., Hawthorne, N. 1larrv,Dav id Sheldon. '62 16 Kalorznna Circle, M'asliington 3.13. C.. liarrv. 1'L'lL'l l'1lOllllls. '63 2500 li. lleverlv Rtl., Milwaukee ll. M'iS. llarslrav. jacolm. '61 1362 li. 13th St.. llrooklvn, N. Y, Bartlett. litlwartl W., '62 5030 Overliill Rd., Shawnee Mission, Karts. Bartlett. llnglr tiahnt. '62 6315 lillenwood Ave.. Clavton 5, M0. Barton. Randolph. '63 3205 Swartlnnore Rd., xvllllllllglllll 6, Del. everything vital to a campus wardrobe SAKS FIFTH AVENUE 46 Nassau Street Princeton 79 Wm' 5717 d at Lindy hy This attractive country Inn, ad- joining the campus of Princeton University, is a delightful setting to enjoy line food and lodging. 100 attractive guest rooms. Dining room. Cocktail lounge. Private function rooms. I ,v i 0 as .l . llartle, Harvev, lll, '62 S101 Field l,ane, Yillanova, l'a. 11llI'llC1l, Richard lf., '61 ll Fairview Dr., St. Davids, 1'a. llaskir, Mark Man, '61 1620 Ave. l, lirooklvn 20. N. Y. liasler, tllrristian O.. '61 3030 Lake Ave.. Cheverlv, Md. Hassett, Denton, '61 13956 Clifton Blvd., Lakewood, Ohio liate, Brian Richard, '62 28505 Lincoln Rd., llav Yillage. Ohio Bates, Fretlerit'k N., '63 000 Greenleaf, Wilmette. lll. llattin, llarrv 15.,'62 Yan Mies I't. on Hudson. fi1ClllllO1l1, N. Y. llattista, joseph Yiftor, '61 29 Ball Rd., Monntain Lakes, N. Bauer, Donglas Fred, '61 4961 li. River Rd., Grand Island, N. Y. 1llllllll,clllZlI'1CS Cahn, '61 3577 liankhead Ave.. Montgomery, Ala. Baum. Stephen Hugh. '62 930 Fifth Ave.. New York, N, Y. lleall, David Strickland. '61 5020 Overlook Rd., N. NY., kvlwlllllgltlll 16, D. C. llear, l'eler Michael, '62 7303 Willowbrook Lane, tlinrinnati 37. Ohio Beard, john Ross, '61 2519 Fairmount Blvd., tilt-veland Hts.. Ohio Beard, Milton C., jr., '63 32 Clinton Ave., Montclair, N. j. lleardslev, john R., '61 89 Sleepy Hollow Rd., Red Bank, N. j. Beattie, james K., '61 738 Grandview Rd., York. Pa. Beck, lfrederiek M'right, '61 17 Ward St.. New Haven, Conn. Beck, Rohert David, '63 22 Hawthorne Rd., Pitlshnrgh 21. l'a. lieek, Robert Randall, '62 314 Mill Spring Rd., Manhasset, N. Y. lleekdorll, David L., '62 11116 lelth Loop Sandia, .-Xlhnqtlerqtxe, N. Mex. Decker, john Edwin, '63 26200 Mallard Ave., linclid 32, Ohio Beckwith, Stephen Ross, '61 1121 London Lane, Glenview, Ill. lleekedorl, David L., '62 lkeebee, William S., '61 381 N. NValnnt St., li. Orange, N. Belasco, David Allen, '64 603 Monmouth Ave., Bradley Beach, N. j. Belcher, jonathan Knapp, '62 Town Hill Farm, Lakeville, Conn. Bell, john R., jr., '64 Bellmere Farms, Bechtelsville, Pa. Bell, Malcolm, III, '63 11 E. 44th St., Savannah, Ga. Bell, Russell S., '61 54 Main St., Ridgefield, Conn. Bell, Sheridan Watson, '63 2518 N. Second, Harrisburg, Pa. Bellios, john George, '64 310 Everett St., Laurinburg, N. C. Belt, 1Vilbur G., jr., '63 126 Newburg Ave., Baltimore 23, Md. Bendann, Felix, III, '64 612 XV. University Pkwy., Baltimore 10, Md. Beudelius, Alan Robert. '61 850 Ridgewood Rd., Oradell, N. Bender, john Bryant, '62 3915 38th St., Tulsa, Okla. Benjamin, james joseph, '62 265 The By-11'ay, Ridgewood, N. Benjamin, jeffrey Lloyd, '63 550 E. 21st St., Brooklyn 26, N. Y. Bennett, Henry james. '63 1781 E. 130, Seattle 1Vash. Bennett, jolm C., jr., '61 Bennett, Ralph D., '61 Bennett, 1Villiam Curtis, '61 115 li. Mill Rd., Flourtown, Pa. 1221 Austin St., Irvington, Calif. 174 Bower Rd., Elmira, N. Y. Benoit, james Russell, '61 716 Church St., Sandpoint, Idaho Benson, Edward George, '63 Bedens Brook Rd., Skillman, N. Berg, Henry George, '62 75 01 184 St., Flushing 66, N. Y. Berg, jack Frederick, '61 290 Riverside Dr., New York, N. Y. Berg, Philip jolm, '63 11'est Landis Aye., R. D. 6, Bridgeton, N. j. Berger, Stephen M., '61 7755 Cedarbrook St., Philadelphia, Pa. Berglund, Milton E., lr., '62 704 New Harwinton Rd., Torrington, Conn. Berkelhammer, Edward M., '63 512 Pennington Ave., Trenton, N. Berkner, Lutl Karl, '64 373 Burbank Ave., Stratford, Conn. Berkowitz, George Ellis, '61 1229 Cardeza St., Philadelphia, Pa. Botnick, Richard XV., '6-1 ll Campbell Rd. Ct., Binghamton, N. Y. Berlow, Peter Paul, '62 Berlowitz, Allan '62 Bermas, Roger Edward, Bernard, Lewis XVinston, Bernstein, Elliot R., '63 Bernuth, Ernest P., jr., Bernuth, Peter Kilbreth, Beron, Bruce Leslie, '64 1 6 Tudor Ct., Springfield, N. j. 200 Burwell Rd., Rochester 17, N. Y. 61 60 Plaza St., Brooklyn 38, N. Y. '63 -174 1Vest Broadway, New York, N. Y. 215 YV. 92nd St., New York 25, N. Y. 62 100 Barrett Rd., Lawrence, N. Y. '63 100 Barrett Rd., Lawrence, N. Y. 4 S. Rumson Ave., Margate, N. j. Berry, Andrew Thomas, '62 513 Upper Mountain Ave., Upper Montclair, N. j. Berlon, Leonard jerrold, '61 196 Osborne Terr. Newark 12, N. j. Berwanger, john jay, '61 404 E. Ist St., Hinsdale, 111. Bevan, john, '62 709 Hampton Sl., Scranton, Pa. Bevan, john Strong, '63 Idlewild Rd., Gladwyne, Pa. Beverley, john R., II, '64 S15 S. Alhambra, Coral Gables 16, Fla. Bidwell, john Gardner, '61 Box 80, 1Vhitehousc, N. Bieler, Louis H., jr., '63 9141 Greentree Rd., Philadelphia 18, Pa. Bierman, james H., '64 750 Gonzalez Dr., San Francisco, Calif. 818 Marion Ave., Mansfield, Ohio Binner, Christian, '62 Bishop, Bailey, '61 Bishop, Frederick E., '61 317 Greenbay Road, Highland Pk., Ill. 425 King of Prussia Rd., Radnor, Pa. 1339 Ridgewood Dr., Highland Pk., Ill. Bishop, Robert Ridgway, '62 425 King of Prussia Rd., Radnor, Pa. Bissell, john Winslow, '62 Beaton House, Main St., Exeter, N. H. Bivens, Carl Hill, jr., '63 The Highlands, Alderson, YV. Va. Bjorkholm, john '61 4513 N. Newhall St., Milwaukee 11, 1Visc. Biorkholm, Paul james, '61 4513 N. Newhall St., Milwaukee 11, W'isc Black, Allen Decatur, '63 561 S. Negley Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Black, David Baxter, '62 955 Marion Ave., Mansfield, Ohio Black, David john, '63 307 Morewood Pkwy. Rocky River 16, Ohio Black, john Lewis C, '63 Boehms Rd., Blue Bell, Pa. Black, Terrence C., '61 Blacker, Donald E., '64 2930 Lombardy Rd., Pasadena 10, Calif. Blackman, Mark Kenneth, '61 1209 N. 2 St., Fargo, N. D. Blair, Bruce Allan, '64 260 Locust Rd., XVinnetka, Ill. Blair, George R., '61 Chairfaetory Rd., Elma, N. Y. Blair, james C., '61 232 So. Rodeo Dr., Beverly Hills, Calif. Blair, john Walter, '63 6 25th St., Tulsa, Okla. Blake, john, '62 Cross River, N. Y. 1736 St. Ann, jackson, Miss. 10 Glenridge Rd., Dedham, Mass. Route 1, Doswell, Va. 50 Chatham Ave., Buffalo 16, N. Y. Blake, Thomas H., jr., '61 Blanchard, George, '64 Blickenstall, Robert A., '63 Blinkoll, james Bladen, '63 4001 Elfm Ave., Louisville, Ky. 2532 Ransdell Ave., Louisville, Ky. 320 Union Ave., Irvington, N. 608 1Villow St., Cranford, N. 3310 Fallstall' Rd., Baltimore, Md. -15 Chestnut St., Sharon, Mass. Bloch, Cameron Russell, '63 Bloch, Wlinslon N., '63 Block, Michael Allen, '61 Blosser, Robert C., '62 Blum, Lawrence Alan, '61 Blyler, Lee Landis, '61 Bodine, Ralph Evan, '61 109C li. Palm I.ane, Phoenix, Ariz. Boelitz, Marlin, '63 72 7th Ave., S., New York, N. Y. Boer, Frank Peter, '61 2556 S. Park Ave., Lackawanna, N. Y. Bogh, I-Ienrikssen M., '62 69 Allen St., Marion, Mass. Bohorad, Robert Nathan, '61 71 S. Main St., Mahanoy City, Pa. Bolander, Richard j., '61 318 Marietta Ave., Hawthorne, N. Y. Bole, Robert F., jr., '61 7810 Ardmore Ave., Philadelphia 18, Pa. Bolgard, Roger Donald, '61 2239 Iforestview Rd., Evanston, 111. Boller, George L., '64 281 E. Grand Blvd., Detroit, Mich. Bolton, Robert H., jr., '62 3200 Parkway Dr., Alexandria, La. Bond, Thomas Dunlop, '63 1Varrenton, Va. Bond, William B., '62 3580 Riclnnond St., jacksonville, Fla. Boolos, George S., '61 166 E. 35th St., New York 16, N. Y. Boone, 1Vil1iam K., '61 506 XVest Main, Brenham, Texas Boorn, jolm Pearce, '61 128 Allen Ave., Bucyrus, Ohio Borda, Robert Paul, '63 102 Hollyoke Lane, Memphis 17, Tenn. Bordner, Kenneth Edward, '63 739 16th St., N. E., Massillon,Ohio Borgenichl, Louis, '61 74 1Villow Ave., Larchmont. N. Y. Boris, jay Paul, '64 271 Henry St., Manchester, Conn. Borkow, joel Elliot, '61 1Vetmore Ave., Morristown, N. Borod, Ronald Sam, '63 -1892 Lake Drive, Memphis, Tenn. Borstad, Thomas Edward, '64 3-123 S. 102nd St., Omaha 24, Nebr. Bortman, Michael Eugene, '62 45091 Yanker, Utica, Mich. Bosak, Barry Francis, '62 R. D. 2, Moscow, Pa. Boskey, james Bernard, '64 19 Colony Dr., E., XV., Orange, N. j. Boslough, jolm Irvan, '64 2073 Bellaire St., Denver 7, Colo. Bostrom, Paul David, '62 8 Ekstrom St., Dover, N. Bourland, john B., '61 3409 Beverly, Dallas, Texas Bourne, Kenneth A., jr., '64 5211 Tilbury 1Vay, Baltimore 12, Md. Old Gun Rd., Midlothian, Va. 1908 Holly Hill Dr., Falls Church, Va. 324 E. Pasadena Ave., Phoenix, Ariz. Bowen, Richard H., '62 Bowers, jolm Victor, '61 Boyd, 1Villiam M., jr., '61 Boyer, Paul Slayton, '6-1 1 11'oodcroft Rd., Summit, N. Boynton, George H., '61 10-15 Sixth Ave., New York, N. Y. Boysen, Peter Anthony, '62 918 Forest Glen Dr., E., 1Vinnetka, 111. Bozimo, Henry, '64 Customary Court, 1Varri, Nigeria Bradford, Charles E., '61 106 Coolidge Hill, Cambridge, Mass. Bradshaw, 11'illiam E., '61 Lahaska, Pa. Brady, Robert K., '63 Stanwich Rd., Greenwich, Conn. Brakeley, George A., III, '61 208 Langley Hill Dr., McLean, Va. Bramhall, David Howell, '62 Overlook Rd., Morristown, N. Bramlette, David C., '62 Woodville, Miss. Brandaleone, Bruce H., '62 1165 Park Ave., New York 28, N. Y. Brandon, john M., '61 2242 Dublin Rd., Oklahoma City 20, Okla. Brandt, Frederick T., '64 Box 11A R. D. 4, Bethlehem, Pa. Brant, Donald Birtley, '61 6 Oakland Dr., Pt. XVashington, N. Y. Bray, james Daniel, '63 Davis Station Rd., Allentown, N. Bray, Thomas joseph, '63 3033 University Terr. N., 1Vashington 16, D. C. Brechner, Ross joseph, '62 215 Adams St., Brooklyn 1, N. Y. Bredahl, Axel Carl, '62 180 Sharon Rd., Coraopolis, Pa. Brennan, Bernard L., '61 47 Dogwood I.ane, Rockville Centre, N. Y. Brewster, Richard XV., '61 Crescent Beach Rd., Glen Cove, N. Y. Brick, Frederick '61 2131 1Vashington Ave., 1Vi1mette, 111. Briggs, Anthony Sanford, '61 3014 Seminary Ave., Riclunond, Va. Briggs, 1N'il1iam A., '61 450 E. 63 St., New York 21, N. Y. Bright, Donald S., '63 4615 Guilford Rd., College Park, Md. TE MED X 5 .- SAFEGUARD f M PRINCETON it N MEN A 1' Hartford's Stag Princeton's Tiger through Thomas W. Armitage '29 liltl Wllltll A ll lllllllltl Y INCORPORATED 25 Broad Street New York 4, N. Y. Broker for Princeton Student Body Group Accident Insurance written in Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company, Hartford, Connecticut Bright, john F., '61 Flderslir, Rector, Pa. Brinfkerholf, Peter R., '61 156 Sherwood Pl., Englewood, N. j. Brinkman, Kenneth XV., '61 1026 13th Ave., N., St. Cloud, Minn. Britton, Christopher H., '63 XVayne Ave., Stony' Pt., N. Y. Broadie, Thomas Allen, '63 195 jellerson Aye., St. Paul. Minn. Brock, Charles Marquis, '63 533 S. slth St., Watseka, 111. Broderick, Vincent A., '61 215 Fairview Ave., jersey' City, N. j. Brodie, Keith Hammond, '61 Box 1115, New Canaan, Conn. Brogan. james lidnnind, '63 89 Farragut Ave., Hastings on Hudson, N. Y. Brooks, Cadwallader E., '61 R. D. 1, Dallas, Pa. Brooks, Daniel 'l'., '63 275 Quaker Rd., Chappaqna, N. Y. Brooks, Morris William, '63 310 N. llth St., Reading, Pa. Brooks, Scott Archbald, '62 R. D. 1, Dallas, Pa. Brooks. William A, C., '63 59 li. Orchard Ave., Providence, R. 1. Brothers, john A., '61 3019 joseph St., New Orleans 25, La. Brown, lidward W., jr., '61 Woodbrook Lane, Baltimore 12, Md. Brown, Frederick Gordon, '63 82 Hillside Ave., XV. Orange, N. j. Brown, David Gardner, '63 2210 Country' Club Di'., Bridgeville, Pa Brown, H. Russell, jr., '61 Eflingham Rd., Morrisville, Pa. Brown, Norman D., '61 76 39 175 St., Flushing 66, N. Y. Brown, Peter Hail, '62 Box 111, M'oodaere, Calif. Brown, Robert lidward, '61 68 Hawthorne Ave., Glen Ridge, N. j. Brown, Robert Perisieh, '61 Hqts., IISAFE APO 633, New York, N. Y. Brown, Stephen M., '61 172 90 Highland Ave., jamaica 32, N. Y. Brown, Stuart C., '62 1405 S. Douglas, Springheld, Ill. Brown, Thomas WV., V., '63 111 Mill Creek Rd., Ardmore, Pa. Browne, Franklin G., '62 272 N. Broadmoor Blvd., Spring6eld, Ohio Brownrigg, Peter D., '64 Leesburg, Ya. Brownrigg, Walter C., 62 Leesburg, Va. Bruner, Philip Lane, '61 Bryan, james Alfred, '62 Bryan, Reed Asa, II1 '61 Bryant, Dan Carver, '61 Bryant, David Ray, '61 Bryant, Henry S., '63 Bryg, Peter joseph, '63 Bryson, David Brady, '63 Buell, Lawrence 1., '61 Buerk, Kenneth Melvin, Bu1'ord, William F., '61 Buller, Stanley Ray, '6-1 Buingardner, George H., 1817 S. Main St., Racine, Wis. 2111 Lynn Rd., N. NV., Huntsville, Ala. 1616 7th St., Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. 2 Cypress Carden, Cincinnati, Ohio 1116 Devereux Dr., Dayton 19, Ohio Avent Ferry Rd., Raleigh, N. C. 16 Lakeview Terr., Derby, Conn. Route 2, Box 329, lVestminster, Md. Hershey Mill Rd., Box N, Malvern, Pa. '6-1 723 Springs Dr., Columbus 14, Ohio 2917 College Rd., Holt, Mich. Box 253, Clyde, Kan. jr., '63 Ridgely St., Orbisonia, Pa. Bunn, George R., jr., '63 7 Sunset La., Springfield, 111. Burch, Marshall '61 Burchill, john B., '61 3569 Ridgewood Rd., Toledo 6, Ohio 351 Crest Rd., Ridgewood, N. Burgert, Patil H., '62 -1-10 Waukegan Rd., Lake Forest, 111. Burlingame,Michael A., '61 5501 Christy Dr., Washington l6,D. C. Burman, Timothy' Nile, '64 3930 N. li. 26., Portland 12, Ore. Burke, Robert G., '61 5130 Washington Blvd., Indianapolis, Ind. Burkhardt, Robert jr., '62 Burnes, Donald Walker, '63 98 River Dr., Titusville, N. 11 Ponus St., New Canaan, Conn. Burnham, David Charles, '61 175 Morrison Dr., Pittsburgh 16, Pa. Burnham, james B., '61 Burns, Robert Hayden, '61 Burr, Bruce Styles, '61 Kent, Conn. 1103 Holloway, Midland, Texas 8 Locust Grove Dr., Clark, N. Burrow, William F., jr., '61 807 Il lst Nat'l, Bldg., Dallas, Texas Burruss, Robert Carl, '63 116 Lovell Ave., Broomall, Pa. Burruss. William Bnssey, '63 18 Auburn Ct.. Alexandria, Va. Burt, john Blair, '61 Burton, Charles M.. '61 1 Ridge Rd., Rntnson, N. 29 Dunvegan Rd., '1'oronto,Ont., Canada Burton, lidward Gould, '62 98 Congdon St., Providence 6, R. I. Burton, Michael Blaker, '61 23 li. 26th Pl., '1'ulsa, Okla. Burton. Rodney Lane, '62 317 S. 'l'hird St., Geneva, Ill. Buse, 15121111 Rudolph, '63 lA Ave., 6 18 Zona 11, Guatemala, Guatemala Bush, Harry L,, jr., '61 1905 Arlington Ridge Rd., Arlington 2,Va. Bush, William C., '61 110 Wayne Sq., Beaver, Pa. Bnssmann, Wynn Y.,'63 731 Oak Rd., jewel Pk., Barrington, 111. Butler, jonathan Putnam, '62 Manursing M'ay, Rye, N. Y. Butsch, David M'in1ield, '62 25 Chapin Pkwy., Bullalo, N. Y. Butt, Rirhard Yanbeuren, '61 Bethel Rd., R. D. 2, Lansdale, Pa. Butterworth, john B., '61 Buxton, 'limothy Lee, '6 13 Av e. De La I.oi, Bruxelles, Belgium 1 lfairgrounds Rd., Woodbridge, Conn. Buxton, hvlllllllll Andrew, '61 813 Seward, Evanston, 111. Byek, joseph Sylvan, '62 111 19 Collidge Ave., jamaira N. Y. A. B. C. ENGRAVING CORP. Engravers For All Textiles All Types of Cylinder Engraving 125 Fifth Avenue Paterson, N. J. Compliments of V I V I T O E , I C . Manufacturers of Textile Colors P. 0. Box 2306 Paterson, N. J. Cacchione, David A., '62 Cadman, jolm Denys, '62 Caesar, Sanderson, '61 Cain, David IVilliam, '63 Cain, Louis P., '63 Caldwell, Lee jolm, '63 170 Calhoun, Robert Benn, '61 C 921 W. 16th St., Erie, Pa. 1115 5th Ave., New York 28, N. Y. 93 Ponus St., New Canaan, Conn. 9121 IV. Pine, Brentwood, Mo. 2618 Grant St., Evanston, 111. li. Mineola Ave., Valley Stream, N. Y. 123 Lee Rd., Pittsburgh 37, Pa. Calhoun. Robert Benn, '61 128 I.ee St,, Pittsburgh 37, Pa. Callard, Timothy Cooley, '63 5107 Roland Ave., Baltimore 10,Md. Caltagirone, joseph '62 '1'ultle Rd., Briarcliff Manor, N. Y. Cameron, Gary Allan, '63 1314 S. jefferson, Saginaw, Mich. Campagna, David Winslow, '63 216 Corlies Ave., Pelham, N. Y. Campaigne, Curtis, 111, '61 16 Rue Hamolin, Paris 16, France Campbell, Charles P., '63 397 Prospect Ave., Hackensack, N. Campbell, David lf., '61 622 S. Crest Rd., Chattanooga, Tenn. Campbell, james A. B., '62 101 E. Belvedere Rd., Norfolk, Va. Campbell, jolm David, '63 119 Sheridan '1'err., Ridgewood, N. j. Campbell, Patrick M., '63 672 High View, Glen Ellyn, Ill. Campbell, Peter Charles, '62 110 Sheridan Ave., Hohokus, N. j. Campbell, Thomas R. B., '61 71 Old Niskaynna Rd., Loudonville, N. Y. Cannon, Eugene Philip, '63 371-1 Merrick Dr., Houston 25, Texas Cantor, Norman, '64 243 Mercer St., Princeton, N. j. Carballo, Manuel, '63 555 North Seventh St., Newark, N. j. Carey, Francis King, '64 737 Vine, Denver 6, Colo. Carfagno, Edward Louis, '63 3001 Benedict Canyon Dr., Beverly Hills, Calif. Cargile, William Price, '64 1000 S. Court St., Montgomery, Ala. Carlile, Robert H., '64 10 N. Drexel Ave., Columbus, Ohio Carlin, Philip Edmond, '62 235 S. Parkview Ave., Columbus 9, Ohio Carlson, Alan Walfred, '62 92 Bradford Rd., Illatertown, Mass. Carlson, Neal Adrian, '62 Donovan Rd., Storrs, Conn. Carlston, Peter K., '62 805 YV. Delaware, Urbana, Ill. Carolau, james F., jr., '62 46 Bullard St., Norwood, Mass. Caron, Paul Edgar, '63 27 Valois Ave., Valois, Quebec, Canada Carpenter, Edwin C., '64 330 29th St., Des Moines, Iowa Carpenter, Russell H., jr., '63 61 jennys La., Barrington, R. 1. Carper, Nicholas XVood, '61 175 9th Ave., New York 11, N. Y. Carpi, Clive Caton, '62 221 Ardleigh Rd., Narberth, Pa. Carr, Franklyn 62' USA Dispensary APO 949, Seattle, Ivash. Carr, William A., '62 1715 Queens Rd., Charlotte, N. C. Carrick, Bruce R., '61 200 E. 66th St., New York 21, N. Y. Carroll, Charles Moisan, '62 3 Elm St., S. Byfield, Mass. Carroll, Kent Edmund, '63 230 Miller St., N. Tonawanda, N. Y. Carry, Benjamin Peter, '64 P. O. Box 132, Norwich, N, Y. Carspecken, Harold H., '62 36 S. Elizabeth Ave., Ferguson 35, Mo. Carter, Howard, 111, '64 1325 Denmark Rd., Plainfield, N. Carter, Lee Ault, '61 Madeira, Cincinnati '13, Ohio Carter, Macauley, jr., '63 Battles Rd., Gates Mills, Ohio Carver, Lloyd A., jr., '61 86 Irwin Pl., Trenton, N. Case, Claud Warren, '61 4933 E. Mulberry Dr., Phoenix, Ariz. Case, David B., '64 211 Delacy Dr., N. Plain6eld, N. j. Cass, William F., jr., '64 2-125 E. Second St., Long Beach, Calif. Cassista, Achilles jon, '63 High St., Chester, Vt. Catlett, john Nail, '64 476 Chevy Chase Rd., Mansfield, Ohio Causey, Beverley D., III, '64 714 Fontaino St., Alexandria, Va. Chamales, jolm Peter, '63 714 IVashington, Iklilmette, Ill. Chamberlain, P. A., 111, '61 1641 Forest Hill, Plainfield, N. j. Chamberlain, Robert G., '62 5 Douglass La., Kirkwood, Mo. Chamberlin, David B., '62 28 Harbor Rd., Oyster Bay, N. Y. Chambers, David L., III, '62 '13-14 N. Pennsylvania St., Indianapolis, Ind. Chambers, john C., '64 7 Turnagain Rd., Kent6eld, Calif. Chambers, Samuel Allen, '62 3516 Sunset Dr., Lynchburg, Ya. Chambliss, john D., '64 315 XV. Lake Dr., Athens, Ga. Chance, Douglas C., '64 1517 Highland Rd., Sharon, Pa. Chandler, Richard Hill, '6-1 626 Forest Ave., Glen Ellyn, 111. ANTIQUES nien 'lextile Printer , lne. , Leopard s Head Secaucus, N. J. 12 Chambers WA 4--3228 Wrrifiil 'd v Kdflva Custom Tailors S-' kf' Furnishers p SJTVETQDQ f , ' 1 - ., CHIPP TRAVELLERS ON THE ROAD Periodically, during the year, Chipp representa- tives visit many cities to exhibit distinctive Custom Tailored and Special Cut Clothing for men and Custom Made Clothing for women. Also, at this time., Chipp carries a complete sample range of exclusive accessories for men. Listed below, are the names of the cities and hotels on our itinerary. Cities Hotels Cities Hotels Cities Hotels Atlanta Dinkler-Plaza Lynchburg, Va. Virginian Richmond .leffcrsofl BHIUIHOTC Southern Memphis Peabody Rochester Sheraton Buffalo Statler-Hilton Midland, Texas Scharhauer San Antonio Gunter I Chaflffsmn, W. Va. Daniel Boone Minneapolis Radisson San Francisco St. Frar1C1S Charlotte. N. C. Charlotte Nashville Dinkler Andrew Savannah De Soto Cl11Cfig0 I La Salle Jackson St. Louis Chase Cincinnati Netherland Hilton New Orleans Roosevelt Toledo Commodore Perri' Cleveland Statler Oklahoma City Biltmore Tulsa Mayo Columbia, S. C. Jefferson Omaha Sheraton Fontonelle Washington Willard Dallas Adolphus Philadelphia Bellevue-Stratford Wilmington Du Pont Dayton Van Cleve Pittsburgh Penn Sheraton Winston-Salem Robert E. Lee Denver Albany Princeton Nassau lnn DCUOII- Sheraton-Cadillac Evansville Mcfjurdy Houston R' Indiana ' me - We invite written requests for our exact dates. C H I P P K 132115 Sheraton Lincoln 311535 HY Muehlebach . L05Ange1eS Biltmore 14- EAST 44TH STREET, NEW YORK 17, N. Y. L0lli5VlllC Brown Chang, George YV., '63 2210 Solano Dr., Las Cruces, N. M. Cibula, Franklin S., '62 993 Market St., Redding, Calif. Cll2lPiI1, Elliott FiC1ll, '61 RFD, Glen Gardner, N. -I. Clark, Jerry Norton, '63 2103 YV. YVashington, Muncie, Ind. Chapman, Arnold D., '61 Clark John YV., '61 2126 XVebster St., Palo Alto, Calif. H112 l1? 'f1l 'U1'C Blvd-f Shaker Heisllls 20, Ohio Clark, Paul Stuart, '62 Brockway La., Fayetteville, N. Y. Clmlmmn' Mil Leslcr' 'GI 2734 S- Hudson Pl-1 Tulsa, Okla- Clark, Perry Belton, '61 1736 Fleming Rd., Louisville, Ky. Chapman, Page, Ill, '61 Glen Alpine Rd., lXlorristown, N. J. Cimk Steven LCC, -61 839 Sheridan Rd., Bloomington, Ind. Chapman, Philip Xavier, '62 Box 45, Route 1, Valdosta, Ga. Cla,-ky T,-mmm A., '53 Ill O. BOX 203, Hczddshurg, Calif' Chapman, Robert G., Jr., '61 Clark ui' Amhom.. 161 H019 PClCl'5PU1'S Rd-1 EVm5l'1llC ll- Ind- H193 Grosse Pt. Blvd., Grosse Pt. Farms, Mich. Chappell, Richard Lee, '62 52 South Dr., Eggertsville, N. Y. C131-ke, Edward Hedrick, '52 Chase, Bryce Steven, '63 180 Bedford St., Minneapolis, Minn. 6792 lqdmonsmdc Aye., Richmond, Va, Chasteen, Ralph Russel, '61 301 Eastman St., Hurvzird, Ill. c1l2uske,F1-nest S., Ill' '52 201 Chiiioe Rd., Lexington 28, Kv. Cheescmfmi 1011 Br 'G' 525 Fulton Sl 001101711 Ill- Clarke, Lewis A., jr., '63 Pinecroft Rd., Greenwich, Conn. Chen, Lincoln Chih Ho, '61 290 Riverside Dr., New York, N. Y. Clarkson, James Al, III, 'til Gilliam La., Riverside, Conn. Cllelnw James H-1 IU, 'ill Route 4- BU 'l5VlllC, N- C- Clarkson, John G., '61 7032 Venetian YVay, YV. Palm Beach, Fla. Chertock, Stephen H., '61 Hilltop Dr., Goshen, N. Y, Claverie, Philip D., '63 81 Audubon Blvd., New Orleans, La. Chesler, Alan Richard, '63 1110 Audubon Ave., jersey City, N. NI. Clayton, YVi1liznn Frank, '62 60 Smiley Terr., Clarence, N. Y. Chesnutt, james H., '611 Rt. 5, Box 98, Hot Springs, Ark. C1ayton,YVi1liam H.,'6l 317 W. Mt. Airy Ave.,Philadelphia l9,Pa. Chiao, Raymond Yu, '61 100 Riverside Dr., New York 25, N. Y. Clement, Charles B., jr., '62 3657 Oaklev Ave., Memphis, Tenn. Childers, Francis G., '61 Box 1385, 20 Dixie Blvd., Dclrav Beach, Fla. Childers, Thomas H., jr., '61 Childs, YVi11ium A. P., '61 3 E. Ina Rd., Tucson, Ariz. 1270 Ave Chilson, George L., '63 Chinatti, Louis l.., '63 Chmiel, james A., '61 Cholodenko, Alan R., '62 ol' the Americas, New York, N. Y. 21 Delta Pl., Kingston. N. Y. East Street, Goshen, Conn. 763 Carl Ave., New Kensington, Pa. 4194 N. Maple Ave., li. Orange, N. Christensen, Warren R., '63 9 Colonial Rd., Pt. Washington, N. Y. Christollerson, liric, '61 Churchill, Frederick A., '61 Church St., XV. Newbury, Mass. 1315 Linville St., Kingsport, '1'enn. Cline, Nvlllllllll Richard, '63 8989 XV. 32nd Pl., XVheat Ridge, Colo. Close, Vernon liugene, '61 2676 Vnaiveep Ave., Grand junction, Colo. Clum, John Mackenzie, '63 I6 Arrowhead Rd.. Morristown, N. Clunau, James Logan, '61 R. D. 3, Flemington, N. C1Y1I1C1',lI0lll1 Howard, '62 21 Fiske Rd.. 1Vel1eslev Hills 82, Mass. Coates, John Boyd, Ill, '63 3935 Legation St. N., Ytfashington 15, D. C. Coates, Tom Ripley, '61 7100 1Vil1owbrook La.,Cincinnati 37,0hio Cochran, james Wallace, '63 961 Oakwood Pl., Plainlield, N. Cochran, john C., '61 5221 Putney YVav, Baltimore 12, Md. Cochran, Samuel, 3rd, '61 Cantitoe Rd., Bedford, N. Y. Coco, Charles Edward, '64 522 Pennsylvania Ave., Hyde Pk., Reading, Pa. Cohen, Kenneth joel, '61 146 Bridgeton Ave., Bridgeton, N. Cohen, Myles joseph, '63 4019 Santa Ana Dr., E1 Paso, Texas Cohen, Peter Adrian, '63 Zumikerstrasse 6, Kusnacht, Switzerland Colchie, Thomas james, '61 153 Stiles St., Elizabeth, N. Cole, David Anthony, '61 48 Oak Ridge La., XV. Hartford, Conn. Cole, Garrett Paul, '61 6556 High Dr., Kansas City, Mo. Cole, james R., '61 169 Bryant St., BuHalo 22, N. Y. Coleman, james jr., '63 1801 Octavia St., New Orleans 15, La. Coleman, jeremy james, '63 3699 Lake Ave., Rochester 12, N. Y. Colley, Adrian Alec, '61 232 Russell Rd., Princeton, N. j. Collins, David H., jr., '61 75 S. Carll Ave., Babylon, N. Y. Collins, j. Roger, '63 320 XV. Eleventh, Bristow, Okla. Collins, Richard Byron, '61 20639 Erie Rd., Rocky River, Ohio Colman, Stephen Tyler, '61 710 N. XVater St., Milwaukee XVis. Colyer, john Harry, '62 Sand Hill Rd., RD 2, Unadilla, N. Y. Compton, john Michael, '62 1735 S.2Sth XV. Avenue, Tulsa,Okla. Conahan, '1'1101I11lS j., III, '63 336 XV. Green St., Hazleton, Pa. Conger, Richard XV., '61 103 Linden Ave., Haddonfield, N. Conn, Archibald C., III, '62 218 Garden St., Mount Holly, N. Connell, Kenneth F., '63 1317 Stanwood Rd., E. Cleveland, Ohio Conner, Andrew john, '62 1135 Chestnut Hill Dr., Erie, Pa. Conner, XX'illiam Peden, '63 120 Carnarron Dr., Houston 2-1, Texas Connolly, George Carl, '63 312 N. 3rd Ave., Highland Pk., N. Connor, XX'alter Fischer, '61 26 Pembroke Rd., Darien, Conn. Connors, David Xvilliam, '62 292 Lincoln St., XVorcester, Mass. Conrad, Friedrich XV., jr., '61 2109 Stanmore Dr., Houston 19, Texas Conrad, Thomas M., '63 316 Collingdale Ave., Collingdale, Pa. Conroy, Terence W., '63 22 Brington Rd., Brookline, Mass. Constable, George XV., jr., '63 Old York Rd., Monkton, Md. Constable, Robert Lee, '64 6466 Brace, Detroit 28, Mich. Constant, Frederic XV., '61 Gun Mill Rd., Bloomfield, Conn. Constantine john B., '62 157 Nottingham Terr., Buffalo, N. Y. Constantine, Richard XV., '64 69 Glenview Rd., S. Orange, N. j. Conway, Clifford C., '61 31 Hasbrouck Rd., Staten Island, N. Y. Cook, Charles Francis, '63 Cook, Henry XV., 111, '61 Cook, james XX'allace, '62 322 S. Englewood Rd., Huntington, XV. X'a. Cook, john Folinsbee, '63 2010 Fairland Ave., Bethlehem, Pa. 211 St. Davids Ct., St. Davids, Pa. Heathcole Farm, Kingston, N. j. Coon, Donald Millis, '61 13 New jersey Ave., Bellport, N. Y. Cooper, john L., '63 Cooper, john Milton, jr., '61 3816 Brandywine St., N. XX'., XX'ashington 16, D. C. A102 XV. North St., Bethlehem, Pa. Cooper, john Robert, '62 21-10 Lakeview Ave., Chicago 14, Ill. Cooper, XX'llllIl11l jr., '62 705 Fourth Ave., Kingstree, S. C. Copeland, XX'illian1 Neal, '63 31 Highland Ave.,Piedmont11,Calif. Corckran, john C., jr., '6-1 5300 PurlingtonXVay',Ba1timore12,Md. Corey, XValter '62 2600 Hudson Blvd., jersey City, N. Corkran Montgomery B., '64 6311 Bahama Shores Dr., St. Petersburg, Fla. Cornwall, Richard R., '62 3665 Ramona Circle, Palo Alto, Calif. Corry, john Thomas, '63 70 Pinewood Rd., Hartsdale, N. Y. Corwin, Charles Thomas, '62 253 E. Roland Rd., Chester, Pa. Corwin, Robert G., '64 821 Hathaway, Day ton, Ohio Costello, lidmund j., '61 5 Glenburnie Rd., Roslindale 31, Mass. Cotner, Calvin B., '62 151 Pine Tree Rd., Ithaca N. Y. Cotomatas, Dimitrios, '61 129 Magnolia Ave., jersey City, N. j. Coupe, jay, jr., '62 35113 Cressou St., Philadelphia, Pa. Cowen, Robert Henry, '61 Kings College Pl., New York, N.Y. Cox, Brice G., '61 2549A Tantalus Dr., Honolulu, Hawaii Cox, Howard Ellis, jr., '61 126 XVabash Ave., Carthage, Ill. Cox, Stephen Stanford, '63 1539 Astor St., Chicago, Ill. Cox, XX'inston Hill, '63 21 High St., Summit, N. Craft, Robert H., jr., '61 2 Rectory La. S., Scarsdale, N. Y. Craig, john Calvin, jr., '62 3106 E. 27th St., Tulsa, Okla. Craig, XValter P., jr., '64 1530 Talbot Ave., jacksonville, Fla. Crain, Crane J XX'illiam Earl, '64 48 Magnolia La., Roslyn Heights, N. Y. George Stephen, '63 Branford Farm, R. R. 1, Loveland, Ohio Crane Neil Allan, '61 1338 Mt. Olive Ave., University City 30, Mo. Crane Warren Russell, '62 59 Lydecker St., Nyack, N. Y. Crano, XVil1iam Dean, '6-1 576 Fernwood Dr., Akron, Ohio Crawford, Frederick O., '64 236 Burleigh Rd., XVilbraham, Mass. Crawford, Harry C., III, '62 Thundertop, Wilbraham, Mass. Crawford, james S., IV, '64 5557 Forbes St., Pittsburgh 17, Pa. Crawford, XX'illiam B., 111, '63 2608 Atlantic Ave., Savannah, Ga. Cresci, joseph E., '64 6 N. State St., Vineland, N. Cropsey, jeffrey Dale, '61 9625 Heather Rd., Beverly Hills, Calif. Cross, Richard Keith, '62 1108 Demarest Ave., Oradell, N. Crossley, james john, '63 328 Paddock St., Xvatertown, N. Y. Crothers, Omar D., III, '63 201 Tuscany Rd., Baltimore 10, Md. Crouse, Gerrit V., '61 9 Middlesex Rd., Darien, Conn. Crow, XVilliam I... '63 Pine Island, Rye, N. Y. Crowell, Robert M., '62 6921 Carleton Terr., College Pk., Md. Crowley, Donald F., '63 91 Elmguard St., Rochester, N. Y. Crowley, Douglas M., '63 80 Claremont Ave., Maplewood, N. Crowther, David Reid, '63 1105 Brynllawn Rd., X'illanova, Pa. Crowther, john M., '61 17 lX1urchison Pl., XVhite Plains, N. Y. Crozier, XX'illiam Frank, '61 5033 Spencer, Omaha, Nebr. Csejtey, lstvan, '61 65 French St., New Brunswick, N. Cullen, jeffrey Alan, '63 5964 Donna Ave., Tarzana, Calif. Cummins, james Rubin, '64 900 Sixth St., Findlay, Ohio Curby, john Edgar, jr., '61 33 XX'estmoreland Pl., St. Louis, Mo. Curci, Michael R., '63 1777 Grand Concourse, Bronx 53, N. Y. Curry, Peter Ladd, '63 21 Miltiades Rd., Riverside, Conn. Curtis, Richard Arnold, '62 Prairie Schooner Trail, Soddy, Tenn. Cushman, Richard Hook, '64 739 Kimball Rd., Highland Pk., Ill. Life Insurance at Sensible Prices Ages 18 through 25 38.00 per thousand HO E FIDELITY LIFE I . CO. 3044 GILLHAM ROAD KANSAS CITY 8, MISSOURI Cutler, Bruce S., '62 1300 Harrison St., 1Vihnington, Del. Cutting, James H. B., '62 12 Southgate Ave., Annapolis, Md. Cuyler, Legare Wvalker, '62 South Kent School, S. Kent, Conn. Czarnowski, Thomas V., '61 P. O. Box 493, Tehran, Iran D Dadisman, Thoburu A., Jr., '62 15 Somerset La., Riverside, Conn. Dagenhardt, Gerald P.. '61 2212 Commonwealth Ave., Alexandria, Va. Dagrosa, Douglas, '63 209 Blvd. De La Luz, Mexico D. F., Mexico Dillingham, Tom Forcey, '62 8008 Orlando Dr., Clayton 5, Mo. Dale, Lewis I., '64 2307 Hampton Ave., Nashville, Tenn. Dallow, Richard L., '62 1921 WVilaray Terr., Cincinnati 30, Ohio Damsky, Ben Lee, '61 2014 16th Ave., Decatur, Ala. Dana, Stephen F., '61 607 '1'usculum Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio Danchower, Richard L., '61 6220 Fairhill St., Philadelphia 26, Pa. Dangel, James Coley, '61 32 Oldham Rd., XVest Newton, Mass. Daniels, John D., '61 200 Oak Terr., Lake Blull, Ill. Daniels, Lawrence S., '64 1110 Geneva Ave., Rockford, 111. Dann, Tyler, '64 Quaker Hill, Pawling, N. Y. Darnell, Lawrence 'l'., '62 313 Goodwyn Ave., Memphis, Tenn. D'Au1aire, Per Ola P., '61 Lia Farm, Wilton, Conn. Daunic, Joel Gustavo, '63 5187 Edenhurst, Ryndhurst 24, Ohio Davidson, Andrew Irvine, '62 I6 Packer Ave., Rumson, N. Davidson, John P., Jr., '61 10 Tallmadge Ave., Chatham, N. J. Davis, A. Drury, '63 431 Abbotsford Rd., Kenilworth, 111. Davis, Chester Van Leer, '61 737 Redman Ave., Haddonheld, N. Davis, Douglas A. C., '62 22 Lawrence Crescent, Toronto, Ont., Canada Davis Harford M., '61 50 McKinley St., Brentwood, N. Y. Davis Joe Leonard, '64 1611 S. W. l73rd Pl., Seattle, Xllash. Davis Linwood L., '62 235 Arbor Rd., 1Vinston Salem, N. C. Davis Martin J., '61 309 Broad St., Mt. Holly, N. Davis Nicholas H., '61 85 Hillcrest Ave., Summit, N. J. Davis Richard H., '61 315 W. Lincoln Ave., Barrington, Ill. Davis, Richard Marshall, '63 R. D. 1, Avonia Ave., Box 33, Lake City, Pa. Davis Sannlel H., '61 81 Van Reypen St., Jersey City, N. Davison, XVi11iam M., IV, '63 Spring Lane, Philadelphia 28, Pa. Day, James Anderson, '62 ll Cornwell St., Rockville Ctr., N. Y. Day, Jonathan S., '62 3635 Overbrook La., Houston, Texas Dean, Robert E., Jr., '63 877 Panama Dr., Littleton, Colo. DeBrier, Donald Paul, '62 500 N. Thurlow Ave., Margate City, N. DeDecker, R. 1Vil1iam, '62 149 Upper Mountain Ave., Montclair, N. Defaymoreau, Francis L., '63 238 Rutgers Pl., Nutley, N. Delilippo, Frederick '62 Strathmont Pk., Elmira, N. Y. Degavre, Robert C. O. T., '62 Chiel' Maag, Ethiopia, APO 319, New York, N. Y. I1C1IlC1',J011ll Terrill, '61 322 S. Third Ave., Highland Pk., N. J. Deitrick, John '62 69 Rockledge Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. Delalield, Joseph L., III, '62 N. Salem, N. Y. Delgado, David Joseph, '62 11 Portman Sq., London S. W. 1, England Delmarsh, Archibald G., '62 Rocky Pt. Inu, Inlet, N. Y. Deloug, Terry Lee, '64 311 S. 18th St., Allentown, Pa. Demarco, Anthony John, '61 20 Wellesley St., lvledford 55, Mass. Demarest, Charles H., '61 350 Ridgewood Ave., Glen Ridge, N. Denious, 11'il1iam Park, '63 1910 Grape St., Denver 20, Colo. Denn, Morton Mace, '61 282 Nineteenth Aye., Paterson 4, N. J. Denniston, Elliott A., '62 7818 Creleld St., Philadelphia 18, Pa. Dent, Daniel Forbes, '63 Box 351, Haverlord, Pa. Deopker, Ford C., '61 326 Lynton La., Richmond, Va. DePeyster, James A., '61 315 Pendleton La., Palm Beach, Fla. DePontet, Ariel B., '62 33 Blvd. Suchet, Paris, France Deprez, Patil Allen, '63 160 XV. Broadway, Shelbyville, lnd. Derochi, Steven Fred, '63 1172 Parker, St. Louis 16, Mo. Dersham, Earle R., '63 302 Green St., Milllinburg, Pa. 286 APPLEGATE FLORAL SHOP Flowers Telegraphed Anywhere CUT FLOWERS - CORSAGES 47 Palmer Square West WA 4-0121 Deslorges, Roger V., '64 Vischer Ferry, Rexford R. D., N. Y. De'1'urenne, Jean Louis, '61 49 Mlistar Rd., Villanova, Pa. Deupree, Thomas R., '62 6275 Park Rd., Cincinnati 43, Ohio Devine, Michael C., '62 110 Guion St., Pleasantville, N. Y. Devito, Peter Carl, '64 155 Linden Ave., Glen Ridge, N. Dewolf, John Barton, '64 3928 Trask Ave., Erie, Pa. Diamond, Marvin Joel, '62 146 Central Pk. NV., New York, N. Y. Dllll, James Raymond, '61 4413 Buckingham Dr., E1 Paso, Texas Diaz, Robert H., Jr., '61 1050 Evergreen Ct., Perrysburg, Ohio Dick, YVa1ter, '61 Church aml Walnut St., Brookville, Pa. Dicke, Stephen Paul, '64 Plymouth Rd., Gwynedd Valley, Pa. Dickinson, Philemon, '64 70 Tower Rd., W'aterbury, Conn. Diener, Edward Moses, '61 74 Alfred Rd. E., Merrick, N. Y. Dill, James G., Jr., '61 2 Ox Ridge La., Darien, Conn. Diller, Edmond Jess, '63 620 S. Hazelwood, Youngstown 9, Ohio Diller, George T., '61 Hopson Rd., Norwich, Vt. Dimond, Frederick Henry, '63 122 YV. Mt. Airy Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Divincenzo, Anthony, '63 11 Blaine Ave., Beverly, Mass. Dixon, E. A., Jr., '62 Tedwyn Apt., Montbomery A, Bryn Mawr, Pa. Dixon, John Farnsworth, '62 1815 Reid Dr., Appleton, YVis. Dixon, Richard' Erwin, '64 2116 Timberwood Pl., Nashville 12, Tenn. Dodd, James Gardiner, '62 Meadow Rd., Riverside, Conn. Dodds, James Thomas, '62 22 Southmoor, Clayton 5, Mo. Dold, Albert XV., III, '64 171 Bryant St., Bulfalo, N. Y. Dolvin, James H., '61 3945 Sheldon Dr., N. E., Atlanta, Ga. Donahoe, Cashell, Jr., '63 7605 S. Pinehill Dr., Riclnnond 28, Va. Doniger, WVi1liam R., '64 Manursing XVay, Rye, N. Y. Donner, George R., Jr., '63 97 Fieldstone Dr., Basking Ridge, N. Donohue, James P., '62 2226 Hartzell St., Evanston, Ill. Dorfman, Paul Michael, '61 165 Maple Hill Rd., Glencoe, 111. Dorris, Thomas B., '61 519 Cherry St., Hammond, Ind. Jacksonville Rd., Ivyland, Pa. 88 XVood1ey Rd., Winnetka, Ill. 104 XV. Rosemary La., Falls Church, Va. Dorsett, Charles H., Jr., '62 Dorsey, Michael F., '62 Doten, Eric Stone, '61 Doublier, Rene Marcel, '62 Yorke Rd., Mountain Lakes, N. Doughty, Edward R., '62 20 N. Nassau Ave., Margate City, N. Douw, John De Peyster, '61 822 26th St. S., Arlington, Ya. Dowell, John Howard, '64 246 Higman Pk., Benton Harbor, Mich. Dowhan, William, Jr., '64 30506 Jellerson St., St. Clair Shores, Mich. Downing, John Scott, '62 1074 Holly Tree Rd., Abington, Pa. Drabenstott, Earle Lee, '63 187 Gillette, Painesville, Ohio Draudt, David M., '61 ll 171 Sunbury Rd., Galena, Ohio Dreher, Ernest C., 111, '63 111 Oakwynne House, 1Vynnewood, Pa. Dreher, Frederick XV., '62 111 Oakwynne House, XVynnewood, Pa. Effrat, Andrew George, '61 4 Peter Cooper Rd., New York, N. Y. Ehrens, Gerald L., '61 3330 Hamilton Ave., E1 Paso, Texas Einstein, Albert B., jr., '63 Eisen, Charles Lee, '64 laisenberger, Peter M., '63 230 Homewood Terr., Baltimore 18, Md. 466 S. Center St., Orange, N. j. 6 Century Trail, Harrison, N. Y. Eisenlelder, Douglas '61 48 Shepard Pl., Nutley, N. Ellis, William M., '61 Eisenstadt, Robert, '63 63 janes La., Stamford, Conn. Ellerman, Alfred Denny, '63 -1 Yia Pelle Selvastrell, Tirrenia, Pisa, Italy Elliot, Bruce, '62 1767 Poly Dr., Billings, Mont. Elliott, Edward Martin, '62 2108 Kenilworth Ave., YVilmette, Ill. Elliott, Stephen P., '64 27 Dolphin Green, Pt. 1Vashington, N. Y. Ellis, 'l'homas S., '61 Goodspeed Rd., Virginia Beach, Ya. Drill, Craig Alexander, '61 1620 Meadow La., Glenview Ill. Dripps, Robert D., '64 526 Avonwood Rd., Haverford, Pa. Driscoll, David Burton, '61 330 XV. Diversey Pkwy., Chicago 14, 111. Driscoll, Robert S., '61 60 Ludlow Dr., Chappaqua, N. Y. Driscoll, Scott H. M., '61 330 XV. Diiersey Pkwy., Chicago 14, 111. Dubrow, Edward Lewis, '61 14 Chatham St., Hartford, Conn. Dti11, john Miller, jr., '63 1171 Murray Hill Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Dullord, P. Wiekstrand, '61 1921 N. 21st St., Boise, Idaho Dulley, john Patrick, '63 121 Old Chester Rd., Essex Fells, N. j. Dugan, john j., jr., '62 730 S. Bowman Ave., Merion, Pa. Dumper, Robert S., jr., '62 141 E. 69th St., New York, N. Y. Diuihani, Allan Toll, '64 6030 Kimbark Ave., Chicago 37, lll. Dtiiui, Douglas Hubbard, '61 259 Coleridge Ave., Pallo Alto, Calif. Dunn, john Helme, jr., '62 74 Ferry La., Barrington, R. I. Dunn, Thomas 1Villiam, '62 328 Spencer Pl., Paramus, N. j. Dunne, Michael Sorge, '62 836 Chestnut Ave., 1Vilmette, 111. Dtiiiliing, Bruce Gardner, '62 227 Tuttle Pkwy., 1Vestlield, N. Dupont, Eleuthere P., 111, '61 Greenville, Del. Durant, David S., '62 31 Park St., E. Hatnption, Mass. Dworkin, Roger B., '64 7055 Eastlawn Dr., Cincinnati 37, Ohio Dwyer, james Robert, '63 65 Corbin Rd., Haniden, Conn. Dyer, W. Xvallace, jr., '61 300 College Ave., Haverford, Pa. Dlimislkiewicz, Richard, '61 19500 N. YV. 7 Ave., N. Miami, Fla. E Earl, Marshall H., jr., '63 1311 Harrow Rd., Charlottesvil le, Va. Earle, john L., '64 A1557 Ukali St., Honolulu 18, Hawaii Earle, Paul Winthrop, '61 1034 M'estmoor Rd., Winnet ka, 111. lzarman, john Samuel, 111, '64 1611 Ruffner Rd., Alexandria, Va. RFD 1, Woodland Ave., S. Plain6eld, N. Ellsworth, George G., '61 57 I.inelle St., M'i1lowdale, Ont., Canada Ely, Stephen, '61 2025 Hillyer Pl., N. YV., XVashington 9. D. C. Emerick, Richard A., '61 5 Bullalo Rd., N. Oaks, St. Patil 10, Minn. Emlev, 1Varren 111, '63 191 Lee Rd., Berea, Ohio Eintnericli, David S., '63 1Vest Cross Rd., New Canaan, Conn. Emmerson, Donald K., '61 U. S. Consulate Gen'l., Lagos, Nigeria Einpsoii, 1Valter Ford, '61 2902 Morewood, Akron, Ohio Endeniann, Christian j. B., '61 960 Park Ave., New York 28, N. Y. Engel, Frank A., III, '63 91-1 Milton St., Pittsburgh 18, Pa. Engel, Lewis Edward, '64 136 Oakview Ave., Maplewood, N. Entin, David H., '62 14142 Townsend Blvd., jacksonville 11, Fla. Epsen, Robert A., '61 608 Fairacres Rd., Omaha, Nebr. Epstein, Patil Elliott, '62 300 Puritan Rd., Swampscott, Mass. Eriksen, Donald P., '64 525 YV. 236 St., New York, N. Y. Erikscn, Neil Oswald, '61 12 Coughlan Ave., Staten Isl. 10, N. Y. Ernst, Carl Raymond, '63 20 Home Ave., Albany, N. Y. Eastlake, Roger McClcan, '63 3117 Midvale Ave., Philadelphia 29, Pa. Ecker, john Lawrence, '61 9311 Harrington Dr., Bethesda 14, Md. Erskine, Eric MacDonald. '62 850 De1Yitt St., Apt. 21K, Chicago 11, Ill. Esmay, Robert Michael, '63 78 River Rd., Grandview on Htid., N. Y. Eckfeldt, Richard H., '61 Pennington Rd., Paoli, Pa. Eckler, Rickey, '63 2105 1.ower Chelsea Rd., Colunibtis, Ohio Eckles, Michael Park, '63 500 Annette, Dodge City, Kan. Edelman, Martin Lee, '63 2 Overlook Rd., XVl:ite Plains Edgerton, Glenn Souders, '61 325 Cherokee Pl., Charlotte ,N. Y. ,N.C. Edmonds, Francis C., 111, '61 Meadowoocl La., Brookville N Y Edmunds, Richard L., '61 Edsall, Robert S., '63 Edson, Ralph H., jr., '62 Edwards, Blair S., '61 Edwards, james David, '62 Edwards, Selden S., '63 9 North Rd., Glens Falls 1828 28th Ave., Yero Beac 77 Oak Ave., Shelton, Rt., 3, Box 1300, Marysville, 9 Ingold Dr., Huntington Rt. 3, Box 1300 Marysville, NY ,.. . h, Fla. Conn. Calif. , N. Y. Calif. Esmerian, Ralph Oliver, '62 938 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. Esser, Carl Eric, '63 320 Bloomfield Ave., Verona, N. j. Esser, Michael Frank, '63 35 Albany St., Elmont, N. Y. Esson, james Douglas, '63 751 Arlington Rd., Camp Hill, Pa. Eubank, Robert B., '64 3307 Parkway Dr., Alexandria, La. Eubanks, Mark Blandford, '62 Chinquapin, Greenwood, C. Evans, Evans, Evans, Evans, Evans, Alfred L., jr., '62 5012 Outlook, Mission, Kans. Arthur H., '62 535 Bowling Green, Moorestown, N. Bradford B., '64 Qtrs. 14, Ft. Shafter, Honolulu, Hawaii Michael j., '64 Little Mountain Rd., Mentor, Ohio Rhys, '62 Dorset, Vt. Everdell, XVilliam R., '63 liluttontown Rd., Syosset, N. Y. Compliments of FOOD MACHINERY and CHEMICAL CORPORATION CHEMICAL RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT CENTER Princeton, New Jersey Everngam, K. Thomas, '62 100 lillerslie Ct. Denton, Md. Evnin, Anthony Basil, '62 68 li. S6 St., New York 28, N. Y. Fwig, Caspar' F., '64 F. Ardsley' Ave., Irvington, N. Y. Ewing, jonathan White, '61 650 Academy, Sewickley, Pa. Ewing, Robert H., 111, '63 272 YV. Channel Rd., Satrta Monica, Calif. Ewing, XYillianr H., '61 Yalley Forge, Pa. Fyerly, Hugh Brian, '61 2321 Clover La., North6eId, Ill. F Faber, Stephen William, '61 Fabian, Richard V., jr., '62 Fairchild, Stanley M., '63 Fairfield, Leslie Parke, '62 65 Iidgewood Dr., Hohokus, N. j. Pine Orchard, Conn. 7 Tnsten Ave., Coshen, N. Y. S2 Market St., Annapolis, Md. Falconer, Harold A., jr., '61 Box 165, Burnt Hills, N. Y. Falk, Stephen, '61 4527 Bedford Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Falkenheim. Yictor C., '61 IIS I2 Newport Ave., Rockaway Pk. 94, N. Y. Farkas. lidward '61 408 Turner Rd., Media 29, Pa. Farmer, Michael james, '63 863 N. Golf Ctrl De Sac, Des Plaines, Ill. Farmer, Willianr S., jr., 163 711 Briarcliff Rd., Montgomery, Ala. Faust, YVi11iam C., '61 Sherry Towers 2117 Ii St., YVashington, D. C- Fattx, Robert jolnr, '64 32 N. Columbia St., M'oodbury, N. j. Fechner, Martin A., '61 846 Garrison Ave., Teaneek, N. j. Feder, Lewis Ira, '63 626 Lafayette Ave., Mt. Yernon, N. Y. Feehan, Allen Walter, '62 Pine Brook Rd., Spring Yalley, N. Y. Fehl, j. Frederick, '64 326 N. Duke St., Lancaster, Pa. Feinberg, David Harold, '63 60 Melville La., Creat Neck, N. Y. Feldman, Howard I.ee, '61 740 Hillside Ave., Plainfield, N. Fell, Armand L., jr., '62 913 Carteret Ave., Trenton, N. j. Felleman, Frank, '61 6 Cross La., Peekskill, N. Y. Felsentlral, lidward S., '63 4211 Montrose Dr., Memphis, Tenn. Fenimore, Iiclward R., '63 23 Dover St., liaston, Md. Ferenback, Carl. III, '64 Old Morristown Rd., Bernardsville, N. j. Ferguson, Charles A., '62 3307 Claranront. Cincinnati, Ohio Ferguson, jolnr I.eslie, '62 64 Alteiglow Aye., Montclair, N. j. Fernholf, lirhartl Robert. '62 106 C Devereux Ave.. Princeton, N. j. Ferrer, jose M., III, '61 133 Ii. 80th St., New York, N. Y. Ferrer. Thomas Hugh, '61 133 li. Stlth St., New York, N. Y. Ferris, Barton I'nrtly, '62 175 Muirlield Rd., Rockville Ctr., N. Y. Ferry, Mason, '61 368 Notre Dame Ave., Crosse Pointe, Mich. Fetzer, james Henry, '62 1800 Camden Ave., S. Pasadena, Calif. Fewster, Lowell H., '61 505 Bonnie Brae Ave., Rochester 18, N. Y. Fiddler, Andrew li., '64 18 XVinthrop Pl., Maplewood, N. j. Fields, Cary A., '61 2324 Bryrnnavrr Ave., Philadelphia 31, Pa. Fike, Fugene li., II, '61 349 XY. Berkeley St., 1'niontoyrn, Pa. Finch, Charles Martin, '62 424 Park Rd., 1Yebster Groves 19, Mo. Finch, Parker 'l'., jr., '61 444 S. White Sta. Rd., Metnphis, Tenn. Finch, Paul Franklin, '61 19715 Marvin Rd., Cleveland 28, Ohio Finks, Mark Preston, '61 151 Malden, La Grange, Ill. Firestone, Peter S., '62 1001 Rock Creek Rd., Bryn Mawr, Pa. Fischer, Barry Robert, '64 37 Clarendon Rd., Albany, N. Y. Fishbein, Norman F.. '63 112 li. Main St., Wallingford, Conn. Fisher, Arthur Lee, '61 260 96 St., Stone Harbor, N. Fisher, David N., jr., '61 27 Patterson Ave., Creenwich, Conn. Fisher, Frederick S., III, '61 Westover, Charles City, Ya. Fisher, james Frederick, '62 120 Country Club Dr., Ashland, Ky. Fisher, jatnes W., jr., '64 8336 Sagatnore Rd., Leawood 15, Kaus. I Fisher, Thomas, III, '62 1131 Brynllawn Rd., Villanova, la. Fitehett, joseph W., jr., '61 1-18 YVoodland Dr., Huntington, YV. Va- Fitzgerald, David L., '61 150 Collins Rd., Waban, Mass. Fitzgibhon, Herbert, Il, '6-1 21 Wyatt Rd., Carden City, N. Y. Fitlhugh, Donald L., jr., '61 8008 L'niversity Dr., Riclrnrond 29, Ya. Fitzpatrick, David S., '61 208 Fernwood Ave., Montclair, N. j. 2 ROBINSON 81 MILLER COMPANY 333 West 52nd Street o New York 19 Divisions of Robinson 8- Miller MARSHALL TYPOGRAPHY, Inc. o Layout, Packaging, Finished Art o Typography ROBINSON 81 MILLER OFFSET CORP. o Camera and Platemaking 0 Offset Lithography ROBINSON 8. MILLER COMPANY o Letterpress Printing A COMPLETE DESIGN and PRODUCTION SERVICE Flaherty, William, '63 1537 Belita La., La Canada, Calif. Fleming, M'illianr W., '61 River Rd., Cold Springs, N. Y. Flessel, Creig Peter, '62 102 Bay' Drive, Huntington, N. Y. Flint, Malcolm li., '61 647 Broadway, Dntredin, Fla. Florslreitn, Bruce H., '63 2531 W. Morse Ave., Chicago 115, 111. Foclrt, XVilliam Lattrie, '63 179 Washington Ave., Carden City, L. I., N. Y. Fogoi. Howard Wilson. jr., '61 115 Aberdeen Ave., Dayton 19, Ohio Folda, jaroslav T., III, '62 2753 Bradley Cir., Annandale, Ya. Fong, Douglas Cun, '61 20 lidwards Pl., Princeton, N. Forbes, William I., III, '61 S16 Maplewood Rd., YVayne, Pa. Forney, C. David, jr., '61 1 Clerrview Rd., St. Louis 21, Mo. Forrester, Alexander Mc., '61 107 Tribal Rd., Lortisville 7, Ky. Fort, john F., III, '63 0160 River Rd., Bethesda, Md. Fort, lXIarron Curtis, '61 16 Arlington St., Newburyport, Mass. Fosburg, Steven Ira, '61 101 Adelberg La., Cedarlnrrst, N. Y. Foster. C. Allen, '63 2108 Hawthorne St., lNlonroe, La. Foster, Donald Rose, '62 P. O. Box 8, Scaife Rd., Sewiekley, Pa. Foulke, William C., jr., '64 452 W. Chestnut Hill Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Foulkes, Fred Klee, '63 06 1Ya1nut Ave., Floral Pk., N. Y. Fowler, Dennis Roger, '63 12037 Calewood St., Sttrdio City, Calif. Fowski, Walter joseph, '61 38 Stephen Dr., Fnglewood Clills, N. Fox, Frederick L., '64 27 Lynwood Aye., Keene, N. H. Fraker, Harrison Shedd, '6-I 150 Cleveland La., Princeton, N. Franre, john M., '61 900 Osage Dr., Pittsburgh 16, Pa. Franre, Peter Timothy, '61 2021 Sutton Ave., Cincinnati 30, Ohio Frarrrpton, john C., '61 5336 Taney Ave., Alexandria, Va. Frank, Lawrence C., '64 204 Lester Ave., Yakima, YVash. Frantz, David Oswin, '64 Penn Hall, Chambersburg, Pa. 240 N, Highland Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. Fratcher, Charles H., jr., '63 47-10 Roanoke Pkwy., Kansas City, Mo. Franz, David Alan, '64 2 Chestnut St., Salem, Mass. 4408 N. WV. 12, Oklahoma City, Okla. 4529 Hawthorne St., Washington, D. C. 458 12. Van Buren St., Nappanee, Ind, Frelinghuysen, joseph S., '63 Hub Hollow Farm, Far Hills, N. Frelinghuysen, Peter, '63 Freedberg, john M., '62 Freeman, jim jay, '64 Freer, Robert E., '63 Freese, George E., '64 Sand Spring Lane, Morristown, N. French, jatnes S. M., '62 3220 Briarcliff Rd., Birmingham, Ala. French, Robert Lynn, '63 4431 Lemac, Houston, Texas Freynik, joseph Gregory, '63 S. Church St., Moorestown, N. Friedberg, Barry Sewell, '62 6621 Chippewa Dr., Baltimore, Md. Friedeman, Richard F., jr., '63 801 Cleveland Rd., Hinsdale, Ill. Friedenberg, X1'il1iam R., '64 216 1Yoodland Ave., Merchantville, N. Friedman, joel Paul, '62 333 Overlook Rd., Palm Springs, Calif. Friedman, Paul Aaron, '64 3106 Labyrinth Rd., Baltimore 8, Md. Friedman, Sidney '61 3920 River Oaks Dr., Des Moines, Iowa Friend, Peter Winstson, '63 358 Flora, Highland Pk., 111. Frisbie, A. Charles, III, '61 316 W. 51 Terr., Kansas City 12, Mo. Frohboese, lirnest C., '62 Paris Ave., Rockleigh, N. j. Frohlich, Lawrence C., '63 Coulter Rd., Clifton Springs, N. Y. Frost, Louis Bentley, '63 15 Grumwold Pl., Hyde Pk., N. Y. Frost, Thomas Robert, jr., '62 62 Brookside Rd., Darien, Conn. Fry, Charles Rahn, '61 520 S. Broadmoor, Springheld, Ohio Fry, Thomas Boyd, '64 7147 Meadow La., Hammond, Ind. Frye, Roger lidward, '62 38 Morningside Cir., Little Falls, N. Fudge, Donald 1Veston, '63 Chittenango Rd., R. D. 1, Manlius, N. Y. Fuerst, 11'oll'gang, 29 Hindenburg Strasse, Meldorflholst, Germany Fuhrman, Paul Michael, '63 930 5th Ave., New York, N. Y. Fujita, Masataka, '63 5 49 Nanpeidai Machi, Tokyo, japan Fuller, Mortimer B., III, '64 Dalton, Pa. Fuller, Robert G., jr., '61 31 Milk St., Rm. 903, Boston Mass. Funkenstein, Daniel L., '64 88 Stanley Rd., YVaban 68, Mass. Funkenstein, H. Harris, '61 88 Stanley Rd., 1Vaban 68 Mass. Funkhouser, Iilmer N., III, '63 Monument St., Concord Mass. Furlong, john E., IV, '64 950 Grant Ave., Pelham Mur. N. Y. Furst, Ronald Wolcott, '63 790 Riverside Dr., New York, G N. Y. Gabel, Robert Alan, '63 11 Fernwood Pl., Mountain Lakes, N. j. Gabriel, Chester joseph, '63 Cosway Rd., Oakfield, N. Galbraith, Brian Bruce, '62 128 Viola Rd., Suffern, N. Y. Gale, M. Kirby, '61 611 Country Club Rd., Camp Hill, Pa. Galef, Bennett G., '62 115 F. 86th St., New York 28, N. Y. Galef, jacques L., II, '64 115 E. 86th St., New York 28, N. Y. Gallagher, Gerald R., jr., '63 2937 V' St., S. E., Yvashington 20, D. C. Gallis, Harry Anthony, '63 Rt. 4, W. Lake Dr,, Athens, Ga. Gallo, Nicholas A., '62 1805 Belvedere Ave., Havertown, Pa. Galloway, john T., '63 228 S. 1Vayne Ave., 1Vayne, Pa. Gambee, Robert Rankin, '64 220 Speer Ave., Englewood, N. j. Gammie, Edward Bruce, '61 620 Ridge Rd., Winnetka, Ill. Gardner, Ames, jr., '62 526 N. Wayne St., Pigua, Ohio Gardner, john H., III, '63 3641 Yalencia Rd., jacksonville, Fla. Gardner, Leland G., jr., '61 6331 Western Ave., N. XV., XVashiugton, D. C. Garland, james C., '64 5830 Mission Dr., Kansas City 15, Mo. Garratt, Charles W., '62 3-104 Iroquois Ave,, Detroit 14, Mich. Garrett, Stephen A., '61 1186 S. Clayton St., Denver Colo. Garrett, Thomas H., '61 Brooklandville P. O., Brooklandville, Md. Garrou, john Louis W., '64 P. O. Box 126, Valdese, N. C. Garthoff, Douglas F., '64 211 llhler Terr., Alexandria, Ya. Gass, Alan Roy, '62 84 Trapelo Rd., Waltham, Mass. Gates, john 1Villiam, Ill, '63 Goose Hill Rd., RFD 3, Huntington, N. Y. Gates, Thomas C., '64 1235 St. Albans Rd., San Marino, Calif. Gaunt, lidmund H., jr., '62 181 Prospect Ave., Red Bank, N. Gaver, james Molloy, '64 30 Locust St., Garden City, N. Y. Gay, David Andrew, '61 1024 Gomber Ave., Cambridge, Ohio Gaynor, Stephen Wells, '63 5114 Bowser St., Dallas 9, Texas Geer, Ralph Taggart, '61 680 Conestoga Rd., Villanova, Pa. Gehris, Fred, '64 R. D. 1, Center Valley, Pa. George, Ronald Marc, '61 617 N. Roxbury Dr., Beverly Hills, Calif. Georgescu, Peter A., '61 34 Fnnismore Gardens, London SXV 7, Fngland Gerber, jay Elliot, '62 101 N. Frontenac Ave., Margate City, N. Gerhart, Patil Frazier, '64 107 7. Fifth Ave., Lebanon, Pa. German, Harold, '63 140 Glenwood Ave., jersey City, N. Gershman, Bennett L., '63 25 li. 86th St., New York 28, N. Y. Gersten, Stephen Miles, '61 2030 Baker Ave., Utica, N. Y. Gervers, Michael, '64 335 1Vinnona Dr., Decatur, Ga. Getnick, Richard Alan, '61 85 Riverdale Rd., Valley Stream, N, Y. Gewin, james 1Vil1iam, '63 35 The Downs, Tuscaloosa, Ala. Gibbons, jon joel, '63 616 Gramar Rd., Moorestown, N. Gibson, Kenney Lee, '64 1401 S. Marion, Tulsa, Okla. Gibson, Royal Harris, '64 94 YV. River Rd., Rumson, N. Gieske, james C., '61 1021 XVinding Way, Baltimore, Md. Gilford, Charles K., '64 5 Charles Field St., Providence, R. 1. Gilbert, George S. B., '63 829 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Gildea, james '64 5619 N. 33rd St., Arlington 7, Ya. Gillespie, Gordon, '63 121 Maple Ave., 1Voodsfield, Ohio Gilliam, George H., '64 Highmont Ave., Nyack, N. Y. CHARTER A BUS . . for 73? Out of State Trips 75? Industrial Tours if? Conventions il? School Excursions 75? Church Groups CARRYING 41-45 PASSENGERS SAFE eouareous DRIVERS Reserve an Air-Conditioned, Air Ride Bus TIGER BUS LINE WA1nut 4-1008 285 JOHN ST. PRINCETON Gillock, Oliver P., '63 228 YV. 1Vater St., Lock Haven, Pa. Giltnan, Robert Hugh, '64 1Vindward Ave., XVhite Plains, N. Y. Gilmore, james Demott, '61 401 S. Penn Ave., Independence Kans. Gilpin, George H., '63 802 W. Hollywood Ave., San Antonio, Texas Gilpin, Robert Peyton, '61 1209 Ridgecrest Rd., Orlando, Fla. Gimber, Stephen Henry, '64 1126 Hanover Ave., Norfolk, Va. Ginsberg, Alan S., '61 17 Tenth St., Lakewood, N. Ginsberg, Allen Louis, '62 175 Forest Ave., Staten Island 1, N. Y. Ginsberg, Phillip H., '61 11 Bishop Pl., Larchmont, N. Y. Glancy, 1Valter john, '61 6511 Lafayette Way, Dallas, Texas Glasier, jatnes Ct'ocker, '62 R. D. 2, Voorheesville, N. Y. Glass, Peter Martin, '62 21 Hawthorne St., Lynbrook, N. Y. Glasstneyer, Edward F., '63 67 1Veed St., New Canaan, Conn. Glickler, Paul, '62 Accomac Rd., Nvyncote, Pa. Godfrey, Aaron Austin, '63 Route 1, Harlingen, Texas Godsick, Peter Alan, '61 30 E. 60th St., New York, N. Y. Gogos, Costas George, '61 3 Ctlritanon St., Athens, Greece Goldberg, Lyn lngratn, '63 227 li. Delaware Pl., Chicago, Ill. Golde, Lawrence George, '63 17 Roxbury Rd., Port 1Vashington, N. Y. Golden, Robert Harvey, '61 24 Wade St., Brighton 35, Mass. Golden, Roger M., '64 29 Wilcox Ave., S. River, N. Goldenson, Ronald, '6-1 5 Mayllower Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. Goldin, Kenneth D., '61 590 Bard Ave., Staten lsl. 10, N. Y. Goldman, Kenneth Alan, '64 9510 Tullis Dr., Beverly Hills, Calif. Goldman, Ronald E., '61 9510 Tullis Dr., Beverly Hills, Calif. Goldman, Steven, '64 2828 Pine Grove Ave., Chicago, Ill. Goldschmidt, Httbert L., '63 1035 Filth Ave., New York 28, N. Y. Gotnberg, Herbert L., '61 1270 19th St., Brooklyn 30, N. Y. Goodenough, Daniel NV., '61 234 Lothrop Rd., Grosse Pt. Farms 36, Mich. Goodfellow, Gordon P., '61 5369 Sugar Hill, Houston 27, Texas Goodfellow, jack S., '63 98 Beech St., johnson City, N. Y. Goodfrieud, Michael A., '62 Montrose Pt. Rd., Montrose, N. Y. Goodman, David, '64 1074 li. 14th St., New York, N, Y. Goodman, Paul David, '63 8310 High School Rd., Elkins Parks 17, Pa. Goodrich, David, '63 153 Highland Ave., Montclair, N. Goodridge, 1Valter Reed, '64 23 Broatlmoor Rd., Scarsdale, Gordinier, Richard B., '64 803 Grove St., Pt. Pleasant Bch N. v. N. J. Gordon, Christopher B., '61 3472 Mountain St., Montreal, Canada Gordon, David H., '61 76 45 168 St., Flushing 66, N. Y. Gordon, David S., '63 40 Kearney St., Denver, Colo. Gordon, Gilbert '62 Box 111, Coltunbia, Tenn. Gore, Philip M. L., '63 3341 Reservoir Rd., M'ashington 7, D. C. Gorman, George Edmond, '63 10456 S. Hamilton Ave., Chicago 43, 111. Goroski, Mitchell '6-1 256 Bullalo Ave., Paterson 3, N. Goss, Barry Dennis, '62 1001 N. Noyes Dr., Silver Spring, Md. Gotten, Nicholas, jr., '61 670 Sweetbriar Rd., Memphis, Tenn. Gottlieb, Stephen '62 1921 Avenue 1, Brooklyn 30, N. Y. Gough, Newell, III, '63 626 Monroe Ave., Helena, Mont. Gould, Michael A., '61 Huntington Hills, Rochester, N. Y. Gottld, Richard Stephen, '63 12 Chester Pl., Bronxville, N. Y. Gouldin, David Millen, '63 Bunn Hill Rd., R. D. 2, Binghamton, N. Y. Graber, Frederic jay, '61 130 E. 75th St., New York 21, N. Y, Graber, jerrold jay, '61 185 Gardenia Dr., Memphis, Tenn. Grad, jelfrey Stuart, '63 1-4 Eastland Terr., Haverhill, Mass. Grady, john Patrick, '62 51 Matthews St., Binghamton, N. Y. Graef, jed Richard, '64 13 Howard St., Verona, N. Graff, jerold Bruce, '64 96 Morningside Rd., Verona, N. Graham, john joseph, '61 Box 1171, Hammond, La. Grand, jean Richard L., '64 34 Lake Forest, St. Louis 17, Mo. Grandone, Lance Steven, '61 120 High Rock, Needham, Mass. Granger, Christopher, '61 7305 River Rd., Bethesda 14, Md. Grant, james Allen, '64 6301 18th Ave., Sacratnento, Calif. Grant, Thomas, III, '64 1042 Coddington Pl., Charlotte 7, N. C. Grane, jerald Cttrtis, '64 3834 Reed St., Wheat Ridge, Colo. Graves, R. Neil, II, '61 322 N. Main St., Medina, Tenn. Gray, George Elmer, '61 525 Ash, 1Vinnetka, Ill. Gray, Stephen Yail, '64 153 E. 82nd St., New York 28, N. Y. Greacen, john M., '64 905 S. Post Oak La., Houston 27, Texas Green, George G., '63 566 Fifth Ave., Laurel, Miss. Green, james R., jr., '61 1054 School St., Indiana, Pa. Green, 1N'i1lian1 Bevans, '61 688 N. Ewing St., Princeton, N. Green, 1Yi1liam jackson, '63 Great Rd., Princeton, N. Greenberg, Edward Alan, '63 -1 Dunster Rd., Great Neck, N. Y. Greenberg, james, '61 1525 1Vildwood Ave., Catnden, N. j. Greenberg, 1Vi11iatn, '63 101 E. Fifth St., Lakewood, N. Greenfield, Lawrence P., '62 18 Glen Mawr Dr., Trenton, N. Greenleaf, Charles W., '63 1545 1Vinding Waters La., Elkhart, Ind. Greenwald, A. Michael, '61 584 Ford Ave., Kingston, Pa. Greenwald, George j., '61 584 Ford Ave., Kingston, Pa. Greenwood, Lee II, '61 Avondale Box 42, 1Vester1y, R. I. Greenwood, Robert H., '61 2641 Burns Pl., Union, N. Greer, Douglas Fielder, '61 2100 N. Quantico St., Arlington, Ya. Greist, john Hnth, '61 43-13 Wlashington Blvd., Indianapolis, Ind. Greminger, Richard F., '61 Main St., Cambridge, N. Y. Grenoble, 1Vi1liatn L., IY, '64 7110 YV. 3rd St., Lock Haven, Pa. Grier, Dottglas A., '64 Grier School, Tyrone, Pa. Grillith, jatnes R., '63 341 Evergreen Pl., Ann Arbor, Mich. Grillith, Richard S., '6-1 59 Prospect Ave., Montclair, N. Grilliths, Hugh M., '63 A. P. Mission, Etah, 11. P., India Grimes, john Harlin, '61 1208 Fontaine Rd., Lexington, Ky. Griswold, Benjamin H., '62 135 li. Baltitnore St., Baltimore 2, Md. Griswold, jack '61 Hess Rd., Monkton, Md. Griswold, Talcott, jr., '62 111 Thorntree La., 1Vinttetka, Ill. Grode, David Lloyd, '62 110 li. Rockaway Rd., Hewlett, L. I., N. Y. Groos, Arthur B., jr., '64 968 NV. Marshall Blvd., San Bernardino, Calif. Gros, Francois R.. '64 1 Sutton Pl., S., New York, N. Y Grosstnan, john Alan, '63 178 23 Croydon Rd., jamaica Estates, N. Y. Grotsky, Stephen Richard, '63 2639 Davidson Ave., New York, N. Y. Groves, Hurst Kohler, '63 4240 Roland Rd., Indianapolis 8, Ind. Grnbbs, Detmis H., '64 The Loomis School, XVindsor, Conn. Gruen, Martin Charles, '61 15 Lawrence St., Lyons, N. Y. Gruenstein. Eric Ian, '64 65 Beverly Rd., Great Neck, N. Y. Guedel, William E., jr., '61 1308 Strnble Ave., N. E., Canton, Ohio Guuby, lidwin Neal, '63 1130 Paran Rd., N. XV., Atlanta, Ga. Gunther, jack D., jr., '63 1Yest Rd., New Canaan, Conn. Gurley, George Hatntnond, '63 622 1Y.60th Terr., Kansas City, Mo. Gnroff, Gregory, '62 1328 Monroe St., Evanston, 111. Gustafson, Andrew Baker, '63 1117 Forest Rd., Lakewood, Ohio Gustafson, Carl A., '61 1911 Spring La., Salt Lake City, Utah Gustafson, Dennis H., '64 2245 Preston St., Salt Lake City, Utah Guttnan, Harry Largman, '63 1824 Turner St., Allentown, Pa. Gutridge, Charles Reed, '61 120 Beverly Rd., XV. Palm Beach, Fla. Haarlow, Arnold W., Ill, '63 241 li. First St., Hinsdale, Ill. Haas, M'i1liam L., '61 61 Barber Rd., Framingham, Mass. Haddock, Donald May, '63 814 Vassar Rd., Alexandria, Va. Hagan, john Bruce, '63 26 Main St., Richlandtown, Pa. Hagen, Christopher, '63 20 Sutton Pl., S., New York 22, N. Y. Hager, jatnes Stephen, '62 11930 Cobblestone Dr., Houston, Tex. Hager, Patil Alcott, '64 Bainbridge Rd., 2, Bainbridge, N. Y. Hagstrom, jon, '61 241 Eastern Ave., Gloucester, Mass. Haines, Andrew Lyon, '61 16 Ichigaya Nakaro Cho, Tokyo, japan Haines, Robert B., '61 21 Forest Brook Dr., N. Plainfield, N. Haigh, Peter Leslie, '63 535 Hillside Terr., W. Orange, N. j. Hale, Peter R. E., '63 420 Hammond St., Chestnut Hill 67, Mass. M 'PW f' 'Z Here's excitement ond fun for your room on compus or ot home. Princeton's ovvn Tiger Stripes oporopriotely Princeton . .. in motching beclspreod ond towels... by Fieldcrest. 291 :pn Y Y Hg: ,J L.. oQo Q? FASHIONS FOR BED AND BATH Haley, john Owen, '64 210 N. Goodlett St., Memphis, Tenn. Hallman, Ulrich, '62 lN'uppertal Elberfeld, Steuben Str. 1, Germany DR. LEON C. NUROCK DR. BARRY LAVINE Hall, Andrew Douglass, '62 Cantitoe Rd., Bedford, N. Y. Hall, David john, '63 Circle Dr., Santa Fe., N. M. Hall, lidward C., '63 262 Bay Avenue, Huntington, N. Y. Hall, james Hardman, '64 111 Linden Dr., Danville, Va. Hall, Perry E., 2nd, '61 128 Forest Dr., Short Hills, N. Hall, Randall Brian, '64 25 S. D St., Lake Hlorth, Fla. Hallock, Houghton R., jr., '64 323 N. 24th St., Camp Hill, Pa. Halnachck, Ross Frank, '61 205 Rose St., Kewaunee, XVis. Hamburger, Louis P., 3rd, '62 100 McHenry Ave,,Pikesville 8,Md. Hamilton, Charles S., III, '63 41 Ashland Ave., Pleasantville, N. Y. Hamilton, Peter Arnold, '62 231 S. Main St., XV. Hartford, Conn. Hamm, Howard K., '63 2224 Bidge Rd., Kalamazoo, Mich. Hannnond, Gary Banks, '61 105 S. Main St., N. Brookfield, Mass. Hamori, Andras Peter, '61 57 Lincoln St., N. Andover, Mass. Han, 'Iheodore Yung 'I'i, '64 Public Health College, Gondar, Ethiopia Hancock, YVinslow Harry, '64 828 Fern St., Yeadon, Pa. Hand, Albert P., III, '62 Hanes, Arthur j., jr., '64 565 Rutherford Cir., Birmingham, Ala. 3 Pond St., Rowayton, Conn. Hanks, james judge, jr., '64 5503 Chevy Chase Pkwy., lX'ashington, D. C. Hans, Bruce Alan, '63 1538 E. Manor Dr., Lincoln 6, Nebr. Hansen, Hardy, '63 3901 XVoodbine St., Chevy Chase 15, Md. Hansen, Stephen C., '62 Hanson, F. Allan, '61 Hanson, Gary D., '61 Haralson, jolm lVilliam, 830 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. 700 Parnell Ave., Des Moines, Iowa 19523 Beacllclill, Rocky River, Ohio '63 207 Broadway, Augusta, Ark. Optometrists 6 Chambers Street Phone: WA 4-0918 Hartman, Bruce C., '63 Harttnan, Lewis Hayden, '62 530 li. 88th St.. New York, Ycneck Acres, 6th St. Pike, Indiana, Pa. N. Y. Hartman. Michael Alan, '62 916 Secor Rd., Toledo, Ohio Hartnett, john G., '61 Bay Yiew Rd., Dover, N. H. Hartshorn, XVilbur XV., jr., '63 440 E. 23rd St., New York, N. Y. Harvey, Francis Axel, '61 4855 Harvard Ave., Montreal 29,Quebec Harwi, William C., '61 Haselkorn, Michael, '62 1480 F. 24 St., Brooklyn 10, 1910 Penlield St., Philadelphia 38, Pa. N. Y. Harding, Richard B., jr., '64 I6 Indian Rock Rd., New Canaan, Conn. Hardt. YYilliam M., III, '63 811 Forest Ave., H'ilmette, Ill. Harman, john N., III, '62 1451 Descanso Dr., La Canada, Calil'. Harman, XVilliam R., '63 121 Hazel Rd., Dover, Del. Harmon, lilson Thomas, '62 25 N. 18th St., Iiaston, Pa. Harmon, George Hart, '63 875 Fairview Rd., Highland Pk., Ill. Harrington, Stephen H., '61 383 Lakeside Rd., Ardmore, Pa. Harris, Charles E., '64 4860 Ortega Blvd., jacksonville. Fla. Harris, john Mosby, '62 7 Langdon La., Narberth, Pa. Harris, jolm Timothy, '64 2530 WV. Dean Rd., Milwaukee 17, lVis. Harris, Michael Eric, '61 38 Linden Ave., Mercersburg, Pa. Harris, Stuart L., '62 346 Rose Blvd., Akron, Ohio Harris, Avllllillll K., '62 4860 Ortega Blvd., jacksonville, Fla. Harrison, Edward W., jr., '64 9 Battle Rd., Princeton, N. j. Harrison, Howard Ratlel, '61 228 Colony Rd., New Haven, Conn. Harrison, john L., III, '62 2 Herford Pl., Yeadon, Pa. Harrison, Robert L., '61 501 Ii. 44 St., Savannah, Ga. Haserot, Robert Bruyere, '64 115 Marlborough Rd., Asheville, N. C. Haskell, 'Ihomas L., '61 405 Yillamay Blvd., Alexandria, Ya. Hastie, john Drayton, '6-4 9 E. Battery, Charleston, S. C. Hatch, Peter, '63 5 Ploughmans Bush, New York 71, N. Y. Hatch, Sinclair, jr., '61 1165 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. Hatfield, Charles j., '62 8007 Lincoln Dr., Philadelphia, Pa. Havell, Frederick YV., '64 846 N. Iiuclid, Oak Park, Ill. Havens, Thomas R. H., '61 Wilson College, Chambersburg, Pa. Haverland. Richard M., '63 7 Salem La., Pt. Washington, N. Y. Havrelly, Ian Henderson, '64 9 Mohawk Rd., Ossining, N. Y. Hawes, john H., '63 79 Abbington Terr., Glen Rock, N. Hawk, Malcolm David, '64 428 Maple St., Palo Alto, Calif. Hawkey, George M., '63 29 Clairidge Ct., Montclair, N. Haws, james Robert, '64 4201 XVestview Rd., Baltimore, Md. Hayes, William G., '63 400 Yia Dichosa, Santa Barbara, Calif. Haynr, jerome Lewis, '64 7 Derby Rd., Rockville Centre, N. Y. Hayward, Donald Max, '62 7900 Crenshaw, Apt. A, Inglewood 4, Calif. Hazard, Keith K., '62 36 Armour Rd., Princeton, N. Hazleton, Robert S., '62 14018 Emery Ave., Cleveland 35, Ohio Hazen, joseph C., III, '63 37 Lenox Rd., Summit, N. Compliments of BREWSTER FINANCE CO Paterson, N. J. Heck, Henry D. Arcy, '61 American Iimbassy, APO 230, New York, N. Y. Hedgren, Arthur XVI11., jr., '61 62 YVoodland Dr.,Pittsburgh 28,Pa. I-Ieerwagen, Peter Dann, '64 405 Bedford Rd., Chappaqua, N. Y. Heffernan, Gary Michael, '63 I2 Ronan St., Binghamton, N. Y. Hegner, A. A. Lee, '61 2323 E. Dakota Ave., Denver, Colo. Heidrick, Gardner YV., jr., '61 101 S. County I.ine Rd., Hinsdale, Ill. Heilner, john Lauren, '63 40 Overlook La., Rockville Centre, N. Y. Heinrich, jack S., '63 12128 Otsego St., N. Hollywood, Calif. Heinz, Charles H., '64 426 Glen Arden Dr., Pittsburgh 8, Pa. Hellegers, john F., '62 129 S. ltlade Ave., Wlashington, Pa. Heller, Stephen Alan, '61 202 S. Orange Ave., S. Orange, N. Helm, Geollrey NV., jr., '63 26 Willow Dr., Pt. Washington, N. Y. Helm, George N., jr., '62 137 Sagamore Rd., Louisville 7, Ky. Helmholz, Richard H., '62 353 Wlestgate, St. Louis, Mo. Hell, George R., '64 20 Maryland Ave., Gaithersburg, Md. Henderson, Charles P., '63 2326 Selma Ave., Youngstown, Ohio Henderson, Michael P., '63 7890 Sunset Dr., Miami 43, Fla. Henkin, Charles joseph, '64 410 Ocean Ave., Ii. Rockaway, N. Y. Henley, Douglas Ray, '61 809 Mt. Vernon Cir., Chattanooga 5, Tenn. Henrich, Christopher J., '62 208 York St., Bullalo 13, N. Y. Henrich, John IV., '63 15 Schoellkopf Rd., Lakeview, N. Y. Henry, Clillord YV., '61 720 River Rd., Trenton 8, N. Henry, Gray Gardner, '63 8704 jonrdan XVay, Dallas 25, Tex. Henry, Richard L., '64 25 Irving St., Hingham, Mass. Henryson, Herbert, 2nd, '62 35 Hlashington Ave., Lawrence, N. Y. Hensel, Peter Norton, '63 Route lixcelsior, Minn. Henshaw, Cullen, '62 2012 Portage St., Kalamazoo, Mich. Henshaw, Richard 'I'., III, '61 8120 lislelferson Ave.,Detroit,Mich. Hepner, Maury Paul, '64 3654 Riedham Rd., Shaker Hts, Ohio Herbert, Robert B., '64 10 Dully Ct., Binghamton, N. Y. Hermanson, Terry, '61 12 XYil1ow La., Scarsdale, N. Y. Hermelee, Bruce Grant, '63 211 Central Pk, XV.,New York 21,N.Y. Hernquist, Richard A., '63 405 Trenton Ave., Cape May, N. Herold, James B., '63 355 Silvergate, San Diego 6, Calif. Herrick, Robert Frank, '64 208 Langhorne Ave., Bethlehem, Pa. Heimowitr, Carl L., '64 3850 Hudson Manor Terr., New York 63, N. Y. Herrmann, Elmer J., jr., '62 101 IVashington Ave., Spring Lake, N. Herron, Douglas M., '64 4200 Kendall St., lVheat Ridge, Colo. Hersey, David Mlillard, '63 34 Bradford Road, IYellesley Hills, Mass. Hersey, M'illiam P., '63 685 Charles River St., Needham 92, Mass, Hershey, Michael L., '61 Chandler Mill Rd., Box '16, Kennett Sq., Pa. Herz, Charles H., '61 6926 IVilson La., Bethesda, Md. Hess, Aaron F., Jr., '64 48 N. President Ave., Lancaster, Pa. Hesson, XVilliam M., '64 84 Chatham Rd., Ellicott City, Md. Hewitt, James Michael, '61 Hewitt Assoc., Libertyville, Ill. Hewitt, Michael Adam, '62 174 E. 74th St., New York, N. Y. Heydon, Peter Northrup, '62 11 Van Dyke Dr., Ho. Ho. Kus, N. ll. Heyn, Maarten Peter, '61 3 Nassaulaan, Delft, Netherlands Hibschman, John S., '62 10 Alsace Ct., Reading, Pa. Hicks, James R., '62 129 E. YVard, Hightstown, N. Hicks, IVil1iam A., III, '6-1 210 St. Nicholas Ave., Fnglewood, N..l. Hicks, XVilliam M., '64 407 Fairway Dr., Anniston, Ala. Higgins, Andrew L., '61 99 Bruce Rd., Red Bank, N. ll. Higgins, Thomas M., III, '63 814 IV. 59th, Kansas Citv, Mo. High, Gilbert P., jr., '62 1417 Scrope Rd., Rydal, Pa. High, Lee Randon, '63 1412 National Ave., Rockford, 111. Highland, john Ross, '63 6230 Moraine Ave., Hammond, Ind. Hilbig, Keith Karl, '61 2909 N. 78th, Milwaukee 10, M'is. Hildebrand, George C., '64 411 Cayuga Hts Rd., Ithaca, N. Y. Hilgendorll, Hugo, III, '61 32 S. Munn Ave., 12. Orange, N. NI. Hill, Colin Patrick, '63 260 Snowden La., Princeton, N. QI. Hill, David Kimball, '62 2461 Oak Tree La., Park Ridge, Ill. Hill, David R., '63 4650 Fremont Ave. S., Minneapolis, Minn. Hill, Lawrence N., '63 10508 lVyton Dr., Los Angeles 24, Calif. Hill, IVilliam KI., '63 73 WVelland Ave., St. Catharines, Ont., Can. Hilliard, Vlilliam P., llr., '62 Box 195,Deer Pk.Rd., Katonah, N.Y. Hills, Ralph Warren, '63 2407 Ruscombe La., Baltimore, Md. Hillstrom, David A., '63 505 Mead Ave., Corry, Pa. Hinchman, David B., '61 155 Irvine La., Grosse Pt. Farms, Mich. Hirsch, Edward Michael, '62 477 Richmond Ave., Maplewood, N. Rl. Hirst, Thomson Mason, '61 Hummer Rd., Annandale, Ya. Hitz, Frederick P., '61 1072 Brush Hill Rd., Milton, Mass. Our research has discovered no limit to the future of electronic development . . . RADIO CORPORATION OF AMERICA RCA LABORATORIES Princeton, New Jersey Compliments of AMERICAN FIDELITY LIFE INSURANCE Co. PENSACOLA, FLORIDA Hitzrot, Lewis Hone, '64 244 S. Compo Rd., Mlestport, Conn. Hixson, David Fraser, '64 Claremont Rd., Bernardsville, N. Hlafter, Jon Dennis, '61 61 E. Somerset St., Raritan, N. Hock, Vincent M., '63 2915 Parkway Blvd., Allentown, Pa. Hocker, Lon O., '64 7637 Shirley Dr., St. Louis 5, Mo. Hodell, Thomas Lee, '62 255 XV. Summit Ave., Haddonfield, N. Hodes, David Samuel, '63 41 Sutton Crest, Manhasset, N. Y. Hodge, Charles J., Jr., '63 26 Barberry La., Short Hills, N. Hodge, Harry B., '61 Hodge, Edward B., Jr., '63 624 Black Rock Rd., Bryn Mawr, Pa. Hodges, YVinthrop M., '62 115 E. 90th St., New York 28, N. Y. Hoey, Peter Eugene, '63 15 N. Crane Rd., Mountain Lakes, N. J. 29 Barclay Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. Hoffman, Earl Powell, '63 23 Briar Rd., 1Vayne, Pa. Hoffmann, John Baldwin, '62 455 N. Arlington Ave., E. Orange, N. J. Hogan, Charles M., '64 2248 S. Crestway, Wichita, Kans. Hohenbcrg, Charles M., '62 New Orrville Rd., Selma, Ala. Hohmann, John Edward, '63 12 Brunson Ave., Columbus, Ohio Hoit, Roger Overton, '62 181 E. 73rd St., New York, N. Y. Hokin, Richard Neal, '62 4950 Chicago Beach Dr., Chicago 15, 111. Holcombe, Robert S., '64 25 N. 24th St., Camp Hill, Pa. Holland, Edward McHarg, '62 1730 N. Danville St., Arlington, Ya. Hollander, Peter, '64 37 Essex St., Irvington, N. J. Hollinshead, XV. H., III, '64 693 Goodrich Ave., St. Paul 5, Minn. Holman, Daniel Van, '63 2440 Bennett Ave., Evanston, 111. Holt, Michael F., '62 4243 Parkman Ave., Pittsburgh 13, Pa. Hooker, Donald H., Jr., '63 204 Kemble Rd., Baltimore 18, Md. Hooker, Roger W., Jr., '63 563 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Hoopes, David MacMillan, '62 Xvind Fall Farm, Hlest Grove, Pa. Hopkins, John lf., '64 121 Wlashington St., Woodstown, N. Hopmann, Philip T,, '64 8780 East Pine, Brentwood 17, Mo. Hopper, John Gordon, '61 365 Wallace La., Paducah, Ky. 294 Horn, Dennis Ray, '64 Center Grove Rd., Dover, N. Horn, Jerold Ira, '63 41-l YV. Greenway Pl., Peoria, 111. Horn, Michael M., '61 306 Grant Ave., Nutley, N. Horner, Charles Dallas. '61 6517 Sagamore Rd., Shawnee Mission, Kans. Horton, Harland B., '64 629 Storer Ave., Akron 20, Ohio Horwich, M'illiam E., '64 5539 Paci6c St., Omaha, Nebr. Horwitcli, Melvin, '64 4300 Marine Dr., Chicago 13, 111. Houck, Robert Allen, '62 R. D. 4, M'estminster, Md. Hovanesian, Archie, '62 38 Linwood St., New Britain, Conn. Hoven, Brian E., '63 3508 Sixth Ave. N., Great Falls, Mont. Howard, Alan Blair, '61 -1900 S. Dahlia, Littleton, Colo. Howard, 1Villiam '64 216 N. Euclid, Princeton, Ill. Howe, Hubert Shattuck, '61 476 Midvale Ave., Apt. 2, Los Angeles 24, Calif. Howell, George A., Jr., '64 3727 Tuxedo Rd., N. XV., Atlanta, Ga. Howell. Joseph O., '64 10000 F. 5th Ave., Aurora 8, Colo. Howlett, Derq, '62 1100 Lenape Rd., M'cst Chester, Pa. Huband, Michael George, '61 1321 Sherbrooke St. W., Montreal, Que., Canada Hubbard, Peter Edward, '61 3170 N. Cratner St., Milwaukee, 1Vis. Hubbard, Richard Bull, '63 626 XVensley, El Centro, Calif. Huber, Charles B., '61 181 Sntntner St., Springfield, Vt. Huckin, Thomas Nelson, '61 130 E. Hudson Ave., Englewood, N. J. Huduut, Stewart S., '61 15 E. Boulevard, Rochester, N. Y. Huebner, J. Stephen, '62 150 Anton Rd., XVynnewood, Pa. Huey, Francis Markley, '61 1910 Island Dr., Monroe, La. Hughes. George Hill, '63 2 Greenridge La., XV. Hartford, Conn. Hughes, James Elliot, Jr., '64 214 Fairmount Ave., Chathatn, N. J. Hughes, Sheldon B., '61 155 Forest Blvd., Park Forest, Ill. Hugill, Steven Elbert, '63 110 Tanglewylde Ave., Bronxville, N. Y. Huiskamp, John Strate, '61 816 Grand Ave., Keokuk, Iowa Hulett, David Todd, '61 105 XV. Pennsylvania Ave., Urbana, Ill. Humphrey, Eugene Farr, '62 2 N. Brookwood Dr., Montclair, N. J. Hunt, Robert Wlalter, '62 Hotel Carrillo, Santa Barbara, Calif. Hunter, David Hobart, '64 627 Pilgrim, Birmingham, Mich. Hunter, James Boyd, '61 381 Bergen Ave., Jersey City 4, N. Hunter, James G., '62 18325 Dundee Ave., Hotnewood, Ill. Hunter, James P., Jr., '64 601 Foster Ave., Elmira, N. Y. Hunter, James XV., '64 413 Sandusky St., Ashland, Ohio Hunter, Hlilliam R., '64 18325 Dundee Ave., Homewood, Ill. Hurlburt, Randall Lee, '63 22490 Edgecliff Dr., Euclid 23, Ohio Hurtt, Steven 1Vi1liam, '63 1705 Farragut Ave., Rockville, Md. Hussong, Donald, '64 Box 90, Awali, Bahrain, Persian Gulf Hutcheson, Thad T., Jr., '63 1815 Milford St., Houston 6, Tex. Hutchison, Douglas Paul, '61 703 Western Ave., Joliet, Ill. Hutfilz, George Melvin, '64 2600 16th St., Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio Huxley, Robert Daniel, '64 Stag La., Greenwich, Conn. Hyde, Michael T., '64 1223 W. 63rd St., Kansas City, Mo. Hyde, Peter Winfield, '61 1223 W. 63rd St., Kansas City, Mo. Hyer, Frederick L., Jr., '61 1731 Xvatchung Ave., Plainfield, N. Hyland, Drew Alan, '61 680 Glick Ave., Allentown, Pa. Hyland, G. Arthur, Jr., '63 680 Glick Ave., Allentown, Pa. Hyland, James Howden, '63 245 Shannon Rd., Sault Ste. Marie, Canada Ibbeken, David H., '63 I5 Lane of Acres, Haddonfield, N. J. Icenhower, lVilliam B., '62 5204 Apache La., Drexel Hill, Pa. Ingraham, David Wood, '64 22 Green Hill La., Huntington, N. Y. Intersimone, Richard A., '64 42415 81st St., Elmhurst 73, N. Y. Irenas, Joseph Eron, '62 852 Jerome Ave., Hillside, N. J. Irvin, George Hoff, '62 23975 Lyman Blvd., Shaker Hts. 22, Ohio Isaac, David Herbert, '64 lsacs, John Lee, '62 Isetnan, Michael D., '61 Isherwood, Mlilliam F., '63 1285 S. Steele St., Denver, Colo. Hilltop Rd., Bridgeport, Conn. 612 E. Fourth, Fremont, Nebr. -1304 55th Ave., Bladensburg, Md. QUEENSTOWN BUILDERS, INC. EDWARD G. FAROE '49 President 238 Nassau Street Princeton, N. J. WA 1-6177 Isbiki, Dean Mitsuo, '63 5118 Kalanianaole Hwy., Honolulu, Hawaii Ives, john O., jr., '61 james St., Norwalk, Conn. 1 jack, Rand File, '63 4112 Fairfield Ave., Shreveport, La. jackson, Andrew D., jr., '63 35 Monroe Ave., E. Orange, N. jackson, Daniel Hull, '61 730 Harvard Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. jackson, Hobart C., jr., '62 1214 N. 59th St., Philadelphia 31, Pa. jackson, Richard Lee, '62 117 Mercer St., Princeton, N. jacobs, Edward li., jr., '62 445 Delaware Ave., Buffalo 2, N. Y. jacobs, Robert C., '61 2746 Fort Scott Dr., Arlington, Va. jacobsen, Carl F., '63 400 Ridge Ave., Evanston, Ill. jacobson, Richard M., '64 154 Godwin Ave., Wlyckoff, N. jacobstein, jerome G., '63 51 South Dr., Buffalo, N. Y. jaeckel, Christopher C., '64 5117 Mlapakoneta Rd., Wlashington 16, D. C. jatfe, Stephen H., '62 7301 179 St., Flushing 66, N. Y. jakeman, Clinton, '61 1405 N. Nye Ave., Fremont, Nebr. jatnes, Douglas Craig, '62 921 E. 1Vye La., Milwaukee 17, 1Vis. IHIUCS, j0llIl YVhitaker, '64 319 N. Chestnut St., 1Vestfie1d, N. james, Laurence T., '61 2962 Devon 1Vay, Richmond, Calif. jatnes, Norman P., '63 Box 456, Route 1, Creve Coeur, Mo. janney, Frank Fay, '62 Box 8200, Spooky Hollow, Cincinnati 42, Ohio jaramillo, Edward j., jr., '63 401 Buena Vista Dr., E1 Paso, Tex. jarman, Bill Charles, '62 240-'l Glenwood Ave., Odessa, Tex. javitch, Daniel G., '63 1589 MacGregor St,, Montreal, Que., Canada jay, Leslie Palmer, '63 Parry Rd., Springdale, Conn. jefferys, Richard M., '63 812 S. 5th St., Ironton, Ohio jelinek, Dwayne Harry, '64 4966 Corby St., Omaha, Nebr. jenkins, David S., '62 1930 N. Main Ave., Scranton, Pa. jenkins, Parish Alston, '61 225 Highland Rd., Rye, N. Y. jenney, Marshall West, '63 Montchanin, Del. jennings, David, '64 76 Mary St., Niagra On. Lk., Canada jennings, Edwin judson, '64 35 East Dr., Livingston, N jensen, Erik Park, '64 205 S. Main St., Fairport, N. Y. jensen, Richard Allen, '63 3 Walden Pl., Northtield, Minn. jeremko, Daniel Louis, '63 506 Ainsworth St., Linden, N. jervey, Hilton McCrea, '61 6 Ridgeview Ave., W. Orange, N. j. 304 Wells St., Westfield, N. j. 928 Lawn Ave., Hamilton, Ohio 909 N. 6th St., Chariton, Iowa 2001 Elm St., Lumberton, N. C. Lake St., Sodus Point, N. Y. jewett, David Stuart, '63 johns, 1Villiam H., '63 johnson, David R., '63 johnson, Hervey McNair, '64 johnson, jotham, '64 johnson, Peter Hallock, '61 P. O. Box 1505, Teheran, Iran johnson, Philip Leslie, '61 1769 Sixth St., Beloit, Mlis. johnson, Richard H., '61 913 Saratoga Rd., jacksonville. Fla. johnson, Stephen Cary, '61 555 S. Main St., W. Hartford, Conn. johnson, Vincent H., jr., '61 325 Dorchester Rd., Akron, Ohio johnson, YVesley Irving, '62 1804 E. Fourth St., Duluth 12, Minn. johnson, 1Vil1iam G., '6-1 2221 Beechwood Ave., VVi1mette, Ill. johnson, Wlilliam Thomas, '64 504 S. Mfoodland Dr., Marietta, Ga. johnston, David Howard, '61 165 Race St., Ambler, Pa. johnston, Francis C., jr., '64 916 Pine Ridge Rd., Richmond 26, Ya. johnston, Richard L., jr., '61 532 Banbury Rd., Arlington Hts, 111. johnston, Terry A., '61 707 N. Broad St., Elizabeth, N. jones, Alexander M., jr., '63 10 Clillwood Pl., Metuchen, N. jones, Anthony A., '63 955 YV. Santa Inez, Hillsborough, Calif. jones, David Bruce, '62 1115 tllst N., Seattle, XVash. jones, Frederick M., III, '64 364 1Vi11iams Rd., XVynnewood, Pa. jones, john M., IY, '61 Hilltop, Greeneville, Tenn. jones, Morgan R., '62 Court House, 1Yilkes Barre, Pa. jones, Philip Dickson, '63 Route 4, Ellicott City, Md. jones, Philip Lyle, '64 -111 Philadelphia Ave., Bridgeport, XV. Ya. jones, Richard Mahlon, '61 2618 Orrington, Evanston, 111. jones, Robert Cooper, '62 4317 Bishop Rd., Detroit 24, Mich. jones, XVilliam G., '63 900 Hereford College Station, Tex. joost, Peter Harrison, '61 Boyce, Va. jordan, George L., '62 Nisqnethaw Creek Rd., Fenra Bush, N. Y. jordan, james P., '62 Box 3837, Memphis, Tenn. jordan, john Orr, '63 90 Galloway Dr., Memphis, Tenn. jorgensen, Peter A., '63 129 XV. Grove St., Bogota, N. joseph, Cheney C., jr., '61 1828 Cloverdale Ave., Baton Ronge, La. joukovsky, Nicholas A., '61 94 Old Farm Rd., Chappaqna, N. Y. judy, George L., jr., '64 653 Villa Pl., Morgantown, XV. Ya. jukkola, Carl Edgar, '62 100 S. Brodhead Rd., Aliquippa, Pa. jnnkunc, Charles A., '63 10870 Prospect Ave., Chicago 43, 111. Kadish, Lawrence j., '63 Kaemmerlen, Alfred XV., '62 2835 Haverford Rd., Ardmore, Pa. Kafer, Frederick YV., '63 52 Aurora St., Hudson, Ohio Kafer, Yvarren Scott, '64 2205 Whitesell Dr., 1Vinter Park, Fla. Kahan, Morton Gerald, '64 19 Eastford St., Hartford, Conn. Kalemaris, Stanley G., jr., '64 29 Arrowwead La., Huntington Station, N. Y. Kales, Wvilliam Robert, '62 8 Morven Pl., Princeton, N. Kalman, Harold David, '6-1 49 Aberdeen Ave., Mlestmount, Que., Canada Kalvert, Michael Alan, '64 Woodville La., Searingtown, L. I., N. Y. For Liquors, Beers and Fine Wines Free and Prompt Delivery YEOMAN'S LIQUORS 108 Nassau Street Princeton, N. J. Anthony Lieggi WAlnut 4-0031 22 Club Blvd., IV. Orange, N. PRINCETON TIGER CHARM 0 1 11111111, 1 - Y ay l' X I , K 14 KARAT COLD 314.95 plus tax By mail, if you wish. In aka ' 7 PRINCETON, N. 1. JEWELERS ' SILVERSMITHS Kalyn, Richard Adrian, '64 417 Edgenioor Dr., Moorestown, N. Kannwischer, Lewis R., '64 340 Rittenhouse Cir., Havertown, Pa. Kannwischer, Stephen A., '62 340 Rittenhouse Cir., Havertown, Pa. Kaplan, Bruce Michael, '62 6 Ivy St., Cedarhurst, L. I., N. Y. Kaplan, Steven L., '63 164 47 73rd Ave., Flushing 66, N. Y. Karamanos, Demetris, '62 ll Mavrogenous, Athens, Greece Karins, Frank C., '63 7500 jonestown Rd., Harrisburg, Pa. Karjala, Dennis S., '61 5525 S. Cornel, Chicago 37, Ill. Karjane, William jr., '61 R. F. D. 2, Box 228, Lakewood, N. Katz, Howard C., '63 140 Fern St., Hartford, Conn. Katz, Victor '63 7545 Brookhaven Rd., Philadelphia 31, Pa. Kaufman, Abraham, '62 83 42 Abingdon Rd., Kew Gardens 15, N. Y. Kaufman, jay Henry, '62 -109 Raymond St., Rockville Ctr., N. X. Kavanagh, james P., '62 Wilson Point, Norwalk, Conn. Kearns, Robert L., '62 8 E. 75th St., New York, N. Y. Kearns, XVilliam S., '62 8 E. 75th St., New York, N. Y. Keely, Dennis F., '64 37 Laekspur Ave., N. Merrick, N. Y. Keep, Oliver H., '64 Barnes Rd., Washington, Conn. Keetley, David john, jr., '63 303 S. Third St., XVatseka, Ill. Keevan, Clifford IV., '62 Keller, Dennis james, '63 Keller, john Mahlon, '61 Keller, Robert George, '63 Keller, Stephen B. R., '63 lll Banbury Way, Wayne, Pa. 537 W. North St., Hinsdale, Ill. 142 N. 6th St., Perkasie, Pa. 12 Ferndale Rd., Short Hills, N. j. 4133 Northtnoor Rd., Toledo, Ohio Kelley, Larry Tappan, '63 711 WV. 16th St., Pueblo, Colo. Kelley, james Sheridan, '61 3857 Ivy Rd., N. E., Atlanta, Ga. Kelley, jonathan M., '61 34 Exeter St., W. Newton, Mass. Kelley, Michael Wallace, '64 3245 Chadbourne Rd., Shaker Hts. 20, Ohio Kelley, Patrick L., '63 6274 Hunting Creek Rd., Atlanta 5, Ga. Kellogg, james C., '61 42 Aberdeen Rd., Elizabeth, N. j. Kellogg, Spencer, III, '62 Valentines La., Glen Head, L. I., N. Y. Kelly, Christopher D., '63 Kelly, Kelly, Kelly, Ernest George, '62 Kelly, Kelsey, Basil WV., jr., '62 Kelsey, john Warren, '61 Post Ofhce Box 1154, Manila, Philippines 75 Ellenton Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. 556 McKinley St., Gary, Ind. 1780 Autumn Ave., Memphis, Tenn. Gordon Randolph, '62 Box 336, Montauk Point, L. I., N. Y. 1204 S. Main St., Ottawa, Kans. 38 Wampatuck Rd., Dedham, Mass. David C., '61 Douglas G., '61 Kemp, Louis F., jr., '62 5 Mfooley La. E., Great Neck, L. I., N. Y. Kendrick, Charles R., jr., '64 lll Gilpin St., Denver 18, Colo. Kennedy, Alexander S., '62 62 E. 91st St., New York 28, N. Y. Kennedy, David Alva, '64 4208 Sylvan Ramble, Tampa 9, Fla. Kennedy, Duane S., jr., '63 13 Cypress Ave., Verona, N. j. SOUTHERN DIVISION NEW ENGLAND mv1s1oN 1200 ELIZABETH AVE. ELM STREET CHARLOTTE, N. C. P. 0. BOX 629 P. 0. BOX 2452 MANCHESTER, CONN. EDISON 4-7206-7 MITCHELL 9-4519 ABC Photo Gravure Supply Corp. M A I N O F F I C E 125 Fifth Avenue Paterson 4, N. J. ARmory 4-4416-17-18 Kennedy, Henry M., jr., '62 228 Irving Ave., S. Orange, N. Kennedy, jan Barry, '63 230 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Kennedy, Peter Spence, '62 36 Edgemont Rd., Montclair, N. j. Kennedy, Richard Frank, '63 718 Demott Ave., Baldwin, N. Y. Kent, Edgar Robert, jr., '63 Sherwood Forest, Anne Arundel, Md. Kerr, Andrew IVarrington, '62 linglishtown Rd., jamesburg, N. Kerr, Douglas McKay, '61 9 Hardwell Rd., Short Hills, N. Kestler, julian IV., jr., '61 306 Hickory St., Charleston 41, S. C. Kettler, Paul C., '63 1250 Marlowe Ave., Lakewood, Ohio Keyes, Robert XV., '63 516 I.inden St., Fairfax, Va. Keyser, john jacob, '61 309 N. Edison St., Arlington, Va. Keyser, Paul Ballard, '62 340 IV. 2nd S. St., Salt Lake City, Utah Khouri, George john, '64 141 joralemon St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Kieselstein, Marshall j., '64 6 Ovington Cir., IVestbury, N. Y. Kilbourne, Lincoln F., '63 1188 Avon Rd., Schenectady, N. Y. Killen, john 'l'., 3rd, '64 250 Clarke Ave., Palm Beach, Fla. Kimatian, Stephen Harry, '63 50 29 186 St., Flushing 65, N. Y. Kimball, justin Heard, '61 1729 Ellincourt Apt. 8, S. Pasadena, Calif. Kincade, IVilliam H., '61 245 N. College St., Hudson, Ohio King, Anthony Van B., '62 Kitchell Rd., Convent, N. King, john '63 8865 Overlake Dr. XV., Bellevue, IVash. King, john Howard, '61 501 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. King, Rufus Gunn, III, '64 4105 IVo0dbine St., Chevy Chase, Md. Kingston, Michael, '62 Fundo Santa Rita, Casablanca, Chile, S. A. Kinsley, Dale Eugene, '64 403 NV. Center St., Mt, Morris, Ill. Brook Uhemioal 110. Division of Philips Electronics, Inc. INCORPORATED Kinsman, jeremy K. B., '63 4870 Cote Des Neiges Rd., Montreal, Que., Canada Kintgen, Eugene Robert, '64 249 Grand Ave., XV. Hempstead, N. Y. Kip, Nicholas Yan H., '64 25 Summer St., Marblehead, Mass. Kirk, Carey Harris, '64 171 Goodhue Dr., Akron, Ohio Kirk, jolm Marshall, jr., '62 80 Country Club Rd., Melrose 76, Mass. Kirk, Paul Nelson, '63 743 S. Lawrence, Montgomery, Ala. Kirkpatrick, Edward S., '63 2400 Grant Ave., Wlilmington 6, Del. Kirsch, jeffrey XVi11iam, '62 1831 Ocean Pkwy., Brooklyn 23, N. Y. Kirwin, XVi11iam C., '64 2203 Douglas Crescent, Utica, N. Y. Kistler, XVi1son Stephen, '61 139 E. Main St., Moorestown, N. Kitch, Paul R., '64 330 N. Roosevelt, Wlichita, Kansas Kitson, Geoffrey K., '62 Klauder, james R., '64 Milwood, Paget, Bermuda 215 li. Central Ave., Moorestown, N. 271 Lee Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. 768 Goodrich Ave., St. Paul 5, Minn. Klein, james M'a1ter, '61 67 Green Knolls Dr., Mlayne Twsp., N. Kliefoth, Arthur ll., III, '64 2050 XV. lV0od1awn, San Antonio 1, 'l'ex. Klausner, Steven C., '63 Klein, Horace Blair, '61 Kliever, Douglas lidward, '61 1008 Mira Mar, Medford, Ore. Kline, lidward john, '63 231 Lincoln Ave., Crookston, Minn. Kline, Edwin Keller, III, '63 2904 Liberty St., Allentown, Pa. Kluft, Richard Philip, '64 81 Harrison Pl., Perth Amboy, N. Klug, '1'ho1nas Norman, '61 Rt. 2, Box 337, Thiensville, NVis. Knapp, Donald R., '63 Lake of the XVoods Dr., RR, Galena, Ohio Knoppers, Bastiaan A., '63 1535 Coles Ave., Mountainside, N. j. Knox, Van WV., 111, '63 801 S. YV. 6th St., Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. Kober, Michael S., '61 6653 Opal St., Philadelphia, Pa. Koch, Robert Edwin, '62 3660 WVa1d0 Ave., Riverdale 63, N. Y. Kogler, john jordan, '63 2315 Santiago Ave., Santa Ana, Calif. Kolofolias, john lilias, '62 820 Broadway, Lowell, Mass. Kordons, Uldis, '63 1137 Grand Ave., Grand junction, Colo. Korman, Michael Andrew, '64 371 Riverside Dr., Princeton, N. j. Kornrumpf, Donald M., '61 70-1 Henry St., Uniondale, N. Y. Kors, Alan Charles, '64 51 Glenwood Ave., jersey City 6, N. Korth, Fritz Alan, '61 5100 Agle Ave., Fort Worth, Texas Kosmas, XVil1iam Peter, '62 3800 Chowen Ave. S., Minneapolis 10, Minn. Koss, Neal, '62 894 Oxford Rd., Woodmere, N. Y. Kotler, Stuart Mark, '62 316 S. Third Ave., Highland Park, N. Kramer, G. Alan, '61 3202 Farl St., Laureldale, Pa. Kramer, Morton liarle, '61 39 Third St., liastport, Maine Kramer, Robert S., '63 300 Overlook Rd., New Rochelle, N. Y. Krantz, Karl T., II, '61 23 Birchwood Pl., Delmar, N. Y. Kranz, David Lord, '64 150 S. Highwood Ave., Glen Rock, N. Kreisler, Frederic F., '61 547 Manor Ridge Rd., Pelham Manor, N. Y. Princeton's Oldest Barber Shop Five Days - Tuesday-Saturday Established 1868 DURNEIPS BARBER SHOP 4. PALMER SQUARE EAST Sixteen years of service to Princetonians- One of New ,lerseyis Largest Furniture and Floor Covering Stores THE RUG MART IVY MANOR THE FURNITURE MART in the State Highway 206 AND Princeton Shopping Center Princeton, N. J. Princeton, N. J. Featuring all nationally advertised lines Beautiful things for gracious living Telephones Student car WAlnut 1-9100-l-9101 service 1-9102-1-9103 to and from 1-9292-1-9293 our door Kreisler, Michael N., '62 52 Pompton Ave., Poinpton Lakes, N. 7809 YVinston Rd., Philadelphia 18, Pa. Kroeger, Harold Alfred, '62 11 Pokahoe Dr., N. Tarrytown, N. Y. Krolak, james Douglas, '64 1337 Creve Coeur St., La Salle, I11. Kroll, S. Stephen, '62 959 Hlellington St., London, Ont., Canada Krongartl, Howard joel, '61 3415 Wabash Ave., Baltimore 15, Md. Kremer, john, III, '61 Kruckemeyer, Kenneth li., '63 354 Compton Hills Dr., Cincinnati 15, Ohio Kruglik, Michael, '63 1115 Lee St., Evanston, 111. Krugman, Richard David, '63 360 First Ave., New York 10, N. Y. Kuchel, Roland Karl, '61 50 Ipswich Rd., Topslield, Mass. Kutller, Alfred john, '61 307 Abbey Rd., Manhasset, N. Y. Kukic, Toma, '61 108 Fifth Ave., E. McKeesport, Pa. Kunkemueller, james R. F., '61 205 Christopher St., Montclair, N. j. Kuntz, Irwin D., jr., '61 975 N. E. 94th St., Miami Shores, Fla. Kunzmann, Axel, '64 22002 Thirteen Mile Rd., St. Clair Shores, Mich. Kurtin, Stephen Brill, '61 -1547 Livingston Ave., New York 71, N. Y. Kury, XVende11 Michael, '62 246 Arch St., Sunbury, Pa. Kurz, Peter j., '64 43 Kossuth St., Wharton, N. j. Kurz, Theodore A., '61 2 Tudor City, New York, N. Y. Kuser, Robert C., jr., '64 Rosedale Rd., Princeton, N. j. Kutsko, Thomas F., jr., '64 240 Mull Ave., Akron 13, Ohio Kutzleb, Richard li., '62 213 Ridgemede Rd., Baltimore 10, Md. L Laba, Gerald jay, '62 5 Tamarack Dr., Ladue 24, Mo. Labarre, jolm Boie, '6-1 1311 Alabama Ave., Durham, N. C. l.abarthe, Darwin R., '61 21 Plala Dr., Berkeley, Calif. Lacey, Richard Sumter, '61 2618 Lackey, Hal Ingram. '61 Laden, Ben Ellis, '63 Ladig, Robert Alan, '61 Lahti, Paul 'l'., '63 I.aird, Avlllllllll P., '62 I.ake, Bruce Meno, '63 E. Overlook Rd., Cleveland Hts., Ohio 11809 Cordon Rd., Silver Spring, Md. 3720 Coleman St., Columbia, S. C. 1464 Republic Ave., Youngstown 6, Ohio 131 North Ave., Barrington, Ill. Vernon La., Moylan, Pa. 2006 Skyview Dr., Altadena, Calif. THE PRINCETON CLUB OF NEW YORK Park Avenue at 39th Street New York 16, New York The Princeton Club of New York, which is the Lake, Donelson M., jr., '61 352 Grandview, Memphis, Tenn. Lamont, 1.awrence Turner, '62 318 Albert St., Turtle Creek, Pa. Latnotte, William M., '61 1101 Barton Cir., IVilmington, Del. l.amparter, Frederick O., '61 I3 Oak Ave., Metuchen, N. -1. l.amson, George Herbert, '62 31 Tootin Hills Rd., W. Simsbury, Conn. Landau, David Paul, '63 7315 Balson, l7niversity City, Mo. Landow, George Paul, '61 Reimer Ave., Dover Plains, N. Y. 1.ands, Richard T., '61 117 Fairview Ave., High Bridge, N. -I. I.ane, james Sargent. '61 1625 Highland Rd., Hopkins, Minn. Langan, XVilliam XV., '62 1509 Albert St., New Castle, Pa. Langlois, john Dexter, '64 489 Roslyn Rd., E. W'illiston, N. Y. Lapidus, Martin, '62 137 Norman Rd., New Rochelle, N. Y. Large, George G. M.. '62 Box 130, Thomas Rd.. Wayne, Pa. Large, Henry XVhelen, '62 1,120 Lake Shore Dr., Chicago, Ill. l.arkin, Lawrence G., '61 225 Park Ave., Elberon, N. QI. 1.asater, I.at1rence M., '63 The Lasater Ranch, Matheson, Colo. l.asky, Robert XValter, '63 1174 Matianuck Ave., M'indsor, Conn. Lathrop, Patrick S., '61 2121 Highland Ave., Birmingham, Ala. Latimer, Douglas H., '62 2802 S. 2750 East St.. Salt Lake City 9, Utah 1.atta, Michael Davis, '63 10747 XV. Florissant Ave., St. Louis 36, Mo. 1.aurence, Albert E., Jr., '62 508 S. Main St., Lombard, Ill. Lauritzen, Peter L., '62 619 Fair Oaks Pk., Oak Park, 111. Lavagnino, john Duncan, '61 619 E. California St., Pasadena, Calif. 1.avine, Richard B., '61 Orchard La., R.F.D. 1, Huntingdon Valley, Pa. I.awler, Robert Butler, '62 15 Webb Rd., N. Tarrytown, N. Y. largest alumni group outside the University, with a membership of 3,500, is a gathering place in New York for Princeton men from the world over. The club is located in the center of mid- town Manhattan, only three blocks from Grand Central Station. The facilities of the club include bedrooms, restaurant and bar service, ladies' dining room and cocktail lounge, private dining rooms, bar- ber shop and squash courts. Upon request, the manager will be very glad to send additional information about the c1ub's facilities, services and activities. Lebacqz, J. Victor, '64 400 S. Homewood Ave., Pittsburgh 8, Pa. Lawrence, Bruce B., '62 12 Mlesskum Hlood Rd., Riverside, Conn. I.awrence, Edgar Abbott, '62 88 XV. Clill' St., Somerville, N. Laws, Robert Douglas, '62 25 Wlalbrook Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. Lawson, Eugene K., '61 Laylon, john P., '63 l.ayne, Charles Lee, '61 Leach, james Albert, jr., 1920 E. -11st St., Tulsa, Okla. 259 Rider Ave., Syracuse, N. Y. P. O. Box 65, Issaquah, WVash. '64 2629 XVood La., Davenport, Iowa 98 Melanie La., Atherton, Calif. Lemon, Eric Vincent, '64 7737 Bonhomme, Clayton 5, Mo. Lenzen, Louis Christmas, '64 96 Serrano Dr., Atherton, Calif. Leonard, jimmer Martis, '6-1 13 Meadows Dr., Haverford, Pa. I.eong, Galen Chunn Kwai, '62 1334 13th Ave., Honolulu 16, Hawaii 1.erman, Stephen james, '61 86 Arlington Rd., Chestnut Hill 67, Mass. Levine, Laurence E., '63 115 Central Pk. NV., New York 23, N. Y. Levine, Neil Arthur, '62 488 E. 18 St., Brooklyn 26, N. Y. Levine, Norman Steven, '62 100 E. 38 St., Paterson 4, N. Levine, Stephen Samuel, '62 Lebhar, Robert Alden, '61 639 Deming Pl., Chicago, Ill. Lecount, Roscoe D., jr., '62 760 Linwood Rd., Birmingham 5, Ala. Lederman, Arthur Rev., '62 130 Roycroft Ave., Long Beach 3, Calif. Lee, David Grattan, '63 5235 Blue Rd., Miami, Fla. I.ee, Peter Wuntuh, '64 239 Central Park W., New York, N. Y. Lee, Robert Fitzhugh, '62 Roseacre Oitts Bay Rd., Pembroke, Bermuda Lee, Thomas S., '61 317 S. Centre St., Philipsburg, Pa. Lefever, Robert Harry, '63 22 E. Lemon St., Lancaster, Pa. Lelller, Sheldon Stuart, '64 184 24 Hovenden Rd., jamaica 32, N. Y. Legere, James E., '63 414 S. Kenilworth Ave., Oak Park, Ill. I.eggett, john Dwight, '63 90 Pine St., New York, N. Y. Lehr, Roland Edward, '64 Forest Dr., Rossford, Ohio I.eifer, Elihu I., '61 41 Eastern Pkwy., Brooklyn, N. Y. Leigh, Egbert Giles, '62 3023 P St., N. W., Washington 7, D. C. Leigh, IVilliam Caleb, '64 909 Hickorywood, Houston 24, Tex. Leiserson, Michael A., '61 3605 Saratoga Dr., Nashville, Tenn. Leisring, Samuel A., jr., '61 169 Boyden St., Waterbury, Conn. Leiter, Edward H., '64 501 Maple Ave., Marietta, Ga. Lemaistre, George G., '63 4667 Ortega Blvd., jacksonville 10, Fla. Letnkin, Richard Henry, '63 159 St. Pauls Rd., Hempstead, N. Y. Levine, YVilliam G., '61 451 Beverwil Dr., Beverly Hills, Calif. Levinson, Hlilliam G., '62 27 Shore Cliff Pl., Great Neck, N. Y. Levisay, Gerald L., '64 223 W. Peru St., Princeton, Ill. Lewars, Michael W'ilson, '63 1616 Oak La., Lancaster, Pa. Lewin, Donald Paul, '61 243 Wlellington Ave., Kenmore 23, N. Y. Lewin, john H., jr., '61 10 Malvern Ct., Ruxton 4, Md. Lewis, Barton Tucker, '62 1180 Midland Ave., Bronxville, N. Y. Lewis, Edwin A. S., '61 103 St. johns Rd., Baltimore 10, Md. Lewis, Frank R., Jr., YVillards, Md. Lewis, john Birt, '64 102 Euclid Ave., Sharon, Pa. Lewis, John Nelson, '64 103 St. johns Rd., Baltimore 10, Md. Lewis, john S., jr., '62 2888 I.incoln St., Camp Hill, Pa. Lewis, Montgomery Meigs, '62 R. D. 4, Norristown, Pa. Lewis, Richard B., II, '63 5-1 Easton Rd., Xvestport, Conn. Lewis, Robert F., II, '63 2717 N. E. 27th Ct., Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. Lewis, Robert Victor, '61 708 Lenox Rd., Glen Ellyn, Ill. Ley, Harold A., III, '61 Stanworth Rd., Greenwich, Conn. Li, Ronald, '64 10 Fairway Dr., Lake Success, N. Y. Lichtenstein, Carl A., '63 Box 504, R. D. 1, Smith Rd., Dover, N.j. Lichthardt, Arlyn H., '63 3216 E. Minnehaha Pkwy., Mitmeapolis 6, Minn. Lief, jonathan Howard, '6-1 191 Gatlmer Ave., Jamesburg, N. Lietzow, lVilliam A., '62 54 YVOodley Rd., XVinnetka, Ill. Lightdale, Charles j., '62 272 Armstrong Ave., jersey City, N. j. Lilley, Alexander N., '63 3495 Mountain St., Montreal, Que., Canada Lim, lidwin Roca, '62 214 juan Luna St., Manila, Philippines Lindert, Peter Harrison, '62 Box 469, RFD 1, Homewood, Ill. Lindsey, Bradford A., '62 92 Field Rock Rd., Southport, Conn. Ling, Robert, '64 708 Chamberry Dr., Louisville 7, Ky. Lipitz, Lance Richard, '62 170 Poplar Dr., East Hills, N. Y. I.ippincott, Paul Howe, '63 214 Ivy La., Haverford, Pa. Lipton, james Spencer, '62 63 Dekoven Ct., Brooklyn, N. Y. Lister, Drummond Dull, '62 879 Avenue Rd., Toronto, Ont., Canada Little, xvllllillll F., jr., '63 Centre Island, Oyster Bay, N. Y. Livesay,Tho1nas G., '64 Beachtern Rd., B.257,Ctr.Moriches,N.Y. Lloyd, Samuel joseph, '64 1211 IV. State St., Trenton 8, N. j. Loftus, Brian A., '63 3 Old Colony Rd., Springdale, Conn. Loftus, Gary Martin, '61 16021 Glynn Rd., li. Cleveland 12, Ohio Logan, joseph D., Ill, '62 2822 Avenham Ave., Roanoke, Va. Long, David Morris, '63 214 Paxton Rd., Richmond, Va. Long, William Henry, '61 3232 First Ave., York, Pa. Longson, Ned Alan, '61 215 Fairfield Ave., Ridgewood, N. j. Loomis, Peter Burr, IV, '61 1648 Dorchester Rd., Birmingham, Mich. Lopez, Alan Clarkson, '63 59 Kings Hwy., Middletown, N. j. Lopez, john Hawley, '61 1601 Gunning Rd., M'ilmington, Del. Lord, Charles N., '63 235 Touraine Rd., Grosse Pointe Fms., Mich. Loud, Brewster M., '61 Michigan Rd., New Canaan, Conn. Love, Francis H., III, '62 68 Bingham Ave., Rumson, N. Lovejoy, lilijah Parish, '62 Box 554, Amagansett, L. I., N. Y. Loveman, David B., 111, '64 462 Palmer Ave., Teaneck, N. j. Loverd, Robert Lewis, '64 156 Hackett Pl., Rutherford, N. j. Loverro, john Simon, '62 67 04 167th St., Flushing 65, N. Y. Low, David Burnham, '64 P. O. Box 5-'11, Fredericksburg, Va. Low, Robert Burnham, '63 Memorial St., Deerfield, Mass. Lowry, Peter Barbank, '63 67 Clinton Ave., Montclair, N. j. Lucas, XVilliam N., '63 Indian Hills Trail, Louisville 7, Ky. Lucchesi, Edward F., '61 109 Nicholas St., Vicksburg, Miss. Ludgin, Robert Frederic, '62 207 Penn Dr., XV. Hartford 7, Conn. Luetscher, Oliver P., III, '62 951 Townsend Blvd., jacksonville 11, Fla. Luke, lidmon George, jr., '61 123 Phelps Rd.,Ridgewood, N. j. Lukens, Robert Alan, '62 Andora Rd., Lafayette Hill, Pa. Luks, Kraemer D., '63 Horseshoe Bend Rd., Frenchtown, N. Lumgair, David R., '64 1552 Clifton Park Rd., Schenectady 9, N. Y. Compliments of MULTITONE ENGRAVING CO. INC. ROCHELLE PARK, NEW JERSEY Compliments of PAN TEXDYE CORPORATION Hawthorne New Jersey Luna, Ricardo V., '62 492 Carpenter Ave., Oceanside, N. Y. Lund, Daniel Peter, '62 435 E. 79th St., New York 21, N. Y. Lundy, joseph Raymond, '62 515 liighth St., XVil1nette, lll. Lungstras, Richard D., '63 9904 Old XVarson Rd., St.Louis,Mo. Luria, David, jr., '63 200 East lind Ave., New York, N. Y. Lutz, Michael R., '64 2911 W. Catalpa, Chicago 25, Ill. Lynch, Hugh Michael, '64 5200 Edgemoor La., Bethesda, Md. Lynch, james B., '62 24 Blackhawk Rd., XVeymouth, Mass. Lynehan, Charles WV., '61 140 Laurel St., Haven 12, Conn. Lynn, Gerald Albert, '64 176 S. Main Ave., Albany, N. Y. Lynn, Richard john, '62 35 Prospect St., Binghamton, N. Y. Lyovin, Anatole, '63 220 Perth Ave., Toronto 9, Ont., Canada Lytle, Vincent Albert, '62 14 Newman Ave., Verona, N. M Macaleer, Stephen C., '63 114 Owen Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. MacCracken, Michael C., '64 67 lirledon Rd., Tenafly, N. MacDonald, Frederic, jr., '61 2188 lVashington Blvd., Huntington, YV. Va. Machledt, john H., '64 243 S. Madison, Greenwood, lnd. Macht, WVilliam P., '63 Holly Hill, Cazenovia, N. Y. Mack, john Hayward, '64 Mlanackme Rd., New Canaan, Conn. Mack, Robert Walter, '62 1912 Gardena Ave.,Glendale 4,Calif. Mack, Talbot Chambers, '61 Wahackme Rd., New Canaan, Conn. Mackay, Malcolm, '63 Box 255, Stillwell La., Syosset, N. Y. MacKenzie, Alan, '61 2520 Guilford Rd., Cleveland Hgts. 18, Ohio MacKenzie, Bruce Donald, '63 journeys End, Middlebury, Va. Mackey, Edmonds P., '61 6040 Mission Dr., Kansas City l5,M0. MacLean, YVilliam C., jr., '62 1931 Greenwood, VVilmette, Ill. MacMillan, Hugh, jr., '64 1125 Belmont Pl., W. Palm Beach, Fla. MacMurray, john Curtis, '61 445 Devon Rd., Camp Hill, Pa. MacNeil, David B., '64 E. Main St., Brookside, N. MacNeil, Nicholas C. H., '61 Box 456, Port Au Prince, Haiti Macrae, Cameron F., III, '63 775 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Madden, john Michael, '61 2614 Marilyn Rd., Ottumwa, Iowa Maddex, jack P., jr., '63 P. O. Box 189, Orange, Va. Maddox, David Bruce, '64 2525 Handasyde Ct., Cincinnati 8, Ohio Magargee, Wlilliam S., III, '62 132 Morlyn Ave., Bryn Mawr, Pa. Maguire, Henry Boas, jr., '63 Harts La., Miquon, Pa. Maher, john R., '64 307 YVoodside Dr., Woodbridge, Va. Mahoney, David Barnes, '62 3901 li. Ave., Rochester 18, N. Y. Malkin, Richard B., '63 1105 E. 14 St., New York 9 Mall, Vance Austin, '64 301 N. E. 6lst., Oklahoma City 5, Mallach, lifrem G., '61 23 Smith Ave., 1Vhite Plains, Malman, Arthur Barry, '61 100 Mulberry Ave., Garden City Maloney, Terrence B., '61 225 Hamilton Dr., Snyder 26, Mandell, Richard K.. '61 16 Young Ave., Pelham, Manke, Hugh Irwin, '61 36 Cold Spring Dr.,Bloomlield, Mann, Mlilliam T., '63 Manning, Richard A., '61 31 Old Farm Rd., Dedham 31 M'indsor Pl., 1'pper Montclair, Manno, Richard Sur, '64 180 Cranford Pl., Teaneck, Mapletoft, Lee, '62 7 Wlinding 1Vay, Verona Marano, Theodore '62 Marasco, Robert '63 , , N. Y. Okla. N. Y. N. Y. N. Y. N. Y. Conn. Mass. x. J. N. J. N. J. 9630 Clark St.. Philadelphia, Pa. 4837 Pulaski Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Marbnrger, john H., III, '62 3638 Largo Rd., RFD 2, Upper Marlboro, Md. Marchand, Paul Robert, '63 11 Merton Crescent, Hampstead, Que., Canada Marcus, Peter jay, '61 7803 Third Ave., Kenosha, 1Vis. Marcy, Gardner N., '62 1024 S. Chester, Park Ridge, Ill. lNIargerison, John S., '63 503 Kenilworth Apts., Philadelphia 44, Pa. Marino, john Harrison, '61 Box 567, New Hampton, N. Y. Markell, Charles, III, '63 2 St. Martins Rd., Baltimore 18, Md. Marks, james L., III, '63 Guys Run Rd., RD 2, Cheswick, Pa. Marquardt, Frederick D., '61 501 Center Rd., Monroeville, Pa. Marquet, Donald WV., '62 833 E. Bay Dr., 1Vest Islip, N. Y. Marr, 1Vi1liam A., jr., '61 78 Bayside Ave., S. Swansea, Mass. Marron, David Richard, '62 1235 Ashland Ave., River Forest, Ill. Marsden, Donald A., '64 7 Anita Pl., Amityville, N. Y. Marsh, Spencer Scott, '63 Garfield Ave., lvladison, N. ml. Marsh, Tom Fariss, '63 3010 Travis, Amarillo, Texas Marshall, Charles N., '63 780 S. Hanover St., Pottstown, Pa. Marshall, David L., '61 4 Hardwell Rd., Short Hills, N. Marshall, KI. C. Douglas, '62 39 Carpenter La., Philadelphia 19, Pa. Marshall, Robert D., -lr., '64 110 Lind, McMinnville, Tenn. Marshall, Robert YVilbur, '64 84 Whetten Rd., W. Hartford, Conn. Martin, Arthur Mead, '63 3070 Monticello Blvd., Cleveland Hgts. 18, Ohio Martin, Bradley K., jr., '64 112 N. Wloodland Dr.,Marietta,Ga. Martin, Eugene Larson, '62 State College, li. Stroudsburg, Pa. Martin, james L., III, '62 4110 E. 43rd St., Tulsa 5, Okla. Martin, Michael YV., '64 595 Terhune Dr., Wayne, N. Martin, Stephen C., '64 57 Dellwood Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. Masella, Charles Y., '63 222 W. Nippon St., Philadelphia, Pa. Massell, Richard XV., '63 182 S. Lake Dr., River Plaza, N. Masters, Stephen C., '64 1509 Oakland Ave., Falls Church, Va. Masuda, Melvin Masao, '64 946 Fourth Ave.,Honolulu,Hawaii Matchett, David YV., '62 1218 Penn Ave., New Brighton, Pa. Mathews, Charles R., jr., '64 81 Woodside Ave., Newton, N. Mathews, Michael Stone, '62 2346 Brandon Rd., Columbus 21, Ohio Mathews, Murray R., '64 27 Commonwealth Rd., Xvatertown, Mass. Mathews, Thomas R., jr., '64 148 Harrison Ave., Sausalito, Calif. Mathias, Charles Bulmer, '62 39 Pine St., Tamaqua, Pa. Matlack, Richard YV., '63 201 Colonial Ave., Moorestown, N. Matteucci, Arthur G., '63 421 Third St. N.,Great Fa11s,Mont. Matthews, Frederick A., '61 Dodds La., Ardmore, Pa. Maximon, Richard C., '61 103 31st St., Altoona, Pa. May, Wlilliam YV., '64 4408 Larchmont Ave., Dallas, Tex. Mayer, Edward V., '63 81 S. Mountain Rd., New City,N. Y. Mayer, John Anton, jr., '62 725 Devonshire St., Pittsburgh 13, Pa. Mayo, John Kelsey, '64 41 Serpentine Ave., Roslyn, N. Y. McAlpin, David H., '62 Treadwell Ave., Convent, N. McAshan, Michael S., '61 3719 Del Monte Dr.,Houstonl9,TeX. McAuliffe, Edward T., '61 10 Media Rd., Colwick, Merchantville, N. McBride, George C. L., '63 8700 S. XV. 1Vhite Ct., Portland 25, Ore. McBride, Michael G., '63 USA Map Service Far E., APO 67, San Francisco, Calif. McCabe, David Allen, '62 235 li. 15th St., New York, N. Y. McCabe, james Mason, '61 206 Spier Ave., Allenhurst, N. McCampbell, Edward L., '64 3815 Kenilworth Dr., Knoxville 19, Tenn. lNIcCarthy, Michael YV., '63 Christmas Lake, Box 439, Excelsior, Minn. McCaughey, Robert P., '63 1579 Bradley St., Schenectady,N. Y. McClain, Allan, '63 11861 Ellsworth Ave., Pittsburgh 13, Pa. McClellan, Joel Graydon, '61 156 Ames Ave., Leonia, N. McClintock, Robert O., '61 Upper York Rd., Solebury, Pa. McClymont, Stephen Eyre, '61 38 Clermont Ave., Hempstead, N. Y. McCobb, John B., Jr., '61 640 Arlington Ave., XVestlield, N. McConihe, Michael H., '62 Piney Meetinghouse Rd., Rockville, Md. McConnell, Frank E., '62 5 Beaumont Rd., Toronto 5, Ont., Canada McConnell, George M., '61 1232 Elmwood Ave., M'ilmette, 111. McConnell, john N., Jr., '61 633 NVarwick Rd., Kenilworth, I11. McCown, Gary Mason, '61 610 Allison Ave., Roanoke, Va. McCready, Richard F., '63 Lexington Rd., Rl, XVinchester, Ky. McCulloch, Donald C., '62 825 Highland Ave., Hlestfield, N. J. McDevitt, Timothy A., '63 12201 Wayland, Cleveland 11, Ohio Mcliwen, David Aikin, '61 1224 Edgewood N. li., 11'arren, Ohio McFerran, Alexander Y., '61 1266 YVoodland Dr., Bridgeport, NV. Va. McGinity, Frank Joseph, '61 27 Swan Rd., Livingston, N. J. McGrath, Michael C., '64 601 Thelma Cir., Yienna, Ya. McGraw, John Adams, '62 Route 3, Gaithersburg, Md. McGuire, Bartlett H., '62 130 E. End Ave., New York, N. Y. McGuire, Diarmnid R., '61 124 Tillotson Cir., Pittsburgh 37, Pa. McKenzie, 1Villiam S., '61 312 S. Lakeshore Dr., Baton Rouge, La. McLaughlin, Donald H., '63 1626 Kentucky, Quincy, Ill. McLaughlin, Henry XV., Ill, '62 101 Mimosa Ave., Halifax, Va. McLaughlin, john F., '61 Riverview Dr., Totowa Borough, N. McLaughlin, -Ion Michael, '61 155 E. 72 St., New York, N. Y. McLean, David Lyle, '63 2509 Cascade 1Vay, Longview, 1Vash. McLean, Hugh Charles, '62 826 W'. Delavan Ave., Buffalo 9, N. Y. McLucas, Don Hamlin, '62 314 Oxford Rd.,Kenilworth,I1l. McMahan, Ian Douglass, '62 5151 -Iackwood, Houston 35, Tex. McMahon, Easton Tompers, '63 1112 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. McMichael, james S., '61 -175 Parkview Dr., Pittsburgh 16, Pa. McMillan, 1Villiam A., '61 1225 Montgomery Ave., Nlynnewood, Pa. McMillen, Robert T., jr., '63 1641 Cherokee Blvd., Knoxville, Tenn. McNilf, john Franklin, '64 47 Cutler St., 1Vatertown, Conn. McPheeters, Hugh, '64 9752 Litzinger Rd., St. Louis 17, Mo. McPherson, Donald P., III, '63 4801 Indian La., Wlashington 16, D. C. McRae, Thomas K., jr., '64 8913 Norwick Rd., Richmond 29, Va. Mckeynolds, Lelan D., '61 1510 Stanford Ave., Brookston, Ind. Mc1Vhinney, Henry G., jr., '64 14 Sand Hill Rd., Morristown, N. FOODS YOU LOVE TO EAT Pllllg ' Nlllgb i Q i i D W Slllliugesb Co uniill 39241 if 'min' ,Liagfgin fg 5 05 ', A A.-ff, Wuxi Mdemimagl icon 'i Jem - . 3' ,maui - .' AQ , i i ax ' 'nf . XM ,i'?55'Q,A C.. i E ...mv-se3::vE-' i 'gm :QQ r gi 3 KZ f Q i ' X' ' M -'L N ouncn 1 H3351 PANcAKE UUAFCEH MOTHERS MIX:--.ol-.nn N , N , Made and guaranteed by The Quaker Oats Company Merchandise Mart ' Chicago 54, Illinois 301 PR1NCETON'S MOST CONVENIENT CLEANERS IVERS lla LEEAN ERSTEE 8 LAUNDRY McWhinnie, Scott '1'., '61 13 Herber Aye., Delmar, N. Y. McWhirter, William A., '63 1244 Stratford Rd., Kansas City 13, Mo. McWilliams, john P., jr., '62 19100 S. Park Blvd., Shaker Heights, Ohio Meacham, Denis Gearing, '61 15 li. 91st Sl., New York, N. Y. Mead, Newton C., jr., '63 1805 W. Ridgewood La., Glenview, 111. Mears, M'i1liam H., jr., '61 1501 Westbury Dr,, Richmond 29, Va. Medina, jeremy '1'yler, '64 Loantaka La. S., lN1orristown, N. Medina, Rohert Brevoort, '62 14 li. 90 St., New York, N. Y. Medina, Standish F., jr., '62 Loantaka La. S., Morristown, N. j. Medlock, jolm M., 111, '64 760 Ragsdale Dr., Milan, Tenn. Medwed, Howard David, '63 75 Mayflower Hill Dr., XVatervil1e, Maine Meehan, Richard john, '62 4 Mlillow Ave., Larchmont, N. Y. Meeker, Charles R., 111, '64 5912 Averill M'ay, Dallas, Tex. Meeks, M'illiam H., '61 1201 S. li. 7th St., PO 194, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. Mehlman, Ira, '63 5520 15 Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Mehr, XVilliam john, '62 R. D. 2, linglishtown, N. j. Meisel, Frederick L., '63 167 Franklin Ave., Franklin Sq., N. Y. Meislahn, Ifindley, '64 91 Academy Rd., Alhany, N. Y. Meistrell, Gerard Moody, '63 4 Highland Ave., Great Neck, N. Y. Mejean, Paul jacques, '63 Brookside Pk., Greenwich, Conn. Mellor, Arthur McLeod, '63 503 Edgewood Dr., lilmira, N. Y. Melrose, Kendrick B., '62 522 Cherokee Dr., Orlando, Fla. Mendelson, john Acker, '62 575 North St., XVhite Plains, N. Y. Mendelson, Paul lidman, '62 Oak Clove, Central Valley, N. Y. Meneely, Clinton T., '63 The Crossways, Troy, N. Y. Menke, Michael M., '63 137 S. lilm, Mlehster Groves 19, Mo. Menna, Vincent joseph, '61 52 1Vashington Ave., 1Vi1liamstown, N. j. Mentz, john Roger, '63 76 Tuscan Rd., Maplewood, N. j. Merlini, Mlilliam li., '63 23 Station Rd., Great Neck, N. Y. Merod, james Barrett, '64 1003 Art Hill Pl., St. Louis 10, Mo. Merrick, Frank B., '64 27 Lexington Ave., Holyoke, Mass. Merrick, james M., '62 Tuscany Apts. Apt. 2 j, Baltimore 10, Md. Messina, joseph C., '61 505 Allgair St., New Brunswick, N. Messing, john Howard, '64 281 Garth Rd., Searsdale, N. Y. Metcalf, Philip Flint, '64 104 South St., Auburn, N. Y. Metz, Robin O., '64 506 Charlotte Dr., Pittsburgh 36, Pa. Metzger, Marshall G., '62 3142 Fox Hollow Dr., Cleveland 24, Ohio Meyer, Kenneth Warren, '61 28 Beech Ave., Madison, N. Meyer, Michael Louis, '62 371 Voorhees Ave., Buflalo 16, N. Y. v Michel, Clifford I.., '61 730 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Michelson, Avlllllllll M., '61 Penn Lawrenceville Rd., Trenton R, N. Michener, Frank lirvine, '61 25 Cromwell Dr.,M1'l 'iSt0W'1,N-j- Midgley, Frank M., '61 38 Ashton Rd., Yonkers, N. Y. Mignogna, Frank V., '61 390 Ogden Ave., jersey City 7, N. Mikell, Charles B., '63 214 li. 44 St., Savannah, Ga. Miles, Michael C., '61 37 lilmdale Ave., Akron 13, Ohio Miles, William S., 111, '61 4307 Grand View Dr., Peoria, Ill. Miller, Alfred Brown, '61 3003 O St. N. AV., Mlashington, D. C. Miller, Allen Clinton, '61 797 Amalfi Dr., Pacific Palis., Calif. Miller, Bowman M., '63 514 XV. A St., N. Platte, Nebr. Miller, Charles lidward, '62 14 Livingston Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Miller, David Louis, '61 Pine Top Trail, Bethlehem, Pa. Miller, George Wesley, '63 7 Morris Ave., Schenectady. N. Y. Miller, Granville Guy, '61 Sussex Ave., Star Route, Morristown, N. j. Miller, jellrey Grant, '63 710 N. Martin Ave., Muncie, Ind. Miller, joseph S., '63 297 Park Ave., Williston Park, N. Y. Miller, Matthew jeffrey, '62 45 jefferson Ave.,Map1ewood,N.j. Miller, Michael G., '61 217 Dorchester Rd., Akron 20, Ohio Miller, Peter Cravath, '61 230 Third Aye., lndialantic, Fla. Miller, Thomas Benjamin, '64 938 Leopard Rd., jenkintown, Pa. Miller, William H., jr., '61 W. Neck Rd., Lloyd Harbor, Huntington, N. Y. Miller, William R.. jr., '61 ll Newdover Rd,, Baltimore, Md. Miller , NVil1iam Thomas, '63 3638 l'pton St., N. W., Mlashington, D. C. Milligan, Day id Vaughn, '62 2140 I.incolnwood Dr., livanston, Ill. Compliments of LAHIERIEPS RESTAURANT For Private Parties and Banquets 7 WITHERSPOON STREET WA 1-9726 Compliments o f NATIONAL BOND LOAN PLAN, INC. 3044 Cillham Road Kansas City 8, Missouri Mills, Allen Paine, '62 68 Sandingham Rd., Rochester, N. Y. Mills, john Paul, '64 14 Meredith Crescent, Toronto 5, Ont., Canada Mills, john S., jr., '63 37 Waveland Ct., Hamburg, N. Y. Mills, Kenneth A., '62 31 jellerson Ave., Morristown, N. j. Millsaps, William XV., '61 P. O. Box 623, Cleveland, Miss. Milner, Humphrey H., '62 2233 Douglass Blvd., Louisville, Ky. Milton, james Thomas, '62 788 Goodrich Ave., St. Paul, Minn. ltlinard, Duarte Elmer., Ill, '62 160 Eagle Rock Way, Montclair, N. Miner, Thomas H., '64 Cove View Ave., Riverside, Conn. Minet, Roy Allen, '63 P. O. Box 8, Lancaster, Pa. Minich, George M., '64 Duinvoetlaan Wassenaar, Netherlands Mintun, john Sheridan, '62 76 Mt. Lebanon Blvd., Pittsburgh 28, Pa. Mishalove, Robert David, '62 133 johns Rd., Cheltenham, Pa. Missel, jerome Lee, '63 1801 N. Bloomington St., Streator, Ill. Mitchell, Charles li., '63 jacksonville Rd., Lincoln Park, N. Mitchell, jatnes A., jr., '63 12 Oberlin St., Maplewood, N. j. Mitchell, jatnes Edward, '64 5412 Hawthorne,LittleRock,Ark. Mockridge, Britton O., '63 492 Russell Hill Rd., Toronto, Ont., Canada Moehlman, Stephen M., '62 2907 Oakhurst, Austin, Texas Moesel, Peter Alan, '62 21 E. 10th St., New York, N. Y. Mollatt, james Price, '63 4655 Briarclift Rd.,Ba1timore 29,Md. Molasky, Stephen Allan, '63 730 Raymere Ave., 1nterlaken,N.j. Montgomery, Clark T., '62 4041 Branson Dr., San Mateo, Calif. Morgan, Ronald Rhys, '63 Hq., Ant. Cmd., U.S. Army CARI, APO 851, New York, N. Y. Morris, Morris, Morris, Morris, jeffrey B., '62 151 Ridgeway St., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. john Haynes, '61 163 Myrtle Ave., Millburn, N. john Wlilson, '61 209 XVheeler Ave., Shetlield, Ala. Robert F., '62 121 Anton Rd., Mfynnewood, Pa. Morrison, Charles D., '62 7205 Nichols Rd., Oklahoma City, Okla. Morrison, M'illiam David, '62 101 Dartmouth Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. Morriss, Thotnas XVynne, '63 5137 Southwest Aye., St. Louis 10, Mo. Morse, Richard S., '63 4989 Glen Brooks Rd., lVashington, N. XY., D. C. Morse, William Shelltnan, '61 1162 Scott Ave., XVinnetka, lll. Mort, Terry Alan, '61 6 Christopher Dr., Poland, Ohio Morton, Freddie Clare, '62 992 National St., Memphis, Tenn. Moscosso, Peter David, '64 120 Wall St., New York 5, N. Y. Moses, Henry C., '63 115 Beechmont Dr., New Rochelle, N. Y. Moss, jellrey Arnold, '63 30 Beckman Pl., New York, N. Y. Moss, john Toothill, '64 3320 Kirkwood Dr., Toledo 6, Ohio Most, M'illiam '64 25 First St., Canton, Pa. Moya, Clarence B., '62 Apt. 67 lj, ITSAPC, Oakland 14, Calil. Moyle, Kenneth john, '61 7 Mould Ave., Toronto, Ont., Canada Mueller, Marvin Allen, '63 4130 Hartford St., St. Louis 16, Mo. Mules, lVilliam Curran, '63 302 Woodbourne Ave., Baltimore 12, Md. Muller, Alfred, '62 2525 Morris Ave., New York 68, N. Y. Mullikin, Kent R., jr., '6-1 79 Market St., Annapolis, Md. Munoz, james Loomis, '61 1770 Glencoe St., Denver 20, Colo. Munson, Lester E., jr., '62 243 Hawthorne, Glen Ellyn, Ill. Murman, Earll Morton, '63 14 Entrata Ave., San Anselmo, Calif. Murphy, Edward R., '64 3-111 Main St., I.aurvs Station, Pa. Murphy, john Anthony, '63 941 Golden Way, Los Altos, Calif. Murphy, M'illiam H., '62 1-1 lilton St., Riverhead, N. Y. Murray, Harry L., 111, '64 6 Torres Street Red Hil, Canberra, ACT, Australia Musser, William L., jr., '64 455 li. 57th St., New York 22, N. Y. Muzzy, john D., '62 64 Franklin St., Englewood, N. j. Myers, Geollrey Randolf, '62 523 Haworth Ave., Haworth,N.j. Myers, H. jack, '62 28 li. Spring St., Somerville, N. Myers, Martin G., '63 3011 45th St., N. XV., YVashington 16, D. C. Myers, Winslow F. B., '62 Mlalpole, Maine Mygatt, joseph Royal, '61 Chestnut Hill Rd., Stamford, Conn. Mygatt, Timothy E. YV., '61 Myslik, 600 Hardscrabble Rd., Chappaqua, N. Y. Robert '61 48 Howland Ave., Riveredge, N. Montgomery, john Hunter, '62 1207 Glenwood, Oklahoma City, Okla. The Three Brooks 1 Mile North of Kingston on Highway 27 Hardware U DUTCH BOY PAINTS 0 Housewares Custom Made Lamps 0 Garden Supplies I Rentals WAlnut l-6275 Moody, Walton Smith, '64 2040 Wedgewood Dr., Lacrosse,Wis. Moore, Anthony C., '62 926 S. Pasadena Ave., Pasadena, Calif. Moore, David Sheldon, '62 19 Earle St., Middletown, N. Y. Moore, john Berryman, '62 Box 100, RD 1, Stroudsburg, Pa. Moore, Robert C., '64 219 Paxtang Ave., Harrisburg, Pa. Moore, WVarwick B., '62 1554 Bayshore Blvd., Dunedin, Fla. Moorhead, Dixon C., '64 964 El Campo, Pasadena, Calif. Moran, Charles Aaron, '64 2950 XV. jarlath St., Chicago -15, Ill. Moran, David T., '62 362 Rye Beach Ave., Rye, N. Y. Moran, Wlilliam C., '63 141 Hudson Rd., Murray Hill, N. j. Moreland, Alan Keith, '62 2625 Sutton Blvd., Maplewood, Mo. Morey, R. Hunter, '62 72-4 Central, Evanston, 111. Morgan, Charles H., '61 710 Peachtree St., N. E., Atlanta 8, Ga. Morgan, james jay, '63 P. O. Box 321, Scarsborough, N. Y. Morgan, jellrey NV., '61 122 Nooks Hill Rd., Cromwell, Conn. Morgan, Marshall Tad, '63 R. R. 1, Okeana, Ohio Morgan, Roger C., '61 Hq., Antilles Cmd., U.S. Army CARI, APO 851, New York, N. Y. Hours RD ifl-Box 392-A Daily 8:15 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. Princeton, N. J. Sun. 8:15 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. N Nabers, Drayton, Jr., '62 6 Beechwood Rd., Birmingham 9, Ala. Nadeau, Douglas A., '62 Ryland Rd., Box 87, 1Vhitehouse, N. J. Nagy, Gabriel F., '63 482 Riverside Ave., Trenton, N. Naples, Elmer, '61 -182 Cleveland Ave., Trenton, N. Nation, Ralph T., '64 840 Cbipeta, Grand Junction, Colo. Naylor, Randolph S., '62 14 Linda La., Darien, Conn. Neely, Daniel Howard, '62 Boland St., Sparta, Ga. Neescmann, Carroll E., '63 Box 207, Severna Park, Md. Nehoda, Albert '64 110 Wandle Ave., Bedford, Ohio Neilson, Bruce John, '64 R. D. 2, New Alexandria, Pa. Neilson, Louis, 111, '64 Unionville, Pa. Neisner, Lewis James, '61 1151 Clover St., Rochester 10, N. Y. Nelson, Curtis Norman, '63 73 Sagamore Dr., Rochester 17, N. Y. Nelson, Ernest H., Jr., '61 Penfield Hill, Portland, Conn. Nelson, James XValter, '64 6308 Westwood Ct., Minneapolis 21, Minn. Nelson, Joseph Bruce, '62 23 Anchorage Rd., Port 1Vashington, N. Y. Nelson, Richard H., '61 71141 Muirfield Rd., Norfolk, Va. Nemccek, Stephen J., '61 17 YV. Central Blvd., Palisades Park, N. J. Nesbitt, Frank M., '63 Box 167, Skytop, Pa. Netherby, Stephen C., '64 2861 Hillside Dr., Burlingame, Calif. Nettrour, Lewis F., '61 Kummer Rd., RDI, Allison Park, Pa. Netts, Jonathan S., '64 217 Maplewood Ave,, Bogota, N. J. Neubauer, Perry King, '62 6212 N. 12th Rd., Arlington 5, Ya. Neuman, Anthony Bruce, '63 1,129 1N'alnut St., Philadelphia, Pa.. Newens, Adrian Fisher, '61 5102 Ilard St., Omaha, Nebr. Newens, Leland Fisher, '64 5102 lzard St., Omaha, Nebr. Newfield, Jellrey A., '64 73 Sycamore Rd., YV. Hartford, Conn. Newhall, David, III, '61 6112 Germantown Ave., Philadelphia 4-1, Pa. Newhouse, Craig Scott, '63 86 Lockwood Rd., Riverside, Conn. Newhouse, Jellrey H., '63 N. Broadway, Upper Nyack, N. Y. Newlin, 'Theodore F., '61 405 Ridgewood Ave., Pittsburgh 29, Pa. Newlin, XVilliam Rankin, '62 405 Ridgewood Ave., Pittsburgh 29, Pa. Newman, Carl F., Jr., '64 2144 Riviera Dr., Clearwater, Fla. Newsome, Thomas YV., '63 4420 Bordeaux, Dallas, Texas Newton, Neil Albert, '64 20 Wedge Way, Littleton, Colo. Nicholas, Nicholas J., Jr., '62 Chief of Staff, Navy 116, FPO, New York, N. Y. Nichols, Frederick T., '63 157 Plain Rd., 1Vayland, Mass. Nichols, John Larry, '64 1715 Pennington Xvay, Oklahoma City, Okla. Nichols, Peter Wlade, '61 Spruce La., Chappaqua, N. Y. Nicholson, Robert H., '63 245 E. Main St., Moorestown, N. J. Nichparenko, YVilliam, Jr., '63 S60 Ivyland Rd., Ivyland, Pa. Nicol, Donald Edward, '63 303 Stanford Ave., Coalinga, Calif. Niner, Richard Thomas, '61 714 Milestone Dr., Silver Spring, Md. Noah, Gene David, '63 114 Naueda Dr., Knoxville 18, Tenn. Noble, Robert P., Jr., '62 Main St., Lakeville, Conn. Nolan, Barry Hance, '64 300 Pierce St., Easton, Pa. Nolan, Robert Frank, '64 3066 Livingston Rd., Cleveland 20, Ohio Norcross, Alexander F., '63 2450 Clairmont Rd., Atlanta 6, Ga. Norton, Gerald Patrick, '61 850 Newton Ave., Baldwin, N. Y. Norton, Stephen Allen, '62 155 Yvinter St., lVestwood, Mass. Novak, Frank Anthony, '61 30 Hlest Rd., Short Hills, N. Nowels, Anthony, '64 2611 River Rd., Manasquan, N. Nussbaum, Xvilliam Lee, '62 8144 Old Bonhomme Rd., University City 32, Mo. Nuttle, Philip E., Jr., '63 Route 4, Easton, Md. Nuzum, John Martin, '62 2712 E. Beverly Rd., Milwaukee 11, 1Vis. Nykwest, Edward Charles, '64 Ryerson Rd., New Hampton, N. Y. O O'Brien, Darcy George, '61 259 N. Kenter Ave., Los Angeles 49, Calif. O'Brien, David P., 111, '62 3023 Lexington Rd., Louisville, Ky. Ochsner, Robert Carr, '61 Route 2, Box 127, Thiensville, 1Vis. O'Connor, William Basil, '61 9 The Birches, Roslyn, L. I., N. Y. O'Day, Daniel, Jr., '63 18 Hillcrest La., Rye, N. Y. Odden, Lance Rue, '61 30 Armour Rd., Princeton, N. J. Odo, Franklin S., '61 989 Kamiloiki Rd., Honolulu, Hawaii PRINCETON BARBER SHOP 11 CHAMBERS STREET TRADITIONALLY FAMOUS FOR THE AUTHENTIC PRINCETON CUT Oelsner, Edward C., 111, '64 Cedar Ridge Rd., Oyster Bay, N. Y. Oestreich, Alan Emil, '61 I3-12 Amherst St., Buffalo 16, N. Y. Ogden, John Conrad, '62 332 Fairmount Ave., Chatham, N. Ojo, Julius Akinremi, '63 Ode Ekiti, Nigeria Okie, James Platt, Jr., '64 Markell Rd., Waite Hill, YVil1oughby, Ohio O'Kief'fe, Douglas G., '63 5005 Ave. 5A Mareano, Merainar, Havana, Cuba 1363 Bresee Ave., Pasadena, Calif. 218 E. Harrison, Harlingen, Tex. Okimoto, Daniel Iwao, '64 Olcott, Cornelius, IV, Olds, Michael V., '62 Dept. State Foreign Ser., W'ashington 25, D. C. Olgin, Howard Aaron, '61 54 Xvegman Pkwy., Jersey City, N. Oliver, David Grant, '64 Weed St., New Canaan, Conn. Olmsted, Robert M., '63 Oyster Bay Rd., Locust Valley, N. Y. Olsen, Brian Lee, '64 547 S. Cedar St., Palatine, Ill. Olsen, Eric, '63 R. D. 1, Windber, Pa. Olson, Lawrence H., '63 Georgia Exper. Sta., Experiment, Ga. Omenn, Gilbert Stanley, '61 2407 Edgmont Ave., Chester, Pa. O'Neil, John Michael, '64 840 Forest Ave., Rye, N. Y. O'Neil1, Gerald William, '61 87 Brook St., Garden City, N. Y. 0'Neill, John Douglas, '61 79 Afterglow Ave., Montclair, N. J. 0'Niel1, Charles A., Ill, '63 4 Audubon Blvd., New Orleans 18, La. Opderbeck, Carl T., '61 176 Parmelee Ave., Hawthorne, N. J. Oppenheimer, Paul E., '61 10 E. 85th St., New York, N. Y. Oram, Raymond F., '62 510 E. Park Towne Pl., Philadelphia 30, Pa. Compliments Osborn, Prime F., IV, '64 4905 Prince Edward Rd., jacksonville, Fla. Oseroff, Allan Roy, '64 30 Broadman Pkwy., jersey City 5, N. j. O'Toole, Dennis Allen, '63 7601 N. 7th St., Phoenix, Ariz. Otten, Michael, '63 1133 Fiftl1 Ave., New York, N. Y. Otto, james lVesley, '63 25791 WVater St., Olmsted Falls, Ohio Owen, Stephen L., '61 96 Madison, New Bedford, Mass. Oxman, David Craig, '62 47 joanna 1Vay, Short Hills, N. P Packard, Daniel A., '63 8 Florence Rd., Marblehead, Mass. Page, joseph F., III, '64 396 Meadowbrook Rd.,Fair6eld,Conn. Page, Littleton D., '63 600 Montcalm Pl., St. Paul, Minn. Paine, Michael jackson, '62 300 Hammond St., Chestnut Hill, Mass. Palmer, Arthur D., '61 62 lihn St., Potsdam, N. Y. Palmer, Richard H., '61 1253 Henry Clay Ave., Ft., XVright, Ky. Palmquist, Ronald XV., '63 834 1Vindsor Rd., Glenview, Ill. Panitz, Lawrence H., '62 110 Lenox Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. Panos, A. james, '64 2160 E1 Molino Pl., San Marino, Calif. Panosian, Stanley R., '61 715 Larchmont Rd., Elmira, N. Y. Panzer, 1Villiam Norton, '64 30 11 Parsons Blvd., Flushing, N. Y Papdantonakis, C., '62 23 Georgion Stavron St., Philothei, Athens, Greece Parente, William D., '64 1616 75 St., Brooklyn 4, N. Y. Partitt, john William, '64 451 River Rd., Manchester, N. H. Park, Richard H., '64 35 Paxton Rd., W. Hartford, Conn. Parke, Nathan G., IV, '63 1Vestford Rd., Concord, Mass. Parker, jason Holloman, '64 4919 Sixteenth St., N. YV., Washington, D. C. Parker, Kim Howard, '62 75 Hubbard Dr., N. Chili, N. Y. Parker, Richard L., jr., '63 44 Arkansas Ave., Ocean City, N. Parming, Tonu, '64 473 Luhmann Dr., New Milford, N. Parry, james Stanley, '6-1 9 Colony Dr,, Summit, N. Parsky, Gerald L., '6-1 397 N. Quaker La., XV. Hartford, Conn. Parsons, Lester, III, '61 23 XV. Beechcroft Rd., Short Hills, N. Parsons, XY11l12lI1l R., '63 108 N. Brown St., Lewistown, Pa. Partnow, Michael j., '63 6423 18 Ave., Brooklyn 4, N. Y. Partridge, Robert B., jr., '62 Hq., SASCOM APO 403, N. Y., Heidelberg, Germany Pasalis, john G., '61 1280 Virginia Ave., Lakewood 7, Ohio Patrick, Stuart K., '61 1 U IVillets Rd., Old XVestbury, N. Y. Patten, Zeboim Cartter, '62 406 N. Palisades Dr., Signal Mtn., Tenn. Patterson, Alan, '63 3 Potter Park, Cambridge 38, Mass. Patterson, john Dwight, '63 2132 Henrietta Rd., Birmingham 9, Ala. Patterson, William Wise, '62 261 Smith Ave., Kingston, N. Y. Patton, Francis I... '61 Leesburg, Va. Paul, john Raymond, '61 177 Glenwood Ave., Leonia, N. Peacock, Philip D., '63 Route 2, jacksonville, Texas Peacock, William '63 2132 Stockbridge Ave., Woodside, Calif. Peard, Howard Ramsay, '64 529 Holland Ave., Fresno 4, Calif. Pearlman, Alan R., '62 1542 Asbury Pl., Pittsburgh, Pa. Pearsall, john YV., III, '62 701 Riverside Dr., Richmond 25, Va. Pearson, Fred Norman, '61 Box 104, Goshen, Conn. Pease, Charles Alan, '62 7 Hewitt Ave., White Plains, N. Y. Peck, Philip C., jr., '63 ' RFD 1, Taunton Hill Rd., Newtown, Conn. Pelen, Marc Pierre, '64 3001 Cathedral Ave., N. XV., XVashington 8, D. C. Pelton, lirnest XV., II, '61 2517 Lincoln St., livanston, Ill. Pelton, Frank ll., III, '62 2 Lenox Pl., St. Louis 8, Mo. 5 Of HULIT'S SHOES, INC. 140 NASSAU STREET Peluso, Vincent A., '61 1106 Langford St., Asbury Pk., N. Pena, Richard Charles, '64 357 St. Marks Ave., Brooklyn 38, N. Y. Pendleton, joseph S., Ill, '64 Fleetwood R. D. 2, Pa. Perko, Kenneth A., '64 3658 Tolland Rd., Shaker Hts. 22, Ohio Pensley, joel, '62 2167 81 St., Brooklyn 14, N. Y. Perry, Albert Loring, '64 3 Drum Hill Rd., Mfilton, Conn. Perry, Charles '63 14321 Valerio St., Van Nuys, Calif. Perry, Christopher L., '61 1109 Brandon La., YVi1mington 6, Del. Perry, David Long, '63 118 Hazelcroft Ave., New Castle, Pa. Perry, George D., 2nd, '62 1213 Main St., Port jefferson, N. Y. Perry, Samuel IV., III, '63 1503 Highland Ave., New Castle, Pa. Peterson, Carl XV., II, '61 310 Tuttle Pkwy., YVestlield, N. j. Peterson, David N., '63 31 Main St., Eatonton, N. Peterson, David Hill, '61 Glenmoore Farm, Hopewell, N. Peterson, Gilbert Val, '64 21 Douglas Pl., Verona, N. Peterson, Harold T., jr., '63 999 Dewitt St., Valley Stream, N. Y. Peterson, Kent Allan, '63 1011 24th St., Moline, lll, Petito, Frank A., jr., '63 89 Galbreath Dr., Princeton, N. Petraitis, lvalter F., '61 316 Quigley Ave., XVillow Grove, Pa. Petrush, john j., '61 35 N. Park Pl., Midland, Pa. Pettibone, Peter john, '61 609 Sunset Dr., lindwell, N. Y. Pettit, Paul H., jr., '63 1408 Wesley Ave., Ocean City, N. j. Pettus, Thruston IV., '63 9740 Litzsinger Rd., St. Louis 24, Mo. Petzinger, Kenneth G., '63 32 Berry Pl., Glen Rock, N. j. Pfaff, Carl Franz, '62 11442 Saticoy St., N. Hollywood, Calif. Pfaffenroth, Peter A., '63 313 Fairmount Rd., Ridgewood, N. Philips, Charles Arthur, '62 1 The Knoll, Lansdowne, Pa. Phillips, Daniel F., '63 78 E. Fourth St., Chillicothe, Ohio Phillips, Douglas S., '63 5720 Buena Vista Ave., Oakland, Calif. Phillips, George '64 42 liastern States Pkwy., Somerville, N. j, Phillips, Kenneth H., '62 Post Kennel Rd., Far Hills, N. Phillips, lValter M., jr., '61 8010 Crefeld St., Philadelphia 18, Pa. Pickels, Robert F., '63 92 Reid Ave., Port YVashington, N. Y. Pickens, Robert Louis, '61 137 Kensington St., Brooklyn 35, N. Y. Pickman, james, '63 160 IV. Shore Rd., Great Neck, N. Y. Pidot, George B., jr., '61 Piping Rock Rd., Locust Valley, N. Y. Pierro, Rudolph, '61 56 08 188th St., Flushing 65, N. Y. Pierson, Donald Eugene, '64 1017 Glenwood Rd., Vestal, N. Y. Pierson, joseph Dean, '63 33 Green Ave., Lawrenceville, N. j. Pierson, XVaIter Lee, '61 125 Hartley St., Hamden, Conn. Pindyck, Frank, '62 244 Beach 135 St., Rockaway Park 9-1, N. Y. Pinkerton, William S., jr., '61 1323 W. Minnehaha Pkwy., Minneapolis, Minn. Pinkston, john T., III, '64 532 IVestminster Ave., Swartlnnore, Pa. Apartado 3265, Panama, Rep. of Panama Pinto. Harry jr., '61 Pirnie, Bruce Roberts, '62 21 Cromwell Dr., Morristown, N. j. 12 Slaytonbush La., Utica, N. Y. Pitt, Courtnay H., jr., '62 129 Clement Rd., jenkintown, Pa. Pitts. William R., jr., '63 Pitler. Kenneth 1... '61 Plant, Carl S., '61 129 Fastoyer Rd., Charlotte 7, N. C. 10 Wadsworth Rd., New Hartford, N. Y. 313 Woodlawn Rd., Baltimore 10, Md. Plasse, Harvey Marshall, '61 I 1188 Grand Concourse, New York, N. Y. Platt, XVaddill. H., '61 300 Strathmore Rd., Lexington, Ky. Platte, lidward H., jr., '61 785 Main St., Collegeville, Pa. Platten, john Mlesley, '63 157 1Vestcott Rd., Princeton, N. j. Plaut, Peter K., '61 Poag. George Daniel. jr., -111 Harvard Ave., Claremont, Calif. '63 1230 1Vaymar Dr., Memphis, Tenn. Polansky, Stephen H., '61 26 Lexington Cir., Swampscott, Mass. Polatin, Peter Barth, '64 Poley, jeffrey M., '63 1667 Delalield Ave., Riverdale 71, N. Y. 1715 S. 91 Ave., Omaha, Nebr. Pollack, Matthew, '61 Route 2, Frederick, Md. Pontius, Howard Garrett, '61 2009 Garden Dr., Schenectatly,N.Y. Pool, Christopher F., '61 158 li. 93 St., New York, N. Y. Poole, Harry Gilbert, '62 2580 Sewell Rd., Atlanta 11, Ga. Poole, W'alter Sloan, '64 331 Hathaway La., 1Vynnewootl, Pa. Popp, Thomas G.. jr., '64 2321 Fastbrook Dr., Ft. 1Yayne 3, Ind. Porietis, Peter A., '64 1017 Oak Grove Ave., Marion, Ohio Porter, Allen David, '63 236 Ml. Scott Ave., Rahway, N. j. Porter, john L., jr., '64 1341 Forest La., N. W., 1Vashington 7, D. C. Posner, Robert Allan, '62 11-13 Fifth Ave., New York 28, N. Y. Poster, Robert L., '62 3135' johnson Ave., Riverdale 63, N. Y. Potter, john R., jr., '63 25 Point O Woods Rd., Darien, Conn. Potter, Richard Curtiss, '63 1-16 Fairmount Ave., Chatham, N. j. Potts, Richard G., '61 11 Buttonwood Rd., lissex Fells, N. j. Powell, Charles Arthur, '64 119 XVashington Ave., Wilmette, Ill. Powell, G. Bingham, jr., '63 1415 Liberty S. E., Salem, Ore. Powell, Irwin A., jr., '64 310 li. 70th St., New York, N. Y. Powers, Charles A., '64 80 Barkers Point Rd., Port YVashingtou, N. Y. Remley, john F., 111, '63 1185 Maple Ave., Lancaster, Pa. Powers, Thomas Francis, '61 Mt. Kemhle Lake, Morristown, N. j. Pragolf, George F., '63 R. D. 1, Mill Creek Rd., Hockessin, Del. Preaus, liugene R., '63 225 Academy St., Farmerville, La. Pressly, Paul Moffatt, '61 l 124 XV. Paces Ferry R, Atlanta, Ga. Prihula, Stephen '63 15 Highland Ave., Chatham, N. j. Price, Bruce D., '63 107 65th St., Virginia Beach, Va. Price. Peter Orion, '62 1911 Pine St., Philadelphia, Pa. Price, Richard F., '64 17 Nassau Dr., Metairie, La. Priest, john Richard, '64 2323 Irving Ave., S., Minneapolis 5, Minn. Prindl, Andreas R., '61 1905 Flushing Rd., Flint, Mich. Pritchard, Philip H., '61 25-149 Cedar Rd., Cleveland 24, Ohio Prochilo, Andrea G., '61 2708 YVoods Ave., Oceanside, N. Y. Proctor, john P., '64 Box 106, Kewaunee, Wis. Propst, Floyd F., 111, '64 606 Congress St., Hliunsboro, S. C. Pryzhy, Stanley john, '62 349 Conway St., Green6eld, Mass. Puchtler, IVo1fgang H., '62 Pugh, Dan YVi1lard, '63 Pugh, james lidwin, '63 Pulling, Thomas L., '61 Pullman, j. Christopher, '63 Purcell, Mlilliam H., '64 845 Circle Dr. Ii., Vestal, N. Y. 1901 Clark St., Laredo, Texas 614 Church La., Yeadon, Pa. Millbrook School, Millbrook, N. Y. 785 Mt. Pleasant Rd., Winnetka, 111. 21 Alameda Rd., XV. Roxbury 32, Mass. Purkiss, Richard Allen, '63 Point O Woods Rd., Darien, Conn. Putney, Paul Mlilliam, '62 1115 Rydal Rd.. Rydal, Pa. Pyle, Gerald jackson, jr., '64 256 W. Prospect St., Mantua, Ohio Pyle, Howard, 111, '62 300 Virginia Ave., Richmond 26, Va. Q Quaintanee, Charles, jr., '61 1302 Fourth St., La Grande, Ore. Quarles, Steven P., '64 512-1 Belinder Rd., Shawnee Miss., Kans. Queen, james B., '61 333 W. Mahoney St., Winslow, Ariz. Quick, Daniel F. B., '63 24 Haslet Ave., Princeton, N. j. 306 Quilty, john Stauller, '61 192 Lexington Ave., Freeport, N. Y. Pt Radehaugh, Avlllllllll H., jr., '61 Marshall Br. Rd., RD 2, Kennett Square, Pa. Ralun, David Alan, '62 67 Union St., Montclair, N. Raiser, Charles Victor, '62 318 S. Freeman Rd., Orchard Pk., N. Y. Rampona, Douglas M., '64 163 jefferson Rd., Princeton, N. Ramsay, 1Villiam Frank, '61 18 Brookline Blvd., Havertown, Pa. Ramsey, Frederick XV., '61 2937 Marquette St., San Diego 6, Calif. Rand. Richard N., jr., '61 Pembroke Rd., Darien. Conn. Randall, john Lear, '61 319 W. Mermaid I.a., Philadelphia, Pa. Randel, Don Michael, '62 Randlett, james lilwood, '64 11 Inner Cir., Redwood City, Calif. Randlett, Thomas lidwin, '64 11 Inner Cir., Redwood City, Calif. Randolph, john XV., '61 110 Lee Ave., Clarksburg, XV. Va. Rankin, Harley, jr., '61 225 Cheswold La., Haverford, Pa. Randolph, George A., '63 20877 'Fhornwood Dr., Olympia Fields, 111. Raubitschek, john Hugh, '64 27 YVilton St., Princeton, N. Rawson, David XVesley, '63 313 Copplcs La., Wlallingford, Pa. Ray, Robert M., Ill, '64 Ray Lumber Co., Oxford, N. C. Rayhin, james Barry, '61 1884 Oakmont Rd., S. Euclid 21, Ohio Raymond, Henry 'l'., jr., '63 2819 Lincoln St., Fvanston, Ill. Raymond, Mlilliarn A., '61 520 Third St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Raynor, joel Orson, '64 3030 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn 35, N. Y. Rea, David Kenerson, '64 1177 Murray Hill Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Rea, Samuel S., '61 5200 XYestminster Pl., Pittsburgh 32, Pa. Reale, Vincent F., '63 14 Brooks Blvd., Manville, N. Record, Charles j., '63 711 S. County I.ine Rd., Hinsdale, lll. Rediker, john Michael, '63 3142 Pine Ridge Rd., Birmingham 13, Ala. Redish. lidward Frederic, '63 230 Atlantic Ave., Lynbrook, N. Y. Redpath, john Huntly, '64 339 River View Dr., Toronto, Ontario, Canada Reed, Randolph, '62 2601 Woodley Pl. N. W., Xvashington, D. C. Reed, Robert Calvin, '61 12 judson Ave., Chautauqua, N. Y. Reeder, Henry S., jr., '61 320 E. 72nd St., New York, N. Y. Reese, David john, '62 Reese, livan C., jr., '63 Rehder, Richard S., '61 Reheis, Richard C., '61 Ninth St., Riverside, Pa. 162 12. Brown St., E. Stroudsburg, Pa. 1181 Hotz Ave., Iowa City, Iowa Pony Farms, Lamington Rd., Bedminster, N. Reichenbach, Keith A., '64 51106 Swede Rd., Norristown, Pa. Reiken, Samuel N., '62 107 Kensington Ave., jersey City, N. Reineman, Kermit Peek, '62 311 Depew Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Reiner, Albey, '62 81 Ocean Pkwy., Brooklyn 18, N. Y. Reiskind, jeremy, '62 650 Victory Blvd., Staten Island 1, N. Y. Reizenstein, Richard C., '63 V 552 N. Neville, Pittsburgh, Pa. Rendell, Robert, '62 90 Riverside Dr., New York 24, N. Y. Rentschler, Charles M., '61 1 Sutton Pl. S., New York 22, N. Y. Rettig, lidward B., '62 17921 Buttles Rd. N. E., Bothell, Xvash. Reusch, Charles F., '61 79 S. Howell Pt. Rd., Bellport, N. Y. Revelle, Randall, '63 7269 28th N. li., Seattle 15, IVash. Reynolds, Michael D., '61 P. O. Box 125, Somerset, Pa. Reynolds, Spencer j., '61 Bar Cross Ranch, Big Piney, 1Vyo. Rhea, lidward jenkins, '61 726 Xvilliamson Rd., Bryn Mawr, Pa. Rhoads, Steven liric, '61 Stockton Rd., Meadowbrook, Pa. Rhode, jeffrey Charles, '63 772 Arlington Rd., Camp Hill, Pa. Rible, Morton, '61 1221 Coldwater Canyon R., Beverly Hills, Calif. Rihner, jeffrey A., '63 158 MacKenzie St., Brooklyn 35, N. Y. Rice, Michael D., '61 3244 Aberfoyle Pl. N. XV., Hlashington, D. C. Rich, Barry Martin, '64 31-15 Menlo Rd., Shaker Hgts., Ohio Richards, David WV., '64 3 Vivian La., Closter, N. Richards, Parke Ill, '63 53 Alexander Ave., Nutley 10, N. j. .Vmu flu' ?l'I'll'0llH' mai l11'1'k011.s' and IIffI'l'?WIl1jIl1'l'I ffm grfzds your YUFZCUIIIVI' l'I'77ZIllfIl.S' az' I'HE PRINCETON UNIVERSITY STORE 40 RlCl1al'KlS1Jl1, Frank F., Ill, '61 Chestnut Rd., Sewickley, Pa. RlCl12ll'ilS0l1. jerry 1-Qdwin. '61 89 N. XY. 15111 St., Delray Bch., Fla. Rieliardson, Thonias C., '61 519 '11l'C111O111 Ave., 1Vest6eld. N. -1. Richardson 'I'l1Oll12lS F., '61 Chestnut Rd., Sewickley, Pa. Richardson Richardson , Xvllllillll F., '62 1303 Reading l1lvd.,YVyo111isSi11g, Pa. XVillia1n P., '61 135 23rd Ave., Seaside Park, N. Riches, LCUll1lI'l1 W., '61 119 Ha111ps11ire Ave., Audiibon 6, N. gl. Ridder, Lauranee M., '62 801 Singing XN'ood Dr., Arcadia, Calif. Riddle, George H. N., '62 S0 liast End Ave., New York 28, N. Y. RKl1JlI1SOI1, YVi1lia111 P., jr., '61 1015 Fitler St., Pl1iladelphia 11, Pa. Robiso11, Andrew C., jr., '62 812 1Vl1ispering La., Falls Church, Va. Robiso11, Sa111ue1 C., '61 531 Alden Ave., 1Vestfie1d, N. Roecas, George john, '63 -116 Prospect St., Fast Orange, N. J. Rochberg, Richard H., '61 2202 XV. Rogers Ave., Baltimore 9, Md. Rockenbach, -12111105 L., '61 1138 Girard Rd., Pittsburgh 27, Pa. Rode, Henrv J., 11, '61 River Rd., Scarborough, N. Y. Rode, john Stanton, '61 River Rd., Scarborough, N. Y. Rogers, Daniel Carl, '62 4501 Pasadena Ave., Long Beach, Calif. Rogers, Richard C., '63 16 C11estn11t St., Fair Haven, N. Rol1le11, Thonias Pavne, '62 671 Lincol11 Ave., Winnetka, Ill. Rol1i11so11, Simeon H., 111, '61 Llewellyn Park, XV. Orange, N. R0lll2111, Richard Ralpl1, '62 Serninary Rd., Bedford, N. Y. Romney, Gordo11 YV., '63 5009 V11l111lJCl61VOlf Dr., lil Paso, Tex. Ridgley, 11110111115 12., '62 108 Wlooderest Rd., NYZIYIIC, Pa. Ridgwav, Charles P.. '63 250 1'IT11'lSl101'1l Dr., Short Hills, N. -1. Rieber. SlCPllCI1 1.., '62 R. F. D. 1. Pound Ridge, N. Y. Riclfel, Alexis 11llPOl11, '63 62 Parkwood Rd., Manhasset, N. Y. Rie111, john M'ade, '62 691 N1C11lO1' Rd., Akron 3, Ohio Rife, john Michael, '63 911 12, Rittenhouse St., Pliiladelpliia 38, Pa. Rifkin, Daniel li., '62 58 Sillllllfllll Dr., '111'CI1lO11, N. Riggs, Richard C.. jr., '61 Owings Mills, Md. Riley, Gregory -lohn, '63 232 Seneca Pkwv., Rochester 13. N. Y. Riley, Yvillllllll 'l'., '63 690 Rroadwav, Redwood City. Calif. Ringel, Rieliard Henrv, '62 7828 16111 St. N. YV., xY21Sl1ll1glOI1 12. D. C. Roper, XVil1ian1 YV., III, '61 7721 Saint NI21l'1111S La., Pliiladelphia, Pa. Rorer, Gerald B., '61 8100 Lincoln Dr., Philadelphia 18, Pa. Rosh orough, Brian A., '62 3925 Ortega Blvd., jacksonville, Fla. Rose, Burton David, '63 162 21 Powells Cove Blvd., Beechhurst, N. Y. Rose, Bvron Alfred, '63 5713 1Vashington Ave., Evansville, Ind. Ringo, 111111111 j.. 164 35116 Turkevfoot Rd., rm-1 11111-11611, Ky. RW' 1ff1WH1'f1 11-1 '01 19 SPWCC 51-1 lminffeef M1159 Riplev. 1111111.11-11 R. Lee, 'rn 1583 cami 1.a., wicimzi Falls, rex. ROSS, Nfflfk 11110111 61 21 11011111016 F011-1 1 H1'01111e- N- ,1- Rippin, Charles, '61 521 North St., Greenwich, flOlll1. Rose, 11131510 Bclmcttf '61 A5 11 Elm St-1 Lum, 01110 Ripps, .lay Carl. '63 2856 Brownlee, Col11111b11s, Ohio ROSCH, Mlchacl Norman, '62 l Ritchie, 112111101 G., '61 736 Goodrich Ave., St. Paul, Minn. 111 Gf 111111111125 AW-1 .l11111H1Ca 35, N- Y- Ri,-inusv pdwmd M., -63 Rosenberg, Donald Karl, '61 172 Kenilworth Dr., Akron 13, Ohio R. F. D. 3, Harness Creek R., Annapolis, Md. Rose11berg, 1i111i1e, '61 3151 Giles Pl., New York, N. Y. Riuuti. Ricliard -I., '61 31 High St., jersey Citv, N. Al. Rosenberg, Peter J., '61 111 .Xradeniv St., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Roberts, Cliarles P., '61 Rising Hopes, XV. CO1ll1'l1lllZl, S. C. Rosennian, joel, '63 21 Midla11d St., Huntington, N. Y. Roberts, Charles XV., '61 Rose11ll1al,Jz11nes Leon, '63 110 Chapel Rd., lilkins Park 17, Pa. 1-123 fil'l'C111X'OOCl Dr., Des Moi11es 12, Iowa Rosing, Douglas Rov, '63 15 11611111111 Ave., Buffalo 16, N. Y. Roberts, liric' XVIIITCII, '61 RK7Sl1C1', Richard, '62 2310 Ocean Pkwv., Brooklvn 23, N. Y. 169 Beach 131 St., New York 91. N. Y. Ross. Christopher yy, S., '54 Roberts, john Harold, '62 117 li. South St., Corrv, Pa. Dept. of glam CONAAKRY, vvnshington 25, D, C. Roberts. Ralph S., '61 6100 31st Pl. N. XV., Nv2lSl1111gl011 15. D. C, ROSS, philip S., 161 255 Frances gl., Tcaneck, N. Roberts' 5101111011 W., '61, 1 U 9 Ross, Yan Michael, '61 sun Hollow Ra., 1.emm0n, N. J. R I x H C '31c 'CC '00d Dr UCS Homes 'Um' Ross111a11, Ronald li,, '61 1711 Rilte1111ouse Sq., Philadelphia 3,Pa. o mertson, X 'i 1:1111 L., '6 . . .., . , , - 106 KC11ll1VO1'Il1 Apts., Philadelphia 111, Pa. Emil' 'lfisiiya gil gi Iii, IIS? T lf'5 1:Lg jg' Robins, Marlin lidward, '61 511 I11wood Rd., Ll1li1C11, N. 1. 0' H IP A ' Q S 0 ' OS ' ac ' K ' . , . , . , ', Roth, Stephen Harold, 61 295A Stevens Ave., lersev Citv 5, N. ROIJIDS, 11101112lS. III, 61 111 11C1'liSl11l'C Pl., 1.llWl'Cl1L'C,11.l.,lN. Y , ' ' ' . , . . , . . Rothrock, David A., III, '61 1311 Colton Rd., Gladwyne, Pa. RODIIISOII, Cabell B., 63 8319 10111 Sl., Sl1YC1' Spring, Md. , , . , . Rothseliild, Elliot I., '61 1618 16 Ave., Columbus, Ga. Robinson, George S., 61 Q ' , Qtrs. 1. Naval Sliipvard, 1,01'1S1110ll1l1, Ya. R011f1C1111S11, Gcolge Sw 11-1 63 W I Q . Robinson, jznnes Ford, '62 135 Guernsev Rd., sWIl1'll1111Ol'C, Pa. 6312 1111511125102 Aw SL' LOUIS D' Mo' Robinson, Kem n.m,1.en, .63 Rough, YVllll2l111 H., '61 2501 Ft. Scott Dr., Arlington, Va. 1001 li. Oxford l.a., Englewood. Colo. Rouse, DCIIIOII Hayden, '63 R. D. 1, Flemington, N. Robinson, Xvlllllllll M., '63 830 Amberson Ave., Pittsl1u1'g11, Pa. Royall, Richard Rovster, '63 827 Kunlman Rd., Houston 24, Tex. WHERE COOKING IS AN ART AND DINING A PLEASURE SCHRAFFTS Restaurants New York City WPSlCh16Sf6f.' Eastehester, White Plains New Boehelle and County Airport Boston Syracuse Philadelphia Newark Denver, Pa. Waldorf and Laurel, Md. Durham and High Point, N. C. Myrtle Beach, S. C. Palm Beach, Florida Compliments of HOUGHTON REAL ESTATE 170 Nassau Street Royster, Michael R., '64 1215 li. Wayne St., N., South Bend, Ind. Rubincam, Paul P., Jr., '61 917 Grandview Dr., S. E., Albuquerque, N. M. Rudell, William B., '61 1040 E. Elmwood Ave., Burbank, Calif. Rudolph, George C., '63 199 Washington Ave., Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. Rube, William James, Jr., '61 Alexandria, Va. Rukeyser, William S., '61 150 W. Pinebrook Dr., New Rochelle, N. Y. Rulon, Miller S., III, '61 2515 Scott St., San Francisco, Calif. Runkle, Ralph Layton, '61 412 N. lVest 39, Oklahoma City 18, Okla. Runne, Herbert Rein, '61 375 Ocean Ave., Lakewood, N. J. Runyan, Damon Richard, '61 6930 YV. 16th Ave., Lakewood, Colo. Rupp, George Eric, '61 2 Outlook Dr., Mountainside, N. J. Rush, Augustus J., Jr., '61 373 Hartshorn Dr., Short Hills, N. J. Russek, Franklin D., '61 7321 Cornell, University City, Mo. Russell, Homer B., Jr., '61 3301 Broadway, Great Bend, Kans. Russell, Joseph D., '64 21 Mountainside Dr., Morristown, N. J. Russell, Roger Vernon, '61 265 N. -1th St., Lewistown, N. Y. Rutherford, Guy G., Jr., '62 1120 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. Rutherford, John, Jr., '62 30 Broad St., New York, N. Y. Rutherford, lVinthrop, Jr., '61 1220 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Ryland, Robert B., '61 Forest Hills, Wheeling, W. Va. Ryter, Stephen Roy, '61 11 Elmwood Rd., New Haven, Conn. S St. John, Peter, '63 Barlow School, Amenia, N. Y. Sachner, Stephen P., '61 118 Deer Hill Ave., Danbury, Conn. Sachs, Peter Norman, '63 165 E. 66 St., New York 21, N. Y. Sachs, Roger Myles, '61 40 YV. 86th St., New York, N. Y. Sagendorph, Frank E., IV, '61 225 Elbow La., Haverford, Pa. Sailey, Jay, '61 2161 Liberty St., Trenton 9, N. J. Salamon, Lester Milton, '64 3469 Beechwood Blvd., Pittsburgh 17, Pa. Sampson, Kenneth B., '63 227 Prospect St., Brockton, Mass. Sampson, Milo B., Jr., '62 1116 Eastside Dr., Bloomington, Ind. Sanborn, John Robertson, '63 57 College Rd. IV., Princeton, N. J. Sands, John Eliot, '62 871 Carroll St., Brooklyn 15, N. Y. Sandstedt, John Philip, '62 69 Lyninouth Rd., Malverne, N. Y. Sanford, Louis H., '63 130 N. Virginia Lee Rd., Columbus, Ohio Sanger, Patil lVeldon, Jr., '61 1813 Providence Rd., Charlotte, N. C. Sansone, Thomas C., '61 152 WV. Maple Ave., Bound Brook, N. J. Santamaria, Phillip H., '62 5301 Memorial Dr., Houston 7, Tex. Sarnecki, Jan Charles, '62 1310 E. Como Blvd., St. Patil 17, Minn. Sanrel, Paul Louis, '61 152 81 St., New York, N. Y. Scanlon, Thomas M., Jr., '62 9570 Copley Dr., RR 14, Indianapolis, Ind. Scarff, Tiinothy B., '61 761 XY. 231 St., New York, N. Y. Scasserra, Kenneth C., '61 Fairacres, R. F. D. 1, Princeton, N. Schaberg, Kevin Bradley, '62 10 Kingsbury Pl., St. Louis, Mo. Schaefer, Carl Barry, '61 577 Schuyler Way, Union, N. J. Schaefer, Steven H., '61 707 N. Doheny Dr., Beverly Hills, Calif. Schaeffer, David, '62 3410 E. 57th St., New York, N. Y. Schainker, Stanley A., '63 7333 Balson St., 1Tniversity City, Mo. Schanz, Anton E., '63 338 Cambridge Ave., Westbury, N. Y. Scharf, Michael Jay, '61 Middle Neck Rd., Sands Point, N. Y. Schaye, lidward Z., '61 156 XV. 86 St., New York, N. Y. Scheele, George A., lll, '61 628 N. Oakland St., Arlington, Va. Scheinhorn, David J., '63 120 E. Loines Ave., Merrick, N. Y. Schevitz, Jeffrey M., '62 124 Thomas Dr., AVll11lll1gt011, Del. Schieren, Carl V., Jr., '62 Burnt Mills Rd., Pluckemin, N. Schirn, Robert, '63 212 S. Alrnont Dr., Beverly Hills, Calif. Schmick, lVilliain F., 111, '63 315 Overhill Rd., Baltimore 10, Md. Schmidt, Nowara W. W., '63 1110 39th St. N. li., Canton, Ohio Schmidt, Thomas Mellon, '62 1060 Highmont Rd., Pittsburgh 32, Pa. Schoch, David I.., '61 119 Yvashington Ave., Oil City, Pa. Schoellkopf, David F., '62 223 Peach Tree La., Delanco, J. Schoenfeld, Lawrence V., '63 X155 Beach 133 St., Rockaway Beach 91, N. Y. Schomann, Charles F., 111, '64 132 Othoridge Rd., Lutherville, Md. Schoolwerth, Anton C., '63 693 Park Blvd., Glen Ellyn, Ill. Schott, Newton Beach, Jr., '6-1 15 Church St., Rockaway, N. Schragger, Stephen R., '61 21 Hilvista Blvd., Trenton, N. Schrauth, Edward I.., 111, '63 Sage Hill La., Menands, N. Y. Schroeder, Peter Saxton, '62 54 Tepee Rd., Louisville 7, Ky. Schroeder, lValter G., '61 1010 YV. 110 St., Cleveland 35, Ohio Schulhofer, Stephen J., '61 10 Arbor La., Merrick, N. Y. Schulz, John Ernst, '61 730 Lake Ave., lVilmette, 111. Schuman, Barry R., '63 8-1 Highland Ave., Binghamton, N. Y. Schwartz, Arthur NV., '63 Muttontown Rd., Syosset, N. Y. Schwartz, John M., '61 43 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. Schwartz, Michael S., '61 131 Esplanade Dr., Mount Vernon, N. Y. Schwartz, Stephen S., '62 98 Gruimnan Ave., Newark, N. J. Schwartzman, lVilliam A., '61 70 E. 96 St., New York, N. Y. Schwedes, Jeffrey '1'., '61 1495 Myron St., Schenectady, N. Y. Schweikert, John F., Jr., '62 310 Station Ave., North Hills, Pa. Schweizer, Robert D., '61 60 North Ave., Elizabeth, N. Schwendler, William 'l'., '62 Merritt Rd., Farmingdale, L. I., N. Y. Schwesig, Norman I.ee, '61 1215 Gilbert Ave., Rock Hill 19, Mo. Scoltock, Hugh I.ionel, '63 2501 Raymond Dr., Des Moines 10, Iowa Scott, Craig Hamilton, '62 31 lVoodbine Ave., Merrick, N. Y. Scott, Hugh Chisholin, '61 634 Charles River St., XVel1esley, Mass. Scott, James Joseph, '61 1 Lorainn Rd., Warren Tws., Plainfield, N. J. Scott, Richard S., '61 2503 Mt. Royal Blvd., Glenshaw, Pa. Scribner, Charles 'l'., '62 40 lVall St., New York, N. Y. Scudder, Charles D., 111, '63 8500 Bayou lVay, Louisville, Ky. Scudder, Kenneth li., '63 5838 N. Shore Dr., Milwaukee 17, lVis. Sculli, John, '62 916 Jackson St., Philadelphia, Pa. Seaman, VVilliam Ewing, '64 835 lVestlawn, E. Lansing, Mich. Sebastian, Richard Lee, '61 622 S. 22nd Ave., Yakima, lVash. Sebring, Heatly Dulles, '62 257 Broughton La., Villa Nova, Pa. Seckel, lVilliam P., '63 5014 Prospect Rd., Peoria Hgts., Ill. Seeberg, Steven David, '62 289 Beard Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Seely, Contee Thompson, '61 1-100 Dexter St., N. XV., Washington 7, D. C. Segal, Samuel Robert, '61 650 Queen Anne Rd., Teaneck, N. J. Segura, Joseph YV., '61 510 Tiffany La., Louisville, Ky. Seligman, Martin E. P., '64 15 S. Main Ave., Albany, N. Y. Selwood, Pierce Taylor, '61 727 Monticello St., Evanston, Ill. Sensabaugh, George F., Jr., '63 1350 Byron St., Palo Alto, Calif. Serafini, Joseph I.., '61 107 Forbes Hill Rd., Quincy, Mass. Sessa, Joseph, '61 8502 Ridge Blvd., Brooklyn 9, N. Y. Sethness, Charles Olin, '63 881 Private Rd., lVinnetka, Ill. Sewall, Murphy Andrews, '61 Box 617, Perry Point, Md. Sexton, Dorrance, Jr., '63 Quarry Hill, Lakeville, Conn. Shakelford, Mark VV., '63 902 S. Main St., Algonquin, Ill. Shambaugh, James P., Jr., '61 189 Bay Ave., Huntington, N. Y. Shane, Jelfrey Neil, '62 573 lVoodheld Rd., YV. Hempstead, N. Y. Shanley, Frank Sheppard, '64 1523 Lincoln St., Evanston, Ill. Shapiro, Earl W., '61 1540 Lake Shore Dr., Chicago, Ill. Shapiro, Marvin Barry, '64 35 Mount Hood Rd., Brighton, Mass. Sharer, Robert White, '64 1124 Linden Ave., Oak Park, Ill. Shattuck, Jerry Hill, '61 Box 238, Clinton, Tenn. Shaughnessy, Stanley, '61 125 Palmer Ave., N. Tarreytown, N. Y. Sheehan, Frederick H., '61 401 Mockingbird Val. Rd., Louisville, Ky. Sheldon, lVylie Rice, '62 1317 Birch St., Denver 20, Colo. Shenk, Allen K., Jr., '62 4225 YV. 38th St., Erie, Pa. Shenk, Charles C., II, '64 4222 XV. Lake Rd., Erie, Pa. Sherman, James G., '63 Box 218 Dunham Rd., M'ayne, Ill. Shepherd, Henry L., Jr., '63 97 Elm St., Hartford, Conn. Sheppard, Edward James, '63 262 Regent St., Glen Ellyn, Ill. Sherbrooke, Ross E., '61 278 Jerusalem Rd., Cohasset, Mass. Sherman, Roger M., '61 1150 N. 12th Ave., Pensacola, Fla. Sherman, lVilliam D., '61 161 Oak Knoll Dr., San Anselmo, Calif. Sherr, Jonathan Harry, '64 249 Ridge Ave., Evanston, lll. Sherwood, John M., '64 Baudette, Minn. Shields, Lawrence W., '61 722 Beck Rd., Far Rockaway, N. Y. Shindle, Richard Dale, '63 415 Walnut St., lVaynesboro, Pa. Shipman, Ronald XV., '61 223 S. Robinson Ave., Pen Argyl, Pa. Shin, Nen Fai, '61 923 E. Block Healthy Vil., Tsat Tse Mui, Hong Kong Shoflner, George R., Jr., '64 3649 Iskagna Dr., Knoxville, Tenn. Sholz, Robert T., '61 118 Brewster Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. Shope, Robert Kinard, '61 27 Circle Pl., Camp Hill, Pa. Shorter, Charles Allen, '62 209 Magnolia Rd., Pemberton, N. J. Shrake, Andrew F., '64 12514 Brackland Ave., Cleveland, Ohio Shultz, Paul T., 3rd, '62 Box 485, Greene, N. Y. Shults, Eric, '63 427 Seneca Rd., Hornell, N. Y. Siegel, John Tyler, '61 Box 398 Route 2, Richmond, Ya. Siegel, Robert C., '62 600 Ford Ave., Kingston, Pa. Siegfried, David C., '64 29 Hillcrest Rd., Madison, N. J. Siegler, Mark, '63 69 39 Yellowstone Blvd., Forest Hills, 75, N. Y. Silber, Cornelius A., '61 505 Linwood Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Silins, lnts Mintauts, '64 6808 6th St., N. XV., Washington, D. C. Silleck, Sidney B., Ill, '62 66 Drake Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. Silman, Eric James, '62 44 Pond Rd., Great Neck, N. Y. Silverglate, Harvey A., '64 35 Essex Ct., Maywood, N. J. Simmers, lVilliam M., '61 62 Buckingham St., Cambridge 38, Mass. Simmons, Huston T., '61 2915 41th St., N. XV., lVashington 16, D. C. Simmons, Thomas Park, '63 318 Poplar St., Cincinnati 15, Ohio Simon, Barry Philip, '61 695 Palmer Ave., Teaneck, N. Simon, John Spier, '63 New Canaan Ave., Norwalk, Conn. Simpson, Larry Philip, '62 1043 E. Vernon Rd., Philadelphia 50, Pa. Sincerbeaux, Richard M., '64 15 Montview Ave., Short Hills, N. Singer, Thomas E. L., '64 31 Crestwood Dr., Clayton 5, Mo. Singmaster, Lawrence G., '64 272 Cheswold La., Haverford, Pa. Siock, Paul Albert, Jr., '64 48 N. 14th St., Kenilworth, N. J. Skeel, James Arthur, '63 4514 Erie Ave., Cincinnati 27, Ohio Skey, Wilfred Gerald, '64 Cedar Rd., IVilton, Conn. Skillman, Richard J., '63 221 Walnut Ave., Wayne, Pa. Skoning, Gerald D., '64 220 N. Bennett St., Geneva, Ill. Skoultchi, Arthur Ira, '62 43 Millington St., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Slivinsky, Charles R., '63 119 S. Morris St., St. Clair, Pa. Sloan, Albert V., III, '62 728 Great Springs Rd., Bryn Mawr, Pa. Sloan David Walker, '63 584 IVest Ave., Sewaren, N. J. Sloan Hugh W'., Jr., '63 1 Gracie Terr., New York 28, N. Y. Sloan, Laurence T., '64 3447 Washington Blvd., Indianapolis 5, Ind. Sloan lVilliam M., Jr., '64 268 Angell St., Providence, R. I. a 4 if 'bfi , vw 1' ' tw- WINE 81 GAME SHOP 6 Nassau Street Free Delivery Tel. WA 4-2468 Renfal-Glassware-Sale Sloane, Charles O., III, '64 Sloboda, John Edward, '64 Slocombe, lValter B., '63 500 Old Post Rd., Fairfield, Conn. 13 Edgewood Rd., Linden, N. 1411 Henry St., Ann Arbor, Mich. Slossberg, Barry S., '64 74 Tumblebrook La., XV. Hartford, Conn. Slotta, Peter Luiz, '64 5740 S. YV. 52 Terr., Miami 55, Fla. Small, James F., '61 2518 Saratoga Dr., Louisville, Ky. Smalley, Bion L., Jr., '61 8940 S. Bell Ave., Chicago, Ill. Smathers, John T., '64 Senate Oflice Bldg., Mfashington, D. C. Smidt Jon Kristian, '64 Folger Shakespeare Lib., lVashington 3, D. C. Smith, Arthur C., III, '61 8237 New Second St., Elkins Park 17, Pa. Smith Barrie Tate, '63 505 Nichols Rd., Pittsburgh 37, Pa. Smith, David H., Jr., '61 404 66 St., New York, N. Y. Smith, Ernest B., '61 203 Third Ave., Haddon Heights, N. J. Smith, Frank D., Jr., '63 79 Cassville Rd., Cartersville, Ga. Smith, Frederic M., '62 522 N. Crescent Dr., Beverly Hills, Calif. Smith, Gaylord Edwin, '61 Box 576, La Porte, Texas Smith, Geoffrey N., '61 23500 Stanford Rd., Shaker Hts 22, Ohio Smith 1 Jolm F., Jr., '63 XV. Clinton Ave., Irvington on Hudson, N. Y. Smith, Jolm Lewis, '63 2424 Tracy Pl., N. W., Washington 8, D. C. Smith, Kenneth Bradley, '62 2223 Cranford Rd., Durham, N. C. Smith, Leland Lamond, '64 533 Lombardy Rd., Drexel Hill, Pa. Smith, McKamy, '61 3300 Beverly Dr., Dallas 5, Texas Smith, Miller, Henry H., '64 R. F. D. 1, Mt. Kisco, N. Y. Smith, Nelson Charles, '62 830 S. Renaud Rd., Grosse Pte. Woods 36, Mich. Smith, Owen Chabot, '63 Lords Highway, Mfeston, Conn. Smith, Peter D., '62 3514 Rodman St., N. W., Mfashington 8, D. C. Smith, Ralph C., '63 Lyons Plains Rd., IVeston, Conn. Smith, Richard C., '62 Lords Highway, YVeston, Conn. Smith, Robert A. K., Jr., '62 6212 Waterman St., St. Louis, Mo. Smith, Ronald K., '64 1696 Charon Rd., Jacksonville 5, Fla. Smith, Sheldon Leroy, '64 110 Hanshaw Rd., Ithaca, N. Y. Smith, Stuart H., Jr., '63 1500 Montgomery Ave., Rosemont, Pa. Smith, Thomas Scott, '63 11616 Joan Dr., Pittsburgh 35, Pa. Smith, Tom E., Jr., '64 3300 Beverly Dr., Dallas 5, Texas Smith, Trent Wynn, '63 46 N. Parkview, Columbus 9, Ohio Smith, Turner T., '62 Haylnarker, Va. Smith, XVard Tolbert, '61 58 Haddon Park, Red Bank, N. J. Smith, Ivarren Drew, '64 933 Stelle Ave., Plainfield, N. J. Smith, lVestcott Hoge, '64 Quarters 174, March AFB, Calif. Smith, YVilliam R., Jr., '64 332 New Market St., Salem, N. J. Smith, William T., III, '64 70 Fieldstone Dr., Basking Ridge, N. J. Smith, William WV., Jr., '64 627 Kingston Rd., Princeton, N. Snedeker, Robert Dunbar, '64 52 Kensington Rd., Garden City, N. Y. Snider, Mark, '62 531 Valancia Ave., Coral Gables, Fla. Snively, Thomas C., II, '63 501 Rosedale Dr., Pottstown, Pa. Snodgrass, Francis R., '61 3909 Cloverhill Rd., Baltimore 18. Md. Snow, Richard Lorenzo, '61 11 Hooker Dr., XV. Hartford 7, Conn. Snow, Stephen L., '63 27 Treeborough Dr., YV. Hartford, Conn. Snyder, Charles J., Jr., '61 2159 Stabler Rd., Akron 13, Ohio Snyder, Robert B., '64 328 Glascow St., Kitchener, Ont., Canada Soare, Robert I., '63 215 Flm Ave., Hackensack, N. J. Sobel, Heywood, '63 1163 1Vood1and Ave., Plainheld, N. Soll, Larry Jay, '61 7105 Shaftesbury, University City, Mo. Somers, Raymond Landis, '6-1 R. D. 1, Hellertown, Pa. Somers, Xllillard C., '61 2 Park St., Tenally, N. Sonnenberg, Stephen M., '61 Post Office Box 177, Shenorock, N. Y. Spalding, Michael C., '63 5 Central Ave., Cranford, N. Spangenberg, Donald, Jr., '61 5101 Montview, Denver 7, Colo. Sparling, James Rand, '63 Scott Rd., Barrington, 111. Speir, David H., '62 Stony Hill Rd., N. Chatham, Mass. Spitz, Harlan, '61 80 64 Surrey Pl., Jamaica 32, N. Y. Sprague, Joseph T., '62 1523 XVood Ave., Colorado Springs, Colo. Springer, 1Villiam L., 11, '64 R.F.D. 1, Centre Meeting, XVi1rnington, Del. Springs, Richard A., 111, '61 Crow Hill Rd., Mt. Kisco, N. Y. Spurgeon, lidward D., '61 35 Linwood Ave., Newton, N. Stratford, Blakeney, '64 Ridge Rd., Martinsville, N. Stafford, Robert M., '63 133 E. Mariposa, Phoenix, Ariz. Stanger, Robert Allen, '61 -109 Casino Ave., Cranford, N. J. Stanley, David H., '64 Route 4, Box 363, Vienna, Va. Stanley, Steven M., '63 Rogers Rd., Gates Mills, Ohio Stapleton, David XV., '64 R. R. 1, Schererville, Ind. Stark, 1Valter A., Jr., '62 Post Office Box 1071, Las Vegas, N. M. Starkey, James A., Jr., '61 N. Orchard Rd., Vineland, N. J. Staroscik, Rudolf N., '61 1027 S. Ithan St., Philadelphia 43, Pa. Stasiuk, Demetrius, '63 112 Nesbit Terr., Irvington, N. J. Staum, Martin Sheldon, '61 545 Maple Ave., Woodbridge, N. J. J. E. CALDWELL and CO. Jewelers 0 Silversmiths 0 Stationers Makers of Upper Class Club Charms and Jewelry INSIGNIA 0 TROPHIES 0 AWARDS Engagement and Wedding Rings Engraved Stationery WEDDING GIFTS USHERS' GIFTS Illustrated brochures sent upon request Chestnut and Juniper Streets Philadelphia 7, Pennsylvania Haverford, Pa. Wilmington, Del. Stauller, John Quinn, '62 207 Cherry St., Galax, Va. Stebbing, David Harvey, '61 2220 30th St., S. E., Itlashington 20, D. C. Steever, Andrew D., '63 70 Benjamin St., Old Greenwich, Conn. Steinberg, Alfred David, '62 70 Dickerson Pl., Great Neck, N. Y. Steiner, David Braun, '61 1016 Bellefontaine Ave., Lima, Ohio Steiner, John F., Jr., '61 3338 S. Perry St., Montgomery, Ala. Stender, J. Douglas, '61 21 Fair Haven Rd., Fair Haven, N. J. Stephens, Norman B., '61 27 Concord Dr., Livingston, N. Stephenson, Charles B., '62 1209 S. Jellerson Ave., Sioux Falls, S. D. Sterrett, Malcolm M. B., '64 115 Main St., Southport, Conn. Stevens, Charles R., '63 778 Mountain Ave., Springfield, N. J. Stevens, James Harris, '61 1222 IV. Savings Fund Bldg., Philadelphia 7, Pa. Stevenson, F. W., Jr., '64 303 Stono Dr., Charleston 43, S. C. Stevenson, Justin J., '63 8855 Camargo Club Dr., Cincinnati 43, Ohio Stewart, Charles R., II, '63 31 Banbury La., Pittsburgh 2, Pa. Stewart, Daniel N., III, '63 925 4th Ave. Dr., N. WV., Hickory, N. C. Stewart, Dennis Dull, '62 51 66th St., New York 21, N. Y. Stewart, Guy K., Jr., '62 Apartado 888, Caracas, Venezuela Stewart, James G., Jr., '61 75 Belknap Beach, Prospect, Ky. Stiefbold, Neil C., '64 Rl., 1, Olsen La., Naperville, Ill. Stiller, John Gilman, '62 5 IV. Conron Ave., Danville, 111. Stiles, Steven Peter, '61 385 Argyle Rd., Brooklyn 18, N. Y. Stirling, James Paulman, '63 825 Boal Pkwy., XVinnetka, Ill. Stith, John S., '61 3135 Oak La., Cincinnati 9, Ohio Stock, Robert B., '62 Stockard, James G., Jr., '64 826 Fordham Ave., Pittsburgh 26, Pa. 5920 N. Xvashington Blvd., Arlington 5, Va. Stoel, Thomas B., Jr., '62 11111 S. WV. Radcliffe Rd., Portland, Ore. Stoneback, John Page, '63 1 111 Langhorne Ave., Bethlehem, Pa. ' ' ' 'rel Stonehill, Mich. H., '61 901 Grant Ave., Plainiield, N. J. Storm, Derek Walton, '63 Michigan Rd., New Canaan, Conn. Stossel, Thomas Peter, '63 1012 Greenwood Ave., Wilmette, Ill. Stover, David Frank, '62 122-'1 Lafayette Rd., Gladwyne, Pa. Strandberg, Don Alden, '64 1811 Robin Crest La., S., Glenview, Ill. Strasburger Arthur K., '61 3311 Bancroft Rd., Baltimore 15, Md. Stratton, David Evans, '63 8 Chenango St., Oxford, N. Y. Straub, Thomas Stuart, '63 4061 Richland Ave., Louisville 7, Ky. Straus, Oscar S., III, '64 228 Ii. 62 St., New York City, N. Y. Street, James Bryan, '64 1503 Guilford La., Oklahoma City, Okla. Streicker, John H., '64 7 Plaza St., Brooklyn 17, N. Y. Strother, John F., '61 215 XV. Upper Ferry Rd., W. Trenton, N. J. Strow, Pete Holland, '63 1975 Lasalle St., Ottawa, 111. Stuart, James M., '63 Conway Rd., Lake Forest, Ill. Stuart, Robert D., '61 Conway Rd., Lake Forest, lll. Stubbs, John T., '63 3837 W. 64th St., Shawnee Mission, Mo. Stubbs, William King, Jr., '63 2105 Island Dr., Monroe, La. Studdiford, Linton H., '63 15 Ludlow Dr., Chappaqua, N. Y. Sturla, Robert Albert, '62 1812 Old Gulph Rd., Villanova, Pa. Suid, Kenneth Jay, '62 20013 Scottsdale Blvd., Shaker Hts. 22, Ohio Sullivan Sullivan Sullivan Austin P., Jr., '63 1534 32nd St., N. YV., XVashington 7, D. C. Daniel F., '63 132 Snowden La., Princeton, N. J. Dermod Oliver, '62 151 li. 89th St., New York 28, N. Y. Sullivan Jeremiah M., '61 2 Camp Comfort Ave., Old Orchard Beach, Me. Sullivan, John L., '61 2 Camp Comfort Ave., Old Orchard Beach, Me. Sumner, Alanson James, '62 2689 Claythorne Rd., Shaker Hts. 22, Ohio Supplee, Andrew Righter, '61 Matson Ford Rd., Radnor, Pa. Surkin, Elliot M., '61 7961 Oak Hill Dr., Cheltenham, Pa. Sussman, Lewis A., '63 27 Maple Ave., Cedarhurst, N. Y. Sutherland, Alexander C., '62 U.S. Fmbassy, Phnom Phen, Cambodia , l Swain, XVilliam M., Jr., '62 814 Manalawna Ave., Philadelphia 28, Pa. Swan, Donald Howard, '61 57 Ardmore St., Hamden, Conn. Swan, Oscar lidward, 111, '64 151 Utah, Casper, 1Vyo. Swartz, Marvin, '63 27 Valentine Rd., Framingham, Mass. Sweet, Anthony H., '61 6912 Ayr Lane, Bethesda 14, Md. Swenson, Alvin A., Ill, '64 1360 Hampton Rd., Rydal, Pa. Swerchowsky, Vladimir, '63 3590 Higley Rd., Rocky River 16,0hio Swift, Charles M.. Jr., '62 60 Front St., lixeter, N. H. Swigart, lingerie Robison, '62 Spring Hill La., Cincinnati, Ohio Swigert, Charles. '61 811 Monticello Pl., livanston, 111. Swinburn, Charles, '63 20-1 Yorkshire La., Fairless Hills, Pa. Swire, James Bennett, '63 86 415 Santiago St., Holliswood 23, N. Y. Sykes, Henry Andrew, '61 Bartlett Hall, Dartmouth, Hanover, N. H. Sylvester, Edward J., '61 130 Atlantic St., Hackensack, N. Sylvester, Howard C., Jr., '61 21100 Allwood Rd., Westfield, N. J. Symington, A. Lloyd, Jr., '64 3030 Chain Bridge Rd., N., Hlashington 16, D. C. Szabo, Frank, Jr., '61 690 lidinburg Rd., Trenton 9, N. Szigethy, Zoltan, '61 58 Main St., XN'harton, N. Taft, Timothy Ned, '61 2000 Rieth Terr, Kirkwood, Mo. Taliaferro, George W., '61 208 Franklin St., Harrisonburg, Ya T amkin, Jeffrey Herter, '64 636 Hudson Ave., Los Angeles 5, Calif. Tamsky, Maurice Kenneth, '61 7-140 Cornell, lfniversily City 5, Mo. Tape, YValter Richard, '62 High Path Belle Terre., Port Jellcrson, N. Y. Tarana, Peter Daniel, '61 1030 Community Rd., Schenectady, N. Y. Tanbe, Carl A., '61 R. F. D. 1, Katonah, N. Y. 'l iylor, Gary N., '61 526 Oakridge Ave., N. Plainfield, N. J. Taylor, George XY., '61 2316 F. Newberry Blvd., Milwaukee 11, 1Vis. Taylor, Henry A. L., '62 3101 Herschel St., Jacksonville 5, Fla. Taylor, Lane, Jr., '61 Cherry La., Miquon. Pa. Taylor, Randolph XV., '61 117 07 Curzon Rd., New York 15, N. Y. Taylor, Robert Lee, ll, '63 81 Monroe St., Memphis, Tenn. Teich, Stephen S., '62 1090 New York Ave., Huntington Sta., N. Y. Tellefsen, Jens Aage, '62 5C Asryggen Oslo, Nordstrandshogda, Norway Teplansky, George R., '61 Box 615. Port Huron, Ohio Terpack, Daniel, '63 785 N. Pennsylvania Ave., Wilkes Barre, Pa. Terry, Michael Bennet, '64 1 Bancroft Tower Rd., XVorcester, Mass. Thach, Bradley T.. '64 701 N. F. 50th St., Oklahoma City, Okla. Thach, Robert lidwards, '61 701 N. F. 50th St., Oklahoma City, Okla. Thal, Lennard Ralph, '64 910 16th St., Bellingham, XVash. Thatcher, Richard B., '62 232 Lydecker St., Englewood, N. Thauer, Peter lirnest, '61 95 XVanamaker Ave., Oradell, N. J. Thieblot, Armand J., Jr., '61 1675 Fountain Head Rd., Hagerstown, Md. Thom, Hlilliam John, '63 Round Hill Rd., Greenwich, Conn. Thomas. Edward Perry, '61 3 Trianon Plaza, New Orleans 25, La. Thomas, Laverne, 111, '64 1152 Ingleside Dr., Baton Rouge 6, La. Thomas, M. Peter, '63 321 YV. Plymouth Circle, Minneapolis 27, Minn. Thomas, Norman M., III, '63 33 Catherine St., Newport, R. I. Thompson, Andrew, Jr., '64 332 Mill St., 12. Aurora, N. Y. Thompson, Anthony J., '63 4605 Langdrum La., Chevy Chase 15, Md. Thompson, John XV., Jr., '61 6002 Bremo Rd., Riclnnond, Va. Thompson, Reynolds YV., '64 430 Mill Hill Terr., Southport, Conn. Thompson, Robert David, '63 4804 S. Chesterfield Rd., Arlington 6, Va. Thompson, Ronald R., '61 60 Stark Ave., Dover, N. H. lliomson, Williell R., '63 3939 Broadway, Boulder, Colo. 1'horburn, David, '62 Morris Plains Rd. R.D. 2, Dover, N. Thorne, Thomsen Leif, Jr., '63 46-1 li. Illinois Rd., Lake Forest, Ill. Thurber, Bert Henry, '62 2303 Goldsmith Rd., Houston, Texas Thurber, lidward G., '62 Brook House, Lawrenceville, N. Tilton, Elvin Jolm, '61 Route 1, Box 58612, lixcelsior, Minn. Tisne, Peter Brevoort, '62 24 Wlildwood Rd., Chappaqua, N. Y. Titus, Jolm Clark, '62 3660 Mill Rd., Hatboro, Pa. Tobriner, Matthew XV., '61 6100 33rd St., N. XV., 1Vashington 15, D. C. Todd, Frederic A. D., '64 Mianus River Rd., Bedford, N. Y. Todd, Thomas C., Jr., '6-1 128 Meadow Rd., Bristol, Tenn. Todd, XVebster Bray, '61 Oldwick, N. Tokieda, George Z., '63 Route 1, Box 103, Clewiston, Fla. Tollerton, Harry M., '61 R.F,D. 2, Lake Rd., Pulaski, N. Y. Tomlinson, Fdward A., '61 320 Upper Mountain Ave., Upper Montc'air, N. J. Tompkins, XVilliam F., Ill, '62 1 Robin Rd., Richmond 26, Va. HINKSON'S Books and Stationery 74 Nassau Street Princeton Torell, John Raymond, '61 Westmoreland Dr., W. Hartford, Conn. Torkelson, Lynn Seth. '64 200 Clover St., Clear Lake, XVis. Tornek, Lawrence D., '61 269 Ocean Pkwy., Brooklyn 18, N. Y. Tornrose, Russell T., '62 107 Beach Rd., Salisbury, Mass. Torre, Tasso Alexander, '62 1607 Sweet Home Rd., Williamsville 21, N. Y. Tower, John Colman, '63 1515 National Ave., Rockford, Ill. Towers, John Roy, '63 280 Longmeadow Rd., Smoke Rise, Butler, N. J. Towler, Robert W., '61 702 W, 7th St., Columbia, Tenn. Towles, Robert Lewis, Jr., '64 4-116 Eastway, Baltimore 18, Md. Towne, Francis A., '61 70 Linden Ave., Verona, N. Townsend, Roger N., '64 66 Chestnut St., Nutley, N. Train, Cuthbert R., Jr., '64 4426 Hadheld La., N. YV., 1Vashington D. C. Tredick, Peter YVendell, '62 240 Mira Mar Ave., Long Beach 3, Calif. Tremaine, Russell Ford, '61 422 Baker Ave., Nvestlield N. Treyz, Russell L., '62 Cooks Falls, N. Y. Trimble, John Ralston, '62 288 Ruskin Rd., Buffalo 26, N. Y. Trister, Michael B., '63 506 lrvington Ave., Elizabeth, N. Trout, Gary Calvin, '61 1139 Altamont Ave., Schenectady, N. Y. Trowbridge, Frederick L., '64 1536 Kew Rd., Cleveland Hts. Ohio Versace, Louis Frank, '62 239 Springfield Ave., Hasbrouck Hts., N. KI. SERVING TOWN and GOWN Since 1834 PRI CETO BA K A D TRU T CO PA 'Y George R. Cook, Ill, '26 J. Taylor Woodward '33 President Vice President and Trust Officer Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Troxell, Benjamin F., 111, '62 1771 Humboldt Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. Trunnell, Thomas Newton, '64 130 Ivanhoe Rd., XVaterloo, Iowa Truscott, William G., '63 Niorriston, Ontario, Canada Tucker, Donald M., '61 R. D. 2, Phoenixville, Pa. Tucker, N. Beverly, Jr., '62 175 Fountain Ave., Glendale, Ohio Tudor, 1Vi1lian1 Dean, '64 R.R. 3, Box 30, Colorado Springs, Colo. Tuffnell, Stuart Allan, '61 174 S. Finley Ave., Basking Ridge, N. J. Tull, Richard Paul, '64 1955 Glencoe St., Denver, Colo. 'l'urnbul'l, Benjamin H., '61 4510 Holly Rd., Virginia Beach, Va. Twiggar, Edward V., II, '63 185 N. Marshall St., Shamokin, Pa. U Uhrman, Walter, '62 115 Goldsmith Aye., Newark, N. Uman, Myron F., '61 160 Bosphorus Ave., Tampa 6, Fla. linger, Raymond H., jr., '61 615 Fisher Ave., E. Liverpool, Ohio Upson, 1Valter Lyman, '64 35 Kingsbury Rd., Garden City, N. Y. Urquhart, Bradford A., '63 2817 Fondren Dr., Dallas, Texas Utter, John Gordon, '63 1532 22nd Ave., Longview, YVash. Valdes, Richard Albert, '64 6604 W. Foster, Chicago, 111. Van Amerongen, Lewis W., '62 21 The Ridge, Plandome, N. Y. Van Der Aue, George L., '62 5305 Brookeway Dr., Yklashington 16, D. C. Vanderpool, 1Vynant D., '63 Long Hill Rd., New Vernon, N. Van Dervoort, Robert L., '62 Old Cheney Rd., Lincoln, Nebr. Vanderwicken, Edwin, II, '61 9-101 XV. Grand Ave., Franklin Park, lll. Van Dusen, Lewis H., 111, '62 1100 Phila. Natl. Bk. Bldg., Philadelphia 7, Pa. Van Fossen, Ralph H., Jr., '63 933 Schricker St., Davenport, Iowa Van Geel, Tyll Robert, '62 2425 Funston, Hollywood, Fla. Van Gerbig, Barend, 2nd, '61 21 XVood Acres Rd., Brookville, L. I., N. Y. Vanneman, John Peter, '62 526 Fifth St., Tyrone, Pa. Vanourek, Robert A., '64 1327 Elmwood Ave., Berwyn, Ill. Van Zanten, john YV., III, '62 4767 Henry Hudson Pkwy., New York 71, N. Y. Varian, Lee Charles, '63 1215 Lenox Ave., Plainlield, N. J. Varner, Kineh M., III, '63 634 Cary Dr., Auburn, Ala. Vaughan David A., '64 Box 595 Rt. 2, Princess Anne, Va. Vaughan, Robert Carl, '63 41 Monroe Ave., Little Silver, N. J. Veal, james Ross, jr., '64 Route 3, Gaithersburg, Md. Veeder, Peter Greig, '63 5864 Aydesboro Ave., Pittsburgh 17, Pa. Vehslage, Stephen T., '61 138 Little La., Haverford, Pa. Venable, TVil1iam W., jr., '62 1-126 Elm St., Grinnell, Iowa Verrill, Addison H., jr., '63 69 Haverford St., Hamden, Conn. 230 Park St., Montclair, N. Vetromile, Gerard F., '62 Vhay, David Lincoln, '62 Virgona, Raymond James, '64 Vockrodt, Thomas M., '64 52 First St., Garden City, N. Y. 1775 Westfield Ave., Reno, Nev. 5 Drury La., Palisade, N. J. 370 Escarpment Dr., Lewiston, N. Y. Volkwein, Edward A., '63 5071 Yacht Club Rd., Jacksonville 10, Fla. Von Gehr, George H., jr., '63 1011 Sheridan Rd., Evanston, Ill. Von Volborth, Michael A., '64 3505 Telford St., Cincinnati 20, Ohio Von Wallmenich T. N., '62 Vreeland, John H., '62 438 Ridgewood Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J. Vries, john Kenric, '62 2315 33rd St., Apt. B, Santa Monica, Calif. Vroombout, Leo Owen, '62 4014 Amon Ave., Pennsauken 5, N. Al. W Waddington, Arthur B., '62 654 Moreno Rd., Narberth, Pa. Xtladsworth, james M., '61 753 Forest Ave., Bullalo, N. Y. Wadsworth, Robert H., '62 29 Langdon Terr., Bronxville, N. Y. Wagner, Edward Harris, '61 25 Chatham Ave., Buffalo 16, N. Y. Hlagner, Franklin Carl, '61 1309 E. Fifth Ave., Sterling, 111. XN'agner, Thomas E., '64 7450 McClellan Dr., Bedford, Ohio Waid, Addison C., 111, '64 3117 Huntington Rd., Shaker Hts.,Ohio Waitneight, Peter F., '61 605 Spruce La., Villanova, Pa. Wald, Michael Stuart, '63 1139 N. Prairie St., Galesburg, Ill. XValdner, Robert B., '62 35 E. 35th St., New York 16, N. Y. Wlalker, Andrews Ridgely, '61 16 1Va1l St., New York, N. Y. Walker, George M., '63 2150 Greenwood Ave., Wilmette, Ill. YValker, Robert G., jr., '61 2150 Greenwood, YVilmette, Ill. Walker Robert Owen, '63 2118 E. Linnwood Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. Walker, Timothy Blake, '62 1427 Hinman Ave., Evanston, Ill. Walker, 3V11l1Z1111 Mudd, 11, '64 667 Pugh Rd., Straiford, Xvayne, Pa. 1Vall, Richard Edward, '61 532 Vernon Rd., Springfield, Pa. Wallace, Richard A., '62 Yvardenclilf Rd., Slioreliarn, N. Y. 1Vallen, Burr Edgar, '63 45 YV. 94th St., New York 25, N. Y. Walpole, Forrest T., '63 4621 Seeger St., Cass City, Mich. 1N'alsh, Edward Francis, '63 465 St. Leger Ave., Akron 5, Ohio Walter, Henry A., Jr., '61 1183 Longmeadow St., Longmeadow, Mass. Walters, Christopher K., '64 327 Mallwyd Rd., Merion Station, Pa. Walters, Gary Richard, '64 288 High St., Greenfield, Mass. Compliments of JACK HONORE'S Barber Shop 38 NASSAU STREET PRINCETON CLARKSVILLE MOTEL and COLONIAL DINER OPEN 24 HOURS 3 Miles from Princeton on U.S. 1 Phone WA 4-4089 XVcbster, Jerome P., '61 697 YV. 247 St., New York 71, N. Y. 1Vebster, Richard A., '61 10 Coleman Dr., East YVilliston, L. I., N. Y. Wedemeyer, Wesley D., '64 33 Clermont La., Ladue 24, Mo. Weeden, Donald C., '64 13 Marshall St., XVatertown, Mass. Weeks, Louis B., III, '63 3189 Highland Park Place, Memphis, Tenn. IVeene, Kenneth Albert, '62 Box 21, Belmont, Mass. IVehrli, Michael Jay, '64 431 South Grove, Oak Park, Ill. YVeihenmayer, Edwin A., '62 1872 Lambert Rd., Jenkintown, Pa. WVein, Alan Jerome, '62 107 Queen St., Beckley, IV. Va. Wleinrich, Martin Carl, '63 155 Vorn La., Birmingham, Mich. Weinstein, Alan H., '61 44 Dunloe Rd., Toronto, Ontario, Canada XVeinstein, Lewis M., '62 1431 Ormond Ave., Camden 3, N. Weinstein, Philip Meyer, '62 1Veinstein, Weinstein, 3912 Wlalnut Grove Rd., Memphis, Tenn. Philip Ralph, '61 6110 Benhurst Rd., Baltimore 9, Md. Richard H., '61 100 Ryerson Ave., Newton, N. J. Weintraub, Bruce Dale, '62 125 Covington Rd., Buffalo 16, N. Y. IVeisband, Edward A., '61 7022 Ridge Blvd., Brooklyn 9, N. Y. YVeiss, Burton Albert, '63 45 Myrtle Ave., N. Plainfield, N. Weiss, John Hubbel, '63 602 N. George St., Rome, N. Y. IVeiss, Joseph B., '64 112 50 78th Ave., Forest Hills, N. Y. Welch, Michael Taft, '64 219 Sunset Dr., Tulsa, Okla. Welch, Thomas D., Jr., '62 Nanepashemet St., Marblehead, Mass. IN'eldon, William Bernard, '62 200 Demarest Ave., Closter, N. Walters, William Lee, '63 2625 Garden Lakes Blvd., Rome, Ga. Wanat, Stephen Joseph, '62 152 W. Franklin St., Bound Brook, N. J. Wang, Jon Brandt, '62 812 Inwood Court, Grants, N. M. Wanklyn, Frederic M., '61 Box 933 Prospect Ridge, Nassau, Bahamas, BWI Wanless, Harold Rogers, '64 704 S. McCullough St., Urbana, Ill. Ward, Michael E. A., '62 26 Chapala St., Santa Barbara, Calif. Ward, Robert D., Jr., '62 621 Henri Rd., Richmond 26, Va. XVelles, James Frederic, '63 212 Sunset Ave., Ridgewood, N. J. Wellford, Alexander, Jr., '61 162 Goodlett St., Memphis, Tenn. YVe1ls, Bradley Hill, '61 320 N. Mountain Ave., Upper Montclair, N. XVard, 1Villiam L., '61 Deer Park, Greenwich, Conn. IVarde, Robert Hall, '64 4770 La Canada Blvd., La Canada, Calif. Wardenburg, Peter Seely, '63 3210 Swarthmore Rd., Wilmington 6, Del. Ware, George H., Jr., '62 120 York La., Virginia Beach, Va. Warner, Ralph Edwards, '63 3 Briar Close, Larchmont, N. Y. XVarren, Stuart Maury, '61 80 Nassau Dr., Great Neck, N. Y. Warren, William E., '64 115 YV. Linda Mesa, Danville, Calif. Waterbury, John, '61 1217 Ocean Ave., Mantoloking, N. J. XValers, George Henry, '61 Box 221 RD 4, Marshfield, WVis. 1Vathen, Paul Gillette, '61 27 Masterton Rd., Bronxville 8, N. Y. XVathen, Richard Hill, '64 5039 Lowell St., N. WV., Hfashington, D. C. Watson, Charles N., Jr., '61 421 Wolfs La., Pelham, N. Y. 1Vatson, Martin Cameron, '61 69 WVest La., Ridgefield, Conn. YVatson, Russell E., III, '62 4 Riverview Rd., Irvington on Hudson, N. Y. Wlatt, David M., Jr., '64 7150 Fair Oaks Dr., Cincinnati 37, Ohio Hlatts, David Ritchie, '62 142 Sterling La., IVilmette, Ill. IVebb, John Graham, '63 222 Main St., Oxford, N. C. XVebber, David A., '63 205 Oakwood St., Ottumwa, Iowa IVeber, Harry Carl, '64 5 Oak Park Ct., Creve Coeur 41, Mo. XVeber, Martin Stanley, '62 2600 Blvd., Jersey City, N. XVells, John C., '64 185 Montclair Ave., Montclair, N. YVells, XVarren David, '61 2224 S. 86th Ave., Omaha, Nebr. Welsh, Frederic S., III, '64 I New England Dr., Rochester, N. Y. IVerner, Louis Kaplan, '61 550 J Grand St., New York, N. Y. YVest, Olin, III, '62 235 Pennswood Rd., Bryn Mawr, Pa. Westfall, William, '62 95 Central Ave., Montclair, N. J. Wetherill, David C., '64 113 Rose La., Haverford, Pa. Wexner, Victor Irving, '63 175 W. 93 St., I2C, New York 25 N. Y. Wharton, Hugh D., III, '61 28 Hodge Ave., Buffalo 22, N. Y. Wlheeler, Alfred Aaron, '61 335 Varick St., Jersey City, N. Wlheeler, George Y., III, '63 2510 Foxhall Rd., N. YV., Ivashington, D. C. IVhitaker, Richard A., '61 Flushing, Ohio Yvhite, Buel, '62 258 Riverside Dr., New York, N. Y. White Clifton Fenno, '62 65 Old Mamaroneck Rd., WVhite Plains, N. Y. IVhite Edward, '63 27 Bassett St., New Haven, Conn. White, James Frederick, '62 4600 Brookside Rd., Toledo 6, Ohio White, James Herbert, '64 3719 Old Leeds Rd., Birmingham, Ala. White YVhite YVhite White 1Vhite XVhite James YVilson, '63 12 Dusenberry Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. Robert C., Jr., '64 3609 Clifmar Rd., Baltimore 7, Md. Robert Carey, '64 3 Ardsley Terr., Irvington on Hudson, N. Y. Robert MacDonald, '63 Qtrs. F, Naval Station, Glenview, Ill. , Robie William, '63 3 Conklin Ave., Morristown, N. J. Ivilliam YV., '61 I2 Dusenberry Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. Whitehead, Allen H., Jr., '61 46 Marshall Pl., Webster Groves, Mo. Whitehead, G. Marc, '61 Box 215 Cherry St., Lebanon, N. J. Whitehouse, lValter J., '62 1306 Mahantongo St., Pottsville, Pa. Whitelaw, John David, '62 641 Michigan Ave., Evanston, 111. Whiteley, Daniel H., '61 Jordan, N. Y. IVhite1ey, John W., 3rd, '62 914 S. E. 14th Terr., Deerfield Beach, Fla. Whiteside, Henry O., '64 943 Pine Tree La., Winnetka, Ill. Whitham, Kenneth, '62 41 Cedar St., YVorchester, Mass. Whitlock, James P., Jr., '61 214 Exeter YVay, Hillside, N. J. Whitman, Barry R., '61 613 Salem End Rd., Framingham Centre, Mass. Whitt, Hugh Pelham, '62 1711 lVestwood Ave. S., Atlanta 10, Ga. Wilson, Edward Thomas, '63 -1850 Rockwood Pkwy., N. W., Washington 16, D. C. Wilson, Geoffrey Alan, '62 Wilson, George S., '61 Wilson, Robert Piatt, '6-1 Wing, Paul, III, '62 Winn, Herbert Richard, '61 201 XV. Winn, James J., Jr., '64 Winslow, XVarren li., Jr., '62 480 Sheridan Rd., Evanston, Ill. 56 Tunstall Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. 2301 Valley Dr., Alexandria, Va. 12 Weston Rd., Hingham, Mass. Rose Valley Rd., Wallingford, Pa. Auhurnople, Owings Mills, Md. 465 Congress St., Portland Me. lVhittaker, James Miller, '62 5 Beverly Dr., Allentown, Pa. XVickenden, James XV., '61 Tabor Academy, Marion, Mass. lViegand, Roger Allen, '61 223 Bierman Ave., Villa Park, 111. Wiessler, David Albert, '61 21 Beverly Dr., Allentown, Pa. Wilder, Richard, '64 44 College Dr., Jersey City 5, N. J. llliles, Albert D., II, '61 38 YV. 42nd St., Indianapolis, Ind. XVilk, Sheldon M., '61 2516 Lincoln Rd., Kenosha, Xllis. Wilkinson, Frank C., '63 600 Shatleland Ave., Drexel Hill, Pa. Wilkinson, Robert B.. Jr., '61 151 Academy St., Clayton, N. J. Wilkoc, August R., '64 37 Manchester Rd., Eastchester, N. Y. lVil1ard, XVilliani G., 111, '63 2 lVoodburn Rd., Spartanburg, S. C. XVillcox, John Mc., Jr., '61 508 Pearl St., Darlington, S. C. Wille, Carl Richard, '61 182 lVetheril1 Rd., Garden City, N. Y. ll'illey, lVillis H., 111, '61 970 Audubon Dr., Memphis, Tenn. Wlilliams, Charles T., 111, '63 Williams lVil1iams 1321 Dulany Valley Rd., Towson 4, Md. Dennis Lee, '61 Box 98, Alpine, Texas James Alan, '61 1707 N. Jefferson St., Arlington 5, Ya. I Wlilliams, John 1 ., '63 1101 Runnymede Rd., Dayton 19, Ohio lVi11iams lVilliams Williams , Jonathan R., '61 ll Pine Acres, Selma, Ala. Richard Hal, '63 135 lf. 51th St., Apt. flH, New York 22, N. Y. , Richard J., Jr., '63 1023 Yarmouth Rd., Birmingham, Mich. Winter, John Edward, '63 926 E. lVeldori Ave., Scottsdale, Ariz. Winterfield, Michael R., '63 1 Britton St., Jersey City, N. J. Wintersteen, George F., '61 Mt. Pleasant Rd., Villanova, Pa. Wise, Hugh Douglas, III, '61 77 Westcott Rd., Princeton, N. J. Wisner, Frank George, '61 U. S. limbassy, London, SYV1, England Witherspoon, Joseph, III, '61 5312 Shoal Creek Blvd., Austin, Tex. Witschey, Walter R. T., '63 8-12 Spring Rd., Charleston, W. Va. Xlloerthwein, Kenneth F., '64 3811 Howard Ave., lVestern Spr., Ill. YVoflord, George T., III, '62 1541 Euston Rd., San Marino, Calif. Wohl, William Jeffrey, '62 470 Woodvine Ave., New Orleans, La. Wojciechowicz, A. F., '61 I 1800 N. Wanamassa Dr., Wanamassa, N. J. Wolf, Thomas Adams, '63 14 Russell Rd., Dedham, Mass. lVol1l, Geoffrey A., '61 23 1879 Hall, Pr. lfniv., Princeton, N. J. Wolff, Laurence, '62 183 Beechwood Ave., Bogota, N. J. Wolfson, Mitchell, Jr., '63 Post Ofhce Box 2440, Miami, Fla. Wollmershauser, Richard, '61 7238 High St., Maplewood, Mo. Williams, Richard J., '63 5 N. Lancaster Ave., Margate, N. J. Wlilliams, Richard L., III, '62 100 lV00d1ey Rd., lVinnetka, Ill. lVllll3I11S, R0lJ6l't A., '61 236 N. Market St., Lisbon, Ohio Williamson, Alexander M., '61 North St., Greenwich, Conn. Williamson, James A., Jr., '64 809 Penndale Ave., Reading, Pa. Wilson, David Goss, '63 3101 26 St., Moline, Ill. ll'onacott, Patil N., Jr., '61 1911 S. XV. Myrtle, Portland 1, Ore. XVong, Cheuk Yin, '61 48A Island Rd., Gr. Fl., Aberdeen, I-long Kong, BCC Wong, Jacob Yau Man, '62 320 Kings Rd., 3rd Floor, Hong Hong, BCC THE S. K. SMITH COMPANY Producers of MOLLOY-MADE Covers The tooling and manufacture of the 1961 Bric-A-Brac cover was done by our New York Office. 52 Vanderbuilt Avenue New York 17, N. Y. Davis Alan, '62 Wong, Yung, '61 2311 Massachusetts Ave., Washington 8, D. C. Woo, David Bow, '61 214 Kinsley Ave., Winslow, Ariz. Wood, James lirastus, III, '61 105 S. Bellevue Dr., Nashville, Tenn. XVood, Jellrey S., '63 7432 WV. 54th Ave., Miami '13, Fla. lN'ood, Joshua YV., III, '63 113 Gillis Rd., Portsmouth, Va lVood, Robert lidward, '63 A135 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago 11, lll. Wood, Robert Turner, '61 105 S. Bellevue Dr., Nashville, Tenn Wood, Roger Conant, '62 11 Wildwood Lane, Amherst, Mass. W'oodard, David YV., '62 llryn Athyn, Pa. Woodin, lVilliam N., '64 518 Nottingham Rd., Syracuse, N. Y. Woodrow, Peter Jay, '61 17 Rosedale Rd., Princeton, N. J Woods, Hendrick R., '6-1 301 S. Saint Asoph St., Alexandria, Va Woods, James S., III, '62 16 Grand Pkwy., Lewistown, Pa lVoods, Robert Octavius, '62 608 Parkway Ave., Trenton, N. J Woodward, Jolm T., III, '62 15 Hodge Rd., Princeton, N. J Woodward, William li., '61 1 lNIerrymount Rd., Baltimore 10, Md. Woodwell, James A., '62 43 Schoolhouse La., Poughkeepsie, N. Y Woolley, Clark H., '61 2312 Willard St., Wilmington, Del Woolley, Victor Hynson, '64 2312 Willard St., Wilmington, Del. YVorden, Eugene C., III, '64 Valley Rd., New Canaan, Conn. Worden, XVilliam N., '63 9015 Haddin Way, Bellevue, Wash. Workman, Robert Jay, '61 319 Sycamore St., Staten Island 12, Worthington, Clarke, III, '63 N. Y Woodberry Forest School, lVoodberry Forest, Va. Wreden, William P., 3rd, '62 60 Parkwood Dr., Atherton , Calif. lVright, Peter M., '64 Middle Rd., Lucas Pt., Old Greenwich, Conn. Wright, Richard L., '61 1305 Bay Laurel Drive, Menlo Park, Calif. XN'rigl1t, Thomas A., III, '6-1 1109 Eslmonclson, Dallas 5, Tex. lVright, Thomas H., Jr., '62 510 Orange St., YVilmington, N. C. Wright , lVilliam P., Ill, '63 1-122 Claremont Dr., Falls Church, Va. Wu, William Ding Yee, '61 907 Stockton St., San Francisco, Calif. Wnnderlich, Albert H., '62 610 S. Meramec Ave., Clayton 5, Mo. Wurmleld, Michael S., '61 1081 Jerome Ave., New York 52, N. Y. Wurts, Clarence Z., '62 Stenton Ave., Blue Bell, Pa. Wyckoff, Tom L., '61 6027 Windermere Rd., Seattle, Wash. Yao, Kung, '61 Yatko, Raymond John, '63 Yee, Leland Lee Goey, '62 Yellin, Yenawine, Philip Lee, '61 Yencharis, Jerome D., '64 Yerian, Yost, George Palmer, '63 Young, Young, Y 138 09 76 Ave., Flushing 67, N. Y. -112 Madison St., Wilkes Barre, Pa. 44 Blue Ridge Ave., Dunellen, N. J. 1-14157 Valerio St., Van Nuys, Calif. 821 Ostrom Ave., Syracuse 10, N. Y. 25 Sylvanus St., XVilkes Barre, Pa. 117 Diana Dr., Poland, Ohio 2201 Mendoza Dr., Tallahassee, Fla. Ira Edward, '62 John H., Jr., '61 David Nathan, '62 1166 Yan Curler Ave.. Schenectady, N. Y. 1441 Fitzwatertown Rd., XVillow Grove, Penna. Wright, Austin A., III, '6-1 220 Stockton St., Hightstown, N. J Young, George IV., Jr., '63 17 Longview Rd., IV. Hartford, Conn. Wright, C. Thomas, '64 512 East Ave., Newark, N. J Young, Hillyer M., '61 10 Gracie Sq., New York 28, N. Y. Wright, Denis Bourke, '62 220 Mercer St., Princeton, N. J Young, Peter MacPherson, '62 '12 Sunset Ave., Montclair, N. J. Wright, Harlan Tonie, '63 34 State St., W. linglewood, N. J Young, Raymond A., III, '61 Rte. 3, Box 139J, Charlotte 3, N. C. lVright, John C., Jr., '61 6 Public Sq., Bedford, Pa Young, Roy Traywick, '62 11 Linden Pl., Summit, N. Wright, Joseph H., III, '61 Morrison St. XV., Lookout Mt., Tenn Young, Sherwood F., '61 1055 Plummer Cir., Rochester, Minn. lVright, Lee Andrews, '6-1 58 Turner Dr., Chappaqua, N. Y. Young, Thomas B., '61 105 Jamison Ave., Cadiz, Ohio nan00k's trading post oogla, alaska 'iprincelon in the nation's service 5 Compliments of ASSOCIATED MARKETS LAWRENCE NORRIS KERR REAL ESTATE 32 Chambers Street WA 4-1416 CORPORATION - Saleswomen d Eqgf Ngrwighl New Ygrk Cornelia Dielherin Marjorie Ensminger Ann S. Stockton Sarah Griswold Young, TVil1iam Halter. '61 Golf Hill, RD l, Honesdale, Pa, Zia Rowe King Ping, -61 3 Keep Stl, Madison, N. Yolmghcfgf -'Ame Sigffifli 562 , V Q D 1 Vd g I , Zidcr. Leroy S., III, '61 299 Colony St., W. Hempstead, N. Y. Y Q 3 1 Ijl'05'6F'fniiTfid rg' ,Luc 1 no Ziegler. Robert P., '61 2545 Handasyde Ave., Cincinnati 8. Ohio Yorniius'1Ii,nN1'ml' my-'lhl UI ' nel' ic' Z ':lnIQcaP?lT'M1Ei1' Zink, Roy Allen, '62 273 Pendleton Rd., Clemson, S. C. U LHC ' A K MC' T -lac Sim 1 ilu' ,emi C' 0 10 Zirin, James David, '61 lfll Broadway, New York, N. Y. Zoll. lirle III, '61 1800 TVestern Ave., Flossinoor, Ill. Z Zschau. Edwin, '61 1702 S. 79th St., Omaha, Nebr. Zuckerman, Steve D., '63 829 N. Wlhitter Dr., Beverly Hills, Calif. Zabel, Sheldon Alter, '63 A109 TV. 26th St., Sioux Falls, S. D. Zug. james TVl1ll1'l0l1, '62 170 Rose La., H21VCff0l'il, PU. Zagoria, Robert Reimer, '63 605 fQl'QlIll Aveu lflgrinfieltl, N, -1, Zumbrunn, john Robert, '64 322-1 S. Dahlia St., Denver 22, Colo. Zavodni, Zavis Marian. '61 1-1 Soundview Ave., TVhite Plains, N. Y. ZWii'liY, A100111 M-, JI'-, '52 24 VHHCB' Rd-, TV5'0miSSiI'1g, Pli- ADVERTISERS INDEX A. B. C. Engraving Corp. ...,..........,.... . A. B. C. Photo Gravure Supply Co. .. American Fidelity Life Insurance .... Applegate Floral Shop .........,.......,... Associated Markets Corp. Brewster Finance Co. ..... . Brooks Chemical Co. .... ................. . . Chipp Tailors ...............,...,........................,....... ....... Colonial Restaurant and Clarksville Diner Durnerls Barber Shop ...........................,......... ....... Fieldcrest ......................,...,..,............,... Food Machinery and Chemical Corp. Garamond Press ................... .. .............,. . Griswold and Company ..... Hinkson's ........................,............. Home Fidelity Life Insurance .... Houghton Real Estate ...,......... Hulit's Shoes .................... J. E. Caldwell ik Co. ......,...... . jack Honorc's Barber Shop ...,. La Vake Reid's ...................... Lahiere's Restaurant .,.... Lawrence Norris Kerr .....,.... Leopard's Head Antiques ....... Multitone Engraving Co. ..,.. , 282 296 294 286 317 292 296 284 314 297 291 287 318 282 312 285 309 305 311 313 296 302 317 283 299 7 Nanook's Trading Post ................. ...... 3 16 National Bond-Loan Plan Inc. .... ...... 3 03 Nurdock Ek Lavine, Optometrists ,... ....... 2 92 Pan Texdye Corp. ........................... ...... 2 99 Pantino Inc. .................................. ,..... 2 81 Princeton Bank and Trust Co. ,.... ...... 3 13 Princeton Barber Shop ..................,. ...... 3 04 The Princeton Club of New York ..... ...... 2 98 The Princeton Inn ......................... ..,... 2 79 The Princeton University Store ...... ...... 3 07 Quaker Oats .................................., ...,.. 3 01 Queenstown Builders .... ...... 2 95 R. C. A. Laboratories .... ....,. 2 93 Robinson 8: Miller Co. ...,. ...... 2 88 The Rug Mart ................ ...... 2 97 Saks Fifth Avenue ..... ...... 2 79 Schrallts ......,................ ...... 3 08 S. K. Smith Company .... ...... 3 15 The Three Brooks ..... ...... 3 03 Tiger Bus Line ....................... ...... 2 89 Union Textile Printers Inc. .... .. 283 University Cleaners ..........., ...... 3 02 Vivitone Inc. ............... ....,. 2 83 Wine Xa Game Shop ...... ...... 3 10 Yeoman's Liquor Store ..... ...... 2 95 About the Brio-A-Brac . . . The text has been set in Baskerville, with display heads set by hand in Stymie lVledium. The Paper is Lustre Enamel, manufactured by the S. D. Warren Company of Boston. The book has been printed and bound, with great care a11d considerable pleasure by GARAMOND PRESS BALTIMORE 1961 Q'-rg 5? PRINTERS OF C0Lt.1ac:E YEARBOOKS 318 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The Board and Staff of the 1961 Brie-11-Brac extends its grateful thanks and appreciation to the following persons for their assistance in the production of this year's book. XVilliam H. Kincade for his excellent coverage of the year's events in Going Backf' His humor and insight represent one of the important outside contributions to this year's Bric. Henry A. XYalter for his colorful account of the 1960 football season. Thomas Grant for his interesting pen and wash draw- ings of Princeton life in the introduction. Perry K. Neubauer for his line renderings of the detail in some of the buildings on campus for the dividers. Thomas H. Miner and Alexander N. Lilley for their excellent pictures of campus buildings at night follow- ing the dividers and inside the covers. The Photography Staff of The Daily PI'f77l'l?f0l7I.IlII, under the direction of Derek XV. Storm and Philip Shambaugh, for their large supply of pictures through- out the whole book. Orren jack Turner, Allan XY. Richards, and Clearose Studios for their formal organization and athletic pictures. Howard Schrader for his splendid action shots of foot- ball at Princeton. Elizabeth Menzies for unusually fine views of Prince- ton in the introduction. Nlr. XVilliam C. Striker and the Department of Public Information for their assistance in supplying material for the Introductory and University sections of the book. Mr. Dan D. Coyle for his cooperation in obtaining the Presidential letter. ,Iohn D. Davies, '41, Editor of the Princeton Alumni Weekly, and the Princeton University Press for their assistance in providing many pictures used in the book. Senior, junior, sophomore, and freslnnan class officers and other undergraduates who devoted their time in preparation of many of the articles. Assistant Dean of Students james B. Laughlin, '52 for his assistance and advice on Hrtancial matters. Mr. Dominick Graziano of the S. K. Smith Co. for his aid in producing this year's cover. Mr. Irvin I. Silvers and his expert staff at Garamond Press whose helpful suggestions and patient assistance in all phases of publication contributed more than any other factor to the successful preparation of this year- book. 1961 BRIO-A-BRAC Co-Chairmen JOHN D. MUZZY JOHN BEVAN JOHN H. CLYMER STUART L. HARRIS EUGENE L. MARTIN Evecufive Edifor Managing Edifor I Managing Editor Editorial Associafes Vic-tor Katz Allan Melllain T. YVynn Smith Charles R. Stevens Editorial Assisfanfs C. Van Davis Richard Getniek Paul Hager Charles Roberts Newt Schott Confribufing Editors Henry A. VValter XVilliam H. Kincade Phofography Board XVilliam lf. Burrow, jr. Peter R. E. Hale Gray G. Henry Alexander N. Lilley, Jr. Edward V. Mayer, Thomas Miner Peter Plaut Phillip Shambaugh Derek Storm Confribufing Orren jack Turner Alan Richards Howard Shrader Clearose Studios Elilabeth Menzies Ulli Steltler Daniel Drath Photographers 20 FRANKLIN G. BROWNE Business Manager RICHARD A. CURTIS Subscription Manager EDWARD M. HOLLAND Advertising Manager - Business Associates Douglas Esson '1'homas M. Higgins, III Roger O. Hoit -I. X. Hughes H. illilfllklll Ronald Thompson Sales Alexander M. Arkley David Beall Robert N. Bohorad XVilliam B. Bond james B. Burnham XVilliam H. Clayton Riehard L. Danehower 'l'homas Deupree -lerrold Graber -Ion D. Hlafter Daniel H. jackson xlames P. Kavanagh IVilliam H. Kineade R. Dale Leeount Peter Marcus David I.. Marshall Kendrick B. Melrose X'Villiam H. Miller, David P. O'Brien Alan E. Oestreieli Brian A. Rosborough Steven P. Styles Jeremiah M. Sullivan Gary C. Trout Robert 1.. Van Dervoort Staff 5 o .xg M4 Y, ' Q. 1 3 .. Q gk' ! 4 N 5 K Y 555 1 iz X 'v 1 1:2 ' ' S' . A 5 ff ig l -fs 4 5 My L QA if J J Wy. V :asf V F 5 ' ,K 1' f 254, 2 5 M W ,,. .S . ci. 1 I iiw. , V wr .' , . V V ' 'E M J' V L, gr I us. 43 i ,V :qv . f Q f M' 5 4 . , pw, A ,E . -.rid Q-ia 5, , u ,ly Rwwwsfsai- 0 'S Q o --v-vw UNYWMW ' 5:51, i Aw Q ,, uw , U X 1 Sir 5' ' m gf 2 . - 2 1' 3- fifiq-1 ,,.' 15 . 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