Radcliffe College - Yearbook (Cambridge, MA)

 - Class of 1968

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Radcliffe College - Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1968 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 424 of the 1968 volume:

332 THE YEARBOOK OF HARVARD AND RADCLIFFE 1968 STAFF David W. Johnson '68, President Robert F. Sproull '68, Managing Editor Randall D. Weiss '68, Business Manager Kenneth M. Ludmercr '68, Editorial Chairman Kenric W. Hammond '69, Production Chairman James T. Kurnick '68, Photography Chairman Daniel R. Pennie '68, Assistant Managing Editor Chien-Chung Pei '68, Lecture Coordinator David C. Jimerson '68, Executive Editor Linda Liu '68, Assistant Photography Chairman Lee S. Smith '69, Assistant Photography Chairman Jeffrey S. Padnos 70, Assistant Business Manager James A. Allen '69, Associate Business Manager David J. Decker 70, Senior Section Editor Richard A. Cohn 70, Clerk HARVARD YEARBOOK PUBLICATIONS, INC. 52 DUNSTER ST., CAMBRIDGE, MASS. Copyright 1968 by Harvard Yearbook Publications, Inc. Library of Congress Catalogue Card Number 68-21678 Printed in the United States of America by the Woodland Publishing Company. CONTENTS THE COLLEGE 6 RANDOM THOUGHTS ON FIFTY YEARS 16 HARVARD EDUCATION 18 WHAT HARVARD DOESN'T TELL YOU 22 THE HONORS THESIS 28 ALL-NIGHTERS 34 UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES 40 FACULTY 50 Talcott Parsons 52 Jorge Luis Borges 56 Toshihiro Kalayama THE WAR 62 THE WAR COMES TO HARVARD 70 DOW 74 THE DEBATES 80 TEACH-IN 86 NATHAN S RESTAURANT 88 RESISTING THE DRAFT ARTS AND ACTIVITIES 94 VIEWPOINTS 100 UNDERSTANDING ACTIVITIES 102 PORTFOLIO 112 ANYONE FOR CROQUET? 116 THE HARVARD CRIMSON 122 THE PRODUCTION OF PRINCE ERIE SPORTS 130 VIEL SPASS 138 FOOTBALL: 4th and 1 from the Yale 32 146 BAND:... Because It Eats Its Young 152 SOCCER: Overcoming Injuries, A Major Feet 156 CROSS COUNTRY: Why They Run 160 HOCKEY: A Cold Beanpot 166 GOLF 1967: The Putt Runneth Over 170 BASEBALL 1967: A Stretch in Time Saves Nine 174 CREW 1967: The United States Eight 182 THE RADCLIFFE SKI TEAM 186 FORM 190 BOX SCORES THE HOUSES 196 THE MASTERS 198 THE HARVARD HOUSES 202 ADAMS HOUSE: The Music Men 206 DUDLEY HOUSE: Roost of the Radicals 210 DUNSTER HOUSE: The Organizers 214 ELIOT HOUSE: Master John Finley 218 KIRKLAND HOUSE: A House that Works 222 LEVERETT HOUSE: Problems of Size 226 LOWELL HOUSE: The Senior Common Room 230 QUINCY HOUSE: The Great Divide 234 WINTHROP HOUSE: The Arts Festival 238 THE RADCLIFFE HOUSES 244 EAST HOUSE 246 NORTH HOUSE 248 SOUTH HOUSE 252 The Roar of the Grease, the Smell of the Chain 5 INC A RANDOM THOUGHTS ON FIFTY YEARS By ELLIOTT PERKINS '23 The origin of the following remarks was a request that I contribute something along the lines of Fifty Years of Harvard'' (it's actually forty-nine) to the Yearbook; what it's been like, and what people have thought about it; how it has changed, and not changed. The undertaking has been more complex than I had anticipated — which, since I hadn't anticipated any complexity at all, is not surprising. Lots more has’ happened that I know something about than I realized, and excision has been a problem. My first idea was to follow out a line developed last year in a casual conversation in which someone posed the question How many Harvards do you think there have been since we were Freshmen? We ultimately fixed on five. The first was the Harvard of the '20's and '30's, which stands all of a piece because it was the Harvard in which Mr. Lowell's great measures to save the College, Concentration, General Examinations and Tutorial, which reached full stature in the '20's, and the House Plan, which was not wholly effective until the mid-thirties, under Mr. Conant, dominated the scene. The second was War Harvard, which really began in 1943, when full mobilization transformed the College, and was followed by the Reconstruction Harvard, that fantastic Harvard of veterans and recent schoolboys all jumbled together in fantastic overcrowding, optimism, and achievement. The fourth was Harvard of the '50's, which the pundits christened apathetic and I found sensible, and, finally, that Harvard for which I am writing this, a Harvard dating from, I guess, 1965, and much too close for christening. But it will not be called apathetic . A nice line, I think, but not one to pursue here. Space and the reader's patience forbid. So in the end I have taken as my base the first of these Harvards, a good point of reference for much that concerns us today, when people are questioning the operation, and even the validity, of General Examinations, Honors Theses, and residential education. When you start taking a machine apart it helps to know something about why and how it was first put together. Harvard College of 1919 was, to me and my companions. Old Harvard, rock-solid, rooted in tradition and excellence. To Mr. Lowell, and I know now but did not suspect then, it was in shaky shape. Ten years before it had emerged from the Presidency of Mr. Eliot, who cherished the University and, according to some, endured the College, with a lackadaisical attitude toward study and a weak social structure. In his Inaugural Address Mr. Lowell had laid down his lines of campaign. The opening paragraph reads: Among his other wise sayings, Aristotle remarked that man is by nature a social animal: and it is in order to develop his powers as a social being that American colleges exist. The object of the undergraduate department is not to produce hermits, each imprisoned in the cell of his own intellectual pursuits, but men fitted to take their places in the community and live in contact with their fellow men. This may sound trite in 1968, but it didn't in 1909, when strong currents of American opinion urged that the object of the undergraduate department was to train prospective graduate students without wasting time or effort on the development of their powers as social beings. Later in his address Mr. Lowell spoke of the chasm that has opened between college studies and college life. The instructors believe that the object of the college is study. Many students fancy that it is mainly enjoyment, and the confusion of aims breeds irretrievable waste of opportunity. The undergraduate should be led to feel from the moment of his arrival that college life is a serious and many-sided thing, whereof mental discipline is a vital part. So were his objectives defined. Ten years later the first post-war Freshman class found a college considerably, but subtly, affected by his ideas. I don't know how many, if any, of us took much note of the Lowell changes. Harvard had a strong atmosphere of opportunity and tradition, opportunity to make about what you liked of your Harvard experience, tradition to guide you in the ways of doing it. I was more conscious of opportunity, and the responsibility for using it, than of restraints unknown before The War. In his annual welcome to newly registered Freshmen classes Mr. Lowell often likened Harvard to a buffet, a set-out of many-flavored dishes from which they not only might but must pick, and the soundness of choice was up to the picker. He could get advice, but he must weigh the advice. Nor were the dishes all academically flavored; Harvard was a many-sided place, and they should look to get something like thirty-five percent of tbeir education outside the curriculum. Whether or not he said that to '23, that was the attitude we early acquired. That Harvard was akin to this in many essentials. It had no approved pathways to success, to being Big Man on Campus. For one thing, we never used campus in connection with Harvard, for another we didn't think in terms of Big Men. To illustrate terminology and attitude: a militant President of the Crimson once said to me, God damn it; down at Yale the President of the News is the uncrowned king of the campus. Up here the President of the Crimson is crowned by everyone around the College. Then as now Harvard was a place in which men of varied interests followed their own lines for their own reasons. Then as now the public acclaim man, the would-be shaker, did appear — and in time disappear. But there were differences. One was in the attitude toward study, and it is important, affecting the whole attitude of the student to his college experience. In this first Harvard , which endured until 1943, men did not feel the community compulsion to graduate with honors that they feel today. There are understandable reasons for today's attitude; but it does bring a sense of strain. The acceptance of a direct correlation between academic achievement in college and ultimate achievement in 7 MM. life demands from many men scholarly effort unaccompanied by scholarly interest, and brings many, perhaps all, to sec their college years in terms of exploitation of an opportunity, like it or not. The earlier attitude was more that college should be savored, not exploited. Adequate academic achievement was of course demanded; you couldn't stay here long with less than three C's and a D, but high academic achievement was a matter of taste, the individual's choice from the buffet. So the men who took corns did so for their own reasons, usually a late-awakened interest in a subject, but not from any sense that C grades and a pass degree connoted inadequacy, now or later. Corns were likely to have achieved well outside the curriculum. Magna and somma men were, of course, more naturally inclined to scholarship. They made that choice from the buffet early, but then as now, leading men in athletics and activities were often leading scholars. Often, but not as often as in the twenty years just ending. It is instructive, in these years when well over half (what will it be this year, seventy percent?) of a senior class takes com or better, to contemplate the percentages of the early '20's. In 1922 twenty-one percent took honors, in 1923 twenty-four percent, in 1924 twenty-nine, at which point things levelled off for a while, but not for long. The trend continued steadily upward through the '30’s, and in our recent times has, of course, zoomed. However, the significance of those figures of forty-odd years ago is perhaps less their relation to what has followed than their relation to what had gone before. The Classes of 1922 and 1923 were the first to experience full operation of tutorial instruction, general examinations, and honors theses. Before then, with the exception of a few special areas, the path to honors was the path of course grades, and a great many men had simply declined to be bothered. After all, a pass degree was a passport to a job in business, to the Harvard Law School, and to the still somewhat unorthodox Business School, and business or law were the generally contemplated careers. Piling up course grades was caviar to the general, deficient in challenge and charm. It appealed only to those who knew early what they were about, then, as always, a minority. But the idea of mastering a subject, writing one's own thesis about some part of it, and knocking back a general did, as it proved, challenge and charm many who had, under the older system, shopped for snap courses at convenient hours and settled for comfortable C's. The honors degree men of the early '20's were not many, but they were a break-through in the effort to strengthen the college experience, to make the A.B. truly a certificate of membership in the fellowship of educated men. And they denote the effective accomplishment of one of Mr. Lowell's objectives. Accomplishment of the other took longer: laissez-faire in residence lasts longer than laissez-faire in study, and it was dangerous, for under it the social cohesion of the college was disintegrating. One of Harvard's principal sources of strength was, even then, a big. heterogeneous student body, one which throws together men of varied origins, outlooks, ambitions, and abilities, knocking off corners and widening perceptions. The trouble with the '20's was that it had the varied types but it couldn't throw them together. There were, to be sure, the Freshman Dormitories — Core, Standish, Smith, and, after 1926, McKinlock, each with its own dining hall — in which Freshmen must live and eat (or at least pay board) and in which the different types were thrown together. They accomplished a good deal, as I can testify, for my wide acquaintance in the Class was made in the Dorms; but one year is not long, and the upper class years tended to narrow, not widen, contacts. Most people tended to get into a rut — crew. Crimson, Lampoon, Advocate, debating, what have you — and see mostly those in it with them. There were no upperclass dining halls, and so no places in which one habitually saw the same people, who also belonged and in time, for all the Harvard reticence, came to know some of them. Residence, for Sophomores and Juniors, was round about in the dormitories and lodging houses between the river and the Yard. It was not unsupervised, for there were proctors about, but it was without identity. Claverly and Randolph, for example, had no identity. Various individuals and groups of individuals lived in them, but they rarely mixed, unless they had known each other in the Freshman Dorms. Again, this was a consequence of changing conditions, of the growth of the student body, of the invasion of the area about the Yard and the Square by non-University elements, of the opening of restaurants, which led to the desertion of the once heavily used commons in Mem. Hall. It was logical, but it was breaking up the college. Not until the House Plan burst upon us, in 1928, was anything effective done, or could anything effective have been done. And what, one may ask, was the effect of this apparent social desert upon its inhabitants? Speaking for the generation of '23, we liked it, and judging the generation of '28 by their violent objection to the announcement of the House Plan, they liked it. Club men of course liked it, and those without clubs made their own lives to what was, apparently, their satisfaction. But, looking back, one can see that Harvard was on the road to loss of character. What is the good of a widely varied community that isn't a community but a collection of self-contained enclaves? We weren't there, by a long shot, but the trend was clear. The Houses, when they took hold, and it took five or six years for them to do so, provided what I think was the best Harvard College of the half-century. Each House, until 1943, was a community small enough to be comprehended by the individual, large enough to comprehend individuals of all shapes and sizes. One of the most striking changes of the later 9 :? “? 3SM J 3S « «al aatitrai '30's was the emergence in the Houses of the slow starters . In the '20's much depended on a fast start. You got into some swim or other as a Freshman, and from then on you were known, advanced if you were good, carried along if you weren't. But if you didn't get into the swim early, you probably never did. One result was that the Class leaders of Freshman year were usually still leading four years later, and this the Houses changed. Living in a community instead of a desert had good effects for many, and for the College, but it certainly undercut the long-standing near monopoly of College leadership by the prep school men. I am sometimes asked about the elations of students, faculty, and administration over the fifty years. In this day of confrontations and student power the topic is certainly fraught with interest. Superficially, in view of the McNamara and Dow incidents, and in view of the sense of outrage expressed by certain of the more dedicated, the change looks considerable. Yet, from my memory and the few records that I have been able to consult, I wonder. Undergraduate resentment of faculty decisions was rare in the '20's, but it did occur. (Incidentally, all decisions from above were regarded as faculty decisions then, and later. The dichotomy between faculty and administration was unperceivcd, because it wasn't there. Now it is perceived; but it still isn't there.) When undergraduate resentment did become aroused it was expressed, sometimes excessively in the Crimson, sometimes more quietly, but very clearly, in talks with the President or the Dean of the College. The tone was that of a disagreement between Harvard men (this feeling was very strong), and the President or Dean always, I think, made his position understandable, if not palatable. And since he had to decide, his decision was accepted. Frequently, be it said, the final decision was altered, if not withdrawn, after the confrontation. Only in 1940 and 1941 do I remember serious and extended picketing. In those years Mr. Conant came out, as an individual, not as spokesman for the University, in favor of getting into the war. A convinced and vocal group decided to demonstrate against his position, and to do so by picketing. The times being what they were, they sought out the Secretary to the Corporation to discuss the best place to get wide public attention without creating disorder, and for the month of May, 1941, Seniors in caps and gowns picketed the McKean Cate throughout the month. They had a position to make clear, and they made it. Customs change, at least externally, but I notice that current protest, if responsibly conceived, includes faculty participants. That indicates that the change is not very fundamental, that Harvard men have not yet split along the generation gap. ' - 'ai baa u a-itfeau SoS I ‘ te Kite t ■ Sj£N 5 7 Si • HARVARD EDUCATION: The Student Gains an Audience The Harvard University of J. Lawrence Lowell is rapidly disappearing— the community of scholars and gentlemen is becoming increasingly tied to the world of government, public service, and society. The University today is not an isolated community devoted to research and thought, but is called upon to lead major innovations in society. The guidance of the University is influenced by the funding policies of foundations and the government, as well as by the individual members of the academic community—faculty and students. But the planning decisions of the University seem to be dominated by the outside world, and as a result the faculty increasingly commits itself to research and public service. It is not surprising, therefore, that it pays only sporadic attention to the affairs of the College. Being minimally concerned with the College, the faculty cannot cope with the problems of undergraduate education. One such difficulty is the diversity of the educational aspirations of the student body. Some students desire a broad education, others wish to specialize in a field even though they have no intention of continuing their studies, still others specialize in the hope of eventually going to graduate school. Instruction at Harvard must be able to respond to the needs of jail, non-concentrator as well as concentrator, undergraduate as well as graduate. Unfortunately, most courses are intended primarily for specializes. A reappraisal and revitalization of some of the basic aspects of Harvard education is long overdue. The philosophy behind tutorial, fields of concentration, and distribution require-iments is a remnant of the innovations of President Lowell's :reign. Its last major reworking was in 1949, when the whole concept of General Education was inaugurated. President iConant led the assault on the system; he enlisted the support iof the deans, and goaded the faculty into adopting the idea of General Education — an educational program which is now presented to virtually every student going through the College. | General Education courses were developed in an effort to provide dabblers comprehensive, interesting surveys of whole fields. Yet, even some Gen Ed courses seem primarily geared for concentrators. Nat Sci 5 or its equivalent, for example, is Required of all biology majors. A more serious problem is that acuity innovations are sometimes made without accurate in-ormation on undergraduate interest. The recent failure of Nat Sci 115 is a case in point. This course, which was designed to pulline simple mathematical solutions to general problems (population control, flood control, traffic systems) drew very few students. This was but one of the many frustrating cases Ivhon the faculty couldn't seem to judge accurately the feelings of undergraduates. This year, the undergraduates themselves have started to ronverse with the College on educational matters. The admin-stration has developed an openness to student ideas and sug-;estions which has resulted in new importance for several :ommittees, most notably the Harvard Policy Committee (HPC) nd the Committee on Educational Policy (CEP). Many reports ■ nd proposals routed through these channels have reached i acuity meetings, where they have received the support of acuity members. There is a new aura of faculty interest and •rxeitement in the air; the meeting which decided the pass-fail issues was attended by 225 professors. The character of the present renovation is entirely different from the one which developed Gen Ed — the clamor is now •joming from the Houses, not Massachusetts Hall. The Harvard Policy Committee, which sprang from a shaky birth last year, has managed to reach puberty — its inputs (student ideas, interest, and effort) and its outputs (concrete proposals to the faculty) appear to be extremely effective. Numerous reports have been prepared under the aegis of the HPC, such as audits of the Architectural Sciences and Government Departments and of Independent Study, an appraisal of the house system, and a proposal for a fourth course pass-fail system. The pass-fail debate was in some sense a test of the HPC's effectiveness. Its campaign for pass-fail started in spring, 1967, when the HPC presented a proposal for a free pass-fail fifth course to the faculty. The Committee on Educational Policy, the organ of the College responsible for making recommendations to the faculty, approved the plan. No formal action was immediately taken, and as the HPC changed membership, the CEP almost lost interest. The new HPC drafted a simplified proposal: students should have the option of taking one of their four courses pass-fail. The CEP approved the report in November; the faculty endorsed it at its December meeting. During the process, the HPC had strengthened relations with the CEP, for in a virtually unprecedented occurrence, HPC members were asked to argue the issue before the CEP. Nonetheless, the pass-fail system has yet to be implemented. The specific details, left to the individual departments for solution, could inhibit if not completely prevent widespread use of the option by undergraduates. The Harvard Policy Committee has also attacked some of the specific problems of instruction; its departmental audits have been aimed at revitalizing course offerings within existing modes of instruction (lectures, sections, tutorial, seminars, theses, independent studies). To some extent, these audits have been succinct statements of trends already evident within the departments, but the airing of these proposals has greatly speeded changes. The most impressive response came from the Arch Sci Department. Within three months after the HPC audit, the department published a concrete outline of course offerings for the 1968-69 academic year which included almost all of the HPC's recommendations. The HPC has also launched a long-range effort designed to evaluate the academic requirements and responsibilities of the University and to attempt to provide specific proposals to the Harvard administration. This effort is embodied in the Harvard Education Project, which has enlisted a sizeable interest from undergraduates. Its prospectus outlined a list of faults: The concept of college education as preparation for vocational or graduate work in isolated, obscure fields, rather than as a personally relevant and broadening experience; the failure to use the House system as an intellectually and socially appealing residential unity; the over-reliance on large lectures; the lack of a truly responsive advising and counseling system; a university which is committed to hiring research professors with brilliant reputations and frequently not-so-brilliant teaching abilities: These are only a few of the things that we are up against. These are ambitious goals, and they invite the exploration of many delicate areas: the relation of the University to the College, the ambitions and needs of undergraduates, the professional and personal roles of the faculty, the aloofness of university management, and, above all, the role of the university in society. The results of the study could unleash the energy of students and faculty to ensure that a Harvard education approaches the superlatives of its reputation. — Robert F. Sproull 17 aafaii vr«n«i SiWWW ®fioa«i a r « v'- xto 11 1 I SfN ,H‘S ' -N ■ 'U u;v WHAT HARVARD DOESN’T TELL YOU Jeffrey Elman is the founder of the Harvard Education Project, a student group organized to examine the changing requirements and challenges of a Harvard education. In this article, which originally appeared i.n the Harvard Crimson, he surveys some of the problems which the group is studying. At some time during his four years as a Harvard undergraduate, nearly everyone asks himself whether he really belongs here. For some, this uncertainty may occur only briefly during the freshman year; others experience it more intensely as part of their “sophomore slump. And there is always the small but disturbingly increasing number of seniors who even at the end of their four years feel vaguely out of place. They suspect that what they wanted from Harvard was not what Harvard wanted to give them. Harvard has probably never been free of discontent, and dissatisfied students are to be found at any college. Sometimes the school is at fault, but when the dissatisfaction is confined to a small number, one tends to think the problems lie with the students. What perplexes and dismays many at Harvard is that this number has already passed the point of comfort. Most faculty members and administrators blame this situation on the draft. Until now. Harvard's solution for unhappy students has been to suggest a leave of absence. David Rics-man. Harvard's guru-in-residence, expressed this attitude when he said that in the absence of the draft, dropping out is a very good thing, both for the student and for the school. After a year or so of living in the big outside world, the student decides either that pumping books is preferable to pumping gas, in which case he returns, or else that it isn't, in which case he stays away. For a long time this alternative remained Harvard's ultimate therapeutic trump card, a sign of flexibility the school pointed to with great pride. Director of the Bureau of Study Counsel William G. Perry often refers to himself as the head of Harvard's drop-out program. But the crux of the problem is not that these students can't get out — it's why they got in in the first place, and, once in, why the feel cheated. When a significant proportion of a school's students are unhappy with their education, one must either revise the admission policies which accept them or the educational policies which instruct them. To encourage them quietly to leave is an easy way out, but in no way does it solve the basic problem. I Not only Harvard has to deal with a new kind of student population. Since World War II, there has been a gradual but steady change in the character of incoming college classes. Thirty years ago, only a small portion of American college-age youth went to college. Today, in what is fast becoming an established middle class pattern, over half the high school graduates enroll in higher institutions. The result has been that many students go to college today who wouldn't have gone thirty years ago. The opportunities are greater, the motivations different. During the Depression, only those who were academically motivated or wealthy went to college. Today, the typical college student ends up on campus because of social pressures and because of the vague feeling that education enables one to be a better person. He tends to be less of a pure scholar than his predecessor, and because it was easier for him to get to college (despite comparatively more stringent admissions requirements) he is more likely to criticize his education. Whatever one thinks of this situation — and there are many Old Guard educators who deplore it—the fact remains: the modern American college has gone a long way toward redefining its function by the mere process of redefining its student body. In the educational step ladder, the college today is what high school was yesterday. Students don't go to college today to become teachers or professional scholars, although they may later go to graduate school for these purposes. They go instead recognizing that the complexity of our society demands more than a high school education, and they hope college can prepare them to meet the challenges of modern life. It is entirely to the credit of the Director of the Office of 19 Ill Admission, Chase Peterson, and to his predecessor, Fred Climp, that not only are the more able and creative members of this new student pool admitted to Harvard but that they arc sought out and encouraged to come. Board scores and academic brilliance arc of course considered, but selection is increasingly made on the basis of feel. II While Harvard's admissions policy has kept pace with the changing context of education in society, its educational policy has not. Most of the Harvard Faculty, trained at a time when college meant something vastly different than today, have difficulty in understanding just how radical those changes are. The commotion which followed President Posey's unfelicitous report to the Overseers this year illustrates that the problem is not simply one of lack of communication: there are very basic differences of opinion as to what a university should be like. It shouldn't be surprising, then, that so many of the students brought to Flarvard by a farsighted Admissions Office should be sorely disappointed after arriving in Cambridge. They soon find that the flowery rhetoric about General Education in the General Catalogue may be mostly wishful thinking. The College claims to look first of all to [the student's! life as a responsible human being and citizen, but its glances seem at best sidelong. The delicate balance between the University, dedicated to the advancement of knowledge, and the College, whose purpose is the development of the individual, is undelicately weighted in favor of the University, perhaps because no one really knows what the College should be doing. While these modern students are not the same kind of dedicated academics as their predecessors, it is wrong to think that they are anti-intellectual. To be sure, they resent the emphasis on professional training, on medieval scholasticism, and on ethereal abstractions; but this does not mean they are anti-intellectual any more than it means that the medieval scholastic is a true intellectual. The intellectuality of these students is one of personal and social relevance. They see around them a society which, for all its potential and promise, seems bent on destruction. As the presumed repository of society's knowledge and wisdom, it seems proper and fitting to them that the University ought to be concerned with salvaging what worthwhile remnants of society are left. Instead, they find a Harvard College which appears to have in no significant way changed from the Ivory Tower of the past. Only instead of an Ivory Tower, the university's protective wall is called value freedom. Technology, President Pusey explains, cannot be used to support an opinion. For this reason the administration did not permit television to broadcast a recent Vietnam teach-in. (He did not explain how the dissemination of opinions differs from the dissemination of information. Did he feel that the teach-in was totally devoid of any information whatsoever?) The renunciation of social obligation follows the same form, though the harm wreaked in this case is infinitely worse. Value freedom allows one to wallow in the mud without feeling soiled. What values Harvard does espouse are usually traditional ones. Tradition is in fact the premise to the General Education program. The ideal underlying Gen Ed is the traditional belief that appreciating the past will enable one to appreciate the present. Only recently have some members of the Harvard community, notably Winthrop House Master Bruce Chalmers, suggested that what is even more important than knowledge of the past is an understanding of the present; the former does not inevitably lead to the latter. Although the idea of learning from the past is appealing, there is a tendency for this kind of scholarship to be concerned with irrelevancies. If students today are less academic than previously, it is only in the sense of having little tolerance for the academics' habitual preoccupation with minutiae. It would be foolish not to recognize that many students — perhaps the majority at Harvard — are fairly content with the system as it operates. A large number not only intend to go on to graduate school, but see the College as a prep school for the University. This sort of student is almost ideally suited to the education Harvard is able to give him. The other kind of student, the one who feels discontented, has little alternative other than to get out. Despite all the courses in the Cencral Catalogue, despite all the extra-curricular activities, there is a surprising lack of genuine diversity in the education Harvard offers its students. Many disciplines are represented in the Faculty, and there's a shopping market glut of courses to choose from each term. But essentially, the courses and the Faculty are frighteningly alike: there is an assumption common to both that Harvard students come to their courses already intellectually motivated. Professors simply present the pertinent body of information — rarely is there an attempt to stimulate or to inspire. The only real variety at Harvard lies in its student body. This is Harvard's strength; it is also its weakness. Given such a heterogeneous student body, one would expect the College to provide a reasonable amount of flexibility, freedom, and opportunity for independence. Administrators are quick to point out that there is a minimum of rules and that almost any regulation can be broken under some circumstances. If a person is willing to scream and kick enough, he can get almost anything. Unfortunately for many students, there are even stronger forces which discourage their taking advantage of Harvard's freedom. The prospect of manipulating a system overgrown with 300 years of ivy can be overwhelming. It takes security and self-confidence to buck a school with Harvard's reputation. Few students are able to do this without some advice or prodding. The paucity of such help is what makes Harvard's flexibility uncomfortably rigid for a great many students. Harvard insists that it does no nursing job, but says that anyone who needs advice can readily get it if he wants to ferret it out. Here again, part of the claim is legitimate; advice can be gotten by those determined and sure enough of themselves to go out and seek it. The tragedy of the unhappy and confused student is that he rarely has the determination and confidence to seek help. Either the student is half-ashamed of his problem and doesn't want to admit its existence by seeking help, or else he's gone so far off the deep end that he cannot get help on his own initiative. This no-nursing attitude of the Deans and what Riesman calls the machismo of the Harvard student (seeing ourselves as self-sufficient Harvard Men ) operate to keep students from admitting that they have problems which they cannot solve themselves. Dr. Perry of the Bureau of Study Counsel claims that Harvard emphasizes self-sufficiency in order to avoid charges of paternalism from students resentful of an over-active counselling staff. This would seem to indicate that many students misunderstand the meaning of paternalism. Administrative paternalism — undue regulation of the college environment — is understandably and justifiably repugnant to students. But there can be another form of paternalism, and this seems to have completely escaped Flarvard. There is nothing wrong when a faculty, older and presumably wiser than students, advises and helps its students much as a father would his grown son. Much can be said for encouraging people to be independent, to work out their own problems — this is one way we develop self-confidence. On the other hand, we all must know our own limitations and realize there are times when it is not degrading to go to others for help. It is unfortunate that the general student view is so hostile to interference. Perry once said students had vet to learn that people can get help for themselves without getting it by themselves. It is ironic that Harvard evidently expects its students to learn this important piece of wisdom by themselves. Hopefully, help and encouragement for the discouraged student might be provided by informal student-faculty contacts. This is rarely the case, and amounts to a double tragedy: not only is the student left to fend for himself, but the quality of academic intercourse is impaired. Theoretically, tutorial and the House system provide the personal contact and intimacy to countervail the size and impersonality of the University. In practice, however, the Houses, with an average population of over 400 students per house, have become little more than overcrowded dormitories. The opposition to House courses on the part of conservative members of the Faculty illustrates that even the administration basically conceives of the Houses as fancy dormitories. Most people now recognize that the central issue behind the parietal uproar is not “longer sex hours, nor even democracy for the sake of democracy, but rather that there would be a much greater chance of student involvement with the House community were the Houses to be self-regulating. However, because ultimate responsibility for governing the House falls upon the Master, not the students, and because of mundane things such as limited budgets (Houses are totally self-supporting, in contrast to Yale's Colleges), more and more students leave the Houses to live off campus. There is no excuse for such bumbling waste of what might be Harvard's most desirable feature. Tutorial has worked out slightly better. Here, at least, the student has the opportunity to meet his instructor on a relatively individual basis. When difficulties do arise, they usually stem from either the tutor's not being interested in his student (most tutors are graduate students pursuing their own studies) or from the fact that students simply do not know how to behave in a one-to-one classroom situation. Despite the occasional successes of Tutorial and the Houses, most students consider Harvard a lonely, impersonal place. There is little or no sense of community, which is regrettable, for it is in community that one is able to learn and share with others on a personal basis; it is in community that one finds relevance and immediacy in education; and it is only in community that a college can flourish. Considering the lack of community, the increase in students who feel alienated from Harvard is not surprising. Now that the possibility of leaving is temporarily closed, the student who might otherwise have left will be around to voice his discontent. If self-criticism is a virtue, then perhaps the draft will have served Harvard well. Harvard, as well as every other American college, is caught in a difficult situation. It has to abandon its traditional function of professional training, which is being taken over by graduate schools, and to find a new role for itself in American society. That the college will have a role is inevitable. Being convinced of the importance of a college education, the American people will continue to encourage their sons and daughters to take advantage of it. It is not difficult to envision a college which does raise the level of our society. For this to happen, there must be a radical and thorough reorientation in the sorts of things colleges do. Many men may be capable of advanced thought, but few are academics. While it is not too soon for Harvard to consider what its new role in society should be, it may be too much to expect that it will. The draft is only temporary; even now some students are leaving, unwilling to endure any longer what they consider to be a purposeless grind. The frank, radica) self-probing necessary to enact meaningful change may prove to be beyond the capacity of a community noted for its liberal cool. If this is the case. Harvard will be around for a long time to remind us of a glorious opportunity missed. — Jeffrey L. Elman HONOR THESES Most students consider the senior honors thesis the climax of undergraduate education at Harvard. In the fall, faculty members eulogize the glories of theses to awe-struck seniors who at the time see only the trauma and uncertainty of the effort rather than the glory of its completion. Despite procrastination all year and all-nighters the week before due-date, the majority of thesis writers manage to nurse their project to maturity. Was the effort worth it? For most the answer seems to be yes, even though there arc certain drawbacks. Few activities, academic or otherwise, are as physically and emotionally exhausting as thesis writing. This is in part a result of the size of the project, but it also stems from the fact that the most difficult problems in writing a thesis are those encountered first. Contemplating a thesis is dangerous, for at the start it appears as an intimidating 80-arm octopus; without jumping in right away, it is easy not to get started at all. Finding a workable and interesting topic is not easy, especially since many departments ask that theses be original and because of the practical consideration that sufficient research information must be available. After finding a topic, grueling, seemingly endless weeks of research follow. Having compiled quantities of data, the writer faces immense organizational problems in composing a first draft. But when he's doing the work, and not thinking about doing it, the going is smooth and sometimes enjoyable. A good thesis demands that his soul be put into it, but during spring vacation, after he's slept off his all-nighters of the week before, he knows he's accomplished something. The value of completing a thesis is usually great. Academically, it can be a superb experience. Most thesis writers for the first time are reversing their role in the educational process; they are no longer devouring the words and views of others, but arc developing a position or theory of their own. To do so, they must refine their own abilities of critical thinking and lucid writing. The chief rewards of a thesis come not as an intellectual exercise, however, but as a personal experience. Writing a thesis provides the student many insights into himself — his creative talents, his ability to organize himself, his ability to cope with pressure and strain. As a personal challenge, it can contribute greatly to the writer's character development, even if he intends never to write a page of scholarly prose again. At Harvard, however, there is a tendency, common among both faculty and students, to overestimate the importance of thesis writing. Too often the intellectual value of theses is overrated, their personal and emotional value underrated. As contributions to scholarship, relatively few theses are earthshaking, or even water-rippling. Only occasionally are they original; the large majority are products of methodical plodding. Neither are they necessarily difficult or time-consuming to write — summa theses have been produced from start to finish in four weeks. Most problems in writing arise simply from procrastina- tion, lack of personal organization, or fear of failure. Nonetheless, a popular mystique about the intellectual value of theses has been cultivated, and many seniors find themselves pressured into writing one, sometimes on topics they dislike. Some haggard thesis writers have even been accused of being un-scholarly and anti-intellectual for failure to show complete enthusiasm in doing their project. To some seniors, the thesis becomes not a privilege, but a requirement for graduation or graduate school, and these individuals are so intent upon getting it out of the way that they have less chance to enjoy it and to develop personally from it. Such a situation is unfortunate, since it merely adds another academic pressure to the already overburdened student. In light of events of the past year, not only do theses seem overplayed, but, to some students, irrelevant and inconsequential as well. One senior commented, With all the killing going on in Vietnam, early American literature just doesn't seem so important to me. If I could. I'd drop my thesis and work fulltime for McCarthy. While this particular senior did not drop his thesis, many others this year did. The number of dropped theses this year rose sharply over past years; in some departments, as many as a third of those starting theses did not complete them. Many factors contributed to this situation, but the predominant reason seems to have been the preference for anti-war activities over what some seniors regarded as academic trivia. There would be cause for alarm if the war had not made so many seniors regard theses as relatively unimportant. Unfortunately, the war has led some people to over-react against theses. Fear of the draft has caused some seniors to substitute for thesis writing not politics, but inactivity: one senior said, If I wrote a thesis, I could graduate magna. However, even if I received a summa, I still couldn't go to graduate school next year. I may as well not write a thesis and enjoy my senior year. This rising attention to non-academic problems has also driven some students to challenge the importance of pure scholarship itself. Such are but two of the pernicious effects of an unpopular war. For the majority of students, the war does not reduce thesis writing to irrelevancy any more than the claims of some professors make it an academic necessity. It is important to realize that thesis-writing is a highly personal matter: some students may spend their time more profitably in other activities, yet the fact remains that for many individuals thesis writing can be intellectually rewarding, war-time or not, and that for scholars it is intellectually crucial. In any case, the thesis' main purpose should be the writer's personal development; and, as such, the thesis is only one way — but an excellent one — to promote this. — Kenneth M. Ludmerer SHAPCSHIfTtft is a computer program designed to run on a PDP-1 with graphic display devices attached. The program accomplishes rapid transformations in the complex number plane, and allows the user to quickly visualize the results of a specific mathematical transformation. The transformation equations are inputed to the computer by means of a drawing pen, displayed (see above), and converted into machine-recognizable code. The actual computations are then controlled by this code. The picture on the preceding page was the result of applying a polynomial transformation to the figure of a circle. — Harry R. Lewis The ghetto unrest which frightens the liberal community into making concessions to Black Poweritos also feeds tendencies which both undermine liberal tolerance and lead in the direction of more repressive responses to ghetto violence. Factors contrary to liberal restraint are already present within the ghetto system; forces arc set in motion which may circumscribe liberals' ability to respond to ghetto violence in a concessive way. However, liberals themselves are of two minds about violence. A limited amount of violence can be interpreted as a sympton of very real underlying social problems. But there is a threshold beyond which symptoms of social problems become a lack of acceptance of the ground rules of liberal society. Beyond a certain point, acts of violence become untenable violations of the law, which must be met by force . . . The system is predisposes! toward a repressive response to racial violence and unrest. — Barbara Fields 25 Wolfgang Amadaeus Mozart left behind some SO fragments of his compositions — unfinished pieces of all kinds. Three unfinished compositions were chosen: the Requiem (K. 626), a Concerto for Violin, Piano and Orchestra (K. 31Sf), and a Quintet for Clarinet and Strings (K. 516c). The stylistic framework of each of these pieces, as svell as other Mozart essays of the same genre, was carefully analyzed. A completion was then written for each, attempting to preserve the original flavor of the compositions. Franz Sussmayr, a student of Mozart, had already completed the Requiem, but the thesis involved addition of a fugue to one portion of the piece. All three compositions, together with the completions, were performed in May. — Robert O. Levin A photolormer function generator is a means of converting graphical information into an electrical signal. Thi; is useful when electrical signals of peculiar waveforms are desired, since standard function generators produce only a poor variety of waveforms. For example, odd waveforms are required for analog computer simulation of a flood control system, e.g. the irregular and empirical waveform representing rainfall over a period of time. This could be represented in a graph, however, and the photoformer could produce the appropriate voltage from the resulting graph. — Charles S, Peskin 27 “Trouble springs from Idleness, and grievous Toil from needless Ease.” Poor Richard The all-nighter, an institution prevalent at most colleges not because of the extremely heavy work load, but rather the unusual study habits of many students, is an unavoidable aspect of Harvard life. It's like sex here; everybody does it sometime. An all-nighter, however, though conceived in sweet indolence, is for many a distinctly unpleasant experience, a bastard child of sloth, born in the pain of unwanted labor. The all-nighter can be divided fairly logically into four segments: the 2-7 PM stall, the 7-11 PM attempt, the 11 PM-1 AM forgetting, and the 1-7 AM blur. The first of these segments, the stall, is characterized by the sublime wasting of time before the indistinct spectre of some future unpleasant task. After lunch a typical all-nighter, candidate returns to his room picking the corn from his teeth. He lights a cigarette, opens a window, and sits down to read the Crimson. Perhaps he puts a Buddy Holly record on the stereo and simply settles back to digest. Perhaps he wanders over to see the guys next door or to browse in heavy silence through their crinkled Playboy’s. At any rate he wastes his time with an unusual relish due to the fact that he knows he has at least six hours of work ahead of him, and he wants to make every free moment count. He is facing an impending ordeal, and he may daydream. He thinks of his girl back home, or maybe his girl here at school. He calls her up if it's convenient, and writes a letter to her (two drafts) if it is not. Sealing up the envelope, he looks at his watch. It's 3:30; just time enough for a quick game of squash, ping-pong, frisbee, cards, handball, or touch football. There's no panic yet, just time for a lot of good fun with the guys. There will be plenty of opportunity later to do whatever studying that has to be done. Later, our hero, heralded by raucus laughter, returns to his room flushed with the effects of his recent activity. If he has been exerting himself physically, he takes a shower (one of those 30-minute lukc-warm showers) and emerges refreshed, relaxed, relieved. Promptly at 6 o'clock he goes to supper, lingering like a death-house convict over his cup of coffee and three pieces of chocolate cake. It is 7 PM; he has effectively blown the afternoon. Time is crawling away and our potential all-nighter victim begins to feel a little anxious. He has run out of things with which to waste his energy. He feels he must go to the library and make an attempt. With notebooks, books, pens, pencils, life-savers, and cigarettes, our hero trundles off libe-bound. He is now relaxed for the first time since lunch; he is making an effort. His conscience is salved. As soon as he reaches the library, however, frustration overtakes him. He cannot concentrate; he fidgets in his chair; he takes four or five trips to the drinking fountain (necessitating an equal number of study breaks in the john). If Hilles is his domain, he aimlessly wanders the halls in cautious but desperate inspection of crossed legs and short skirts. In the end, though, his nervous forays are in vain. Predictably, he succumbs, and cradling a dish of ice cream, props himself against the wall like everyone else. If in Lamont, he spends countless hours counting subway trains (1st floor), reading old Life magazines (2nd floor), reading Henry Miller (3rd floor), watching Cliffies on the 3rd floor (4th floor), watching the flashing sign at the Hong Kong restaurant (5th floor). In Widner, secure in the fact he will be awakened at 10:00, he falls asleep. At 11 PM, or thereabouts, he gives up the attempt, resigned to a night of study as he sheepishly checks his books at the door. Faced now with a grisly prospect, our subject wants to put off the actual labor as much as possible. He may take another shower (this time, only 20 minutes), watch the Johnny Carson monologue, visit the guys next door. Usually he begins to banter feverishly with his roommates, trying to start an argument, and the resulting bull sessions stagger illogically far into the night. The room resounds with polemics concerning sex, religion, 3nd the nature of the universe as the spectre of six hours of future toil is clouded behind bad grammar and non sequiturs. Our hero is forgetting. Slowly all his roommates slip away to bed and our all-nighter candidate becomes an all-nighter participant. Now he has to get the work done, concentration is forced upon him, and he labors into the night. People who frequently, if reluctantly, participate in a-n er's say that the hours between 3 and 5 AM are the toughest. One becomes conscious of a slow heat creeping up over the back of the shoulders, the body exists in a state of semi-sweat, eyelids become swollen, the hands feel puffy, a growing heaviness smothers the chest . . . blur has set in. 29 Cartoons by Rick Deutsch It is 3:30 AM; our hero is trying to fight fatigue. He takes No-Doze, dexedrine, or gulps cup after cup of acid-black coffee. If he is typing, he begins to spell out each word, letter-by-letter, as he types it. He makes mistakes. Through his stupor he erases mechanically, paying homage to catatonia. He plods on while everything becomes a blur under the glare of his high-intensity lamp. Fighting a complete breakdown, he may take another shower (this time, short and cold). Returning to work, he frequently stares out the window for the first signs of dawn. The ticking of his watch propped up on the desk becomes louder as he calculates whether or not he will finish his tasks before the imminent deadline. Dawn renders remarkable changes; it washes away depression, heightens perception, and the “blur begins to fade. The jets start taking off from Logan again, and our hero is cheered on by the sight of people rushing to work below his window. His body is fooled by the sight of the sun; it believes, as usual, it has rested the night before, and fatigue lessens. If he has time, our all-nighter veteran plods light-headedly down to a breakfast which he will not really taste. His eyes feel a little twinge as he tries to focus on the Crimson. His face twitches, and his body subtly submits him a constant stream of neural lies. Leaving the dining hall, our veteran is elated. He recalls the events of the previous night and afternoon. He feels proud that he worked through the night, and he is quick to inform anyone of the fact. In the happy bustle of mid-morning, he completes his tasks with aching back muscles and takes his exam, hands in his paper, or recites slurringly before his history and lit. tutor. Returning to his room later, he sinks into a chair, still elated. He will remain so until fatigue overtakes him sometime in the afternoon, and his all-nighter, which began in fevered inactivity, ends in fevered sleep. — John Larouche It's 3:30; just time enough lor a quick game of squash, ping-pong, Irisbee, cards, handball, or touch iootball. The sublime wasting of time before the indistinct spectre of some future unpleasant task. 31 He feels proud that he worked through the night and afternoon, and is quick to inform anyone of the fact. 33 FACULTY Looking Back Every generation has its great teachers, and every generation loses its share to retirement. No matter how one faces this phenomenon, the fact still remains that at a given instant in time a university faculty has reached a particular stage of maturity. However, there comes a moment, perhaps once in a decade, when a whole group of highly esteemed men reach the twilight of their careers. And for those scholars trained in the post-VVorld War I, pre-Depression era, that moment is now. A whole generation of Harvard professors has nearly completed its academic tour. From Ph.D. candidate to teaching fellow, from section man to assistant, then to full professor, these men have lived a life of scholarship: what is so interesting is that for many of them life has meant nothing but Harvard. Crane Brinton of the class of 1919, Eliot Perkins of the class of 1923, and John Finley of the class of 1925 — all three have lived in, have worked with, have veritably breathed Harvard academia for over forty years. And there are many others. The late David Owen joined the faculty in 1937; chemist George Kistiakowsky came to Harvard in 1930; and protein expert J. T. Edsall was a classmate of Eliot Perkins. To say the least, their positions are unique: thirty to fifty years is an unusual amount of time to spend in any one place — even Harvard. It gives these men an extraordinary vantage point from which to view the University today. Feet propped on his desk, a familiar pipe in hand, Eliot Perkins, Professor of History, former Master of Lowell House, and member of the class of 1923, likes to assert jokingly that the past forty years of Harvard have, of course, all been for the worst. Aside from the obvious physical and administrative differences, such as the construction of the Houses and the full integration of Radcliffe and Harvard classes, which have made a tremendous change in College life since his undergraduate days. Professor Perkins sees some rather fundamental changes in.the constitution of the University. One of the most Professor C. Crane Brinion delivered his last lecture on December 19, 1967 — a 9:00 class in History 134a. Brinton retired after S3 years at Harvard, a period which saw the Houses built and witnessed sweeping educational changes: the establishment of Tutorial, the Society of Fellows, and Ceneral Education. basic, he maintains, is the attitude of the undergraduates. In the thirties, in fact throughout the pre-World War II era, there was a sort of casualness that permeated the College. The academic atmosphere was more relaxing; the pressure for grades was much diminished. And if it was a question of doing a senior thesis or taking the editorship of the Crimson, you took the editorship. Today you would probably choose the thesis or try to do both. As Professor Perkins recalls, that same ideal of a rather unhurried scholarship also pervaded the pre-war faculty. The History Department was much smaller when I began in 1925; I knew all the senior men, and they knew me. There was a sort of tacit assumption, before the expression, that if you wanted a position and delivered the goods, you could get one. But the Depression changed all that. As it had changed, one might add, the prevailing tone of undergraduate life. For Perkins, the ideal Harvard existed between 1936 and 1942, a time when no one felt he had to go to college to keep from being a shoe black. In three years, Perkins maintains, there was no excessive demand on College facilities. The enrollment was only 3600 instead of 5000; the research capacity of Widener was not overworked; and the Houses, with the proper number of men, could more satisfactorily provide the effective community of scholars for whom they were built. If he could. Professor Perkins would recreate that balanced era, that best College of 1936; and he insists that the quality of the undergraduates then was intellectually just as high, though of a much different background, than of those today. Indeed, for Eliot Perkins, forty years at Harvard have brought radical changes in the mood of the college he once attended. And yet, if there has been a radical change in the tone of undergraduate academic life, there has been just as extensive a change in the graduate-student dominated, research-oriented areas of the University — especially those in the pure and ap- 41 plied sciences. As J. T. Edsall, Professor of Biochemistry and world-renowned authority on the chemistry of proteins, likes to recall, All the biochemistry known about the time I graduated from Harvard Medical School in 1928 comprises only about ten percent of what we know today. The avalanche of new material in the sciences has made it all but impossible for a person to keep up adequately, even in his own field. Furthermore, the flood of new publications discourages all but the very hardy souls from writing new introductory textbooks in the sciences. In fact, the breakthroughs in the past twenty years in biochemical research have been so drastic, Professor Edsall remarks, taken aback by it all himself, that in my wildest dreams would never have thought that we would be so far ahead today. And what has made this tremendous advance possible? Ask almost any scientist and he will cite the prodigious amount of post-war government support for pure and applied research as the most important reason. Professor Edsall concurs: Before the War we had no government support at all; only the Rockefeller Foundation provided some funds for our laboratory. But in the forties we got caught up in the production of blood plasma proteins, and the lab grew tremendously. The total effect of the government subsidy of scientific research is rather hard to assess adequately; the radical change since the War in Harvard science, at least for J. T. Edsall, is not. Is the history of Harvard since the twenties and thirties only one of unremitting change? Eliot Perkins and J. T. Edsall seem to think so. What of the enduring elements of the Harvard tradition? The story is not all change, not all innovation. Abbot and James Lawrence Professor of Chemistry George B. Kistiakowsky, former chief of the explosives division of the Los Alamos Laboratory of the Manhattan Project, and science advisor to several presidents, sees both change and continuity. The perennial mentor of Chcm 60 looks back upon forty years at Harvard and marvels at its growth, intellectually as well as physically. When I came to Harvard, Mr. Lowell employed a faculty made up of scholars and gentlemen. With a puckish grin Professor Kistiakowsky adds, Today, the emphasis on gentlemen is not so significant. However, he notes that the Harvard he joined in 1930 was supreme among American universities in the quality of its salaries, facilities, and faculty. Now, he notes, Harvard is only one of a number of outstanding places. Like Professor Edsall, Kistiakowsky remembers a time when two or three evenings in the library told you everything that was going on. Now, he says, I can't even keep up with one journal. Professor Kistiakowsky adds with a grin that scientific research used to be the pastime of the elite few; now it is the profession of the middle class. So, where the rest of the faculty has gained prestige, I now have less than when I came. The remark, of course, must be delivered with a smile, for George Kistiakowsky is deservingly one of the most highly honored chemists in the world. And yet, unlike Edsall, the size of Professor Kistiakowsk s research group has remained the same for over thirty years. With a staff varying from eight to twelve, his research at Harvard has always been non-governmental. Though the financing of his work has changed considerably, he has never engaged in any large-scale research projects. The trend towards big science is not universal. Far from the labs of Oxford Street, in the Master's residence of Eliot House, Professor of Greek Literature John H. Finley thinks that things — at least in a social sense — are about the same at Harvard. Unlike President Pusey, he feels that the University has not changed with the country: Harvard has run hard to keep its place. Finley maintains that the ability of the undergraduates is no greater. There are no more distinguished seniors like e e cummings or Leonard Bernstein. Finley remembers his youth being less influenced by newspapers and world events. People grew up in the shadow of their families. And thus, for my college generation, the minor joys of life seemed innocently large. There were many, for in- stance, who died early from drinking. The danger in this was provinciality. As Finley remarks, People had less of a view of the world at large. My era, the early twenties, was an era of eating clubs. You didn't really meet anyone in the College except freshman year or if you did something. I was president of the Advocate and quarterback of the JV football team. Otherwise, there was little college life in Finley's time, there was no center of things. Undergraduate days were out of focus — we had nothing like the House system. On the nature of college life in the twenties — or what there was of it then — Finley observed: No girl was ever seen in Cambridge. I myself never knew a Radcliffe girl. And my contacts with the opposite sex came only at local Boston parties. Remember, the automobile was rare in those days, so people read a lot. Certainly, Finley says, the emphasis on girls was much less, but I still think that socially the vast middle middle ground of Harvard has not essentially changed. And thus, the gamut of opinion has been run — the men whose lives span the same years sec in them very different things. And just as all cannot possibly be different, all cannot possibly be the same. For certainly, that social life which John Finley describes has in reality, decayed to the same point from which Eliot Perkins would have it recreated. And yet, one man sees the ruins while the other remembers the gardens that hung before. Of all these men, of all these Harvard scholars, the one who has been a part of the University the longest is McLean Professor of Ancient and Modern History, C. Crane Brinton, for whom 1967-68 marks the end of a distinguished fifty-three year academic career. If there have been changes at Harvard, Crane Brinton has seen them. And as he reminisces, one cannot help but wonder about times long since past: Externally, undergraduate life was very different. Commuters wore high collars and dress was on the whole quite formal. The Harvard press was, politically, very right of center. And of course we had no parietals. You've also got to remember that when I went to Harvard it was the USC or Notre Dame of college football. The big stadiums and big crowds started here. In fact, the first game I saw was Harvard 36, Yale 0 — and the Yale captain was led off the field in tears. Those are days long past, but even last semester Professor Brinton's History 134a had the largest single class enrollment in the College. How did the Brinton legend get started? My first chance at teaching was Hist. 14 — the French Revolution course, Professor Brinton said. A fellow faculty member gave me the opportunity of lecturing to the Cliffies to earn some extra money. That was in 1926. When I became an assistant professor I was allowed another half course, and so I brought in History 34 in the early thirties. It's been going now off and on for thirty-five years. Asked about his reputation as an easy grader. Professor Brinton half-jokingly replied: I'm proud of the fact that I rescued several people academically who didn't deserve to go under. My scholar's conscience is clear. And well it should be. Author of fourteen books, recipient of numerous awards, and past president of the American Historical Society, Crane Brinton is an outstanding scholar and teacher. He is one of the great men who, in retirement, will be dearly missed. Every generation has its great teachers. And these men hold different opinions about today's world as well as different remembrances of things past. To house such a diversity of reaction may just be the greatness of this University. Harvard has changed and will continue to do so over the years — no one could realistically want it any other way. And yet, the Harvard tradition of Veritas has remained the same. To mark the passing of a great man is not to strike a mournful note, but merely to reflect upon the timetable of a career. For every end there is always, somewhere, a new beginning; and it is a funny but accepted truth that the many who start are always overshadowed by the few who finish. — lames H. Doroshow r « William Alfred Michael Walter Everyone in the Social Sciences, particularly in government, must face the difficult and complex problem of how to reconcile the ideals of disinterested academic inquiry and personal commitment to particular political or social causes. Some faculty members resolve this conflict by simultaneously holding academic and government appointments; others do so by devoting themselves almost entirely to scholarship. Associate Professor of Government Michael VValzer has never been a Presidential Advisor, but the conflict between political activism and academic disinterestedness is still a serious one for him. As a radical, he is devoted to working for sweeping changes in the society around him, but as a scholar he must constantly face the problem of whether his understanding of history and political theory is distorted by his involvement in radical politics. Obviously, he says, the things you choose to study are affected by what you believe, but it should be added that this does not mean that one will only find those truths that happen to be convenient. Walzer himself is very careful not to let his political views enter the classroom. This fall he taught a course on political obligation which covered such topics as civil disobedience and the obligation to pay taxes and serve in the army, and he meticulously avoided promoting his own beliefs. This spring, when faculty members were asked to speak in class about the war in Vietnam as part of a national day of conscience, he said that he would not talk about Vietnam because he didn't feel that students should have to be subjected to his opinions. Walzcr's involvement in radical politics goes back to 1%0. That year, after graduating from Brandeis, he went South with the civil rights movement. Soon afterwards, he began writing articles for Dissent magazine, and, upon returning to Cambridge, he helped organize the Woolworth boycott. Since then he has continued to write for Dissent and has emerged as a leading radical figure. Recently, along with Professor Alpero-vitz, he was one of the organizers of Vietnam Summer and of the Cambridge Referendum on the war. As a radical scholar, Walzer must consider whether the university is an effective place to work for social change. To this he says, Clearly if you feel that change is going to be brought about by the working class or by oppressed minorities the university is no place to be, and a lot of radicals have left for that reason. On the other hand there are a lot of people who think change will come through the educated middle class. That is why SDS has arguments about whether to organize students or to work in the ghetto. Walzer himself believes that the radical can be effective in a university setting. He seems to be comfortable at Harvard and does not feel that the demands of the academic profession seriously infringe upon his radical activities. He plans to continue both his political writing and his college teaching —even if they don't result in any appointments by the President. —Peter Coonradt John Kenneth Calbraith i . HA History 271br. Seminar: United States — East Asian Relations Assistant Professor J. S. Thomson and Professor E. O. Rcischauer. TALCOTT PARSONS Talcott Parsons is an academic Buddha, whose influence, though seldom perceived by the mass of heretically non-academic Harvard students, wafts from the Cantabridgian Ivory Tower. Its essence originates in William James 330 and diffuses through the sterile passageways and offices; it brings warmth to bored secretaries; it pervades Massachusetts Hall; it finds its way to the Brookline offices of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences; it drifts to sociological oases at home and abroad; and lastly, though by no means unrecognizably, it permeates the texts and minds of thousands of students of the world's most emergent science. Professor Parsons is the last living member of the coterie who founded the Harvard Sociology Department in 1931. At that time he was secretary to the faculty committee, chaired by Pitirim Sorokin, which studied the need for an independent department; since then he has been the major figure in demonstrating and developing the importance of that department. In fact, if there is one word which evinces the proper response from those inquiring about Parsons, it is important . Yet this influential figure had a rather multi-directed start for one whose disciplinary dedication is so strong. An undergraduate program in philosophy and biology was somewhat complicated in Parsons' senior year at Amherst when a quarter of the faculty resigned over the dismissal of President Micheljohn. The young Parsons, who even then had some interest in social ethics, was still unable to take a single course which he had planned to take. Somehow he landed in a seminar in German philosophy with a senior professor who later would suggest that he apply for a fellowship to study in Germany. But this was not until Parsons had spent a year at the London School of Economics, a year in which, he points out, I did not hear even once the name of Max Weber. In 1925-26, however, as a PhD candidate at Heidelberg, Parsons did hear that name, and the reaction, if not earthshaking, was at least self-shaking in terms of a thesis, several translations, and a myriad of articles. The only comparable mutual attraction is T. S. Eliot's discovery of John Donne. While he was in Germany that year and the following summer of 1927 earning the degree which he chortles was nowhere equivalent to a Harvard PhD (take heart graduate students!). Professor Parsons observed a rampant nationalism , but still, when he saw a swastika painted on a wall and asked what it was, he was told it was the emblem of an extremist group. When he returned to Germany in 1930 tension was very high; Parsons did not see that country again until after the war. But the German years proved Parsons' serendipity. They were the pivotal lark in his life. In the conclusion to his latest book, American Sociology, Parsons calls attention to the shift in sociological emphasis from Marx's economic concern to the less eclectic theoretical framework used in analysis and scholarship in sociology today. Parsons' own career can be said to have followed a similar course. His post-doctoral study at Harvard was in economic theory and his first appointment here was as a teacher of Economics A. Professor Parsons had the unique experience of coming of age with his discipline. It is as a man of his discipline that Parsons impresses one the most. He represents the ideal of the academic sociologist, combining teaching, research, and publication. It is not surprising, therefore, to discover that he is currently conducting, in collaboration with his research assistant Gerald Platt, a study of the American academic profession under a grant from the National Science Foundation. His interest in academic men ranges from familiarity with more names and more careers than could find their way into the most fertile academic chit-chat to his desire to view the academic world as a social system in the most sophisticated Parsonian sense. The academic study, of which a pilot report has just been distributed, attempts to see the various American Universities as representing a continuum of institutions along a scale of what Parsons calls differentiation. Put simply, this differentiation is a measure of the amount of autonomy among the different subunits of the university. The study ultimately hopes to prove that individual faculty members' attitudes and behavior patterns vary with some consistency according to the level of differentiation of their school. The attitudes studied run the gamut from enthusiasm for research to desire to leave academia altogether. Among the behaviors studied are teaching styles and friendship patterns. Professor Parsons is most eager to correct several assumptions about academic men. First, he wants to prove that the vast majority of professors have little desire to curtail their teaching in order to conduct their own research. The results of the pilot study begin to confirm Parsons' theory. Most professors feel the teaching component to be a vital part of their role obligation. Strangely enough, the results seem also to indicate that the faculty at upwardly mobile medium differentiated schools have constructed an ideal of research that members of lower differentiated faculties look to with great desire. Hence a greater demand for research time as one goes down the differentiation scale. This phenomenon is most disconcerting when one considers the corruption of research motivation involved. Instead of the purest cognitive rationality (i.e., scholarship for the advancement of knowledge alone) one finds the vilest lust for prestige. Another major concern of Parsons' study is the distribution of power and influence. At low differentiated schools there is usually a powerful president who makes decisions in most matters. Conversely, at higher differentiated schools department chairmen gain authority until, at schools like Harvard, the department becomes a company of equals. Parsons likes to point out the decreasing bureaucratization and increasing colleagueality as one proceeds up the differentiation scale and the increasing satisfaction of the faculties concerned. To be sure, the president and overseers contfnuc to make final administrative decisions, but informal decision-making and use of influence are a much more significant aspect of the high differentiated schools like Harvard. Indeed, if anyone is able to speak knowingly about influence at Harvard it is Talcott Parsons. A discipline-oriented man like Parsons is also interested in a break-down of professors' attitudes by discipline. In the 116-school study now underway several colorful patterns have begun to emerge. Not the least satisfying to Parsons is the fact that, in a three way’consideration (Humanities — Natural Sciences— Social Sciences) the Social Scientists arc most satisfied with their disciplines and with their rate of career advancement. Parsons hypothesizes that this result is due to the rising prestige of the Social Sciences, a phenomenon which can be seen by the large number of grants being given to research in this area. In other words, social scientists arc now enjoying the excitement and the prominence which was new to the natural scientists in the last two decades and which once belonged to the humanities faculties in the 19th century university. Parsons does not care to speculate on whether the phenomenon might be cyclical. When asked about intra-departmcntal strains, notably the scholarly versus the more social-service directed elements of the Social Relations Department, Parsons points out that members of his department have done well in both areas for a long time. It is harder for sociology to be an Ivory Tower discipline than any of the others, and Parsons does not see a phenomenon in the field comparable to the ecclesiastical incest that disturbed the late Dean Miller of the Divinity School. Where Parsons does sense a strain is in student attitudes toward involvement and their conflict with the practical needs of scholarship. Professor Parsons answers critics of university abstention from political issues by drawing a contrast between corporate and individual stands. He sees the university as a pluralistic microcosm, and says it must protect the right of its members to speak out. His single-mindedness on the issue of academic freedom is demonstrated in a strong letter to the Gimson on The Double Helix affair. Nevertheless, he maintains that the university enjoys a privilege within our society that excludes the possibility of such actions as political endorsement. For Harvard University to support Robert Kennedy as opposed to Lyndon Johnson just wouldn't work! he laughed. His detractors might suggest that this is copping out, but witness his stand on an analogous issue: knowing full well the tendency of American media to ignore the subtltics of association. Parsons supported the right of a number of members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, of which he is president, to protest formally, as members of the Academy, America's involvement in the Viet Nam war. Parsons says the university too is not unwilling to take risks, such as the establishment of the Russian Research Center at the height of the Cold War. Harvard professors have never been lackies of the most reactionary elements in Washington. It will be interesting to see if the university will act with the same courage to the problem of R.O.T.C. credit, at the height of a real war. One of Parsons' favorite expressions is on the other hand, and it would be hard to question his sincerity in reasoning out the question of involvement. The fact is, however, the Federal Government has remained very liberal in granting research monies. Parsons, who is a champion of Research no less than of its brother. Academic Freedom, cannot overlook this treatment. At a party last summer, Talcott Parsons' wife spoke of him as if he were indeed a champion. She told a story of a visit they paid to a large mid-western university where her husband was giving a guest lecture. It was as if he had brought the light of sociology to the backlands. One saw reflected in the sparkle of her eye the image of a portly mustached gentleman in a pith helmet, bearing the insignia of the AGIL paradigm, making his way among throngs of amazed young students. At the same time she was telling this talc. Professor Parsons walked among his party guests ladelling wine punch into upraised glasses, and it was as if her story found its counterpart in their Belmont home. Eager undergraduates and those graduate students who seek Talcott Parsons out every year for a theoretical opinion or just a word of advice should not despair. Their grand professor has obtained what he calls a new academic lease on life and will be at William James for at least several years more. After that, we may be sure that the road to Belmont will be well-travelled. 51 — Arthur Lipkin BORGES AND I Things happen to him, the other one, to Borges. I stroll about Buenos Aires and stop, almost mechanically now perhaps, to look at the arch of an entranceway and the ironwork gate; news of Borges reaches me in the mail and I see his name on an academic ballot or in a biographical dictionary. I like hourglasses, maps, eighteenth-century typography, etymologies, the taste of coffee, and Robert Louis Stevenson's prose; he shares these preferences, but with a vanity that turns them into the attributes of an actor. It would be an exaggeration to say that our relationship is a hostile one; I live, I go on living, so that Borges may contrive his literature; and that literature justifies me. I do not find it hard to admit that he has achieved some valid pages, but these pages can not save me, perhaps because what is good no longer belongs to anyone, not even to him, the other one, but to the language or to tradition. In any case, I am destined to perish, definitively, and only some instant of me may live on in him. Little by little, I yield him ground, the whole terrain, though I am quite aware of his perverse habit of magnifying and falsifying. Spinoza realized that all things strive to persist in their own nature: the stone eternally wishes to be stone and the tiger a tiger. I shall subsist in Borges, not in myself (assuming I am someone), and yet I recognize myself less in his books than in many another, or than in the intricate flourishes played on a guitar. Years ago I tried to free myself from him, and I went from the mythologies of the city suburbs to games with time and infinity, but now those games belong to Borges, and I will have to think up something else. Thus is my life a flight, and I lose everything, and everything belongs to oblivion, or to him. I don't know which one of the two of us is writing this page. — Translated by Anthony Kerrigan JORGE LUIS BORGES The Charles Eliot Norton Professor for 1967-66 was Jorge Luis Borges, the Argentine writer who specializes in metaphysical pastels. He delivered six lectures to a groundling-filled and Gods-packed Memorial Hall, speaking on metaphor, on the art of translation, on his lexical playfields of nouns and verbs. Though some of his auditors must have been idle worshippers who had yet to enter the world of his books, of his irretrievable sunsets and arcane grammars, Borges' emblematic gestures and verbal exuberance quickened even the unlettered. Borges has been amused and amazed at the reception he has been accorded in Cambridge. Piles of the glaucous-covered Argentine edition of his works appeared and disappeared as suddenly from the bookshops. He was invited to speak at Spanish tables and House dinners, and he even endured an evening with the Advocate. In his own country he is taken for granted; the international publishers' Formentor award (which he believes has caused most of the fuss) was greeted with indifference in Argentina. Borges remarks in an early essay that the European and the North American believe that a book which has been awarded any sort of prize must be good; the Argentine acknowledges the possibility that it may not be bad, in spite of the prize. Borges' public appearances were not the only outward and visible signs of his inward and spiritual grace. He also gave a course on Argentine poetry which was a charmingly anecdotal romp through the pampas of C6rdoba Province and salons of Buenos Aires. He considered not literary history (with all its attendant demons of shabby and unsatisfactory textbook truth), but rather the logodaedalian enchantments of each poet. Instead of dealing with literature on a taxonomic and phylogenetic basis he examined the sacred quiddity of the individual artist. Those students who attended his courtly presentations in Hilles Library were introduced to the gauchos of Jos6 Hernandez, the sublunar metaphors of Loopoldo Lugones, the slippery solipsism of Maccdonio Fernandez, and the catoptric games with time and space that Borges himself has copyrighted in all countries. It is unlikely that many of those students will forget Borges' reading of some favorite lines in Martin Fierro, the Argentine epic, or his account of Macedonio Fernandez and his whims. Borges is one of those souls who defines a country not in terms of its venerable cathedrals and mountain passes, but in terms of the local morphemes and phonemes. He is unhappy with the Spanish language and Spanish literature. His library is redolent of hawthorn-hedge-and-hey-nonny England, and he prefers to speak English. Borges delights in our rich verbal palimpsest in layers of Latin and Anglo-Saxon. The secret of good writing in English, he claims, is the ability to play upon these two lexical keyboards simultaneously. He enjoys quoting from Rossetti a line which keeps a latinate alive in a solution of pure Anglo-Saxon: Sleepless with cold commemorative eyes. Like Nabokov, another alien and cunning linguist, he has helped us to relearn the peculiar power of our own tongue. Borges has written somewhere that all the books have already been written, or at least prefigured. The history of literature is the history of its attenuation. This is the defense of his own miniature fictions, which often begin as commentaries on past creations but ultimately transcend their slight form through his verbal mastery. In style, Borges is lapidary; in content, he is addicted to philosophical themes. Yet critics have accused him (there is nothing, of course, that a critic, with a fine nib and nimble wit, cannot find to say about an author) of passing the metaphysical buck. They are annoyed at his eclectic and to them cavalier use of philosophy, his deliberate raids on the museum of general ideas, his exoticism, his eschewing of eschatology in favor of the conundrum and the brazen paradox. But the reader of Borges can only remember with delight such quick fictions as Pierre Menard ( Author of Don Quixote ) and Ephraim Blueprint (the protagonist in The Bookshop of Isidor Circle ), the same Blueprint who memorably describes Infinity as that dreadful and everlasting lemniscate ( lemniscato espantoso y sempiterna ). Those who are hot for certainty, or who expect from verbal artifice a spiritual massage, may find more appealing than Borges' tentative lines the stale truths of Mediterranean profundits or the Vedic verities of Vishnu-land. Others may see in Borges' eclecticism the wise recognition that any philosophy, any brand of logic-chopping or moral suasion, is not the truth but merely an endless asymptote to the line of truth. Philosophic themes do not, of course, exhaust his repertoire. Readers of Borges come to welcome the game of chess, and the breeding mirrors, and the invented languages, and most of all the false authorities and obscure texts of his tales. Borges (again like Nabokov) wrests from the world of scholarship, a world of art. Borges has been pleased with his stay in Cambridge. This is fitting. His life (or rather, the life of that Borges who coincides with him in Time and Space) has been spent in libraries; thus he has more than a spiritual affinity with this university town, where whole lives may pass in the universe between Philol. 15.64 and Philol. 16.16. Borges claims that the students here arc very keen. Generally speaking, the Argentine students are interested in their examinations. American students are more interested in the subject matter. If one went to talk with Borges, he would discuss, not the latest revolt in Kumquat, not the stellar exploits of some astrofellow, but instead the etymology ( Etymology is the only game you can play ) of Buffalo (a mctathclic mess from bel fleuve ) or the lexical slumming of certain Argentine chers maitres who dabbled in hoodlums' slang (lunfardo). He has found time, between lecture lours and conversations, to write some stories ( which I hope will be a new departure ) and to reread his favorite books. His evenings arc spent with the silence, exile, and kenning of Anglo-Saxon poems, the inkhorn cacozealotry of Robert Burton, the oneiric prose of Lewis Carroll, the nightingales and limpid iambs of Keats and Shakespeare. For several months he has offered us a world quite different from that in which we swim. Sir Thomas Browne, a being akin to Borges, once wrote that there is all Africa and her prodigies in us , and it was this quiet pleasure in the interior world of art and heart — in the Word and the free play of the mind upon it — that he exhibited to all who would listen. Borges has returned to Buenos Aires. That timid and myopic librarian (one of his impersonators) has left us his mirrors and his labyrinths, his vast cosmographies, his incessant sunsets, the fire and the algebra of his mind. — Peter Lubin 53 PARABLE OF THE PALACE That day, the Yellow Emperor showed the poet through his palace. As they moved on, they left behind them, one after another, the first western terraces that, like gradins of an almost boundless amphitheatre, slope toward a garden whose metal mirrors and intricate juniper borders prefigured the labyrinth. They lost themselves in it, gaily at first, as if consenting to a game and later not without misgivings, for its straight avenues underwent a very slight but continuous curvature and secretly were circles. Toward midnight their observation of the planets and the opportune sacrifice of a turtle enabled them to extricate themselves from that seemingly bewitched region, but they did not free themselves from the feeling of being lost, which accompanied them until the end. Afterward they passed through antechambers and patios and libraries and a hexagonal drawing room with a water clock, and one morning they made out from a tower a man of stone, later lost to them forever. In sandalwood canoes, they crossed many glittering rivers, or a single river many times. The imperial retinue would pass by and the people would prostrate themselves; but one day they arrived at an island in which someone did not do so, because he had never seen the Son of Heaven, and the executioner had to behead him. Their eyes looked with indifference on blackhaired heads and black dances and complicated gold masks; what was real would confound itself with what was dreamt or, rather, the real was one of the configurations of the dream. It seemed impossible that the earth should be anything other than gardens, watercourses, architectural and other forms of splendor. Each hundred steps a tower cut the air; to the eye their color was identical, though the first one was yellow and the last scarlet, so delicate were the gradations and so long the series. It was at the foot of the penultimate tower that the poet (who had seemed remote from the wonders that were a marvel to all) recited the brief composition that today we link indissolubly to his name and that, as the most elegant historians repeat, presented him with immortality and death. The text has been lost; there are those who believe that it consisted of a line of verse; others, of a single word. What is certain, and incredible, is that all the enormous palace was, in its most minute details, there in the poem, with each illustrious porcelain and each design on each porcelain and the penumbrae and the light of each dawn and twilight, and each unfortunate or happy instant in the glorious dynasties of mortals, of gods and of dragons that had inhabited it from the unfathomable past. Everyone was silent, but the Emperor exclaimed: You have robbed me of my palace! And the executioner's iron sword cut the poet down. Others tell the story differently; There cannot be any two things alike in the world; the poet had only to recite the poem, they say, when the palace disappeared, as though abolished and obliterated by the last syllable. Such legends are, to be sure, no more than literary fictions. The poet was the emperor's slave and died as such; his composition fell into oblivion because it merited oblivion and his descendants still seek, and will not find, the word for the universe. — Translated by Carmen Feldman Alvarez del Olmo NEW ENGLAND. 1 %7. Han cambiado las formas de mi sueno; ahora son laterales casas rojas y el delicado bronce de las hojas y el caslo inviorno y el piadoso leno Como en el dia septima la tierra es buena. En los crepusculos persiste algo que casi no es, osado y triste, un antiguo rumor de Biblia y guerra. Pronto (nos dicen) llegara la nieve, y America me espera en cada esquina, pero siento en la tarde que declina el hoy tan lento y el ayer tan breve. Buenos Aires, yo sigo caminando por tusvcredas, sin porque ni cuando. J.L. Borges, Cambridge 3 $je octubre 1967 The shapes of my dream have changed. Now there are red houses aslant, and the delicate bronze of leaves, and the chaste winter, and the log of piety. As it was on the seventh day, the earth is good. In the twilight hours persists something that almost is not, resolute and sad, an ancient murmur of Scripture and war. Soon (we arc told) the snow will arrive, and America awaits me at every street corner, but I sense in the fading light the slowness of this day and the brevity of yesterday. Buenos Aires, I go on walking your streets, without a why or a when. 55 TOSHIHIRO KATAYAMA was bom in 1928 in Osaka, Japan, the son of an artist. In 1952 he won the Mainichi Industrial Design Award. In 1960, Mr. Katayama entered the Nippon Design Center as art director and designer for Toshiba Electric, Nikon Camera, and Fuji Iron Steel. He then moved to Switzerland in 1963 to become designer for J. R. Geigy. Mr. Katayama came to Harvard in 1966 as Lecturer on Graphic Design and Exhibition Designer at the Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts. In 1967 he inaugurated Harvard’s first course in graphics. Visual Studies 136-137, Principles of Graphic Design, pictured above. Strongly influenced by the Bauhaus, Toshihiro Katayama professes a deep interest in Constructivist thinking. He stresses the difference between art and design — the latter is an approach to a problem, a way of thinking which takes into account not only visual impact, but also the technical limitations of materials and production methods, as well as the stringent limitation of concept. It is the communication of a concept that is most clearly evident in Katayama's posters, well-known around the University. His sparing use of elements reveals his Japanese, as well as his Bauhaus background — he shares Mies' insight that less is more. To the economy of Mies and the Bauhaus he brings a Japanese simplicity that uses each form to the utmost of its symbolic meaning: the concept is distilled and given visual form. ,vvtVv iK 1 . :0l V ° . U £ll I 3,- c • v '■ THE WAR COMES TO HARVARD Posted on the oak door of the dining hall was a notice from the 25th Infantry Division: a junior who had left Harvard last year had been awarded the Bronze Star Medal posthumously for heroism in connection with military operations against a hostile force. A sophomore received a phone call from his parents telling him that his brother, married and a father, was in a reserve unit that had been activated for duty in Vietnam. A letter from an army hospital to another sophomore explained how his cousin had been critically wounded in an ambush. A senior returned home a few days before Christmas in order to attend the funeral of a high school friend who had died in Vietnam. This year the war finally came to Harvard. For us, there is no parallel, no contrast between the Vietnam war and the Great Patriotic War of our fathers. The advice and reprimands of those who had lived through the second war to end all war therefore go largely unheeded. The anxieties and pressures of the war fall upon us, and it is our generation that seems to have accepted the responsibility for ending it. Even in the Ivy Towers, students are laying aside their textbooks to join picket lines, marches, teach-ins, sit-ins, fasts, and referenda. Such a state of affairs is not surprising when one realizes that political activism is extremely time-consuming. Students generally do not have families to support, employers to placate, and time-clocks to punch. They have more free time to begin with, and if extra hours are needed, classes may be cut and papers postponed. Convenience explains potential, but not motivation. Students can easily make time for anti-war activity, but why should they feel compelled to join it? There exists on campus a plethora of pleasurable diversions which tempt one to rationalize or neglect the problems of the world. Indeed, the majority of students succumb to these temptations. As a result, those that become activists are a minority, but they are only the most obvious manifestation of a more widespread opposition to the Vietnam war. Most, if not all, students sense that something is amiss, even if they fail to act on it. They recognize that their alternatives have been constricted ( channelled, to use the Selective Service's phraseology), when, for example, they must choose a-field of concentration. Many students interested in scientific research will be adding doctor to their names with an M.D. rather than a Ph.D. For those who, despite urgent personal desires to take a semester off, decide to remain under the college umbrella, there is still an intense awareness (especially after the new draft law revisions) that the ll-S deferment is not an inalienable right, and that it is subject to change without notice. For some students, this anxiety is symptomatic of fundamental evils and deficiencies in American society. Many of these students feel they must protest and attack these evils. One may decry their motivation or condemn their outbreaks of self-righteousness, but the sincerity and intensity of their commitment is undeniable. PROTEST When the conflict in Vietnam was in its infancy, when Amer icans were still only advisers and Diem was Vietnam's benevolent despot, there were only a few voices raised in warning of impending disaster. With the Gulf of Tonkin incident and its aftermath, appeals to the reason and conscience of the American government became commonplace and were institutionalized in the form of the teach-in. Most people knew very little about the history and geography of Vietnam and even less about its politics. Scholars of Asian affairs awoke to find themselves perhaps the most sought-after academics in the nation. Biologists, mathematicians, and instructors of English also rose to contribute to the discussions on foreign policy and American society. Professors, who formerly were just names in catalogues and on book jackets, suddenly appeared as public figures with voices and personalities. All over the country, students listened to processions of speakers that often lasted into the early hours of the morning. Such gatherings were both exciting and informative, but everyone soon realized that major foreign policy decisions were not made at the universities. The teach-ins became teach-outs and moved from the colleges to the streets. Non-violent protest marches began in the hope that a demonstration of the fact that a large and respectable segment of the population was opposed to the war would change government policy. There were silent vigils in front of the United Nations; a march to Washington in April 1965, and a Voters' March in May 1966; and a rally in Madison Square Garden at which the crowd was incredulous when a speaker predicted that a half-million troops might be sent to Vietnam. The transition from the teach-ins to peaceful marches was only a change of tack. The protestors began to appeal to the government and general population as well as the students, but the nature of the appeals remained unchanged. Long lines of students, parents, women with baby-carriages, and young girls with buttons saying End the War, Draft Beer — Not Students, Beautify America — Sterilize LBJ, Make Love, Not War, and Vietnam for the Vietnamese, walked down Fifth Avenue to Central Park or to the United Nations or round and round the White House lawns. Old IWW songs were revived and a repertoire of chants created — Hey, hey, LBJ! How many kids did'ya kill today? , What do we want? Peace! When do we want it? Now! Other protests used silence. In a vigil to encourage U Thant to mediate peace talks, the demonstrators who stood shivering in the snow shushed anyone who broke form and spoke. Violence rarely flared during these demonstrations; they disturbed only the pigeons frightened by the waving placards.. The transition from dissent to resistance was dramatic. The war had been rather distant in the lives of the protestors, who were only anonymous parts of groups at the Washington Monument or in Midtown Manhattan. The demonstrations at new . is of the 6 5!)- 'd fttn to rod tVJni -C :• onovr, i«. be: how of v onw There IKB mJw troops X WJS -so: the Pentagon in October 1967, and against Dow in Mallinckrodt changed all that. Tear gas and clubs in Washington, probation and admonishment at Harvard, hit directly. The events at the Pentagon typify the changes in the antiwar movement. One had a sense of optimism, even euphoria, as one looked from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial and caught sight of the Washington Monument towering behind a vast expanse of fellow demonstrators. There were the ubiquitous guitars; the flower people were giving away fresh strawberries; and couples were making out beside the reflecting pool. So many people were there that light-heartedness seemed justified: surely the war would stop when government leaders saw this many souls opposed to it. Even when the march began, people remained very much at ease. At one point, the New England contingent was split in two, and discipline had to be imposed to get the groups united. A student told one group that they were the 82nd Lawnborne Division (the 82nd Airborne had been assigned by the Pentagon to deal with any disorders) and insisted that the marchers follow his orders. The speakers had injected a note of militancy that the majority of marchers did not appreciate until they crossed the bridge to the Pentagon. March leaders cautioned demonstrators not to step beyond the lines of police, to link arms, and to remove neckties or earrings which might be pulled at in a scuffle. Previous demonstrations in Washington had been relaxed affairs, but with these ominous warnings, the march grew tense. Most people decided to scoff at danger in order to protest the war and the military leaders. Only a few hundred people had been expected to engage in the sit-down at the Pentagon itself, but thousands joined in. As the line of demonstrators tromped over a small fence in order to get to the roadway leading to the Pentagon, a friend of mine cried out in surprise and glee: “Don't all these people realize that this is the civil disobedience part? If they did, they certainly were not bothered by the fact. The steps to the terraced parking area surrounding the Pentagon building were covered with protestors. Those who were able to climb to the terrace threw down ropes, and several hundred more demonstrators scaled the walls to join them. Lined up in front of the Pentagon entrance were rows of troops holding their rifles out stiffly in front of them. Federal marshals in helmets wandered about, while more troops and several members of the military hierarchy looked down from the roof of the building. The demonstrators sat down on the terrace while self-proclaimed leaders called for a silent vigil. Other protestors were chanting and waving their fists at a group of .troops blocking a ramp to the terrace. The disturbed troops eventually put on their gas masks and fired a canister of tear gos. The serious violence did not begin until later in the evening, when the television cameras had gone. Federal marshals told the demonstrators to leave the terrace and ordered the column of troops to advance. The troops had seemed reluctant to hurt the demonstrators (one is said to have thrown down his rifle and then to have been dragged away by the M.P.'s; another had grinned broadly when a pretty girl in a miniskirt put a flower in his rifle barrel), but urged on by the marshals, they began to beat their way through the crowd. Those protestors who did not move away fast enough were clubbed by the marshals and carried to paddy wagons. DOW It is no surprise that three days later students opted for an obstructive sit-in against Dow. Stories about what had happened on the terrace and reports of militant anti-Dow demonstrations on other campuses made people indignant and angry. The SDS, which had called for the demonstration, specifically voted down a proposal for an obstructive sit-in; the group that filled the halls of Mallinckrodt and confined the Dow recruiter for five hours acted on its own initiative. Later the spontaneity of the demonstration was looked upon as its greatest justification. The distateful consequences of the demonstration were also Washington, October 21-22, 1967 “The Pentagon spokesmen denied categorically that any rifle butts were used on demonstrator ; I saw upwards of two hundred people smashed, mainly In the head. I didn't know how to respond to this statement, first they said that no tear gas had been used. I was hit with tear gas and was wretching for about half an hour; and I saw an awful lot of other people hit by tear gas. Then they said that the demonstrators threw the tear gas at themselves. Well, the one that threw it at me was clearly disguised as a paratrooper in uniform in a line with other paratroopers. The newspapers did not cover the real violence, which occurred from about ten forty-five until about one o'clock on Saturday night. The violence they did describe they said was mainly provoked by the demonstrators. I’d just like to describe very simply for you what happened. At ten forty-five they switched the troops; they took out the MPs and put in the paratroopers. There were no photographers left except for some people from the BBC. The people were sitting down, some of them with their backs towards [the troops), some of them with their fronts towards them; their arms and legs were linked. There was absolutely — I say absolutely — no provocation from the demonstrators. They were asked to sit peacefully. They were singing. Starting at ten-forty five, at ten minute intervals, the paratroopers would look for a weak link in the chain, usually a girl. First they would try to grab her. It's very hard to grab someone who has arms and legs linked, so they clubbed [people] with their rifle butts until they were limp and then dragged them off. Every time this happened the demonstrators would scream for those lights to come on. and the 8BC would take pictures. “This went on about ten or eleven times until 12 o'clock. At 12 o'clock the MP's went up and they told the photographers they could not put any more lights on. Without any warning of any type they ust charged into the crowd and clubbed upwards of I’d say a hundred people, who were sitting down, with absolutely no provocation, no warning. There was not one word from the Pentagon the entire day, not one word of warning. I really don't know what to make of all of this. I hadn't expected to sit there and watch us be clubbed. I figured that if they really thought it was necessary to move us from the steps, one fire hose, a few tear gas cannisters. would have moved us pretty quickly. The fact that they just marched in and smashed all these people — I mean. I really don't know what to make of it, I was really taken by surprise. — Bob Cass, '69. tboul the Pentagon 'X' • • the result of its spontaneity. There was confusion over just what had been protested. It was generally agreed that Dow. as a manufacturer of napalm, was a symbol of corporate involvement in an atrocity-filled war. but the demonstrators also raised the issues of campus recruitment, free speech, and university complicity in the Vietnam war. There was also a great deal of rancor among the students, faculty, and deans, over the method and severity of the administration's punishment. Waiver of the “right of self-mcrimination. denial of personal appearances before the administrative board, and the differentiation between obstructors and “mere participants prompted accusations of arbitrariness and intimidation. The positive results of the Dow protest, however, will certainly be more lasting. The proposal for the establishment of a student-faculty committee was first put forth at the mass meeting in Lowell Lecture Hall. There is a vague possibility that the Student-Faculty Advisory Committee will become a vehicle for meaningful dialogue and change in the University. In addition, the discussions about the war, recruitment, and the university's role in society that Dow inspired were good for the Harvard community. There is little doubt that the individual commitment and intense concern manifested in the Dow protest were responsible for the Hoffman-Bundy and Ford-Handlin debates, and led to a widespread expression of anti-war sentiment on campus. The demonstration made it clear that, at least at Harvard, one of the most cogent arguments for militant protest is that it legitimizes and inspires the more moderate forms of dissent. Obstructive sit-ins lead to debates; placardcarrying Pentagon marchers lend respectability to McCarthy workers and forbid the nation to forget. RADICALS Most of Senator McCarthy's support from college students comes from their acceptance of him as a “peace candidate. McCarthy's growing “college corps has without question become one of the senator's most valuable assets. Yet a large number of campus radicals have refused to support him, for they have lost faith in the electoral system and feel that McCarthy's candidacy will only result in another betrayal. Many of today's radicals were active campaigners for President Johnson in 1964. These students can remember the campaign advertisements on television; a young girl is picking flowers in an open field. Suddenly a mushroom cloud appears on the screen, and it is obvious who it stands for. Then there appears the caption: Vote for Johnson. With their Scientists and Engineers for Johnson-Humphrey buttons pinned securely above their hearts, the activists ran from the TV sets to the local Johnson office to hang posters, distribute leaflets, and canvass door-to-door. But victory proved to lie an emetic for Johnson supporters, for the President soon justified escalation in Vietnam on the basis of his mandate from the people. The betrayal was complete: the election has transformed a peace candidate into a war president. Never again could a losser-of-two-evils argument prompt these students to work for a Democratic or Republican presidential candidate. A number of political groups have been formed on the premise that the only way to end the war in Vietnam and insure that similar conflicts will not occur in the future is to effect major changes in American society through base-building, i.e., educating the American people and instilling in them a political consciousness. The Students for a Democratic Society encourages members to work on local issues. Their Fight the Fare Hike project is a splendid example of the kind of program intended to develop political awareness among workers through cooperation in a united struggle. This strategy meant that many members of SDS opposed mass demonstrations such as the one in New York on April 15th and the Pentagon march, since they were one-shot affairs that did not contribute to base-building. The Cambridge Neighborhood Committee on Vietnam, led by Professor Michael Walzer, also encourages door-to-door and long-term organizational work instead of dramatic demonstrations which they feel do little more than 67 Mr U' csf 07 jJ ° £ p ’% w Wh t we have here is a national problem. The American ethos, the American background, is not attuned to the revolution of the Chinese culture area in East Asia. — John AC. fjirbjnk, Professor of History relieve frustrations. The CNCV sponsored an anti-war referendum which appeared on the ballot during this year's Cambridge elections; many of its members are now actively campaigning for McCarthy. RESISTANCE The institution that brings the war closest to students is the draft. Even after watching the battle flicks on Walter Cronkite, one sees the war as an abstraction. A notice of reclassification from a local draft board, however, is tangible. The result is that protest against the draft and protest against the war have become inseparable and draft resistance has been institutionalized. The 8oston Draft Resistance Group and the Resistance were founded to help young men who wish to refuse to serve in the armed forces. The BDRG is directed toward helping those who are too poor to be students to stay out of the war; the Resistance appeals almost exclusively to students. Because the two organizations are designed for different followings, their tactics differ: on the one hand, self-defense; on the other, self-sacrifice. An adult support group. Resist, has also been formed; in fact, of the five persons arraigned in Boston on conspiracy charges because of their anti-draft activity, only Michael Ferber of Harvard was draft-eligible. The others. Dr. Spock, Reverend Coffin, Mitchel Goodman, and Mark Raskin, were all members of Resist. Ferber, speaking at a lengthy teach-in at the Brattle Theater and Lowell Lecture Hall, acknowledged the active support of the Resist organization, but admitted that he had never met any of his co-defendants until after the indictments. A large number of college students who still retain their ll-S deferments have also been drawn into the anti-draft movement. The Harvard Draft Union, which has adopted a position of “no draft for an unjust war and immediate withdrawal of American troops, embarked this year on a program of reaching seniors and graduate students to discuss the war and provide counsel. A special commencement exercise is being planned to support and encourage graduating seniors to refuse induction if and when they are called. Demonstrations at the Boston Army Base have become more and more frequent, and the protestors who regularly attend the cold, early morning demonstrations have developed an esprit de corps reminiscent of the early anti-war protest marches — usually someone brings a loaf of bread and everyone tears off a chunk, passing the rest to his neighbor. The largest demonstration, which was held for Ray Mungo of Harvard, involved 600 people who picketed the Army Base, and then marched through Boston to the Arlington Street Church, where they had coffee and donuts with Professor Howard Zinn. The most dramatic act of the Resistance is, of course, deliberately handing in a draft card and thereby inviting an induction notice. It is a step that involves great personal anguish and carries with it risks of uncertain proportions for the individual's future. What prompts a person a relinquish his deferment voluntarily? There are obviously moral arguments of the Thoreau genre. One might also hope that if enough people refuse induction and go to jail, nonparticipation in the draft would disrupt the whole system. Moral arguments and arguments of political effectiveness are not enough however. Disrupting a system that has access to eleven million draft-eligible men is at best a very difficult task. One must recognize that the primary job of the Selective Service System is not to obtain enough men for the armed forces, but to find deferments for the tremendous number of men who are not needed. Furthermore, if you believe that you can help end the war by remaining unimprisoned and building a movement, it is pointless to allow yourself to be put in jail. The motivation for handing in one's draft card is, in the end, intensely individual. Jamie Kilbreth, '69, who handed in his card during the April 3rd demonstration said, It was a question of no longer being able to live without confronting the war and its implications for me. The alternatives — leaving the country, building a base for a revolutionary movement a hundred years from now — just weren't for me. The war has grown to the point where I can no longer try to save my skin by not opposing it. Robert Shetlcrly, '69, the first Harvard undergraduate to receive an induction notice for handing in a draft card, concurred: People have to act out of what is true in themselves. Up to now, people only ask what are the options for not doing what they're afraid of. The Selective Service System counts on this reaction. I'm not going to act out of fear any more. I'm going to act out of what I think is right. FRUSTRATION What has all the protesting, demonstrating, and canvassing accomplished? Certainly the mass protest movement has undergone a growth in numbers and an increase in the militancy of its tactics and demands. This new militancy is obvious when one contrasts the Voters' March of May 1966, with the Pentagon march of October 1967. The first was a peaceful, almost cheerful march around the White House, followed by a congenial gathering at the Washington Monument. It intended to show senators and congressmen that only by taking a stand for peace in Vietnam and advocating a negotiated settlement would they receive the vote of their marching constituency. The police were both helpful and friendly, directing women to rest stations and ignoring violations of keep off the grass signs. The violence which erupted during the Pentagon march stands in stark opposition. Even the speeches in October were different: the call for immediate withdrawal of American troops was no longer an anomaly, and there was open encouragement of young men to resist the draft. The choice of the Pentagon as the target of protest, rather than the White House, was indicative of a new direction for the movement — confronting the forces behind the President rather than aiming at the President alone. The declarative placards which read in 1966, We are succumbing to the arrogance of power, had become, Confront the warmakers. The rising militancy is unfortunately more a sign of impotence and frustration than of success. One's moral arguments, political analyses, legal precedents, are met with a flood of cliches and accusations. One finally reaches the point, after having repeated the same argument so many times, where one does not have the emotional energy to go through them again. The antiwar position seems so undeniably correct and morally just that anyone who remains in favor of the war seems blind to reality and deaf to argument. The frustration goes even further. The government's only response to protest has been a constant escalation of the war. Furthermore, there has been an increased antipathy toward anti-war protestors; they are scoffed at and passed off as peaceniks and Vietniks, a breed closely akin to the beatniks and hippies. Newspapers, which one would expect to convey to the American people the intense commitment of thousands of individuals opposed to the war, publish articles on demonstrations that deliberately underestimate the number of participants and distort the seriousness of the protest. After seeing an MP put on a gas mask and fire a canister that burst into choking white smoke, it is inexpressibly exasperating to read in the New York Tima that the Pentagon categorically denies using tear gas and suggests that the demonstrators themselves set it off. Or, if there are ten people with beards and twenty counter-protestors in a demonstration of several thousand students and middle-class parents, the newspapers will run only two pictures: one of the long-haired youth and one of the counter-pickets. Perhaps most disheartening of all is the lack of awareness of the sacrifices that individuals have made to stir the moral conscience of America. Who knows the name of the man who immolated himself in front of the United Nations? Who, outside the anti-war movement, knows what the Fort Hood Three did? THE NEW LEFT At least part of the reason for the ineffectiveness of the antiwar protest lies within the movement itself. Only the politically naive would think that there is a single, coherent New left Movement that a nascent radical might join. The movement contains a welter of different organizations ranging from Maoists and anarchists to dilettante liberals that have decided it is fashionable to call themselves radicals. Among the serious members of the New left there is almost a convention of fratricidal disagreement on ideological issues. In addition there are conflicts within individual groups. The fact that opposition to the war is often a very personal reaction to the war's immorality and unjustness (rather than the result of a consistent political line ), coupled with the characteristic anti-authori-tarianism of the left, works against having a united and cohesive anti-war movement. WHERE FROM HERE? The exigencies of the moment make speculation about the future seem superfluous. One also risks being called naive for thinking that there will be a society to speculate about. For student protestors, attacking the establishment is a luxury; a student is much more likely to grab a McCarthy-for-Prcsident button than a gun. Yet one cannot entirely rule out the possibility of an increasingly violent response to the escalating war. Marching down 42nd street in New York and being forcibly halted by a line of police who try to push you with their billy clubs back against a flood of oncoming demonstrators, or seeing a pretty blonde girl next to you trampled after bending down to pick up her glasses, is, to say the least, a radicalizing experience. When people on a silent vigil in Washington arc tear-gassed and kicked and clubbed unconscious, hatred grows with every blow. It makes you want to attack the establishment regardless of the risk. Rumors about the proposed use of tactical nuclear weapons against the Vietnamese spark thoughts of sabotage against munitions plants and draft boards. If these thoughts seem unrealistic, remember that a few years ago the idea that college students would spend five years in a federal penitentiary seemed equally far-fetched. The lasting effects of the war and the protest movement arc even harder to predict. The war aggravates the deficiencies in American society. It is absurd to believe that domestic programs are not emasculated when billions of dollars are channelled into the defense budget. The poor pay a triple indemnity for the war: they pay taxes to support it, they arc de-. prived of benefits because of it, and they must supply the manpower to prosecute it. It is a truly unjust, and in the long-run dangerous, situation when those who provide most receive least. One must also take into account the fact that a significant segment of our generation has acquired a distrust, even a hatred, toward its government. Most do not read news reports or hear public officials without doubting them. Suspicion and distrust, however, can be dispelled, given a long enough period of relative calm in America. The psychological effects of this crisis will be far more difficult to vitiate. One professor of psychiatry has said that male students who accept the ll-S deferment arc plagued with an unremitting guilt which dominates every aspect of their existence . . . They may also find that the emotional price that must be paid for preferential treatment is not worth the temporary physical safety it provides. One of the reasons for the spreading use of drugs can also be attributed to the pressures of the war and the draft. Even more serious will be the effects upon students of feigning homosexuality or of obtaining psychiatric or medical deferments for questionable infirmities. Uncertainty and guilt may be the least of the consequences. If the Crimson and Graduate School polls are any indication of genuine sentiment, this country will be jailing and losing many of its most highly-trained citizens. Jail and expatriation are also radicalizing experiences, and the opposition to the American government thus engendered will be both profound and lasting. The only way for this generation to honestly fulfill its obligation to society will be to insure that such a catastrophe will never happen again. 69 —Lawrence R. Berger October 25, 1967 We arc sitting in to prevent anyone from the Harvard Chcm department going to work for Oow. Our objection to the Dow company is that they are making napalm, which is the prime weapon in the American genocide in Vietnam. Most of the people here agree that if Dow's freedom of speech, Dow's freedom of activity is being abridged, then it is being abridged because the rights of the Vietnamese arc being violated much, much worse by Dow. The Dow chemical recruiter did not come here to discuss an idea, he did not come here to discuss a thought, he did not even come here to discuss the war; he came here to take Harvard students and to talk to Harvard students about participating in murder. That is not a question of free speech. The point is that we feel any University executive, or bureaucrat who is willing to channel his students into those kinds of corporations is also a criminal. And it is very clear that our protest is not just against Dow, but against Harvard. “This is already an issue of peace and war. I don't even like to say that; it is an issue of murder. Hilary Putnam, Professor of Philoiophy We're not twisting anyone's arm; we are presenting facts. I give the Harvard student a lot of credit. I give you people credit for being able to influence your fellow students’ thinking, and if you feel that you are obligated to influence them in this manner, fine. fred Leavitt, Dow recruiter “The first demand is that the administration of Harvard University not permit Dow Chemical company to recruit on campus. The reason sve make this demand is that Dow Chemical company said they will not come back to Harvard unless they are invited by the University. Second demand is that the administration not permit the CIA to recruit on campus. Third demand is that the administration not permit the military services to recruit on campus. Tour that no disciplinary action be taken against any individual for today's action, Five that bursar’s cards be returned to students. 5HDULD harvard HELP TH £ The fact i$ that you have a man falsely, under the legal jargon, imprisoned, and we must get him out of here. Dean Climp The clear issue that concerns us greatly is the use of physical force. Certainly as we would respect the right to dissent, and particularly that right when it is the result of conscience, at the same time we also respect the rights of guests, visitors, and members of the community to pursue their own lives, which from someone else's point of view may look like dissent. Dean ford We think of this as an example of a kind of behavior the institutions of higher education can stand in only limited degree, ideally aero degree. Dean Climp The question is whether anything is gained by having a kind of demonstration that violates basic principles of the University and that offends large parts of this community in 8oston. The country is largely anti-intellectual, and I think it is a serious question how a place like Harvard can have its most constructive effect. Dean Climp Those who refused to honor the fugitive slave laws and who thought the slave entitled to his freedom regardless of constitution and law would have refused to honor the claims of the Nazi government to the loyalty of its citizens and the claims of our own government today to unquestioning acquiescence of its citizens to the war it is now waging. Henry Steele Comnuger, Prolessor of History, f mcritus THE DEBATES McGEORGE BUNDY I believe th.u when you go to work for an administration you have a . . . free choice as to whether you will or will not accept the appointment . . . You acquire an obligation of loyalty which tends to increase through time, and which has a special meaning in the American process because your visibility and your noise level value is not really yours. It is something which has been conferred upon you and which develops through time as a result of the association and the office which you hold___ A particular reason from my point of view for having a chance to discuss here is that one of the most dangerous aspects of what is a dangerous and difficult enterprise at best is the degree to which it appears to have produced a breakdown of communication among different parts of our society. I do believe that however this affair comes out, whoever turns out in history to have been right, wrong, good, or bad, the processes of effective participation in the effort to make the world better and to avoid its self-destruction require within the American society an effective level of communication which is hard to sustain even in good times .... I think it is a fair division of labor to ask professors precisely what they do mean by a settlement that is not unconditional surrender, and whether they really do believe that in the short term there will be any signature from the Communists in Vietnam except in terms of their take-over... STANLEY HOFFMANN I am merely an academic who has not served in any administration, and who is reduced to the somewhat frustrating job of criticizing from a university--- What I notice from within the university is something which is very serious and in some ways very tragic. The war has been dealing a blow to the kind of extraordinary bond of trust which has always existed in this country between youth and the government, between people who have been brought up to believe that their government was indeed faithful to those ideals youth was learning about in school. It seems to me that this was so much the distinctive feature of the United States, at least to somebody who comes from Europe, that I am deeply worried at seeing the present wave of revulsion against a government-- All I find in the statements of those who more or less defend the position of the administration in a moderate way is a hope that somehow we will be able without further escalation to provide the miracles that escalation has not given us. This again strikes me as extremely unlikely-- HOFFMANN For many of us, since our goals were good, since our intentions were excellent, international politics did not seem to raise fundamental ethical problems. In Vietnam, in particular, our objectives were certainly worthy: we were trying to achieve stability; we were trying to protect, as we thought, a small nation from being taken over by force. And much too long, it seems to me, this seemed to dispose in the eyes of many, all of the ethical questions that could be raised. We cannot avoid raising those questions any longer. One of the fundamental problems for American foreign policy in the future, if it has to have a worthy future, is the problem of the degree to which the United States can substitute itself for others — the degree to which it does not, by over-committing itself, weaken the capacity of others to do what should be their part in world affairs. I think we have suffered from both politico-military and moral hubris in this respect, and this is not a problem for Asia alone---- What I find so devastating about the war in Vietnam is that for once the policy we have followed is combining political ineffectiveness and moral ugliness. This is a fairly rare combination, and I would very much like it reserved to our adversaries BUNDY I do know that when you start out to make war, innocent people get hurt, and large numbers of them get hurt; and I do know that there is an important moral question as to whether any war is justified. I also know that in trying to reach decisions on this question one should not ask the question framing it in such a way that it sounds that anyone that gives any kind of an answer is somehow morally insensitive. That seems to me not the way to get at the truth in this matter_ This carries me back — and this analogy is precise, I assure you — seventeen, fifteen years to the debates over the morality of the war in Korea, where much smaller, but equally passionate groups of undergraduates were equally convinced that the North Koreans were not the invaders, that Mr. Dulles had provoked the war, that terrible inhumanity was being committed, and that morality and ethics were all on the other side .... Two points. The judgment of morality remains first of all a judgment of degree. There is a question of balance; there is a question of size, of moderation, of proportion. This has been the traditional basis by which one has tried to distinguish between a tolerable immorality and an intolerable one. And it seems to me from all that I read about Vietnam that we have reached the degree of an intolerable one . . . Second. Morality in international politics is also related, alas, to whether one succeeds or not. As de Gaulle once said during the Algerian war, “Blood dries fast, if the operation one has engaged m succeeds. This is indeed what history teaches us, and it is a very harsh lesson_____ BUNDY It would be a great comfort to all of us ... if it were possible to play out on a sand table of argument between people of different opinions how we would settle the war with each other, but nobody has mentioned the fact in that discussion that the process of negotiating is with a government whose own current bargaining position is just as rigid as it can be____ My own estimate is that the physical damage of this war, less by an enormous fraction than physical damage of like wars in which we have been engaged over the last generation, would be repaired, and will be repaired, if we still have a role in Vietnamese affairs, in a very short number of years after war .... We are talking about a contest waged with enormous skill and dedication and perseverance and hardness by a Communist regime; and that's where most of the trouble comes from . ...___ _______________ ______________ HOFFMAN What I find is that in the kind of turmoil which the war has provoked, there is a question as to whether it will be possible to avoid the kind of wild and irrational swing which has been manifest in American history in the past, between a period of over-commitment which provokes disillusionment and a period of genuine neo-isolationism (not the kind of neo-isolationism the administration has so often taxed its critics with, but one in which having been frustrated because of the resistance of the world to the ideas one has about it one then literally tells the world to go to hell). I think what is required of all of us, and not only of the government officials, is a very serious political and moral re-examination; and I do not believe that it should be postponed any longer____ This war, like some Moloch or Minotaur whose worship permits of no restraint or doubt, devours the substance and saps the energy which alone could let us tackle the giant problems of our cities and our schools, our agrarian poor, and fiscal stability on which solutions to so many other problems must depend__________ This game in which averages don't count. You can win 19 times in a row, but if you lose the 20th, you're out. Any five thousand years of civilization are out with you . . . Those endlessly painful, hateful scenes on television. What if those are a part of the price we pay to avoid that neat swift war which will be over before the cameras ever come into focus________ Jl HANDUN Vicinam is but the most recent of the disastrous legacies of the great war that ended in 1945 ... In Europe and in Asia, relative peace appeared only as a series of more or less arbitrary lines that separated the contestants. In each case those lines were drawn in the hard process of matching force with counter-force. At the beginning of 1961 one such line ran across Vietnam at about the 17th parallel___ My definition of American policy is one that aims ... at patient probings toward de-escalation, while sustaining a force that is necessary to prevent a further rise in North Vietnamese power and a North Vietnamese military victory___ These issues, I fear, do not lend themselves to easy solutions, and the stakes are too great for gambling. The counsel of patience and fortitude lacks drama, but it is the best I can in all honesty give. And I console myself by thinking back twenty years when Bertrand Russell, one of the finest minds of our century, was urging us to get it over with, to blast the Russians before they had the bomb. It took a kind of faith then to believe that small painful steps to avert a showdown would save a whole generation. I trust the same faith now .... I can conceive in my worst moment the necessity of withdrawal, but I cannot conceive that it will be an easy or a satisfying, or a simple solution. FORD The tough question, of course, remains, where do we go from here. Any attempt to frame an answer must take account first of all of a hard truth. It is that supporters of the present course within the government can easily dismiss any detailed practical criticism as not based on secret intelligence. Up to a point the reflex is fair enough, so long as they do not also imply, as I am afraid they often do, that no suggestion is helpful unless it is expressed in detailed practical terms. But no one can have it both ways. Those of us who are not on the inside, but want to function as a loyal opposition, can't have withheld from us secret details and then be challenged to provide detailed answers. What we can do, as can any citizen, is to discuss general objectives for our country. Where in our times do we want the United States to be committed, and to what tasks do we want to see it devote its immense energies? Not being an insider in one sense is quite different from being an outsider when one's own nation's future is under discussion — years of using secret intelligence in the mid 1940's I acquired a certain skepticism of its magical superiority over all other forms of information, including the best of journalistic coverage. Things may have changed radically since then, but episodes such as the Bay of Pigs and the recent Tet offensive in Vietnam suggest that they really haven't--- 79 TEACH-IN February 11,1968 ROBERT COLE, Research Psychiatrist I don't think that the country is headed for anything that resembles Germany or Russia, and I don't think that we are at the brink of some kind of fascist take-over. I think it is a particularly hurtful thing for all of us to start taking the President of the United States . . . as if he were a mental patient, or to start . . . treating him as a particularly wrong-headed or evil person. What we have to do is try to understand what this country is like, what it has been like throughout its entire history, what its history, what its social and political institutions are like, and how all this should not necessarily seem to be all that strange. If we get deterred on this road of Stalin's paranoia and Hitler's complex of one sort or another— and I've heard every kind of glib psychiatric diagnosis — then I think we are letting ourselves off very easily as a people.'' I'm no authority on political tactics or strategies, although I suspect that sometimes the way we talk about things indicates how intimately we take over what we consider to be our enemies' propositions. Why should we be interested in storming the Pentagon? Why should we be interested in only what is practical and what will work? I hear that nonviolence is not practical and will not work. Sometimes it seems to me that if we would concentrate on what we believe in ethically and religiously ... if it will do nothing else, it will save us from copying the exact language of the people that we are presumably disagreeing with. Sometimes we can be very arrogant ... at those who can't . . . comprehend issues that we comprehend and understand. We talk about the arrogance of the government, we talk about the nastiness and vindictiveness and the hatred on the part of the government and its leaders. How about some of our arrogance and nastiness? I'd like to know what docs one say to a family like this: The father told me about all the work he had done all his life, the laboring. laboring, laboring of an electrician's helper, what a lousy deal he had in the depression, how little he'd gotten, how he'd stayed off relief, the biggest achievement of his life, he thought. And then he turned to me and said, and this is what it came to. This, with his oldest son. He knows, and he told me this too, that people like me don't die in wars. Not because we're cowards, not because we have moral scruples, but because inevitably the chances are that people like me can go to Harvard, can become professional men and can become officers. This man said to me that his son was doomed to die because he was poor, because if he had been wealthier and come here to be among us he wouldn't have died. And he may be quite right. It's very hard to answer a man like that. Whatever it is that is happening, it seems to me, in this country and perhaps all over the world, is so complicated and tied up with the incredible genius of our society that people may be opposed to one another and led away from one another and not even know where their best interests are. I despair of knowing how to solve it. And in that sense the criticism of society that we make along the lines of history seems to me the sort of thing that we have to bring in more and more as we think about what is going on in America, rather than concentrate on a particular president, who after all was one of a group who has been doing these kind of things now, as far as I can see, ever since the country was here. I'm horrified by what we are doing in Asia, by the fact that we can't do anything about it here, and horrified by the fear that seems to be gripping this nation — class against class, region against region, people against people, the desertion in a sense of the South and Appalachia by the best people in the country that were working there for a while, the desertion of the American public from its own capacities that we saw demonstrated a few years ago; and in a sense the progressive collapse of the country not into fascism, not into the grips of some kind of monster, but in a way into the worst possibilities that have always been there and probably plague every nation. And in that sense we are failing as a nation, failing to live up to what we have done and to what I think we have demonstrated we can do and most certainly are not doing now. WILLIAM SLOAN COFFIN, Yale Chaplain I find myself very disturbed by a person leaving this country, particularly if he does it precipitously. What I fear so is that suddenly the new draft policy has made demands upon students that they're not willing to meet, that they are not able to make a free choice, that the balance of conflicting forces within them is too delicate for this. The tendency, of course, is to punch the panic button, buy the ticket, and go off to Canada or Mexico, with the possibility that later they may deeply regret the decision. It may well be that the judgment of history has come upon America — we used to be the nation to which all other nationalities came; we may now be the nation from where our citizens go to all other nationalities. HARVEY COX, Associate Professor, Harvard Divinity School If one comes to the point where he really feels that he does not want to serve a term in prison, but cannot conscientiously serve in the United States military forces, there is always the possibility of emigration. For some reason, emigrating from the United States has accrued to it a kind of moral stigma or pariah status, and I would like to state unequivocally this evening that I see no particular reason why the choice to live in another country should in any way bring the person who makes that choice any moral stigma. The United States of America was for many years the refuge of thousands and thousands of people who left Europe to escape oppressive conscription systems. There is no reason why Canada or some other country cannot, at least temporarily, become a place where one can remain out of prison and honor his conscience, and could perhaps even contribute to the opposition and organization of dissent against the war in Vietnam. I think, therefore, that it is a perfectly legitimate alternative that one should think about. If you examine your conscience, and you can honestly say it is a conscience which is informed and illuminated and not simply a conscience which is spasmodic or impulsive, and it has led you to the conviction that you cannot conscientiously participate in this war, I hereby aid, counsel, and abet you not to participate in the draft system. Still I remind you that every man must believe for himself, every man must die for himself, and this is a decision which one can finally only make in the inner quietude of his own spirit. Perhaps someday, God willing, the war in Vietnam will be over. Perhaps someday, ten, twenty, thirty years from now, there will be other happier issues that we will be discussing, but when that moment comes we will all have to live with what we have done or not done at this moment. WILLIAM HUNT, BDRC We are organizing them to resist the draft . . . We have been engaged in what has been so far a very effective and entertaining program of propaganda against and sabotage of the Selective Service System. We do it as a tactic against the war. We also do it because we regard the draft system as fundamentally illegitimate. In fact we regard it as a kind of microcosm of a lot of things that are wrong with America, because we don't think the war in Vietnam was simply a mistake, or the product of bungling and hypocrisy in high places. We regard Vietnam as in some ways a structural product of the kind of society this is becoming, and we look on the draft system as a kind of manipulative, bureaucratic, in fact quasi-totalitarian structure, which seems to be increasingly prevalent in the United States. There was an induction refusal at the Boston Army base yesterday morning. We were told by liberal well-wishers that if we staged this thing at the Boston Army base, we were going to get thrown in the freezing waters of the Boston Bay by the longshoremen who would congregate and be very antagonized. The reality was somewhat different. We wound up conducting political seminars with the longshoremen in the diner across the road, which was a hell of a lot more fun as well as politically productive than walking around in a circle in sub-arctic weather. And we found out that people, once we got across to them that we were in the Resistance because we didn't think anybody should go, because we thought this war was not in the interests of the American people, and particularly not in the interests of working people, who by and large have to pay for it, both in terms of lives and money and anti-strike legislation — that this idea went across. It is an effective strategy for reaching the kinds of people who so far have not been very receptive to the liberal, peacenik rhetoric. We found that guys were giving us advice on how we could better reach people. One guy, as we said good-bye and were going out, said: 'You know, if you guys were smart and you hadn't gone through all this draft card burning stuff, you would have about half the guys that work around here down in that line with you.' HAROLD HECTOR, BDRC If I'm lucky, I don't get killed. If I'm lucky, I don't lose an arm or a leg. And I come back to this country and it just so happens the plane misses California and lands in Mississippi. And I got to get off and eat, or go to the bathroom, and here I just risked my life for my country, supposedly, and I get off the plane .and some honkie tells me I can't use that bathroom, or I can't eat in this restaurant. Now, man. I'm going to do to him what I just got through doing to the Viet Cong. And that's what the black man feels in this country .. NEAL ROBERTSON, New England Dralt Resistance It's funny, I'm not an ideologist at all, and I don't even consider myself a political activist. Four months ago I was a musician, and it seems incredibly sad to me that now my profession is draft resistance. I think it is sad that this is necessary. vmsm MARTIN PERETZ, Instructor in Social Studies I want to address some brief remarks to liberals, because those of us that have been identified as part of the radical community have always been accused and condemned to walking outside democratic means — and certainly the people who are resisting are being told that they do not use democratic procedures, that there is after all a legal process in this country which should be used, that there are possibilities for open discussion and education. So what I want to say to liberals and moderates in this room is that it is you who have not used the legal procedures. It is you who have not used the procedures of American democracy, and it is unjust of you to say that it is we who have not done so. Let me particularize that even further. I think what you should do is make your own movement. There are six million American college students; it is a scandal to defame whatever there is good in American history that there should not be a mass movement of 250,000 or half a million American students against the war in Vietnam. And what I would like to do is challenge any enterprising and innovative undergraduates in this room. . . . I challenge you to start a moderate movement of moderate students demanding that the war in Vietnam be brought to an end. But let me tell you who you will not have as allies. And let me tell you people who you should not count as allies, because they are very irresponsible—and I want to associate myself very directly with Professor Maurice's extremely wise remarks about liberals. Those liberals who are against particular strategies of the war are the authors, are the ideologists of the worst manifestations of the cold war. Those very glib and facile writers of ways out of Vietnam, those precise men are the authors and ideologists of America's squalid war against the Cuban people and America's war against any revolutionary movement that rises any place where we appear to think that we have legitimate interests. I also want to tell you that you will not get assistance from people in the establishment — what some people call the ruling classes, what other people call the ruling circles. If you read the Wall Street fournal, you will notice that the Wall Street lournal is against the war. For those of you that have personal contact with people in America's ruling circles, they have a congenital inability — however apprehensive they are about the war, however they may mutter in private that the war is a disaster for this country—they have a congenital inability to enter into opposition. I think you can see that really by the pathos of Mr. McNamara. Pounded, bludgeoned, humiliated, having indignity heaped upon him publicly by the President of the United States, and what does he do? He becomes a silent partner, a member head of the World Bank. And you will see something quite as unseemly and grotesque when Mr. Arthur Goldberg, the United States ambassador to the United Nations, finally decides that he cannot mouth these words any longer. He will simply try to forget that he ever did — as a loyal member of the Johnson administration, or as its political representative in a senate race in New York. You will also not get assistance from Mr. Robert Kennedy. Robert Kennedy is of course very much against the war in Vietnam. If you can get him before any group of coeds or nuns, he will tell you that his country faces a crisis greater than it ever has, or at least greater than any crisis since the ordeal of those private musings of his own destiny. He will tell you that the war in Vietnam is so wretched, so immoral that of course you should give blood to the North Vietnamese. But the one thing he will not do is give up those private musings of his own destiny. He has that curious solipsism of small men of thinking that the only svorse disaster for the country than the one we are now in is that he might fall flat on his face. If this country is to be saved the disaster of a poisonous and rancorous war. if we are to stop heaping murder and destruction on millions of innocent Vietnamese, if the instinct of belligerent response to revolution is to be reversed, then it is you, the moderates, the decent, the liberal young people who all by yourselves will have to initiate the political movement against this kind of foreign policy. You must engage in psychological guerrilla warfare against your parents and against your friends. You must make it too taxing, too costly for them to support this war or to be apathetic towards it. I dare say that it is with sadness and with a certain amount of pessimism that it is left to you to preserve the possibility of liberal and humane sentiment in America. NATHAN’S RESTAURANT An Autobiography by Neal Katz. When I entered Harvard things were pretty well worked out. I was going to become a chemist and my College Boards assured me that I had the aptitude for it, so all I had to do was to learn a lot of chemistry and to grow up a little. It turned out however that part of growing up was learning that I didn't want to become a chemist. As Freshman year progressed I became less certain not only of what, but even of who I was to be. Intelligence, affability, and confidence had always been my strong points, but by the end of that year the latter two were gone and the former highly in question. The summer of that year I hitchhiked around the country and returned rejuvenated. That experience gave me a niche; I was adventurer in residence. But it wasn't until the end of sophomore year that I was satisfied enough with myself to start thinking about other people. I needed more; I was satisfied but unoccupied. By April academics bored me and a girl who had been important wasn't any more. I had a lot of time to think, and when a person spends time alone he has to start asking what he can do meaningfully. I have always felt a responsibility to attack the injustices in this country. Even in high school I was concerned in a vaguely liberal way. When I was a freshman I tried PBH, but I wasn't competent enough to be very satised with my efforts. Sophomore year I had declared a moratorium for pulling myself together. Junior year I joined SDS. It was all very new to me. SDS was a community, a heterogeneous one to be sure, but a community nevertheless. Some of us took the same courses, many of us were reading the same books. We thought about the same things, from imperialism to relating to people. Many of us were unsatisfied with the isolation from the outside world that the university encouraged, so a good number of people lived off-campus. I spent many a Friday night at an SDS meeting followed by a party, and many a lunch with the people I knew at Lehman Hall. For me the essence of community was that I had found people who were thinking about the same things and in the same way. There was a deep feeling of camaraderie. A community of radicals can work two ways. If it is successful, it is organizing effectively on and off campus, if it is helping end a war, it is winning concessions from a college administration, if it can do effective civil rights work, then there's a sense of buoyancy. The community is a spur to further activity, and the sense of fulfillment unleashes further creativity. But when a radical community is not winning the campus, when it is powerless to stop a war like that in Vietnam, and when both poor white and poor black communities are effectively closed to it, then the community can very easily begin to wallow in self-pity and bitterness. The radical believes that much of the injustice, the exploitation of the poor, and the distorted American values are part of a system that is run in business' best interest; the poor provide business with a reserve labor force for keeping wages down. Anti-communism is used, at home as an excuse for ignoring legitimate grievances of the poor people and unorganized workers, and abroad to protect business interests from revolution. In the successful radical community, the vision of people controlling their own lives is communicated to the people as an alternative to the elitist control of business interests, in the belief that people, whether they be poor, middle class. or fellow students, will ultimately choose to do what is best. Our job is two-fold: to advance creative alternatives and to support creative action. When radicals or anyone else are dealing with people on these terms, a mutual respect develops. In a community of failure there is often bitterness at poor people who want to be middle class, at middle class people who have in a material sense made it, and at fellow students who do not see what is right, or seeing it, do not act. What sometimes comes of this is a radicals' burden, complex, a condescending attitude which leaves the person being spoken to with the feeling that he is being lectured at. There is a lot of resentment on campus toward SDS; some is ignorance, but some comes from people who feel they are being looked down upon. My junior year was a year to learn how I operated as such a radical. I went to almost all the SDS meetings and became friendly with many of the more important radicals on campus. I did not wholly immerse myself in the radical community; I was spending a lot of time taking pictures, as an active member of the Karate Club, and with my roommates who are people I respect very much. So in many senses I was fragmented, but I still considered myself a radical. In the fall I spoke to freshmen once or twice. I attended several demonstrations, and I leaflctted in the Yard. But there were a lot of elements of a failing community. The war in Vietnam was overwhelming. Promising issues on campus, like the draft and the war, never mobilized the Harvard community as we had hoped. Organizing in the community never really got started. The most active people — those on the SDS Labor Committee — were for all intents and purposes a separate body. For me it was all very difficult, because I always felt I was imposing on people by trying to organize them. Moreover I didn't have well-documented figures at my fingertips, so many discussions degenerated into personal arguments. At the beginning of second semester I was elected to SOS's twenty-man Executive Committee. Every Sunday morning I went to a meeting which usually lasted around two hours. Many a meeting was like one meeting at the beginning of April where we discussed the possibility of endorsing the April 15th Mobilization. Two Progressive Labor Party people argued bitterly against the Mobilization because its line was not clearly immediate withdrawal. Others argued that we should support any effort to end the war. Still others argued that many people would go down whether or not we endorsed it. It was finally decided to go, but to go with signs that made clear our position: Immediate Withdrawal. By the end of last year I was very much discouraged by my own efforts as well as by SDS's efforts. I was lucky enough to get a grant from the scholarship office for thesis work. I decided to hitchhike around the country as I had done at the end of my Freshman Year. I spent time in New York, Syracuse, St. Louis, San Francisco, and Chicago. In Chicago I found a thesis topic, a model for my own life, and one for successful community organizing. The topic was the First Presbyterian Church of Chicago and their dealing with the Blackstone Rangers, a gang of some 3,000 black teenagers in Chicago's Woodlawn area. The model was Reverend John Fry, a committed, shrewd, and articulate man who worked with the Rangers. And the Community was the rest of the dedicated activists who were Reverend Fry's allies. I spent three weeks in Chicago at the end of the summer. What impressed me about the man and his politics is best told in the discussion I had with him when I first arrived. I asked Reverend Fry what he and his group were trying to do. He answered that they were presenting the Rangers with alternatives from which to choose. I suggested that the Rangers might very easily just become more middle class Americans, and I asked if there was any assurance that they wouldn't. He said there wasn't, but neither was there any assurance that the French Revolution of 1789 wouldn't be just another middle-class revolution. The future there was exciting, and I think they felt a control over it that is too often sapped from the radical by the ease with which he defers to the inevitability of history. I came away from those three weeks with a new hope for making life as a radical significant. I also developed a belief that a person ought not undertake a project unless he can devote himself to it completely. There are very few people who can do things well out of a sense of duly alone. Too often I've seen people in SDS take on too much out of duty and then do none of it well. When I got back to school, I tried to do things completely. In October, when it came time to request a 2-S deferment, I decided that I would not accept one; I was well enough in control of my life to refuse a privilege I felt was wrong. Most people from middle-class backgrounds are entitled to go to college, while most people who are poor never reach college. As a result of this mistake, they become cannon fodder. At the time I felt it was cynical to have accepted for so long the privileges of a system I rejected. (I now feel that people who are committed to working against the war ought to get out of the draft any way they can and work for peace.) That act freed me; I felt I had a choice. I didn't have to do anything; I chose everything. Even jail could have been a growing experience at that time. It was a tremendous sense of power. Then things began to fall apart. With several others, I organized a campaign to extend parictals with the hope that this would lead to discussions of larger issues of student rights vis-a-vis the administration. We were in the midst of collecting pledges to break parietals en masse when the Dow demonstration broke, and 70 people were put on probation. The parietals fight was forgotten, because people were less anxious to confront the administration with the threat of dismissal over their heads, and parictals were inconsequential compared to the war in Vietnam. After the parietals issue had died, I couldn't find anything else that I could make such a wholehearted commitment to. That was November. From then till the middle of March all was downhill. In December I lost two girls who were very important to me. I went to California for winter break, but even hitchhiking back didn't provide the spark I needed. And never did I feel more powerless as Vietnam became more ugly, and I became more irrelevant. I began to understand that my personal life was an important part of any effective political work I might do. A political life, at least for me, had to be a supplement to and not a substitute for a satisfying personal life. Things changed dramatically in mid-March as my Draft Board caught up with me and asked that I go for my preinduction physical. That became a clear-cut confrontation with the evil. I began by asking them to explain Vietnam, and learned that they don't enjoy questions of that sort. In the course of the day I met four army commanders, a psychologist, and several irate sergeants. I didn't quite hit double figures on my mental test, and I had written subversive literature on my back. I walked out of the place with an army bathrobe, three pens, and a 4F. It was Alice's Restaurant revisited; I had just dealt with the system on my own terms. I have decided to go to work for the First Church in Chicago next year. I have a lot to learn there, and I'm lucky to have found a place to learn it. 87 'vfi THE CHANNELING MEMO An official document of the Selective Service System, luly 7, 7965. (This document has since been re-written in a form that is not so blatently anti-democratic.) One of the major products of the Selective Service classification process is the channeling of manpower into many endeavors, occupations, and activities that are in the national interest. . . . The opportunity to enhance the national well being by inducing more registrants to participate in fields which relate directly to the national interest came about as a consequence, soon after the close of the Korean episode, of the knowledge within the System that there was enough registrant personnel to allow stringent deferment practices employed during war time to be relaxed or tightened as the situation might require. Circumstances had become favorable to induce registrants, by the attraction of deferment, to matriculate in schools and pursue subjects in which there was beginning to be national shortage of personnel.... This was coupled with a growing public recognition that the complexities of future wars would diminish further the distinction between what constitutes military service in uniform and a comparable contribution to the national interest out of uniform. . . . The meaning of the word service , with its former restricted application to the armed forces, is certain to become widened much more in the future. This brings with it the ever increasing problem of how to control effectively the service of individuals who are not in the armed forces. . . . The young man registers at age 18 and pressure begins to force his choice. . . . The door is open for him as a student to qualify if capable in a skill badly needed by his nation. Me has many choices and he is prodded to make a decision.... He can obtain a sense of well being and satisfaction that he is doing as a civilian what will help his country most. This process encourages him to put forth his best effort and removes to some degree the stigma that has been attached to being out of uniform. In the less patriotic and more selfish individual it engenders a sense of fear, uncertainty, and dissatisfaction which motivates him, nevertheless, in the same direction. He complains of the uncertainty which he must endure; he would like to be able to do as he pleases; he would appreciate a certain future with no prospect of military service or civilian contribution, but he complies with the needs of the national health, safety, or interest. . . . Throughout his career as a student, the pressure— the threat of loss of deferment — continues. It continues with ecjual intensity after graduation. His local board requires periodic reports to find out what he is up to. He is impelled to pursue his skill rather than embark upon some less important enterprise and is encouraged to apply his skill in an essential activity in the national interest.... From the individual's viewpoint, he is standing in a room which has been made uncomfortably warm. Several doors are open, but they all lead to various forms of recognized, patriotic service to the nation. Some accept the alternatives gladly — some with reluctance. The consequence is approximately the same. . . . Delivery of manpower for induction, the process of providing a few thousand men with transportation to a reception center, is not much of an administrative or financial challenge. It is in dealing with the other millions of registrants that the System is heavily occupied, developing more effective human beings in the national interest. MICHAEL FERBER, Harvard Graduate Student Indicted for Conspiracy Against the Draft. “Brothers and sisters: What I have to say is very simple. Today we are growing stronger in numbers. By the hundreds and maybe by the thousands, starting here in Boston and moving across the country men will return their draft cards and join the resistance. And by the tens of thousands their families and their women and their friends will stand with them. Today and during the next couple of months we will be so numerous that we will no longer be just a problem troubling the sleep of the men waging this war and dreaming up the next one; we will be a nightmare. Let them face us. Let them face that either the war stops and the draft stops, or they will find that this country can no longer be governed. Let them face the prospect of thousands and thousands of men refusing induction this spring and in the summer. Let them face riots on American army bases, desertions in Europe, and mutiny in Vietnam. Let them face the exodus of hundreds every week to Canada. Let them face what is worse for them: the return of men by the hundreds from Canada to join the resistance. If that is what they want to face, then we are ready, stronger today than ever to give it to them. As a group we are now stronger. But the risk in saying that is to confuse our size with our strength. Let us not be misled; our power is not in our numbers alone. Our impact on this country, our effect on one another depends so much more on the strength that each of us finds in himself. Every one of you that has turned in his card, every one of you who will turn in his today, every one of you who is pledged to help the resistance in any way, you have all shown a certain strength in being here. It is not easy for any of us to be here today. Turning in our card and standing with the resistance is not all that will be demanded of us. Do we have the strength to work together in the months to come? Can we handle the pressures that will come on us without falling apart? Can we, for instance, clash with one of our brothers and still love him? Do we have the strength to be both public and private men? Can we keep from sacrificing our own sense of purpose to an abstract ideal and still keep from shrinking into our own little world? Can we start right now to make a revolution in our own lives and change the lives of others? Can we be serious without clinching our teeth in grim hatred? Can we face the stupifying horror day after day that our country is responsible for and still act together as we work to stop it? Can we make a sacrifice without sacrificing everything? Do we have the strength simply to hold firm? Can we make our deed today a pledge to stay here and work, not to carry a draft card, not carry a deferment, not to join the army, not to go to Canada, but to stay here and hang in and keep the faith and fight the good fight. Those of you who have chosen to join the resistance today try to say yes to these questions, try to see what it is you are doing with your lives now, and see to it that you begin to do the best thing you can. Then let us all rejoice in the crucial work that it is ours to do. Thank you. VIEWPOINTS The following page are an attempt to define the role of activities at Harvard and, by implication, the role of the College itself. The first effort is tenuous and the second is, of course, ridiculous; nevertheless, we have adopted two avenues of approach that may or may not lead to some reasonable suggestions of motives and influences in our grove (grave, groove) of academe. Firstly, we have asked three Harvard seniors, a Harvard junior, and a Radcliffe senior — each of whom has been active in a particular sphere of College extracurricular — to discuss in any way they wished their interaction with the activity of their choice, the background which led them to it, and the attitudes with which they emerged from it. These students are: Gerald Folland, first marshal of Harvard Phi Beta Kappa; Aida Chang, secretary of Phillips Brooks House; Marshall Goldberg, president of the Pi Eta Club; Robert Lewis, manager of the Harvard Glee Club; and Charles V. Hamilton, Jr. '69, editor of The Harvard Journal of Negro Affairs. Of similar interest is the article in the previous section by Neal Katz, a member of the executive committee of SDS. Our second approach was to computerize the data provided us by Harvard and Radcliffe seniors on their Yearbook biography sheets, and to relate this data to various aspects of the students' backgrounds. The result is presented here as an often-confirming, occasionally-startling, and just-maybe-reliable analysis of student interests and stereotypes. This second study is an effort to define the Golden Means; the first is an attempt to demarcate several of the extremes; and together, hopefully, they will provide some insights into what Harvard and Radcliffe were all about for the people who did things differently. Phi Beta Kappa Harvard is a big place, and there are many ways for a person to forge a meaningful experience out of his years here. Some excel in athletics, and others make a name for themselves in music or the theatre. Some center their lives on the various forms of political or social activism, while others devote their energies to creative writing or journalism or make their contribution through house activities. And then there are those who quietly go about being successful at the thing for which most of us presumably came to Harvard in the first place: academic studies. Academic achievements do not lend themselves to the fanfare that accompanies athletic prowess, nor do they generate the sort of publicity that political activities do; but there is an organization at Harvard, outside of the college administration itself, which gives acknowledgement to those who have excelled in their scholastic work. This is Phi Beta Kappa, the national honor society whose aim, as the handbook puts it, is recognition of intellectual capacities well employed, especially in the acquiring of an education in the liberal arts and sciences. Phi Beta Kappa rarely gets in the news, for it is in no sense an activist organization. Its principal job is the perpetuation of its own membership through the election of men who have achieved distinction in their academic careers. At Harvard (and at Radcliffe too, although that is a separate chapter), there arc three elections each year: the Senior Sixteen election in November, the Junior Eight election in April, and the Commencement election in June, at which a large number of graduating seniors (usually around seven or eight percent of the class) is chosen. The elections are conducted by the undergraduate members along with a few graduate members of the chapter and a representative of the Dean's office. The candidates are judged on the basis of their transcripts and departmental recommendations as well as whatever other information members present can provide; although extracurricular work is not a primary consideration, it may be a deciding factor if two candidates are equally deserving in other respects. The people who are elected to the Junior Eight or Senior Sixteen are an amazingly diverse lot. Few of them fulfill the usual image of the dedicated wonk, and few of them have not contributed to the Harvard community in some way besides scholastic work. Three of our current members have served on the HPC, and two of them are on the SFAC. SDS and the Young Republicans both have representatives in our membership, and several of us have been active in various musical organizations. I could not begin to draw a coherent picture of what The Harvard Experience means to the men in Phi Beta Kappa, for there are as many different aspects to that question as there are members of the chapter. The best I can do is to speak for myself and give my own reactions to my years here, for whatever value that may have. Many people seem to feel that Harvard is a lonely place where it is hard for the individual to find himself. I have never had that complaint. After emerging from a public school sys-. tern where almost nobdy could understand a fellow who would rather work calculus problems or translate stories into Latin than attend a pep rally, I found the atmosphere at Harvard very congenial. Here for the first time I could actually communicate with people; I didn't have to assume a false modesty about being bright, and I could find intellectual excitement without having to hunt for it. I came to Harvard laden with admonitions not to overwork myself and not to let it upset me to discover that A's weren't so plentiful anymore. I fully intended to follow that advice. But evidently I didn't know what overwork meant, and I found it harder to satisfy myself than the university. I worked compulsively, worrying through metaphysical enigmas until I satisfied myself that most of them were trivial, struggling with mathematical concepts that I had never dreamed of before, trying desperately to reach the top of the heap of ideas that had been thrown at me. It was very exhausting and very exciting. and although I would hate to go through it again, it was worth it. By my junior year I had built up my mental muscles enough that I dared to try something new, and I ended up spending half my time working for the Levcrctt Opera Society. That was a very salutary experience: not only was it fun in itself, but it showed me that I could now get along to my own satisfaction with a lot less struggle. I am still riding happily along on the momentum I have built up over these years, enjoying my courses dnd activities, and able most of the time to' realize when the law of diminishing returns is getting the better of me. Science, says Nobel Laureate Konrad Bloch, is a glorious entertainment in the best sense - all scientists are doing is amusing to themselves, but in a non-frivolous way ; that statement could serve as my creed. There is a joy in manipulating ideas, as long as one doesn't take them too seriously and thereby get manipulated by them. And although it goes without saying that learning and getting good grades are not synonymous, this same feeling of gamesmanship carries over into my periodic bouts with papers and exams. Asking someone like me why he tries to accumulate A's is like asking a mountain climber why he climbs mountains, and the answer is the same: because they are there, and because the view from the top is often exhilarating. But the time has been rather sorely out of joint lately, and attitudes like these have been called into question. Relevance is the big word now: proving a beautiful new theorem in differential topology or plumbing the depths of Finnegan's Wake may be all very well, but how is it relevant to the mess that everything seems to be in? I regard it as not the least of the evils which Vietnam and our domestic problems have wrought that such an attitude could gain currency at a place like Harvard. Of course abstract thoughts are not going to end war or renovate the ghettoes or even stop Communism, but the best of them do have a profound and lasting effect, though it may be decades before they arc sufficiently diffused into the mainstream of life that the man on the street realizes anything has happened. It may take thirty years for a new mathematical idea to find its way into the language of physics, and it may be thirty years more before the physicists use it to produce a tangible technological advance; nevertheless the correlation is there and cannot be dismissed. Yes, intellectual games are relevant : they arc the stuff of which human advancement is made. Circumstances may force a man to divert his energy toward the solution of an immediate problem for a time, but if ideas are his principal profession, he should never feel guilty about saying so. In their way, the men in the ivory tower are radicals, or — to use a less fashionable word — extremists. As the political radicals well know, however, there can be no center without extremes: the shape of our culture is defined by its boundaries. Some of the boundaries may assume an unwonted importance at times, but the others may be neglected only at the peril of cultural disease. Paranoia, schizophrenia, McCarthyism from the left as well as the right: that is what happens when the intellectual community does not look out for itself. And this decay occurs not only when the public turns against intellec- 95 tualism, but when the intellectuals themselves become so committed to their own ideas that they cannot afford to play with them and enjoy them. — Cerald B. Folland Phillips Brooks House My education has gone up or down from its beginnings in a kindergarten in Argentina where the nuns laboriously taught us to knit, to the New York City public school system, and to the rather unstructured setting of Radcliffe College. While at Radcliffe, I have worked three years in Phillips Brooks House, one summer as a camp counselor and one year as a student government leader. Working with all kinds of people — other students, teachers, administration, community people and children and becoming personally involved with them, has increased my sensitivity to the issues which concern them. It has made me deeply committed to the need for education and change in this society. And I have become convinced that individuals and the larger community must be intimately related and that theories and practice must constantly interact. In my first year at PBH, I was a team-tutor for a group of 8 year-old boys in the Roosevelt Towers Program which operated in a housing project in East Cambridge. The next year I joined the staff of the program as a dayleader to a group of volunteer team-tutors. This past year I was on the Executive Committee of PBH, which oversees and evaluates the various programs and which constantly investigates new areas of concern or innovative means of confronting the old problems. The Roosevelt Towers experience introduced me to people whose lives and experiences and futures seemed far less comfortable than mine. It taught me a great deal about the problems of the disadvantaged. In the year I tutored, the program was located in the basements of the project. The situation was highly chaotic with children running around and screaming constantly. The biggest headache was discipline, and occasionally a child would be sent upstairs to his home and afterwards the tutor would have a long talk with the parents. Without adequate tables and chairs, with no blackboards and few materials, it was almost impossible to teach any concrete subject matter. Sessions often turned into fun and games, trips outside or just talking. The next year, the tutoring program was located in the classrooms of the local elementary school, and discipline was much less of a problem. More subject matter was taught, but the tutors felt more inadequate as teachers. And the school's detachment from the lives of the children made it more difficult to create the informal atmosphere and the personal relationships which had existed in the basements. I learned that education is not simply drills in the subjects, but a much more total process which must see that the child acquire self-confidence, be able to work with his teacher, his peers, or alone with the subject matter. A child’s personality and his family background are also crucial in an understanding of what the child needs to or can learn. The sensitive educator must be very aware of all the distractions in the child's life which he must learn to cope with as he learns to look at himself and to explore the outside world. This year I have looked at the Towers program in the much broader context of what it does in community development. The program is very successful in providing both kids and volunteers with a social and emotional outlet and with meaningful human relationships. But as an agent of social change in the community, a few hours per week with a few children, is in many ways only a drop in the bucket. The limits of time, the lack of experience and know-how, and the vagueness of the goals in the volunteers and the program as a whole — while making it a very open-minded program — may hinder the more radical, more massive changes which must take place in the social thinking and culture of the Towers. Running a successful kids program may even cover up the basic fact that the Towers is a very unhappy community because the adults feel no commitment, no confidence, and no power in themselves as the agents of their own betterment. This year I have come to believe that social service must be committed to social change. Work with individuals is vital, but it is limited as well. One of the reasons I joined PBH was because I wanted to become educated by actual contact with situations and people rather than by the problems posed in books. But by ignoring books, PBH programs are in danger of becoming stagnated in the kinds of action they perform. The training groups in the Towers Program were often frustrated because they were not acquainted with the experiences and ideas formulated by others working in the same field. As students we often cannot spare the extra time to study educational theories. But many volunteers do want to bridge the gap between their academic roles as students in the university and their volunteer work. This year the Executive Committee of PBH instituted Cabinet Seminars on various topics of interest to volunteers. I coordinated the seminar on Education of the Disadvantaged which in a series of five weeks and with several guest speakers — professors, directors of programs, researchers and community organizers — discussed some of the relevant issues. We began with a discussion of the differences between the cultures of different economic and ethnic classes and groups. We next discussed the right or the obligation of the white middle-class, dominant society to intervene in the lives and education of the have-nots. We discussed our own motivation for working with the disadvantaged, the goals we set for our work, and the doubts we felt about disseminating the values of a middle-class society which itself suffers so many weaknesses. Then, since we are all involved in intervention or compensatory or organizing programs, we discussed various strategies and techniques that would apply to our programs or in what situations such programs would be most effective. I have become intrigued with the idea that the ghetto should be considered as an underdeveloped country. Educators and social workers should go into them with a respect for the culture that already exists, and with the attitude that they will work with what is already there to build it up rather than to devalue and to tear down ghetto culture. Black children should study black literature and black history. They should discuss such issues as discrimination, black-while race relations, soul music, and other things which pertain directly to their daily lives. Teachers should concentrate on developing the skills of the children rather than in changing their values. But I tend to think that values and skills are interdependent. Most of my work has been with the underprivileged, but I am also concerned with the children and teenagers from moderate or highly privileged economic background. It is often too easy to forget that these children must also be well-prepared to serve as useful and happy citizens in society. This past summer I was a bunk counselor for 13 year-old girls whose parents had paid $800 for each of them to go there. Their problems were very different from those of the Towers' kids, and it was in many ways more difficult for me to deal with these older and more sophisticated young ladies, some of whom did not want to be in camp. It was extremely difficult for me to bridge the gap between their throw-away, teenie-bopper world and the values that my upbringing and experience had taught me. The strain of constant supervision and the responsibility for the well-being, happiness, and growth of these girls was almost overwhelming. The Roosevelt Towers experience and my work with the volunteers had always emphasized permissiveness and non-directiveness, but this was just what these girls were suffering from. I was constantly trying to balance the discipline and routine necessary to make group living safe and comfortable with the importance of being very receptive and understanding to the individual girls. I had to be concerned enough to be firm with the girls and yet still remain very supportive. As their substitute parent, and as their counselor I had to deal with moral issues — sex, religion, personal relationships. Often I had to decide what was right or wrong despite my own confusion. Sometimes it took all the maturity and self-control I could muster to prevent tense situations from exploding, or if they did explode, to begin again without prejudices and resentment. Even at Radcliffe, which is perhaps the most ideal social system in which I have moved, I have had to face the frustration of being a student government leader. Taking around petitions which I think are of vital interest to students as voices in their own living and education, I have faced apathy, disaffection, and downright hostility or contempt. Working with the administration has made me aware of even more complexities in a consideration of what is a university, what is the place of women's education, and what is the role of the student in it. But merely an awareness of the complexities, just as only a knowledge of educational theory, is never enough. One must decide one's commitments and one's role, and then draw up a list of priorities. One must plan the most effective means of accomplishing set goals, one must consider the relative merits of confrontation politics which can make issues move faster, or the much slower yet perhaps more successful policy of students working together with the administration. One must allow for some compromise and one must have a great deal of patience in the face of student apathy and administrative red-tape. And once again, one is not often here long enough to see any tangible results. In many ways I tend to be idealistic, but I think that I have been through enough real experiences and enough introspection and discussions to know that education is not simple or easy. I know that what I have learned so far is not enough to confront the problems of education effectively, and that a five-week seminar can just barely begin to discuss the Education of the Disadvantaged. But my experiences have inspired me to continue to search, to discuss, and to practice. —Aida Chang Athletics The emphasis upon questioning and upon deriving one's opinions by examination rather than by word of mouth is an integral part in the outlook of nearly every senior. Moreover, this quest for objectivity and independence carries over to the pursuit of personal satisfaction in activities, for the Harvard student is increasingly concerned with doing something personally worthwhile with his academic and non-academic time. The emphasis has shifted from grades to knowledge, from social image to personal satisfaction. There are so many interesting and rewarding things to do at Harvard that one must choose between a vast number of alternatives; and the basis of decision, after four years of college here, has come to be what one truly enjoys doing rather than what one does well or what one should do, according to others. The distinction is crucial. Harvard has taught me and many other seniors that the worthwhileness of an activity is a purely personal decision. If one derives some personal satisfaction from doing something, then the experience has been worthwhile. In most cases this should be the sole basis of decision. The first time that I experienced this criterion was freshman year, when I chose to major in Government, in which I was interested, rather than Mathematics, where my average was significantly higher. I have always looked back upon this decision and others like it as a favorable precedent, and as a member of the varsity football team for three years and as President of the Pi Eta Club, I have seen many others faced with a similar choice. The situation I have seen that probably best exemplifies this conflict of criteria is the plight of the high school super-athlete at Harvard. The all-state football player discovers when he comes here that people in the University do not really care how good a football player he is, or even that he plays football at all. Perhaps this merely reflects the general apathy of Harvard students towards personal accomplishments; but regardless, the Harvard football player is not treated as a superior. If anything, many look down upon his efforts as a waste of time. This is quite a shock for the all-state player, for in many cases the prime motivations for playing were the cheers of the crowd, the gleam of admiration in a girl's eyes, and the athletic reputation with which people seemed to be so impressed. These people who played for the cheers and status rather than for the sheer love of the game face a shattering experience playing football at Harvard. Many of them quit football, either because the status of being a football player is no longer present, or because they discover that they no longer relish the game as much when there are other, more enjoyable things to do at Harvard. The men who continue to play do so out of a love for the game; of this I am quite sure. But the key lesson for both the all-stater who quits and the athlete who continues to play is that one should devote his time and effort to an activity only if he considers it personally worthwhile. The role of status in one's attitudes greatly diminishes over his four years at Harvard, particularly relative to the importance of status in high school. Thus an activity should not be looked upon as good or bad but as worthwhile or wasteful. Personal satisfaction becomes increasingly important, and one's social image becomes increasingly unimportant. —Marshall Coldberg Harvard Glee Club I joined the Freshman Glee Club even before I had found the H.S.A. Linen Depot. Later admitted to membership in the Harvard Glee Club, I felt above all a sense of gratitude at having been allowed to try to avoid wrecking what would otherwise be faultless intonation and emotive bliss. I responded in due course to the competition for managerial candidates. My project was to handle managerial details for a collaboration with the Smith Glee Club in Northampton. The job amounted to little more than compiling a housing list, ordering a bus, agreeing with Smith upon an activities schedule, and carrying the conductor's podium and music stand. I turned the project 97 into a hundred-hour commitment, complete with daily phone calls and letters, and arrived at Smith only to find that, of course. Smith College did own both a podium and a music stand. The manager of the Glee Club felt that I had done an exceedingly fine job, which included the crowning touch of leaving two of my classmates stranded in Northampton. So I was appointed assistant manager of the Glee Club, with the expectation that I would later go on to become manager and, finally, tour manager. The biggest demands which the manager must meet come in mediating the interests of the various parties involved in any Club activity. The concert sponsor generally wants forty clean-cut young men who will not only smile constantly and stand in straight rows, but also sing music that has been described as “light, spirited, whizbang — and in English. The conductor wants everything shipshape, with a good ensemble present and on time, and with as few interruptions to his music-making as possible including attempts of the manager to annoqnce details to the singers. The graduate manager, who serves as a liaison with the Harvard Glee Club Foundation, has traditionally been concerned with legal questions; but even more important has been his emphasis of the virtues of financial solvency. The financial overtones which have perennially crept into the manager's decisions have been, I suspect, both frustrating and annoying to El Forbes, our conductor. Suffice it to say that the manager knows from the moment he accepts his job that he is the only person in the Glee Club who is obliged to take an active interest in the organization’s financial well-being and that he does have substantial latitude for improving or neglecting that secondary, but nonetheless important, interest. The young man who took the same path a year before I did once remarked to me that my participation in Glee Club management lacked any semblance of being a love affair. He was right, of course; being a manager was for me first of all a commitment that I had accepted during my sophomore year. And I suspect that he felt the same way, but was not quite willing to admit that he had sacrificed the freedom of action which our intellectual community holds in such high esteem. The commitment that I made was substantial. It included the normal three rehearsals per week for four years; well over two hundred concerts, including extra rehearsals, travel time, one summer (when I freeloaded off the Glee Club for a trip around the world) which would otherwise have been profitable for me, and all the wasted time that was generated before and after these concerts; between twenty and sixty hours per week spent on arrangement or concerts via correspondence and phone calls, selection of concert lists, compilation of program and publicity materials, budgetary planning, and encouraging younger members to, first, work for the management, and, second, do the job well. A minor side eifect has been that my room has become at times little more than the place where I let the wrinkles out of my tailcoat. I spent most of the hours of darkness two years ago either typing letters to solicit concert sponsors for this year's Spring Tour, or trying to fall asleep atop a ten-foot-long conference table in Holden Chapel. Such arc the discomforts of someone who has not learned to restrain his manic whims. I have the normal grudges that one would expect of someone who has had to try to get his job done while carefully avoiding incurring the hostility of a well-established system of administration. (And in this remark I refer specifically to the internal workings of the Glee Club and the idiosyncrasies of various other individuals and organizations in Harvard extracurricular life.) In general, the offices of the University administration have been very helpful, and only equitably obstructive to any intentions that I might at some time have entertained. A friend who holds a relatively official position in the University and who derives immense enjoyment from seeing me try to undertake straightfaced considerations once offered advice something like this: Much of the recently escalating lack of loyalty to the institutions of which Harvard has been so proud for many years may well be caused by a misguided sense of democracy in our current admissions decisions, wouldn't you say? I get the feeling that we don't have enough gentlemen around here any more. I hasten to add that I do not in the least believe that my friend gives his unqualified support to the value judgements implied in this, or any other dinner table tidbit; for he has long maintained, to very good effect, title to devil's advocate of Harvard, as far as I am concerned. He did, however, treat quite accurately one kind of motivation which has enabled many students to go blood and guts into longterm extra-curricular life: With the exception of the fact that Holden Chapel has no bar, no kitchen, or servants, the management of the Glee Club is in effect a final club, composed of two seniors, two juniors, and a few sophomores. We recently acquired a battery-operated back-scratcher, but we must still, as our associate manager puts it, give each other grief from time to time to keep the slate clean. We allow ourselves luxuries occasionally, too, like the annual toast to the new manager from the carefully hidden bottle of managerial gin, which must date back at least to the days of Elliott Zucker. Who knows; it may even ante-date John Snook, who is reputed to have been seven feet tall before I even knew how to walk. To sec the ultimate in elegance, stop by Holden Chapel some day while the mimeograph machine is eating, and hear it signal its need for more paper with a verse of Fair Harvard. While the Glee Club as a whole cannot boast the same kind of corporate solidarity as its management, it has been known to come encouragingly close. Such moments have occurred in a gymnasium packed with 10,000 Filipinos about 100 miles east of Borneo, and on a barge parked somewhere near Miami. We have sung to full houses from Cambridge to Benton Harbor, where there has not been so full a house since, and to usherettes from Tallahassee to Cincinnati. The rather simple-minded bachelor spirit of much of what the Glee Club has done still holds a certain charm for me, even though my unfailing memory of literally 1,000 renditions of Harvard Songs has left me in a state of shock after our most recent concerts. To recover from a concert tour has become for me an endeavor of major proportions, involving hopefully at least three days of relative silence, and definitely no sudden changes in altitude. All joking aside, there is just no substitute for the burst of applause, the whisper of acclamation, and the dripping shirt that follow a performance where the Glee Club hits the mark. The signs are less obvious when the manager puts out — except for a momentary chill of pleasure when he sees that the house is full, the singers are happy, and that he can afford to buy new batteries for the back-scratcher. I will not even attempt to find any reasonable logic in my acceptance of the job in the first place. — Robert Lewis Association of African and Afro-American Students of Harvard and Radcliffe Sometimes I ask myself what I'm doing here in a society and atmosphere so different from the one I was brought up in. The answer inevitably is that I want to gain something from that other culture, a knowledge of things which I can combine with my own experience to make myself a fuller and more open person. —from THE BLACK STUDENT ON THE WHITE CAMPUS In the past several years, the harsh noises of Birmingham and Selma, of Watts and Detroit, have echoed and reverberated within the usually busy but tranquil Harvard community. These ground-swelling tensions of racial discord and national turmoil have had a curious impact on the Harvard setting; but just as the racial dilemma has dwelled for so long on the darker side of the American mind, so here at Harvard the real import of this changing situation resides and is often unseen —among the growing community of black students. The black experience of Harvard — as ambiguous and difficult to define as it may be — eludes the casual white onlooker. It is because the black experience is lived and not talked about that makes it most real to black students and elusive to whites. And this experience has changed — often subtly, often dramatically — with each pulsating though often unnoticed movement within the American racial dilemma. Like everything else in the shadowy nature of our racial predicament — emotions, tensions, prejudices - the ethos and experience of the black student and his curious nexus within the larger, enveloping Harvard configuration must be seen, if it is to be seen at all, from a submerged vantage point. It is this sort of oblique view rather than a more narrow visual attack — that gives to experience the capacity for insight. My entrance into the Harvard setting was not unlike that of my white counterpart. We shared similar feelings of stature and worth. Many of our reactions were identical; initially Harvard was at the same time overwhelming, awesome and in many ways disarming. But unlike my white counterpart, my adjustment to Harvard — for lack of a better description — was far more compelling and complicated. What was different was my coming to grips with a world that was not totally — and in some ways not at all — my own. I watched with curious interest as other black students evolved the ought to be of their lives — what and who they should be — solely in terms of the white students who surrounded them. Often I questioned my own intuition. Were relations really as strange as they appeared? Was the empathy of white students genuine or forced out of an uncomfortable impulse toward courtesy? Was I coloring a situation to match the changing hues of my own thoughts? I realized that I was becoming most sensitive to the very thing that many black students were trying to relegate to the furthermost corner of their minds — their blackness. But what I soon came to understand was that many black students unconsciously accepted this as part of being here; the charade was part of being at Harvard. But it is important to see analytically, if you will, the motion, the drama, behind the charade. Coming to Harvard is more often than not a painful experience since in many ways coming to terms with Harvard in effect means a tacit denial of an individual's blackness, of his identity as a black person. Harvard is the world that supposedly gives to the black student a new set of garments — a new and supposedly more important identity as a Harvard man. The garment — the Harvard identity — does not change the facts of color and race. What one would understand is that the Harvard black should ignore these facts . . . even if no one else does. It was this mental confrontation of sorts that crystallized in my mind the answers to the haunting questions of who I was and what I represented in the Harvard panorama. It now seems ironic that not until reaching Harvard — in which I felt the subtle imposition of values not my own — did I ever understand my own intrinsic distinctiveness which is inextricably bound up with my blackness. What I would deny in the rush of assimilating that part of Harvard which would rob me of my distinctiveness can not be replaced with any meaningful substitute on Harvard's part. It was more than coincidental that I found other black students here who had watched the same charade as I; who had derived the same pain in coming to grips with the Harvard experience; yet who had recognized the worth of their distinction ... of our blackness. It was at this point that my own concerns and the concerns of many other black students turned toward finding a stage within the Harvard community upon which we could redress the Harvard drama from the vantage point of our new awareness. In the quest to turn individual utterances into collective discussion I discovered that black students before me had created an outlet for the very kind of dialogue I was searching for: th ? Association of African and Afro-American Students. My search and the Association's purpose of understanding through dialogue would have been fruitless if it had meant little more than a burrowing self-defensively in our collective blackness. But we were fortunately impatient not only with the inertia around us which ignored the crisis of the American racial problem, but with ourselves also; we no longer felt a detachment from the social explosions which affected our lives even as we sat at Harvard. It would be simple to list the many programmatic aspects of the Association which evolved out of hours of discussion among black students. The more important development was the focus and ethos which evolved out of dialogue. We realized that our efforts should reflect a consciousness of the community beyond the campus boundaries; that the us uttered at Harvard must be inclusive of more than those privileged few who arrive here through circumstance. Only now do I realize the value of my interaction with and within Harvard. Out of a conflict which, for the most part, challenged me at the level of self-perception, I have a keener awareness of what I am about. There is nothing mystical about this. The black student at Harvard is necessarily caught in the betwixt and between of two different worlds; but it does not follow that this situation is an impasse or that the particular texture and style within black identity need give way in face of a new setting. I believe that the world I am living in — the world of Harvard — is not so unlike the world outside. I have come to treasure my blackness more by seeing it in a world which gives me a preview of the world I will spend the rest of my life in. Education at first meant an escape from the stigma of my people. It has come to mean going back to my people and helping to erase that stigma. —Charles . Hamilton, Jr. 99 UNDERSTANDING ACTIVITIES Clilfies are arlsy-craftsy, super-intellectual, or both. Bring along some rare meat the next time you go to Winthrop House. Folk concepts float through the air of Cambridge like springtime frisbees. Some stereotypes exist because they're true; others arc misleading. With the aid of a computer (Harvard's IBM 7094), we analyzed the information this year's seniors supplied for their Yearbook biographies in order to determine the relationship between certain descriptive variables (such as sex. House, or field of concentration) and certain spheres of action (such as literary, political, or athletic activities). Our study covers 1314 students and 200 of the more formalized activities. Sadly, we could not include the pinball machine at Tommy's, the all-night poker games, or other indoor sports in our data. Neither can we know one's degree of involvement in the organization — we cannot tell whether a senior who checks HSA sold hot dogs at a football game for one afternoon, or whether he sold hot dogs at a football game for four seasons, lastly, as always, plenty of exceptions exist, but certain patterns appear that are statistically significant — not the result of chance variation. PUBLIC PRIVATE Sixty-one percent of the Harvard-Radcliffe seniors attended public secondary schools; thirty-nine percent went to private ones. These students were, as a whole, a rather active group — the average senior took part in three activities during his career in Cambridge. We dichotomized the number-of-activities variable into categories: Low (less than three activities) and High (three or more activities). Forty-three percent of the students fell into the Low category, while fifty-seven percent were High. Private-school students, as a group, fell into the High-Activity category relatively more often than public-school students: 62% of the preppies versus 54% of the pubbies. We can explain part of this difference with the fact that, at the Hasty Pudding alone, the private-school group outnumbers the public-school group by about two to one. Also, the private schools usually offer a more sophisticated program of extracurricular activities, which may better prepare their students for similar endeavors at Harvard. Although the public-school students were in fewer activities, they performed more heroic feats of an academic nature. About 55% of the public-school group received an academic honor during their stay at Harvard, while only 30% of those from private schools did so. This figure, however, partially reflects a difference in financial need rather than in scholarly performance, since about a quarter of the academic honors given arc financial scholarships. Looking at the relationship between the private-public dichotomy and specific spheres of activity, we find that, percentage-wise, private-school students are more heavily represented in literary, dramatic, and athletic areas of action than their public-school cohorts. For example, almost 11% of the private-school students were Loebies, while only 5% of the pubbies were. More simply, we can say that a preppie is more than twice as likely to loeb out than a pubbie. On the other side, the pubbie comes on stronger than the preppie in the political, student-government, and Phillips Brooks House spheres of action. About two out of three PBH'ers came from a public school. Taking an overview of this data — seeing, on one side, public-school background, academic honors, political, student-government, and PBH activity, and, on the other side, private-school background, non-curricular activity, literary, dramatic, and athletic spheres of interest, we perceive a more general common element which differentiates this yin and yang of secondary schools. And the pattern that emerges provides a new confirmation of a study done at Harvard a generation ago; preppies tend to value expressive , individual-oriented concerns — such as athletics and the arts — while pubbies emphasize instrumental , goal-directed concerns — such as PBH, political activism, and academic achievement. SEX If we compare Harvard and Raddiffc on activity variables, we find that the Cliffies do very well indeed. Although Harvard men cite more activities than do Radcliffe girls (60% High-Activity to 46%), this can be explained by the fact that Harvard men have many more opportunities to play organized sports (and about 60% of Harvard does) than Cliffies. The idea that Radcliffe girls are artsy-craftsy has plenty of basis in fact. Harvard keeps up with Radcliffe in the literary area, but in music and drama the Cliffies definitely show more enthusiasm. The proportion of Radcliffe girls in musical organizations is about double that of Harvard men. The same ratio holds true for the Harvard Dramatic Club —12% of Radcliffe, and 6% of Harvard cited the Loeb as one of their things. Cliffies also come on like tigresses for social-conscience action. While 31% of Harvard went the PBH route, a thumping 47% of the Cliffe worked on one of PBH's numerous committees. On the whole, the gargantuan Phillips Brooks House Association, with 444 senior members, claimed the concern of over one-third of the H-R senior class at some point in their undergraduate career. Harvard men out-joined the Cliffies in at least one area, however: while 37% of Harvard opted for some political activity, only 29% of the Cliffe did so. The Young Democrats, with 293 senior members, and the Young Republicans, with 123, dominate — numerically, at least — the political scene. We find that Harvard and Radcliffe join the Young Dems at about the same rate, with slightly over a fifth of each college signing up; but among the Young Republicans, we discover drastic differentiation by sex: of the 123 senior YRs, only three came from Radcliffe. The latter figure represents a minuscule 1.2% of the Radcliffe seniors studied, compared with 21.2% participation of Cliffies in the YDs. Put another way, the data shows that, while Harvard men joined the YDs twice as frequently as the YRs, Cliffies checked into the YDs twenty times more often. Percentage-wise, the Cliffe also contributes more members to SDS than does Harvard, so it would appear that Radcliffe, on the whole, falls to the left of Harvard on the political spectrum. HOUSE Harvard's Houses have long generated a wealth of stereotypical speculation. We chose to test the House stereotypes by investigating the distribution of various categories of action in each House. Lowell, Eliot, and Winthrop (in that order) came out as the most active Houses, rated by number of activities per capita. A heroic 73.5% of Lowell House seniors took part in three or more activities. Dudley, Dunstcr, and Adams appear to be the least active; in fact, 15% of the Dudley House seniors sank into a complete torpor, not citing a single activity. Quincy and Lowell claim the largest percentages of men who held a position of leadership in some organization (37% of Quincy House seniors did so), while Dudley and Eliot held the smallest proportions of organizational officers. Our data confirms the validity of Adams House's stereotype as the haven of artistic souls, at least for the class of 1968. Over half of Adams' seniors performed Dionysian action of the literary, musical, or dramatic sort. Quincy ran a poor second in this area, while Kirkland and Winthrop are cultural wastelands where only a quarter of the seniors showed interest in artistic activities. Political activists center around Lowell and Winthrop, where the YDs and YRs have big contingents. In addition to coming out on top in the political sphere, these two Houses contrib- The Extensions of Man utcd the largest numbers to PBH programs —an interesting co-occurrence. Dudley easily takes the title of Most Radical House : one out of every eight Dudley seniors demonstrated his interest in SDS. No clear patterns appear regarding apolitical feeling, since it runs rampant through several Houses. Eliot House clearly takes the lead in jockism. A beefy 56% of Eliot’s seniors took part in an intercollegiate sport of some kind. When we add to this another 16% of Eliot which participates in House athletics, we have a House where, if four students are feeding around a dining hall table, three are likely to be jocks. We can explain part of this statistic by noting that preppies are over-represented in Eliot; we recall that preppies show more orientation toward athletics than do public-school students. Kirkland and Quincy follow Eliot in athletic participation, while men from Adams and Dudley show the least interest in sports. While only 16% of Harvard belonged to a final club, almost a third of Eliot fell into the Clubbie category. Our data seems to describe Eliot House as a center for preppies, dubbies, and jocks — three qualities which our previous preppic findings seem to connect. STUDY Certain patterns appear when we test the relationship between field of concentration and orientation of non-curricular action. About half of the senior class concentrated in a Social Science, while the Natural Sciences and Humanities each commanded the loyalty of about 25% of the students. We discovered that the social scientists took part in more activities than the other two groups: 62% of the Social Science students were in three or more activities, compared with 54% of the natural scientists and 52% of those in Humanities. However, Natural Sciences took the first place award in academic heroism; over half of the scientists received an academic honor, while the figures for the other two areas indicated about 42% with this fine distinction. Predictably, social scientists engage in more political concerns than do the other groups. While 45% of the Social Science students went the political route, only 29% of the natural scientists and 26% of the Humanities students became involved in politics. This illustrates the interplay between academic interests and non-academic concerns. For example, a healthy 60% of those in Government chose some politically-oriented organization. Phillips 8rooks House, however, draws equally from all three areas of concentration. About one-third of each group did PBH work — perhaps indicating that the motives for joining PBH are not so much an intellectual concern with social problems as a personal desire to get out of the dorm or into a good grad school. Natural scientists seem to favor outdoors-y activities, such as the Outing, Mountaineering, and Yacht clubs. This is perhaps only natural (n.p.i.), since the interests of these people lie in environmental concerns. And anyway, a weekend in the New Hampshire hills provides a pleasant escape from a weekday schedule in the laboratories. While over half of those in the natural and social sciences indulged in some form of athletic exertion, less than a third of the Humanities students did so. Tender-minded” humanists, it seems, clearly prefer an evening with Yeats to an afternoon with Yovicsin. And so, while some of the old characterizations of Harvard clearly fall victim to our IBM 7094, many of the stereotypes do in fact exist. Eliot House and Adams. House simply will never be the same and. Cod willing, will never even approach similarity. This, then, is the state of affairs in Cambridge. —Craig Lambert PORTFOLIO % ERIK WRIGHT 109 STEVE 8USSARD 111 a ;iA- on : v. r ( ANYONE FOR CROQUET? Or, A Brief History of Harvard Publications With the arrival of summer we all look forward to a gala season of Lawn Parties. For the true aficionado, the Season means days of frantic research on occult topics at once frivolous and profound: a cultivation of fact and anecdote to roll off the tongue with consummate sprezzatura. Fortunately the history of undergraduate publications has long preserved a fact-filled obscurity; I shall here attempt to convince the devotee of the wonderful potential hidden within the dust of the Archives. With regret, but because of the important pragmatic purpose of the essay, expository elegance must be sacrificed to the cramming of savory fact. You — the aficionado — have just arrived at the party, politely late. The hostess greets you with worried mien, a skyward glance, and the standard lament of the possibility of rain. You reply: Ahh, yes! 'What the Thunder Said.' Pause. Speaking of Eliot, those were the days when the Advocate produced. And illustrious names produced the Advocate: Theodore Roosevelt, Franklin Roosevelt, George Kittredge, Conrad Aiken, E. E. Cummings, Norman Mailer, and Eliot himself. The Lampoon, on the other hand, boasted George Santayana, John Updike. . . . Suppose, for example, that your hostess should pair you off with a colorful young gentleman. One might burst forth: Cucumber sandwiches are awefully popular these days — how rapidly they disappear! They call to mind those good College periodicals that went the way of the Gadfly (c. 1922). Here you may wish to consult the handy pocket reference chart, accompanying. Cf. especially The Harvard Grind (c. 1908 — Our Motto, 'Call a Spade a Spade' ); The Aristocrat (c. 1921); The Harvard Anarchist (c. 1921); The Harvard Prohibitionist (c. 1909); the scintillating Extra of the Harvard Ladies' Home Journal (Shamebridge, Mess, Indian Game, 1908). One might distill a good quote from the Harvard Brewers' Gazette (November 6, 1909): CULTURE COURSES For admission to these courses the student must have received not higher than D in Music 3, Anthropology 1, and Social Ethics 1. Static 17: — How to stand. This course is a necessary prerequisite for Zoology 10. Zoology 10: — How to tell the wild-flowers from the birds after mid-night. Hydraulics 31: — A course of theoretical but no practical importance. Mr. Spurns. Alcoholics 9ahf: — Parallel course with Zoology 10. History of the Separation of the State and Booze in France. Mr. Addled; 10 evening hours a week. You might also wish to discuss the history of Max Keezcr ads: Better to Rise and Fall Than never to have Ariz at all. While the crowd of im-(J.)Press-ive yellows and pale greens adjourn for a well-needed drink, let us quaff the quenching facts of undergraduate publishing. PUBLISHING BEFORE 1800: There was none. As Samuel Eliot Morison writes in Three Centuries of Harvard, College journalism began in 1810 with the Harvard Lyceum, a painfully literary fortnightly. The founders, most notably Edward Everett, promised in their weighty exploratory venture to comprehend every department of the academical studies, including expccially the subject of American literature, together with such general topics as attracted the public attention. A formidible Johnsonian style dominates the leading articles of Volume I, Number 1: Classical Learning, The Prejudices of Literature, On Mathematical Learning, and a translation of Horace {Lib. 2, Ode XVI). The Lyceum closed its doors within the year. Sixteen years later, in February, 1827, Cornelius Conway Felton and two fellow seniors issued the first Harvard Register, a monthly octavo pamphlet of thirty-two pages. The twelfth issue was the last. The Collegian, edited by J. O. Sargent and four colleagues of the Class of '30, graced Cambridge newsstands in February, 1830. The obvious popularity of the Collegian arose from its new, lighter format, and from the support of Oliver Wendell Holmes (especially under the pseudonym Franck Hock : The Dorchester Grant, The Spectre Pig, The Height of the Ridiculous ). The Collegian lasted six numbers. In 1834, the Freshman Class of '37 planned a magazine; the Junior Class got word and demanded, on the grounds of seniority, the management—and, indeed, produced the Har-vardiana. Harvardiana succumbed in its fourth volume despite the guidance of Rufus King '38 and James Russell Lowell '38. The first number (December, 1854) of The Harvard Magazine is interesting for its review of Walden; or Life in the Woods, by H. D. Thoreau. First championed by Phillips Brooks '55, F. B. Sanborn '55, and J. B. Greenough '56, the Magazine died of pomposity in its tenth year. A new Collegian ( Dulce est Periculum ) appeared on March 9, 1866, headed by A Word of Introduction : When the venerable and dyspeptic institution, the Harvard Magazine, sank into a premature grave, few were surprised and fewer disappointed; and yet all felt that there must be sufficient literary talent among the undergraduates, and willingness enough to employ it, to support a sheet of moderate dimensions and of the right character. There was definite promise in the new venture, for the great college epic, The Rebelliad,' made page 3; the Author's Preface bespeaks the gravity of the Poem: Some of the most venerable of the antique tribe of critics have had the unaccountable audacity to assert that I have wasted, not only my time and ideas in a vain attempt to impose an Epic upon them, but even my paper, ink, and quills. I was for some time at a loss to determine whether to laugh at the ludicrous gravity of their virulence, or to answer them with soundness of argument. After due deliberation, I concluded to pursue both courses; laughing lustily three times at the close of each argument. They accuse me of wasting, I. Time. I would remind them of that golden rule, Do as you. arc done by. Now time wastes me, and vice versa, (which is, being interpreted. Tit for Tat,) I waste time. II. Ideas. They are wholly immaterial, and how can immaterial substances be wasted? III. Paper. I have used no more than was or will be absolutely necessary: of course there has been no waste, since waste implies unnecessary consumption. IV. Ink and quills. It has cost me nothing for these articles, as my chum can prove. Having thus fully and unanswerably silenced objection-makers of all descriptions to the above-mentioned points, I shall now wield my pen in defense of another vulnerated punctilio. The last number of the Podunk Pop-gun, (a semi-annual publication, issued from the Brass Foundry of 113 Peter Pampoodle, Esq., once a century,) contains the following: He (meaning me) says, say they, that he followed that infallible guide of genius, the intellectual nose. It may be so; we follow the same guide ourselves; but we cannot perceive how that proves his Poem an epic. There are 22222 different ways of solving this difficulty, 2 of which I shall mention. 1. By premising it to be a well-authenticated fact, that those persons who are in the habit of following their noses, are in the habit of picking them. Now what pick is to the physical nose, epic is to the intellectual. 2. By proceeding to conclude. On May 11, 1866, The Advocate, Veritas Nihil Verctur, opened in militant obsequies: The 'Collegian' was started two months ago as a Cambridge newspaper, intended to represent the views and opinions of Harvard students. Its prosperity was great; it had a long list of honorable subscribers, among both graduates and undergraduates, and was favorably spoken of by the leading periodicals of Boston. Soon after the issue of its third number, the editors of the Collegian were summoned, and informed that their publication must be discontinued. The incensed Advocate editors have assumed by their third page a countenance quite modern in style and tone: The Collegian has been suppressed. Just as it was starting out upon a career full of hope and promise, its young life was crushed — crushed, so far as we have been able to learn, for the following cogent reasons. 1st, Formal permission to publish it was not obtained from the faculty. 2d, It contained complimentary allusions to members of the faculty. 3d, It contained jocular ditto. 4th, It was conducted with no ability. 5th, It was not a fair exponent of the students' views. 6th, They (the suppressors) did not think the said students had time for any such things. We do not propose to endeavor to controvert the above reasons. We submit that they are all lumps of wisdom, and must so stand, unscathed and unanswered forevermore. What we do propose is, to publish a paper in spite of the fate of our lamented predecessor, and regardless of the seven lumps of wisdom. [The faculty failed their turn in the repartee, and the fortnightly Advocate continued in health.] Class jealousy led to the feeling that there was room for another paper (The New York Times1): The Magenta, edited by members of the Classes of '74 and '75, came to life on January 24, 1873 (reading period). Harvard changed its colors to the crimson, and the aesthetically alert Magenta became the Crimson on May 21, 1875. The daily Echo appeared on December 9, 1879; later it transmuted to the Harvard Herald, and in 1883 the entire enterprise consolidated with the Crimson to become the Harvard Daily Crimson. (Abbreviated anecdote: Thomas W. Lamont '92 edited the Crimson his senior year.) From their inception, the news journalists had no pretensions to literary worth: Our work as a whole, is meant to show no affectation of fine writing, nor does it lay claim to literary excellence. The Advocate has this ground by right of possession; we do not attempt to rival it in jeux cfesprit, or in cunningness of speculation, or otherwise poach on its preserves. We shall be content with the humbler task of satisfying the curiosity of our readers about what is going on in Cambridge . . (the Magenta, Vol. I, No. 1). While the others have a last drink, we conclude this briefing with the Lampoon, the third of Harvard's long-lived journals. First issued on February 10, 1876, by Samuel Sherwood '76, Arthur M. Sherwood '77, Ralph Curtis '76 (of the Advocate), and John Tyler Wheelwright '76, as a one-shot enterprise, the Lampoon met with singularly favoring breezes. Our ears still ring with the nobility of the first number: In launching our light craft on the rather troubled seas of college journalism, with Youth at the prow and Pleasure at the helm! we naturally feel a certain trepidation, and would say a few words in behalf of our, perhaps, rash effort. It is not our purpose to vie with the pessimistic and Nestor-like tone of the Nation nor the twaddle of the Saturday Evening Gazette, and we cannot hope to attain the poet-laureatism of the Advocate nor the high moral and aesthetic tone [sic] of the Crimson, but we shall try, with trenchant pencil and sarcastic pen, to hit off the foibles of our little world, and to open a field where the last jest at the club-table and the latest undergraduate freak may find a fitting place. The first issue also offers eminently degenerate quotable material, as in the column of Foreign Correspondence: cheisca, January 5. EDITOR IN CMItf Of THE HARVARD LAMPOON: honored sir: — The proof-sheets of your efforts received: your verbal constructiveness is good. My experience and intuition leads me to suggest the interpolation of articles on Harmony of the Spheres, Evolution, and the Amnesty Question. You must cater to the taste for solid reading, and the organic accompaniments of feeling, which exists so largely at Harvard now. Taper off to your Enthememes and Epicheiremas with puffs of the Howard Athenaeum. Inter nos, by this you get a pass. I will send you my article on Hypothesis, Theory, and Fact. I must now cease, as I am to take the Washington train for a ring dinner with President Grant. Synthetically your Daniel Pratt, G.A.T. Meanwhile, this may be a convenient moment to mention the important Extraneous Facts of Lampoon parodies: Parodies of the Crimson: 5 30 01; 1 18 15; 11 6 26; 2 22 33; 5 24 34; 2 22 39; 4 26 46; Single sheets: 5 24 30; 3 31 31; 11 10 11 63. Parody of Town Country 2 1 23; of The Literary Digest 4 15 25 (Archives lists a Censored Ed. ); of Boston Daily Record 5 8 34; of PM 4 30 42; of Mademoiselle 7 61; of Time 6 65; of Playboy 1966; of The New York Times 3 7 GB. Back on the grass, a dignified old gentleman might now accost you with a pack of young pups: I say, old sport, you aren't of the Class of '05, are you, perchance? The College class portrait collection has included every year but that for the last century. Century, indeed! The Class of '52, claiming (through its secretary) to be the most distinguished ever graduated anywhere, first preserved for the College its image, in daguerreotypes (by Whipple of Boston) of all but three of its members. From then until about 1908, a class album with individually bound photographs depicted each senior class. The first printed yearbook made its debut in 1889-90 as The Harvard Portfolio; an Annual Illustrated Record of Men and Events of Permanent Interest to Harvard Students . . . Published by students of Hars-ard University. In 1898 the Portfolio was succeeded by the Harvard 501 jNfcfcft.5a.5T 8 5. i: id (Class) Album, Containing Pictures of University Buildings, Instructors and Officers, the Senior Class, Literary, Social and Athletic Organizations, Etc. . . . Issued by Authority of the Class. The Harvard Class Album (parentheses dropped c. 1908) held a veritable monopoly, in unchanged format — Tea? Thank you. Without lime. — until the advent of 314: The Harvard Yearbook; 314, et seq., have returned to a general review of the year similar to that of The Harvard Portfolio of 1890-17, and that of The Han ard Year 8ook of 1903-05. The present Yearbook assimiliated its Radcliffe counterpart in 1963. As parly breezes blow that crowd away, say that an inebriated pedant from New Haven should stand you on the lawn with the assertion that his town fostered the first press in the Colonies. What defense?: ‘The first press in English America — in America north of Mexico — dates from the autumn of the year 1638. It was located in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in a neighborhood that has since then produced a large amount of important printing, much of it of the finest quality.'1 (This press was operated by the Day family from 1638 to 1649 in agreement with Harvard College. Samuel Green continued its operation until 1692.) In fact. The Harvard Yearbook lay germinal in a 36-page tract, 'New England's First Fruits, Printed by R. O. and G. D. [Gregory Dexter) for Henry Overton. 1643.' Included in this small volume was an account (dated 26 September, 1642) of the first Harvard Commencement. Among the Fruits appeared the titles of the Theses in whose support the graduating students had been trained. The hour grows late. Urbane conservatives have become tired liberally, and you might safely wander off muttering Avatar and expostulating on its undisputed predecessor, i.e. the Cambridge Review (six numbers, 1954-56). The life of this magazine has been short. When we remember its reception, its readers and the Cambridge people as they arc when they first arrive excited and expectant, we know that with encouragement, imagination and straightforwardness on the part of their teachers and older contemporaries they would become increasingly daring and open in their feelings, independent, intelligently aggressive and enthusiastic. But then we recall another Cambridge: the many indifferent and bitter tutors, the stiffling stiffness and distrust between close friends, the tearing insecurity, the unnecessary and inhibiting doubts, the hardness of the toughs, the weakness of the strong, the strength of the dull, the bored and disinterested objectivity of the academically ambitious, the tearful declarations of resignation, I ■am what I am , the suave hidden confusion of the intellectuals, the early desire curdled into boasts of everybody and anybody , and above all the defect of imagination — the conviction that a better community and University is impossible — we cannot help but fear that ours has been a speech to the deaf. The Editors; December, 1956. Harvard Brewers' Gazette But everyone is deaf at a Lawn Party—the aficionado must always grade himself. You can not, of course, have an A without knowing the total number of pages (or words) published by undergraduates to date. Unfortunately publication of that information might disclose some idea of the size of the Archives. Large numbers are gauche, anyway, and completeness is repletion. — Cryptidcs limes. « Mi mi'Ui.u it to lix fanily i The Harvard Ladies' Home Journal, Indian Game, 1908. DOC ON IT ac s descensus KENT Beer Mugs and Yaid Guides for Freshmen Poker Dice and Poker Chips for Sophomores Works on Finance for Juniors Suuvenir Pillows for Seniors and Everything for Woik, Comfort or Celebialion. Harvard Square. j|ON SPICY NEWS II) Ir-rgrlia fi'.w SnIIVi IV,|1., or lean flat tl.ro « •• ui ki|Wm l(.lrtill • • 1 in r uiw- in SjoliM. '« ybee detail. nr l .v ig . Ini U t Imran that many wet. Uiiai. [inr rn•«■! i h . ih -li-irH , . . ,, , Hr:—How yin whi like the IJt«t lfc ir «li Jlr juith vo aWtUf rite ■ li.n«l K4 v frohmin ? Ullur «ttk fH r iul« vl |ailU She:- Oh. heVtCMlInr .chip. %• l l ri ..I ttluil •! . «««. f..r viliwiy Oalkn. wl. it !« ■ .. i hap. Why thill I )«l TTt lVamthirwhi.r.rM r 4un . « ' ion K .l kfl Hr Syur. «t -1 Wiley' (■ I r r c r i ii c aUr i itniti 1M1 ifliw, at llillii g A Se.-r.lV Min a!. Uim .| ■-••IK'll Zvrl7:, ,?zz } ••• '«■ « '• - ol W. I.IU lu IN. IVuU.lt UI I |UN r -| lU AMil-...- TVrw. I , -i iIk I rallrrliwullillriUiP • U • ••lit. jnj l Tin ii. ' “TV-rv i. yiu. rr i« j IUtrW|“ trwtwrwl w. BKS • TWir « an j(b% 4l«OTf . •! iuiniM lr tmi r wy in l I. a«t4 i« u toilit r, !• il i« Ml, ..oer.lls kir «a llui lit. •o!W « r j «n iK lriVj k«l hM« I . •! ae lluvunl !..«• .V i .I [r.k ' •1 I III lU «t rot'-v •.” • lUM imirUV., 1 %Ue. •• Mil IIm MaU iVtr Ivfui -liotiM klr.v iVeVbtl KIm4 7 Ol in, I | nl lb piphii'X. ilS Ui it |Vhi..m Uti hIcW ‘ - a.l Ibw IliftUr -r ••I lut an t'p«nl iimMImi fdraill |M| IliM l-aup-w, -1I .W Utrl T U I .4Ul lr t M.M - • « k MM r -UN :. .« Iko I..4 c.v . Kiv fp lUnvyMMiU, I I |.m . Lf , r lU lie- r lalljM IK. M Un V il. Kr.l ll r i|riWA i||, Alkgoent lie- IllrpiiO. «ka| plrlllMljT ! Ik ! it’ • • r.4«l It . |«t«w amI nrk I Nr MWi . tin. If I nr n4l ImV i.lm pi. p4 1.|PI|||i. i lid • • irt AaulPUnil, U «..M kav. kip.-M I la I U- «Mir •Ullp’l l« l l I 'l lUti k l tip n|.m iUiM. (Uy l« 4 f .U4 f|t«« eprl 4l r ii i « Jirl ll r allrxr.1 |L « lVt«rri« Itfl IrW fii«m 11 - ihHi •i (Uy k l I .I— Iw iWir MimK !• £ U-Npp. TV t4 «l ll aii i Ia ii r.n.r Ikruw li lUnLiku wilN .t. .it.T .I io.«. -AII M 4,all v,. .1. r. l. j ol ...i l.r N i l i. Mm im| U iivrl l f •n«i hU Wx-vl lu V«. ai.l Vji i iu l.ii l| iWt 4r «1 ln|lU' tifcilM M l' ni{-r l I 111 la ll - hum ClliUttlfP «•«!•! 4 I'T SLIP UP ON THIS SUCK OPPORTUNITY. READY MADE CLOTHING and Haberdashery in more attractive patterns and prices than the Boston Stores can give you A, A. SMITH, 5 Brattle Street. Horrible Accident Hr St v«r. Mrmbrf of il|.kM a Firm ..Ml.Mini, A Stavrr pattiJ awaylalf laiul|lil aafulaam ' in Store Loot not matt known toexn Cloaeat Ciiafomtro antll this morninj-Store open at uiaal. llalTlnl ,l«lra4l eill f..f piI|nl.V .awl .,!. ! IU..I I.. I.lw.vterke .i.l . .alou.i win ri.l.r-iC'llW w. II k . w ,. |..ariaar o BDi Ka j Sent ,V‘ waorviaae liillr iraliinl Itlwi inythttfC - tr er-l,«aa 1 1 oreaia. | r l Mr. II. :.. . awi hi. r-n-a e -iblaat, wi, rVwrful awl arallr at j It ww, antal It. k-rueowlnl ir-1-olerol Tor llmioni. I.ixir- Hour JnaklimUn) ill tvr In wstul rail) .new if rU...Utr .allnl iwvlk ■ .ll. .a jenwi In j wneU.) ,£, lr.’AU,t •I wan Ml IV Kala l-aiaiuin lV.1 •m ol tie • .! an! koiriWe ne..Vn Ini..I ml. .Ill Il.irjr4 tt a.V«t anl rati rlia . 1 lattl.lt.le will iyu|4lhi . wall, Mr. I illm . at ! mootti l ia Ini. It ait t llawwn tneirli tkeelowit .uloaiinof lie Oita llal Mr. Moir. •i. is tlw luUt “I takiuj jt.jll oj U-foie fine bow u ttiKlr. at.l tkia «t |ia,M «n ut Will le aWlwl ttl IU axl wn lilt ll nil le uall In ol juatihratiio. sy. anil llViMUKil ll.at ivlke 10 Inr w—• j Miully lirf |oti...ac d tU kilo. It nsoltew i..■ im l.-r Mr. Ht-.i.r to I iraaai.. at lie atiec n.ltl I late bar in I if«e oI lU faet that l.e ht4 hn i«o t.iiaUH a lartl dlv’l eel, Mr. Jilmer knl l. n (r--li..j will .11 Jay ant toaar.U l.lyl.t Uiu. altyl.lly tijny fan laaii.p iwnte! 4vn IU .Ottt.wta o ao ulay boltl.a iwrt.y hia |4rvi.yl wt hour , bat hr h l ui! HE'S GOT The Lillie Brown hr , This is not A Spiiit in Pris ii).'' An 1 say! Tlvero’s a new pmeh an Ills st«re.-“Myille Baldwin — have you seen her e Slie's no! the only myrllc around Iho shop. Tlaere's Di na MaBory.“- •The Fair Mississippian. —“JiKlith. and one or two oilier best sellers- AMEE IS THINKING OF TAKING HOLY ORDERS Ivime t reaJ. Ii's by Marie Coecih. Cel the wear lilrat « r at Amee Brothers, Booksellers and Stationers HARVARD SQUARE. !ake you insured « vim. nvriRniixr. r«L « Wa w iVMlk Vin VI. If •€ .« I •r+'C” Cdd Jobs done At odd Cambridge Police Dept. MAX WITHOUT CLOTHES to supply the market. The rich irnn’i jxini, hi mi xriouilj' iflcclcd the excherjoer ol lire jiildtil youth • ( the (« M C«i t lliit they arc ucarinj; the old doihe Max Kvcrcr enight lo hate •« hi oounlcrx al j It.n Street. I he need b (rcvwwinj;. w net whal you ran ready Inr iwr oW friend. THIS IS WAX. Tel- Camla. i;.a|-|. To be oblaided al BILLINGS STOVER Druggists, Harvard Square. PRETTY GOOD PHIZZES SEEN AROUND OUR SODA FOUNTAIN. Ir wrwt h)..r la binrr. Hr rHunw! lo ihr iwr al ortlr afirr •earn nVIerk Ittl o.eor hia t'.iiibri-ijc Irwxlt. wlo 1 1 j.'t iw|urtt M rm. Hollo , hap ralo lie toie i.l, ee., Mr. Stwirr. r naikr4 Ihit h- oiyltlob-reilht lonlKttlulyr writ,—le had l. l r ... l' Mi Sam hxl «ewei liVrd lo harr his .utttuni r ««.rar l Iwal ,Miami him llal ao lar a he wat row. reined le vu r ehwp for, and U hrpl l.i« roadit.ia pretty well to hii.aelr. ll u ro a ! ribl altu I.IKte-loie Mi. Slortr earn cea te rd Ihr idfiub :.ly c! roll.i.j a UK. Ut awb drtlly ItllnnK ll maditioo, hr tleel-1 r-l to elooe up thr atrte mI l k Ueiie L.wr w.th Mm. .la hr via rearlinf lie the bwttlr ■. Ihr hell iw tLo little U r)i clowt lUt Uat lie lao. bowt, U i'nf.1 on lit w.Uj (lyroiine holtle with wl.irh Ihr abaie ia alearl writ liy(Ci.l aid liiMlnl a Mien l lalySai diatida' oS the bottOM .heir axl It (,ule.| to tU ftoi Mi. Stoirr [..u.d away, leaiinc ider to hit a'tiitaata torlean .Ip the iieea. aad Ihit nuaitf it waa. to all l t an km. teemed reieetei, • thttich oethaaf ha.1 (..(.jened (l opywrmird IW h T. H. R l rl ter.i Send her your picture and show her how you’ve developed since you came to Harvard. Pach’s Studio Adjacent to BECK HALL. 01468272 117 THE HARVARD CRIMSON The Crimson is a unique newspaper. Almost everyone at Harvard reads it, but very few know anything about it. This is because of a standing rule of journalism — a newspaper never writes about itself. Yet the Crimson is an important part of Harvard life. As a dispenser of opinion and information, it is invaluable. It is ironic that so little is known about it, since it is referred to more often than any other organization or periodical on campus. The Crimson building is on Plympton Street. On the ground floor to the front are the business offices. To the rear are the news rooms and other offices. Downstairs, there are three linotype machines, a printing press capable of putting out an eight-page paper and folding it, an engraving machine, and a machine to make headlines. On the second floor, there is one large room called the sanctum, where general membership and board meetings are held. The Crimson is unique in that it follows practically every facet of Harvard life. It attempts to communicate with all parts of the university, even though some organizations have less highly developed relations with the Crimson than others. There are always events the Crimson misses, but no other group expends nearly the same amount of energy in the effort. The Crimson's uneven coverage of university events is in a large part due to the uneven composition of its staff. There is a preponderance of concentrators in the social sciences and the humanities, but a lack of same in the natural sciences. Thus the paper has a plethora of information about the Government and English Departments, but almost none about the Physics Department. Though an effort is made to counterbalance this, departmental news coverage remains poorly distributed. It is generally true that organizations with Crimson members draw more attention in the paper than those without: note the heavy emphasis on political action groups in which Crimson members participate, and the neglect of news from Harvard Student Agencies. With the university administration, however, the Crimson ♦enjoys a highly developed relationship which has nearly become institutionalized. The personalities occupying the various roles may change, but the framework seems to survive. The highest ranking members of the Crimson, usually the president and the managing editor, attend a press conference weekly where they address questions to the President of the University, the Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, and the Dean of the College. At these press conferences, potential administration stories are discussed. The Crimson usually publishes information with the consent of the relevant dean. Discretion is taken seriously when talking to them, for these Deans arc invaluable contacts for future stories. They may also reveal tips on important shifts in administration policy. Consequently, their good will is a matter of some concern. It is through its administrative contacts that coverage of the faculty meetings is obtained. At the conclusion of each meeting, Dean Ford calls the president of the Crimson and gives him a review of what took place. The Crimson then calls the various faculty members to verify their roles in the meeting as reported by Dean Ford. Faculty meetings are closed, but they might as well be open since Dean Ford's phone call is an established practice. Faculty members speaking on sensitive issues expect to be interrogated that evening by the Crimson. Corporation meetings, on the other hand, are impossible for the Crimson to penetrate. Every other Monday, the President meets with the other members of the Harvard Corporation to make many key university administrative decisions. No one on the Corporation Board ever talks. And the Crimson can only guess what goes on. Despite lack of contact with the Corporation, the Crimson on the whole has intimate connection with the administration. Crimson members are proud of their contacts, which perhaps explains why they overvalue the information they get from them. One sometimes thinks Crimeds are warming up for careers on the Washington Post or the New York Times. On the other extreme, stories which require contact with the Harvard police arc sometimes dropped altogether; information simply cannot be obtained from the police. According to one Crimson member, this is because of some indiscretions committed by the Crimson in years past. In one such case, a student who had attempted suicide was taken out of school, but it was hoped he would return shortly. Naturally, it was desirable that his name be kept secret in order to facilitate his reintegration into the student body. The Crimson, however, ran the story and the name. Today, no Harvard policeman may release any information whatever to the press. Because of this, an important Crimson story concerning a series of bicycle thefts and an assault upon an officer once had to be scratched. A Harvard policeman, attempting to arrest four youths in the process of disassembling bicycles in the Quincy House courtyard, was assaulted by them. Three students came to the officer’s assistance so that the arrests could be made. The next day. Chief Robert Tonis was not available to the press, and no other officer would say anything either. The following day, Tonis was available, but he still would not reveal the names of the officer, the three students, or the four youths. Without any names, there was no story. Perhaps the Crimson's most unusual relationship is with the Lampoon. The two organizations constantly badger each other in a jovial, but fierce, rivalry. The Crimson seems to get the upper hand by engineering such masterpieces as the kidnapping of Natalie Wood when she was here to receive an award from the Lampoon, and the theft of Ibis, the Lampoon symbol, from atop Lampy's Castle. The Crimson voluntarily released Wood, and the Poonies recovered Ibis when a Crimed left his car unlocked with Ibis inside. Poking and pranking, neither side cares enough to give up the feud. And so on it goes, a source of amusement for all. When a completed story is turned in at the Crimson, it is edited, given a headline and cutline for any picture, and sent downstairs to the linotype operators. The Crimson employs two full-time linotype operators who put the story into type. The type comes out in slugs, individual lines of print, which are then set up into pages. Headlines are made on a separate machine. Photo engraving is also done at the Crimson. When the pages have been composed and proofed, the press starts to roll, usually about 3 AM. When the paper is out, the lead slugs and headlines arc melted down to be reused in future editions. Engravings, done on a block of wood, are saved. The Crimson puts out its product six days a week. This requires considerable work, much of which is uninteresting and tedious. When it comes to drudgery, the organization relies heavily on the ever-present candidate. Competitions for the Crimson are held in the fall, winter and spring, and last for nearly three months. Comps are as challenging as they are long. This spring, 23 candidates (known as candies) started the competition for the news board; by spring break, only ten remained. And these ten did not have much to look forward to in the rest of the comp. With fewer candidates, the busy work became more intense. They ran errands, edited the notice column. and wrote cutlincs and headlines two nights a week. If a candidate can endure this, he is made for the Crimson. A candidate's progress is critically followed by the membership. All candidates' articles are placed in the open book, where members may write comments. There is also a closed book. where more graphic considerations are undertaken. A candidate is free to read the open book, but he will be cut if caught looking in the closed book. One Cliffie drew such uninhibited comments that on the night of her election, people went through the book erasing their more perspicacious remarks. The competition is the grease that keeps the Crimson going. Candidates do the dirty work, and from their ranks the new membership is chosen. A cause of great bitterness to some is that dirty work is not always rewarded by election. It is a bitter man indeed who discovers after many thirty-hour weeks that the Crimson wasn't really interested after all. The Crimson often uses candidates to expand its contacts in the student body. The paper has its own version of publish of perish: a candidate must find original stories or he will be cut. The pressure is constantly applied. A candidate will do almost anything to get a story, they are told. This high-pressure journalism is not always effective. It may force the writer to sensationalize and even to falsify. In the fall, one desperate candidate sat down and invented quotations for an article he was writing. The story was printed and naturally proved embarrassing. That candidate is no longer welcome at the Crimson. Falsification isn't always deliberate. The writer may have drawn incorrect conclusions from limited available information. But the Crimson is responsible for inaccuracies as well as falsifications, and consequently they are both unforgiveable. In an article on changes in the English Department, one of this year's spring candidates claimed that an introductory Bible course would now be required of all English majors, a statement which caused momentary panic in the department. It was a major black mark against the candidate; and when cuts came around, he was quietly shown the door. Candidates must do more than prove themselves competent journalists —they must also show that they are socially adept and able to follow fraternity-like standards of behavior. Candidates are not much different from fraternity pledges. They are expected to be appropriately cowed, to serve members hand and foot, and to obey the Crimson's rules for candidates. Candies may never touch type, talk back to members, look in the closed book, or go upstairs to the sanctum. Violation expedites one's expulsion from the competition, candidates are warned. Some of the rules are defensible, but others make no sense at all. The Crimson's logic is that only really devoted people will stick it out. On that score, they're right. At times, the candidate rules reach comic proportions. One rule is that only candies answer the telephone. It is intriguing to watch the more ambitious plunging for the phone as though in mortal fear of the wrath of Cod, or what's worse, the wrath of a member. Sometimes two or three get there at once (invariably within two rings) like a dead heat at the dog races. Some members exploit to the fullest their advantages over candidates. It is not hard to do. They know their way around; they can claim an expertise that candidates cannot. By pressing the irrational as well as the rational rules, they can easily squeeze an admission of inferiority from candidates. Most members don't push it. There seems to bo a correlation between those that do and the members who are relatively low on the Crimson ladder; the important members are secure enough in their positions to feel comfortable with candidates. Though the candidacy is trying, the rewards of membership are even greater. Crimeds put in differing amounts of time, depending on their individual tastes. They do most of the substantial work on the paper, writing essentially what they want to write. Since all the bylined articles are by members, Crimeds who like to write can easily satisfy that urge. Crimson members can take off on any project that interests them. At one point this spring, there were three Crimeds covering the Presidential primaries: one in Nebraska, one in Wisconsin, and one in Iowa. One Crimed got so involved in the McCarthy campaign that he resigned from his executive editor's post to work full time for the senator. The Crimson is, of course, more than just a news board; its editorial, business, and photo boards are also essential to the organization. The duties of these boards are self-explanatory. A candidate is elected to a particular board. However, once elected he can work for any board he desires. If someone on the business board wants to write an article or feature, he is free to do so. Nonetheless, there arc still basic differences between people who go out for the different boards. Association with each other as members may wear the differences down, but it does not eliminate them entirely. If it takes devotion to become a member, it takes fanaticism to become an executive. The executive board is selected after a competition among interested members. Executives — president, managing editor, executive editor, and so forth — do the real organizational work; they plan and put together everything that goes in the paper. The executive board is the top of the Crimson world, and it literally runs the show. Execs often see their grades drop precipitously, but they are willing to make the sacrifice — journalism is their life's work. If their low grades put them on probation, they simply join what is known as the proboard. Officially, this means they aren’t active on the paper, but in practice it doesn't mean anything. An executive takes his degree a l.i Crimson. Editorial policy for the Crimson is determined at a meeting of the editorial board every Sunday, a conference which news board and executive board members may attend. The results of these meetings often draw wide attention. When the Crimson, after prolonged deliberation, switched its Presidential endorsement from Eugene McCarthy to Robert Kennedy by a 17-14 vote, Kennedy sent a telegram thanking them and McCarthy was heard to comment, I thought we had the Crimson under control. The Crimson is a lot of work, but it can be rewarding work. People are striving for recognition and acceptance, and competition is fierce. Election doesn't necessarily mean the end of this competition — there may be ill feeling right on up through the executive board. But if a person knows what he wants and gets it, the Crimson is a happy place. At times the Crimson is confusing and inefficient. An efficiency expert might have a coronary if he could see the Crimeds crowded around phones, dashing up and down stairs, looking for a typewriter, or even an issue of the paper. These things are all part of the Crimson’s character — the Crimson is unique. Whatever its curious foibles and painful drawbacks, it avidly concentrates on being nothing other than itself. And if you think about it, that's something. — James C. Kitch 121 THE PRODUCTION OF “PRINCE ERIE” Prince Erie was written in three weeks in the lobby of a London hotel. Airmailed to Cambridge in time to win the 1966 Phyllis Anderson Award for original student drama, it posed the Locb Drama Center and the Harvard Dramatic Club with a problem: as submitted, the play was long and diffuse, required a huge cast, and admittedly needed extensive revision. Only after a full term of political maneuvering could a December production be scheduled in the Loeb. Hardly a typical Loeb production, Erie climaxed several years of work by a large part of the Harvard theater community. 8oth the author, Tim Mayer, and the director, Thom Babe, have been prominent here for quite some time, and since neither planned to be in Cambridge next year, most of their past associates wanted to be involved in the production. Dan Seltzer, the Loeb's associate director, was chosen for the title role of Jim Fiske, the Erie financier, while Susan Chan-ning, who has starred in many of Mayer's productions, was cast opposite as Fisk’s mistress, Josie Mansfield. Mayer has termed Prince Erie a play about a famous fat man, and a way of looking at other Americans, but he dodges further questions on the play's intent. The three main events of Fisk's life — his takeover of the Erie Railroad, his cornering of the Cold Market, and his assassination by a jealous rival — are covered only in brief, exaggerated pantomimes, while the play focuses instead on Fisk’s relations with the people closest to him: Josie; his partner. Jay Gould; and Ned Stokes, his protege and eventual assassin. The collaboration between Mayer and Babe began two summers ago, when they directed alternate shows in Agassiz Theatre with the HDC Summer Players. Mayer got his start at Harvard in 1964 with a lavish production of Utopia, Ltd. that bankrupted the Gilbert and Sullivan Society, and followed in 1965 with a Threepenny Opera revival that made it solvent again. A large proportion of his later shows have been musicals, but he would rather be known for his Cood Woman of Sezuan and The Tempest. Babe, meanwhile, has long been interested in Strindberg, and has frequently chosen expressionistic plays to present. His own adaptation of Euripedes' The Trojan Women, performed last summer, can be so categorized, and in 1966 he directed the Loeb production of Spring’s Awakening. The version of Prince Erie presented in the Loeb was very much the work of both men. Back in Cambridge, Mayer rewrote the entire play, working on a schedule so tight that Babe often found himself blocking scenes that he had discussed but never seen before rehearsal. The songs, set primarily to re-scored Offenbach, were written by Mayer in the final week before opening. The principal technical challenges of Prince final script contained thirty-one scenes, calling for seventeen distinct locales; and in order to make it playable, Babe had to devise action which would weld the short scenes into longer units, and transitions to carry on the dramatic action during scene changes. Five of these scenes were set in what the program coyly termed a podium, located on the wings of the stage, but the remainder required detailed settings. The basic acting area of the Erie set was a thrust plank platform, on which pieces of furniture and sliding wall panels created the settings. The panels, ten feet high, hung on roller fittings from fifty-foot-wide steel struts, and could be rolled out of sight to either side of the stage for changing. Two drop curtains, one solid black and the other a painted black and white American flag, permitted scene shifting to go on behind them while the action continued out front — an old musical comedy trick. This basic platform was not difficult to construct, but the many setpieces called for were time-consuming to make. The grand staircase on which Fisk was to die, for example, occupied one man for six days, even though it was m view for only five minutes. An eleven foot long bar in Dclmonico's restaurant spent less than two minutes on stage. A more fruitful effort was the construction of a fake grand piano, which appeared in six scenes. Many details of the production were decided at the last possible minute. In the final two days, all sixteen of the panels were painted or wallpapered, and had mouldings attached and curtains hung. The last panels, appearing in the second act, were finished early in the first act of opening night. In order to suggest the many locales, Erie's sketchy set required elaborate props. A preliminary list, prepared a few weeks before rehearsals began, ran four pages and included antimacassars, corpses, a stereopticon, a carved wooden bed, a full-length breakaway mirror, and a coffin big enough for a 400-pound man. Somehow the antimacassars were forgotten in the rush, but all the other items appeared in time. The large walnut-panelled desk which represented the sumptuous Erie offices was the last item unearthed — discovered m a Somerville furniture store the morning of the opening. To manipulate the set and its furnishings, inordinate amounts of manpower were required. Eighty-one staff names were listed on the show's program, but this did not include late additions to the stage and set crews. Backstage, three stage managers rode herd on the cast of thirty-one, a nine-piece orchestra, a stage crew of fourteen, two prop girls, and three dressers. Out front, the light crew was augmented by three follow-spot operators. And each night someone had to walk Seltzer s three-month-old husky, Odin. The costume department faced similarly formidable requirements. Assembling some Erie lay not in its bulk but its variety. The Il.viii. (The Cold Room ol the New York Stock exchange.) The scene is dominated by a marker which is mechanically controlled. It is at 148. At least 10 brokers frantically buying and selling. Music. Enter FISK, in a gold suit, waving money sacks. There is a dash to buy. Men crowd around the marker. They jump on top ol one another. The marker goes up — one point .it .1 time. FISK laughs. everybody laughs. The marker reaches 755. FISK shakes hands, pals heads, blows kisses and exits. Music becomes faster. Violent buying. Marker continues to rise. It reaches 760. Men start to throsv money in the air. One lamts One has convulsions. It reaches 164 Fistfights embraces Suddenly, the marker starts to fall rapidly. Men throw watches, rings, and finally clothing. The marker reaches 134. One man shoots himself. The rest arc clearly mad, rolling on the floor, crying hysterically, or wandering m a daze. They do not sec the corpse Freeze. Tableau. Blackout. I.iii. A New York Pier . . . Miniature cut-out ol terry boat propelled by stagehands appears lett and comes along side of the pier. Erie henchmen and DREW get out ot barrels but FISK gets stuck They have a tug ot war — three pull his arms, three pull the barrel. ORIW waves his hands, urging them to hurry. FISK treed, and all tall down. All gel up and run on Jo terry, with more money sacks, ledgers, and carpet bags. Ferry pulls slightly out. Policemen return and shake their Fists. Eric henchmen thumb their noses and stick out their tongues. Freeze. Tableau. Blackout. Ill.ii. STOKES: I am delighted to be received by the man they call Prince Erie. FISK: They call him lim, Mr. Stokes, and he's pleased to meet you. STOKES: Ned . . . lim. FISK: So be it, Ned. (They shake hands.) Il.v. MANSFIELD: Can you do a handstandf STOKES: A what? MANSFIELD: A handstand, Mr. Stokes. STOKES: I think so. MANSFIELD: Oh, dot STOKES: Right here? MANSFIELD: Please. STOKES: As you wish. (He complies.) MANSFIELD: Thai's splendid, Mr. Stokes, just splendid. STOKES: Now you try. (Blackout.) Il.vi. FISK: Thought I'd drop by and show off my new skin. (He produces boxes containing an admiral's uniform.) What do you think? WOOD. Splendid. FISK: The Erie's got more steamships than the Commodore, so I figure that makes me an admiral. WOOD: Of course it does. CLAUDIA: How lovely. Please try it on for us, Mr. Fisk. FISK: Shall I? MINNIE: Oh, yes! (They all clap their hands.) 125 eighty costumes on a tight budget — without the aid of Loeb costumer Lew Smith, who had died earlier in the fall —was challenge enough; but six of these costumes also had to fit a 400-pound, size-60 man. The most striking of Fisk's costumes (all tailor-made, which is unusual for a Loeb production) was a gold lame suit worn first amid the frenzy of the pantomimed Gold Panic, and then, with telling effect, in the realistically played scene which followed, when Fisk and his cohorts celebrate their financial triumph. Returning to the 400-pound man: ironing-board padding, sewn several inches thick onto ordinary long-johns, swelled Seltzer's legs and posterior, while his ponderous stomach was created out of a foam-rubber pad worn in reverse knapsack fashion. Thus encumbered, Seltzer needed the help of two of the three dressers to manage his costume changes. With this system, two minutes allowed him to have a complete costume change, a glass of water, and his brow mopped. Fifteen women's costumes were made for the production, nearly half of them to be worn by Susan Channing. All were rebuilt from existing Loeb costumes, with the addition of bustles. As usual, men's costumes were rented from suppliers in Haverhill and New York. In contrast to the technical aspects of Erie's production, most of the publicity requirements— even for a world premiere — have become standardized at the Loeb. Press releases, photos, and special letters inviting critics to attend, arc sent out in a steady stream; a seasonal subscription drive fills half the seats; and since the profit incentive is absent, morale and staff recruitment become prime publicity motives. Less standard was the show's poster: a Thomas Nast caricature of Fisk atop a stack of greenbacks, which was silkscreened by hand in three colors. As compensation, the silkscreening crew imprinted their T-shirts, workshirts, and — in one case — a raincoat, with the same design. A greater publicity coup was the appearance of 125 Prince Erie buttons on the lapels of the Harvard Band at the Yale game; but the Erie aerial sign, with letters eight feet high, scheduled to circle over the stadium for an hour, was grounded due to inclement weather. As a consequence of its complexity. Prince Erie needed the largest budget ever authorized by the Loeb management — a sum in excess of $5,000, sixty percent of which went into costumes. Several previous shows have cost more, but none had planned to. And in terms of operating complexity, Erie could well have been the most difficult production ever attempted at the Loeb. In any case, the results were several favorable reviews and eight full houses ... but like any other Harvard show, in two weeks it closed and became a memory. — Scott Kirkpatrick ll.x. FISK: The day is ours. Ours the power. Ours the glory. Nothing is lost save honor. Ill.viii. lobby of Crtnd Hotel. Bellboys, long suirase. Music. STOKES enters lurtively, tnd goes up the staircase. fISK enters — followed by a small crowd. They lall on their knees before him, tugging his sleeves and trousers. fISK scatters greenbacks In the air. The crowd scrambles lor the money, quarreling over ownership. fISK laughs. Consults bellboy, who points upstairs. fISK begins to mount staircase. STOKfS appears brandishing a pistol. STOKfS fires. fISK clutches belly and falls. fISK gets up and mounts another step. STOKfS fires again. fISK tails. fISK gets up. fISK falls and tumbles down the remaining steps. STOKfS dashes out. Crowd runs to fISK. They lilt him up, forming something of a picta. freeze. Tableau. Blackout. Ill.xi. fISK'S CHOST: Rest easy neighbors. My lather was a madman and I had no son. My seed was the seed of a mule. Men like me are born dead — but we don't late it lying down. Informal Sports at Harvard and Radeliffe Each year around the first week of April, a dedicated group of individuals begin gingerly treading the soggy turf and brittle snow patches bordering the Charles River in front of Dunster House. Their scrutiny of the area is almost scientific. Whispering in low tones, they stare disdainfully at the few remaining kite-flyers mushing the hallowed ground. Nervous hands finger frayed plastic discs — the Harvard frisbee players wait yet a few more days. The manly occupation of physical training has long been an informal Harvard tradition. Frisbee and, especially since 1%0, touch football are increasingly becoming part of the Harvard experience. The frisbees arc everywhere. During the last six weeks of the spring term, it's impossible to walk through the Leverett House courtyard without being half-decapitated by some grinning jock in a U.C.t.A. sweatshirt. Devotees actually stage organized competitions on the banks of the Charles. Wild throws and mistimed leaps are salvaged by passing rowers who routinely pluck fallen frisbees and retching players from the slimy water. Gymnastic catches and hovering throws arc cheered on by the strollers and sunbathers as exams, papers, and generals are screwed to the wall. An informal Harvard tradition of time-wasting is also reinforced by a local mania for touch football. Each Sunday afternoon toward the end of spring, Charles River frisbee turf and the lawns around the Business School are commandeered by hundreds of sweatshirted Harvard men. The rules are loose; the play is serious — fake inside and buttonhook in front of the spruce tree. Indiana high-school halfbacks mingle with eastern varsity rejects and the product is usually a lot of exercise and some very good touch football. Minor injuries are perhaps more common than would be expected, but a lot of people around Harvard simply take touch football very seriously. Less exerting but certainly as demanding is the year-round devotion and or addiction to pinball which is spreading silently, like so much mouldy asparagus, throughout the central-kitchen Houses. Incredible amounts of time can be spent gripping a pinball machine or standing transfixed in front of the blinking lights watching someone else trying to rack the all-time game. Said one Leverett House senior: That damned machine is the worst thing that ever happened around here. It's impossible to walk by the thing and not play it, especially when there's no one around, and it just sits there blinking drawing you in. Pinball aside, serious physical exercise has always been a Harvard tradition. Large numbers of Harvard undergraduates, as well as graduate students and Business School people, arc taking up the punishing sports of running and rowing. Each early morning during the relatively good weather of fall and spring, snorting herds of corporation hopefuls 131 n l 'hC Center t2 l” ePenLmo,e Popular among Har- -roSiVhr : ini° ar es each fall and spring. Attempted nously. rowing can become one of the A«cmoiipHU|°-US Pf,'TeS P0”16'0 a‘ Attempted leisurely, the sport can offer many Pleasant spring afternoons drifting on the Charles l.stenmg to the birds, getting a sun-an, and watching the girls stretched out on the banks. sports at Radcliffe, are by definition, informal; the college has no compulsory physical educatcon program. As such, Radcliffe stands as an oddity besides the other seven-sister schools. The Cliffo, however, is not as flabby as might appear at first glance — there's really nothing like a Radcliffe jock. A dedicated clique of girls runs an impressive variety of sports programs which keeps the flab under control and annually earns Radcliffe a good deal of respect and enmity among other eastern women's colleges. The tennis team — loosely composed, according to Nancy Kleckner '68, of the people who want to play — each year usually places Cliffies in the second and third rounds of the New England Intercollegiate Tennis Championships. For a part-time sports organization, the Radcliffe team is unusually successful. Says Miss Kleckner: We don’t have the really good participants, but we have a lot of depth. Not only in tennis, but in the other more or less formal team sports at Radcliffe, the desire for excellence and the will to win is very prevalent among the participants. This attitude carries over to another group of girls, the sailors. Sailing with clenched teeth, this group of enthusiasts is undefeated in area competition this year, a fact which has caused a lot of resentment at the other girls schools. Said one jackson sailor, They'd sink your boat if they had to. Radcliffe swimmers, while equally informal, arc equally dedicated. Competing regularly with other New England schools, the girls usually come out on top. Active swimmers participate for various reasons, says Cathy McBain '70. Physical fitness is certainly a part of it, but most of the girls had done A.A.U. swimming in high school and want to continue. Not all of Radcliffe's informal sports organizations have fostered such an interest m outside competition, nor indeed have they been able to dredge up ,he sp' t to maintain themselves. Basketball at Rad-cliffc, following an old Harvard tradition, is and always will be a total flop. A«orth « one Cliffie jock: Every time we tried to play somebody we got creamed. ... Whatever its motives, however, a significant portion of the Radcliffe student body regu-l ly engages in physical exertion. Said one Aching fwimmer: t. jus, feols good ,o be physically tired once in a while. 133 Co-educational physical exertion, always popular between Harvard and Radcliffe students, has, like other informal sports activities within the respective schools, increased significantly in the past few years. Virtually all of the Radcliffe-based sports activities make provisions for regular meetings with their opposite numbers at Harvard. The most organized of the co-ed activities is volleyball. Meeting one night each week in the Radcliffe Gym, a small group of Harvard and Radcliffe volleyball fanatics sharpen their skills to the point that mixed teams regularly challenge other co-ed schools in the Boston area. The boy-girl rule, requiring that no two persons of the same sex touch the ball in succession, and the California-style of Harvard-Radcliffe volleyball (idealizing carefully controlled play) usually combine to produce surprisingly skillful contests. Co-ed swimming, if not one of the mainstays of mixed athletic activity between Harvard and Radcliffe, is certainly one of its more enjoyable aspects. One Tuesday each month, eager Harvard men get a chance to jump into the Radcliffe pool and frolic with a few glistening and equally eager Cliffies. Lighthearted water polo matches, swimming contests, socializing, and fantastic food usually round out a co-ed swim, making it one of the best-attended mixed sports activities between the two schools. Less organized clashes of various mixed sports groups occur spasmodicajly throughout the year, usually on the Radcliffe Quad. Virtually every Sunday afternoon in the fall and spring, in response to personal invitations or signs posted in the Houses or in the Yard, a few Harvard men and Radcliffe women show up on the grass. A few more bored students lope over from Hilles and invariably something gets started — field hockey, lacrosse, soccer, softball. Infrequently, strictly organized competitions are held, but usually the sexes just romp around the green, kicking, gouging, or gleefully bashing each other over the head with lacrosse sticks. Each May the last rites of spring, known locally as a Medieval Joust, are celebrated on the Radcliffe Quad, officially ending everybody's frolicking for another year. Unwilling Iowa farm boys are lashed to affectionate Cliffies for three-legged races, while Harvard and Radcliffe students expectantly toss water balloons at each other. Everybody uses the occasion as they have used similar occasions throughout the year—to put off responsibilities, and to enjoy themselves. War? — What war? Harvard? — What Harvard? Ric Zimmerman called this play on a fourth-and-onc situation from the Yale J2 yard-line. He fated 10 O’Connell, and Ihen I oiled (broken line) to Carter lord, the right end, for a touchdown. Halfback Ray Hornblower went deep up the middle, and Vic Catto went into the right Hat a the option receiver. 4th AND 1 FROM THE YALE 32 Many people- last fall really felt that Harvard had a shot at the Ivy crown. In retrospect, these hopes proved unwarrented; Harvard's dream of an Ivy League championship in 1967 was, from the beginning, an impossible dream. It was a year of individuals; throughout the season the squad lacked team coordination. Offensive end Carter Lord put it this way: At each position we had individuals as good as last year, but we were better as a group last year. Individuals excelled (Lord, Zimmerman, Gatto, Wynne), but the group compiled a 6-3 record and finished a disappointing fourth in the Ivy League. Nonetheless, the season never lacked excitement. The traditionally dull Harvard offense, leaning heavily on the power sweep, fell down against the big Ivy strength. The Crimson had to rely instead on the passing and flashy running of Vic Gatto and sophomore halfback Ray Hornblower. Receiver Carter Lord also set records throughout the season. If it was a year of exciting moments, it was also a year of costly fumbles, sloppy ground attacks, and general overconfidence. Defending a championship and scoring easy early victories, Harvard was not prepared for the 45-6 rout at the hands of Princeton. The defense was usually more consistent than the offense; at least they had their bad day all at one time — against single-wing Princeton. The Tigers' Ellis Moore easily rambled through Harvard's carefully planned defense to chalk up five touchdowns in a single afternoon. Things weren't always that bad. The Crimson defensive line — Timpson, dc Bettencourt, Greenidge, Zebal, and Hoffman — showed that Coach Yovicsin's building program of varsity B football could provide meaty replacements for last year's linemen. Harvard's defensive backfield was even rated by some as one of the best in the league. Captain Don Chiofaro, junior linebacker John Emery, cornerback Bill Cobb, along with Wynne and Tom Williamson consistently made key stops and interceptions. On offense, the Crimson tallied big yardage through the air. We had to: Harvard didn't possess last season's up-thc-middle thrusts of Bobby Leo and Tom Chocquelte. Hornblower and Gatto tried valiantly throughout the season to punch out yardage, but this year's ground attack never approached that of the year before. End Carter Lord, snagging everyone's passes all over the field, remained perhaps the team's only consistent offensive standout. In September, hopes were high. The season began greedily. Lafayette (always a power) fell in the opener 59 to 0, the highest score in Yovicsin's career. Zimmerman notched his first three touchdown passes of the season. By halftime. Harvard had racked up a 28 to 0 lead, and the second and third units grunted onto the field. Harvard tried everything. Zim- merman, calling a mixed offense, threaded both short and long passes to ends Lord and Cook, while Gatto and Hornblower romped. Junior Tom Wynne even kicked a 42 yard field goal; things looked bright indeed. Next Saturday brought B.U., a supposedly competent opponent. Overrated , quipped one Harvard player after the Crimson bounced to a solid 29 to 14 victory. Individuals again stood out — Carter Lord, receiving five times for 128 yards, set a Harvard record, while safety Tommy Wynne intercepted three B.U. passes. As a team. Harvard looked strong enough after the B.U. game to win the Ivy championship, provided its passing game could make up for the loss of the '66 ground attack. Unfortunately, early season competition was misleading and did little to prepare the Crimson for what lay ahead. Almost every Ivy team in 1967 boasted a good quarterback: Dowling at Yale, Mazniki at Brown, Robertson at Cornell, Ryzewicz at Dartmouth, and, for the first Harvard would face in 1967, Columbia's Marty Domres. In some minds, Domres ranked as the best quarterback in the league, even considering Dowling's fame at Yale. But Domres could not win games by himself, and the Crimson had no trouble demolishing Columbia 49 to 13. In the first period Tommy Wynne booted the longest field goal in Harvard history, a 51-yard kick that eclipsed the 47-yard record established by Charlie Brickly in 1912. Columbia came right back with a touchdown, but Bill Cobb rushed in to block the extra point attempt, and the score stayed 6 to 3 at the period. Harvard set up its first touchdown on another blocked kick, which Cobb recovered at Columbia's four and carried in for the score. From then on it was Harvard's football game, as Zimmerman passed for three more touchdowns — one to Lord, one to Gatto, and another to Strandemo. By the end of the third quarter, after Ken Thomas intercepted a Domres pass on the 9 and ran it back 91 yards for the score. Harvard had a commanding 37 to 6 lead. Harvard next traveled to Cornell, and the Crimson began to show its true colors. Cornell had shellacked Princeton 47 to 13 the week before, and Harvard knew it would have to score heavily and contain both quarterback Bill Robertson and the massive Cornell line. It did neither and barely eked out a victory. Using halfback options. Harvard quickly scored twice in the first period. Then the tide began to turn. Both teams battled to a second period draw. The second half was all Cornell's, as the Big Red steamroller lumbered all over the gridiron. What saved Harvard at Ithaca was an alert secondary which twice cut down Cornell attempts at two-point conversions, allowing the Crimson to hold in to a 14 to 12 squeaker. Cornell had throttled most of Harvard’s scoring potential, so Harvard was forced to 139 play its traditional strategy against the other Ivy powerhouses. Against Dartmouth, Princeton, and Yale, Yovicsin said later, we usually try to keep the opposition's score to two touchdowns or less. If we can do that, our offense will score enough to win. As usual, however, things didn't go according to plan. Against Dartmouth, the Crimson gave up three touchdowns before its own offense exploded. Then, to conserve a narrow lead. Harvard played what Coach Yovicsin calls its sagging defense , giving up the short yardage in order to guard against the long pass or the sweeping run. Said Yo-Yo, We didn't think they would be patient enough to wait out a long drive, like the 80-yardor that set up their final field goal. Of course, that penalty hurt, too. Unfortunately, Dartmouth came to Soldiers Field armed with more than patience. With Gene Ryzewicz and sophomore Bill Koenig alternating at quarterback, the Green managed to go over and around the Harvard defense with distressing ease. By halftime, the Green had piled up a 14 to 0 lead, and in the third period they scored again, making it 20 to 0. Harvard's defense now sprang alive, and Bill Cobb charged in to block the extra-point kick. The score stayed 20-0. Encouraged, Harvard began taking advantage of Dartmouth errors. On its next attack, Dartmouth's quick kick fell short, and Harvard recovered inside the 50. Zimmerman threw three completions, and Hornblowcr legged in from the 5 for Harvard's first touchdown. With the score 20 to 7, Harvard trampled the Green after the kick-off and then, adding insult to injury-, blocked their punt: Bill Cobb batted the ball out of the air to Mike Ananis, who smothered it on the 2 yard line. On the next play, Zimmerman handed off to Vic Gatto who raced in for the score. Wynne kicked the conversion, and Harvard was back in the game, with the score 20 to 14, one touchdown away from victory. Dartmouth received. Deep in Dartmouth territory, the Green's Gene Ryzewicz tried a second-down pass, which Tommy Wynne intercepted. From the 19, Harvard carried the ball in five plays to the Dartmouth 1-yard line, and Vic Gatto plunged in for the score. Wynne came in to kick, and Harvard went ahead 21 to 20. In less than seven minutes Harvard had turned a 20-0 deficit into a narrow 21-20 edge. But with 7:45 on the clock, Dartmouth still controlled the game, and did what Harvard thought they would be unable to do — sustain a long, nit-picking drive that piled up yardage bit by bit, all the way from their own 20-yard line to the Harvard 12. Using short flat passes and short runs, Ryzewicz put Dartmouth in winning position with less than two minutes left. A penalty finally put Dartmouth on the Harvard 12 with 1:26 remaining. Ryzewicz then made four yards on a keeper, but Cobb and Emery broke up two Dartmouth pass plays. On fourth down, Dartmouth's Donovan tried a field goal. He missed, and the Harvard stands erupted. In the pressure of the moment, however. Harvard had lined up offside, and the play was called back. This time Donovan put it through the uprights, giving Dartmouth a 23-21 lead with less than a minute left in the game. With 57 seconds to go. Harvard received. Zimmerman passed to Joe Cook, who fought to the Green 46-yard line. Trying another pass, Zimmerman was partially blocked; Dartmouth snuffed up the fumbled completion and that was all she wrote. Dartmouth, the first loss of the season, left the impression that the defense might be highly erratic. The offense looked even more discouraging, but the Penn game kept lingering hopes alive. Zimmerman teamed up with end Carter Lord for a record-breaking afternoon as the Crimson shattered Penn, 45-7. Zimmerman completed 14 of 17 passes for two touchdowns and a new Ivy record of 237 yards. Lord caught nine of them for 199 yards. Harvard rushed for total of 547 yards, 283 in the air, both of which were records for Harvard in Ivy as well as in non-Ivy competition. Many records fell that day. Everybody had a good game, including reserve halfback senior Marshall Goldberg who ran 80 yards off tackle for a fourth period touchdown. The Penn game gave Harvard another victory and the confidence to face an improving Princeton team. Perhaps the Crimson left with too much confidence. The Princeton game was a catastrophe, despite Harvard's being a slight favorite to win. We were really up for this game, commented Carter Lord later. Princeton, however, was up also. By halftime, and before an east-coast television audience, Princeton had rambled up to a 16 to 0 lead. From then on, things only got worse. In the third period. Harvard was on the smelly end of a 25-6 score. In shock. Crimson fans watched the Tigers' Ellis Moore score twice more for a new Ivy record of five touchdowns in a single game. The dream had evaporated. That night, clubbies and jocks alike sobbed in their schnapps, as the 45-6 loss crushed any hopes of a tie for the championship. Then Yale. 68,135 people crammed into the Yale Bowl expecting to see the 1967 champions, unbeaten in the Ivy League, march to an easy win over Harvard. Yale, which had walloped Dartmouth, 56-15, and Princeton, 29-7, was given the edge; even the Harvard Crimson, which had earlier picked Yale for a sixth-place finish, predicted a 42-7 turkey shoot. The Yale Daily ran a headline — God Plays Quarterback For Yale — paying homage to Yale's amazing Dowling, who had paced the Dogs to the championship. Coach John Yovicsin thrives on adversity, however, and he believed Harvard had a good team. Yovicsin is also somewhat of an optimist: I told the boys that all we had to do was put together our four best quarters of the season against Yale, and we would win. We did . . . almost. Harvard fans found the game in New Haven as teasing as the Dartmouth debacle. In the second period, even though Dowling had found his initial attacks cut down as Chiofaro and Wynne intercepted two of his high floating passes, Yale kept threatening. The Eli swarmed in on Paul Saba trying to punt from the Harvard 40 and scored in six plays. With the score 7-0, Dowling dropped back to pass and was rushed by a wall of Harvard defense-men. Eluding the Harvard rush, Dowling tucked the ball under his arm, moved toward scrimmage, and then threw to Calvin Hill on the 35. Hill scored, and a field goal a few minutes later made it 17-0 Yale, with six minutes left in the half. With 44 seconds left in the first half. Harvard's offense took to the air to keep the clock from running out. Starting the drive from his own 20, Zimmerman could do little wrong. After a series of plays, he threw deep to Carter Lord, who finally was forced out at the Yale 14. Yale regrouped on the mud flats in front of their goal, expecting another pass to Carter Lord. Instead, Zimmerman took the center, moved to his right, and tossed a flat pass to the left to Ray Hornblower. Horn-blower skidded 10 yards past Yale lacklers to the goal. Wynne kicked, and Harvard was back in the game, 17-7. After intermission. Harvard again marched 80 yards, and Gatto capped the drive, plunging for a touchdown to make the score 17-13. The rest of the third period was uneventful, and as the fourth quarter opened. Harvard had the ball on its own 8. Vic Gatto started Harvard moving with a run to the 27, and then he made a 13-yard dash to the Yale 48. Zimmerman went to Lord, who got to the Yale 17. Three more runs by Gatto gave the Crimson first and goal to go on the Yale 6. Two runs gleaned two yards. From the 4-yard line, Zimmerman went into the air, but his two passes failed. The score remained 17-13, and Yale fought to get back across field. Pushed back by the Harvard defense, Yale was forced to punt to its own 40, where Harvard took over. Four minutes remained for the Crimson to catch the lead. With about three minutes left. Harvard was at the Yale 31-yard line on a fourth-and-one situation. Yale tightened its line, expecting a run, but Zimmerman went deep to Carter Lord who pulled in the pass at the Yale 10 and rushed into the endzone for the score. The Harvard stands went wild! The kick made it 20-17. Yale was not through, however. Brian Dowling regrouped his team. From his own 34, Dowling scrambled away from rushers, looked for a receiver, and, as the man covering Calvin Hill slipped in the mud, threw to Hill for a 66-yard touchdown. Yale 24 — Harvard 20, and Zimmerman pulled more pass plays to move from his own 25 to the Yale 20. 1:16 remained, the entire stadium was on its feet. Harvard plowed the ball up the middle through the muck for ten yards, but Yale gang-tackled the helpless runner and jarred the ball loose ten yards short of the goal... We lost. Zimmerman, however, had thrown for a record-breaking 289 yards, as the team broke a long-standing record with a total of 300 yards through the air. Yale was our best game — it wasn't good enough. But we almost won, said Coach Yovicsin. Maybe, we were just lucky. Halfback Vic Gatto makes a reception in the season opener against Lafayette. 141 Offense: Vic Catto (40) and Ray Horn-blower (16) were the stars of Harvard's ground game, shown at Yale and Cornell, Ric Zimmerman (26) shattered several passing records as he piled up 1143 yards in the air in 1967. His favorite receiver was Carter Lord (82), who gathered m 39 passes for 774 yards and 6 touchdowns this season, all records. Will Stargel (17) made the reception, opposite, on a pass from Catto in the Cornell game. Defense: CapUin Don Chiofaro («) led the defensive line, and kept the Yale ground attack in check. John Tyson, below, and Tom Williamson, opposite, led the defensive secondary to 23 interceptions for the season. Williamson is shown making one of his three interceptions at Cornell, an individual record. Records Set in 1967 Defense: Williamson: 3 pass interceptions in one game (Cornell). Wynne: 3 pass interceptions in one game (Boston Univ.). Kicking: Wynne: 51 yard field goal against Colombia. Offense: Zimmerman: (season) 139 attempts, 62 completions, 13 touchdown passes, 1143 total passing yards. Lord: (season) 39 receptions, 6 touchdowns, 774 yjrds. Team: most attempts 172 (season), most completions 17 (Penn), most yards gained passing 300 (Yale) and 1446 (season), most touchdown passes 16 (season). . . . BECAUSE IT EATS ITS YOUNG It'S 10:30 AM on the chilly gray morning of the Yale game. The band has formed a foot on the practice field behind the Yale baseball stadium. Over by the equipment truck the prop crew is drinking silently, while on the 40-yard line a girl is feeding a blue-frostingcd cupcake to a trumpeter. Bedlam reigns. Drill instructors mercilessly harangue the bleary-eyed assemblage; the student conductor, David Grimes '69, perched atop a step ladder, is throwing a tantrum; and at least twenty people arc laughing absurdly — the Harvard University Band is preparing a half-time show. Known to form letters backwards, skip on and off the field, and deliberately mutilate musical selections, the H.U.B. persistently thumbs its nose at everything in sight — including itself. Said one freshman, wiping the grass from his crimson blazer, I guess we're one of the best bands in the East, but we tend not to take ourselves seriously. The band performs its varied roles with varying competence. As a marching unit, the band is a happening going somewhere accidentally. As a half-time performer, however, the band (the only organization in the world with a double B-flat sinktrap) is superb. Presenting a mixture of gimmicks, good music, and satire the H.U.B. remains unbeaten, untied, and rarely scored upon in fifty years of struggles with other musical organizations. Today, the attitude in the Harvard ranks toward their Eli adversaries is less than friendly; Yale has stolen our drum. Says one prop crew member, shifting uneasily in the cold, I'll c.....e their goddamned bull- dog! And menacingly the band —132 members strong—marches toward the Yale bowl chanting: What do we eat; what do we cat? Dog meat.... Dog meat! Fans along the marching route continuously applaud the group as Harvard songs are performed in rapid succession, punctuated by a Freudian street cadence in which the band alternately grunts and sighs. At the main gate, band dates carrying coats, liquor, and umbrellas are challenged by ticket takers. The band growls angrily, and the dates pass unmolested. In a final gesture of defiance the group slams into Ten Thousand Men Of Harvard and disappears into a tunnel under the stadium, only to emerge a few moments later on the playing field chanting, Yale Eats Moose, Yale Eats Moose. The prop crew has in the meantime regained the drum from the Yale pranksters with, as one member put it, characteristic force and now surrounds it protectively on the sidelines while both bands go through their pre-game shows. Muses one clarinetist, standing in the mud on the 35-yard line observing Brian Dowling, Calvin Hill, and defensive end Rod Watson i warming up, It's going to be a long, long day. Once in the stands, however, the band begins to entertain itself. Prop crew personnel propel box lunches through the air, while the band grinds into a truly inspiring repertoire of smut cheers: Needles, needles, stitches, stitches; Come on. Fight, you sons of . . . Harvard! People settle down with their roast-beef sandwiches, band dates start snuggling up to their escorts, and the air becomes fragrant with the smell of alcohol. Periodically, trumpets rise to commit phyte cheers torn from classical selections. The Yale Band, across the field, attempts a fight cheer of its own. The Harvard trumpet section instantly parodies it, and sends it wafting back across the gridiron. Meanwhile, on the field. Harvard can't get moving, but fortunately, neither can Yale. The Crimson secondary stops two muddy Yale drives cold, and four clarinets rise to bestow phyte cheers appropriate to the occasion. Anticlimactically, the period ends soon after with the score 0-0. The band wryly chants, Negotiate, now; Negotiate, now. Things turn rapidly worse in the second period, however; Yale smothers our punter at the Harvard 40-yard line; the trumpets rise to parody one of our own cheers in tribute to the Harvard defensive line. In the lull that follows, the girl next to me smiles, says her name is Ginny, and starts feeding me a pickle. I mumble my thanks to her as Yale scores its first touchdown. In the following minutes the game situation further deteriorates. When things gel grim on the playing field, however, the band refuses to give up. It cheers for time outs, punts, and when the ball is successfully snapped from scrimmage. Piccolos and glockenspiels rise to try out their own phyte cheers, and a sort of gallows humor pervades the ranks. Yale continues to destroy our defense, and people around me begin to review their positions for the half-time show. With the score 17-7 at the half and in bitterly cold weather, the Harvard University Band takes the field. Jumping from formation THE band performs nearly flawlessly before 68,000 cheering fans in the Yale Bowl. Back in the stands for the second half, the band itself has something to cheer about; the Crimson offense has come alive. The band responds eagerly. The trumpets offer Tchaikovsky; clarinets, Mozart; trombones, Beethoven. Four sousaphones race down to the front of the band and perform the tuba copulation cheer, fitting their bells together and producing sustained grunts. The Crimson keeps on scoring. A prop crew chief emeritus leads the famous MOM cheer. The trombones, unintentionally mutilate a phyte cheer ; band dates symbolically turn thumbs down, and the trombone section is immediately pelted with fruit. Into the fourth period Harvard continues to advance, and the cheering continues: Why is there only one Eiffel Tower! Because it eats its young! Down in front of the band the present band hierarchy is installing next year's officers against a backdrop of foaming champagne bottles. Herr Schneider is announced. Ginny asks me what Schneider's Silver Cornet Band is. I tell her it's sort of a cross between a German beer band and a costume party. She giggles, and feeds me another pickle. Suddenly, someone notices that because of all the cheering, the drum has been neglected, and is now being towed across the end zone toward the enemy side of the field by the Yale cheerleaders. The first five rows of the band section empty immediately and a crimson brigade charges around the field. The group quickly repossesses the drum from the quaking Eli's, and returns triumphantly to the Harvard side amidst the cheers of the older graduates sitting in the stands. I still think we should have c....d their goddamned dog. growls the prop crew chief. A few moments later, there is very little to cheer about as Brian Dowling passes 66 yards for the score that wipes out Harvard’s three-point lead. The band stares in shock as the conversion makes it 24-20. Ten minutes later, Ginny turns to me while the crowd is filing out of the stadium and says, Well, at least your band won; you must have had a good season. And anyway, Yale played dirty. Said the trumpeter next to me, Hligitimum non Carburundum. — lohn Larouche OVERCOMING INJURIES: A Major Feet To be or not to be: that is the question, or so it was before the season commenced for coach Bruce Munro's twentieth Harvard soccer team. It was not to be. As the saying goes, it takes two to Tango, but eleven to play soccer. It seems unlikely that coach Munro fully appreciated the painful significance of his own pre-season prediction, We're going to have a pretty fair first eleven, but behind them there isn't much depth. If anyone gets hurt, we're going to be in trouble. And trouble was the name of the game from that point onward. Soccer is one of those contact sports in which injuries are none too rare a phenomenon, and the 1967 Harvard hooter squad demonstrated no exception to that rule. Senior starting goalie John Axten from Wellesley, Mass., missed more than half of the season's play suffering from internal injuries sustained when he svas kicked in the ribs early in the game against Amherst, Harvard's second game of the season. Junior Nwachukwu Marshall Azikiwe, the team's starting right halfback from Lagos, Nigeria, was sidelined for several vital games with a cracked jaw suffered in the Cornell contest. When he returned to play against Princeton, his jaw was wired. The tenor for the season was set when junior starting outside left Scott Robertson from Englewood, N.J., who had been plagued with bad colds throughout the season, had great difficulty in breathing after the first ten minutes of the Columbia game and started coughing up blood as he was sitting on the bench. Robertson, whose teammates elected him captain of next year's squad, spent several days in the infirmary, where his ailment was diagnosed as a mild case of bronchitis. He was declared fit to play in the Cornell game, however, and fortunately so, for his designated replacement, sophomore Bill Bellows from Little Silver, N.J., had broken his collarbone during practice that week. Bruce Munro's good-humored, but honest appraisal of the situation, With all these injuries, we're in the soup, walking on the vegetables, spelled out the tale of the walking wounded. Playing with a barrage of injuries, the team ended the season with a disappointing third-place Ivy League finish (4 wins, 2 losses, 1 tie) and an overall 8-3-1 record. Sophists amid the Crimson ranks might point casuistically to the siege of injuries and illnesses as the Rosetta stone to the soccer team’s uneventful performance this past season. The more perceptive observers, on the other hand, reason differently, pointing by way of counter example to the 1967 Green Bay Packers who, though severely hampered by injuries throughout the season, went on to win the world football championship in impressive style. Lack of depth. Harvard soccer's true Achilles' heel, posed the most insurmountable impediment to the team. The 1967 season saw the return to action of the top three scorers from 1966 captain Richie Hammond's spirited booter squad (6-1 in Ivy League play): junior inside left Jaime Vargas (Bogota, Columbia), senior inside right Lutz Hoeppner (Bombay, India), and Scott Robertson. In 1966 Hoeppner and Robertson each scored seven goals and garnered All-Ivy honorable mentions, while Vargas, who collected five goals, copped first team All-Ivy honors. This season Vargas and Hoeppner repeated their impressive performances of last year, scoring ten and seven goals respectively. Robertson, however, on those occasions when he was healthy enough to sec much action, turned in a rather disappointing four-goal season, well below his potential level of performance. Senior halfback Joe Gould (Brockton, Mass.), captain of this year’s team, likewise experienced a somewhat bootless season, despite his fine reputation as an extremely well-balanced and persevering defender. Some pleasant surprises this year served in part to combat the demoralizing effect of the numerous injuries. Junior center forward Ahmed Yehia from Rolle, Switzerland, who is known not as a hustling ballplayer, but rather as one who has an uncanny knack of being in the right place at the right time, clearly manifested his impressive ability by scoring a total of eight goals (second on the team only to Vargas) and by leading the team in total assists with five. Goalie Richard Locksley (Alma, Mich.), who replaced the injured John Axten in the net, was described as a sophomore sensation. Senior Gcof Keppel played extremely well at the outside right position, a change from the fullback slot he filled last year for the JV team. In the Brown game, perhaps the most exciting match of the season for the Crimson, the team equalled its goal output for the past three years against Brown, perennially labeled the best American soccer team in the college ranks. Despite these heroics. Harvard dropped the decision 3-2. The Crimson has not won a game against Brown since 1963, when Chris Ohiri's tally accounted for a 1-0 shutout in Providence. The scores for the past three seasons have been 2-1, 6-1, and 2-0. Brown is the only Ivy League school at which soccer is as important as football. Bruin soccer coach Cliff Stevenson engages each year in The Harvard attack: Jaime Vargas (white jersey, above) stole the ball and scored the winning goal against Yale with only 4 minutes left in the game, Against Princeton, below. Harvard kept pressure on the Tiger defense, which finally succumbed in overtime. Harvard bid for the Ivy League title was challenged in Ithaca, where Cornell played to a 2-2 tic. Scott Robertson is shown making a penalty shot. The Crimson defeated Princeton 4-2 in overtime — Lutz Hoeppncr's go-ahead goal was well received by his teammates (below). 37 Despite heavy injuries, the Crimson finished third in the Ivy League with an 8-3-1 record. The team suffered league losses only to Brown and Pennsylvania, and tied Cornell. an active, aggressive soccer recruitment drive. As one unidentified Harvard player commented in retrospect, It makes sense that we lost to Brown. But at least we got the satisfaction of scaring 'em a bit. The Crimson soccer team has had its outstanding plays as well as players, but in both categories this year the performance was at best streaky. The none-too-potent offense, which exploded only infrequently, produced a total of 16 goals in its seven Ivy League games, while the inexperienced defense collapsed often enough to yield 13 goals to the opposition. These statistics become more meaningful when compared with those for the Ivy League front-runners: Brown (6-0-1), 23 goals for, 18 against; and Pennsylvania (4-1-2), 12 goals for, 3 against. Captain-elect Scott Robertson has expressed his excitement and confidence about the prospects for the 1968 Harvard soccer team: If the players can work together as a team, and if a couple of gaps can be filled by upcoming sophomores, there should be nobody that can stop us, even Brown. However, earlier in the 1967 season, prior to Ivy League competition, Bruce Munro had flatly stated, We've finally developed the finesse and teamwork to score ... No one in the Ivy League is going to run over us! Perhaps next fall, the flesh will be as healthy as the spirit. — Nathan S. Birnbaum Few of us have ever seriously considered running 50 miles a week just to keep in shape. If you're like me, exercise is walking to class. There are those among us, however, who put two hours a day, six days a week into running over hills, fields, and golf courses. In the winter, the hypnotic monotony of the circle in Briggs Cage beckons them on a few more miles each day. They run the longer races for the track team in the winter and spring. Competitively, this devotion to constant running paid off in a big way in 1967. Undefeated in nine dual meets, the Greater Boston Colleges meet, and the Heptagonals, Harvard compiled its best record ever. Paced by captain Jim Baker '68 and Doug Hardin '69 and staffed by many very capable runners, the team asserted itself as a major cross country power. But this is just Crimson copy. What is it that makes these men run? Why the fanatical devotion? What makes a distance runner tick? Distance runners don't really know why they run, but a number of interesting points surface as they grapple with the question. A distance runner, Hardin observes, sees his running partly as a character building experience. Fullfillment of a desire to succeed, accomplishment of an established goal, and better acquaintance of mind with body all contribute. Ambition, determination, confidence, and knowledge of oneself are the resulting characteristics. Clearly, they all have to be present before a man can discipline himself to the rigors of training. Nevertheless, they are tuned and sharpened by the trials of Cross country. The appeal of competition, the lust for victory, is usually the most overemphasized motivation to run according to Erik Roth 70. Although it does have its role, being a part of a spirited team effort is one among a number of factors probably as important. Team spirit at Harvard bears certain communal qualities. Sharing what is for them a very vital experience, they run together, eat together, and often room together. Team spirit may tell us how coach Bob McCurdy makes Harvard win meets it isn't supposed to win, but it can't fully explain why these men run in the first place. Runners are aware of one element that few laymen would ever encounter. This is the aes- The cross country team lifts coach Bill McCurdy to its shoulders after winning the Heptagonals at Van Cortlandt Park, the first team victory for Harvard in Heptagonal history. Pictured are 8ob Sternpson, Jim 8aker supporting coach McCurdy, and Doug Hardin. Baker and Hardin, opposite, were the major contributors to the win, placing ninth in 25:50 and first in 24:59.4. Tim Mcloone (64) and Jim Baker (102) were two elements in Harvard's best season ever. Winning all dual meets, the Greater Boston and Heptagonal titles, the team lost only the ICAAAA's. Baker was the most prominent distance man of the year — against Columbia and Pennsylvania at Van Cortlandt Park in New York City, he ran the 5 mile course in 25:19.2, breaking the old meet record by 33.9 seconds. Runners attack long-standing records — Doug Hardin clocks an 8:44 two-mile; Jim Baker and Roy Shaw approach the 4-minute mile; The two-mile relay team finishes in 7:28.1. thetic value of running. Something which cannot really be described, it lies in the world of sensations. Runners see their effort as a form of expression with a very high emotional content. Roger Bannister's description of the first time he became aware of this sensation is exemplary. Standing on a beach, he was struck by the awesome beauty and perfection of nature. The emotion that arose within him spontaneously found its expression in running. When standing, he felt like an isolated observer. But when he was running, he seemed united with the natural beauty around him. He became a participant in the creation of natural beauty. It's a creative process says Keith Colburn '70. Those with a sense of the romantic have probably felt something like this. Emotional expression through the expenditure of energy is a mystical quality of running. Runners have different words for it, but they all sense it. When they run, they're in a different world, a world of sensation, of mute expression. Bannister's writing seems to have had a substantial impact on the Harvard team. When in England for the Harvard-Yale - Cambridge-Oxford meet in 1%7, Doug Hardin stayed in the Bannister home. Sufficiently impressed by the doctor to read his book, Hardin found himself in basic agreement with the world's first four minute miler. Others on the team have read the book and also speak favorably of 8annister's views. He seems to have come closest to putting his finger on what is intriguing about running. The mystical qualities of running are addictive and few Harvard runners quit running upon graduation. Baker estimates that 90% of the team's members will continue. Though they may never compete again, running is a part of them and they cannot simply walk away from it. One strange psychological aspect of cross country is the effect of running with other runners. When a man is a few yards behind another runner, he can mentally attach himself to and be drawn on by the leader. This psychic contact makes it easier for the second man to run. For some reason, a pace setter in contact with the other runners can draw them on to faster than normal times. At some indefinite point 10 to 15 yards in front of a runner, contact is suddenly broken. In the mile or two mile runs, breaking contact is tantamount to winning the race. If a runner can take a 15 yard lead, the others in the race are usually psychologically beaten and cannot recover even should the leader weaken. If the lead is any smaller, the other runners are drawn on by this psychic contact, feel the physical effort less, and may overtake the leader near the race's end. It is easier to follow than to lead even though the physical energy requirements should be the same. Awareness of this phenomenon is shown in the practical strategies Harvard runners use in races. When Hardin and Baker are running in the same race, they try to run together. Since neither of the two has a particularly strong finishing kick, it is necessary for them to move out in front early and to cither break contact with the other runners or to be in a position to resist closing challenges. Running together, they alternate the lead, push each other on at a rapid pace, and conserve each other for whatever may be required of them in the last quarter. We help each other observed Hardin as he looked at a picture of Baker and himself running together well out in front of the pack. Given the theory of running, it is best to come from behind; but if two runners haven't got strong finishing kicks, the next best thing is setting a fast pace together. The distance man tries to find a pace, a measured tempo, while he is running. Methodic movements are executed in rhythmic fashion. The hypnotic monotony of the pace is part of the psychic concentration that makes a man mentally capable of running great distances. The mind has no room for pain; and for a distance runner, pain does not play a very great role. If it did, according to Hardin, there wouldn't be any distance runners. Some people talk about the loneliness of distance running. Most runners disagree in one way or another. For one thing, they rarely run alone. The psychological advantages of running with others is too great. For another, there is a sort of blankness in the mind penetrated only by scattered thoughts and dominated by psychic concentration. This state of mind is not necessarily loneliness; it can be thought of as part of another world, the world of sensation and expression we have already observed. If it is loneliness, it is a loneliness to be enjoyed. — lim Kilch Cap’n Jackie on the Fly All the throats were lull of thunder on that fateful winter day. As the legions of the faithful all turned out to see the fray. With the chips upon the table and the pot a-spillin' beans, rightin' Dirties came to battle Cap'n lackie's Crimson Cleans. First a howl from Cap'n fackie and his weary men o' war Sent our necks a-strelchin' goalward as the Dirties got a score. Dirlie drums coughed up a rhythm while the weak among us cried, We were down but hardly out, although we'd lost a little pride. As the action grew more heated and the sticks were genin’ high Dirtie forward Whackabashy grabbed the puck and let it fly. Goalie Derksie didn’t see it as it came a-squibbiin' through. ■Vo, the tide sure wasn't Crimson as the count became oh-lwo. With the contest now hall-over, we were awed by what we saw: Dirtie vacuum-cleaner, shol-careener, seven-armed McClaw Didn't check him with a ruler, but I'm game fo take a bet That the Dirtie in the goal ivas two feet wider than the net. All his teammates shared his fortune, shots an' passes lookin' keen. As they like to bowled us over, and they made it look routine. Clever monsters on defense were proving two can make a crowd; Dirties Abbott and Costello kept our fans from laughin' loud. What we need, said an alumnus, drowning sorrow in his drink, Is a break our way, a snazzy play, a breakaway, I think. We were growin' tired of waitin', precious seconds passin' by, When a joker up an’ hollered Cap'n Jackie's on the fly! He bejumbled Whackabashy, faked him left an' left him low, Then he whizzed by dazzled Abbott — left 'im in a cloud of snow. Old McClaw was waitin', leanin', poundin' tensely on his slick; Both the benches knew the tide would turn if Cap'n turned this trick. As he sped a-skatin' goahvard, Jackie couldn't hear the cheers — Might a' been his concentration or his frozen, bean-filled ears. Clean and Dirtie tongues grew silent as he faked, then let 'cr go; Thirtcen-nine-oh-ninc were watchin' when McClaw put on his show .... Somewhere happy fans are cheering to a band's resounding beat. And some gayer blades are flying to a victory too sweet. Laughter warms a frozen garden if a skater makes the play. But there is no joy in Cambridge — Jackie's shot was turned away. — William A. Strauss Seem: 1%8 Beanpot Finals (Final Score: B.U. 4, Harvard 1) Dramatis Personae: the Cleans — Harvard Cap'n Jackie — Jack Garrity Coalie Dcrksie — Bill Oicrcks the Oiriics — Boston University Whackabashy — Herb Wakabayashi McClaw — Jim McCann Abbott — Darrel Abbott Costello — Abbott's sidekick Harvard's second and third offensive lines, shown here in action in the Bean-pot finals, contributed all year to a well-balanced Crimson attack. At the right. Ron Mark and Kent Parrot forcchcck deep in the 8.U. zone during the second period. Below, Dwight Ware and Jack Turco converge on Jim McCann, as the Terrier goalie is about to kick in Harvard's only goal of the night. A COLD BEANPOT Cap'n Jackie Garrity's breakaway in the Beanpot finals symbolized the frustration as well as the emotion of this year's wacky hockey season. This winter there were some surprising upsets, both by and against the Crimson skaters, but even our losses could not keep Coach Woiland's men from developing into the best Harvard hockey crew of recent years. The early February Beanpot tournament in Boston Garden typified the season's ups and downs. The Crimson surprised no one but Boston College in upending the Eagles 6 to 4, but then were themselves upset, bowing meekly to the rugged Terriers of Boston University. The B.U. game fell decisively to our crossriver rivals, who were hungry for revenge after being shellacked 8 to 5 early in the season at Watson Rink by a similarly hungry Crimson team. Facing B.U. in the Beanpot, Harvard was not overconfident, but overcautious, completely unable to come up with the big play that had created their momentum in earlier games this season. It was Harvard's ability to pick up momentum that had given our earlier hockey games a rare degree of excitement. One Crimson goal frequently led to another a few seconds later, and those rooters who had gone wild over our skaters' four third-period, gamewinning goals against B.U. in December knew that the Crimson could do it again — if a break our way, a snazzy play ever were to come. Jack Garrity's foiled breakaway might have pulled a sluggish team out of its second-period rut; so might have a two-on-one play from Kent Parrot to Ron Mark a moment later. Parrot’s beautiful pass and brilliant fake left B.U. goalie McCann on the ice, but Ron Mark overskated the puck and joined him there. These were the plays and the players who had led the Crimson through an outstanding season. Garrity's two goals, Mark's breakaway game-winner, and Parrot's steady, dazzling play all helped hoist Harvard over the B.C. team which had previously edged them twice. Their loss in the Beanpot finals frustrated many but disappointed few; like the 1%7 Dartmouth and Yale football games, this defeat still earned the team great respect. The Crimson had class. — As did the Terriers. Only in jest could the team with Wakabayashi, Abbott, and McCann be called Dirties, for they all (particularly McClaw McCann) played the kind of outstanding hockey necessary to beat an outstanding opponent. The win gave Boston University three straight Beanpot trophies, something Harvard's returning lettermen will certainly remember come next February. Perhaps then Harvard will reverse this year's score. So we lost the Beanpot — but we had a helluva season. Ten of twelve Ivy League contests were wins, few of them very close. This well-coached, high-spirited Crimson team rebounded from their loss to B.U. with several late-season wins which assured them of second place in the Ivies and a high ranking in the East Coast Athletic Conference hockey standings. The only team they couldn't conquer was the Big Red of Cornell — the Maple Leafs as the xenophobes among us like to call them. Next year's hockey squad should be just as good. The fiery and talented seniors of 1968 will be gone, but their memory may still inspire the team. Those of us who have followed Harvard hockey during the past three years have seen them develop into some of the East's finest — Bob Carr and Ben Smith with their curved sticks and gutsy play, Don Grimble with his rugged forechecking. Bob Fredo with his holler-guy enthusiasm, and Kent Parrot and Jack Garrity with their heady performances and self-confident leadership. Kent Parrot finished third on the all-time Harvard scoring list; Jack Garrity led his team to its best season in years. No Beanpot upset could blemish these accomplishments. This was a very good year for Cap'n Jackie's crew. 163 ... George McManama makes the play. and joy doe reign in Cambridge after the sophomore skater's dutch goal which pot the Crimson ahead of Boston College for good, later goals bv Ron Mark and lack Carrity sealed the fagtes' fate and sent Harvard into the 8canpol finals against 8.U. Captain Brian McCuinn, playing third in the Yale match, chops out of the rough. The ball hit the pole, and was ruled a hole. McCuinn eventually lost his match by one stroke. oH if not a irifrj. Tte atches in thonfy «i when t i inute drive arm'ton -jWA? a aw hands 6 he way up le go':' tea pitches se Bui in Ma $ beautiful he Create; cn though ■ease with se big ma In the Cc g So Keei ead Hirvar local I feni since seven ‘ Ilir finis! -m rrent third Omrrr,- v,t loring. the Fast •S tver — f slro'ses b asset WlU 10 Hazard than r3 ' ! P fa fctJ thtr Haryj Kan ncc ( ‘ Ond h,n?c, ' s of The c S« J • H)t v Jr Wf THE PUTT RUNNETH OVER Golf is not a sport well-suited to New England spring. The Harvard golf team plays its first matches in wind, wet, and cold, on courses with only a threadbare coat of grass. Practice, even when the weather is good, means a 40-minute drive up to the Myopia Hunt Club in Hamilton — and there is no worse feeling than topping an iron shot in the cold: your redraw hands feel a nervous shock that runs all the way up to your shoulders. As much as the golf team would like to take its early matches seriously, it cannot. 8ut in May, when exams are in the air, golf is beautiful again. The big contests arrive — the Greater Bostons, the Easterns, and Yale. Even though Harvard had finished the regular season with its best record in years —10-4 — these big matches were the ones that counted. In the Greater Bostons, it was a local boy, big Bo Keefe, who fired a five-over-par 76 to lead Harvard to an eight-stroke victory over the local talent - its first victory in this tournament since 1964. Only the low five scores of the seven men on each team count. Bob Sinclair finished second behind Keefe in the tournament with 77, and Bruce LoPucki tied for third with 78. Paul Oldfield (82) and Tommy Wynne (83) rounded out Harvard's scoring. In the Easterns, Harvard made its best showing ever — fifth place — with a total of 777, 48 strokes behind winner and host Penn State. Navy was second (759), then came Army (770), Yale (771), and tied with the Crimson, Princeton. Harvard’s total represented an average of less than 78 strokes per round for the Crimson's top five men. But for the golf team, more than for any other Harvard team, the Yale match is the season. Harvard has not beaten Yale in golf since 1957, when Eisenhower was just starting his second term and you and I were still watching Captain Midnight and drinking Oval-tine. But last year on the dark-and-light-green hills of The Country Club in Brookline, Harvard came as close to winning as anyone could without winning. With the match tied 3-3, Roger Wales, a big, brawny, inconsistent golfer, who played number seven (bottom man) for the Crimson, went two extra holes with his Yale opponent before missing a two-foot putt for a par to give the Elis a 4-3 victory. Yale then went on to win its tenth Ivy League title in 13 years by narrowly beating Princeton the next week. The Wales match had provided the most exciting golf of the day. After Wales had jumped out into a quick lead early in the match, he began to falter around the middle, then made a remarkable comeback on the last two holes to gain a tie for the normal 18. On the 450-yard tenth, he holed a 200-yard four-wood shot for an eagle. By the time he came to the 18th, the terrible fear he had mused about in the automobile ride had been realized. Wales had said to a teammate: “You know, I bet this thing will be 3-3 going into the last hole, and everything will ride on me. The way Wales lost his match was close to surrealistic. The second hole of the playoff was a 510-yard par five with woods all around and a creek running across the fairway 150 yards from the green. Wales played the hole well. After a fine drive down the right side, he sliced his second shot into deep rough 100 yards from the green, and then knocked a fine wedge shot to within 25 feet of the pin. His opponent, Bert Barnes, let his drive get away from him. It headed deep into the forest, then with a clatter and a loud clomp it struck a rock and bounced out into the fairway. Barnes was not yet through with that kind of magic. On his next shot, he busted a fairway wood straight toward the creek, over which crossed a tiny footbridge near the middle of the fairway. Sure enough, Bert Barnes' ball hit the tiny footbridge, took one high bounce in the air and landed on the other side. His third shot just trickled over the green into the fringe. On the green, with 60 spectators gathered around and the sun trying to get a look through a light May shower, Barnes and Wales were about to decide A Very Important Thing. Barnes chipped six feet past the hole. Wales just missed a birdie on his first putt, but he left himself a putt for what looked like a sure par. Then, with Yale's truckload of 29 straight victories heavy on his shoulders, 8arnes knocked his second putt straight into the cup for a par. Next, Wales tried. The ball just slid past the hole as if the hole was not there. He missed. He didn't miss. No, he missed with a 167 crash of finality. He didn’t miss. He missed. Everyone stared at the ball and then stared at Wales. He missed all right. The way it got to be 3-3 is another story. The three sophomores on the squad — Bruce Lopucki, Tommy Wynne, and Paul Oldfield — won their matches, and Greater Boston Champion Bo Keefe and captain Brian McGuinn lost theirs on the last hole. Wynne, who is a place-kicker and defensive back on the varsity football team, won his match in a breeze, five holes up with three to play. He fired a magnificent 74 on the par-71 course, the site of the 1%3 United States Open Championship. Oldfield also played brilliant golf, being only two over par to win his match, six and four. Lopucki, playing Yale captain John Rydcll, stood even with his opponent going into the last hole. He knocked a perfect seven iron shot onto the tiny 18th green, then two-putted for a par and a win. The long-hitting LoPucki, deadly with his irons all day, shot a fine 76. Keefe's match provided the best golf of the day. In the teeter-totter battle with opponent Jim Rodgers, neither man was more than one up at any lime. Tied after 16 holes, Rodgers won 17 with a par, then tied 18 with another par to win, one-up. Keefe was only three over par for the round. McGuinn played erratically. Two down after the first four holes, he won the next three in a row to take the lead. Then his opponent, John Coles, pulled even at 10 and won 11 with a par. He held that lead to the end. Senior Bob Sinclair, playing in the number five position, never got started and lost, three and two. The win was the 111th in 120 matches for Yale coach Al Wilson. Despite the loss. Harvard's 10-4 season was still enviable. Still, there is only one Satan in the demonology, and failing to overcome Yale means being vanquished by some kind of Bulldog-Devil; but even in defeat there was dignity, because playing golf well is a Dignified Thing. In May the world is green and lush, and when you hit the ball there is crispness and grace and not the shock of cold metal in your hands. That is why, I imagine, people play golf, and that is why it did not hurt too much when Harvard lost to Yale last year. — James K. Classman it. 80 Keefe (left, number 2) and Bruce lopucki (lower left, number 1) both won their matches against Yale by one stroke. Roger Wales, playing ninth, just missed this put on the 18th bole of his match, narrowly dropping the meet to the traditionally strong Yale team. ... . 169 le 'aSeuitui wp u m )1 |B9 A STRETCH IN TIME SAVES NINE New England baseball fans showered most of their attention last year on the Boston Red Sox' sensational grab of the American League pennant. But only a short distance from Fenway Park, the 1967 Harvard baseball team was doing almost exactly the same thing collegiately as its counterpart was doing on the professional level. In many ways Harvard's season turned out to be even stranger than that of the Red Sox. Coach Norm Shepard termed the season the most unusual situation I've ever faced in my coaching career. Two years ago there were three ball players Shepard had expected to form the nucleus of a solid infield for several years to come, but by last spring, he had lost all three. The lure of professional ball, marriage, and academics had taken its toll on the Harvard team. With a difficult schedule looming almost immediately ahead, Shepard had to build the team from scratch, resorting to constant experimentation in an effort to find a winning lineup, frequently he tried as many as half a dozen men at one position before he could find a permanent starter. By the end of the season, he was playing two erstwhile catchers and an outfielder at three of the four infield positions. But Shepard finally found a combination that jelled. With this lineup, last year’s team finished the season with a 15-7 mark; it had turned a near catastrophe into a season which surpassed the most fanciful hopes of any pre-season prognosticators. The season began during spring break with the annual southern trip, an opportunity to gain valuable and necessary experience playing tough southern baseball clubs. Harvard returned home having compiled a 4-3 record, a respectable showing considering the fact that some of its southern opponents are among the country's strongest collegiate powers. Despite the promise of the spring trip, the first half of Harvard's season was mediocre at best. Stumbling through their opposition in the Eastern Intercollegiate Baseball League, one of two leagues in which the Crimson participates, Coach Shepard was unable to find a team that could win consistently. It was a period of trial and error — one, however, which reaped numerous dividends by the end of the season. The turnabout came midway through the season after Dartmouth shut out the Crimson 5-0, a loss which eliminated Harvard from the EIBL race and relegated the Crimson to a tie for fourth in the final stand- ings. From that point on, behind an outstanding pitching staff and bats which finally came to life. Harvard proved unbeatable as it roared to the end of the season with a seven game winning streak and the Greater Boston League crown, a title the Crimson has captured five out of the past six years. In this stretch run were victories over arch-rival Yale as well as over Holy Cross, usually one of the best teams in New England and one of two teams to represent the East last year in national competition. Several factors contributed to this phenomenal drive. Not the least of these was the performance of pitcher Ray Peters who, according to Shepard, came through for us in a fine way. Peters, an awesome figure on the mound at 6'5 , managed to post a 9-3 record with a 1.67 ERA, the best pitching at Harvard since Paul Del Rossi's departure in 1964. Twice Peters struck out 16 batters in a game, and in one of the strongest performances of his career, he allowed only one hit in a 1-0 victory over Navy. Another important factor was the contribution of Carter Lord, the GBL's Most Valuable Player. Without a doubt, Lord was the best all-round offensive player for the Crimson, turning in a performance which earned him the Wendell Bat Award. He completely dominated the statistics, leading in hitting (.337), home runs (2) RBI's (24) and almost every other offensive department. His play was not just brilliant, but consistent as well; in only three games did he fail to get a hit. Against strong Holy Cross pitching, he went 3 for 5 and had 4 RBI's. In the Yale game he drove in both runs as Harvard won a 2-1 squeaker from the Elis. But perhaps the greatest factor in Harvard's upsurge was the team's sudden jelling as a cohesive unit. The team began to click as maximum personal efforts by everyone started to materialize at the same time. While Harvard's surge represented a real team effort, other individuals of course stood out. Among these were Bill Cobb, the GBL's leading hitter. Captain Joe O'Donnell, and catcher Jeff Hall — all of whom, along with Peters and Lord, were named to the GBL All-Star team. For those concerned with Harvard baseball, last year's season was a tremendous success. The team that started so slowly in April came on strong in May. While it is unfortunate that this surge did not come soon enough to improve Harvard's EIBL standing, even this could not dim the luster of an excellent year. — David . Decker 171 Carter lord, the leading hitter and base-runner, tears around first base after hitting a long home run against Brandeis. Harvard's amazing win over strong Holy Cross (above, lower left) highlighted the late spring. The team ended the season with a seven game winning streak, posting a 15-7 record. THE UNITED STATES EIGHT: 1967 Harvard Heavyweight Crew Alter West Germany's famous Ratzeburg crew revolutionized rowing in (he 1950's, many coaches and rowing officials thought American College crews would never again be able to row successfully in international races. The Vesper Boat Club’s impressive victory in the 1964 Olympics led many to think that only the more experienced club oarsmen were capable of representing the United States in international competition. Last summer the Harvard varsity heavyweight crew proved that the fastest American college crews were again able to compete successfully with the best European crews. In the following article the varsity heavyweight coxwain, Paul Hoffman, describes the crew's growth from an undefeated college crew to one of the finest eights in the world. Lounging in the sunny garden of the Hotel des Lilas in Vichy, France, we felt a little like tourists on a summer vacation tour. But we were not in Vichy on vacation — we were there to take the waters in a special sense — to race as the United States eight-oared crew in the European Rowing Championships. It was the day before the finals, a day of no racing. We had gotten together to talk over what seemed to be going right, where in our approach to racing we thought we were not fully agreed, and just what our attitudes towards the competition should be. Our talk showed to all of us how much we had changed and grown as a crew during the spring and summer. It was as if we were making sure that the months of training before the Charles had melted six months earlier, the miles in practice, the college season, and the earlier summer races were not to be wasted. Each of us had become aware of how long and how hard it had been. It seemed that the rowing season had begun an age ago. (It is probably no longer possible to say when the rowing season starts or ends at Harvard.) We spent February and March rowing m the indoor tanks and running up i Ian Gardiner, stroke; Curt Canning; Andy tarkin; Scott Steketce; Frit Hobbs; Jake Fiechtcr, captain; Clevc livingston; and Dave Higgins. 175 and down the steps of the football stadium in the snow. We began our racing season in-auspiciously by just barely beating Northeastern. But the rest of the college season passed with no more scares and a few enjoyable wins. We won the Eastern Sprints quite handily and enjoyed doing it. Somehow 2,000 meters seemed to be the distance we thought we could best test ourselves at, and this is the length of all international races. Already in May we'd begun to look forward to the Trials for the Pan-American Games. They opened, we realized then, the way to what seemed to be the most exciting program of summer rowing possible. Yale came next. 8ut somehow the Red Top Training Camp had lost much of its thrill. New London was too rough for us to row the higher cadence we were practicing for the 2,000 meter Trials. Heading back to Cambridge the Monday after the Yale race, we realized that the summer would be a new kind of racing. We appreciated that what we lacked was the experience of close races, the kind of experience that comes, too, from losing. In a way losing was what we were most scared of. Vesper was entered in the Trials and they were the last crew to have beaten Harvard. None of us had rowed them, but the idea of a crew, particularly another American crew, beating Harvard didn't sit well with us. We had not yet learned the mutual respcct-without-re-sentment that characterizes top-level competition. In June and July Vesper was still Vesper, the arch rival of whom no good was to be acknowledged. We were a college crew, a fast one, but a college crew just the same. The Trials on July 2 were the key to the summer; we knew we had to win. The newspapers hailed the race as a Harvard-Vesper rematch, and this was not completely lost on us. Lining up at the start with Vesper was not like a college race. After 500 meters of the race we were a length down on Vesper and for the first time since Northeastern we were forced to come from behind. But rowing our race — and rowing it well —we passed Vesper and went on to beat them by open water and win a place on the Pan-American Team. Spirits were high two weeks later when we flew to Minneapolis, where the Pan-Am Team was assembling and being outfitted. This interim period was great fun; somehow the Harvard crew on tour knew how to live. Ian, our stroke, managed to pick up Miss Minnesota and even persuaded her to cox the boat in a practice spin on the Mississippi River. We all began making friends among the other teams, and it seemed only a matter of time before Cleve, the number two man, was going to go a couple of 400's with Lee Evans. In Minneapolis we had to borrow shells because ours had been sent directly to Winnipeg. The other members of the rowing team, who were rowing in smaller boats, formed another eight, and we worked out together. This crew — the Mississippi Muddlers — included Eric Sigward and Art Evans, who were the spares for our eight. We were hard- There was one exciting race against Yale, Yale's JV had beaten Hazard's at the Eastern Sprints, and they were expected to svin again in New London. But there they met the indomitable third varsity Turkeys. The Turks had confounded coach Parker all season, for despite their less-than-excellent technique, they were usually as fast as the JV and often gave the varsity a good run. Because they had done so well, they were invited to train at Red Top, where they won the honor of rowing Yale by consistently beating their JV. They finished their season in character by upsetting Yale by three lengths. The varsity race finished as expected: Harvard won by about nine lengths, and the remarkable Harry Parker went swimming for the fifth consecutive year. pressed to beat them, and often, to their undisguised glee, they beat us. They quickly drove home the point that good oarsmen make boats move. We looked forward to getting back to our own boat, which, we thought, was waiting for us in Winnipeg. The city of Winnipeg had gone all out for the Games, and the rowing facilities were good. We were quartered in a University of Manitoba dormitory with the crews from Argentina, Cuba, Uruguay, Paraguay, Mexico, Chile, and Peru. Harry had outlined a series of hard practices for the week before the races, and we were anxious to get to work, but our shells had not yet arrived. We had to split up into two fours and borrow four-oared shells from Vesper. (The Vesper eight had split into two fours and won the small boat Trials held two weeks after the eight Trials.) Finally, after two days of uncomfortable competition between our stern and bow fours, our shell arrived, and we settled down to the job of preparing to race. The days passed quickly. The Games were opened by Prince Philip in a ceremony modeled after that of the Olympics. We marched as a part of the U.S. team which was an honor made meaningful by the realization that wc were part of a team of the best athletes in many different sports. It quickly became clear that the Canadian crew from the University of British Columbia was our major competition. Much of the suspense of the final was lost, however, when we drew Canada in the opening heat. Three strokes into the race the Canadian cox made the mistake of yelling beat Harvard. That did it. We hadn't completely taken over the role of U.S. eight, but as a Harvard crew we had established a pattern of rowing our own race and winning. We stuck to the pattern, beat them off the line and continued to lengthen our lead right to the end. We had won our qualifying heat and were ready for the finals. The Regatta was run under international rules, which meant that there were repechages in addition to the qualifying heats. In the repechage those crews that do not qualify by winning their heats race again, and the winner of that race qualifies for the finals. The Canadian boat won the repechage, so we raced them again. The result of the final was the same — we beat them by six seconds, with Cuba finishing third. We had won the gold medal in our first international competition. The next morning we were off to what everyone knew would be a very different experience — the First North American Championships at St. Catherines, Ontario. Planned as part of the Canadian Centennial, the North Americans had invited the leading foreign crews: Oxford, Yugoslavia, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, and Ratzeburg. the West German world champions. Ratzeburg was a legend at Newell, and the legend traveled with us to St. Catherines. They were big, they rowed a high stroke, they rowed it well, and they were fast. We had known that for a long time, and seeing them stirred doubts as to whether we were ready. For us Ratzeburg was the challenge of European rowing. We were scared. But we felt that if we beat them, we would win the regatta. Harry tried to convince us that the fastest way for us to cover 2000 meters was to keep our minds on our own race without worrying about how the other boats were rowing. Still, Ratzcburg's racing starts and sprints were impressive; it would Jake enormous discipline to keep from letting them shake us during the race. In our opening heat we drew Japan, Oxford, and Mexico — a fairly easy heat. We had a terrible start and rowed an unimpressive race, but we won by two lengths. Ratzeburg, rowing in the following heat, was beaten by New Zealand. Sure, Ratzeburg loses heats, but they don't lose finals, we argued. Somehow we couldn't accept New Zealand as a crew of the same caliber as Ratzeburg. and their performance in the heat only heightened our doubts as to whether we weren't a bit out of our league. By the time we lined up for the final, the uncertainty had gone deep. We weren't ready to just race, because we had never lost. We were just too tight to row well. Our start was fast, but never settled for the body of the race, and we paid a high price for rowing too high a stroke. At the halfway marker we were a length behind and still rowing a -10. We had trained to row the body of the race at a 36, and we just couldn't maintain the high beat. We kept dropping further and further back. The final result was numbing — New Zealand, Australia, Ratzeburg. We were fourth, three lengths off the pace. The shock that settled over us at the finish was not just that we'd lost, for in a certain sense we'd prepared ourselves for that, but how badly we'd been beaten. New Zealand, rowing the same kind of race we tried unsuccessfully to row, not only won, but beat Ratzeburg in the process. We knew the way we had rowed was wrong and suspected the reasons for it lay not in our physical training, but in our approach to racing. Coming back to the dock after the race was not easy. But this, we soon found, was not the most trying result of St. Catherines. For it became clear that we had some very important decisions to make individually and as a crew. We had to decide whether were going to try to come back. We had to decide whether St. Catherines was to remain just a painful memory, or whether we would take it as a lesson learned, albeit unpleasantly. Harry made the point that a crew is only as good as it is in losing, not just in winning; but he only emphasized what we were already thinking. Perhaps the most unique thing about the summer was that it provided an opportunity to try again. The National Championships were two weeks after the North Americans, and both Australia and New Zealand were entered. The first place U.S. crew would be selected for the U.S. rowing team at the European Championships. We came back to Cambridge to prepare. Practices were not grim, but neither were they carefree. A quiet determination charac- terized the work before our departure for Philadelphia; it was a determination that marked the beginning of our growth into a crew worthy of racing in international competition. We looked forward to the Nationals as a test. New Zealand and Australia had gained our respect. We didn't resent them; in fact we'd become friendly with these crews, and this camaraderie is of no little importance among international competitors. It is something that the isolation of American rowing and the parochialism of college sports do not allow. Later, at Vichy, we were to see how the Europeans, racing each other throughout the season, year after year, became friends as well as competitors. There the fraternity of oarsmen docs not wait, as it so often does here, until after the oarsmen have stopped competing. We didn't beat New Zealand at the Nationals, but we rowed a race we were proud of. The race, rowed in a torrential downpour, became a duel between the New Zealanders and ourselves, with Australia and Vesper falling behind from the start. We were trailing New Zealand by a length after 500 meters, but rowing strongly on our own cadence we gained slowly and drew even with 500 meters to go. Then, in their sprint, New Zealand went ahead to win by two seconds. They were more experienced than we, and it paid off. The fact that we had come from behind and drawn even, however, restored much of our self-confidence. Our second place finish was three lengths ahead of Australia, and it assured us a berth on the team for Vichy. We were anxious to go. Vichy was something new to us. The scale and efficiency of the European Championships made the best of regattas in the U.S. seem rinky-dink. Crews from more than twenty nations had gathered to compete in seven events in this, the biggest and final event of the European rowing season. Here we could not, nor would we ever again after St. Catherines, single out one crew as the fastest or the best — better to consider everyone fast, since it is closer to the truth. We were at Vichy to race with the best, but it was to be fun. During the week before racing, we met and talked with many oarsmen. The Russians, the East Germans, and Ratzeburg were held to be the fastest. They looked fast, but so did many others. We took a few informal practice pieces — 500 meter races — with the Dutch. They were the only other university crew among the eights and had been written off by some observers as too inexperienced. We split one for one in our races, both by small margins, and we came away happy. The drawing for the heats put us right in the thick of things—we drew Ratzeburg. Great Britain, France, and Yugoslavia. In the heat we got away to a fast start and led by almost a length at the 1000 meter mark; but then Ratzeburg started to move up and we weren't able to do much about it. Once they went ahead we realized we had to go to the repechage. Even our view of the repechage had changed over the summer. Sure it was too bad that we'd let Ratzeburg get by us, but the experi- 179 cncc of the repechage, were we able to make the finals, would be valuable. And yet. when we saw the entries in our repechage, we saw that we were far from assured a place in the finals. Just making the finals in the Championships means being one of the six fastest crews in Europe, and therefore the repechages are all or nothing affairs. With the Czechs, Spain, and Norway in our race we had our work cut out for us. In their heat the Czechs had led East Germany and the Australians in an impressive race. We got together and decided that if we were going to beat them we had to treat the repechage as the final; anything less and there would be no final. When we went to the line we were as ready to race as we had ever been, and it quickly showed. We rowed well and powerfully, jumping to an early lead that seemed to discourage the Czechs, who finally ended up three lengths back. We were in the finals of the European Championships, and for the first time we realized what a thrill it could be just to get into a race, let alone row it. The finals would be our last test together, for, as a college crew, we were a unit for only one year. Jake was graduating, and that alone meant the crew was splitting up. We had done a lot together. We all knew that we had changed and that the crew had changed. The excitement at being in the finals showed that; we weren't simply flattered to find ourselves among the top six, we wanted to see how fast we could go. Lined up with Australia, West Germany, Holland, East Germany, and Russia, we were racing the best in the world. The start was even, and after 500 meters it was still very close. Then Ratzeburg made their move and quickly gamed a lead that they stretched to one length by the 1000 meter mark. We were in second place, a little less than half a length ahead of the Russians. East Germany was in fourth place. Approaching the 500 to go mark, the Russians began their sprint, and we took our stroke up with them. We were gaining on Ratzeburg. but the Russians were coming up on us. We took the stroke up again. Last 20 . . . 10 . .. and the finish. Nobody knew how we'd done. It was a long five minutes before the photo was processed, the decision made and posted: 1st, West Germany, 6.04:89; 2nd, USA, 6.06:46; 3rd, USSR, 6.06:49; 4th, East Germany; 5th, the Netherlands; and 6th, Australia. We had beaten the Russians by three one-hundredths of a second! The silver medal was ours. More importantly, though, we had proven that we could race in international competition. We had learned enough so that on the afternoon of September 7th, 1967, we were the second fastest crew in Europe. We had learned the pleasure of constantly testing ourselves to see how much faster we could go. Two weeks later, back in Cambridge, the new term and the 1968 rowing season began. — Paul Hoffman THE RADCLIFFE SKI TEAM The Radcliffe ski team, after nearly four years of development, has blossomed into a consistently powerful contestant, rich in spunk as well as depth. This year the team easily won the Women's Intercollegiate Ski Conference title, capturing four firsts and a second in the twelve-team field. Its best performance was in the two races at Killington, where Ellie Waterston and Ginny Storrs, the team captain, dominated the competition, placing second and first in the slalom and the Alden Trophy races. The team wound up conference skiing the following weekend at Cranmore, N.H., where Robin McLane placed first-inconference in the giant slalom. The remarkable feature of the Radcliffe team was its many fine competitors; in each race several girls placed high in the finishing order. The team's depth was best demonstrated in the Killington slalom, a rugged course, where five racers placed in the top eleven: Ginny Storrs (1), Ellie Waterston (2), Melanie Simo (3), Lisa McGrath (8), and Sally Petry (11). This performance becomes even more significant considering that over half the field failed to finish. The team is comprised of eight girls, chosen on the basis of their practice performances in the fall. Before the season starts, candidates for the team spend several afternoons a week training: running up and down the steps of the Harvard Stadium, practicing dry-land slalom, and performing calisthenics. After the first snow, the girls spend one night each week at the nearby Blue Hills in Milton, where they practice slalom, giant slalom, and downhill skiing. This training schedule results in a marked versatility among the girls, a versatility which reaps dividends in intercollegiate competition. In skiing, as in their academic pursuits, the Clifries are regarded by their competitors as serious-minded opponents, always out to win. During meets their dedication to the sport extends even into evenings — they chose to file edges and wax skis rather than engage in other skiers' soirees. Such dedication brings rewards, however, as last year's conference title attests. Robin Barnes, one of the team's standouts, typifies the determination of the Cliffie skier. As a freshman, she managed to get her A rating from the Eastern Amateur Ski Association, despite having raced that year for the first time. In one staggered giant slalom race she overtook the preceeding racer, and was forced to start again. Despite their competitiveness, the Clifties are not superhuman, a fact which will console many Harvard men. Their weekends are, in a unique way, as enjoyable as they are strenuous. They savour fig-newton featured picnics and relax with theme songs such as Nancy Sinatra's These Boots Were Made for Walking. Rumor has it that some members of the team speed down courses shrieking in a shrill and unmistakably feminine manner. This antic may discourage area wildlife, but it does win races. — H.S. Butgin The Raddiffc skiing team wound up the season with a conference meet at Cran-morc, N.H„ but by that time the Cliffies had already sewn up the championship. Captain Ginny Storrs (left) accepted the trophy. 1967-1968 SPORTS RECORDS Spring 1967 VARSITY GOLF Won 9, Lost 4 1 Navy 6 7 Amherst 0 6 Tufts 1 5 Boston College 2 4 Williams 3 12 VARSITY 8ASE8ALL Won 15, Lost 7 Florida Southern 5 3 4 4 6 Holy Cross Columbia Pennsylvania Brown 4 3 3 1 7 8 2 0 1 1 4 Stetson Stetson Rollins Rollins Rollins Navy’ Springfield 2 3 3 3 12 0 5 VARSITY TENNIS Won 9, Lost 5 S Cornell 2 Tie Fifth in Easterns Winner of Greater 8ostons 3 Yale 4 5 Dartmouth 2 2 Princeton S 9 Tufts 6 4 Georgia 5 2 Princeton’ 3 2 Georgia 7 4 Cornell’ 1 6 Navy 3 5 Pennsylvania 4 9 M.l.T. 0 VARSITY TRACK 3 Columbia 4 8 Amherst 1 Won 4, Lost 1 6 Brown 0 9 Brown 0 113 Brown 40 0 Dartmouth’ 5 2 Pennsylvania 5 110 Princeton 44 5 Boston College 3 7 Columbia 2 135 Dartmouth 18 3 M.l.T. 0 7 Williams 2 Winner of Greater Bostons 2 Yale’ 1 4 Princeton 5 80 Yale 74 12 Northeastern 2 6 Dartmouth 3 Placed fourth in Heptagonals 16 Brandcis 0 8 Cornell 1 67 Army 87 10 Holy Cross S 8 Army 1 Harvard-Yale 11 4 Boston University 1 4 Yale 5 Cambridge-Oxford 5 HEAVYWEIGHT CREW Won 5, lost 0 Stem Cup first Compton Cup first Adams Cup first E.A R.C. Sprint Regatta first Sexton Cup first Pan-American Games first Canadian Nationals fourth European Championships second LIGHTWEIGHT CREW Won 4, lost 1 Harlem River first Biglin Bowl first Haines Cup first Goidthwait Cup first E-A.R.C Sprint Regatta fourth VARSITY LACROSSE Won 6, Lost 7 9 Hofstra 5 3 Rutgers 7 1 Navy IS 8 Washington College 16 6 M.l.T. 3 3 Pennsylvania 10 8 Cornell 10 10 Brown 12 7 Princeton 11 11 Williams 6 7 Dartmouth 4 15 Holy Cross 6 8« Yale 6 Fall 1967 VARSITY CROSS COUNTRY Won 9, Lost 0 20 Providence College 35 15 Northeastern 50 15 Columbia 50 20 Penn 35 21 Brown 36 16 Cornell 45 17 Dartmouth 44 Winner of Greater Bostons 23 Yale 35 27 Princeton 32 Winner of Heptagonals 7th in IC4A's VARSITY FOOTBALL Won 6, Lost 3 Lafayette Boston University Columbia Cornell Dartmouth Pennsylvania Princeton Brown Yale 51 29 49 14 21 45 6 21 20 VARSITY SOCCER Won 8, Lost 3, Tied 1 Tufts Amherst Wesleyan B.U. M.l.T. Columbia Cornell Dartmouth Pennsylvania Princeton (O.T.) Brown Yale 3 0 6 8 4 3 2 3 0 4 2 2 Winter 1967-68 VARSITY 8ASKET8ALL Won 7, Lost 14 77 Boston University 78 83 Wesleyan 73 78 Navy 79 59 Williams 74 78 New Hampshire 52 67 Northeastern 72 68 M.l.T. 60 56 Pennsylvania 69 71 Princeton 99 60 Dartmouth 65 69 Brown 63 76 Yale 88 79 Cornell 83 70 Columbia 103 69 Cornell 78 S6 Columbia 115 72 Princeton 84 69 Pennsylvania 67 60 Brown 66 98 Yale 89 75 Dartmouth 72 VARSITY HOCKEY Won 15, Lost 9 9 Northeastern 1 8 Boston University 5 3 Boston College 5 Princeton 7 Brown 0 Cornell 1 North Dakota 2 Boston College 12 Sir George Williams 2 R.P.I. IS Pennsylvania 8 Brown 8 Clarkson 7 Dartmouth 12 Pennsylvania 6 Boston College 4 Princeton 3 1 Boston University 4 4 St. Lawrence 6 4 Dartmouth 2 7 Yale 1 2 Cornell 7 9 Yale 1 3 Boston Univ.(ECAC) 6 VARSITY SQUASH Won 12, Lost 0 8 Cornell 1 VARSITY WRESTLING 8 Toronto 1 Won 2, Lost 8 VARSITY SWIMMING 7 Army 2 Placed fourth in Coast Won 6, Lost 4 9 Amherst 0 Guard Tournament 73 Springfield 40 8 McGill 2 12 Franklin Marshall 21 50 Army 63 9 M.l.T. 0 12 Cornell 28 66 Navy 47 7 Pennsylvania 2 22 M.l.T. 19 62 8 town 32 9 Dartmouth 0 8 Pennsylvania 25 68 Columbia 33 9 Navy 0 18 Columbia 19 73 Pennsylvania 39 5 So. African Jesters 1 17 Springfield 23 45 Dartmouth 68 (exbn.) 11 Princeton 20 55 Princeton 58 6 Williams 3 17 Rutgers 19 72 Cornell 41 7 Princeton 2 17 8rown 15 34 Yale 49 6 Yale 3 14 Yale 18 WINTER TRACK VARSITY FENCING Won 7, Lost 0 Won 7, Lost 8 68 Army •to 24 Holy Cross 3 86 Boston University 21 17 Southeastern Tech 10 78 Northeastern 31 19 M.l.T. 8 Winner of Greater Bostons 7 C.C.N.Y. 20 67 Yale 47, Princeton 23 9 N.Y.U. 18 89 Dartmouth 19 6 Columbia 21 75 Brown 34 16 Holy Cross 11 19 M.l.T. 8 9 Pennsylvania 18 16 Trinity 11 9 Princeton 18 9 Rutgers 18 12 Cornell IS 16 Brandeis 11 10 Yale 17 HOUSES THE h Master Charles W. Dunn, Quincy House Master Dana L. Farnsworth, Winthrop House Master Zeph Stewart, Lowell House Master Richard T. Gill, Leverctt House Master John H. Finley, Eliot House Master Thomas E. Crooks, Dudley House Master Arthur Smithies, Kirkland House Master Reuben A. Brower, Adams House Dean F. Skiddy von Stadc, Dean of Freshmen Master Alwin M. Pappenhcimer, Dunster House 1 This year has witnessed a growing uncertainty over the purpose and worth of the House Plan. Central to the controversies over parietal , off-campus living, and the Tenth House is the fundamental question, unanswered for many undergraduates, of what House living is supposed to accomplish. It has become apparent that the inconveniences of House life are no longer being cheerfully accepted; few students feel they are necessary either for the preservation of the Collegiate Way of Living or for the retention of the male community. The steadily increasing number of students wanting to live off campus has called into question the importance and relevance of the plan which has become for many only a vague and ill-defined ideal. For President Lowell, the Houses were a social device for a moral purpose. Created from a gift of some 13 million dollars by Yale graduate Edward Harkness. the House Plan was originally designed to stop a trend toward social stratification that by Lowell's early years as President had resulted in such unwanted residence patterns as the Cold Coast (apartments along Mount Auburn Street reserved for the rich) and Little Jerusalem (rooms in Walter Hastings Hall occupied almost exclusively by Jewish students). What we need, said Lowell, is a system of grouping that will bring into each group men from different parts of the country, men with different experience, and as far as possible, social condition. In short, what we want is a group of colleges each of which will be national and democratic, a microcosm of the whole university. Now, forty years after the Faculty of Arts and Sciences unanimously approved the House Plan, social diffusion at Harvard, at least m living arrangements, is an accomplished fact. To most undergraduates, Cold Coast means little more than the laundry on Mount Auburn Street, and there is no longer any particular novelty in a scholarship boy rooming with a preppy. For the rest, admissions policies and the newly modified procedure for house selection have managed to provide a fairly even distribution of interests and backgrounds throughout the college. Overtly, it would appear that Lowell's objectives have been obtained — the democratic microcosm is reality and everyone's happy. The problem, of course, is that everyone is not happy. In 1931 President Lowell could say concerning the small number of undergraduates preferring to live off campus, To permit them to do so has been thought wiser than to attach to the Houses any sense of compulsion or make residence therein other than a privilege. That a resistless current will before long draw all such men into the vast majority of their fellow students there is no reason to doubt; and in the meanwhile the loss is theirs. In 1968, on the other hand, a number of masters in discussing the Tenth House expressed the opinion that allowing a 199 greater number of live-outs would weaken the House System. Unfortunately, they are probably right. The approximately 250 students currently living off-campus do not constitute a heterogeneous cross-section of the university. They tend to fall into three main special interest groups: political radicals, literati (artists, actors, writers), and clubbies. While their separation from the Houses eases overcrowding. it also detracts from the diversity which the House Plan strives for. If the quota system were to be significantly liberalized, or worse, abolished, the Houses undoubtedly would suffer a sizeable loss, both in the variety and absolute number of their students. The unfortunate result of this situation is that House living is compulsory; it has come to be regarded by many as anything but a privilege. Today, no one, least of all the Masters, are betting on any resistless current to reattract the large percentages of Crimson (25%) and Final Club (23%) members who have already foresaken the Houses for Porter Square. There is little reason to expect that such a current will materialize to prevent future defections. Reasons for living off campus (or, conversely, against living in the Houses) are generally of two kinds, practical and philosophical. The former category- includes the type of grievances that appear on HUC agendas (parietals, poor food, limited inter-house dining, etc.), and is by far the most common irritant prompting people to move off. Of course, to make the break with the system is not easy. The Houses, after all, present a mixed bag of advantages and disadvantages, and it's often difficult to decide at what point the irritations outnumber the benefits. Purely in numerical terms, there are even more reasons for staying than moving. Living in l.everett House, for example, you have a room or a suite that is fairly clean and is kept that way by a weekly porter service. There arc 450 people whom you can get to know, play house sports with, and borrow things from. There is always enough hot water for showers, and if something breaks down, like the elevators, it is fixed without having to complain to the landlord. You don't have to cook your own food, or clean up afterward. You can use the House's many facilities: library, practice room, pool table, dark room, grille, and pin-ball machine, to name a few. There are various House activities to join, including the newspaper, radio station. House Committee, and Social Committee. Occasionally you can enjoy one of the House's special dinners in honor of a traditional event or guest speaker. And. finally, there is the opportunity to meet faculty members in an informal setting. Compared to these advantages of House life, the reasons for going off-campus are few in number, yet to some they arc very persuasive. Living off-campus is cheaper than living in the Houses, even including the 285 dollar surcharge proposed by the Gill Committee. By sharing an apartment with two friends, there is a good chance that you will have your own bedroom, even if you happen to Ik a sophomore or junior. Off campus. you pay for only those meals you eat. While your cooking may not be outstanding, at least you are guaranteed that your meals will be edible. If your date can't come to dinner on Saturday (or Friday, Wednesday evening, or Sunday noon) you can always invite her for Tuesday. For the majority, the most important advantage of off-campus living is that there are no parietal regulations. You won't be expelled from Harvard if you and your date decide that you'd prefer to watch the Sunday night movie rather than the Saturday night movie. Instead of waiting in line to register in the sign-out book, you can walk right in the door — just like adults do. Living in Porter Square, you won't be subjected to the annoying paternal voice that dictates the hours you may entertain mixed company for cocktails. One oft-quoted advantage of off-campus living is more imagined than real. Theoretically, the off-campus student loses few House benefits. He is permitted to use House facilities, to play House sports, to participate in House activities, and to attend House functions. This, after all, is the reason for the proposed 285 dollar service charge. In reality, however, the majority of off-campus students use these benefits considerably less than do the residents — a fact that was true even before they moved off. Most residents of Porter Square have realized their main interests do not center around House life. The Crimson editor who has covered the McCarthy campaign in New Hampshire is little interested in a House Committee election. The student who is finishing rehearsals for Coriolanus is not attracted by the Economics Table. Other examples are not difficult to find. This is not to say that those who live off campus — or who try to do so — dispute the House Plan's goal of bringing together people of diverse backgrounds and interests. For the most part, these people recognize and appreciate this as well as other aspects of House life. However, they feel the advantages are offset by the existing social regulations. The junior in Dunster who wants to write uninterruptedly on Saturday and Sunday finds that he can't see his girl friend during the week for any more than three hours at a time. Consequently, he tells his Senior Tutor that he wants to move off campus to have more time and privacy—for his poetry. He may be perfectly satisfied with the House in other respects, but under the present rules, the House Plan and his writing (or girl friend) are incompatible. There is a final, more philosophical, criticism of the House Plan. Many students feel that House life, with its rules relating to individual conduct, is irrelevant to the real world. While it is difficult to say how much this feeling has contributed to the move off campus, its presence is easily observable. Many seniors faced with the prospect of induction, for example, find the idea of parietal regulations genuinely absurd and consider the time spent in arguing whether they should be changed even more so. Valid or not, there is a certain belief that Harvard students have better things to do than worry about lack of participation in House activities or the number of meals Cliffies arc allowed to eat in the dining hall. Unfortunately, this philosophical criticism of the House Plan offers no specific suggestions for change. It simply voices a feeling of general discontent based on a desire to act instead of being acted upon: Stop the war. Resist the draft, Co into the Peace Corps instead of business school, and so on. House living — because it is structured, regulated, and, above all, compulsory — is a natural target for this amorphous malaise. Somehow, getting out of the Houses means getting into the world, where life seems to be freer and more meaningful. Despite valid criticisms directed at various features of House living, the original purpose of the House Plan remains a sound one. Now, as for President Lowell in 1928, The problem of the college is a moral one, deepening the desire to develop one's own mind, body and character . . . Consequently it seems logical that the function of the Houses should lx as originally intended, to provide surroundings and an atmosphere congenial to that object. To accomplish this purpose today, hosvcver, it must be recognized that the dominant concerns of students have altered over the past forty years. To maintain the diversity that has resulted in a more democratic college, the House Plan must accommodate those students who consider personal freedom to be more important to character development than playing House football. Overcrowded rooms, needlessly restrictive parietal regulations, and poor food — no matter how well rationalized — do not create the kind of atmosphere President Lowell was talking about. House living cannot and should not duplicate the environment of an off-campus apartment. But to keep a highly diversified student body from forming into special interest groups off-campus, living regulations must be made as flexible as possible. Changing the few rules and policies that are the principal sources of complaint would, at the very least, be a positive complement to current efforts to preserve diversity by restricting off-campus living to a limited number. Ideally—and not unrealistically—a more liberal policy with regard to meals and parie-tals, along with a general deconversion of overcrowded rooms, would eliminate the need for making residence in the House compulsory. Conceivably, as the Houses became more than competitive with accommodations in Porter Square, even the criticism of irrelevancy would disappear. The changes involved, of course, would necessarily mean a limited break with some of the traditions that have become associated with House living. This should pose no serious obstacle, however, for such alterations would be in harmony with what both Presidents Eliot and Lowell called Harvard's most persistent tradition, the tradition of change. — Craig £. Stewart Chairman, ieverett House Committee, Member of HUC ADAMS HOUSE The Music Men Remember last September when you'd just come back to Cambridge, and you put on your sneakers and shorts to head down to the Charles? And as you ambled down Plympton St„ past Quincy and Lowell, you heard the symphonic rush from A Day in The Life blaring out of about 10 different KLH's. It seemed that everyone was getting into Sgt. Pepper back then, some to turn on their new roommates, others to impress the knowing scenybopper they'd just met at Tommy's — everyone that is, except the Adams House guy, to whom the new Beatles were already old hat. For him, the music scene meant anyone from the Doors to Stockhausen, as a shortcut to Linden St. through the poly-cacaphonic Adams courtyard loudly testified. By now, years of Crimson profiles have succeeded in establishing the legend of the Adams House individualist, who in 1968 is more wigged than rugged. Anarchy is his keynote, echoing everywhere, save for the prolific Drama Society and the weekly Economics Table. Disorder reigns especially in music: the House harbors dozens of virtuosos who could combine to make any music on many instruments, but most play in their own separate worlds. Except for the occasional offerings of the Music Society, the closest Adams comes to a House-wide musical happening is when 10 or so refugees from supper gather round the common-room piano to hear Verdi overtures played four-hands. But why this isolation in music, which, unlike writing or schoolwork, is potentially a shared experience? Undoubtedly, part of it stems from the wide spread in musical tastes — Schubert-song lovers usually don't have too many records to swap with Coltrane devotees. Still, in an age when every music is supposedly being felt as an influence, there has to be more behind this compartmentalization than just stylistic preferences. Basically, the other divider is the intensity with which the Adams musician does his thing, and which often precludes interaction with those who are into something else. The classical musician at Adams is more often a solo pianist than an HRO wind player; the reedman, meanwhile, spends his time jamming with jazz musicians from the Berklee school; and the budding rock star is forming a group with three guys from River St. The fact is, most of the musicians at Adams House are damn serious about their music, and they look at Harvard mainly as a good base from which to play it. Still, if the Adams musicians arc all equally into their music, some arc more into The Scene than others, especially those who play rock. For them, musical life revolves around the band, with professional-sounding talk of demo records and pending contracts which excludes anyone outside the inner circle. A good case in point is the Strcctchoir, an excellent blues-rock band which featured the phenomenal harmonica work of Peter Ivers, an Adams House senior. The Streetchoir became a local sensation last fall, performing gigs at clubs and colleges and playing songs that featured extended instrumental solos. But despite their talent for improvisation, the group ran into trouble when they tried to play their material with other musicians at informal get-togethers. Being geared to well-rehearsed public performances, the tunes were mostly originals and were too complex for outsiders to improvise on. People just couldn't solo on our tunes, said Ivers; they'd lose the rhythm or else they'd get hung up on the chord changes. Meanwhile, despite continuing success at concerts, the Streetchoir broke up in December after a series of disputes over musical style. We had an exciting appearance, and we turned each other on in performance, but we couldn't do it in rehearsal. Since then, Ivors has been dividing his time between Cambridge and New York, playing at clubs and on records, and trying to get a new group together on a permanent basis. Compared to rock, the classical music scene at Adams presents a paradox: despite the serious nature of their music, the classical players sometimes seem to get more fun out of what they play than do the rock groups, many of which have their collective eyes set on lucrative recording contracts. The classical counterparts to these ambitious mind-blowers are the piano wonks, who work in the practice room for hundreds of hours to play one or two recitals during their three years at the House. But balancing out these competitive soloists at Adams are the ensemble-oriented instrumentalists, who help to populate the HRO and the Bach Society, plus a small but enthusiastic body of musicians who play chamber music. Leading this last group is Bob levin, a senior at the House whose concert career includes the solo role in Mozart's D-minor Piano Concerto with the HRO. but who feels that chamber music offers the greatest challenge for House musicians: It •a oi! CISM lets you explore possibilities beyond your own personal music-making. Accordingly, Levin organized an impromptu sight-reading of the 5th Brandenburg and Cantata 202 to commemorate Bach's birthday, and helped direct a concert for oboe, bassoon, bass, and keyboard, featuring his arrangements of Beatles tunes. These, and not solo recitals, are the concerts which have attracted the audiences at Adams, claims levin, This is what they can't get anywhere else. One thing Harvard audiences certainly won't get elsewhere is Levin's Oratorio on passages from the Regulations for Students in Harvard College, which he wrote for the Signet Society and which he hopes to present at Adams this spring. Unlike classical music, which is read by the musicians, and rock, most of which has been composed by them, jazz is improvised, thereby permitting the jazz player more freedom in both choice of partners and choice of notes. And since the scene holds few jobs for jazz groups, there are no steady bands, but just musicians who come together for an evening to play songs from the latest Miles Davis record or to do free-form improvisations. As a result, the partners for jazz at Adams are usually any people with an instrument and an ear, while the notes are the sounds of New Thing — cluster-chords on the piano, shrieks on the sax, pulses (as opposed to a beat) on the drums. With both musicians and music in constant flux, one of the central figures in the jazz scene is Adams junior Paul Balmuth, who plays piano, oboe, and saxophones, and who has organized many jazz gatherings around the Square, each of which invariably includes musicians who have never played together before. This openness may occasionally create friction — as at a recent session when both a jazz bassist and a rock bass-guitarist showed up — but more often it results in spontaneity and enthusiasm, with the players leading each other into new areas of sound that had previously been closed to them. According to Balmuth, this ever-changing web of sound frees him to get deep into his own instrument and sec what some of the notes are. The same notes may be available for anyone who plays music, but Adams’ rock, classical, and jazz men work them into a variety of style and sound that is as diverse as the House itself. — Charles Komanoll The Streetchoir at Adams' first mixer of the year. What began as a dance turned into a concert as an enthusiastic audience decided to exchange warm laps for folding chairs and the Cambridge community's version of the New Rock. House member Peter Ivers blew harp with the group. DUDLEY HOUSE Roost of the Radicals Dudley House is a Harvard House in name only; it is by nature an exception to all Harvard's rules. Dudley is a heterogeneous collection of the college's loose ends: the married students of Peabody Terrace, commuters, most off-campus students, and the residents of Apley Court, Wigglesworth, and the Cooperative House. The inability of the House Committee over the years to get Dudley men from these varied groups to take an interest in House functions indicates that they have something else on their minds. The alarms and diversions of the last year have indicated what those concerns might be. What brings students into Dudley in the first place? Of all the Houses, Dudley is the only one whose organization is fundamentally different from the norm. While the others are based on the notion of a community of scholars living and eating together within the confines of University buildings and regulations, Dudley House encompasses a range of possibilities more fitting for life outside. For many Dudley men, the life style of the House system is tremendously unsatisfying. They object to being fitted into a mold and prefer to do without the complete Harvard experience. For these students, Dudley House supplies alternatives to House life which offer greater independence, which are closer to the real world, and which are appreciably cheaper, no small consideration. One unique aspect of Dudley House became startlingly evident after the Dow demonstration. When the dust had cleared, more than half the students placed on probation were Dudley men. Most notably, the co-op house, with a total membership of 37, had 14 on probation. The Dudley Senior Common Room, originally one of the most militant in its demands for punishment, was forced to come to grips with the large faction of Dudley radicals who until then had gone their own way without much communication with the rest of the house. To facilitate communication within Dudley, a House committee on the University and the War was created and actually met several times. Here it became apparent that there were also conservative elements in the House; radicals sparred uneasily with conservatives from among the married students and commuters. This led to difficulties on the committee: the two political styles didn't mix, and further problems arose when members of the administration proved unwilling to testify before what they feared was a left-dominated committee. The group eventually disintegrated, mostly because of a general lack of interest and confidence in it. Nonetheless, many Dudley radicals remained interested in the committee's issues; almost all the points the committee discussed in the fall cropped up again in the heightened campus political activity of the spring term. As the draft became a major issue, Dudley students again showed a different perspective than the rest of the University — and perhaps a greater willingness to tackle problems in the real world. A Crimson poll showed a far higher proportion of Dudley students determined to resist the draft than students in any other house. Some off-campus students became involved in community draft work with the Boston Draft Resistance Croup. For handing in his draft card, one anti-draft organizer in the co-op house faced a possible jail term. Within the University, Dudley students, less enamoured of the ivory tower and more impecunious than others, were not prone to ac- 207 Dudley House became a kind of inter-house house; its dining hall provided a meeting place for political groups and Cliffics. Dudley members led the challenge to the Administration's handling of the Dow demonstration, by choosing as its representative to the Student Faculty Advisory Committee John Fouts, who was on probation for Dow. Foots was eventually seated. cept at face value the rationalizations of bureaucrats intent on preserving the campus status quo. Proposals from the Gill Committee to reduce off-campus housing brought an almost unanimous response from the coop houses: scathing criticism of the House system, especially of Mather House, the white elephant. The announced increase in off-campus fees drew a similar reaction. These events prompted two Dudley students to lead an SDS campaign to oppose the fee raise and to expose the class and race bias of the University's admissions and scholarship policy. The connection of campus radicalism with Dudley House is not merely a result of the daily SDS meetings in Lehman Hall, nor of the greater percentage of overt radicals who join the House. Rather, it is also a product of the House's less artificial and less cloistered atmosphere, which enables Dudley students to be more aware of the needs and concerns of ordinary people being taxed or drafted. With this perspective, Dudley students are more likely to question the policies of the University, the kind of education it offers, and the role it seeks to play in society. Perhaps this atmosphere also enables Dudley men to be more responsive to the awkward problems of the outside world that have only recently thrust themselves so rudely into Harvard's safe and ordered society. In a year of political conflict and crisis, Dudley's role has been unique. As the University's traditional methods and familiar rationalizations are increasingly seen to be inadequate to handle today's problems, Dudley might well teach the rest of the college some lessons. — Jonathan Harris L. David Carmichael 209 The Organizers Escaping the intellectual lassitude of a fall mixer, two young students were engaged in a heated discussion about Hubert Humphrey. An alluring, raven-haired Wellesley girl glided between them and, with a disarming smile, inquired: You're from Dunstcr House, aren’t you? Why, yes! But how could you tell? You were discussing politics. The only Harvard people that discuss politics are from Dunster, or from that other house that doesn't have any parietals. □uniter's reputation of having become a hotbed of political activity is not entirely undeserved. The entry bulletin boards are littered with announcements of demonstrations, meetings, and debates. During the elections for the Student-Faculty Advisory Committee, Dunster encouraged students on probation to run and used a system of proportional representation to determine the winner. The victor, Robert Post '69, now leads the Harvard Education Project's group studying the role of the university in society. More people in Dunster were involved in the Dow demonstration and participated in the Vietnam fast than in any other house. Dunster's Gordon Foote '70, was the first Harvard undergraduate arrested for selling Avatar, and Robert Shctterley '69 was the first Harvard undergraduate to receive an induction notice for handing in his draft card. Surprising as it may seem, Dunster as a whole docs not teem with activists. The senior class, for example, averaged fifth among the houses in taking the most radical positions in the Crimson poll. Its reputation for political activism stems from the activities of a close group of sophomores and juniors and of an innovative Senior Common Room. Post and Bob Gass, one of the leaders of the Vietnam fast and the chairman of Dunster's draft union, are roommates, as are two of the four Dunster men who renounced their ll-S deferments. Another pair of roommates, Mike Schiffer and Jerry Roberts, specialize in midnight leaflet distribution forays. These people, with a few others, such as Peter Bilazarian (Dunster's closest thing to a full-time radical-in-residence), comprise an informal clique that attends demonstrations at the Boston Army Base together, keeps its members informed of current meetings and events, and sponsors intra-clique football matches. The same spirit of activism exists among the tutors of the house. Seventeen members of the Senior Common Room signed a statement in support of the first two students in the house to be reclassified l-A by their draft boards. Maurice Ford, an Assistant Senior Tutor, wrote a sympathetic article about the Dow demonstrators for the November 11th issue of the New Republic. John Perkins, tutor in biology, is a member of the Resistance and a draft counselor for the American Friends Service Committee. Lawrence 8lum, a philosophy tutor, manages to find time for such things as organizing fasts and getting signatures for the Cambridge referendum. The effectiveness of political activity in the house does not result from the individual tutors or undergraduates, but from their interaction and cooperation. Dunster is one of the few houses in which students speak to tutors on a first-name basis and are regularly invited to the Senior Common Room. Among tutors, friendliness is the rule, condescension the rarity; and most tutors have sincere interests in the concerns of undergraduates. After the Dow demonstration, for example, Larry Blum stayed up until three in the morning with the demonstrators threatened with severance, discussing life, the future, and the new Rolling Stones album. Even non-resident tutors, such as Sandy Levinson, have established friendships with many students in the house. The dining hall is unquestionably the vehicle for this interaction, a fact which became particularly clear to participants in the fast. Said one Dunster faster, After the first two days I didn't even want to look at food, but I just had to go to all the meals. I really missed just sitting around and talking with everybody. At Dunster, students get along well not only with tutors, but also with each other. If the activists are able to mobilize other members of the house for large demonstrations, it is because Dunster's atmosphere is congenial to discussion and argument. A McCarthy supporter will man a table selling Resistance newspapers outside the dining hall so that the Resistance salesman can get himself a second dessert. The concept of a house elitism, of a small group of people greatly influencing the activi- ties of others, has affected many aspects of Dunster House life. For example, the rejuvenation of the Dunster House Forum, which this year sponsored talks by William Scranton, Barney Frank of the Kevin White administration, the president of the United Nations General Assembly, Tom Wicker of the New York Times, Singapore Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew, and David Rockefeller, chairman of Harvard's Board of Overseers and president of the Chase Manhattan Bank, was almost entirely due to the work of two juniors, Peter Goldberg and Roberts Bennett. The ascendancy of Dunster House drama, which now ranks second perhaps only to Adams House, may also be attributed to the intense work of a small group of five or ten members of the class of '69. This year's production of Beyond the Fringe and six one act plays were indicative of the great talent and vitality that has been injected into Dunster theatre. Dunster's music has likewise flourished, under the aegis of Charles Kletsch and Master Pappenheimer. There has been an exhausting schedule of Friday and Saturday evening concerts, Sunday afternoon concerts, sight-readings, and midweek midnight concerts. The artistic scene at Dunster House has a long heritage; the political activity is a new twist. No one will deny that the worsening of the war could itself explain the rise of activism in the University. Why, however, should activism be so pronounced at Dunster House, which formerly could be distinguished by a preponderance of funsters and pre-meds? One explanation for the change in the house's character is that Dean Munro, when he personally assigned students to the houses, disregarded all preconceived notions of house stereotypes. The influx of non-science concentrators followed, and from this fertile soil political activism blossomed forth. This explanation does not, however, account for the character of the tutors and the sophomore class. Perhaps the only explanation is the unfathomable ironies of Chance. Somehow, politically conscious individuals found their way to the outer limits of the campus and made Dunster House their humble abode. In an atmosphere of toleration and candor, the potentiality for activism was finally realized. —Lawrence R. Berger The Dunstcr House radicals: (left to right, top to bottom) Bob Cass, '69; John Perkins, tutor in biology; Peter Bilazarian, '69 and Ccrry Roberts, '70; Robert Shcttcrly, '69; larry Blum, tutor in philosophy. 213 ELIOT HOUSE Master John Finley Professor John H. Finley has been Master of Eliot House for twenty-six years. To twenty-six generations of Eliot men, he has made the House a distinctive place to experience Harvard. Despite many memories of people and events, Finley is more interested in the present than in the past, and he is always hopeful for the future. A long conversation with Mr. Finley, especially one about Eliot House, is endlessly apocalyptic. From such a conversation one obtains a view — in some ways a vision — of life, of Eliot, and of life at Eliot, as seen through the alembic of John Finley's mind. Life has many shapes to John Finley: the hour glass, the pyramid. Lake Erie (!). From his metaphorical mental laboratory, Mr. Finley produces a unique retort with a narrow tube leading to the bubble of college, from which another narrow tube, graduate school, leads to the bubble of life. With elegant simplicity Mr. Finley pencils the path of reaction within the bubble of college. The plateau at the left shows the newly arrived student, who finds a vivid multiplicity of courses and activities from which to mold his curriculum. The second plateau represents that student after he has chosen his field and his interests and is ready for graduate school. At the bottom of the path, all the experiences of one's life fuse in a recognition of self, an understanding of the best course to the second plateau. College, in Finley's view, has a twofold role. On the one hand, the mythology of one's life is created when he is young and has fresh sensibilities which make his impressions appear more vivid, his friends more illustrious. A warm glow lights Finley's eye when he speaks of his own mythology. On the other hand, one must achieve the understanding of self. A theory of parietals can justifiably rest upon the conviction that sense of self is stronger than, and in some ways hampered by, the sexual impulse. Private intellectual interests must be respected. Mr. Finley says, I may be snobbish in one respect — his feeling is that girls should not be extended the freedom of his House, only because he suspects that one might better choose a future path if Esther and Susie are temporarily fended off. The long graduate tube of the retort, where one's course has been defined and one's colleagues are less varied than college friends, seems a more fitting place for women. The sincerity of Finley's practical concern for a man's finding himself speaks through his proposal for a new House tutorial system. The growing demands of the future, the increased need for keeping up on people and writing more and more letters of recommendation, and a housemaster's finite capacity to handle this increased burden — all bespeak the need for a redefinition of the role of the House tutor. Under Finley's proposed system, each of the twenty-five House tutors would be assigned as personal advisor to six men; the tutor would, then, fill each man's dossier with meaningful personal information. With better understanding of the student, the tutor and Master could more effectively direct him along his proper path — through advice, through letter of recommendation. Nine Burris Young's, one for each House, would administer the program; it should not be an additional responsibility for the Master. In Finley's view, then, a prime function of a great House is to help individuals fight their battles. In this respect, he has made Eliot an exemplar of what a House should be. Rather than placing primary emphasis on the academic extras (e.g. science tables and literature tables) or the social extras (quotidian or weekend entertainment for the troops), Eliot has focussed on truly knocking itself out for individuals. The high proportion of grants, fellowships, and graduate school acceptances captured by Eliot's people are evidence to this. The essence of the House experience, Finley feels, is an individual's opportunity to live together with widely different people of widely differing natures. The residents of a successful House system develop a generosity and understanding for one another; ideally, this insular generosity burgeons into a broad and deep sympathy for different selves and different kinds of people. While each of us, Finley continues, fights for the integrity of his own individual response and expression, part of our excellence and joy is discovering how to share and assist rather than to exploit. Individual achievement, as defined by an individual for himself, should not have to be wrested from a hostile world, but should be encouraged by gracious and sympathetic helpers. Mr. Finley enjoys looking ahead to the bubble that succeeds graduate school, where life diverges toward four possible human destinies: ego and saint at the two extremes, and poet and squire in the middle. The poet sees life as theory — he is the scholar, the artist, the research scientist. The squire deals with people as institutions — his works are practical ones which keep society rolling. A doctor, for example, could be a squire as general practitioner, or a poet in the research laboratory. In the midst of the college community looms a strident duality. The middle-aged academic has in some ways excelled his expectations, having become a scholar, having written good books. Yet in other ways he fails his expectations: as a resident of the suburbs, he becomes an amateur janitor for his wife ( Oh, Henry, it's an early spring and we want to keep the flies out: the screens should go on . . Even at William James or Mallinckrodt he is isolated from a wider range of scholarly interests; he associates mainly with colleagues in his field and never becomes part of a corporate group. He fails, in Finley's 215 terms, to find the village within the community. In his House, the master is both squire and poet. He is a poet in his scholarship and in his study of people. He is a general practitioner in his efforts to predict what a fellow will be in ten years hence and to speed the man toward that goal. At the edge of his fingers Mr. Finley senses a complex of laws that he does not fully grasp. In the House there are gods similar to those revealed to Aeneas; some are gods of developmental psychology, constitutional psychology, and sociology that produce the multifarious personalities in whom Mr. Finley' has an intense biographical interest. His is a profound appreciation for the mystery and complexity of each individual, and a deep affection for them all. Like a novelist, and with consummate perspicuity, Mr. Finley guesses at people's natures and finds delight in the seemingly simple ones as well as in the most complex and brilliant people. Here he bemoans a crucial problem at Harvard — disparity between the standards of the Admissions Committee and those of the Faculty. The Admissions Committee, for example, welcomes warmly the bright-but-non-scholarly nice boy who was king of his small high school; the Faculty, on the other hand, focusses its attention on the student who shows the greatest potential as a scholar. Finley would like to see the straight, non-scholarly types more affectionately and appreciatively treated — they, after all, are the future pillars of the community and of the society, the professional men who will make things go. With an eye for continuities, Mr. Finley describes changes in House atmosphere mainly through causes. Conflict in Asia and increasing graduate school competition generate pressures. Parents who were once simple and traditional have a generation later lost religious and ethical conviction. Publicity and the national media create raucous noise today; yesterday, the little voices were louder — a completed forward pass, an A paper, the girl who wrote you a letter. Collegiate continuity must perhaps now rest on friendships rather than on traditions. In this sense, the American college teacher of the last twenty years has failed; he has persevered in roles of dissent that suited admirably a provincial, conformist society. What today's student often needs is a secure, traditional standard on which he can rely in the face of an unstable, dissent-riddled society. Next year Mr. Finley will be on leave of absence, after which he will return to a new phase of his Harvard career. There will be more time for scholarship and teaching and time to reflect on the shadowy laws. Pleased with Alan Heimert's impending reign, Finley especially likes his successor's color and vitality, his Pickwickian character. Characteristically, Mr. Finley anticipates a glowing and hope-filled future. — D. C. limeison — Cary N. Sinawski KIRKLAND HOUSE A House that Works Fitted neatly between Eliot House, the MBTA yards, the rutted South Street, and the Eliot quadrangle, Kirkland House sits comfortably atop Harvard’s Central Kitchen. As the smallest of Harvard's houses, Kirkland probably best fulfills that purpose for which the house system was originally devised. It is informal, relaxed and friendly; as such it provides a congenial refuge from the occasionally oppressive anonymity of much of the rest of the college. Yet, in its smallness, Kirkland does not sacrifice diversity. The house offers music, drama, art and poetry seminars, pinball, pool and billiards, athletics, movies, dances. By understanding a few of the highlights of Kirkland House activities, one may begin to understand what the house means to its members. The intellectual and cultural atmosphere of Kirkland helps to make the house a stimulating place. Students find mealtimes ideal for all sorts of talk; an anonymous pollster calculated that many Kirkland students spend an average of four to five hours a day in the dining hall. Tutors are readily accessible and always willing to talk. A prime example is government tutor Ward Elliot's free-wheeling social awareness table at which the topic of discussion is written out and carefully wrapped around the gallon jug of Tavola wine which sits in the middle of the table. On Wednesday nights after dinner, Kirkland House musicians give excellent concerts of baroque, classical, and modern music in the Junior Common Room. Another Wednesday night activity is in D-basement where a nude girl stands frozen before a group of pencil-chewing, eraser-wieldmg house members. This is the art seminar, begun this winter and greeted enthusiastically by all art lovers in the house. Contributing to the atmosphere of congeniality and informality is Master Arthur Smithies. Installed as master three years ago, he has instituted Sunday evening beers to which all house members are invited. Talking to the master over a glass of beer, an undergraduate is treated to an inimitable mixture of serious talk, occasional harrumps, and hearty guffaws. At Christmas dinners the master has also proved himself to be amiable and gracious, as an entertainer rather than a host. A favorite tale repeated by undergraduates is of the master singing an unrecognizable, thoroughly enjoyable, tune at last year's dinner; the master then made the much needed, greatly appreciated, announcement of the name of the song — Waltzing Matilda. Other members of the house staff also contribute to the style and character of the house. In the main office are the omniscient Senior Tutor, Peter Stansky, and the omnipotent House Secretary, Alice Methfessol. In the superintendant's office is the indescribable head super, Eddie Chamberlain. After walking jauntily across the courtyard every morning in his dapper hat and Harris Tweed sportcoat, Eddie settles down for a day of friendly 8$ with all comers. As a student aptly put it, Eddie both has, and is, the last word. A drinking companion to some, a friend to even more, Eddie docs his bit to keep the wars of truth of the Harvard intellectual milieu in their proper perspective. Diversions from studying are by no means neglected in the house. The pool and billiard tables, one of them a gift of Sargent Kennedy, are in constant use. And the addition of the new Cactus-Juice pinball machine in the billiards room has proved to be the most popular attraction of all. The popularity of pinball has been such that house members are now suggesting a house pinball tournament to complement pool, billiard, and ping-pong tournaments held every spring. House athletics arc low-key, popular, and generally successful. Consistently good teams have kept the house A-baskelball team in first of second place over the last several years. In football this year Kirkland finished in the middle of the league. This was anticipated, somewhat philosophically, by Coach Bob Stack, who noted early in the season, We're small, but slow. This year the Kirkland golfers took first place in interhousc competition. In a dramatic victory last spring, the house crews swept the river in mterhouse competition. Single oarsman Master Smithies lent enthusiastic encouragement, but it was the hard work of the crew members themselves that led to the dethroning of the perennial champions from Eliot House. In sum, Kirkland House contains most of the elements necessary for enjoyable house living. Despite its characteristic elements, or perhaps as a result of this diversity, it resists any stereotypes. In this house, the efforts of the Harvard administration to create a satisfactory balance have been successful, for the house members are as diverse as the activities within the house itself. Yet the jocks, wonks, poets, and free spirits live together in more than just peaceful coexistence; Kirkland’s smallness permits close tics among many of its members and promotes friendly group living on all levels. This year Kirkland is quite high on the list of house preferences. This has not always been so. When the members of the present senior class applied to houses, Kirkland was far and away the least popular choice. Assignments to this house were greeted with dismay; a few freshmen assigned to Kirkland the year before even wore black arm-bands to mourn their ill-fortune. The reasons for the house's resurgence in popularity are difficult to sort out. but that Kirkland is now more than just a place to eat and sleep is indisputable. The great majority of Kirkland seniors are undeniably happy there. — William A. Fletcher LEVERETT house Problems of Size As Harvard's largest house, Leverett directly challenges the assumptions of the entire house system. With nearly five hundred students, it is clearly impossible to provide the intimate atmosphere that supposedly characterizes house living. Much of Leverett's distinctiveness is due to its successes and failures in dealing with the problems of size. The house is unquestionably one of the most active on campus. Five hundred students support activities ranging from lavish operas to unbeatable football teams. Leverett boasts the Leverett News ( Harvard's Largest House Newspaper ), WLHR ( Harvard's Largest House Radio Station''), seminars in epistemology and creative writing, clubs for photographers and filmmakers, and numerous other endeavors. With such a collection to choose from, many students find their niche in activities that might not exist in a smaller house. But Leverett's size is a mixed blessing, for lack of intimacy in the house is a serious problem. Leverett has fewer tutors per student than most houses, and a student survey this year revealed that the majority of Leverett men are dissatisfied with tutor-student relations as they now stand, The size of the house makes it increasingly difficult for Master Richard Gill and his staff to get to know each student well and to prepare detailed recommendations for graduating seniors. The situation might change because of a weekly student-tutor luncheon that has been initiated by Master Gill to help correct these problems. Nevertheless, some Leverett men still regard the house as impersonal and cold, little more than an oversized dormitory. Ultimately each member of Leverett House, must weigh the advantages and disadvantages ° size and decide whether to apply for off-campus living. An apartment can mean no Panetals, better food, and reduced costs — three considerations that are difficult to ignore. The issues concerning off-campus living are of particular interest in Leverett because they were among the major concerns of the Gill Committee, which was headed by Levereit's master. The Gill Committee used cold mathematics to determine that a considerable fee should be charged to students who move off campus. If such a fee is not charged, the Committee claimed, students who remain on campus end up paying a disproportionate share of the cost of the house office, house library, and other house facilities. The fee would thus serve to keep more students on campus. Even without this fee. Master Gill is confident that in the future, Leverett House can compete successfully with the lure of off-campus living. He points to the fact that in 1967-68 only about 25 seniors, less than Lcvorctt's quota, elected to move off campus. While Master Gill believes that all seniors should have the right to move off campus if they so desire, he regrets decisions to leave the house. In his opinion, decreased occupancy of the dorms raises the room rent for those who remain and, far more important, the people who move off campus rob the house of much-needed diversity. Those who move to apartments do not represent a cross-section of the house's population; a disproportionate number are, for example, either members of final clubs or are political radicals. In either case, the house is losing a valuable point of view when these people leave. Master Gill is fond of noting that he has seen his house grow from the smallest to the largest. As recently as 1959, Leverett consisted of Mather and McKinlock Halls; the addition of the luxurious Towers made Leverett. the behemoth it is today. Leverett was certainly a different house when it was smaller, but it is not yet clear whether it was a better house. The outcome of Levcrctt's battle with the problem of size will reveal a great deal about the future of Harvard's entire house system. — Steven Goldberg riofC .' • •; H:'- 5 e? Iron} • -- r. sri j! ’ V hhv r.«s I st LOWELL HOUSE The Senior Common Room Lowell Mouse is consistently the most over applied house at Harvard. The key to its attractiveness is the tone set by the Senior Common Room, and the tone of the Senior Common Room is set by the Master. Master Zcph Stewart knows every incoming sophomore by name. This isn't unusual for masters at Harvard, but few of them ever learn much more. Zeph does, and he does it without offending the sensitivity and intelligence of his undergraduates. Stewart's interest in them accounts for both his own popularity and for the atmosphere of the house itself. Generations of stern-faced Lowells scowl down at the students from portraits lining the dining hall. This decor and the architecture of the house present a formidable challenge to those daring to question tradition. It is surprising therefore, that the elaborate chandeliers of the dining hall cast such a congenial light on Master Stewart. Perhaps they too are a little deceived by the habitual three-piece suit and scrubbed visage of the Master; for despite his personal urbane gentility, his reign has been characterized by an enlightened radical spirit. Many undergraduates, expecting the reception-line treatment from the Master, are at first a little disconcerted in his interest in them as individuals. It comes as quite a surprise to sit down to dinner with the Master and hear a joke that would make Lenny Bruce roll over. But Stewart can talk smut with an ease which implies that smut is a gentleman's prerogative and that you are enough of a gentleman to appreciate it. It takes a year to realize that Master Stewart considers this title merely as a modifying factor. You learn that any subject you've got the guts to discuss, Stewart has the urbanity to listen to. He is sincerely interested in his students, and will tolerate any conversation in which the student shows equal sincerity. Still, when your discourse on the economic climate in Northern Manitoba passes the point of boredom, Stewart will let you know without compunction. Sometimes it's difficult to tell whether you've been put down or not, but by junior year conversation is on a first-name basis. When conversation leads to issues, Master Stewart approaches the subject with an open mind. During the Dow debate, Stewart distributed a questionnaire in Lowell House to sense student opinion before he met with the faculty. Last spring, when Lowell House started discussing parietals, Stewart again listened. Realizing this, his students spoke frankly, and by Easter, most of those interested had spoken privately with him. When his efforts to change college parietal rules were opposed by Masters Brower, Finley and Gill, Stewart issued a discretely-worded notice which liberalized Lowell House parietals without disturbing the equilibrium of the other houses. It was an effective enough pacifier to knock the momentum out of the sleep-in confrontation which had been planned for the following week. There now exists a gentleman's agreement at Lowell on parietals: if you don't make waves, no morality is forced upon you. Thus the effect of Harvard's institutional rigidity is tempered by the house's humanism. The undergraduates in the house know that this humanism is Stewart's personal philosophy; a philosophy which depends on subtle communication between students and the Master. The Lowell House Senior Common Room has been the instrument of this communication, an ability which Stewart emphasizes in its selection. In their separate ways these men reflect the interests and concerns of the Master. Like Stewart, Marsh McCall, the Assistant Senior Tutor, is in Classics and gives the impression of having made the perfect adjustment to academic life. Behind his comfortable and friendly manner, however, McCall is rumored to conceal an intensity which shows only in involved discussions with close friends. Those who don't know him well can only guess that his ferocity on the soccer field belies the tension of his inner spirit. This type of dual nature is characteristic of a number of the senior members at Lowell and is indicative of their efforts to remain in contact with the undergraduates. John Marquand, tutor in history, has a unique conception of this contact. According to House mythology, Marquand knows not only everyone ever associated with Lowell 227 The Senior Common Room: Master and Mrs. Zeph Stcsvart (right and opposite) enjoyed holding frequent teas for House members. John Marquand (below) was one of the several active members of the Senior Common Room, jack Stein, Professor of German (right), is shown on one of his visits to the House. House, but also the women they've dated. Marquand has brought to Lowell House the sociability of his Yale education. His position as tutor in history allows him regularly to spend two hours over dinner, circulating from group to group, passing on information and making frequent entries in his datebook. Marquand has the remarkable habit of treating everyone like a preppy, which embarrasses boys from St. Marks as much as it makes the High School Harries happy. Marquand has contributed greatly to the feeling of communication around the house. His willingness to converse at any time about the Master's views and opinions encourages the atmosphere of understanding which characterizes Lowell House. Robert Slicfeb the assistant to the Senior Tutor, is theoretically the assistant watch-dog, but having been relieved of much of this responsibility by the new understanding, he has been able to kick the stigma of an authority figure. Stiefcl was largely responsible for the creation of the successful Hum 10 course in the house, a course which shows as much German flavor as Stiefel himself does. Outwardly, Stiefel has a chummy manner which allows him to know most of the members of the house, but he also has an inner reserve which limits his close friends to a small group of German-oriented students. As long as they agree not to smoke, these men are invited to his suite to nibble strong cheese and listen to Mahler. Most members of the Senior Common Room, like Sticfel, have strongly individual personalities, yet arc social enough to mix well with a wide variety of individuals. As a result, Lowell House, despite its austere appearance, is not bound by tradition and formality. Conversations at High Table are often radical enough to peel the paint off of Amy Abbott Lawrence Lowell's canvass nose. Each member of the Senior Common Room has his special interests, but Master Stewart's particular nature creates an atmosphere in which they can freely exchange views with undergraduates. The result, as far as Lowell men are concerned, is eminently satisfactory. — Robert M. Isscnman 229 QUINCY HOUSE The Great Divide This year Quincy House was seemingly inactive; except for the play and the Arts Festival, there were no major activities in the house. Yet excitement of another sort developed this year. In the fall, Quincy found itself caught up in the prevailing atmosphere of political desperation. For a few months, the house, which had previously been undeniably cohesive, was threatened by division. Prompted by the issue of liberalizing parietals, a hostile split emerged between Quincy students and the Senior Common Room. The reaction of the house administration to the parietals issue was a model of failure. The Master, in trying to break the image that Quincy was an 'open house', called a meeting of the Senior Common Room. Under a cloak of misunderstanding and mistrust, a campaign by innuendo rather than reason developed. Mimeographed sheets of rules regarding women were subtly mounted around the halls in a futile act of one-way communication. The content of the message was so blatantly absurd that student respect for SCR became at best tenuous. The rules stated that no woman was allowed to be in the Common Room, in the halls, or near the Grill, even during certain parietal hours. Distrust for the tutors finally reached the point where a rumor started claiming that the members of SCR were planning a Saturday night bed check of all the rooms. Assumcdly, this was totally untrue, but it was most indicative of the tension which surrounded the house at this time. Gradually, communications within the house were restored. But to many, the house remained nothing more than a cause of irritation, as the Mascle Forum (the house newspaper's editorial section) suggested. This situation was unfortunate, since even those who wanted to leave the house to move off campus saw that it has a far greater potential. Many students in Quincy feel that the house falls short of its potential because of a lack of spirit. As a remedy they propose that the house should have more clubs, games. i 8 w W •UMfp sports, and discussion groups. To some, instigating these activities and bureaucracies represents the return to constructive use of the house. One wonders where went all that Freshman Spirit? asks one member of the House Committee. Quincy House is blessed with a self-perceived elite, a hang-over from the time that the Quincy man was the driving politician type, attracted to the sterile features of its shiny new building. The elite's call for House unity has always been one of joining, whether in sports or miniature politics. To this group the house is indebted, for it is governed well. There are plenty of beer weekends, mixers, and cowboy movies. In fact, just about everyone who wants to be organized can be, and the majority who want a lack of structure can find that too. Quincy House is at its finest when it does not strive self-consciously and clumsily to be a house. When the parietal issue died down the house could again provide an informal setting for students and tutors to get to know-each other informally. At Quincy, dining-room discussions arc usually rewarding. Those who actually want to study all of Wagner's Ring know they will have the interpretations of Fred Gajewski, no matter how few others may be interested. Informal meetings with Professor Porte usually reveal as much about the man as about his subject. Frequent visitors for lunch include Professor Raul Bott of the Math Department and President Bissell of the University of Toronto. The hospitality of the Master and his wife at a penthouse concert is a perfect example of how the house can offer enjoyable contact with the staff without forcing itself on the student. Quincy House philosophy comes from as disparate sources as Professor Albritton and Louie, the janitor. Perhaps it is true, to paraphrase a scholar, that the great majority of Quincy students go about their daily business seriously and gaily, blissfully ignoring those around them seeking a unified and contented house. It would be more accurate to report that this year Quincy was a microcosm of the nation, a house divided in conflict, whose heterogeneity alone rescued it from delighting in small virtues. — Matthew A. Coogan WINTHROP HOUSE The Arts Festival Some of us were tired. Bored by beer blasts, fed up with food fights. Apathy had become alliterative. This year some of us refused the repetition. I think it was John Newmeyer, Winthrop tutor in Social Relations, who first suggested the new language: Let's talk about people, he said, people instead of playing fields, people instead of protons. We knew this new sound was the stimulant we needed, but there were the opposing voices. The rear guard of the jock contingent blustered in stentorian monotone. Not that the threat was ever great — the hard-core jock at Winthrop was a thing of the past, and a new era of laissez-faire liberalism had swept in on the heels of Bobby Leo's passing. Even those B.V.D. braggadocios left were content when we assured them that the artsy-craftsy resurgence proposed to make nothing happen, that we would not mean but be. Greater problems were posed by the tender circle of House esthetes. Surrounded so long by the slashes of frenetic Frisbees, these frightened sensitives had retreated so far into classicism that they viewed a Kline painting as a personal frontal assault. The stability of their critical universe rested on the post-mortem security of historical perspective. Mere mention of Warhol was enough to weaken their stomachs. Is is art? one demanded, nervously. Some of us replied that we knew not what art was. Some of us cared less. We thought, along with Leo Steinberg, that the history of twentieth-century art has been the domestication of the outrageous. Some of us, against the territorial interests of the esthetes, proceeded to make ourselves at home. By far the most distressing opposition came from the interested apathetics. These are those who cat and sleep in Winthrop House but live in Adams House — the culture-seeking Winthrop expatriates. Through long experience they had had to learn that their imagined kingdom of the mind lay on the other side of Calv.ly's. Any attempt at art nearer the riverbank was foredoomed to miasmal mis- fortune. Of course I'd like to see something happen, one said earnestly, but who wants to play missionary? This opposition was silent, a non-vocal acquiescence in the image the outside world had of us as a misty bog where naked brawn sloshed through slung beer. Luckily the defenses of this languorous group had already been attacked from two fronts. Master Chalmers, through his continual vigorous espousal of liberal artistic and political thought, had gone a long way toward convincing the interested apathetics that things could indeed happen in our supposed bastion of boredom. And several vibrant members of the House tutorial staff had made Winthrop one of the university centers for educational experimentation through their institution of the first series of House courses, Nat. Sci. 1, Soc. Sci. 9, and Hum. 10. Winthrop was finally doing something scholastically, and doing it better than the rest of the Houses. Surely, some of us thought, we could do the same artistically. We needed something flashy, startling. A Quincy- or Leverett-type festival wouldn't do — the interested apathetics could only see it as another magnificent mimicry. We needed something more up-to-date, more high-key, something no one had ever thought of doing and no one had ever thought Winthrop could do. We dared and persevered until we got Anne Sexton, Richard Eberhart, Allen Ginsberg, Henri Pousseur, Jonas Mekas, and an evening of Andy Warhol films. Several shocking nights — our esthetes were especially revolted by the fact that almost everything presented was less than ten years old. The Festival, these critical morticians lamented, had not had time to achieve historical rigor mortis. A now Festival, one of the hippie tutors labeled it in return. Perhaps not now, but at least just yesterday. In conversation after her reading. Anne Sexton chided, So you came to Harvard looking for what's going on. Don't you know Harvard is what was going on forty years ago? That's what we were trying to remedy. ' • ■ • ' Oflsrd . : • I W' I ■ The Winthrop House fesliv.il of the arts, above; Anne Sexton at the festival, right; William Sloanc Coffin, Vale Chaplin indicted for his anti-draft activities, far “right. The medicine took hold. Even some of the less calloused jocks and the less crotchety esthetes were caught up in our artistic renascence. The interested apathetics were ebullient. Suddenly the Celestial City had crossed Mt. Auburn Street. The short pilgrimage to the House dining hall was all that was needed to hear discussions of Pop culture, of electronic music, of confessional poetry. A few weak voices even spoke out in favor of Warhol. They were not persecuted. A new Winthrop House, and we knew it even if the outside world refused to recognize it. The Crimson gave us as little space as possible. Adams House still viewed us as a suspicious mob of upstart madras thighs. Their dedication to the status quo only ended in filling our houses. We had finally outdone them. Some of the excitement inevitably waned after the festivities. But the discussions continued. A new House drama group planned a scries of experimental productions, including plays by e e cummings and Gertrude Stein. Plans were laid for a new House experimental film society. The House courses chugged along, stronger and more resolute than ever, pulling behind them their first mimic child, the Lowell House Hum. 10. It looked like the beer blasts and the food fights had finally lost their steam, Of course our new language hadVt totally triumphed — 11% of the House members still spoke in favor of the Vietnam holocaust. But some of us knew that the percentage was significantly lower in the sophomore class than in the junior and senior classes, and we could hope next year's crew would be even more liberated. Apathy has lost hold here. We have another Festival to look forward to, a whole spectrum of year-round artistic activities, and the example of one year successfully completed to inspire us. Next year some of us will be more. And not at all tired. — Tom Hopkins, Director, Winthrop House Festival of the Arts. THE RADCLIFFE HOUSES Carole Adams was a participant in last year's Radcliffe hunger strike for off-campus living. In this article, she presents her criticisms of the Radcliffe House System and her view as to why permission for off-campus living in the future should be freely granted. The House system at Radcliffe is predicated on two ideas: that Harvard's House system is he best possible residential plan, and that wl.it is good for the men is good for the wonen. On the basis of these assumptions, elaborate plans have been made and some already put into effect;, the new Mabel Daniels dormitory is the first step in a million dollar bolding program known as Fourth House, ant Hilles library is the basis of a Radcliffe stufv center. The lack of communication between the college administration and the body of Radcliffe students over this issue cannot be doubod. One need only look at last spring's hungtr strike, or simply at the fact that every yeo the great majority of upperclassmen apply © move off-campus into small Radcliffe-owncd Souses or off-off into their own apartments, last spring, out of approximately three hunoed girls, over 125 applied to live in non-collc y housing; and presently only about one-thirl of Radcliffe's senior class lives on campus. YeVthe administration persists in its belief that Vmore perfect House system will end the fenigration from the dormitory. The vision of the Perfect House System varies among its supporters, but basicity it follows the pattern set by the Harvard Hcntcs, which serve both educational and so«ij| functions. With the remodeling of existitv dormitories and the completion of Fourth House, facilities are planned at Radcliffe for resident tutors and House courses; programs of guest lecturers and luncheon and dinner guests have already been established. House social functions have long been on the scene, including dinners. House art, drama, and musical groups, formal dances, and the perennially popular jolly-ups. Facilities such as art studios are, or soon will be, available for furthering various individual interests. Yet, somehow the Radcliffe House System does not work. For the first year or two, students are enthusiastic about it; by junior year many Cliffies move off-campus and become aloof from what is happening; by senior year, the majority ignores the whole thing. This is to be expected at a college which prizes individualism and which views education as a means for individual self-realization. In such an atmosphere, an inclusive House system which broadens freshman and sophomore Cliffies fetters many upperclassmen and hampers the personal development that the college ostensibly seeks. Individuality is not assured because dormitory rooms are different shapes, and a system designed for men is not ideal for women. Freshmen enter Radcliffe from a wide variety of backgrounds and with extremely different expectations. During their first year, dorm life serves a purpose. Each Cliffic encounters peaches, limes, and chocolates, and can talk to the few remaining upperclassmen in her dorm. The House system provides a structure within which she can get her bearings in the Harvard community, meet new people, and develop new interests. But even this first year in the House, centered as it is around dormitory life, is restrictive to some Cliffies. Study rooms cannot make up for the fact that it is impossible ‘or most Cliffies to study in their own rooms, o to go to sleep before midnight without car pluV Parietals do not change the fact that cranked rooms make it extremely difficult to entert n. And interesting luncheon guests do not maic it any more appealing for Cliffies to 239 W- - trudge back to the Quad between a twelve o'clock and a two o'clock class when they can eat at Lehman Hall or Tommy's. In freshman year, these vague feelings of dissatisfaction are balanced by the novelty of college. By sophomore year, however, the rosy glow begins to fade, and many Cliffies ask themselves and friends if they should apply to move off-campus. Overwhelmingly, the answer is yes, even though that means another year without a single room, not to mention losing money for meals or marching to the Quad to eat dormitory food three times daily. By senior year, the dormitories, the Houses, and Radcliffe itself have become largely irrelevant to the affairs of a majority of Cliffies. Having established themselves with a group of friends and a set of interests, each moves within her own orbit, which is usually fixed about an off-campus house or an apartment, either her own or her boyfriend's. If her House figures in her thinking at all, it is usually because of some specific feature — a lecturer she came to hear, or perhaps a dark-room she frequently uses. The Radcliffe Houses have failed because the dormitories have failed; the House system as it stands cannot succeed because it is inevitably tied to presently existing or planned-for dormitories. Radcliffe's housing facilities are wrongly structured and wrongly located. The most that the new study center can hope to do is to draw Cliffies to the Quad in the evening, but judging from the number of girls who study all night in Lamont, it does not always succeed even at that. Despite having attractive dorms like Mabel Daniels, and despite trying to provide more girls with single rooms, the Houses fail because most women do not have a locker room mentality and cannot stand seeing thirty other women daily. What amounts to a bull session at Harvard is a gossipy hen party at Radcliffe. |4 jv Even more than men, who of course traditionally ignore domesticity, a Cliffie needs a place to entertain. Yet the idea of cooking a fancy meal for a boyfriend, let alone a dinner party, in one of Cabot's kitchenettes is at best laughable. In fact, in the dorms, any kind of entertaining is impossible. Private rooms with kitchens are planned as a part of dormitory renovation, and that is a start, but any possibility of spontaneity and informality is denied when one must sign up in advance for a little room in which to entertain friends. No wonder girls flock off-campus, where a real kitchen and a comfortable living room awaits, or off-off, where a girl has a place that is hers, where she can invite someone in for coffee or plan a party any time she wants. The Houses also fail because by a Cliffie's junior year they have little to offer her. A Cedar Hill conference held two years ago to discuss Cliffies and the House system was attended by fewer than twenty girls. By the time they are upperclassmen, Cliffies know a good deal about what the community has to offer. If they want to hear a certain lecturer, there are usually opportunities other than at House appearances. More important, a Cliffie's social life is not centered around her living quarters in the Quad. At least by junior year, a Cliffie has a group of friends and interests, usually centered about the Square. Harvard students arc Harvard-based, but Cliffies are not Radcliffe-based, or even Cliffie-oriented; they too are Harvard-based. Radcliffe is not Wellesley. All this does not deny that a House system should exist. But that a House system should be envisioned as the center of the Cliffie's universe, especially after freshman and sophomore years, is certainly open to question. House officials periodically insist that the system is meant to coerce no one; as East House Master Anthony Oettingcr has frequently stated, the Houses are to be a framework within which each Cliffie can do as she desires. This is the value of the plan: to provide a structure within which the individual has opportunities to pursue her own interests and to develop her own talents, to permit her to accomplish something that she could not do otherwise. But this does not necessitate huge dining halls with institutional food where Cliffies arc required to eat, nor does it justify corridored dormitories replete with resident tutors. Dudley House exists with no unified residential structure, only with Lehman Hall. If Radcliffe must build college housing, why can it not be on 'he order of Wolbach Hall or Peabody Terrace, apartments of various sues with complete facilities and privacy. If there must be group dining to provide an intellectual backdrop for the lady scholar, why not have a cafeteria where individual meals are bought or a certain number of meals per week charged as board. If we are to be presented with a House system, why not pattern it on Dudley rather than Lowell, providing only a framework of possibilities and recognizing that the student's interests are centered elsewhere. Cliffies are individuals; their residential system should provide optimum flexibility and not attempt to push them into molds, even if two or three molds are offered. Cliffies are past the boarding school stage; in loco parcnlis is pretty much dead at Radcliffe. Why then herd Cliffies into a House system designed for men and adopted at Harvard from a plan established in another country over a hundred years ago. Radcliffe frequently takes the stance of Protectoress of the Rights of Women in Education; why can it not recognize that modern women need a living system designed for them. — Carole E. Adams 241 EAST HOUSE Whatever may have been said in the past. East House defies the three flavors classification. No East House girl would submit herself to such rubber-stamping, if she could possibly help it. She's a law unto herself, which explains why she came to Radcliffc in the first place. One day she'll awake feeling limey — she'll scurry into the pair of blue jeans standing in the corner, part her hair down the middle, and go for a long soulful walk by herself. Another day the same girl will be a typical peach,’ applying blush-on before starting out for a day's flirt in Widener Reading Room.2 Of course, whatever the cover of her wrapper, the East House type always has a thin chocolate coating as well. She worries about her work, if only the day before it's due, and surprisingly enough she always pulls through with eminently acceptable grades.4 But the East House girl is no more the Stereotype of the individual than she is the embodiment of one of three, much less twenty-eight,1 flavors. That's why she's so hard to describe The East House liver7 doesn't refuse to conform to codes of dorm behavior the way some House specimens do, but on the other hand neither could she be accused of purposely fitting in. It has been said that East House is cliquish, but this just isn't true. As one resident put it, Since we're all so much ourselves, we have a great deal to contribute to everyone else. Eccentricities are accepted, even welcomed, although never for their own sakes. By and large. East House girls bely the nationally disseminated, media-spawned rumor” that Cliffies are unattractive. They may be of the long skinny-haired variety, or they maybe nice-looking in a robust, even buxum” way, but whatever their shape, they have an attractive way about them which11 eventually ensnares the Harvics. As in other things, they date in a calm, self-assured manner, confident of their intrinsic worth, if not of their inherent superiority.” The East House girl is not in awe of Harvard; she's not that silly girl in section who stutters when she has to answer a question under the unrelenting stare of all those male eyes. Nor is she that obnoxious girl with the bifocals who has done not only all the reading, but additional research on her own.’4 No, in section the East House girl occasionally makes intelligent, relevant, slightly sardonic remarks and certainly doesn't care to flirt. We don't need to bother, said one. This doesn't mean that the East House type goes out every night,’’- but rather that if she stays at home, she finds other compensations than biting her nails. It is with this sophisticated attitude that East House girls join organizations. They do not join to prove anything to anybody; in the Yearbook they wouldn't even consider listing everything they've ever done. If the East House girl is a drama type —as she frequently is’ —she takes the whole mystique with a grain of salt. Some of my best friends arc Loebies, 17 said one girl nonchalantly. The East House resident with a literary bent isn't prone to poetic, suicidal excesses, but rather to the opposite.” If she plays a musical instrument, she does so only to satisfy the needs of her own soul, and only midnight haunters of the practice rooms know how bad she really is. Whatever she does, she does cooly, for the essence of the East House girl is cool. ” Nevertheless, the East House girl has her drawbacks — she isn't all sweetness and light, as they say.” For one thing, the East House girl doesn't have the most considerate nature, usually because she has been spoiled at some point in the past. She values her independence and is downright nasty to anyone, male or female, who threatens it. She tolerates her roommate, but doesn't make her bed for her, let alone scratch her back when it itches. As one girl put it, my roommate doesn't wash, so we go our separate ways. 1 The East House girl, in fact, is classified as a bitch much more often than other Cliffies,7-' despite her ability to be charitable, even Christian, when the mood strikes her. I helped an old man across the street last week, commented one, a clean old man, of course. Moodiness is another fault of the East House girl — she just isn't given to self-control. She's too natural even to be tactful. Maybe it is just this quality that endears the East House girl to people; she's a real woman of feline inconsistency; not just a pallid yes-woman. No wonder surveys show that Harvard men date more girls from East House than from North or South House. Harvard men were always paragons of discrimination. 245 NORTH HOUSE Contrary to the views of a consistently unsympathetic press. North House is not and never was a chocolate palace. The North House girl, sterling character that she is, refuses to submit to such narrow and unpleasant stereotyping. She's a law unto herself, which explains why she came to Radcliffc in the first place. One day she'll awake feeling limey — she'll scurry into the pair of blue jeans standing in the corner, part her hair down the middle, and go for a long soulful walk by herself. Another day the same girl will be a typical peach.1 applying blush-on before starting out for a day's flirt in Widener Reading Room.1 Of course, whatever the cover of her wrapper, the North House type always has a thin chocolate coating as well. She worries about her work, if only the day before it's due, and surprisingly enough she always pulls through with eminently acceptable grades. Hut the North House girl is no more the stereotype of the individual than she is the embodiment of one of three, much less twenty-eight,1 flavors. That's why she's so hard to describe.6 The North House liver1 doesn’t refuse to conform to codes of dorm behavior the way some House specimens do, but on the other hand neither could she be accused of purposely fitting in. It has been said that North House is cliquish, but this just isn't true. As one resident put it, Since we're all so much ourselves, we have a great deal to contribute to everyone else. Eccentricities arc accepted, even welcomed, although never for their own sakes.’ By and large. North House girls bcly the nationally disseminated, media-spawned rumor10 that Cliffies are unattractive. They may be of the long skinny-haired variety, or they may be nice-looking in a robust, even buxum11 way, but whatever their shape, they have an attractive way about them which13 eventually ensnares the Harvies. As in other things, they date in a calm, self-assured manner, confident of their intrinsic worth, if not of their inherent superiority.11 The North House girl is not in awe of Harvard; she's not that silly girl in section who stutters when she has to answer a question under the unrelenting stare of all those male eyes. Nor is she that obnoxious girl with the bifocals who has done not only all the reading, but additional research on her own. No, in section the North House girl occasionally makes intelligent, relevant. slightly sardonic remarks and certainly doesn't care to flirt. We don't need to bother, said one. This doesn’t mean that the North House type goes out every night,11 but rather that if she stays at home, she finds other compensations than biting her nails. It is with this sophisticated attitude that North House girls join organizations. They do not join to prove anything to anybody; in the Yearbook they wouldn't even consider listing everything they've ever done. If the North House girl is a drama type —as she frequently is16 —she takes the whole mystique with a grain of salt. Some of my best friends arc Loebies, 1' said one girl nonchal-lantly. The North House resident with a literary bent isn't prone to poetic, suicidal excesses, but rather to the opposite.1' If she plays a musical instrument, she docs so only to satisfy the needs of her own soul, and only midnight haunters of the practice rooms know how bad she really is. Whatever she does, she does cooly, for the essence of the North House girl is cool. 1 Nevertheless, the North House girl has her drawbacks — she isn't all sweetness and light, as they say.30 For one thing, the North House girl doesn't have the most considerate nature, usually because she has been spoiled at some point in the past. She values her independence and is downright nasty to anyone, male or female, who threatens it. She tolerates her roommate, but doesn't make her bed for her, let alone scratch her back when it itches. As one girl put it, my roommate doesn't wash, so we go our separate ways. 31 The North House girl, in fact, is classified as a bitch much more often than other Cliffies,33 despite her ability to be charitable, even Christian, when the mood strikes her. I helped an old man across the street last week, commented one, a clean old man, of course. Moodiness is another fault of the North House girl — she just isn't given to self-control. She's too natural even to be tactful. Maybe it is just this quality that endears the North House girl to people; she's a real woman of feline inconsistency, not just a pallid yes-woman. No wonder surveys show that Harvard men date more girls from North House than from South or East House. Harvard men were always paragons of discrimination.31 HBeM SOUTH HOUSE Since there simply aren't enough preppies at Radcliffc to fill South House, we are forced at last to bid good-bye to that old saw. The South House girl has long been in revolt against the image imposed on her by such traditions as the Master's Ball. She protests that she's a law unto herself, which explains why she came to Radcliffe in the first place. One day she'll awake feeling limey — she'll scurry into the pair of blue jeans standing in the corner, part her hair down the middle, and go for a long soulful walk by herself. Another day the same girl will be a typical peach,1 applying blush-on before starting out for a day's flirt in Widener Reading Room.2 Of course, whatever the cover of her wrapper, the South House type always has a thin chocolate coating as well.1 She worries about her work, if only the day before it's due, and surprisingly enough she always pulls through with eminently acceptable grades.4 But the South House girl is no more the stereotype of the individual than she is the embodiment of one of three, much less twenty-eight,1 flavors. That’s why she's so hard to describe. The South House liver1 doesn't refuse to conform to codes of dorm behavior the way some House specimens do, but on the other hand neither could she be accused of purposely fitting in. It has been said that South House is cliquish, but this just isn't true. As one resident put it, Since we're all so much ourselves, we have a great deal to contribute to everyone else. ’ Eccentricities arc accepted, even welcomed, although never for their own sakes. By and large. South House girls bely the nationally disseminated, media-spawned rumor10 that Cliffies are unattractive. They may be of the long skinny-haired variety, or they may be nice-looking in a robust, even buxum11 way, but whatever their shape, they have an attractive way about them which” eventually ensnares the Harvies. As in other things, they date in a calm, self-assured manner, confident of their intrinsic worth, if not of their inherent superiority.13 The South House girl is not in awe of Harvard; she's not that silly girl in section who stutters when she has to answer a question under the unrelenting stare of all those male eyes. Nor is she that obnoxious girl with the bifocals who has done not only all the reading, but additional research on her own.14 No, in section the South House girl occasionally makes intelligent, relevant, slightly sardonic remarks and certainly doesn't care to flirt. We don't need to bother, said one. This doesn't mean that the South House type goes out every night,11 but rather that if she stays at home, she finds other compensations than biting her nails. It is with this sophisticated attitude that South House girls join organizations. They do not join to prove anything to anybody; in the Yearbook they wouldn't even consider listing everything they've ever done. If the South House girl is a drama type — as she frequently is10 —she takes the whole mystique with a grain of salt. Some of my best friends are Loebies, 11 said one girl nonchalantly. The South House resident with a literary bent isn't prone to poetic, suicidal excesses, but rather to the opposite.1 If she plays a musical instrument, she does so only to satisfy the needs of her own soul, and only midnight haunters of the practice rooms know how bad she really is. Whatever she does, she does cooly, for the essence of the South House girl is cool. 10 Nevertheless, the South House girl has her drawbacks — she isn't all sweetness and light, as they say.!0 For one thing, the South House girl doesn't have the most considerate nature, usually because she has been spoiled at some point in the past. She values her independence and is downright nasty to anyone, male or female, who threatens it. She tolerates her roommate, but doesn't make her bed for her, let alone scratch her back when it itches. As one girl put it, my roommate doesn't wash, so we go our separate ways. 11 The South House girl, in fact, is classified as a bitch more often than other Cliffies,3- despite her ability to be charitable, even Christian, when the mood strikes her. I helped an old man across the street last week, commented one, a clean old man, of course. Moodiness is another fault of the South House girl — she just isn't given to self-control. She's too natural even to be tactful. Maybe it is. just this quality that endears the South House girl to people; she's a real woman of feline inconsistency, not just a pallid yes-woman. No wonder surveys show that Harvard men date more girls from South House than from North or East House. Harvard men were always paragons of discrimination.33 249 1 Free adaptation of the old rural expression Be a peach ' She's a peach, etc. 2 Reputed to be a hang-out of the in-crowd; if so, the writer would like to know who constitutes the out-crowd. 3 Bad pun, cf. Shakespeare. 4 Eminently acceptable — good, solid journalese, means nothing. 5 Obscure reference. 6 Plea to the reader's sympathy. 7 See footnote 5. 8 Truth is stranger than fiction, or people will believe anything, as long as it's in quotation marks. 9 Contradictory statement designed to please. 10 Off-color double entendre: everybody should have at least one. 11 See footnote 10 — I've got two! t 12 To wit, a nice smile, applicable to anyone whose teeth haven't rotted. 13 Intrinsic, Inherent — typical Yearbook, term paper words designed to impress and befuddle. 14 Applies to no one, thank Cod. 15 Same as 14. 16 Safe generalization (how unusual); the theater bug has bitten almost everyone in this writer's experience. 17 Shocking. 18 Whatever that means. Equivocal statement designed to confuse the reader into agreement. 19 Everyone, without exception, way down deep, thinks in some sense or another th.rt she is cool. 20 Who is? And more to the point, who wants to be? 21 Every red-blooded young female suspects her roommate of not washing, and rightly . . . 22 Surprised? 23 Huh? — Eve Endicotl ■v - '•. 1 •Wf ’‘a. l N ADAMS HOUSE DAVID BARRY ACKERMAN Born on November 28. 194$ at Middle-town. Connecticut. Prepared at Mount Hermon School. Mount Hermon, Massachusetts. Home AddKSs: 46 Linbert Si reel. Middletown. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. YardUng. Adams House: Squash. Tennis: Music Society. GEOFFREY HARRIS ARNOLD Bom on February 25.1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at Livingston High School. Livingston. New Jersey. Home Address: Butternut Lane. Westport. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Economics. National Merit Scholarship. WINSTON DREW ALT Bom on February 5. 1946 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at Evanston Township High School. Evanston. Illinois. Home Address: 1144 Michigan. Evanston. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Fine Arts. Harvard An Review: Senior Associate. Adams House: Boxing. NEIL WARNER AVERITT Born on April 28. 1946 at Washington. D.C. Prepares! at Wheat Ridge. Denver. Colorado. Home Address: 2120 Myrtle-wood Lane. Denver. Colorado. Field of Concentration: Government. Classical Club; Outing Club: Rifle Club: Yerein Tunnwachter von ISS6: Wireless Club. JV Fencing; Varsity Rifle. National Honor Society Honorary Scholarship. JAMES HENRY HURT Horn on May 17. 1947 at Providence. Rhode Island. Prepared ai Providence Country Day School. East Providence. Rhode Island. Home Address: 240 Cole Avenue. Providence. Rhode Island. Field of Concentration: English. Gilbert and Sullivan Players. Patience (Director) and Yeoman of the Guard: Harvard Dramatic Club: Committee on Intra-Itouse Drama (Treasurer). Adams House: President; The Virtuoso: Wild Duck (Director); Trial fly Jury (Director): Music Society. Harvard Freshman Honorary Scholarship. PAUL LOUIS CACCAMISE Horn on January 31, 1947 at Rochester. New York. Prepared at McQuaid High School. Rochester, New York. Home Address: 117 Seventh Street. Rochester. New York. Field of Concentration: English. Phillips Brooks House Association. Harvard College Scholarship. DAVID LEIGHTON CALFEE Born on July 16, 1946 at Cleveland, Ohio. Prepared at Hotchkiss School, Lakeville. Connecticut. Home Address: 4892 Clubsidc Drive. Cleveland, Ohio. Field of Concentration: English. Member of Army ROTC. Caisson Club: Freshman Glee Club; Harvard Glee Club: Hasty Pudding. Fox Club. MANUEL FELIPE CAMACHO Born on April 6, 1945 at New York. New York. Prepared at Kent School. Kent. Connecticut. Home Address: Apatado 4313, San Jose. Costa Rica. Field of Concentration: Biology. Catholic Student Center: Club Hispanico: Harvard Student Agencies: Latin American Association: Pre-Medical Society; Young Democrats. Adams House: Soccer. Squash. VINCENT JOSEPH CANZONERI Bom on October 8.1946 at Washington, D.C. Prepared at Newton High School, Newton. Kansas. Home Address: 612 Hart Drive. Newton, Kansas. Field of Concentration: History. Gilbert and Sullivan Players. Music Director and Chorus Master; Harvard Dramatic Gub. Adams House: Drama Society. Harvard National Scholarship. CORT BOON CASADY Horn on Apcil 22. 1947 at McAllen, Texas. Prepared at Grossmont High School. Grossmont. California. Home Address: 9974 Shadow Road. Grossmont. California. Field of Concentration: Government. Harvard Student Agencies: Hasty Pudding: Young Democrats. Varsity Crew; Freshman Crew. Adams House: Crew; Institute of Politics (Seminar on State and Local Politics). ALFRED STEFAN BEEBE Bom on August 12. 1944 at Baltimore. Maryland. Prepared at Saint Albans School. Washington. D.C. Home Address: 3505 Porter Street. Washington. D.C. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. STANLEY EASTON BLACK Bom on February 6. 1946 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Exeter. Exeter, New Hampshire. Home Address: Page Road, Lincoln, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Architectural Sciences. Hasty Pudding; Karate Club; Outing Gub; Yacht Club. Adams House: Soccer. FRANKLIN GEORGE BOWLES Horn on December 20, 1944 at l ctroit, Michigan. Prepared at Grosse Pointc High School. Grosse Pointc, Michigan. Home Address: 24 South Edgcwood, Grosse Pointc, Michigan. Field of Concentration: American History. Young Democrats. Varsity Crew. Adams House: Basketball. JONATHAN HARRY BROOKS Born on December 26. 1946 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at Walt Whitman High School. Bcthesda. Maryland. Home Address: 5025 Waldo Avenue. Riverside, New York. Field of Concentration: Matliematics. Adams House: Class Marshall. ROBERT DENIO BAKER. Jr. Bom on January 20. 1945 at Houston, Texas. Prepared at Kent School, Kent. Connecticut. Home Address: 14 Rue Victor Durct Vaucrcsson. France. Field of Concentration: English. JV Crew; Freshman Crew. RICHARD WHITE BURRILL Horn on January 8, 1947 at Great Lakes, Illinois. Prepared at Paducah Tilghman High School. Paducah. Kentucky. Home Address: Oaks Road. R.R. 3, Paducah. Kentucky. Field of Concentration: Economics. Cercle Francois: International Relations Council; Debate Council; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. Adams House: Volleyball. Basketball. Detur Prize: Harvard College Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship; Edmund Whittaker Award. ROBERT OSGOOD CHESSMAN Bom on January 28, 1946 at Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Andover Academy. Andover. Massachusetts. Home Address: 210 Briarvvood Road. Granville. Ohio. Field of Concentration: English. Varsity Lacrosse: Freshman Lacrosse; Freshman Soccer. Adams House: Squash. LAURENCE JAMES CONNORS Bom on May 31. 1946 at Denver, Colorado. Prepared at South High School, Denver, Colorado. Home Address: 790 South Vine Street. Denver. Colorado. Field of Concentration: English. Harrard Crimson: WHRB. Adams House: The Wild Duck LAWRENCE DAVID COPELAND. II Bom on January 1, 1945 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Hingham High School. Hingham, Massachusetts. Home Address: 14 Eastgatc Lane. Hingham. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Engineering and Applied Physics. Skin Diving Club; Wireless Club. ROBERT S. COREN Bom on May 15. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Ficldston School. New York. New York. Home Address: 750 Kappock Street, New York. New York. Field of Concentration: Music. Freshman Glee Club; Gilbert and Sullivan Players; Harvard Glee Club; Musk Club. Adams House: Trial By Jury and Christmas Shore; Musk Society. Harvard College Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship; Phi Beta Kappa. DENNIS NORMAN CROUSE Bom on June 24. 1946 at Marion. Iowa. Prepared at Marion High School. Marion, Iowa. Home Address: 955 7th Street. Marion, Iowa. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences Freshman Crew. FRANK ROBERT CURTIS Bom on September 27, 1946 at Valley Stream. New York. Prepared at Valley Stream North High School, Franklin Square. New York. Home Address: 100 Park Drive. Valley Stream. New York. Field of Concentration: Government. Harvard Dramatic Club. Detur Prize; John Harvard Scholarship. ANDREW HAVEN EDDY. Jr. Bom on August 6, 1946 at Kinston. North Carolina. Prepared at Providence Classical, Providence, Rhode Island. Home Address: 77 Nliantonomo Drive. Warwick, Rhode Island. Field of Concentration: Economks. AIESEC. Vice President; Harvard Yearbook Publications; Karate Club. Instructor. Adams House: House Committee: Social Chairman. THEODORE LEE EINSTEIN Bom on January 20. 1947 at Cleveland. Ohio. Prepared at Shaker Heights High School. Shaker Heights. Ohio. Home Address: 12024 Shaker Boulevard. Cleveland. Ohio. Fkld of Concentration: Physics. Hillcl Society; Phillips Brooks House Association, Tutor: Physics Club. Harvard College Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. MICHAEL WALTER ELl.MANN Bom on July 9. 1946 at Detroit. Michigan. Prepared at Cass Technical High School. Detroit. Michigan. Home Address: 70 McLean. Highland Park. Mkhigan. Field of Concentration: English. Gilbert and Sullivan Players: Phillips Brooks House Association. Adams House: All's Well That Ends Well; Trial By Jury; Dido; Musk Society. Harvard College Honorary (Freshman). STEPHEN WILLEMS DE YOUNG Bom on December 9, 1946 at Rochester, New York. Prepared at Eastrtdgc High School. Rochester, New York. Home Address: 151 Walzford Road. Rochester. New York. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Dramatic Club. Detur '■Prize. JOSEPH McELHINNEY DUANE Bom on February 22, 1947 at Iowa City. Iowa. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. Exeter, New Hampshire. Home Address: Bcdminster, Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: Far Eastern Studies. Americans for Reappraisal of Far Eastern Polky; Signet Society. Freshman Lacrosse. Adams House: Soccer. GEORGE FABYAN DAVIS Bom on November 7. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Brooks School. North Andover. Massachusetts. Home Address: 840 Park Avenue. New York, New York. Field of Concentration: History and Science. Chess Club; Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association. Freshman Squash. Adams House: Soccer, Squash. Iroquois Club. A S: WILLIAM SMITH FURRY Bom on July 5. 1945 at Glendale. Cali-fornia. Prepared at Palisades High School. Pacific Palisades. California. Home Address: 556 Ocampo Drive. Pacific Palisades. California. Field of Concentration: History. Hasty Pudding: Latin American Association; Ski Club; Young Republicans. Adams House: Football. Baseball. THOMAS F. C.AGEN Bom on July 29, 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Sebastian's. Newton. Massachusetts. Home Address: 46 Oak Road. Milton. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: American History. Catholic Student Center: Hasty Pudding; WHRB; Young Republicans. STEVEN LEE FIELDS Bom on August 29. 1946 at Seattle. Washington. Prepared at Shoreline High School. Seattle, Washington. Home Address: 2127 North 185th, Seattle. Washington. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard College Scholarship. JON TERRY ENDER Bom on January II, 1942 at Lincoln, Illinois. Prepared at Harvard. Harvard. Illinois. Home Address: Valwood. Har-sard. Illinois. Field of Concentration: English. Served in the United States Army. Harvard Art Review; Hasty Pudding: Ski Club; Vereln Turmwachter ton 1886: Young Republicans. Freshman Football: Freshman Tennis. ' r' it I ■ Ht Wtr. fc wtrrcc h oafcria;. ft ); : WOW. Ala DOY.Jr. WtiKesx riaiftaita me 1ini Msoowfrx, LFaidCa-AIESEC, Va irtcciPiiio trader. ;So«ICto- STEIN JitOne rr Ba o;S i-vc, s dt v L XU - ft? • sl JOSE RAMON GARCIA-PEDROSA Bom on May 2. 1946 at Havana. Cuba. Prepared at Coral Gables High School. Coral Gables. Florida. Home Address: 2920 North Fulton Drive, Apartment Gl, Atlanta. Georgia. Field of Concentration: Economics. Debate Council; Young Democrats. Executive Committee. Adams House: Basketball. Harvard College Scholarship. PAUL TIMOTHY GIBSON Bom on April 29. 1946 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Rindgc Technical School. Cambridge. Massachusetts. Home Address: 18 Clarendon Avenue. Cambridge. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Biology. Association of African and Afro-American Students; Christian Fellowship: Harvard Undergraduate Council; Phillips Brooks House Association: Teacher Aide Program. Freshman Cross Country: Freshman Spring Track; Freshman Winter Track. Adams House: Football. Crew; House Committee. Chairman. DANIEL SIMON GILBARG Bom on November 20. 1946 at Bloomington. Indiana. Prepared at Cubberlcy High School. Palo Alto. California. Home Address: 209 Creeksidc Drive, Palo Alto, California. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Students for a Democratic Society. Adams House: Basketball. Baseball. Harvard College Scholarship. DONALD HOWES GLEASON Born on April 23. 1946 at Cambridge. Massachusetts. Prepared at The Pingry School. Elizabeth, New Jersey. Home Address: 200 Prospect Street. Belmont. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Biology. Freshman Glee Club; Gilbert and Sullivan Players; Harvard Student Agencies: Hasty Pudding; Krokodilocs, Director. Varsity Soccer. Adams House: Baseball, Softball. Soccer; Flnktn’s Rainbow (Quincy). PETER MERLIN FORBES Bom on November 5. 1944 at Waltham. Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton, Milton. Massachusetts. Home Address: 304 Adams Street, Milton, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Dramatic Club; Phillips Brooks House Association. Varsity Wrestling; Freshman Wrestling. Adams House: Wrestling. NATHANIEL WILLIAM FOR BUSH Bom on February II. 1946 at Brockton. Massachusetts. Prepared at Deerfield Academy, Deerfield, Massachusetts. Home Address: 161 Howard Street. West Bridgewater. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. Gilbert and Sullivan Players; Pi Eta Club. Adams House: Soccer, Baseball. FREDERICK JOEL FOX Born on October 28, 1946 at Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Lakewood High School. Lakewood. New Jersey. Home Address: 1221 Old Country Line Road. Lakewood, New Jersey. Field of Con-centration: Psychology. Bach Society; Harvard Band; Experiment in International Living; Psychology Society; Wind Ensemble. Adams House: House Committee. Treasurer; Don Giovanni (Leveren). Music Society President; Library Committee. Harvard College Scholarship. ROBERT FREEDMAN Bom on June 8. 1946 at St. Louis. Missouri. Prepared at Clayton High School. Clayton. Missouri. Home Address: 8025 Rosilinc Drive. Clayton. Missouri. Field of Concentration: History. Phillips Brooks House Association; Senior Associate. Varsity Crew. Adams House: Crew. Dctur Prize; Harvard College Scholarship; John Harvard Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. ADAMS ROBERT BRUCE HARLOW Born on June 24, 1946 at Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Prepared at Evanston Township High School, Evanston, Illinois. Home Address: 2506 Jackson Avenue. Evanston, Illinois. Field of Concentration: Architectural Sconces WHRB; Yacht Club. The Skin of Our Teeth (Lowell); Toad of Toad I lull (Lowell). Harvard College Scholarship. WINSTON GILBERT HARRISON Born on December 10. 1945 at New York. New York. Prepared at Fteldston School. New York. New York. Home Address: 940 St. Nicholas Avenue, New York. New York. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Ayn Rand Society. Secretary-Treasurer; Freshman Glee Club: Harvard Glee Club. Detur Prize: Harvard National Scholarship, S. and H. National Scholarship. DAVID EUGENE HELTON Bom on January 11. 1946 at Ada. Oklahoma. Prepared at Ada High School. Ada, Oklahoma. Home Address: Ada. Oklahoma. Field of Concentration: Government. Young Republicans. Adams House: Football. JOHN DAVID HIMMELFARB Bom on June 3. 1946 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at Wheaton Community High School. Wheaton, Illinois. Home Address: Box 474. Wheaton. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Architectural Sciences. Harvard Student Agencies; Pierian Sodality. MATTHEW HALLOCK HOBBS Bom on October 20. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Pomfret School. Pomfret. Connecticut. Home Address: Gilliam Lane, Riverside. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Architectural Sciences. Freshman Glee Club. Harvard Glee Club. Asian Tour Group: Yacht Club. Varsity Squash: Freshman Squash: Varsity Tennis: Freshman Tennis. PETER SCOTT 1VERS Bom on September 20.1946 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at Roxbury Latin School, West Roxbury. Massachusetts Home Address: 193 Gardner Road. Brookline, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Classics. Freshman Council: Gilbert and Sullivan Players. Board of Directors: Harvard Dramatic Club. Executive Board; Hasty Pudding. Theatricals; Ivy Films Research. Freshman Wrestling. Adams House: Drama Society; Soccer. V. kr. Hr ox B.v S.V Coo Arc. Dnr per 4c: JESS! Boo Sc DAVID HAROLD GOODE Bom on June 17. 1946 at Urbana. Illinois. Prepared at Lee M. Thursten High School. Detroit. Michigan. Home Address: 8S46 Robindale, Detroit, Michigan. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Radcliffc Orchestra. Harvard College Scholarship. CHARLES JOSEPH GOULD Bom on August 3.1946 at St. Johnsbury. Vermont. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter, New Hampshire. Home Address: 59 BriarclilT Road, Brockton. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Biology. Freshman Lacrosse; Varsity Soccer. Captain; Freshman Soccer. Adams House: Volleyball. Basketball. Softball. Baseball. TIMOTHY DAVID GOULD Bom on June 29, 1948 at New York. New York. Prepared at Leonia High School. Leonia. New Jersey. Home Address: 203 Van Orden Avenue. Leonia. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Philosophy. Students for a Democratic Society. Adams House: Tennis. Soft-ball. Harvard College Scholarship. PAUL GROBSTEIN Bom on March 21, 1946 at Long Beach. California. Prepared at Palo Alto High School. Palo Alto. California. Home Address: 718 Alvarado. Stanford, California. Field of Concentration: Biology. Adams House: Basketball: Library Committee. Honorary Freshman Scholarship. JONATHAN HALE Bom on May 24, 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Stuyvesant High School. New York, New York. Home Address: 45 East 9th Street, New York, New York. Field of Concentration: Architectural Sciences. Film Studies; Harvard Drama Review; Ivy Films Research; Students for a Democratic Society. KEN MeGARVEY HANNUM Bom on March 14. 1946 at Altoona. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Eastlakc North High School. Eastlakc. Ohio. Home Address: 439 East 326th Street, Willowick. Ohio. Field of Concentration: Economics. New l.uxo-Brazilian Studies Group. Varsity Crew; Freshman Crew. Adams House: Crew. Football; Adams House Reformed Druids. Harvard College Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship; Harvard College Freshman Scholarship. 'h Wi o. Fdl rf nl S. c« Sind Or Txd Hi S:tamS, RICHARD BRYAN KALIN Bom on August 24, 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts. Home Address: JO East Avenue, Norwalk, Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Applied Mathematics. Committee to End the War in Vietnam; Ivy Films Research; Film Studies; Yacht Club. Freshman Crew. Adams House: Father San and Holy Ghost; Crew, Swimming. ARBI50N IWkV. dKEe cc Vort Boat Aietst-Sn d (octants. Ass W rer. FraSiai eCtete 1 U'tdrit Unbp. STEPHEN HANAN KAPLAN Bom on January 7, 1946 at Washington, D.C. Prepared at Calvin Coolidge High School, Washington. D.C. Home Address: 1220 Blair Spring Road. Silver Spring. Maryland. Field of Concentration: English. Gilbert and Sullivan Players. Vice-President; Harvard Dramatic Club. Secretary-Treasurer; Hasty Pudding; Lampoon; Signet Society; RaddilFe Grant-In-Aid. STEPHEN DAEDALUSLERNER Born on February 9. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Phillips Acad-emy. Andover. Massachusetts. Home Address: 445 East 84th Street. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: Govemnxnt. Harvard Crimson, Executive Editor; Students for a Democratic Society. Spec Club. DAVID MARK LESNICK Bom on May 22. 1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at Rivcrdale Country School. Rivcrdale. New York. Home Address: 4515 Waldo Avenue. Rivcrdale. New York. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Gilbert and Sullivan Players; Hillcl Society; Outing Gub; Phillips Brooks House Association; Yacht Club. ITON ■5r.A3.Ct iHghtei Mica. M Cceceanta: Ktp oa I DOUGLAS CLARK KENNEY Bom on December 10. 1946 at West Palm Beach. Florida. Prepared at Gil-mour Academy. Gates Mills, Ohio. Home Address: 17 Glensidc Road. South Orange. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: English. Member of Army ROTC. Caisson Club; Harvard Dramatic Club; Hasty Pudding; Lampoon; Signet Society. Spec Gub. President. National Merit Scholarship. ROBERT DAVID LEVIN Bom on October 13,1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at Brooklyn Friends School. Brooklyn. New York. Home Address: 139-22 Caney Lane. Rosedalc. New York. Field of Concentration: Music. Harvard Dramatic Club: Hasty Pudding: Music Club; Pierian Sodality; Signet Society; WHRB, Program Director; Young Democrats. Adams House: Father Son arul Holy Ghost; The Man of Mode. Harvard National Scholarship. SELFA33 V. uatCocaxp lUsosSn iefcx. Cm ■: V.-ate Apas CKHOiSS Serial iPccfcted . Hre Visa tic. Caeca co: Artesal Glee Oat; Rr i Tot Gr.y. s ;Frr ' CK3. HARRY KEITH LYNCH Bom on April 9. 1946 at St. Louis. Missouri. Prepared at University City Senior High School. University City, Missouri. Home Address: 11320 Inverness Lane. St. Ann. Missouri. Field of Concentration: Biology. Harvard Stu-dent Agencies. Harvard College Scholarship. JAMES ANTHONY MANN Bom on April 22. 1946 at New York, New York. Prepared at Horace Greeley High School. Chappaqua. New York. Home Address: 720 Quaker Road. Chappaqua. New York. Field of Concentration: English. Advocate; Harvard Dramatic Club; Mountaineering Club: Ski Club. Adams House: Rhinoceros. The Wild Dock. MARC ELIOT MANN Bom on September 30. 1947 at Los Angeles. California. Prepared at The Putney School. Putney. Vermont. Home Address: 5242 East Alhambra Place. Tucson. Arizona. Field of Concentration: Chemistry. Outing Gub: Phillips Brooks House Association. Detur Prize: John Harvard Scholarship. ALEXANDER KRASZESKI Bom on December 2, 1945 at Cracow. Poland. Prepared at Newburgh Free Academy. Newburgh. New York. Home Address: 10 Ashwood Terrace. Newburgh. New York. Field of Concentration: Physics and Chemistry. Varsity Fencing; Freshman Fencing. JESSE LYLE KORNBLUTH Bom on January 4. 1946 at Flushing. New York. Prepared at Milton Academy, Milton. Massachusetts. Home Address: 315 East 65th Street. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: English. Advocate, Managing Editor; Harvard Drama Review; Hasty Pudding; Young Democrats; Forum Theater. Phoenix Club. STEPHEN ROBERT KOWARSKY Bom on May 28. 1946 at St. Louis. Missouri. Prepared at University City High School. University City, Missouri. House Address: 7512 Blackberry. University City. Missouri. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Bach Society; Hillcl Society; Ivy Films Research; Music Club; Pierian Sodality. Cosi Fan Tulle (Leverett); Don Giovanni (Leverett). Harvard College Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. ADAMS FREDERICK VASS NEWSOME Bom on July 7, 1946 at Charleston. West Virginia. Prepared at Charleston High School. Charleston. West Virginia. Home Address: 1009 2nd Avenue. Charleston. West Virginia. Field of Con-ccntration: Chemistry. Association of African and Afro-American Students; Experiment in International Living; Phillips Brooks House Association. Tutors Committee; Pre-Medical Society. Harvard National Scholarship. LOUIS JAMES MARETT Born on March 17. 1947 at New York, New York. Prepared at Pelham High School. Pelham. New York. Home Address: 6 Hazen Street. Pelham. New York. Field of Concentration: Economics. Catholic Student Center; Pre-Law Society; Yacht Club. Varsity Sailing. Adams House: Hockey. Soccer; House Committee. BRIAN EDWARD McO.UNIGLE Bom on November 2. 1947 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin School. Boston. Massachusetts. Home Address: 448 Park Drive. Boston. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Hasty Pudding; WHRB. Adams House: The Wild Duck; Football. Soft-ball, Baseball; Social Sciences Forum. Harvard National Scholarship. HENRY RICHARD NORR Bom on February 20. 1946 at Washington, D.C. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter. New Hampshire Home Address: 143 Hobart Road. Newton. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Harvard Policy Committee. Chairman: Signet Society, Students for a Democratic Society. Adams House: House Committee; Library Committee. Detur Prize; Harvard National Scholarship: National Merit Scholarship. STEPHEN ANTHONY MICHAELS Bom on January 14, 1946 at Poughkeepsie. New York. Prepared at Browne and Nichols. Cambridge. Massachusetts. Home Address: 35 Ash Street. Cambridge. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Gilbert and Sullivan Players. President; Harvard Dramatic Club- Adams House: Drama Society Executive Board. EVAN VANSANT PAINTER Bom on January 25. 1946 at Austin. Texas. Prepared at Lyons Township High School. La Grange. Illinois. Home Address: 161 Central. Monmouth Beach. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Harvard Band. National Merit Scholarship. PETER JAMES MILLOCK Bom on November 14. 1946 at New York, New York. Prepared at Great Neck South High School, Great Neck. New York. Home Address: 29 Prospect Street. Great Neck. New York. Field of Concentration: Economics. Motodezfi; Phillips Brooks House Association; Byzantine-Russian Choir. Freshman Soccer, Captain. Adams House: Basketball; House Committee; Library Committee. Detur Prize: Harvard National Scholarship. JOHN MORRIS PARSON Bom on May 29. 1946 at New Orleans. Louisiana. Prepared at Albemarle High School. Charlottesville. Virginia. Home Address: Box 2072. Makcrerc Medical School. Kampala. Uganda. Africa. Field of Concentration: Chemistry. Phillips Brooks House Association. Detur Prize: John Harvard Scholarship. DONALD BJORN MILLS Bom on October 5. 1946 at Buffalo. New York. Prepared at Montgomery High School. Montgomery, West Virginia. Home Address: Box 235. Alloy. West Virginia. Field of Concentration: Government. Harvard Student Agencies; Young Democrats; Young Republicans; National Model United Nations. Adams House: Football, Baseball. Basketball. Harvard College Scholarship. PETER CHARLES PATRIKIS Bom on August 27. 1946 at Lynn. Massachusetts. Prepared at Swampscott High School. Swamp scott. Massachusetts. Home Address: One Hillcrest Circle, Swampscott, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Romance Languages. Harvard Band. Concert Manager; Phillips Brooks House Association; Teacher Aide Program. Director. Harvard College Scholarship; Harvard National Scholarship. KENNETH MARK MINKOFF Born on December 26. 1948 at Brooklyn. New York. Prepared at Andrew Jackson High School. Queens. New York. Home Address: 5 Horizon Road. Lake Success. New York. Field of Concentration: Physics. AIESEC; Outing Club; Phillips Brooks House Association; WHRB. Commercial Copy Chief; Young Democrats. Harvard College Scholarship; John Harvard Scholarship. ALEXANDER EUSTISS PATTON Bom on May 18,1945 at Santa Barbara. California. Prepared at St. George's School. Newport. Rhode Island. Hoove Address: Orchard Road. Skillman. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: English. Varsity Soccer. Fly Club. R 5«Wlk, 2 5 ho 5xe tt.b WwlMa WER IW i! A:si )CC5 Tw£; ftl Alta IceaxrtBsd. ; Cctaiuso: vt?J B i N -9- RSOS SttSwCtta J a fy Hxlfftrc V 3 W-.C AW MriS pai b u r;ss ‘jtfS s«s 2 CHIEN CHUNG PEI Bom on September 7. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Andover. Massachusetts. Home Address: 30 Beckman Place. New York. New York. Field of Concern iraiioo: Physics. Bach Society; Harvard Yearbook Publications. Photographic Chairman; Music Club; Rifle Club; Signet Society; Wind Ensemble; Yard-Ung; Senior Associate. Freshman Rifle. Adams House: Squash; Music Society. WILLIAM FLORIAN PERRON Bom on May 29. 1946 at Little Rock. Arkansas. Prepared at St. Joseph High School. Jackson. Mississippi. Home Address: 2976 Lakewood Drive, Jackson. Mississippi. Field of Concentration: History- Catholic Student Center; Crimson Key Society. Adams House: Basketball. Baseball: House Committee; Social Committee. Harvard College Scholarship. JOSEPH HEALY PLECK Bom on July 14. 1946 at Evanston. Illinois. Prepared at New Trier Township High School. Winneika, Illinois. Home Address: 747 Ridge Avenue. Evanston, Illinois. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Phillips Brooks House Association. Mental Hospitals Committee Case-Aid Coordinator. Adams House: The Virtuoso; AITs Well That Ends Well; Rhinoceros; Wild Duck ; The Play of Daniel (Lowell); Adams House Journal of the Social Sciences. ROBERT ALAN RAFSKY Bom on July 22. 1945 at New York. New York. Prepared at Central High School. Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. Home Address: 3461 Schoolhousc Lane, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: American History. Harvard Crimson. Managing Editor. PETER RAVEN-HANSEN Bom on June 5. 1946 at Copenhagen. Denmark. Prepared at Pascack Valley High School. Hillsdale. New Jersey. Home Address: 270 Drury Lane (Bilt-inorc), Barrington. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Social Studies. Adams House: Touch Football. Softball. Fris-bce; Social Sciences Forum Editor. Detur Prize; John Harvard Scholarship; Phi Beta Kappa. THOMAS PAUL REARDON Bom on August IS. 1946 at Quincy. Massachusetts. Prepared at Thayer Academy. Braintree. Massachusetts. Home Address: 20 Martin's Lane, Hingham, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: American History. Catholic Mudent Center. Social Chairman; Freshman Glee Club, Assistant Manager; Harvard Glee Club; Hasty Pudding; roung Republicans. Adams House: root ball, Basketball. Tennis. Volleyball. WALTER LAWRENCE RICE Bom on January 25. 1946 at Kansas City. Kansas. Prepared at Sumner High School. Kansas City. Kansas. Home Address: 1945 North Fourth Street. Kansas City, Kansas. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. Member of Air Force ROTC. Association of African and Afro-American Students. JV Football; Freshman Spring Track. Adams House: Basketball. Boxing. Volleyball. Harvard College Scholarship. ALAN RUTHERFORD RICHARDS Bom on July 23. 1946 at Dallas. Texas. Prepared at Highland Park High School. Dallas. Texas. Home Address: 2916 Daniels. Dallas. Texas. Field of Concentration: English. Students for a Democratic Society. Adams House: Rhinoceros: Wild Duck. Harvard College Scholarship. PHILIP STEVENSON RICHARDSON Born on April 5. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Mount Hermon School, Mount Hermon. Massachusetts. Home Address: Clyde, Brookline, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Hasty Pudding. Varsity Golf. Adams House: Football. Squash. Baseball. MARK R1TTS Bom on June 16. 1946 at Bryn Mawr. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Princeton High School. Princeton, New Jersey. Home Address: 256 Spruce Street, Princeton, New Jersey. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Dramatic Club; WHRB. MORRIS SLOCUM ROBERTS Born on May 31,1945at Newport News. Virginia. Prepared at Harrow School. Middlesex. England. Home Address: Star Route. Rector. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: Economics. Member of Army ROTC. Charles River Literary Society: Harvard Student Agencies. Personnel Manager: Hasty Pudding. Varsity Soccer; Freshman Soccer. Adams House: Squash. Crew. Soccer. Fly Club. GERALD MARK ROSBERG Born on September 22. 1946 at Niagara Falls. Canada. Prepared at Stamford Collegiate Institute. Niagara Falls. Canada. Home Address: 2130 Corwin Avenue. Niagara Falls. Canada. Field of Concentration: Government. Harvard Crimson: Signet Society. V p p X- y) GEORGE HAROLD ROSEN M Bom on May 24, 1946 ai Chicago. Hli-nois. Prepared ai New Trier Township High School. Winnetka. Illinois. Home Address: 2400 North Lakeview Astnuc. W Chicago. Illinois. Field of Concentrn- jj tion: History and Literature. Harvard Crimson, Assistant Editorial Chairman; Signet Society: Young Democrats. Adams House: Finian's Rainbow (Quincy); Christmas Shows; Adams House Journal of the Social Scier ces. National Merit Scholarship. GUY ANTHONY ROWLEY Bom on August S. 1946 at Plainfield, New Jersey. Prepared at Kent School. Kent. Connecticut. Home Address: 191 Mill Lane. Mountainside. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Varsity Crew; JV Crew; Varsity Wrestling; JV Wrestling. Adams House: Soccer. Delphic Club. National Merit Scholarship. JOSEPH BOWMAN SEALE Bom on May 28. 1945 at Dallas. Texas. Prepared at St. Mark's School of Texas, Dallas. Texas. Home Address: 8315 Inwood Road, Dallas, Texas. Field of Concentration: Physics. Freshman Glee Club; Harvard Glee Club. Freshman Cross Country. Manager: Freshman Spring Track, Manager; Freshman Winter Track, Manager. STEPHEN MERSHON SENTER Bom on September 6. 1946 at Detroit. Michigan. Prepared at Cranbrook School, Bloomfield Hills. Michigan. Home Address: 112 Moss Avenue. Highland Park. Michigan. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Film Studies. Adams House: Wild Duck; Adams House Social Science Forum; Adams House Life Drawing Class. GERALD SEROTTA Bom on July 6, 1946 at Miami. Florida. Prepared at Miami Beach High School, Miami Beach. Florida. Home Address: 5014 Lake View Drive. Miami Beach, Florida. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Hillel Society: Phillips Brooks House Association; Pre-Medical Society; Young Democrats. Yard Council. Adams House: Basketball; Library Committee. r-H as fCacesa CeS U- s HALO e Vat i ixv V- b Vert I at Kira see- AS Tc?K- i fciai h feat X f: b Fei ax Ai 'lisre. ‘ ai •teas. £ ‘! li STEVEN JOSEPH CHERTCOFF SHEA LEE HARVEY SIMOWITZ Bom on September 7. 1946 at Augusta, Georgia. Prepared at Choate. Walling, ford. Connecticut. Home Address: 827 Milledgc Road. Augusta. Georgia. Field of Concentration: Government. AIESEC: Harvard Crimson. Associate Managing Editor: Signet Society. Adams House: Basketball. Harvard College Scholarship. FRANKLIN E. SMITH Born on July 18. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin School. Boston. Massachusetts. Home Address: 102 Princeton Road. Brookline. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. Harvard Crimson. Business Manager; Gilbert and Sullivan Players: Organ Society: Parachute Club. Adams House: Drama Society: Football. Baseball. ST. JOHN SMITH. Jr. Born on April 7, 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Groton School. Groton. Massachusetts. Home Address: 315 Walnut Street. Brookline. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Architectural Sciences. Hasty Pudding Adams House: Football. Squash. A.D. Club. TRAVER CLINTON SMITH Bom on February 25. 1946 at Detroit. Michigan. Prepared at Noble and Grecnough. Dedham. Massachusetts. Home Address: Quintana 1053. Acas-suso, Buenos Aires. Argentina. Field of Concentration: Government. Hasty Pudding: Jubilee Committee: Returnees of American Field Service: Ski Club: Young Democrats: Young Republicans. Freshman Football. Owl Club. DAVID PORTER SOMMERS Born on March 18. 1947 at Fairfield. Connecticut. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. Exeter. New Hampshire. Home Address: 19 Verona Drive. Riser-side. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Physics. Yacht Club: Young Republicans. Adams House: Football. Basketball. Baseball. Softball. Born on May 12. 1946 at New York, New York. Prepared at Riverdale Country Day School. New York. New York. Home Address: 21 East 87th Street. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: English. Hasty Pudding. Co-Author H.P.T. 118: Phillips Brooks House Association. Varsity Fencing. Adams House: Drama Society. Detur Prize: John Harvard Scholarship. ROBERT ANDREW SQUIRES Bom on May 15. 1946 at Rockville Center. New York. Prepared at Wilton High School. Wilton. Connecticut. Home Address: 242 Beldcn Hill Road. Wilton. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. Gilbert and Sullivan Players. Adams House: Softball. Touch Football. ROBERT ALAN STEINBERG Bom on May 18. 19-16 at Brooklyn. New York. Prepared ai W. C. Mepham High School. Bel I more. New York. Home Address: 945 Little Neck Avenue, North Bellmore. New York. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Pierian Sodality. Harvard College Scholarship; National Science Foundation Grant. ARTHUR CAMPBELL SULLIVAN. Jr. Bom on November 14. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. Exeter, New Hampshire. Home Address: Atlantic Avenue. North Hampton. New Hampshire. Field of Concentration: Economics. Catholic Student Center; Hasty Pudding; Pre-Law Society; Young Republicans. Adams House: Football. Hockey. Iroquois Club. LEONARD MARK SUSSMAN Bom on July 26. 1945 at New York. New York. Prepared at Horace Mann School. New York. New York. Home Address: 1050 Fifth Avenue. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Dramatic Club; Signet Society. Adams House: Andorra. STEPHEN EUGENE TAYLOR Born on June 30. 1947 at Huron. South Dakota. Prepared at Garrison High. Garrison. North Dakota. Home Address: 232 Grove Street. Paxton. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. Adams House: Adams House G 1 Society. Harvard College Scholarship. TYLER CHAPMAN TINGLEY Bom on July 12. 1946 at New Haven. Connecticut. Prepared at Kingswood School. West Hartford. Connecticut. Home Address: 7 Ridgcvicw Drive, Farmington, Connecticut. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Dramatic Club. Adams House: Alt' Well That Ends Well. Harvard College Scholarship. JAMES CREWDSON TURNER Bom on June 25. 1946 at Knoxville. Tennessee. Prepared at Jesuit High School, Dallas. Texas. Home Address: Dallas, Texas. Field of Concentration: American History. Catholic Student Center; Debate Council. Executive Committee; Wireless Club: Young Republicans. Harvard College Scholarship: National Merit Scholarship; Wendell Phillips Prize; Coolidgc Prize. WILLIAM CHRISTOPHER WALSH Bom on August 22. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Bergen Catholic High School. Oradell. New Jcrsc . Home Address: 555 Picrmont Avenue. River Vale. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Applied Mathematics. JV Crew: Freshman Crew. Adams House: Basketball. Cross Country. Vol!c ball. BERNARD COSMO WILMOT Bom on January 29. 1946 at Kingston. Jamaica. Prepared at St. George’s College. Kingston. Jamaica. Home Address: 29 Merrion Road. Kingston. Jamaica. Field of Concentration: English. Association of African and Afro-American Students; Catholic Student Center; Harvard Dramatic Club. Varsity Soccer; JV Soccer. Adams House: Soccer; Macbeth; The Wild Duck: Under Milk-wood (Dunster); A Man's a Man (Kirkland). Harvard College Scholarship. TIMOTHY JOSEPH WILTON Born on October 3. 1946 at Bronx. New York. Prepared at The Choate School. Wallingford. Connecticut. Home Address: 22 Ridgewood Road. Wallingford. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Government. Harvard Dramatic Club; Phillips Brooks House Association: Luso Brazilian Studies Group. Adams House: Trial By Jury; The Wild Duck; Rhinoceros. EVON ZARTMAN VOGT. Ill Bom on August 29. 1946 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at Phillips Exeter. Exeter. New Hampshire. Home Address: 79 Spruce Hill Road. Weston. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Hasty Pudding; Jubilee Committee: Latin American Association; Harvard Undergraduate Athletic Council. Varsity Lacrosse. Adams House: Soccer; House Committee: Pool Society. Fly Club. Librarian. ROBERT LEWIS WALKER Bom on August 26. 1946 at Cleveland. Ohio. Prepared at Youngstown South. Youngstown. Ohio. Home Address: 489 Broadway. Girard. Ohio. Field of Concentration: History. Young Democrats; Young Republicans; Combined Charities. Adams House: Andorra (Publicity): Football: House Committee. Activities Chairman and Secretary. Harvard College Scholarship: David Nelson Little Adams House Award. EDWARD NATHAN WOLFF Bom on April 10. 1946 at Long Branch, New Jersey. Prepared at Sleeps Hollow-High School. Tarrytovvn. New York. Home Address: 39 Orchard Lane. Elnvs-ford. New York. Field of Concentration: Economics. Phillips Brooks House Association: Young Democrats. Committee Chairman. Adams House: Squash. Tennis. Harvard College Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. (fl THOMAS VANCE YATES M Bom on April 18. 1946 at Midland. Michigan. Prepared at Midland High School. Midland. Michigan. Hook Ad-dress: 27 Lexington Court. Midland. W Michigan. Field of Concentration: Philosophy and History. Bach Society; Pierian Sodality. Vice-President. Adams House: Soccer. Tennis; Cost Fan Tulle (Lerereil); Don Giovanni (Ltvtreu). Harvard College Scholarship JOHN ADLER ZYSMAN Born on March 23. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Omaha Central High School. Omaha. Nebraska. Home Address: 5005 Davenport. Omaha. Nebraska. Field of Concentration: Social Studies. Harvard Review: Phillips Brooks House Association; Teacher Aide Program; Young Democrats. Adams House: Social Sciences Forum. Robert J. Bennett S. G. Bennett. Ill Andrew G. Blackwell L. T. Carlson. Jr. David A. Fricdcl Ebcnczcr P. George Walter Jaros Julian A. Koslow Henry G. Pearson. Jr. Richard M. Petkun Harrison G. Pope. Jr. Neil B. Rolmck Stuart I.. Slsapiro Michael S. Siegal James P. Sloan. Jr. C. E- Warren. Jr. Walter J. Wolnik V - DUDLEY HOUSE MARC FRANCIS APPLETON Bom on March 29. 1945 ai San Francisco. California. Prepared ai Pomfret School. Pomfrci. Connecticut. Home Address: E. H. R„ Elgin, Arizona. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Dramatic Club; Ivy Films Research. Varsity Squash; Freshman Squash. Adams House Christmas Show. Fly Club. BENJAMIN AYER BARNES. Jr. Bom on October 22, 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts. Home Address: Beaver Pood Road. Lincoln. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Phillips Brooks House Association, President. Varsity Rugby; Varsity Skiing. Porcellian Club. WILLIAM JOSEPH BARRETT Bom on October II. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Mission Church High. Roxbury, Massachusetts. Home Address: 47 Lorraine Street, Boston. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. Dudley House: Drama Society; Football. Basketball. Baseball, Softball: Dudley House Reporter: House Committee. Harvard College Scholarship. JOHN MICHAEL BATTEAU Bom on March 25. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Choate School, Wallingford. Connecticut. Home Address: 51 Lexington Avenue. Cambridge, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Christian Fellowship. President; Music Club. Varsity Soccer; Freshman Soccer. Dudley House: Soccer. TODD WARREN BOLI Bom on September 5. 1946 at Canton, Ohio. Prepared at Glenwood High School. Canton, Ohio. Home Address: 259 Beacon Street, Somerville. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Italian. Married to Gail von der Lippe on September 5. 1966. Advocate; Yardllng. Harvard College Scholarship. LEO VINCENT BOYLE. Jr. Bom on May 5. 1946 at Providence. Rhode Island. Prepared at Wellesley Senior High School. Wellesley. Massachusetts. Home Address: 28 Orchard Street, Wellesley Hills. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Member of Army ROTC. Caisson Club: Hasty Pudding: Teacher Aide Program. Executive Committee. Dudley House: Hockey. Harvard College Scholarship. STEPHEN ERIC COTTON Born on February 23, 1947 .it Washington. D.C. Prepared at Hyde Park High School. Chicago. Illinois. Hook Address: 935 East 49th Street. Chicago. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Government. Harvard Crimson, Editorial Chairman; Signet Society. JOHN WILSON BOYNTON Born on March 13, 1946 at Concord. Massachusetts. Prepared at Concord Carlisle High School. Concord. Massachusetts. Home Address: Cargill Road. Concord. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Married to Mary Ann Campbell on December 12, 1964. Pre-Law Society; Yacht Club. Varsity Baseball; Freshman Baseball. Dudley House: Football, Baseball. Basketball. ROBERT LESOURD BRADLEY Born on July 1. 1946 at Newton. Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton Academy, Milton. Massachusetts. Hook Address: 135 Ivy Street. Brookline. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Fine Arts. Harvard Undergraduate Council. Dudley House: Softball; House Committee. CHARNEY VLADECK BROMBERG Bom on March 25. 1944 at Waukegan. Illinois. Prepared at Sleepy Hollow High School. Tarrytown. New York. Home Address: Gunpowder l.anc. Tarrytown, New York. Field of Concentration: Government. Harvard Policy Committee; Phillips Brooks House Association. Dudley House: Descant: House Committee; President of Harvard Cooperative House 1966; Librarian. JOHN OLLIS BROWN. Jr. Bom on May 16. 1946 at Nashville, Tennessee. Prepared at Wooster School, Danbury. Connecticut. Home Address: 1100 N. W. 61 Street. Miami. Florida. Field of Concentration: Biology. Married to Gail Martha Devlin on January 29. 1967. Association of African and Afro-American Students; Bridge Club; Young Democrats. Dudley House: Football, Wrestling. Track. Harvard College Scholarship. MICHAEL DAVID BROWN Bom on December 11,1946at Bozeman, Montana. Prepared at Weymouth High School. Weymouth. Massachusetts. Home Address: 50 Rindgc Avenue. Cambridge. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Married to Linda Lee Giacomo zi on September 2. 1966. Harvard Student Agencies. Assistant Manager; Pre-Law Society; Yacht Club. Varsity Football. Harvard College Scholarship; Harvard Club of Boston Scholarship; Harvard Club of Quincy Scholarship. LANG DON GATES BURWELL Bom on June 13. 1944 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter. New Hampshire. Home Address: Fay Road. Woods Hole, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Served in United States Marine Corps Reserve. Gilbert and Sullivan Players; Harvard Dramatic Club; Hasty Pudding. Varsity Cross Country1: Freshman Spring Track: Freshman Winter Track. WliM WILLIAM DEAN CARLSON Born on May 14. 1946 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Wellesley Senior High School. Wellesley, Massachusetts Home Address: 8 Lincoln Circle. Wellesley, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Varsity Rugby. Dudley House: Hockey. BO AXEL WILHELM CARLSSON Born on July 22. 1942 at Ulricchamn, Sweden. Prepared at Gothenburg School of Economics. Home Address: Britt-gatan 10. Tibro. Sweden. Field of Concentration: Economics. Married to Glenda V. Bishop on December 28. 1965. Harvard Undergraduate Council; International Relations Council. Dudley House: House Committee; Dudley-House Married Student's Committee. Harvard College Scholarship. LANE CRAIG CASEBEER Born on April 16. 1946 at Medford. Oregon. Prepared at Medford Senior High School, Medford. Oregon. Home Address: 362 Commonwealth Avenue. Boston, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Married to Sherri Winningham on July 9. 1966. International Relations Council; Art Group Leader. Varsity Baseball; Freshman Baseball. Dudley House: Baseball. JOSEPH MICHAEL CHAISSON Born on December 30. 1946 at Quan-tico. Virginia. Prepared at Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: American History. Member of Naval ROTC. Mountaineering Club; TatTrail Club. WAYNE LAWRENCE COLE Born on January 15. 1946 at Denver. Colorado. Prepared at North Denver High School. Denver, Colorado. Home Address: 3174 West 35 Avenue. Denver, Colorado. Field of Concentration: Government. Married to Pcgic Alice Carter on September 1. 1964. Young Democrats. Dudley House: House Committee. Harvard National Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. PETER GEOFFREY CRANE Born on September I. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Woodrow Wilson High School. Washington. D.C. Home Address: 4444 Springdale Street N. W.. Washington. D.C. Field of Concentration: History. Phillips Brooks House Association. Harvard College Scholarship. GEORGE HOMER DURHAM. II Born on October 16. 1944 at Logan. Utah. Prepared at Scottsdale Arcadia High School. Phoenix. Arizona. Home Address: 2400 South College Avenue. Tempe. Arizona. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Married to Christine Louise Meaders on December 29. 1966. Deseret Club: Freshman Glee Club. Honorary Freshman Scholarship. GEORGE PAULL CROUNSE. Jr. Born on December 7. 1942 at Florence. Alabama. Prepared at Culver Military Academy. Culver. Indiana. Home Address: 105 S camore Drive, Puducah. Kentucky. Field of Concentration: Government. Served in United States Army. Married to Rachel Chalepah on September 16. 1966. Yacht Club; Young Democrats. Dudley House: Married Students Social Committee. THOMAS CHARLES EDWARDS Bom on May 8.1944 at Urbana. Illinois. Prepared at Institut Dr. Schmidt. Lutry Lausanne. Switzerland. Home Address: Route. Standardsville. Virginia. Field of Concentration: English. Married to Carole Ann Shelton on June 21. 1965. Young Democrats. Varsity Tennis; Freshman Tennis. GEORGE EDWARD CURTIS Bom on December 14. 1946 at Lowell, Massachusetts. Prepared at Mission High School. Boston. Massachusetts. Home Address: 591 Dudley Street. Boston. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. Dudley House: Basketball. Harvard College Scholarship. PAUL RAYMOND DICKMAN Bom on May 3,1947 at Chicago, Illinois. Home Address: 6245 North Maplewood. Chicago. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Social Studies. Young Democrats; Massachusetts Pax Legislative Intern Program. Dudley House: Softball. Harvard College Scholarship. ROBERT NEWMAN MALCOLM DOLE Bom on Apnl 30. 1946 at Baltimore. Maryland. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. Exeter. New Hampshire. Home Address: 4910 North Rock Spring Road. Arlington. Virginia. Field of Concentration: English. Outing Club; Phillips Brooks House Association; Students for a Democratic Society: Yardling. Dudley House: Adams House Drama Society; Bradsireet Review. Harvard College Scholarship. THOMAS LOUIS DUBLIN Bom on December I. 1946 at Norwalk. Connecticut. Prepared at Staples High School. Westport. Connecticut. Home Address: 12 Redcoat Road. Westport. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Chemistry. Phillips Brooks House Association; Students for a Democratic Society. Freshman Spring Track; Freshman Winter Track. Harvard National Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. ELLIOT ZEV ENTIS Born on July 3. 1945 at Brookline. Mas-sachusetis. Prepared at Brookline High School, Brookline. Massachusetts. Home Address: 202 Mason Terrace, Brookline. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Government. Hillel Society; Student Zionist Organization. ANTHONY CARL ERDMANN Bom on February 24. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Hotchkiss School. Lakeville. Connecticut. Home Address: 119 Fast 79 Street. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: Economics. Hasty Pudding; Bridge Club. LINCOLN PIERCE FIELD Bom on August 21. 1942 at St. Louis. Missouri. Prepared at Lawrcnccvillc. New Jersey. Home Address: 348 Center Street. Milton. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. Served in United States Navy. Hasty Pudding. Freshman Golf: Freshman Squash. Dudley House: Soccer. Golf. Hockey. Delphic Club. JOHN ROBERT FISHFR Bom on August 22, 1946 at Ml. Vernon. Ohio. Prepared at Frcdcricktown High School. Frcdcricktown. Ohio. Home Address: Route 3. Frcdcricktown. Ohio. Field of Concentration: History. Married to Margaret M. Jones on August 7. 1966. Young Republicans: Henry Adams History Club. Harvard College Scholarship. HARLAN HIM,MEL Born on September 2. ISMS at Wayncs-boro. Pcnnsylvainia. Prepared at Walter Johnson High School. Rockville. Maryland. Home Address: 10127 Crest wood Road. Kensington. Maryland. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. KENNETH BRUCE FRISOF Bom on December 18. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Horace Mann School. New York. New York. Home Address: 624 East 20 Street. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Ivy Films Research: Students for a Democratic Society. Detur Prize; National Merit Scholarship. ROBERT STEVEN HOFFMAN Born on October 19. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Deerfield Academy. Deerfield. Massachusetts. Home Address: 266 Carroll Street. New Bedford. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Psychology. Gilbert and Sullivan Players; Harvard Dramatic Club; Phillips Brooks House Association. General Hospitals Committee; Psychology Society. Cosi Fan Tutu (Levereti): On the Town (Quincy). Harvard College Scholarship: John Harvard Scholarship. EDWARD JOSEPH GOTGART Bom on March JO. 1947 at Brighton. Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Dominic Savio High School. East Boston, Massachusetts. Hook Address: 21 Orient Avenue. East Boston. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Government. Dudley House: Crew. Baseball, Basketball. Football. Softball; House Committee. JOHN CHARLES HOOPER Born on March 17. 1945 at St. Louis, Missouri. Prepared at Groton School. Groton. Massachusetts. Home Address: 22 Concord Avenue. Cambridge. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Member of Army ROTC. Married to Cynthia Whitman Davis on December 7. 1966. Harvard Glee Club: Hasty Pudding; II Cireolo Italiano; Parachute Club. Varsity Soccer; Freshman Sceccr. Dudley House: Soccer; Crew (Eliot). A.D. Club. WILLIAM P. HAMMOND Bom on December 6. 1946 at Elgin, Illinois. Prepared at St. Andrews School, Middletown. Delaware. Home Address: 701 Cheltenham. Wilmington, Delaware. Field of Concentration: Stxial Relations. Freshman Council; Harvard Undergraduate Council; Ski Club; Harvard-RadclitTe Combined Charities; National Student Association. Varsity Squash; Freshman Squash. Dudley-House: Tennis. Harvard National Scholarship. TIMOTHY McLELLAN HUNTER Bom on June 15. 1947 at Los Angeles. California. Prepared at High School of Music and Art. New York. New York. Home Address: 225 West 86 Street. New York, New York. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Crimson; Film Studies. Vice President; Harvard Drama Review, Editor; Harvard Dramatic Club: Ivy Films Research. President 65-68. CHARLES RUSSEL HANSEN. Jr. Bom on October 6. 1946 at Spokane, Washington. Prepared at St. Petersburg High School, St. Petersburg, Florida. Home Address: 210 40 Street South. St. Petersburg. Florida. Field of Concentration: History. Married to Pamela Louise Winning on August 26. 1966. Harvard Student Agencies; Pre-Law Society; Rifle Club; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Young Democrats. Varsity Lacrosse. Dudley House: Football. Harvard College Scholarship. CHRISTOPHER LESLIE HUVOS Born on June 18. 1946 at Budapest. Hungary. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. Exeter. New Hampshire. Field of Concentration: English. Married to Nell Harkness on June 10. 1967. Advocate, Dionysus. Harvard College Scholarship. ROBERT BRAND HANSON Born on July 2. 1946 at Norwood. Massachusetts. Prepared at Dedham High School. Dedham, Massachusetts. Home Address: 57 Dartmouth Avenue. Dedham. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. PETER ANDREW JASZ1 Bom on December 20. 1946 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at Bethesda Chevy-Chase High School. Bethesda, Maryland, Home Address: 4910 Cumberland Avenue, Chevy Chase. Maryland. Field of Concentration: English. Advocate, Managing Editor; Harvard Drama Review, Editor; Harvard Dramatic Club, Executive Committee; Ivy Films Research: Signet Society. PERRY HARRY HARRIS Bom on November 24,1946 at Wilmington. Delaware. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Cambridge. Massachusetts. Home Address: 33 Jusiin Road. Brighton. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Government. Member of Army ROTC. Rifle Club. Home® • « «, -'Oi K 0e£, c, ;. to a Hc« w V v'P.ldnH«n Hoofa . INS h Si I i Grax $Qa aa-HwAtes e. CisWp.it urea a - .-. = ROICVirc nDrmaDn i 0« CW vr hH kFrohcate: Kc«; Cr iGo. LIAS ffl.MIl IW) u lafcgb d st Hiffa fcvo j .■ Ycrt.Sn'.n !25 Wes K Sa Vert. FrtirfC l H Kfi (VM. : Preside! 4ta; Hnri in RoarA f fca P[« bi : ! • ! EUGENE HUTCHINS JENNESS Bom on Apnl 13. 1947 at Norristown. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Groton School. Groton. Massachusetts. Home Address; North Bridgton. Maine. Field of Concentration: Architectural Sciences. Students for a Democratic Society; Thursday Night Club. Dudley House: Hockey. Harvard College Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. JOSEPH ANDREW KAY Bom on April I. 1947 at Brookline. Massachusetts. Prepared at Wellesley Senior High School. Wellesley. Massachusetts. Home Address: 20 Tufts Street. Arlington. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. Gargoyle; Hillcl Society; Mathematics Society. Detur Prize; Harvard College Scholarship; John Harvard Scholarship: National Merit Scholarship; Edwards Whitaker Scholarship. JEREMY JOHN KINROSS-WRIGHT Bom on September 19. 1943 at Woking. England. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Andover. Massachusetts. Home Address: 9 Grey Gardens East, Cambridge. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Served in United States Army. Married to Katherine L. Tyler on December 28. 1966. Advocate, Business Manager; Harvard Student Agencies. Harvard College Scholarship. JOSEPH S. KLEIN Born on April 2. 1945 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Brookline High School. Brookline. Massachusetts. Home Address: 145 Sandbury Road. Brookline. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. Bach Society; Experiment in International Living; Music Club. Dudley House: Dudley House Reporter. Harvard College Scholarship. VICTOR ARTHUR KOIVUMAKI. Ill Bom on April 19. 1946 at Minneapolis, Minnesota. Prepared at Edina-Morning-side High School, Edina. Minnesota. Home Address: 269 Waldcr Street. Cambridge. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Married to Judith Allcnd Hall on October 15. 1966. Freshman Council: Mountaineering Club; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Republicans: Harvard Conservative; Jazz Dance Workshop. Dudley House: Drama Society: Lowell House Drama Society; House Committee; Chairman Dudley House Married Students Committee. Harvard College Scholarship. JOHN J. KRUSE Bom on March 31.1946 at Lasa Grande. Arizona. Prepared at Catalina High School. Tucson. Arizona. Home Address: 5425 North Via Alcalde. Tucson. Arizona. Field of Concentration: English. Hasty Pudding; Skin Diving Club. Vice President. Varsity Fencing. Bom on November II, 1942 at Los Angeles. California. Prepared at Brush Free Public High School. Brush. Colorado. Home Address: 612 Fay Dnve. Colorado Springs. Colorado. Field of Concentration: English. Served in United States Army. Catholic Student Center: Gargoyle; Phillips Brooks House Association; Speaker's Club; Young Democrats. Dudley House: I he Drunkard; The Crucible; Fetching Bedroom Fetching Bed; Basketball. Football. Softball; Bradstreet Review; Descant; Reporter; House Committee; Master's Aide. Harvard College Scholarship; Harvard Club of Rocky Mountains Scholarship; Ward Scholarship; Weld Scholarship; Whittemorc Scholarship. JAMES HENRY LAMPMAN Bom on May 17.1946 at Madison, Wisconsin. Prepared at West High School. Madison, Wisconsin. Hook Address: 729 Oneida Place. Madison. Wisconsin. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Phillips Brooks House Association, Wellmct House Mental Hospitals; Pierian Sodality. President. Freshman Basketball. Harvard College Scholarship. ROBERT JOSEPH LAROCCA Bom on August 8, 1946 at Takoma Park. Maryland. Prepared at Blair High School. Silver Spring. Maryland. Home Address: 6 Wessex Road. Silver Spring. Maryland. Field of Concentration: Social Studies. Students for a Democratic Society: Teacher Aide Program. Dunster Political Review. Detur Pnze; Harvard College Scholarship. SIDNEY PHILLIP LEE. Jr. Born on September 8, 1946 at Dallas. Texas. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Andover. Massachusetts. Home Address: Box 291, Christianvtcd St. Croix. Virgin Islands. Field of Concentration: English. Bridge Club; Hasty Pudding. Dudley House: House Committee; Social Chairman; Dunster House Christmas Play; Dunster Drama Review. D.U. Club. ERIC LESSINGER Born on January 31. 1948 at Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Stuyvevant High School. New York. New York. Home Address: 105 Ashland Place. Brooklyn. New York. Field of Concentration: Biology. Phillips Brooks House Association; Students for a Democratic Society. Chairman 65: Jazz Dance Workshop. Harvard College Scholarship; National Honor Society Scholarship. CHARLES TAFT LOTSPEICH Bom on March 13, 1947 at Syracuse, New York. Prepared at The Harley School. Rochester. New York. Home Address: 900 Memorial Drive. Cambridge. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: American History. Married to Laurie Jean MacDonald on July 2.1965. Young Democrats. Varsity Soccer. Dudley House: Basketball, Baseball. D.U. Gub. Harvard National Scholarship. HENRY SELLERS McKEE. II Born on November 23. 1946 at Buy Shore, New York. Prepared at St. Paul's School, Concord. New Hampshire. Home Address: 5 Cross Road. Darien. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. Hasty Pudding; Yacht Club. Varsity Swimming; Freshman Swimming. Fly Club. DOMINIC ANTHONY M El MAN Bom on December 30. 1945 at Pensacola, Florida. Prepared at Cambridge School of Weston. Weston. Massachusetts. Home Address: 529 East 85 Street. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Dramatic Club. The Wild Duck (Adams Houu■). Harvard College Scholarship. JOHN MORRIS MENDELOFF Born on November 8.1946 at New York, New York. Prepared at Baltimore City College High School, Baltimore. Maryland. Home Address: 2109 NorthclilT Drive, Baltimore, Maryland. Field of Concentration: Government. Students for a Democratic Society. KENNETH THOMAS MENZIES Bom on October 28, 1946 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Rindge Technical School, Cambridge. Massachusetts. Home Address: 62a Wendell Street, Cambridge. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Chemistry- Natural History Society; Yacht Club. Dudley House: Soccer: House Committee. LAWRENCE EDWARD MOCK. Jr. Bom on April 21, 1946 at Louisville. Kentucky. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter. New Hampshire. Home Address: 801 Elm Spring Road, Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: Government. Ayn Rand Society; Hasty Pudding; Young Republicans. Varsity Lacrosse; Freshman Soccer. Dudley House: Soccer. Iroquois Club. President. DAVID OLIVER LOUD fjQ Born on April 27, I94S at Oak Ridge. Tennessee. Prepared at Bryan High School. Yellow Springs. Ohio. Home P Address: 1430 Meadow Lane, Yellow Springs, Ohio. Field of Concentration: TZ. American History. Harvard Glee Club; P Students for a Democratic Society. Co-Chairman. Detur Prize; Harvard National Scholarship. THOMAS JOHNSON MOORE Bom on July 20. 1946 at Evanston, lilt-nois. Prepared at North Shore Country Day School. Wmnetka, Illinois. Home Address: 100 Green Bay Road. Win-netka, Illinois. Field of Concentration: Government. Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association; Your.g Democrats. Spec Club. THOMAS HENRY MURPHY Born on February 9, 1942 at Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Newburgh Free Academy, Newburgh, New York. Home Address: 7 Center Street, Newburgh. New York. Field of Concentration: Biology. Served in United States Navy. Married to Edith Pierce on June 10. 1967. Hasty Pudding. FJiol House Drama Society. GERALD F. MURRAY Bom on July 20. 1942 at Winthrop. Massachusetts. Prepared at Carmelite Junior Seminary. Hamilton. Massachusetts. Home Address: 133 Gainesville. Dedham, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Served in Peace Corps. Phillips Brooks House Association. Dudley House: Soccer. Volleyball; Descant. Harvard National Scholarship; National Science Foundation Grant. DAVID MAURICE NEE Born on February 11. 1947 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin School. Boston. Massachusetts. Home Address: 256 O'Callaghan Way. South Boston. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Policy Committee; Young Democrats. Dudley House: Football; Dudley House Reporter: House Committee. William Brackett Snow Scholarship. DAVID EDWARD NICHOLS Born on October 17. 1942 at New York. New York. Prepared at Richard Montgomery High School, Rockville. Maryland. Home Address: 111 South Adams Street. Rockville. Maryland. Field of Concentration: Government. Served in United States Air Force. Married to Jacqueline C. Bruce on March 4, 1963. Harvard Student Agencies; WHRB. Harvard College Scholarship. JOEL BRADISH NICHOLS Born on July 15. 1946 at Portland, Maine. Prepared at Gould Academy. Bethel. Maine. Home Address: Parsons Creek, Edgccomb. Maine. Field of Concentration: Geology. Phillips Brooks House Association. Dudley House: The Crucible: Baseball (Winthrop). v3l2 ktv n v. U «c« 133 Gmcr . Fxttcffo tW0i Sorft Broou Hxa Hose Scot Ur.ird Njtui SwxtFoaS NICWXS ,, Riiirf !S jr 3% Iff ' oltf 0« V ■gjS %g RICHARD THOMAS OEHRLE Bom on June 18. 1946 at Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. Prepared at llavcrford School. Haverford. Pennsylvania. Horne Address: 115 North Spring Mill Road. Villanova. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Dramatic Club. Varsity Lacrosse: Varsity Rugby. Owl Club. Harvard National Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. RICHARD MICHAEL OLKEN Bom on September 13. 1945 in Cambridge. Massachusetts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin School. Cambridge. Massachusetts. Home Address: 18 Longfellow Road. Cambridge, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Phillips Brooks House Association. Quincy House: Drama Society; Hockey. PAUL JAMES PADLAK, Jr. Born on March 24. 1946 at New Brunswick. New Jersey. Prepared at Edison High School. Edison. New Jersey. Home Address: 6S Forest Street. Mctuchcn. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Married to Margaret Ann Czopek on February 15. 1966. Varsity Wrestling. Harvard College Scholarship. GEORGE R. PATTERSON Bom on June 21. 1944 at Jersey City. New Jersey. Prepared at Cheshire Academy. Cheshire. Connecticut. Home Address: 34 Fairmont Avenue. Cambridge. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Married to Judith Pardee on December 23, 1965. Varsity Spring Track: Freshman Spring Track; Varsity Winter Track; Freshman Winter Track. Dudley House: Football. Track. ARTHUR JOSEPH PITTS Bom on October 7. 1946 at Boston. H. l ‘V., ,Cpa,cd a‘ B°«°n High School. East Boston. Maxsachu-W. HSmc ADddrm: 129 Lexington FiH?'«rrv£ BoMo°' Massachusetts. . °f Concentration: American His- PV,d c House: Basketball. Har-vard College Scholarship. LINCOLN HARTLEY PLATT Bom on February 12. I94S at Morristown. New Jersey. Prepared at Law. rcncevillc School. Lawrenceville. New Jersey. Home Address: Loontaka Way. Madison. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: English. Advocate: AIESEC; Committee to End the War in Vietnam-Hasty Pudding; Keystone Movies; Pre-Law Society. Freshman Lacrosse. Dudley House: Soccer. Hockey; House Committee. Fly Club. C. PATRICK O'DONNELL. Jr. Bom on December 12. 1945 at Cleveland. Ohio. Prepared at St. Ignatius High School. Cleveland. Ohio. Home Address: 40 Stimson Avenue. Providence. Rhode Island. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Crimson; Debate Council; Freshman Council; Signet Society; Harvard Conservative Society. DONALD MICHAEL PEHLKE Born on January' 22. 1946 at Portland. Oregon. Prepared at Palisades High School. Pacific Palisades. California. Home Address: 519 El Medio. Pacific Palisades. California. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Phillips Brooks House Association. ALDEN SAMUEL RAINE Born on January 12. 1947 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prcpared.it Boston Utin School. Boston. Massachusetts. Home Address: 636 Weld Street. Boston. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Government. Dudley House: Baseball. Softball. Football. Basketball; Dudley House Reporter. STEPHEN W. RAUDENBUSH Bom on January 3.1946 at Minneapolis. Minnesota. Prepared at Blake School, Hopkins. Minnesota. Home Address: 4637 Emerson Avenue. Minneapolis. Minnesota. Field of Concentration: Social Studies. Students for a Democratic Society. Harvard College Scholarship. MARK REBF.R Born on July 5. 1946 at Philadelphia. Pennsy lvania. Prepared at Lower Mcrion High School. Ardmore. Pennsylvania. Home Address: 14 East Newfietd Way, Bala-Cynwyd. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: Slavic. Harvard Band; Motodezh; Phillips Brooks House Association: Teacher Aide Program. Detur Prize: John Harvard Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. TIMOTHY PAUL RIDGE Born on August 6. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Newman School for Boys. Boston' Massachusetts. Home Address: 43 Malta Street. Mattapan. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Gos-emment. Catholic Student Center; Young Democrats. Dudley House: The Dnvxkard: Baseball. Basketball. Soft-ball, Football; Dudley Reporter. Harvard College Scholarship. DONALD FERNALD ROACH. Jr. M Bom on February 3. 1946 at Concord, •j New Hampshire. Prepared at St. Paul’s School. Concord. New Hampshire. P Home Address: Bujumbura. Burandi. P Africa. Field of Concentration: English. Q PETER ROTHSCHILD Born on May 11, 1946 at Rockville Center. New York. Prepared at Ficlds-ton School. New York. New York. Home Address: 4640 Delafield Avenue. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: Architectural Sciences. Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association. JON TERRY SAUNDERS Born on November 2. 1946 at Ottumwa. Iowa. Prepared at Somerville High School. Somerville, Massachusetts. Home Address: 16 Russell Road. Somerville. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Harvard College Scholarship. JOSEPH M. SCORNAUACCHI. Jr. Bom on May 26,1946 at Reading. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Exeter Township High School. Pennsylvania. Home Ad-dress: Route 3. Reading. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Married to Susan Prann on August 12. 1966. Fox Gub. THOMAS JAMES SCOTT. Ill Born on October 9,1945 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Belmont Hill, Belmont. Massachusetts. Home Address: 119 Orchard Avenue. Weston. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Married to Jacquelyn Ann Potter on October 29. 1966. Hasty Pudding; WHRB; Harvard RadclifTe Combined Charities. Varsity Hockey: Freshman Hockey. Dudley House: Crew. Hockey. GORDON HENRY SELLON. Jr. Born on December 19, 1946 at Cambridge. Massachusetts. Prepared at Belmont High School. Belmont, Massachusetts. Home Address: 166 School Street. Belmont, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. Harvard Band. Drillmastcr and Assistant Manager. Dudley House: Soccer. Hockey. Baseball. Harvard College Scholarship. DAVID CAMP SHELTON Bom on April 23. 1946 at Pomona, California. Prepared at Putney School, Putney. Vermont. Home Address: IJQrj Oxford Avenue. Claremont. California. Field of Concentration: Geology. Harvard Glee Club; Harvard Dramatic Gub. Varsity Soccer; Freshman Soccer; Varsity Squash; Freshman Squash. Dudley House: Soccer, Tennis. Squash, Softball. WILLIAM CLAY SHROUT, III Bom on March 21. 1946 at Phoenix, Arizona. Prepared at Brooklyn Technical High School. New York. New York. Home Address: 133-40 Roosevelt Avenue, Flushing. New York. Field of Concentration: Engineering and Applied Physics. Married to Constance B. Maincs on June II, 1966. Hasty Pudding; Young Democrats. Varsity Swimming. LOREN RICHARD SKE1ST Bom on August 22. 1946 at Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Roslyn High School. Roslyn. New York. Home Address: 64 Serpentine. Rosly n. New York. Field of Concentration: Psychology. Phillips Brooks House Association. Chairman Mental Hospitals Committee: Returnees of American Field Service; Verein Turmwachter von 1886; Young Democrats; Young Republicans. Harvard College Scholarship. MICHAEL LOUIS SPIEGEL Born on August 16, 1946 at Portland. Oregon. Prepared at Woodrow Wilson High School. Portland, Oregon. Home Address: 1919 Southwest Stephenson. Portland. Oregon. Field of Concentration: Social Studies. Phillips Brooks House Association: Students for a Democratic Society, Co-Chairman. RICHARD COLLINS ST. CLAIR Bom on September 21, 1946 at Jamestown. North Dakota. Prepared at Central High School. Grand Forks, North Dakota. Home Address: S07 North 24 Street, Grand Forks. North Dakota Field of Concentration: Music. Music Club; Students for a Democratic Society; Young Democrats. Harvard College Scholarship. CARL WILLIAM STERN. Jr. Bom on March 31. 1946 at San Francisco. California. Prepared at Webb School of California, Claremont. California. Hook Address: 55 RayclilT Terrace. San Francisco, California. Field of Concentration: Economics-Married to Karen Lee JalTe on September 7. 1966. AIESEC; Returnees of American Field Service. Leverett House Candy Stand. Iroquois Club. ■ort, w. “w.'hc. “« S . LAWRENCE BENNETT SULLIVAN Bom on January 27. 1945 at New York. New York. Prepared at Lexington High School. Lexington. Massachusetts. Home Address: 8 Warren Street. Lexington. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. CLIFFORD A. TRUESDELL. IV Bom on February 4.1944 at Ann Arbor. Michigan. Prepared at University High School. Bloomington. Indiana. Home Address: S91 Massachusetts Avenue. Cambridge, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Married to Marilyn Richardson on March 17.1965. Harvard College Scholarship. JAMES MICHAEL SULLIVAN Born on June 22. 1946 at Coquille, Oregon. Prepared at Myrtle Point High School. Myrtle Point. Oregon. Home Address: 692 View Street. Myrtle Point, Oregon. Field of Concentration: English. Married to Dinah Marie Dooley on January 29. 1967. Harvard Dramatic Club; Keystone Movies. Father Son unci Holy Ghost (Adams House). Harvard College Scholarship. CHRISTOS TOUNTAS Bom on July 19,1945 at Athens. Greece. Prepared at Athens College. Athens. Greece. Home Address: 7 Xenophontos Street. Amaroussion. Athens. Greece. Field of Concentration: Physics. Freshman Spring Track. Harvard College Scholarship. E1ST Rttljn Kp ittHareAS taNwYst Awtadx, Is Cornea ; Fxid Seniz m. Ycirj m a Perfasi ttgoa B feptox tfCcwm-Srxto tee x i [ttina - . CUl Kit 25 LEROY YOSHIO UYEHARA Bom on June 7. 1946 at Wailuku, Amui, Hawaii. Prepared at lolani School, Honolulu. Hawaii. Home Address: 1760 Gulick Avenue, Honolulu, Hawaii. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. Married to Anne Marie Hauck on February 3. 1947. Dudley House: Football. Boxing. Harvard College Scholarship. DAVID LAWRENCE WALSH Born on May 31, 1945 at Cambridge, Massachusetts. Prepared at Nlalignon High School. Cambridge. Massachusetts. Home Address: 44 Ridgcmont Street, Brighton, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: American History. Served in Army National Guard. Catholic Student Center; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. Dudley House: Football. Basketball, Baseball; House Committee. Harvard College Scholarship. CHARLES ADAMS WEBER Born on March 12, 1946 at Takoma Park. Maryland. Prepared at Bethcsda Chevy Chase High School. Bethcsda. Maryland. Home Address: 2500 Virginia Avenue N.W., Washington, D.C. Field of Concentration: Far Eastern Studies. Freshman Glee Club; Students for n Democratic Society; Yacht Club; Dudley House: Crew. Detur Prize; Harvard National Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship; Phi Beta Kappa. JOHN BENNETT WELCH Born on September 2.1946 at Oak Park, Illinois. Prepared at New Trier Township High School, Winnetka. Illinois. Home Address: 54 Crescent Place, Wilmette, Illinois. Field of Concentration: English. Pierian Sodality; Young Democrats. Varsity Football; Freshman Football. Dudley House: Hockey. Football. Harvard College Scholarship. HOWARD H. S. TAN Bom on April 8. 1946 at Honolulu. Hawaii. Prepared at lolani School. Honolulu. Hawaii. Home Address: 1510 Kceaumoku Street. Honolulu, Hawaii. Field of Concentration: Engineering Sciences. Married to Beverly J. Gantt on June 13. 1966. Dudley House: Football. Basketball. Baseball. Harvard College Scholarship. SANFORD ROYCE THOMPSON Born on October 21. 1946 at New York, New York. Prepared at St. John’s School. Houston. Texas. Home Address: 507 Flintdatc Road, Houston. Texas. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. International Relations Council; Karate Club; Students for a Democratic Society; Verein Turmwachter von 1886. Varsity Cross Country ; Freshman Cross Country; Varsity Winter Track; Freshman Winter Track. Track (Adams House). THOMAS SLOCUM TILGHMAN Born on November 15. 1946 at Norwood. Massachusetts. Prepared at Kent School. Kent. Connecticut. Home Address: St. Bernard’s School, Gladstone, New Jersey. Field of Concentration: History. Married to Jo Ann Burt on August II, 1965. Dudley House: Hockey. Harvard College Scholarship. ALAN HARRINGTON TI.MBERI.AKE Born on September 6. 1946 at Deeth, Nevada. Prepared at Phillips Academy, Andover. Massachusetts. Home Address: 23 Maple Street, Franklin, Ohio. Field of Concentration: Slavic. Varsity Lacrosse; Freshman Soccer. 0 EDWARD FLOURNEY WELLS H Bom on February 23. 1940 ai Evanston, h) Illinois. Prepared ai Tabor Academy, Q Marion. Massachusetts. Home Ad- dress: 145 Laurel Street. San Francisco, California. Field of Concentration: His-Q tory. Served in United States Marine Corps Reserve. Hasty Pudding. Varsity Crew, Manager. JOHN CHANDLER WHITEHEAD Bom on June 19. 1946 at Summit, New Jersey. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter. New Hampshire. Home Address: 710 South Hanley Street, St. Louis. Missouri. Field of Concentration: English. Hasty Pudding; Skin Diving Club. Vanity Crew; Freshman Crew. Spec Club. WILLIAM LEONARD WHITEHOUSE Bom on September 19, 1944 at Denver, Colorado. Prepared at Mattawamkeag Consolidated High School. Mattavvam-kcag. Maine. Home Address: Mill Street. Mattawamkeag. Maine. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Harvard College Scholarship. Bruce C. Allen Michael S. Ansara Philip T. Aranow James Ault. Jr. James Alan Baker John F. Ballard John Barzman Harold B. Benenson Craig S. Boyan Louis D. Carmichael Eric A. Chase Robert D. Clallin Paul Thomas Clegg Garrick F. Cole M. B. Crawford David W. DcVorc Jeffrey R. Donat Michael V. Dycti Simon D. Finkclhor Michael M. Fiveash Andrew M. Gilman Alejandro C. Gomez Donald B. Guidotti KENNETH ROBLEY WULFF Born on June 12. 1945 at Dayton. Ohio. Prepared at New Hartford High School. New Hartford. New York. Home Address: 3 Taber Road. Utica. New York. Field of Concentration: Biology. Pierian Sodality; Wind Ensemble. Dudley House: House Committee. DOUGLAS ROBINSON WYNNE Bom on July 29.1946at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Technical High School. Boston. Massachusetts. Home Address: 244 Hovenden Avenue. Brockton. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Dudley House: Football; House Committee. JAMES HENLEY ZEANAH Bom on July 18. 1943 at Uikc Charles. Louisiana. Prepared at Gordo High School, Gordo. Alabama. Home Address: Church Street. Gordo. Alabama. Field of Concentration: Economics. Member of Army ROTC. Married to Eleanor Elois Kennedy on August 10. 1963. Charles River l iterary Society; Harvard Conservative. National Merit Scholarship. Robin Eric Hahnel David N. Hancock Jonathan M. Harris Robert C. Hart John T. Jameson Thomas E. Kruskal Allen Lloyd Kyle Scott H. Lang Philip Ray Lemmons T. H. Macdonald Stephen Pike Marx Anthony L. S. Power Eugene A. Rosov John E. Scheub Van J. Schwartz James Lewis Shuman Lewis H. Spence Bro Uttal Roger Austin Weil Wesley Rhyne White Jeremy G. Williams Wesley C. Williams PETER JAY ALTER Bom on August 28. 1946 at Watcrbury, Connecticut. Prepared at Crosby High School. Watcrbury. Connecticut. Home Address: 53 Clinton Street, Watcrbury. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Pi Eta Club. Varsity Swimming. SCOTT VIRDEN ANDERSON Bom on February 3. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Groton School. Groton. Massachusetts. Home Address: 301 Promenade dc la Comichc. Marseille. France. Field of Concentration: Biology. Gilbert and Sullivan Players. Dunstcr House: Crew. Fly Club. KENNETH GOODRICH APPEL Born on June 6. 1946 at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Episcopal Academy. Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. Home Address: 518 Oak Grove Lane, Radnor. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: Biology. Hasty Pudding. Freshman Soccer; Freshman Squash. Dunstcr House: Soccer, Squash. Delphic Club. NWACHUKWU AB10DUN AZIKIWE Bom on December 24. 1944 at Lagos. Nigeria. Prepared at Government College, Umuahia. East Nigeria. Home Address: Onuiyi Haven. Post Office Box 7, Nsukka. Nigeria. Field of Concentration: Government. Hasty Pudding. Varsity Cricket; Varsity Soccer; Varsity Spring Track. Dunstcr House: Dun-tier House Political Review. DUNSTER HOUSE GEORGE ALBERT BACHICH Bom on April 25, 1946 at Sutter Creek, California. Prepared at Calaveras High School, San Andreas. California. Home Address: Star Route 3. Jackson, California. Field of Concentration: Economics. Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Harvard College Scholarship. STEPHEN DAVID BARNETT Bom on December 12. 1946 at Ouray, Colorado. Prepared at New Trier Township High School. Winnetka. Illinois. Home Address: I09S Mount Pleasant Road, Winnetka, Illinois. Field of Concentration: Physics. Dunster House: Dunster Cycle Society. JEFFREY WARREN BEAN Bom on March S. 1947 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Deerfield Academy, Deerfield, Massachusetts. Home Address: 2234 Q Street N.W.. Washington. D.C. Field of Concentration: Applied Mathematics. LEROY WILLIAM BLANKENSHIP Bom on March II. 1946 at Atlanta, Georgia. Prepared at Georgia Military Academy. College Park. Georgia. Home Address: 4335 Pcachtrcc-Dunwoody Road, N.E.. Atlanta, Georgia. Field of Concentration: American History. Member of Naval ROTC. International Relations Council; Sigma Alpha Epsilon: Young Republicans; Baptist Student Union. JAMES BROOK Bom on December I. 1946 at Buffalo, New York. Prepared at Royal Oak Don-dero High School, Royal Oak. Michigan. Home Address: 265S6 Dundee Road, Huntington Woods. Michigan. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. Phillips Brooks House Association. Dunster House: Under MUkwood; The Frogs: Yoipone; Thurber Carnival. Harvard College Scholarship. NIKOLAI BURLAKOFF Born on February 16. 1946 at Lienz-Drau. Austria. Prepared at Benjamin Franklin High School, New York. New York. Hook Address: 601 West 160 Street, New York, New York. Field of Concentration: Slavic. Dunster House: Crew. john McKesson camp, ii Born on February 8, 1946 at New York, New York. Prepared at Brooks School, North Andover, Massachusetts. Home Address: Watch Hill, Rhode Island. Field of Concentration: Classics. Classical Club: Harvard Dramatic Club; Hasty Pudding; Senior Associate. Varsity Soccer. Dunster House: Under Milktvood; Apollo of llelluc (Quincy); Andorra (Adams): Soccer. Spec Club. GEORGE TIEN-CHIA CHU Born on November 23.1946 at Washington, D.C. Prepared at Bronx High School of Science. Bronx. New York Home Address: 2796 daflin Avenue, Bronx, New York. Field of Concentra-lion: Mathematics. International Relations Council; Phillips Brooks House Association. Harvard College Scholarship. DENNIS PAIGE CLARK Bom on September 7, 1946 at Bridgeport, Connecticut. Prepared at West Haven High School, West Haven. Connecticut. Home Address: 449 Main Street. West Haven. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Biology. Pi Eta Club. Varsity Hockey. THEODORE EDWARD CLARK Born on July 20. 1946 at Syracuse. New York. Prepared at Christian Brothers College. Pretoria. South Africa. Home Address: 4421 Hawthorne Street N.W., Washington, D.C. Field of Concentration: History. International Relations Council, Executive Council; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. MARVIN SIDNEY COHEN Bom on December 15, 1946 at Waiter-boro. South Carolina. Prepared at The Gand School, Charleston. South Carolina. Home Address: 2 Notice Place. Charleston, South Carolina Field of Concentration: Philosophy and Classics. Hillel Society; International Relations Council; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats; Mosaic Editorial Board. Dunster House: Yot-pone. John Harvard Scholarship. JOHN FRANKLIN CROCKER, IV Born on April 11. 1946 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton Academy, Milton. Massachusetts. Home Address: IS4 School Street, Milton. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Freshman Glee Club; Harvard Undergraduate Council. Varsity Crew; JV Crew; Freshman Crew-Dunster House: Under Milk ood; Yolpone: A Thurber Carnival; The Frogs: House Committee. Chairman; Dunster Dunces. JAMES PUTNAM DEAN THOMAS CHARLES EVANS Born on November 6, 1946 ai Pontiac. Michigan. Prepared at Brother Rice High School, Birmingham, Michigan. Home Address: 640 Baldwin Court. Birmingham. Michigan. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Catholic Student Center; Freshman Council. Social Chairman; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Young Republicans; Combined Charities Assistant Treasurer. Dunstcr House: House Committee; Dunstcr Weightlifting Club. DOUGLAS ALAN DE HART Born on March 14. 1946 at Portland. Oregon. Prepared at Sunset High School. Beaverton. Oregon. Hook Address: 1170 Northwest 128 Avenue, Portland. Oregon. Field of Concentration: Biology. Yacht Club: Young Republicans. Varsity Sailing; Freshman Sailing. Harvard College Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. STEPHEN MICHAEL DODD Born on September 3. 1946 at Carlisle. Pennsylvania. Prepared at South Middleton Township, Boiling Springs. Pennsylvania. Home Address: Rocklcdgc Drive. Carlisle, Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Band. Harvard College Scholarship. iiiiu W Born on May 28. 1946 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at The Hill School. Potts-town. Pennsylvania. Home Address: 67 South Munn Avenue. East Orange. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: English. Hasty Pudding. Phoenix Club. ALAN PAGE FISKE Bom on May 10. 1947 at Ann Arbor. Michigan. Prepared at University of Chicago High School. Chicago. Illinois Home Address: 5711 Blackstonc Street. Chicago. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Outing Club; Young Democrats; Boston Grotto N. S. S. Harvard College Scholarship. DAVID ROSS FOLEY Bom on June 22. 1946 at New York, New York. Prepared at Riverdalc Country School. New York. New York. Home Address: 460 Riverside Drive. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: History. Pre-Law Society; Rifle Club. Varsity Rifle; Freshman Rifle; Varsity Soccer; Freshman Soccer. DONALD ALLEN DOWDELL Bom on January 22. 1946 at Miami, Florida. Prepared at Miami Senior High School, Miami. Florida. Home Address: 504 Boabadilla Street, Coral Gables. Florida. Field of Concentration: Government. Harvard Crimson. J V Baseball; Social Committee. Harvard College Scholarship: Harvard Club of Miami Scholarship. ROBERT FRANCIS FREDO, Jr. Bom on July 10. 1945 at Chelsea. Massachusetts. Prepared at Deerfield Academy. Deerfield. Massachusetts. Home Address: 144 Overlook Road. Arlington. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Pi Eta Club. Varsity Hockey; Freshman Hockey. Dunstcr House: Baseball. Softball. RICHARD BRIAN DOYLE Born on May 24, 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Saint Sebastian’s School. Newton. Massachusetts. Home Address: 39 Frost Street, Arlington. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Government. Catholic Student Center; Hasty Pudding: Pi Eta Club. Varsity Football; Freshman Football. Dunstcr House: Football. Hockey. Baseball. Softball; Social Committee. JAMES FRANCIS EARLY. Ill Bom on April 23, 1946 at Derby. Connecticut. Prepared at Hopkins Grammar School. New Haven. Connecticut. Home Address: 301 Hawthorne Avenue, Derby, Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Government. Catholic Student Center; Junior Usher; Pi Eta Club; Pre-Law Society. Varsity Baseball. Dun-sicr House: Basketball, Volleyball; House Committee. Social Chairman. BYRON N. FUJITA Born on May 23, 1946 at Fort Snellmg, Minnesota. Prepared at E. S. Ingraham Senior High School. Seattle. Washing-ton. Home Address: 9549 Lakeshore Boulevard N.E.. Seattle. Washington. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Phillips Brooks House Association: Young Democrats. Dunstcr House: Squash. Tennis. GABRIEL MYLES GESMER Bom on August 17, 1946 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin School. West Roxbury. Massachusetts. Home Address: III Danchill Road. Newton. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Government. Harvard Crimson. Photographic Chairman 1967; Yacht Club. Harvard College Scholarship. DUNSTER RICHARD WILLIAM GROSSMAN Born on February 17. 1946 at Newton. Massachusetts. Prepared at Noble and Green OUgh. Dedham. Massachusetts. Home Addrc : Wauwinct Road, Nantucket. Massachusetts. Field of Conan-tration: English. Freshman Glee Club; Young Republicans. Varsity Crew; JV Crew. Dunster House: House Commit-tee. Treasurer; House Newspaper. JOSEPH WILLIAM GLANNON Bom on March 22. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Roslyn High School. Roslyn. New York. Hook Address: 1621 Northern Boulevard. Roslyn. New York. Field of Concentration: English. Phillips Brooks House Association. Dunster House: Thurber Carnival. JOSE RAUL GONZALES Bom on January 12. 1947 at Santurce. Puerto Rico. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Andover. Massachusetts. Hook Address: G. P. O. Box 4(M7. San Juan. Puerto Rico. Field of Concentration: Chemistry. Latin American Association. Varsity Squash; Freshman Squash. Captain; Varsity Tennis. Owl Club. Harvard College Scholarship; Honorary Harvard Freshman Scholarship. MARVIN ALLAN HANSON Born on April 19. 1946 at Bemidji, Minnesota. Prepared at Bemidji High School. Bemidji. Minnesota. Home Address: 1402 America Avenue. Bemidji. Minnesota. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. AIESEC; Harvard Student Agencies. Varsity Football; Freshman Football. Dunster House: Football. Basketball. PAUL ROWLAND GOODYF.R Bom on October 12.1946 at New Haven. Connecticut. Prepared at Hopkins Grammar School. New Haven. Connecticut. Home Address: Long Hill Ro3d. Guilford. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Harvard Student Agencies: Pre-Medical Society. Dunster House: Soccer; Icemen. WILLIAM BRUCE HARRIS Born on October 12. 1946 at Nashville Tennessee. Prepared at The Hill School Potlstown. Pennsylvania. Honse Ad dress: East Gate Road. Lloyd Harbor New York. Field of Concentration: En glish. Hasty Pudding. Phoenix Club. MICHAEL ALFRED GREEN Bom on April 5. 1946 at Presque Isle. Maine. Prepared at Hebron Academy. Hebron. Maine. Home Address: Box 277, Waquoit. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. AIESEC, Co-President 1968; Harvard Student Agencies; Outing Club; Ski Club. Varsity Spring Track; Freshman Spring Track. Dunster House: Football. Track. Spec Club. IRA JAY HAUPTMAN Bom on August 28. 1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at Bronx High School of Science. New York. New York. Home Address: 245 East 178 Street. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: English. Phillips Brooks House Association: Mosaic. Dunster House: Fergus. Harvard College Scholarship. IRA GEORGE GREENBERG Bom on May 8. 1946 at Jamaica. New York. Prepared at Miami Senior High School. Miami. Florida. Home Address: 160Southwest 53Court. Miami. Florida. Field of Concentration: Government. Debate Council. Treasurer 1966 Vice President 1967; tlillel Society; Young Democrats. Dunster House: Football. Basketball, Softball. I ctur Prize: Harvard National Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship: Coolidgc Debating Prize. JOHN ANDREW HERFORT Bom on October 29. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Phillips Academy, Andover. Massachusetts. Home Address: 251 Montrose Avenue, South Orange. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: History- llariart! Crimson. News Board 1967 and Associate Editorial Chairman I96S: Signet Society. Harvard College Scholarship. GEOFFREY MICHAEL GREENFIELD Born on February 17. 1947 at Los Angeles, California. Prepared at Beverly Hills High School. Beverly Hills. California. Home Address: 443 Spalding Drive. Beverly Hills. California. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Bach Society: Music Club. Treasurer; Phillips Brooks House Association; Pierian Sodality; Young Democrats. Dunster House: Cross-Country; Dunster House Chamber Orchestra Conductor; Dunster House Musk Society. Harvard College Scholarship: Harvard National Scholarship; John Harvard Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship; Phi Beta Kappa. GEORGE QUINTARD HILTON Born on October 29. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton Academy, Milton. Massachusetts. Home Address: Middle Hancock Road. Peterborough. New Hampshire. Field of Concentration: Biology. Pre-Medical Society. LESTER ALLYSON KNIBBS Born on October 20. 1945 at Brooklyn. New York. Prepared at High School of Music and Art. New York. New York. Hook Address: 1118 East 215 Street. Bronx. New York. Field of Concentration: Music. Association of African and Afro-American Students: Musk Club. Harvard College Scholarship. MARC I.AZARD H UR WITZ Born on December 6. 1947 at New Orleans. Louisiana. Prepared at Isidore Newman. New Orleans. Louisiana. Home Address: 6401 Fontainebleau Drive. New Orleans. Louisiana. Field of Concentration: Government. Hillcl Society. Member-at-Large; Phillips Brooks House Association: Mosaic. CARMINE ROBERT INSALACO Born on June 7. 1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at Seward Park High School. New York. New York. Home Address: 67 Manhattan Avenue, Brooklyn. New York. Field of Concentration: Slavic. Dunstcr House: Society for live Promotion of Elegant Eating at Dunstcr. Harvard College Scholarship. THOMAS SPARKS IRELAND Bom on July 27,1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Horace Mann School. New York. New York. Home Address: 83 Park Terrace West, New York. New York. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Crimson, Circulation Manager. Freshman Crew. Dunstcr House: Wrestling. Crew. Weight-Lifting. John Harvard Scholarship. DAVID ARTHUR JOST Born on March 25. 1946 at Reedlcy, California. Prepared at Rccdley High School, Reedlcy. California. Home Address: 8126 South Frankwood. Reedlcy, California. Field of Concentration: Social Studies. Freshman Glee Club; Gilbert and Sullivan Players: Karate Club; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Republicans. Dunstcr House: Dunstcr Dunces. Harvard National Scholarship. GEOFFREY HOPPIN KEPPEL Bom on May 17. 1946 at Bogota. Colombia. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. Exeter, New Hampshire. Home Address: College Hill Road, Montrose. New York. Field of Concentration: Government. AIESEC; Hasty Pudding: International Relations Council; Latin American Association. President; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Republicans. Policy Director. Varsity Rugby; JV Soccer; Freshman Soccer. Dunstcr House: Soccer; Rugby. Spec Club. CHARLES KOMANOFF Bom on October I. 1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at Long Beach High School. Long Beach. New York. Hook Address: 556 Washington Boulevard. Long Beach. New York. Field of Concentration: Applied Mathematics. Music Club; Phillips Brooks House Association: WHRB. Dunstcr House: Dunstcr House Chamber Orchestra; 1-cverctt House Film Series; Leverett House Opera Society; The Barto-Ja Control Center. Harvard College Scholarship. ANDREW JOSEPH KOPECKI Born on October 6. 1946 at Exeter. New Hampshire. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. Exeter. New Hampshire. Home Address: 202 Front Street. Exeter. New Hampshire. Field of Concentration: Far Eastern Studies. Mountaineering Club; Outing Club. Freshman Crew; Varsity Wrestling. Captain. Dunstcr House: Drama Society; Crew; China Table. D.U. Club. EVANS JOHNSON KOUKIOS Bom on March 15, 1946 at Grand Rapids. Michigan. Prepared at Central High School. Grand Rapids. Michigan. Home Address: 45 Mayfair Northeast, Grand Rapids, Michigan. Field of Concentration: History. Pierian Sodality; Henry Adams History Club. ALEXANDER LASAREFF-MIRONOFF Bom on May 10. 1946 at Furth. West Germany. Prepared at Classical High School. Springfield. Massachusetts. Home Address: 16 Pine Drive, Wilbra-ham. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Slavic. Young Republicans; Byzantinc-Russian Liturgical Choir. NAASP Scholarship. ROBERT EDWARD LEE Bom on February 15. 1945 at Walla Walla. Washington. Prepared at Stayton Union High School. Stayton. Oregon. Home Address: 1210 East Pine Street, Slayton, Oregon. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Harvard Band; Young Democrats. Harvard College Scholarship. RICHARD SNOWDEN HOPKINS Born on June 13. 1947 at Washington, D.C. Prepared at Melbourne Grammar School. Melbourne, Australia. Home Address: 5108 Lawton Drive. Washington. D.C. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. WHRB. President: Harvard Band. Detur Prize; Harvard College Scholarship: John Harvard Scholarship. KM4 CHOIX) MA Born on October 14, 1946. in Shanghai. China. Prepared at Bronx High School of Science, New York. New York. Home Address: 90 LaSalle Street. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: Chemistry and Physics. MICHAEL A. MANHEIM Bom on July II, 1946 at Los Angeles, California. Prepared at Verde Valley School, Sedova. Arizona. Home Address: 12001 North 66th Street. Scottsdale, Arizona. Field of Concentration: Government. Harvard Band; Latin American Association; Young Democrats; Hasty Pudding Theatrical. Dun-stcr House: South Pacific: Fhiian's Rainbow: Musk Society Concerts. Latin American Studies Committee Traveling Fellowship. JOHN BARRETT MARKS Bom on December 3. 1946 at Harre. Montana. Prepared at Lakes High School. Tacoma. Washington. Home Address: Box P, Steilacoom. Washington. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Harvard Student Agencies; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Dcntocrats. Varsity Rugby. Dunsicr House: Boxing. Harvard College Scholarship. JOHN MATTHEW MAZUR Bom on May 27, 1946, in Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Dormont High School. Dormont, Pennsylvania. Home Address: 1160 Tranter Avenue, Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: Government. Glee Club: Freshman Glee Club; Young Republicans. Thom McAn Leadership Award. w H (A z p Q PAUL MICHAEL LUCHESSA Born on August 24. 1946 at Berkeley, California. Prepared at Albany High School, Albany. California. Home Address: 754 Gateview, Albany, California. Field of Concentration: English. Young Democrats. Varsity Rugby. Dunstcr House: Basketball. Harvard College Scholarship. ANDREW MOSHER MeGINNIS Born on November 18,1946at Madison, Wisconsin. Prepared at Natick High School. Natick. Massachusetts. Home Address: 12 Bamesdate Road. Natick, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Physics and Chemistry. Chess Club; Harvard Policy Committee; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats; American Friends Service Committee. Harvard College Scholarship; National Honor Society Honorary Scholarship. JOHN HUGH McGUCKIN, Jr. Born on November II, 1946 at Lower Marion, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Brother Rice High School. Birmingham, Michigan. Home Address: 27451 Gold-cngatc. Lathrup Village. Michigan. Field of Concentration: History. Phillips lips Brooks House Association. Varsity Tennis, Manager; Freshman Tennis. Dunstcr House: House Committee. Harvard College Scholarship. JERRY LOUIS MILLER Bom on June 1. 1946 at Addison. Michigan. Prepared at Washington Gardner High School, Albion. Michigan. Home Address: 823 North Clinton. Albion. Michigan. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Hasty Pudding: Phil-Brooks House Association: Speaker's Club. Varsity Crew. Dunstcr House: Track. Football. CHARLES WHITING MOCK Born on April 10. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Colcgio Americano. Caracas. Venezuela. Home Address: Capitan Haya 30. Madrid. Spain. Field of Concentration: Romance Languages. WILLIAM COCKE MULLEN Bom on November 4.1946, in Houston. Texas. Prepared at Portsmouth Priory. Portsmouth. Rhode Island. Home Address: 6020 St. Andrews Lane. Richmond. Virginia. Field of Concentration: Classics. THOMAS LEE MUNZEL Bom on April 5. 1946 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at Maine Township High School East. Park Ridge. Illinois. Home Address: 1741 Good Avenue. Park Ridge. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Biology. Psychology Society. Co-Chairman. Varsity Baseball. Dunstcr House: Football; Social Committee. Harvard College Scholarship. THOMAS YUKIO NAKATA Bom on November 24.1946 at Portland. Oregon. Prepared at Franklin High School, Portland. Oregon. Home Address: 3003 Southeast 67th Avenue. Portland. Oregon. Field of Concentration: Biology. Harvard College Scholarship. VICTOR STEPHEN PIRO Bom on July 8. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Friends Academy. Locust Valley. New York. Home Address: I Coot Road. Locust Valley, New York. Held of Concentration: Government. Harvard College Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. JOHN ROBERT NELSON Born on March 3. 1946 at Evanston, Illinois. Prepared at Maine East High School. Park Ridge. Illinois. Hook Address: 106 Gillick Street. Park Ridge. Illinois. Field of Concentration: English. Catholic Student Center: WHRB. Freshman Spring Track: Freshman Winter Track. Dunstcr House: Football. Basketball, Track. PAUL YOVANOVICII NESKOW Bom on October 31, 1946. in Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at Phillips Exeter. Exeter, New Hampshire. Home Address: 634 North Merrill Avenue. Park Ridge, Illinois. Field of Concentration: Biology. Freshman Crew. ENID RICARDO QUINONES. Jr. Bom on July 27. 1947 at Brooklyn. New York. Prepared at Stuyvesant High School. New York. New York. Home Address: l05Callc L-Constancia. Ponce. Puerto Rico. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Phillips Brooks House Association. Dunstcr House: Track. RUSSELL SMITH PAGE. Ill Bom on March 3.1944 at Macon. Georgia. Prepared at Sidwcll Friends. Washington. D.C. Home Address: 4503 Dalton Road. Chevy Chase. Maryland. Field of Concentration: Biology. Mountaineering Club; Outing Club; Phillips Brooks House Association. Freshman Soccer. Dunstcr House: Baseball. Soccer. DAVID CROCKETT RAY Born on April 19, 1946 at South Bend, Indiana. Prepared at Rcdford High School. IX-troit. Michigan. Home Address: 16767 Warwick Road, Detroit, Michigan. Field of Concentration: History. Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. Dunstcr House: Drama Society; Daily Planet; House Committee; Social Committee; Properties Committee. Harvard College Scholarship. JOHN BRYANT PAINE. Ill Born on November 9, 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Noble and Grcenough School. Dedham. Massachusetts. Home Address: 140 Orchard Avenue. Weston. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Chemistry. Bridge Club; International Relations Council; Young Democrats; Young Republicans. Freshman Baseball. Manager; Freshman Football. Manager; Freshman Wrestling. Manager. PETER REED PA VAN Bom on April 2. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton Academy. Milton. Massachusetts. Home Address: 40 Crabtree Road. Quincy. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Phillips Brooks House Association. Drives Committee Chairman. Harvard College Scholarship. ARTHUR JAY P1CCINAT! Bom on May 17, 1946 at Colorado Springs, Colorado. Prepared at Scotts-dalc-Arcadia High School, Scottsdale. Arizona. Home Address: 5640 Joshua Tree Lane. Scottsdale, Arizona. Field of Concentration: Government. Phillips Brooks House Association. Sill STEPHEN SAVIDGE RODEWALD Bom on June 6. 1947 at Nyack. New Yoik. Prepared at Lower Me non High School. Ardmore. Pennsylvania. Home Address: 9 Hathaway Circle. Wynne-wood. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Freshman Glee Club: Harvard Glee Club; Phillips Brooks House Association. Dunstcr House: Baseball. Dclur Prize. MARC JON ROSENSTEIN Bom on September 20, 1946 at Glens Falls, New York. Prepared at Highland Park High School. Highland Park, Illinois. Home Address: 82 Green Bay-Road. Highland Park. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Hillcl Society. President; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats; Mosaic. Publisher. National Merit Scholarship. JAMES STEPHEN ROSOKOFF Bom on August 27, 1946 at North Tonawanda. New York. Prepared at The Nichols School of BulTalo. Butfalo. New York. Home Address: 128 Delaware Street, Tonawanda. New York. Field of Concentration: Biology. Freshman Glee Club; Harvard Glee Club; Hillcl Society; Pre-Medical Society; Young Democrats. Dunstcr House: Dunstcr Dunces; Dunstcr House Pre-Medical Society; The Pavement Narrows; Dunstcr House Weight-Lifting Cub. WILLIAM HUTCHINSON £ ROUSSEAU g Bom on October 6. 1946 at Boston. H Massachusetts. Prepared at Deerfield (f) Academy. Deerfield. Massachusetts. •7 Home Address: 4 l.anston Way. Read- ing. Massachusetts. Field of Conceit-p (ration: Engineering Sciences. Harvard Q Glee Club. Secretary. PHILIP ALAN SCHWARTZKROIN Born on April II. 1947 at White Plains. New York. Prepared at White Plains High School. White Plains. New York Home Address: 66 Longview Avenue. White Plains. New York. Field of Concentration: Psychology. Harvard College Scholarship: National Merit Scholarship: National Science Foundation Grant. STEPHEN BARRY ROY Born on April 15. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Home Address: 36 Fairmont Avenue. Newton. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. AIESEC. President; Harvard Student Agencies. Student Linen Service Manager. Varsity Football: Varsity Spring Track; Varsity Winter Track. Dunstcr House: Wrestling. Harvard College Scholarship. JOSEPH DENNIS RYAN Born on January 26. 1946 at Toledo. Ohio. Prepared at Maumee Valley-School. Toledo. Ohio. Home Address: 3018 Middlesex. Toledo, Ohio. Field of Concentration: English. Varsity Cross Country: Freshman Soccer; Varsity Spring Track: Varsity Winter Track. Harvard National Scholarship: National Merit Scholarship. DAVID WELLSPRING SCULLEY Bom on July 17. 1946 at New York, New York. Prepared at St. Mark's School. Southboro. Massachusetts. Home Address: Harbor Road. St. James. New York. Field of Concentration: Economics. Hasty Pudding. Theatricals Business Manager 1967 and Producer 1968; Varsity Club. Varsity Soccer: JV Soccer: Freshman Soccer. Dunstcr House: Hockey. Tennis. Por-ccllian Club. SAMUEL DAVID SHAPIRO Bom on September 23. 1945 at Phila dclphia. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Osh kosh High School. Oshkosh. Wisconsin Home Address: 119 Scott Street, Osh kosh, Wisconsin. Field of Conccntra lion: Mathematics. Harvard Band. DONALD ARTHUR SADOSKI Bom on July 3. 1946 at Salem. Massachusetts. Prepared at Salem High School. Salem. Massachusetts. Home Address: 5 Orchard Terrace. Salem. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. JV Baseball; Freshman Baseball; Varsity Football; JV Football; Freshman Football : Dunstcr House: Baseball. Swimming: Dunstcr Pre-Medical Society. Harvard College Scholarship: Francis Ouimet Batlis Fund. ERIC HALL SIGWARD Bom on June 22. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Horace Mann High School. New York. New York. Home Address: 350 Central Park West. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Hasty Pudding; Outing Club. Varsity Crew. Porccllian Club. Harvard College Scholarship. FREDERICK PAUL SCHAFFER Bom on July 18. 1946 at Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Scarsdale High School. Scarsdale. New York. Home Address: 43 Hampton Road. Scarsdale. New York. Field of Concentration: Social Studies. Detur Prize; Harvard College Scholarship; Harvard National Scholarship; John Harvard Scholarship: Jacob Wcndcl Scholar. ARNOLD GORDON SMITH Born on May 14. 1946 at Toronto. Ontario. Preparedat West Hill High School. Montreal. Canada. Home Address: 42 Francis Avenue. Cambridge. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Applied Mathematics. Bach Society: Pierian Sodality. Dunstcr House: Music Society. Harvard College Scholarship; Canadian Mathematics Association Scholarship. PETER WILSON SCHANDORFF Born on September 16. 1946 at Sioux City. Iowa. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Andover. Massachusetts. Home Address: 4943 Walnut Grove Road. Memphis. Tennessee. Field of Concentration: Far Eastern Studies. International Relations Council; herein Turin-w itchier ixm 1886: Young Republicans. Dunstcr House: Drama Review Assistant Editor. Harvard College Scholarship. DAVID WARREN STEEL Bom on September 20. 1947 at Evanston. Illinois. Prepared at Scotia High School. Scotia. New York. Home Address: 34 Washington Road. Scotia. New York. Field of Concentration: Linguistics. Harvard Band; Musk Club; Organ Society; Vertin Turmwachier ixm 1886; Yacht Club; Cantori Da Chiesa Freshman Sailing. Dunstcr House: Dido and Aeneas (Lowell Opera Society): Musk Society. PETER FAHEY WELLER Born on May 5. 1946 ai Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Needham High School. Needham, Massachusetts. Home Address: 56 Winding Kiser Road. Needham. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Chemistry. Harvard Policy Committee; Phillips Brooks House Association; Prc-Mcdical Society; Young Republicans; Chemistry Audit. Dunstcr House: Dunster Daily Planti; Elections Committee. Harvard College Scholarship. JOSEPH BURTON WILEY Born on February 10. 1946 at Morristown, New Jersey. Prepared at St. Paul’s School, Concord. New Hampshire. Home Address: Riser Road, Bodmin-stcr. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Government. Charles River Literary Society; Karate Club; Outing Club; Phillips Brooks House Association. DONALD CAMERON SWENSON Bom on May 17, 1946 at Nyack, New York. Prepared at Clarkstown High School. New City. New York. Home Address: 2138 Ascott Road. North Palm Beach. Florida. Field of Concentration: American History. Dunstcr House: Soccer, Basketball, Volleyball, Tennis; Social Committee; House Athletic Secretary. MICHAEL LOUIS TABAK Bom on July 3. 1946 at Brooklyn. New York. Prepared at Lynbrook High School. Lynbrook. New York. Home Address: 241 Main Street. East Rocka-way. New York. Field of Concentration: Economics. Pierian Sodality. Dunstcr House: Solo and Chamber Music Performances. Harvard College Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. THOMAS JOHN TREMBA Bom on August I, 1946 at Bellingham. Massachusetts. Prepared at Bellingham High School. Bellingham, Massachusetts. Home Address: 44 Pond. Bellingham. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: American History. AIESEC; Catholic Student Center; Young Republicans; Senior Associate. Dunstcr House: Basketball. Baseball. Harvard College Scholarship. ROBERT GORDON URQUHART, Jr. Bom on June 5, 1945 at Bridgeport, Connecticut. Prepared at Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts. Hook Address: North William Street. Vineyard Haven. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Married to Barbara Freer on September 2. 1967. Outing Club: Pre-Law Society; Students for a Democratic Society. Freshman Crew; Varsity Crew. CHARLES RALPH WILLIAMS. Ill Bom on October 26. 1946 at Pittsburgh. Pennsy lvania. Prepared at Schenlcy High School. Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania. Home Address: 2033 Webster Avenue. Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: Government. Association of African and Afro-American Students; Freshman Council. Committee Chairman; Karate Club: Pre-Law Society; Young Democrats; Director of Black Arts Workshop. Dunstcr House: Fergus Literary Magazine. Harvard College Scholarship; Harvard Club Scholarship. RONALD THOMAS WILSON Born on December I. 1945 at Burley. Idaho. Prepared at Twin Falls High School. Twin Falls. Idaho. Home Address: 476 Sophomore Boulevard. Twin Falls. Idaho. Field of Concentration: Biology. Pre-Medical Society. Varsity Spring Track; Varsity Winter Track. PETER WYMAN WALCOTT Bom on August 23. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton Academy. Milton, Massachusetts. Home Address: Farm Street, Dover, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Anthropology. Young Democrats. Varsity Crew; Freshman Crew. Dunstcr House: Crew. Owl Club. CASPAR WILLARD WEINBERGER. Jr. Born on January' 9, 1947 at San Francisco, California. Prepared at Burlingame High School. Burlingame, California. Home Address: 2260 Forest View. Hillsborough. California. Field of Concentration: History. Freshman Council; Hasty Pudding; Young Republicans. D.U. Club. STEPHEN JEFFREY WILLSON Born on August 19. 1946 at Urbana. Illinois. Prepared at Beverly Hills High School. Beverly Hills. California. Hook Address: 1715 Chevy Chase Drive. Beverly Hills. California. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. Adrocate; Phillips Brooks House Association. Dunstcr House: Piano Recitals. John Harvard Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship; Phi Beta Kappa. PETER ALBERT WOLFF Born on January 23. 1947 at White Plains. New York. Prepared at Roosevelt High School. Yonkers. New York. Home Address: 35 Hilltop Drive. Chap-paqua. New York. Field of Concentration: Economics. Harvard Band: Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. Dunstcr House: Touch Football. Harvard College Scholarship. pJ STEPHEN BROOKS WYMAN ry Bom on Augiui 19. 1946 at Boston, rj Massachusetts. Prepared at Belmont H High School, Belmont. Massachusetts. (i) Home Address: 295 Marsh Street. Bel- Zmont, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Hasty Pud-p ding. Q John J. Bandeinn Thomas W. Bottonari Hugh C. Clark. IV Lyman H. Clark James L. Coobs, Jr. Norbert A. Doran Malcolm D. Eckel Thomas J. Ferriter Michael J. Frantz Robert Ira Hcckcr Gary R. Johnson John F. Potts William R. Scott. Jr. Leon A. Story, Jr. ELIOT HOUSE JOHN FLEMING ADAMS Bom oo December I. 1945 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Browne and Nichols, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Honsc Address: 55 Lee Road, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Hasty Pudding: International Relations Council; Mountaineering Club; Pre-Law Society; Speaker's Club; Young Republicans. JV Crew; Freshman Wrestling. Eliot House: Wrestling, Football. BERNARD ROY ADELSBERG Bom on July 2. 1947 at Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Jamaica High School. Jamaica. New York. Home Address: 67 21a 193 Lane. Fresh Meadows, New York. Field of Concentration: History and Science. Hasty Pudding. Freshman Squash; Varsity Tennis. Iroquois Club. JAMES ELIOT AISNER Born on November 12, 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Unin School, Boston. Massachusetts. Home Address: 76 Old Farm Road. Newton. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Classics. Pre-Law Society; Young Republicans; Atheneam. A. MICHAEL ARON Bom on May 14. 1946 at Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. Prepared at William Penn Charter School. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Home Address: 1398 Valley Road. Meadowbrook, Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: Government. Hasty Pudding. Varsity Basketball. Eliot House: Basketball. D.U. Club. JOHN AXTEN. II Born on July 6.1946 at Cleveland. Ohio. Prepared at Noble and Greenough, Dedham, Massachusetts. Home Address: 96 Abbott Road. Wellesley. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Harvard Student Agencies; Hasty Pudding: International Relations Council: Young Democrats- Varsity Soccer. JOHN REIMERS BAUMANN Born on March 17, 1946 at Grand Island. Nebraska. Prepared at Central Catholic High School. Grand Island, Nebraska. Home Address: 620 South Clay. Grand Island. Nebraska. Field of Concentration: English. Catholic Student Center; Mountaineering Club; Young Republicans. Eliot House: Basketball. Softball. Harvard College Freshman Honorary Scholarship. ELIOT WALTER F REDERIC BLOOD Horn oil July 26. 1946 m Lconia. New Jersey. Prepared at Lconia High School, Lconia. New Jersey. Home Address: 446 Park Avenue. Lconia. New Jersey. F ield of Concent ration: English, Pierian Sodality: Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Young Republicans. RONALD SPAHR BOGDASARIAN Born on June 14. 1946 at Binghamton. New York. Prepared at Loomis School. Winsor. Connecticut. Home Address: 46 I.aurcl Avenue. Binghamton. New York. Field of Concentration: English. Hasty Pudding: Young Democrats; Hasty Pudding Theatricals 119. Freshman Spring Track. Eliot House: Wrestling. Spec Club. STEVEN HOLMES BOWEN Born on March 14. 1946 at Norwood. Massachusetts. Prepared at Norwood Senior High School. Norwood. Massachusetts. Home Address: 246 Union Street. Norwood. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. Harsard College Scholarship. WILLIAM HOWARD BRAUN Born on June 17. 1946 at Buffalo. New York. Prepared at Orchard Park High School. Orchard Park. New York. Home Address: 274 Hillside Drive. Orchard Park. New York. Field ol' Concentration: Economics. Speaker's Club. President: Pre-Law Society. Varsity Crew. Eliot House: Swimming. Track. ARTURO EDUARDO BRILLEMBOURG Born on April 27. 1947 at Caracas. Venezuela. Prepared at Canterbury School. New Milford. Connecticut. Home Address: 101 Cedar Avenue. Hewlett. New York. Field of Concentration: Economics. Harvard Dramatic Club. Varsity Swimming. Eliot House: Swimming. Delphic Club. DAVID CHURCH BROOKS Born on November 9. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Noble and Greenough. Dedham. Massachusetts. Home Address: 95 Church Street. Weston. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Member of Naval ROTC. Hasty Pudding; WHRB. Freshman Crew. Eliot House: Boat Club. A.D. Club. HOWARD KENNEDY BEALE. Jr. Born on March 17. 1943 at New York. New York. Prepared at University of Wisconsin High School. Madison. Wisconsin. Home Address: 2816 Columbia Road, Madison. Wisconsin. Field of Concentration: History. Freshman Couneil; Freshman Glee Club: Rad-clitic Grant-in-Aid: Jazz Dance Workshop. Macbeth. National Merit Scholarship. STEVEN MARK BEAN Bom on October 15. 1947 at San Francisco. California. Prepared at Fairview High School. Boulder. Colorado. Home Address: 2755 Julliard Street, Boulder. Colorado. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Detur Prize; John Harvard Scholarship: National Merit Scholarship. GARY WALTER BECK Born on November 27, 1945 at Cincinnati. Ohio. Prepared at Walnut Hills High School. Cincinnati. Ohio. Home Address: 5470 Irwin Road. Mason, Ohio. Field of Concentration: Government. Sigma Alplta Epsilon. Treasurer; Young Republicans. Eliot House: Football. Iroquois Club. JOHN GORDON BEMIS Bom on May 10.1946 at Concord. Massachusetts. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Andover. Massachusetts. Home Address: Monument Street. Concord. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association. Vatsity Hockey; Freshman Lacrosse. Eliot House: Soccer. Track. Fly Club. PAUL WESLEY BENNETT Born on September 5. 1946 at Portsmouth. Ohio. Prepared at St. Charles Preparatory. Columbus. Ohio. Home Address: 3034 111 Paso Drive. Columbus. Ohio. Field of Concentration: Economics. Catholic Student Center: Yacht Club: Young Democrats; Young Republicans: Schooling Careers Project. Freshman Football; Freshman Swimming. Eliot House: Swimming. Football. LARRY ROBERT BERNSTEIN Born on November 1.1946at Worcester, Massachusetts. Prepared at South High School. Worcester, Massachusetts. Home Address: 6 Fairlawn Drive. Worcester. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Government. Harvard Army ROTC. Caisson Club: Freshman Council; Harvard Student Agencies: Hillcl Society; Pre-Law Society: Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Recording Secretary: Young Democrats: Senior Associate. Eliot House: Football. Baseball. Volleyball: House Committee. Treasurer. Harvard College Scholarship. IW6 Sis MARTIN HARRISON CAIN Born on Jul 10. 1946 at Baltimore. Maryland. Prepared at St. Paul's School. Brooklandville. Maryland. Home Address: 1624 Hardwick Road. Towson. Maryland. Field of Concentration: History. Young Democrats. Freshman Football; Varsity Lacrosse. Eliot House: Football. ROBERT THOMAS BROOKS Born on December 16. 1946 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at St. Albans. Washington. D.C. Home Address: 5325 North 32nd Street. Arlington. Virginia. Field of Concentration: English. Hasty Pudding. Varsity Football; Freshman Lacrosse: Varsity Spring Track; Varsity-Winter Track. Owl Cub. ah boo: 'Wre'ttU ■® . Beri '■ Y«aj i T aro:-Utti i . RICHARD FORD BUCKLEY Born on March 24, 1946 at Springfield. Massachusetts. Prepared at Williston Academy. Easthampton, Massachusetts. Home Address: 76 Roscland Terrace. Longnscadow. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. Member of United States Marine Corps Reserve. Catholic Student Center; Phillips Brooks House Association. Varsity Lacrosse: Varsity Wrestling. ERNEST WESTERVELT CARMAN Born on October 31.1945 at Fort Worth. Texas. Prepared at Hillsboro. Nashville. Tennessee. Home Address: 140 Oak Street. Glendale. Ohio. Field of Concentration: Geology. Member of Naval ROTC. Mountaineering Club. Freshman Football. Harvard Freshman Scholarship. 01MB10 B KfcU-WaXwi 01 x V.i; 'Seta Non to MfcEShi r ool Mijadoais “ ■ : feweafee hdinhf. PAUL SELKREGC BUDDENHAGEN Bom on March 27,1946 at Akron. Ohio. Prepared at Choate School. Wallingford. Connecticut, and Cheltenham College. Cheltenham. England. House Address: 3S0 Ely Road. Fairlawis Heights. Akron. Ohio. Field of Concentration: Economics. Young Republicans: Hasty Pudding. Varsity Rugby. Captain. A.D. Club. Harvard Honorary Scholarship. ROBERT HARKIN CARR. Jr. Bom on July II. 1946 at Cambridge. Massachusetts. Prepared at Arlington High School. Arlington. Massachusetts. Home Address: 198 Overlook Road. Arlington. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. Pi Eta Club. Freshman Baseball: Varsity Hockey. Eliot House: Football. Softball. Harvard National Scholarship. 4 HOWARD BUS -se 17.1 6 it i;V, rpireJ a ChJrl Mif «hirihd.Sc T«lh r; Ksic fey. Ore r Ycrt FriJ i Casa won. ScniffiCiih tD So6av Cs csc:S os«.I NICHOLAS RANDOLPH BURKE Bom on October 6. 1942 at New York. New- York. Prepared at St. Paul's School. Concord. New Hampshire. Home Address: 816 Youngsford Road. Gladwync. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: History. Served in the United States Marine Corps. A.D. Club. President. PHILIP S. CHASE Born on April 12. 1946 at Durango. Colorado. Prepared at New Trier Township High School. New Trier. Illinois. Home Address: 286 Drexel Lane. Glencoe. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Biology. Phillips Brooks House Association. Varsity Swimming. Harvard National Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. BRYAN CLAIR CHENEY xCB ri Go (dr s Sod rt jW CHRISTOPHER JON BURNS Born on October 20. 1946 at Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania. Prepared at St. John's Preparatory School. Danvers. Massachusetts. Home Address: Chase Point. Little Compton. Rhode Island. Field of Concentration: Economics. Catholic Student Center; Hasty Pudding. Varsity-Football. Eliot House: Softball. Owl Club. GREGORY WHEELER BYRNES Bom on December I. 1945 at Eugene. Oregon. Prepared at South Eugene High School. Eugene. Oregon. Home Address: Route 2 Box 350. Bend. Oregon. Field of Concentration: History. Freshman Council: Harvard Undergraduate Council : Speaker's Club. Bom on May 15. 1946 at Pasadena. California. Prepared at Grossmont High School. Grossmont. California. Home Address: 9916 Sunset Avenue. La Mesa. California. Field of Concentration: Architectural Sciences. Freshman Glee Club: Harvard Student Agencies. Manager: Mountaineering Club; Phillips Brooks House Association; Returnees of American Field Service; Vtrtin Turmwachttr rot I8S6. Freshman Crew. National Merit Scholarship. JOHN JEFFREY CLEMENT Born on August 8. 1946 at Evanston. Illinois. Prepared at Maine Township High School West. Dcs Plaines. Illinois. Home Address: 355 Stratford. Dcs Plaines. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Physics. Phillips Brooks House Association; Yacht Club. Varsity Sailing. Eliot House: Football. Squash. ELIOT ilfi MICHAEL ALBERT CRESPI Bom or August 23, 1946 at Bridgeport, Connecticut. Prepared at Portsmouth Priory School. Portsmouth, Rhode Island. Home Address: Route I, Headland, Alabama. Field of Concentration: Romance Languages. Catholic Student Center; Young Republicans. Policy Director and Member-at-Large of the Executive Committee. GARY BRANT CRIGGER Bom on July 20. 1946 at Marlinton. West Virginia. Prepared at Lewisburg High School. Lewisburg, West Virginia. Home Address: Lewisburg, West Virginia. Field of Concentration: Economics. Member of Air Force ROTC. Eliot House: Football. Basketball. Harvard College Scholarship. CHRISTOPHER CLAY DEMUTH Born on August 5. 1946 at Evanston. Illinois. Prepared at The Lawrcnccviile School. Lawrencevillc, New Jersey. Home Address: 337 Abbotsford Road, Kenilworth. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Government. Freshman Glee Club; Harvard Undergraduate Council; Hasty Pudding; Jubilee Committee. Freshman Football. RODOLFE FREDERIC DERLANGER Bom on June 7. 1945 at London. England. Prepared at Eton College, Windsor, Berkshire. Home Address: 44 Upper Grosvenor Street, London W. 1, England. Field of Concentration: Fine Arts. Hasty Pudding; Hasty Pudding Theatricals. Porcellian Club. WILLIAM EDWARD CROWE Born on July 8. 1946 at St. Louis, Missouri. Prepared at St. Louis Priory. St. Louis. Missouri. Home Address: 7550 Wise Avenue. St. Louis. Missouri. Field of Concentration: Psychology. Pi Eta Club; Pre-Medical Society; Young Democrats. Eliot House: Ett-dymion; Midsummer Night's Dream; Football. Boxing, Fencing; House Committee. Iroquois Club. Harvard College Scholarship. ARCHIBALD CASON v EDWARDS. Jr. „ Bom on January 24. 1945 at Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter. New Hampshire. Home Address: 5631 North q Kelley Avenue. Oklahoma City. Oklahoma. Field of Concentration: Fine Arts. Hasty Pudding; Lampoon. Eliot House: Drama Society; Squash. Spec Club. ROBERT THOMAS CUNNINGHAM Bom on January I, 1947 at Danvers, Massachusetts. Prepared at Danvers High School. Danvers. Massachusetts Hook Address: 118 Locust Street. Dan vers. Massachusetts. Field of Conceit tration: Economics. Varsity Baseball Eliot House: Football. Basketball. Har vard College Scholarship. JAMES JOSEPH FEDERICO. Jr. Bom on April 26. 1946 at Westerly. Rhode Island. Prepared at LaSalle Academy. Providence, Rhode Island. Home Address: 50 Highland Avenue, Westerly. Rhode Island. Field of Concentration: Government. Freshman Basketball. Iroquois Club. PETER YUNKER CONNOR Bom on January 17. 1947 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at Rich Township East. Park Forest. Illinois. Home Address: 25S Sangamon. Park Forest, Illinois. Field of Concentration: Economics. Caisson Club; Young Democrats; Bridge Club. National Merit Scholarship. TERENCE M. CONS1DINE Born on April 8. 1947 at San Diego. California. Prepared at Groton School. Groton, Massachusetts. Home Address: Cole Grodi Road. Valley Center, California. Field of Concentration: History. Hasty Pudding; Young Republicans. Varsity Crew. Porcellian Club. EDWARD ALLEN DAVENPORT Born on November 24, 1945 at Yakima, Washington. Prepared at Lincoln High School. Seattle, Washington. Home Address: 518 North 59th, Seattle, Washington. Field of Concentration: English. Wesley Foundation. Varsity Fencing. Eliot House: Poetry Group; Literature Table. Sloan Foundation Scholarship. JEREMIAH THOMAS DELANEY Bom on September 10, 1946 at Nor- I wood. Massachusetts. Prepared at Wal- I pole High School. Walpole, Massachusetts. Home Address: 38 Riverside Place, Walpole, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Catholic Student Center; Pi Eta Club. Secretary; Young Democrats. Varsity Hockey. Eliot House: Volleyball, Softball. Harvard College Scholarship. e r r,- x v r O’ WBicta £ • • . L £ «0 G:o$. U-jj wsJKa S jf.. HOMAS itUVB iriw M, I'rt i v (crf.'Wpottesi Ailrm: a ). . . Muadc i •«: : Hsury Ckxuy, h Ea G kr,-xms. Vnij Htb V ,••• -V ’.: • X- m. cuv n fctf S, 1W e E«l; :i:ol i: Tit la SL-,-•racedk, No ri ,: 3)1 AStctfaU Itsos FrilJCsj ixeraast faint urdlJadepkaCa; ttsj; Itia Cm Foaitl MARK JAY FELDMAN Born on July 5. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Tcnally High School. Tonally. New Jersey. Home Address: 133 L lcwood Drive. Tcnally, New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Social Studies. National Merit Scholarship. STEPHEN JOSEPH GALLI Born on February 15. 1947 at Somerville. Massachusetts. Prepared at Malden High School. Malden. Massachusetts. Home Address: 236 Webster Street, Malden. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Biology. Catholic Student Center. Harvard College Scholarship. JOHN PAUL GARR1TY, Jr. Born on December 14. 1945 at Los Angeles, California. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Andover. Massachusetts. Home Address: 17 Century Road, South Weymouth. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Catholic Student Center: Hasty Pudding; Young Democrats. Varsity Hockey. Captain; Freshman Hockey. Eliot House: Soccer, Softball. D.U. Club. Harvard College Scholarship. MARSHALL MARK GOLDBERG Bom on December 23. 1946 at Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Kiski School. Sullburg. Pennsylvania. Home Address: 5425 Albenarlc Avenue. Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: Economics. Harvard Student Agencies; Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association: Pi Eta Club. President; WHRB: Yacht Club: Young Democrats. Varsity Football: Freshman Spring Track; Freshman W inter Track. Eliot House: Volleyball. Track. Softball. Cross-Country . Harvard College Scholarship. J. STEPHEN GOLDEN Bom on August 8. 1946 at San Antonio. Texas. Prepared at Thomas JetTerson High School. San Antonio. Texas. Home Address: 134 Vaughan Place. San Antonio. Texas. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Hillcl Society; Phillips Brooks House Association; Pre-Medical Society: Young Democrats. Eliot House: Tennis: Science Dinner Committee. Detur Prize; Harvard College Scholarship. JONATHAN ROUILLARD GRANDINE Bom on July 16. 1946 at Concord. Massachusetts. Prepared at Wellesley Senior High School. Wellesley. Massachusetts. Hook Address: 26 Kingsbury Street. Wellesley. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Detur Prize: Phi Beta Kappa. EfR£CBK 1GB hoeUMtlaUi TtreigfwCrigti r Saw. Icoa Vis rid d Cscasxar: s Priiw. hq IsPofxLuOi JAMES HINKLEY GARVIN. Jr. Born on October 3, 1946 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Friends School. Wilmington, Delaware. Home Address: 2302 Delaware Avenue, Wilmington, Delaware. Field of Concentration: Chemistry. Harvard Band, Treasurer and Executive Assistant. National Merit Scholarship. MIOCASW UK. Jr. Janry X UitccA hjeeir?--toJeay. bee. Na fd 1ta Aifts V Ave . OiaNjaCty) Fd4 d CcKCBi j1 i S) Dn=t VINCENT AUGUSTUS GAUDIANI Bom on July 27, 1946 at New York, New York. Prepared at The Lawrencc-villc School. Lawrenccvillc, New Jersey. Home Address: 60S Coles Mill Road. Haddonftcld, New Jersey. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Dramatic Gub; Phillips Brooks House Association. Freshman Lacrosse. Eliot House: Crew; House Committee. Harvard College Scholarship. PETER GOELET GERRY Bom on September 23. 1945 at Glen Cove. New York. Prepared at St. Paul’s School. Concord. New Hampshire. Home Address: Willcls Road. Old Westbury, New York. Field of Concentration: Economics. Member of Naval ROTC. Hasty Pudding; Young Republicans. Freshman Crew. Eliot House: Crew. Spec Club. MORRIS GRAY. Jr. Bom on August 18. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Noble and Grccnough. Dedham. Massachusetts. Home Address: 223 Highland Street. Dedham. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Member of Naval ROTC. Hasty Pudding: Phillips Brooks House Association; Talfrail Gub: Young Republicans. A.D. Club. DAVID CONNOLLY HALL Born on April II. 1946 at Seattle. Washington. Prepared at Bellevue High School. Bellevue. Washington. Home Address: 3655 Hunts Point Road. Bellev ue. Washington. Field of Concentration: Histoo and Literature. Phillips Brooks House Association; Ski Gub. Freshman Tennis. Eliot House: Football. Squash. Harvard National Scholarship. CHRISTOPHER LADD HALLOWELL Bom on October 14. 1945 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton Academy, Milton. Massachusetts. Home Address: Foggybrook Farm. Lenox. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Hasty Pudding: International Relations Council; Natural History Society; Phillips Brooks House Association: Yardling: Young Republicans. Freshman Crew. Eliot House: Midsummer Night's Dream: Soccer. Squash. Crew. Tennis. Fly Gub. DONALD MARK HOOI'ER Horn on October 2. IW5 at Hartford, Connecticut. Prepared at Loomis School, Windsor. Connecticut. Home Address; 12 Rolling Meadows. Madison. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Film Studies: Harvard Student Agencies: Hasty Pudding; Wind Ensemble. Varsity Rugby; Freshman Soccer: Freshman Spring Track: Freshman Winter Track. Eliot House: Track. Hockey. Owl Club. Harvard Honorary Scholarship. JEFFREY GEORGE HUVKU.E Born on February 6, 19-16 at Battle Creek. Michigan. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Andover. Massachusetts. Home Address: Beecher Lane. Litchfield. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: History. Varsity Spring Track: Varsity Winter Track. PHILIP JOSEPH HWAY Bom on September 3. 1946 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at Maine Township High School West. Dcs Plaines. Illinois. Home Address: 1855 Locust Street. Dcs Plaines, Illinois. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Member of Air Force ROTC. Music Club; Phillips Brooks House Association: Pre-Medical Society; Young Republicans. Freshman Crew. Eliot House: Cross-Country. Wrestling; Young Republican Policy Report on Vietnam. HOWARD ISENBERG Bom on October 15. 1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at Forest Hills High School. Forest Hills. New York Home Address: 108-24 Jewel. Forest Hills. New York. Field of Concentration: Biology. Harvard College Scholarship. DAVID CEDRIC JIMERSON Bom on August 30. 1946. in New York. New York. Prepared at Wilson High School. West Lawn. Pennsylvania. Home Address: Sinking Spring R.D. I. Pennsylvania. JAN LEWIS JOHNSON Bom on September 10. 1946 at Chattanooga. Tennessee. Prepared at Chattanooga High School. Chattanooga. Tennessee. Home Address: 20J Sequoia Drive. Chattanooga. Tennessee. Field of Concentration: Music. Bach Society; Music Club: Pierian Sodality: Yacht Club. Eliot House: Music Society: Brass Ensemble. STANLEY IRA HANOVER Bom on January 10. 1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at University of Chicago High School. Chicago, Illinois. Home Address: 2449 East 74th Place, Chicago. Illinois. Field of Concentration: English. Karate Club; Phillips Brooks House Association: Psychology Society. Eliot House: Soccer. Track. Squash, Crew; Colloquium on Far Eastern Affairs. Spec Club. Harvard College Scholarship. PHILIP HARRISON Bom on April 6. 1946 at Seattle. Washington. Prepared at Foster High School. Seattle, Washington. Home Address: 5702 South 152nd. Seattle. Washington. Field of Concentration: Anthropology. Harvard Band: Phillips Brooks House Association: Yacht Club; Pierian Sodality. Detur Prize; John Harvard Scholarship. STEVEN GEORGE HERBERT Bom on January 6. 1946 at Lansing. Michigan. Prepared at East Lansing High School. East Lansing. Michigan. Home Address: 1236 Blake Street, Lansing. Michigan. Field of Concentration: Biology. Outing Club; Phillips Brooks House Association; Pre-Medical Society; Young Democrats. Freshman Football. Eliot House: Swimming. Soccer. Harvard College Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. ROBERT FRANCIS HIGGINS Bom on January 27. 1947 at Medford. Massachusetts. Prepared at Malden Catholic School. Malden. Massachusetts. Home Address: 33 Holland Road. Melrose, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Member of Army ROTC. Catholic Student Center; Hasty Pudding: Pi Eta Club: Pre-Law Society; Young Democrats: Young Republicans: Senior Associate. Varsity Hockey: Varsity Lacrosse. Eliot House: Football. Hockey. Softball. Harvard College Scholarship. LOUIS CLARK HINMAN Bom on March 8, 1946 at Detroit. Michigan. Prepared at East High School. Rochester. New York. Home Address: 799 Harvard Street. Rochester, New York. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Dramatic Club; Returnees of American Field Service. Freshman Crew. Eliot House: A Midsummer Hlght's Dream; Soccer, Fencing. Crew. John Harvard Honorary Scholarship. PAUL HOFFMAN Bom on April 21. 1946 at New York, New York. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Andover. Massachusetts, and Bryanston School. England. Home Address: 41-42 Uogens Godc. St. Thomas. Virgin Islands. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Hasty Pudding. Varsity Crew. D.U. Club. C«oa T io; Hr j « % “ $P, |Ia , t. xi.EiaH CV fcr.«fc; iFORGE HLMUt • ilW« «■ « , Aatoa ifejcjj. ' Bede In Lc MC-lFoirfCjt-. • Vni) Sgai at Tiki JOHN SHIVELY KNIGHT. Ill Horn on April 13. 1945 at Columbus. Georgia. Prepared ai Laurences tile. Laurencesillc. New Jersey. Home Address: 815 Cooper Avenue. Columbus. Georgia. Field of Concentration: History. Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association; YanNirig. Phoenix Club. President. JOHN DENNIS KELLY Horn on November 14.1946 at Minneapolis. Minnesota. Prepared at Crookston Cathedral High. Crookston. Minnesota. Home Address: 401 Hunter. Crookston. Minnesota. Field of Concentration: Government. Harvard Undergraduate Council; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. Freshman Crew. Eliot House: Hockey; House Committee. tSv hi B-v .:' -J ANTON M. KRONE Born on November 29, 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Erasmus Hall. New York. New York. Home Address: 16 West 16th Street. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Hasty Pudding: Pre-Medical Society. Erh WAY fcswi uVaal ; tori' ! . DoPiak 1!S5 tea h inev II 3 FeCJCt} Scot! RtifcK tai: te ROIC Vl.se Qi Pi: tVxsAMacaPtfc: . YcvaiRrysKoahs Ea Hew: Cntfii fc70b.1t iMlimx ISFNKRo iriel!.l ‘i'a Prerrti i Fats xFasHiVjh ter.1 WS YettHUCW . HwdU'b D. SCOTT KEMPER Born on October 9. 1946 at Harvey. North Dakota. Prepared at Hibbing High School. Hibbing. Minnesota. Flume Address: S |uircs Hall. Grand Forks. North Dakota. Field of Concentration: Government. Debate Council; Outing Club; Phillips Brooks House Association; Pre-Law Society; Students fora Democratic Society. Eliot House: SUdtummtr Night's Dream: Spring Reading Festival. Harvard College Scholarship. WALTER KIECHEL. Ill Born on July 21. 1946 at Tccumsch, Nebraska. Prepared at George Washington High School. Alexandria. Virginia. Home Address: 448 Argyle Drive. Alexandria. Virginia. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Member of Naval ROTC. Eliot House: Don Juan. Detur Price. Harvard College Scholarship: John Harvard Scholarship. HENRY WALTER KILLEEN. Ill Bom on August 25. 1946 at Buffalo. New York. Prepared at Nichols School. Buffalo. New York. Home Address: 46 Highland Avenue. Buffalo. New York. Field of Concentration: English. Freshman Glee Club; Hasty Pudding: WHRB; Yacht Club; Young Democrats; Hars-ard-Radclitfc Forum Theatre. Varsity Sailing. Eliot House: Christmas Hay. Phoenix Club. £.1%; sgi LARY JON KILTON Born on May 20. 1946 at tlighland Park. Illinois. Prepared at South High School. Sheboggan. Wisconsin. Home Address: 314 Center Avenue. Sheboggan. Wisconsin. Field of Concentration: History. Bridge Ciub; Hasty Pudding; Karate Cub; Pi Eta Club. Treasurer; Young Republicans. Freshman Crew. Eliot House: Basketball, Crew. Harvard College Scholarship. EDWARD FARNSWORTH LAWSON Born on January 3. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Noble and Grccnough. Dedham. Massachusetts. Home Address: 507 Bridge Street. Dedham. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Government. Varsity Crew ; JV Crew ; Freshman Crew. Owl Club. RICHARD WARD LEYERLE Born on November 22. 1946 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at Maine Township High School West. Dev Plaines. Illinois. Home Address: 1722 Birch Street. Dcs Plaines. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Chemistry. BRUCE ROBERT MacEACHERN Bom on March 3.1946 at Malden. Massachusetts. Prepared at Malden High School. Malden. Massachusetts. Home Address: II Dennis Road. Malden. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Catholic Student Center. Harvard College Scholarship. WILLIAM BERNARD MALUGEN. Jr. Bom on April 2. 1946 at St. Louis. Missouri. Prepared at New Trier Township High School. Wmnetka. Illinois. Home Address: 788 Walden Road. Winnetka. Illinois. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. w RICHARD ELLERT MANCHESTER Bom on May 21. 1946 ai Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at New Trier High School. Winneika. Illinois. Hon e Address: 1336 Chestnut. Wilmette, Illinois. Field of Concentration: Economics. Freshman Council: Hasty Pudding; Jubilee Committee. Freshman Baseball; Freshman Football. Eliot House: Basketball. Owl Club. JOHN HALL MANNERS Bom on September 25. 1945 at New York. New York. Prepared at Newton High School. Newton, Massachusetts. Home Address: 134 Sumner Street. Newton. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Film Studies; Harvard Dramatic Club: Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association; Senior Associate. Freshman Soccer. Eliot House: Soccer. Football. Softball: Christmas Play. ROBERT PATTERSON MARSHALL. Jr. Born on June 5. 1946 at Memphis. Tennessee. Prepared at Phillips Academy Andover. Massachusetts. Home Ad dress: 3 Plateau Circle. Bronxville. New York. Field of Concentration: History Harvard Crimiou. Sports Editor; Hasty Pudding; Natural History Society. Exec ulivc Committee; Returnees of American Field Service. Freshman Tennis. Eliot House: Football. Soccer. Squash. Basketball. Baseball. Tennis. National Merit Scholarship. JEFF CEPHUS McCOY. Jr. Born on May 23. 1946 at St. Louis. Missouri. Prepared at Sumner High School. St. Louis. Missouri. Home Address: 3122 Marnicc Place. St. Louis. Missouri. Field of Concentration: Philosophy. Association of African and Afro-American Students. Eliot House: Volleyball. Track. john alson mckinnon Born on May 5. 1946 at San Francisco. California. Prepared at San Rafael High. San Rafael, California. Home Address: 72 Lochinvar Road. San Rafael. California. Field of Concentration: English. Lampoon: Phillips Brooks House Association. Freshman Crew. Eliot House: Crew. Owl Club. Harvard National Scholarship: Sloan Foundation Scholarship. IAN MALCOLM WATSON McLaughlin Born on June 14. 1945 at New York. New York. Prepared at St. Paul’s School. Concord. Massachusetts. Hook Address: 155 East 72nd Street. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: Fine Arts. Hasty Pudding; Young Republicans. JV Rugby. Eliot House: Crew; Christmas Play. Fly Club. JAMES EARL MEIKRANTZ Born on August 8. 1946 at Scranton. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Abington Heights High School. Clark’s Summit. Pennsylvania. Home Address: Box 282. R.D. 3. Moscow. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: Economics. Member of Air Force ROTC. Phillips Brooks House Association. Eliot House: Baseball, Football. Track. MARSEL MESULAM Bom on April 7. 1945 at Istanbul. Turkey. Prepared at Robert Academy. Istanbul. Turkey. Home Address: Tes-vikiye 105-3. Istanbul. Turkey. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Phillips Brooks House Association. Harvard College Scholarship. EGILS MILBERGS Born on August 7. 1946 at Lubeck. Germany. Prepared at Rich Central High School. Olympia Fields. Illinois. Home Address: Ftossmoor. Illinois Field of Concentration: Economics. Yacht Club. D.U. Club. Harvard College Scholarship. DONALD WAYNE MITCHELL Bom on November I. 1946 at San Ber-nadino. California, Prepared at Pacific High School. San Bemadino. California. Home Address: 1912 North Belle Street. San Bemadino. California. Field of Concentration: History. Harvard Undergraduate Council: Pre-Law Society: Young Republicans; Senior Associate Freshman Winter Track. Iroquois Club. Secretary. Harvard College Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. BRANT STEVEN MITTLER Bom on October 5. 1946 at Corpus Christi. Texas. Prepared at W. B. Ray High School. Corpus Christi. Texas. Home Address: 653 Sorrell. Corpus Christi. Texas. Field of Concentration: Biology. Debate Council: Hillel Society; Phillips Brooks House Association. Eliot House: Tennis. Harvard College Scholarship. RICHARD THOMPSON MECHEM Born on December 29. 1944 at Boston. Massachusetts Prepared at Newton High School. Newton. Massachusetts Home Address: 36 Dexter Rond. Newton. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Varsity Football; Varsity Hockey. Eliot House: Football. Hockey. Softball: Croquet Club President. Harvard National Scholarship. teS.Bu,, ' P: «-C X v ; 'iCMtt O XDoaSj Hi i£ 0«Ko ;CfteeCk NaMd fei, XI IBKlAMt allWxfcst h x 1km, •y, i. tire ' .::■ • v sWi.Pesiiaife; oa:Ecaaia1fcfc )TC ;- ,-.:• ■ • Ekt Hcafa MESIUV VrH.IWxlattv tire! c life- ±-Tif'ifvHrt.UJtsV tf-3.l2eW.rrij.fe: nr-oi: Sxsl Utah lAjHastXaMtafe; SchSxalu PETER PATRICK MORRIN Born on October 31, 1945 at St. Louis, Missouri. Prepared at Governor Dum-mcr Academy, South Byfield, Massachusetts. Home Address: 5251 Westminster, St. Louis, Missouri. Field of Concentration: Fine Arts. Hasty Pudding; Yardling; Forum Theater. D.U. Gub, President. Harvard College Scholarship. ROY WILLIAM MORRIS. Jr. Born on July 23, 1946 at St. Louis, Missouri. Prepared at Southwest High School. St. Louis, Missouri. Home Address: 2727 Hampton Avenue, St. Louis. Missouri. Field of Concentration: History and Science. Karate Gub; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. Harvard College Scholarship. DANIEL TLD ORLOVSKY Bom on July 6.1947 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at Roosevelt High School. Chicago. Illinots. Home Address: 5014 North Springlield Avenue. Chicago. Illinois. Field of Concentration: History. Harvard Student Agencies: Hasty Pudding: Phillips Brooks House Association; WHRB; Young Democrats. Varsity Basketball. Idiot House: Basketball. Harvard National Scholarship. GLENN ALAN PADNICK Bom on September 8. 1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at Farming-ton High School, Farmingdalc. New York. Home Address: 15 Gail Place. Newburgh. New York. Field of Concentration: History. Harvard Crwno i. Managing Editor; Hasty Pudding; Signet Society. Idiot House: Wrestling. Harvard College Scholarship. RICHARD MORENO Bom on May 31. 1945 at Medellin. Colombia. Prepared at Portsmouth Priory. Portsmouth. Rhode Island. Home Address: Apartado Acrco 12-46. Medellin. Colombia, South America. Field of Concentration: Economics. Catholic Student Center; International Relations Council; Students International Organization. A.D. Club. Harvard College Scholarship. NICHOLAS OGAN Bom on May 25. 1947 at Boston. Mas-sachuvetts. Prepared at The Lawrence-ville School. Lawrences die. New Jersey. Home Address: 113 Dartmouth Street. Holyoke. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Young Democrats. .NIIUtfGS okfsi.HtalMfc e Jjd Caa S; LObcpi Fo. Cab m: Ffceaxt. East FSi 2rr a:tci wshJu A10 Vri !V!3jE-i ob Sachs!. jaiW KlCl uPs l tSdeoLSoteSsiCia AiSMdiHVfibii fcraiKL Ciin center Hsr. firs P cCmo hU rtar- tixaVtetSioJK uvrsn'P 1 3 PETER FRANKLIN MOULTON Bom on May 27, 1946 at Springfield, Massachusetts. Prepared at Winchester High School, Winchester. Massachusetts. Home Address: 149 Forest Street. Winchester, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Physics. Harvard Band; Hasty Pudding; Hasty Pudding Theatricals. South Pacific (Wiathrop). Flarvard College Scholarship. ARTHUR CHARLES NIELSEN. Ill Bom on December 20,1945 at Evanston, Illinois. Prepared at New Trier Township High School, Winnetka. Illinois. Home Address: 1122 Pelham Road, Winnetka, Illinois. Field of Concentration: Social Studies. Varsity Squash; Varsity Tennis. Eliot House: Squash. Harvard College Scholarship. THOMAS HOLDEN NOBLE Bom on August 22, 1946 at Evanston. Illinois. Prepared at La Jolla High School, La Jolla, California. Home Address: 247 Mount Auburn Street. Cambridge, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. JONATHAN ROBINSON PANTALEONI Bom on June 22. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Louis Country Day School. St. Louis. Missouri. Home Address: 37 Glen Eagles Drive, St. Louis, Missouri. Field of Concentration: Architectur.il Sciences. Hasty Pudding; Young Republicans. Delphic Club. ANTHONY WEYBURN PARKER Born on September 16, 1945 at New York. New York. Prepared at St. Paul's School. Concord, New Hampshire. Home Address: South Freeport. Maine. Field of Concentration: Government. Member of Naval ROTC. Hasty Pudding, Vice President; Yacht Club. Rear Commodore; Young Republicans; Hasty Pudding Theatricals. JV Crew; Freshman Crew; JV Hockey; Freshman Hockey; Varsity Sailing. Captain. Eliot House: Hockey. Delphic Club. KENT PARROT Bom on September 28. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Belmont Hill School. Belmont. Massachusetts. Home Address: 711 Concord Avenue. Belmont, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Freshman Football; Varsity Hockey: Varsity Tennis. Eliot House: Tennis. Baseball. ALBERT AUGUSTUS POPE Bom on July 12. 1944 at Panama. Panama. Prepared at Milton Academy. Milton. Massachusetts. Home Address: 11 Tokenckc Trail. Darien. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: History. Freshman Glee Club; Harvard Dramatic Club; Hasty Pudding: It Circoto hali-ano: Lampoon; Phillips Brooks House Association. Eliot House: Hockey. Tennis. Spec Club. FRANK HAMMOND PRESTON Bom on October 9. 1946 at Fitchburg. Massachusetts. Prepared at Fitchburg High School. Fitchburg. Massachusetts. Home Address: 35 Ellis Street. Fitchburg. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. Harvard Band. STANLEY DAVID QUINT Born on November 14. 1946 at Newton. Massachusetts. Prepared at Brookline High School. Brookline. Massachusetts Home Address: 125 Elm Street. Belmont. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Applied Mathematics. Eliot House: Baseball. Softball. Harvard College Scholarship. DEAN WILLIAM RAU Born on January 27, 1946 at Willmar. Minnesota. Prepared at Willmar Senior High School. Willmar. Minnesota. Home Address: 819 Ella Avenue. Willmar. Minnesota. Field of Concentration: Biology. Harvard Student Agencies: Mountaineering Club. Cabin Chairman; Phillips Brooks House Association: Young Republicans. Varsity Basketball; JV Basketball: Freshman Basketball. Eliot House: Football. Basketball. Track. Harvard College Scholarship. JAMES AUSTIN PEHRKON Bom on June 25. 1946 at Austin. Texas. Prepared at Seoul American High School. Seoul. Korea. Home Address: 2000 South Eads 804. Arlington. Virginia. Field of Concentration: Economics. Member of Army ROTC. Caisson Club; Parachute Club; Young Democrats. Vanity Crew; Freshman Crew. Harvard College Scholarship. HAVEN NELSON BORLAND PELL Bom on February 19.1946 at Glen Cove. New York. Prepared at St. Paul’s School. Concord. New Hampshire. Home Address: 149 Jericho Turnpike. Old Westbury. New York. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Member of Naval ROTC. Hasty Pudding: Hasty Pudding Theatricals. JV Hockey; Freshman Hockey; Varsity Soccer: J V Soccer; Freshman Soccer. Eliot House: Softball. Fly Club. MICHAEL ADRIAN PONSOR Bom on August 13. 1946 at Chicago. Illinois. Home Address: 19 South First Street. Apt. 1506. Minneapolis. Minnesota. Field of Concentration: English. International Relations Council; Phillips Brooks House Association; Returnees of American Field Service. Varsity Fencing; Freshman Fencing, John Harvard Scholarship. LARS E. PETERSON Bom on March II, 1946 at Bethesda, Maryland. Prepared at St. Alban's School. Washington, D.C. Home Address: 1650 Jonquil Street N.W.. Washington. D.C. Field of Concentration: American History. Freshman Glee Club: Harvard Glee Club; Hasty Pudding; Krokodilocs. Assistant Director; Students for a Democratic Society; Russian By antinc Liturgical Choir. JV Soccer; Freshman Soccer; Freshman Squash. Eliot House: Soccer. Porccllian Club. AUSTIN JEROME PHILBIN Born on August 9. 1946 at Ginton. Massachusetts. Prepared at Portsmouth Priory School. Portsmouth. Rhode Island. Home Address: 189 Cedar, Clin-ton, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. Phillips Brooks House Association; WIIRB. Eliot House: Soccer. Basketball. Volleyball. Harvard National Scholarship. DANIEL RICHARD PENNIE Born on June 17. 1945. m Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Phillips Exeter. Exeter. New Hampshire. Home Address: 2200 Block Oak Drive. Minnetonka. Minnesota. Field of Concentration: English. Young Democrats; Young Republicans: Pre-Law Society. Crew. Eliot: Swimming. JON PEARSON PERRY Born on January 19. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Wellesley Senior High School. Wellesley, Massachusetts. Home Address: 7 Cavanagh Road. Wellesley, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Bach Society; Music Club. Secretary 66-67; Phillips Brooks House Association; Returnees of American Field Service. Eliot House: Eliot House Music Society; Turn of the Screw (Lertreu). Harvard College Scholarship. LEONARD PFEIFFER. IV Born on January II. 1947 at Summit. New Jersey. Prepared at Glen Rock School. Glen Rock. New Jersey. Home Address: 419 Rock Road. Glen Rock. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Economics. Member of Army ROTC. Caisson Club: Catholic Student Center; Freshman Council; Harvard Student Agencies; Natural History Society: Pre-Law Society. Eliot House: Swimming. Track. Harvard College Scholarship. IE JUa ‘Us D .UN 18 W|[L ■ ii2 SKkJfcJS I Cco-yra S HtataZl Aama f« • , 4 sum MGUSTWWt 4HWIih«h X K ) X Iob laataavtatJife itloiftraCccec ttCtSIOXlfij fo Ok; tart Dn bfij MdstilCf W ivwi:raphiib KB.Eb.tK,v Kilvc- 3 . V HAMWfflRBi eOotakWift bum Pv i«te ctai • Altai: MaKSaaM 18 -uwWwmHwite FKANKLIN AUGUSTUS REECE, 111 Bom on August 24, 1946 at Blue Hill, Maine. Prepared at Noble and Green-ougli. Dedham, Massachusetts. Home Address: 99 Common Street. Dedham. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: American History. Hasty Pudding: Young Republicans. Varsity Football; Freshman Football. Eliot House: Football. Hockey, Cress. Ossl Club. JAMES MICHAEL REUM Bom on November 1.1946 at Oak Park, Illinois. Prepared at Oak Park River Forest High School, Oak Park. Illinois. Home Address: 232 North Kidgcland, Oak Park. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Government. Harvard Yearbook Publications: Hasty Pudding: Phillips Brooks House Association; Pre-Law Society: Young Republicans; Varsity Club: Jazz Dance Workshop. Varsity Basketball; JV Basketball. Eliot House: Football. Basketball. Baseball. Detur Prize: Harvard National Scholarship. PAUL COURTNEY REYELTS Born on September 5. 1946 at Davenport. Iowa. Prepared at Britton Public School. Britton, South Dakota. Home Address: 1221 Vander Horck Avenue, Britton. South Dakota. Field of Concentration: Architectural Sciences. Crimson Key Society. Chairman University Studies Committee: Hasty Pudding; Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Eliot House: Football. FREDERIC NASH RIS Born on February 12. 1946 at Denver. Colorado. Prepared at George Washington High School, Denver, Colorado. Home Address: 635 Eudora Street, Denver. Colorado. Field of Concentration: Physics and Chemistry. Bridge Club; Music Club; American Field Service. Freshman Crew. Harvard College Scholarship. DAVID ISAAC ROME Born on June 15. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Scarsdale High School. Scarsdale. New York. Home Address; 14 Overhill Road. Scarsdale. New York. Field of Concentration: Classics. Chess Club; Millet Society. Varsity Fencing; JV Fencing; Freshman Fencing. Harvard College Scholarship. KARL FREDERIK ROSENBERGER Born on June 6.1946ai Worcester. Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Mark's School. Soul (thorough. Massachusetts. Home Address: 15 Woodclilf Road. Wellesley Hills. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Freshman Glee Gub; Hasty Pudding. Varsity Tennis: Freshman Tennis. Eliot House: Tennis. Hockey. Delphic Club. Itt, MARTIN RICHARD ROSENTHAL Born on May 10. 1047 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Brookline High School. Brookline. Massachusetts. Home Address: 85 Abbotsford Road. Brookline. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. HillcI Society; Phillips Brooks House Association. Eliot House: Football. Basketball. Volleyball. Harvard National Scholarship. BRUCE DUR RUSSEL Born on January 26. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Mountjoy School. Dublin, Ireland. Home Address: 152 East 71st Street. New York. New York, Field of Concentration: Applied Mathematics. Varsity Rugby. Eliot House: Soccer. DAVID ALEXANDER SAMUELS Born on September 27.1946 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at South Broward High School. Hollywood. Florida. Home Address: 2465 Monroe. Hollywood. Florida. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Member of Army RO I C. Crumon Key Society. Secretary: Discussion Group: Hasty Pudding; Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Secretary. Eltot House: Football; House Committee. Detur Prize: Harvard College Scholarship; John Harvard Scholarship: Fid-wards Whittaker Honorary Scholarship. ERNST JOHN SCHAEFER Bom on November 18. 1945 at Bad Manlseim. Germany. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Andover. Massachusetts. Home Address: Neck Road. Old Lyme. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Biology. Harvard Undergraduate Council: Hasty Podding: Phillips Brooks House Association. Vice President. Freshman Lacrosse; Varsity Soccer. Eliot House: Swimming. Hockey, Track. Delphic Club. JEFFREY RICHARD SCHMIDT Born on October 31. 1946 at Worthington. Minnesota. Prepared at Blake School. Hopkins. Minnesota. Home Address: 2615 Newton Avenue South. Minneapolis. Minnesota. Field of Concentration: Government. Harvard Student Agencies: Hasty Pudding: Young Democrats: Young Republicans. JV Hockey: Freshman Hockey. Eliot Flousc: Football. Hockey. Baseball. Softball: House Committee: Eliot House Grill; Eliot House Combined Charities Drive. Iroquois Club. JOHN CUNNINGHAM SHELDON Born on November 30. 1945 at Brooklyn. New York. Prepared at Montclair Academy. Montclair. New Jersey. Home Address: 45 Park Road. Maplewood. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: History. Harvard Glee Club: Music Club: Linguistics Club. Varsity Football; Freshman Football: Varsity Skiing: Freshman Skiing: Varsity Winter Track. Eliot House: Football: Music Society. ELIOT MAKK SMITH THOMPSON Born on March 4. 1946 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at Ithaca High School, Ithaca. New York. Home Address: 105 Texas Lane, Ithaca. New York. Field of Concentration: Economics. Bridge Club, President. Freshman Crew. Eliot House: Basketball, Boxing, Crew. JAMES BRUCE TORHORST Born on December 13. 1945 at Burling, ton. Wisconsin. Prepared at Burlington High School. Burlington, Wisconsin. Home Address: 341 South Kane. Burlington. Wisconsin. Field of Concentration: Economics. Harvard Student Agencies; Hasty Pudding: Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Varsity Golf. Eliot House: Basketball. Volleyball. DAVID JOHN VITALE Born on June 15. 1946 at Beverly. Massachusetts. Prepared at Beverly High School. Beverly. Massachusetts. Home Address: 8 Victor Avenue. Beverly, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. Catholic Student Center; Hasty Pudding. Varsity Football: JV Football; Freshman Football: Varsity Lacrosse; Freshman Lacrosse. Eliot House: Basketball. Softball. Baseball. WILLIAM JENS WALDERMAN Bom on July 17, 1946 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. Exeter, New Hampshire. Home Address: 30S West 86th Street. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: Classics. Classical Club. ROBERT BYRON WALLACE Bom on December 19, 1945 at Seattle, Washington. Prepared at Harborfields High School. Grccnlawn. New York. Home Address: 32 Marys Lane. Center-port. New York. Field of Concentration: Economics. Harvard Drama Retie : Yacht Club; Young Republicans. Eliot House: Soccer. Squash. Baseball. PETER RICHARD SILVERSTEIN Bom on July I. 1946 at Brookline. Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin School. Boston. Massachusetts. Home Address: 405 V. I-'. W. Parkway. Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Biology. Hillcl Society; Phillips Brooks House Association. Eliot House: Football. Harvard College Scholarship. GARY NICHOLAS SINAWSKI Bom on October 29,1946 at Claremont, New Hampshire. Prepared at Stevens High School. Claremont, New Hampshire. Home Address: Charlestown Road. Claremont, New Hampshire. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. BENJAMIN ATWOOD SMITH. Ill Born on January 22. 1946 at Gloucester. Massachusetts. Prepared at Gloucester High School. Gloucester. Massachusetts. Home Address: 54 Leonard Street, Gloucester. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: American History. Yacht Gub. Freshman Football; Varsity Hockey; Varsity Sailing. Eliot House: Football, Softball. FRANK MARTIN SNOWDEN. Ill Bom on June 22. 1946 at Washington, D.C. Prepared at St. Albans School. Washington. D.C. Home Address: 4016 18th Street N.W., Washington. D.C. Field of Concentration: Government. Phillips Brooks House Association. Varsity Cross Country; Freshman Cross Country; Varsity Spring Track; Varsity Winter Track. Spec Club. Detur Prize; Harvard National Scholarship: National Merit Scholarship. RICHARD EUGENE STILES. Jr. Born on August 9. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Belmont Hill School. Belmont. Massachusetts. Home Address: 51 Yale Street. Winchester, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Hasty Pudding; Mountaineering Club; Phillips Brooks House Association. Varsity Crew; Freshman Crew. Eliot House: Drama Society; Soccer, Hockey. Crew. Cross-Country; Eliot House Boat Club. GARY ALLAN STRANDEMO Bom on January 12. 1946 at Faribault. Minnesota. Prepared at Kenyon High School. Kenyon. Minnesota. Home Address: 504 3rd Street. Kenyon, Minnesota. Field of Concentration: Biology. Harvard Student Agencies; Phillips Brooks House Association; Pi Eta Club: Pre-Medical Society: Young Democrats. Varsity Baseball; Varsity Football. Eliot House: Basketball: Informal Biology Tutorial. ARTHUR RICHMOND WATSON Born on January 4. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Noble and Grccnough, Dedham. Massachusetts. Home Address: 210 Highland Street. Dedham. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Freshman Council: Freshman Glee Club: Hasty Pudding. Varsity Crew, Manager; Varsity Sailing. A.D. Club. flHOMT «kW ■ « (« H v i ijjo of ■ Bcm£ tau W5K3f.eS,i a fort if “waiw Ka Avace, lw, «rfC«aax, Stria Cot V )Fw6«!; aaFooWiY . ras l 3 t 3j L fhlfo DONALD DAVIS WEAR. Jr. Bom on November 18. 1946 at Harrisburg. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Cedar Clilf High School. Camp Hill. Pennsylvania. Hook Address: 3593 Springliill Road. Birmingham. Alabama. Field of Concentration: Economics. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; WHRB. Eliot House: Drama Society; Dot i Giovanni (Ltvtreli): Fencing. Basketball. THOMAS GEORGE WEISS Born on February 26. I' 46 at Detroit, Michigan. Prepared at University of Detroit High School. Detroit. Michigan. Home Address: 18255 Ashton. Detroit. Michigan. Field of Concentration: Economics. Hasty Pudding; Pi Eta Club; Jubilee Committee. Treasurer. Varsity Football; Varsity Lacrosse. Harvard College Scholarship; Harvard Gub of Eastern Michigan Scholarship. DAVID MADISON WELLS Born on October 21, 1946 at Wilmington. Delaware. Prepared at Mount Pleasant Senior High School. Wilmington. Delaware. Home Address: 209 Churchill Drive. Wilmington, Delaware. Field of Concentration: History. Member of Army ROTC. Caisson Club; Hasty Pudding. Phoenix Club. Harvard College Scholarship; Harvard Freshman Honorary Scholarship. JOHN VAN HUSAN WHITBECK Born on December 21. 1946 at New York. New York Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. Exeter. New Hampshire. Home Address: 1150 Park Avenue. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: History. Harvard Policy Committee; Hasty Pudding; Undergraduate Athletic Council. Owl Club. Dctur Price: Harvard College Scholarship; John Harvard Scholarship. CHARLES EVERETT WIGGIN Born on March 13. 1947 at Newton. Massachusetts. Prepared at Wellesley High School. Wellesley. Massachusetts. Hook Address: 144 Forest Street. Wellesley. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Applied Mathematics. Hasty Pudding; Young Republicans; Senior Associate. Varsity Lacrosse. Eliot House: Football. Soccer. Cross-Country. Hockey. Track. Squash; House Committee. Harvard National Scholarship; National Honor Society Scholarship. DAVID WOFSY Bom on December 26. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Clairc-nvont High School. Sun Diego. California. Home Address: 7030 Westmoor-land Drive. Berkeley. California. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. Students for a Democratic Society. Executive Committee. Eliot House: Football. Swimming. Basketball. Softball. Dctur Prize: Harvard College Scholarship. 5WAIKWW. 7.13 11 ttNtp ajto Hiapirt Sa ItSlrttelVv rt.Wd cfCaaa CUssalOi. ROMAIC etelUW fttpriiMrill Groslw. No 1 IfoicfCass flaw In ■ Y « ? ' y.Ssrf-W Lee Barroll Barton Gordon M. Black Franklinc T. Caudill Philip Scion Chase Grenville Gark, III Ellcrbe Powe Cole L A. Darby III Charles N. Estes, Jr. John D. Eishburn William R. Karclis Anil Khosla R C. Kubacki Paul D. Lagomarsino Henry Hunter Lewis Jeffrey A. Lipkin R. W. Lishnun James Graham Niven Charles M. Padcn Hcrluf C. Prosenscn Daniel V. Robinson A. ShoumatotF John T. Speaks. Jr. J. F. Symington. Ill Efrem Zimbalist. Ill KIRKLAND HOUSE CHARLES RICHARD AJALAT Bom on March 4, 1947 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at Calexico High School. Calexico, California. Home Address: 1070 C. N. Perry Street, Calexico. California. Field of Concentration: Government. Phillips Brooks House Association; Pierian Sodality; Dcmolay. Kirkland House: House Committee. TRAVIS WAYNE BALLEW Bom on December II. 1945 at Mexia. Texas. Prepared at Midway High School. Waco. Texas. Home Address: 3825 North 20th Street. Waco. Texas. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Harvard Student Agencies; Phillips Brooks House Association. Harvard College Scholarship. JAMES BOYDEN ALT Bom on September 16.1945 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at Choate. Wallingford. Connecticut. Home Address: 7 Pine Street. Winchester. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Psychology. Mountaineering Club. Treasurer; Phillips Brooks House Association. PETER BANYS Born on April 16, 1946 at Hanau. Germany. Prepared at Farmington Community High School. Farmington, Illinois. Home Address: 330 South Bamewolt Drive. Peoria. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Freshman Basketball. Kirkland House: Basketball. Track. National Merit Scholarship. PAUL BAKER Bom on July 22. 1946 at Brookline, Massachusetts. Prepared at Brookline High School. Brookline, Massachusetts. Home Address: 122 Lancaster Terrace. Brookline. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Astronomy. Phillips Brooks House Association; Students for a Democratic Society; Young Democrats. WILLIAM BENJAMIN BARKER Born on June 2. 1947 at Stamford. Connecticut. Prepared at Phillips Academy, Andover. Massachusetts. Home Address: 809 Oenoke Road. New Canaan. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Physics and Chemistry. WHRB: Harvard Radio Recordings. Harvard National Scholarship: National Merit Scholarship. ALAN DOUGLAS BLRSIN DANIEL JACOB BELLER Bom on August 4. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at The Ramaz School. New York. New York. Home Address: 50 Riverside Drive, New York. New York. Field of Concentration: History. Harvard Crimson. Photograph) Editor: Phillips Brooks House Association. Chairman Adolescent Unit Mental Hospitals Committee: Young Democrats. Kirkland House: Basketball. Harvard College Scholarship. Born on October 15. 1946 at Brooklyn. New York. Prepared at Abraham Lincoln High School. Brooklvn. New York. Home Address: 7 Dover Street. Brookl)!). New York. Field of Concentration: Government. Phillips Brooks House Association. Columbia Point Project: Pi Eta Club: Young Democrats. Varsity Football: Freshman Lacrosse. Kirkland House: House Committee. Secretary. Delur Prize: Harvard National Scholarship. ROBERT BELLER Bom on January 29. 1948 at Brooklyn. New York. Prepared at New Utrecht High School. Brooklyn. New York. Home Address: 5601 14th Avenue. Brooklyn. New York. Field of Concentration: History. Hillel Society: Pre-Law Society. Varsity Basketball. KEITH BAKER BEI.SER Born on November 22. 1945 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at A.C. Flora High School. Columbia. South Carolina. Home Address: 5433 Sylvan Drive. Columbia. South Carolina. Field of Concentration: English. Married to Beverly Mary Black on August 25. 1967. Americans for Reappraisal of Far Eastern Policy; Harvard Review, Editor; Hasty Pudding; Pre-Law Society: Young Democrats; Harvard Southerners Club President. Spec Club. Harvard Freshman Honorary Scholarship. WILLIAM ALLEN BLUMBERG Born on November 28. 1946 at Glen Ridge. New Jersey. Prepared at Mont-clair High School. Montclair. New Jersey. Home Address: 229 North Mountain Avenue, Montclair. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Physics. International Relations Council; Young Democrats; Eliot House Forum on Developing Nations. Detur Prize; John Harvard Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. CHARLES ALAN BORIGHT Born on February 3. 1946 at Barrc. Vermont. Prepared at Peoples Academy. Morrisville. Vermont. Home Address: Westvicw Avenue. Morrisville. Vermont. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Kirkland House: Basketball. PETER CALVIN BERG Born on March 29. 1945 at Chelsea. Massachusetts. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter. New Hampshire. Home Address: 75 Arlington Street. Winchester. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. Bridge Club; Harvard Student Agencies; Hasty Pudding; Kirkland Drama Club. Varsity Football: JV Hockey; Freshman Lacrosse. Kirkland House: Madwoman of Chailtoi: Hockey. Volleyball, Golf. Baseball. Softball. Owl Club. RICHARD LYLE BERKMAN Born on September 4. 1946 at Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Shady Side Academy. Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania. Home Address: 5411 Albemarle Avenue, Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: Social Studies. Phillips Brooks House Association. Coordinator at Walpole Prison. JV Soccer: Freshman Soccer. Kirkland House: Soccer, Squash, Tennis. Softball. Detur Prize. RICHARD BRIAN BERNER Born on May 3. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Deerfield Academy, Deerfield. Massachusetts. Home Address: 16 Bcrcsford Road. Chcsthill. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. A1ESEC; Harvard Undergraduate Council: Ski Club; Young Democrats. Freshman Swimming. Kirkland House: Soccer. Swimming. Tennis; House Committee. Chairman; House Yearbook Editor. BRUCE MITCHELL BRAINARD Born on August 14. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at The Loomis School. Windsor. Connecticut. Home Address: 26 Marine Avenue, Westport. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Applied Mathematics. Phillips Brooks House Association. Coordinator of Prisons Committee. Kirkland House: Soccer. Harvard College Scholarship. DENNIS ROBERT BREEN Bom on May 30. 1946 at Milwaukee. Wisconsin. Prepared at Milwaukee Rufus King High School. Milwaukee. Wisconsin. Home Address: 5517 North 20th Street. Milwaukee. Wisconsin. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Catholic Student Center; WHRB: Pre-Medical Society: Commonwealth Service Corps. Kirkland House: Taming of die Shrew. Harvard College Scholarship. HOWELL ERMINGER BROWNE Born on February 20. 1947 at Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at St. Marks School. Southboro. Massachusetts. Home Address: 921 North Church Road. Lake Forest. Illinois. Field of Concentration: English. Member of Air Force ROTC. Harvard Glee Club. JV Wrestling. Harvard National Sehnlarshin ERIC WILLIAM BRUNS Born on December 31, IMS at Newport, Vermont. Prepared at Oyster River High School, Durham. New Hampshire. Home Address: Piscataqua Road, Durham, New Hampshire. Field of Concentration: Physics. Phillips Brooks House Association: Young Democrats. STEPHEN BURBANK BURBANK Born on January 8. 1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts. Home Address: Hoppground Lane. Bedford Village. New York. Field of Concentration: Comparative Literature. Classical Club; Harvard Student Agencies; Senior Associate. Varsity Squash, Manager. Kirkland House: Chairman Ford Dinner Program. Phoenix Club. Detur Prize; Harvard College Scholarship; John Harvard Scholarship; Phi Beta Kappa; Harvard Freshman Honorary Scholarship. DANIEL C. BURNES Born on June 24, 1946 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Middlesex School. Concord. Massachusetts. Home Address: 1103 Grose Street, Framingham. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Biology. Catholic Student Center; Hasty Pudding; Pre-Medical Society; Yacht Club. JV Hockey: Freshman Hockey. Kirkland House: Crew, Football. Owl Club. JOHN ASHWORTH BURSLEM Bom on June 17, 1946 at St. Louis, Missouri. Prepared at St. Louis Country Day, St. I.ouis, Missouri. Home Address: 1300 Ruth Drive. Kirkwood, Missouri. Field of Concentration: Biology. Catholic Student Center: Hasty Pudding: Pre-Medical Society; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Harvard Radcliflc FOrum Theater; Harvard Dramatic Club. JV Football; Freshman Football; Freshman lacrosse. Kirkland House: Taming of the Shrew; Madwoman of Chailloi; Football. Baseball. Harvard College Scholarship. ROLAND E. BYE Bom on June 21, 1946 at Valley City, North Dakota. Prepared at Nampa High School. Nampa. Idaho. Home Address: 201 10th Avenue North. Hampa. Idaho. Field of Concentration: History. Young Democrats. Freshman Crew. Kirkland House: Taming of the Shrew; Mad Woman of Chailloi; Crew. Harvard College Scholarship. PETER HOLLIS CALKINS Born on September 9, 1946 at Cambridge, Massachusetts. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter, New Hampshire. Home Address: 507 West Main Street. Crawfordsville, Indiana. Field of Concentration: Far Eastern Studies. Freshman Glee Club; Gilbert and Sullivan Players; Harvard Dramatic Club; Outing Club; Memorial Church Choir. Mikado (Gilbert and Sulliran); The Tempest (Loeb): Trouble in Tahiti (Loeh). Harvard College Scholarship. GEORGE EDWARD CAVE Born on December 16. 1946 at Jersey City, New Jersey. Prepared at Memorial High School. West New York. New Jersey. Home Address: 515 54th Street, West New York. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Government. Students for a Democratic Society. National Merit Scholarship. DONALD JOSEPH CHIOFARO Bom on February 26, 1946 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Exeter Academy, Exeter. New Hampshire. Home Address: 110 Gilbert Road. Belmont, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Catholic Student Center; Pi Eta Club. Varsity Baseball; Varsity Football. 1967 Captain; Freshman Hockey. Kirkland House: Hockey. Harvard College Scholarship. EDWIN RICHARDS CLARKE. Ill Bom on November 24. 1946 at Celma. Ohio. Prepared at Concstogo High School, Berwyn, Pennsylvania. Home Address: 725 Timber Lane. Lake Forest, Illinois. Field of Concentration: Engineering Sciences. Member of Army ROTC. Caisson Club; WHRB: Young Republicans. Kirkland House: Squash. Tennis. GREGORY PHILLIP COLLINS Bom on August 13. 1946 at Lynn. Massachusetts. Prepared at Saint Mary ’s Boy’s High. Lynn, Massachusetts. Home Address:91 Bellvue Road. Lynn. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Married to Melanie Leah Me Guirc on February 24. 1967. Catholic Student Center. Varsity Football. Kirkland House: Basketball. Harvard College Scholarship. THOMAS PHILIP COMENOS Bom on October 4. 1946 at Lynn, Massachusetts. Prepared at Lynn Classical High School. Lynn. Massachusetts. Home Address: 216 Walnut Street, Lynn. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Chemistry- Kirkland House: Football. Boxing. Crew. Harvard College Scholarship. FRANCIS LOWELL COOLIDGE. Jr. Bom on August 4. 1945 at Waltham. Massachusetts. Prepared at Middlesex School, Concord. Massachusetts. Home Address: 2905 32nd Street N.W.. Washington. D.C. Field of Concentration: History. Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association. Freshman Fencing. Kirkland House: Fencing. A.D. Club. John Harvard Scholarship. jy 5 ’WCHBfttj -’cr-ifiddrfQ. foitlOl ( . F«fcU Cf Hocb. Lru Hinr: C . IKCUlALr r :i. IWkCmj ii CcttSip Hf ftt vSm 3b ate Uit lie SdcfCcaxsza e Mertetf to ■JBore.S UPOOOJNS 13. 3M5 c La wduStitHri Usuciutiao c dl aa.W rf Conns w Jldte !a v aj FsBi lAatalfc COVERS I. !« I rein Lea G ia Mjgxvv-i KM $K fidJdta Krtfei Hk w. KhsujC WILLIAM ALAN FLETCHER Bom on June 6. 1945 ai Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Rook veil High School, Seattle. Washington. Home Address: 5319 N.E. 43. Seattle. Washington, Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Phillips Brooks House Association; Ski Club. Vice-President; Yacht Club. Freshman Sailing; JV Skiing; Freshman Skiing. Harvard National Scholarship. RICHARD PAUL FOA Bom on October 7, 1946 at Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Berkley High School. Berkley. Michigan. Home Address: 12917 Wales. Huntington Woods. Michigan. Field of Concentration: Biology. Hasty Pudding; Ski Club. Officer. JV Skiing. Kirkland House: Tennis. JOHN GARDNER FOX Born on June 2. 1947 at l.ongbranch. New Jersey. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Andover. Massachusetts. Hook Address: Clover Lane. Rumson. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Physics. CHRISTOPHER JOHN FREDERICKSON Bom on August I. 1945. in Norman. Oklahoma. Prepared at Casady School. Oklahoma City. OkLshoma. Home Address: 442 N.W. 20th. Oklahoma City. Oklahoma. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Yacht Club. Freshman Football: Varsity Sailing. Kirkland: Track. STUART IRWIN FUCHS Bom on May 10. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Yeshisah of Flatbush. Brooklyn. New York. Home Address: 869 Linden Boulevard. Brooklyn. New York. Field of Concentration: Social Studies. Freshman Glee Club. Vice President; Harvard Glee Club; Asian Tour 1967. Detur Prize; Harvard National Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. RICHARD HOWARD DANIEL Bom on August 7. 1946 at Dallas. Texas. Prepared at Saint Mark's School of Texas, Dallas. Texas. Hook Address: 701 North 9th Street. Temple. Texas. Field of Concentration: Economics. AIESEC, Vice President Research; Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association. Coordinator Roxbury Education Program; Young Democrats. Kirkland House: Deacon's Testament. D.U. Club. WILLIE LEE DAWKINS Bom on September 6, 1946 at Charlotte. North Carolina. Prepared at West Charlotte Senior High School. Charlotte. North Carolina. Hook Address: 1901 Grier Avenue. Charlotte, North Carolina. Field of Concentration: Philosophy. Association of African and Afro-American Students: Signet Society; Young Democrats: Student Educational Exchange Roundtable (SEER) Columbia College. Kirkland House: Tennis. DONALD B. DOLLOFF Bom on April 26. 1946 at Gloucester. Massachusetts. Prepared at Rockport High School. Rockport. Massachusetts. Home Address: Tarr's Lane. Rockport. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. WHRB. Classical Musk Director; Loeb Experimental Production. National Merit Scholarship. PAUL ORTUZAR FARR Bom on October 11. 1946 at San Fernando. Chile. Prepared at Stonington High School. Stonington. Connecticut. Home Address: 16 Clipper Drive, Mystic. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Biology. Phillips Brooks House Association. Prisons Committee; WHRB. General Manager. THOMAS BARRON FITZPATRICK Bom on April 17. 1946 at Portland, Oregon Prepared at Jesuit High School. Portland. Oregon. Home Address: 2611 N.E. Alameda. Portland. Oregon. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Married to Linda C. Little on June 10, 1967. Phillips Brooks House Association. TIMOTHY HARDWICK GAILEY Bom on April 4. 1946 at Orlando. Florida. Prepared at Portage High School. Portage. Mkhigan. Home Address: 5134 Oakland Drive. Kalamazoo. Mkhigan. Field of Concentration: Economics. Harvard Student Agencies; Young Democrats. Kirkland House: Amanisaman; Taming of the Shrew; Football. Harvard College Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. CHRISTOPHER CARY CURTIS Born on August 23. 1946 at Princeton, New Jersey. Prepared at Germantown Friends School. Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. Hook Address: Cape House, Awbury Park. Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration; History and Literature. Freshman Glee Club; Harvard Glee Club. Freshman Soccer. Kirkland House: Soccer. Harvard College Scholarvhip; National Merit Scholarship. REX OTTO GRAFF, Jr. Born on December 22. 1945 at Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Southwestern High School. Flint. Michigan. Home Address: 2020Crooked Lane, Flint. Michigan. Field of Concentration: Government. Kirkland House: Football. Basketball. Baseball; House Committee. WARREN HAMILTON HEISER Bom on July 18. 1946 at Madison. Wisconsin. Prepared at Punahou Academy. Honolulu. Hawaii. Hook Address: 1407 Country Club Road. Fort Colins. Colorado. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Kirkland House: Tennis. Squash. Iroquois Club. Harvard College Scholarship; John Harvard Scholarship. Q Z W Ht B IAN HAYS GARDINER Bom on September 13. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Groton School. Groton. Massachusetts. Hook Address: Salem Road, Topslicld. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association. Varsity Crew. Kirkland House: Hockey. Por-ccllian Club. ANDREW DUNLAP GILL Bom on February 26. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Wellesley High School. Wellesley. Massachusetts. Home Address: 44 Dover Road. Wellesley. Massachusetts. Field of Con-centration: Biology. Returnees of American Field Service. Kirkland House: Fencing. Basketball. JOHN DAVID GLENN Bom on December 13. 1945 at Camp Lcjcunc. North Carolina. Prepared at Clear Creek High School. I-eaguc City. Texas. Home Address: 203 Sleepy Hollow Court, Seabrook. Texas. Field of Concent nit ion: Engineering Sciences. Kirkland House: Social Committee 1965-66. ROBERT M1NDELL GOOR Bom on September 24. 1946. in Washington. D.C. Prepared at Woodrow Wilson High School. Washington. D.C. Home Address: 3133 Patterson Street. N.W., Washington. D.C. Field of Concentration: Applied Mathematics. JAMES BRADFORD GRISWOLD Born on June 20. 1946 at Cleveland. Ohio. Prepared at University School. Shaker Heights, Ohio. Home Address: 23683 Duftield Road. Shaker Heights, Ohio. Field of Concentration: Engineering Sciences. Catholic Student Center; Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Varsity Basketball. Kirkland House: Volleyball. Crew. CHARLES TAYLOR HAGEN Bom on March 31. 1946 at Seattle, Washington. Prepared at The Lakeside School. Seattle. Washington. Home Address: 7777 Overlake Drive. Medina, Washington. Field of Concentration: Economics. Hasty Pudding. Phoenix Club. National Merit Scholarship. RICHARD PAUL HARMEL. Jr. Bom on July 13. 1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at Staples High School. Westport. Connecticut. Home Address: 8 Forest Drive, Westport. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Chemistry. WHRB. Harvard College Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. RICHARD L. HAYES Born on February 8. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Natick High School. Natick. Massachusetts. Home Address: 21 Eliot Street. Natick. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Biology. Pi Eta Club: Prc-Mcdical Society. Varsity Football. Kirkland House: Wrestling. Track. Harvard College Scholarship; Harvard Club Scholarship. STANLEY ERNEST GREENIDGE Bom on December I. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Rindge Technical High School. Cambridge. Massachusetts. Home Address: 2 Pleasant Place. Cambridge. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. Phillips Brooks House Association: Pi Eta Club. Varsity Football. Harvard College Scholarship. LAWRENCE MICHAEL HENRY. Jr Born on August 24. 1946 at Denver. Colorado. Prepared at Machebcuf High School. Denver, Colorado. Home Address: 2630 Forest Street. Denver. Colorado. Field of Concentration: Government. Catholic Student Center; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. -- 'AGEX «U «N y 1 Sdpta Hj, ‘WtolKa, ‘T- « Caaaaa HnrJ C 1 Mot 5d tc fcdB aan tak. txa V . Lit ItntrfCi (WS tONiSSl « £ • £5 coww a ' ■25 HARLOW NILES HIGINBOTHAM. Jr. Born on November 25. 1946 at Joliet. Illinois. Prepared at Saint Mark’s School. Southborough. Massachusetts. Home Address: R.F.D. 2, Harlowarden. Joliet. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Applied Mathematics. Hasty Pudding; Mountaineering Club; Lampoon: Phillips Brooks House Association. Freshman Crew. Kirkland House: Crew. Phoenix Club. Harvard College Scholarship. ROBERT MICHAEL HOFFMANN Bom on October 17, 1946 at Valley Stream. New York. Prepared at Valley Stream Central High School. Valley Stream. New York. Home Address: 324 Arkansas Drive. Valley Stream. New York. Field of Concentration: Biology. S-.gma Alpha Epsilon. Varsity Football; Freshman Lacrosse; Varsity Spring Track Kirkland House: Volleyball. BRADLEY MARK HONOROFF Born on December 31. 1946 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at South Shore High School. Chicago. Illinois. Home Address: 6833 N. Ked ic Avenue. Chicago. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Economics. Harvard Student Agencies. Kirkland House: Tennis; House Committee. Harvard College Scholarship. DON HOWARTH Born on March 9. 1946 at Providence. Rhode Island. Prepared at Mount Miguel. Spring Valley, California. Home Address: 8903 Harness Drive. Spring Valley. California. Field of Concentration: Economics. Harvard College Scholarship. JAMES EDWARD HUGHES Bom on October 31, 1946 at Cleveland. Ohio. Prepared at West High School. Columbus. Ohio. Home Address: 2743 Sutton Avenue. Columbus. Ohio. Field of Concent ration: Social Relations. Pi Eta Club. Varsity Football. Kirkland House: Basketball. Harvard College Scholarship, MERRILL ARNOLD KAITZ Bom on September 22. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Newton High School. Newton. Massachusetts. Home Address: 38 Willow Crescent. Brookline. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. TIRACHAI KAMBHU Bom on February 13. 1946 at Bangkok. Thailand. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Andover, Massachusetts. Home Address: 37 Ekamai Road. Bangkok. Thailand. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Hasty Podding: Signet Society. ROBERT DENNIS KEEFE Born on January 21. 1946 at Arlington. Massachusetts. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. Exeter. New Hampshire. Home Address: I Richfield Road. Arlington. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: American History. Catholic Student Center: Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Eminent Warden: Young Democrats; Young Republicans. Varsity Baseball: Freshman Baseball; Varsity Football; JV Football; Freshman Football. Kirkland House: Basketball, Golf: House Committee. PHILIP ALLEN KEITH Born on August 24. 1946 at Springtield. Massachusetts. Prepared at East Long-nveadow High School. East Long-meadow. Massachusetts. Hook Address: 32 North Linden Place. Dover. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: American History. Member of Navy ROTC. Christian Fellowship: Crimson Key Society. Athletics Committee Chairman 1967; Discussion Group; Freshman Council; Harvard Policy Committee. Secretary; Jubilee Committee; Phillips Brooks House Association; Talfrail Club: Yacht Club: Young Democrats: Naval Science Forum: Naval ROTC Drill Team: Loudspeaker. Freshman Crew. Kirkland House: Squash; Social Committee. Harvard College Scholarship. DOUGLAS GEORGE KELI.ING. Jr. Born on December 13. 1946 at Waverly. Missouri. Prepared at Carrollton High School. Carrollton. Missouri. Home Address: Waverly. Missouri. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Yacht Club. Kirkland House: Basketball. Stirf-V MARK FREDERICK JOHNSON Bom on September 21. 1946 at Red Wing. Minnesota. Prepared at Central High School. Red Wing. Minnesota Home Address: 503 Summit Avenue Red Wing. Minnesota. Field of Concen tration: Physics and Chemistry. Varsity Spring Track: Varsity Winter Track Detur Prize; Harvard College Scholar ship; John Harvard Scholarship; Honorary Freshman Scholarship; Minnesota Elks Scholarship. WILLIAM CHARLES KELLY. Jr. Bom on June 9. 1946 at Minneapolis, Minnesota. Prepared at Blake School. Hopkins. Minnesota. Home Address: 5600 Warwick Place. Minneapolis. Minnesota. Field of Concentration: History . Catholic Student Center; Young Democrats. Executive Committee. Kirkland House: Hockey. Harvard College Scholarship. w THOMAS NETHERY KELTNER. Jr. Bom on June I. 1946 at Oklahoma City. Oklahoma. Prepared at Harding High School. Oklahoma City. Oklahoma. Home Address: 824 Northwest 38th Street. Oklahoma City. Oklahoma. Field of Concentration: English. Hasty Pudding: Phillips Brooks House Association. Varsity Rugby. Kirkland House: Track; Deacon's Testament. D.U. Club. Harvard College Scholarship. FRANKLIN KING. Ill Born on August 28. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Noble and Grccnough, Dedham. Massachusetts. Home Address: Snow Street. Sherbom, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Hasty Pudding; Yacht Club. JV Hockey; Freshman Hockey. Kirkland House: Soccer. A.D. Club. ROBERT GIVAND KOPELSON Born on December 21. 1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at High School of Music and Art. New York. New York. Home Address: 198-53 Pompeii Avenue. Hollis, New York. Field of Concentration: Music. Freshman Glee Club; Gilbert and Sullivan Players; Music Club; Verein Turm• wackier von I8S6: Young Democrats. Kirkland House: Beggars' Opera (Adams): Cosi Fan Time (Leveretl); Don Giovanni (LeveretI): Kirkland Music Review Editor; Kirkland House Music Society President. Harvard College Scholarship. KEITH WALTER LERCH Born on February 14,1946 at Cleveland, Ohio. Prepared at Rocky River. Cleveland, Ohio. Home Address: 2665 West-moor Road, Cleveland, Ohio. Field of Concentration: Government. International Relations Council; Phillips Brooks House Association: Young Democrats. Executive Committee. Kirkland House: Yearbook. Harvard College Scholarship. ROBERT ALLEN LINCOLN Bom on March 25. 1946 at Brooklyn. New York. Prepared at Abington High School. Abington. Pennsylvania. Home Address: 45 Lakeview Boulevard. Avon. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Economics. Phillips Brooks House Association; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Young Republicans. Varsity Baseball. Kirkland House: Football. Golf. CARTER USHER LORD Bom on June 13. 1946 at Portland, Maine. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter. New Hampshire. Home Address: 1416 Easton Drive. Lakeland, Florida. Field of Concentration: Economics. Harvard Student Agencies; Pi Eta Club. Varsity Baseball; Varsity Football: Varsity Winter Track. Kirk-land House: Fencing. STEPHEN MACKAY MORRIS Born on October 18. 1944 at Hartford. Connecticut. Prepared at The Putney School. Putney. Vermont. Home Address: 78 Blue Ridge Lane. West Hartford. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Musk. Freshman Glee Club; Gilbert and Sullivan Players. H.M.S. Pinafore Conductor 1964; Phillips Brooks House Association. JOHN BYRON MARTIN Born on April 6. 1946 at Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Bcthccntcr High School. I rcdericktown. Pennsylvania. Home Address: Bank and Cherry Streets. F rcdericktown. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Phillips Brooks House Association. Kirkland House: Football. KEVIN LAWRENCE MELLYN Bom on October 8. 1946 at Lynn, Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Thomas Aquinas. Dover. New Hampshire. Home Address: 43 Westwood Circle. Dover. New Hampshire. Field of Concentration: History. Debate Council, Freshman President; Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association. D.U. Club. Harvard College Scholarship. DAVID ALLEN MILLER Born on April 12. 1946 at Cincinnati. Ohio. Prepared at Georgetown High School. Georgetown. Ohio. Home Address: 415 North Green Street, Georgetown. Ohio. Field of Concentration: Engineering Sciences. Young Democrats. Varsity Spring Track; Varsity Winter Track. Kirkland House: Basketball. Cross-Country; Social Committee. FREDERICK SAMUEL MILLER. Ill Born on April 4.1946 at Rochester. New York. Prepared at Monroe High School. Rochester. New York. Home Address: 320 Berkeley Street. Rochester. New York. Field of Concentration: Engineering Sciences. Freshman Glee Club; Harvard Glee Club; Hasty Pudding; Junior Usher; Phillips Brooks House Association; Ski Club; Yacht Club; Hasty Pudding Tlicatricals. Kirkland House: Cross-Country; Yearbook Photographer: House Committee. Treasurer: Social Committee Chairman; Jubilee Committee. John Harvard Scholarship. MARK DAVID MITTLEMAN Bom on November 29.1946at St. Louis. Missouri. Prepared at St. Louis Country Day School. St Louis. Missouri. House Address: 11 Wilshirc. East Alton. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Economics. WHRB. Sports Director. Kirkland House: Golf; Social Committee. National Merit Scholarship. ERIC E. MULLOY Bom on February 8. 1947 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at Glcnbard West High School. Home Address: 2 S. 246 Uoyd Road, Lombard. Illinois. Field of Concentration: History. Young Republicans. JV Spring Track; JV Winter Track. Kirkland House: Track. Harvard National Scholarship: Thomas Hollis Scholarship 1967. ROBERT STEVEN POMEKANCE Bom on March 31. 1947 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at South Shore High School. Chicago, Illinois. Home Address: 1756 East 74th Street. Chicago. Illinois. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Phillips Brooks House Association; WHRB. Kirkland House: Basketball. MOu « St iw « « Cotr-atiai O.l q. ILLQ -K6 b iGwpMltr lObcfa,; Cbi. cfCoe a- Yea, a H Ttti. trc WHobcIjIj : Soul Cor- tUEL «takseV MwxHdku «tB Alta W. RxfcefcVj ottoaiEipe. dm CtaW ; Hk fcq tipkxbsLi ChkMQk Ihatroi Lsi: Lca ;Ya ccib e Coerce io pence Gire kjataHrdtt THOMAS MILES MURPHY Born on December 5, 1945 at Sioux City, Iowa. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter, New Hampshire. Home Address: I20S 11th Street, Onawa. Iowa. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. Phillips Brooks House Association; Jazz Dance Quintet; Mike Starr Quintet. Harvard College Scholarship. HUGH WILLIAMSON NEVIN, Jr. Bom on December 9, 1946 at Scwicklcy. Pennsylvania. Prepared at St. George’s School, Newport, Rhode Island. Home Address: 900 Centennial Avenue, Se-wickley, Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: Social Studies. AIESEC; Charles Riser Literary Society, President; Experiment in International Living; Hasty Pudding; Young Republicans; Harvard Conservatives. JV Wrestling. Kirkland House: Wrestling. Soccer. GLENN EDWARD OLF Born on November 17. 1946 at Grand Isle, Vermont. Prepared at Columbia High School, East Greenbush, New York. Home Address: 20 Columbia Drive, East Greenbush, New York. Field of Concentration: Geology. Conservation Club; Harvard Student Agencies; International Relations Council; Phillips Brooks House Association; Ski Gub; Yacht Gub; Young Democrats; Young Republicans. Freshman Crew; JV Sailing; Freshman Skiing. Kirkland House: Cross-Country, Basketball, Touch Football, Track. Crew; House Committee; Athletic Secretary. JOHN EMIL POREBA Born on September 30. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Pons-mouth Priory School, Portsmouth, Rhode Island. Home Address: 121 St. Mark’s Place. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: SIuvk. Catholic Student Center. Kirkland House: Boxing, Swimming; Freshman Athletics Secretary. Harvard College Scholarship. ANDREW PEABODY PORTER Bom on October 5, 1946 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Groton School. Groton, Massachusetts. Home Address: 19 Whippoorwill Road. Chap-paqua. New York. Field of Concentration: Physics and Chemistry. Young Democrats. WILLIAM JOEL RAINEY Bom on October II, 1946 at Flint, Michigan. Prepared at Rccdspon Union High School, Reedspon. Oregon. Home Address: 2135 Greenwood Avenue, Rccdsport, Oregon. Field of Concentration: Government. Phillips Brooks House Association; Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Correspondent; Young Democrats. Kirkland House: Baseball; Logos Editor: House Committee. Harvard College Scholarship. Mimew jdi UaC lcas.Us.vA5s Alt cca!C«aKv cfo CHRISTOPHER GILLPATR1CK OLNEY Born on November 10. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Governor Dummer Academy. South Byfield, Massachusetts. Home Address: Old Neck Road. Manchester. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. Freshman Lacrosse. Kirkland House: Football; Newspaper; Social Committee. (KAY C «5S PETER A. PETRI Bom on October 17. 1946 at Budapest, Hungary. Prepared at B. M. C. Dunfee High School, Fall River. Massachusetts. Home Address: 582 Nichols Street, Fall River. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. Harvard Student Agencies. Manager; Young Republicans. Economic Committee Chairman. Kirkland House: Soccer. Sloan Foundation Scholarship. irfj JOHN REDWOOD. Ill Bom on July 21. 1946 at Baltimore. Maryland. Prepared at Gilman School, Baltimore. Maryland. Home Address: 1900 Ruxton Road. Ruxton, Maryland. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Married to Claudia Van Der Heuvcl on August 19. 1967. Harvard Student Agencies; Phillips Brooks House Association. Harvard College Scholarship. JOHN REYNOLDS RICE Born on June 26. 1946 at Bronxville. New York. Prepared at Millbrook School. Millbrook. New York. Home Address: 24 Riverview Road. Irvington. New York. Field of Concentration: History. Hasty Pudding; Ski Club. Varsity Football; Freshman Football: Varsity Rugby. Phoenix Club. KIRKLAND ROBERT WAYNE STACK Bocn on December 15. 1945 at Waukegan, Illinois. Prepared ai North Chicago Community High School. North Chicago. Illinois. Home Address 890 East Northmoor Road, Lake Forest. Illinois. Eicld of Concentration: Eco-nomics. Hasty Pudding; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Young Democrats; Young Republicans. Varsity Football. Freshman Lacrosse. Kirkland House; Bavket-ball. Baseball. SCOTT NELSON STEKETEE Born on March 13. 1947 at Detroit. Michigan. Prepared at Maumee Valley Country Day School. Toledo, Ohio. Home Address: 5124 Corey Road. Toledo. Ohio. Field of Concentration: Physics and Chemistry. Harvard Policy Committee; Phillips Brooks House Association. Varsity Cress; Freshman Football. Kirkland House: Football. Harvard National Scholarship; John Harvard Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. JEFFERSON DAVIS STEWART Born on October 8. 1945 at Louisville. Kentucky. Prepared at Middlesex School. Concord. Massachusetts. Home Address: III14 Owl Creek Lane. Anchorage. Kentucky. Field of Concentration: History. Hasty Pudding. RONALD WILLIAM STOIA Bom on December 6. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin School. Boston. Massachusetts. Home Address: 292 Huntington Avenue. Hyde Park. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Phillips Brooks House Association: Students for a Democratic Society; Young Democrats; Citizens for tlic Boston Schools Executive Board. DANIEL STEVEN STRAUS Born on May 3. 1946 at Urbana. Illinois. Prepared at Whitefish Bay High School. Milwaukee. Wisconsin. Home Address: 3132 East Hampshire Street. Milwaukee. Wisconsin. Field of Concentration: Chemistry. Detur Prize: Harvard College Scholarship; John Harvard Scholarship. ALAN SUMMERS Born on April 15. 1947 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Brookline High School. Brookline. Massachusetts-Home Address: 85 Somerset Road. Brookline. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Music. Kirkland House: Christmas Play 1966; Hockey. Touch Football; Concerts. Freshman Honorary Scholarship. PETER STEPHEN ROSS Born on October 14, 1947 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at Woodrow Wilson High School. Washington, D.C. Home Address: 3540 Van Ness Street N.W.. Washington. D.C. Field of Concentration: Chemistry. Conservation Club: Outing Club. National Merit Scholarship. RANDY LEE SEBASTIAN Bom on September 2. 1946 at Jelfcrson. North Carolina. Prepared at Oxford Area School. Oxford. Pennsylvania. Home Address: R.D. I. Lincoln University. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: Slavic. Harvard Student Agencies: Slavic Society; Young Republicans. Kirkland House: Football. Basketball. Baseball. Detur Prize; Harvard College Scholarship. STEPHEN ARTHUR SHAKMAN Bom on April 28. 1946 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at New Trier High School. Winnetka, Illinois. Home Address: 3144 Hill, Wilmette, Illinois Field of Concentration: History. AIE-SEC, Vice-President; Harvard Student Agencies, Lei's Go Contributing Editor; Young I5emocrats. Freshman Crew. Kirkland House: Drama Society; Crew, Golf. Harvard College Scholarship. PAUL ALFRED SHAPIRO Born on January 3.1947 at Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Newton High School. Newton ville, Massachusetts. Home Address: 6 Grace Road. Newton Centre. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Applied Mathematics. Phil-lips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. Kirkland House: Football. Softball. Detur Prize; John Harvard Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. DOUGLAS ROBERT SHIER Born on October 16, 1946 at Cleveland. Ohio. Prepared at Coral Gables Senior High School, Coral Gables, Florida. Home Address: 8320 Southwest 65th Avenue. Miami. Florida. Field of Concentration: Applied Mathematics. Phil-lips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. Harvard College Scholarship. THOMAS GRAHAM SPEER Born on March 5. 1947 at Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Putney School. Putney, Vermont. Home Address: 51 Avon Hill Street. Cambridge. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Advocate; Musk Club: Young Democrats. Kirkland House: KieUmnl DAVID THOMAS. HI Horn on May 10. 1946 at Columbus. Ohio. Prepared at Fairview High School. Dayton. Ohio. Home Address: 1424 Kingsley Avenue, Dayton. Ohio. Field of Concent ration: Social Studies. Young Democrats. JV Baseball; Freshman Baseball; JV Basketball; Freshman Basketball. Kirkland House: Basketball. Baseball. Football; Intcrhousc Debate 1966. Harvard National Scholarship. CLAY GOODLOE WESCOTT Born on April 16. 1946 at New Bedford. Massachusetts. Prepared at Hingtam High School. Hingham. Massachusetts. Home Address: 24 Paige Street. Hingham. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Government. A1F.SEC. Executive Vice-President; Freshman Glee Club; International Relations Council; WHRB; Young Democrats. Kirkland House: Taming of a Shrew. Harvard College Scholarship. JAMES IDE WHEELER Born on December 14. 1946 at Leominster, Massachusetts. Prepared at Choate School. Wallingford. Connecticut. Home Address: 69 West. Leominster. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Member of Platoon Leaders Class Marine Corps. Phillips Brooks House Association: Pi Eta Club. Kirkland House: Football. MARTIN JOEL THORPE Bom on February 28. 1947 at Lowell. Massachusetts. Prepared at Lowell High School. Lowell. Massachusetts. Home Address: S31 Watford Street. Lowell, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Engineering Sciences. Hillel Society; WHRB; Wireless Club. National Honor Society Freshman Year. WILLIAM MICHAEL TIMPSON Born on July 10. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Public Latin School. Boston. Massachusetts. Home Address: 39 Robeson Street. Jamaica Plain. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Harvard Student Agencies: Pi Eta Club. Varsity Football: Varsity Lacrosse: Freshman Lacrosse. Kirkland House: Basketball. Crew. Baseball. MARK TRAUGOTT Born on March 29. 1947 at Providence. Rhode Island. Prepared at Moses Brown School. Providence. Rhode Island. Home Address: 196 New Meadow-Road. Barrington. Rhode Island. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Phillips Brooks House Association; Yacht Club. Freshman Sailing. Captain. Kirkland House: Soccer. Squash. JOHN LYNNTON WHITLOCK Bom on October 24. 1946 at New Orleans. Louisiana. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. Exeter, New Hampshire. Home Address: 4 Sauer Terrace. Durham. New Hampshire. Field of Concentration: Applied Mathematics. Freshman Glee Club: Harvard Glee Club. Librarian; Pierian Sodality. THOMAS SAMUEL WILLIAMSON. Jr. Born on July 14. 1946 at Plainfield, New Jersey. Prepared at Piedmont High School. Piedmont. California. Home Address: 40 Cambridge Way. Piedmont. California. Field of Concentration: Social Studies. Harvard Undergraduate Council. Vice-President;.Signet Society; Young Democrats. Varsity-Football; Varsity Spring Track; Freshman Spring Track. Kirkland House: Basketball. Volleyball; House Committee. General Motors Scholarship: Harvard National Scholarship. HOWARD BERNARD TARKO Bom on February 17, 1947 at Patterson. New Jersey . Prepared at Brookline High School. Brookline. Massachusetts. Home Address: 18 Somerset Road. Brookline. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Physics and Chemistry. ROGER MARTIN WALES Bom on February 3. 1946 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Belmont Hill School. Lincoln. Massachusetts. Home Address: Blueberry Lane. Lincoln. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. Hasty Pudding: Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Varsity Golf. Kirkland House: Basketball. Volleyball. LAWRENCE TERRY. Jr. Bom on April 12. 1946 at Concord. Massachusetts. Prepared at Middlesex School. Concord. Massachusetts. Home Address: Still River Road. Harvard. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Varsity Crew. Kirkland House: Hockey. Soccer. A.D. Club. BRYANT L. WELCH Born on April 20. 1946 at Portland. Maine. Prepared at Fairmont High School, Kettering. Ohio. Home Address: 609 Enid Avenue. Kettering, Ohio. Field of Concentration: Government. Debate Council. President 1967 and Home Secretary 1966; Young Democrats. Varsity Cricket. Kirkland House: Basketball, JOHN RANDALI. W(X)DMAN Horn on July 22. 1945 ai Elgin. Illinois. Prepared at Phillips Lxeter Academy. Exeter. New Hampshire Home Address: 6806 West Hillside Road. Crystal Lake. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Engineering Sciences. Marine Corps PLC. Phillips lirooks House Association; Pi Eta Club. Varsity Rugby; Freshman Wrestling. Michael T. Madison G. J. O'Laughlin Jun Louis Onaka John R. Potter LEVERETT HOUSE PETER MICHAEL ADAMS Bom on June 27. 1946 ai Detroit. Michigan. Prepared at Scaholm High School. Birmingham. Michigan. Home Address: 554 Merritt Lane. Birmingham. Michigan. Field of Concentration: History. Christian Science Organization. Treasurer-Vice-President; Hasty Pudding. Varsity Swimming. Leverett House: Crew. Harvard College Scholarship. DANIEL AMORY Bom on December 3. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Alban's School. Washington. D.C. Home Address: 4833 Dexter Terrace. Washington. D.C. Field of Concentration: Government. Friends Service Committee. Spec Club. Harvard College Scholarship. BRUCE GUENTHER BAUMGART Bom on August 7, 1946. in Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at New Trier Township High School. Winnetka. Illinois. Hook Address: 675 Valley. Glencoe. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Applied Mathematics. Phillips Brooks House Association. Prisons Committee. Freshman Swimming. JOHN MARR BAYNE. Jr. Born on March 20.1946 at San Antonio. Texas. Prepared at Alamo Heights High School. San Antonio. Texas. Home Address: 219 Rosemary Street. San Antonio. Texas. Field of Concentration: English. Hasty Pudding. Bat Gub. National Merit Scholarship. JOHN JULIAN BEAULIEU. Jr. Bom on October 9. 1945 at Bath. New York. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. Exeter. New Hampshire. Home Address: 198 Lake Shore Drive. Dracut. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: American History. Catholic Student Center: Freshman Council: Harvard Dramatic Club: Harvard-Radclitfc Combined Charities: Freshman Coon-cil: Hasty Pudding. Varsity Football. Leverett House: Basketball. Baseball: Social Committee. Harvard College Scholarship. JON CHRISTOPHER BENSICK Born on November 21. 1946 at Milwaukee. Wisconsin. Prepared at Hickman High School. Columbia. Missouri. Home Address: 16735 Ridge View Drive. Brookfield. Wisconsin. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Freshman Glee Club: Harvard Glee Gub: Pre-Law Society: Young Democrats. Leverett House: Glee Club Conductor. Detur Prize: Harvard College Scholarship. DAVID FORGAN BROWN Born on September II. 1946 at Duluth. Minnesota. Prepared at I avt High School. Duluth. Minnesota. Home Address: 2328 last 3rd Street, Duluth. Minnesota. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Karate Club; Phillips Brooks House Association. THOMAS ROLAND BERNER Bom on January 17, 1948 at Ness York. New York. Prepared at Collegiate School. New York. New York. Home Address: Cold Spring, New York. Field of Concentration: History. Harvard Art Review. Freshman Football. NATHAN SIMCHA BIRNBAUM Born on February 3. 1947 at Munich. Germany. Prci ared at Newton South High School. Newton. Massachusetts. Home Address: 170 WooddifT Road. Newton, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Harvard Student Agencies: Harvard Yearbook Publications: Hillcl Society: Phillips Brooks House Association. Social Action Committee Chairman and Hospitals Committee (Blood Drive); Young Democrats. JV Baseball. Leverett House: Baseball. Volleyball: WLHR; Pre-Medical Society; Chairman Glee Club. LAWRENCE DAVID BROWN Born on May 6. 1947 at Detroit. Michigan. Prepared at The Choate School. Wallingford. Connecticut. Home Address: 134 Riverside Drive. Binghamton. New York. Field of Concentration: Philosophy. Teacher Aide Program JOHN MICHAEL BURKE Born on April 8. 1946 at Decatur. Illinois. Prepared at Maltoon Senior High School. Maltoon. Illinois. Home Address: 301 Lafayette Avenue. Maltoon. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Economics. Phillips Brooks House Association. HENRY TOWNSEND BLODGET Bom on March 19. 1946 at St. Louis. Missouri. Prepared at St. Paul's. Concord. New Hampshire Home Address: 10 Galbrcaih Drive. Princeton. New Jersey . Field of Concentration: English. Hasty Pudding. Varsity Soccer. Leverett House: Hockey. Fly Club. John Harvard Scholarship. MARCO ANTONIO CABRAL. Jr. Born on January 2. 1946 at Santiago. Dominican Republic. Prepared at St. George's School. Newport. Rhode Island. Home Address: El Sol 73. Santiago. Dominican Republic. Field of Concentration: Economics. Catholic Student Center. Hasty Pudding: 1 atm American Association: Rifle Club. ROY EUGENE BOGGS. Jr. Bom on October 20. 1946 at Miami. Florida. Prepared at Soldan High School. St. Louis. Missouri. Home Address: 6806 South Cornell Avenue, Chicago. Illinois. Field of Concentration: History. Harvard College Scholarship. MARK RUSSELL GRAY CHASSIN Bom on January I. 1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at Manhasset High School. Manhasset. New York. Home Address: 9 East Gate. Manhasset. New York. Field of Concentration: History. Young Democrats. Varsity Soccer: Freshman Soccer. Leverett House: Soccer. Swimming: WLHR House Radio Station. Harvard College Scholarship. MICHAEL JOSEPH BOHNEN Born on March 9. 1947 at Buffalo. New York. Prepared at Classical High School. Providence. Rhode Island. Hook Address: 50 Elm Grove Avenue. Providence. Rhode Island. Field of Concentration: English. Hillcl Society; WHRB; Mosaic. Harvard College Scholarship. JOHN MITCHELL CHIRGWIN Born on November 24. 1946. in Stamford. England. Prepared at Howken School. Cleveland. Ohio. Home Address: 117 Via Pastiual. Palos-Vcrdes Estates. California. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. WHRB. Harvard Student Agencies; Phillips Brooks House Association: Pre-Med Society. MARSHALL GRANT BOLSTER. Jr. Bom on March 19.1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Noble and Greenough School. Dedham, Massachusetts. Home Address: 100 Winding River Road. Needham, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Hasty Pudding. Varsity Crew. Fox Club. CHARLES ELY CHROMOW Horn on January 10. 1947 at Brookl n. New York. Prepared ai Teaneck High School. Teaneck. New Jersey. Home Address: 374 Bnarcliire Road. Teaneck, New Jersey. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Harsard Glee Club: Phillips Brooks House Association. Ixvcrctt House: Don Giovanni: Buch and the Beatles; Chairman Leveret t House Music Society: Manager Leserett Glee Club. John Harvard Scholarship. ALEXANDER WHITEHILL CLOWES Born on October 9.1946at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. Exeter. New Hampshire. Home Address: Pegan Lane. Dover. Massachusetts. Eield of Concentration: Physics and Chemistry. Harvard Dramatic Club. JV Soccer, l.everett House: Soccer. JAMES FARWF.LL COAKLEY Born on February 17, 1947 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at Wakefield High School. Arlington. Virginia. Home Address: 2SI2 Arlington Boulevard. Arlington. Virginia. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. Freshman Glee Club; Harvard Glee Club: University Choir. Detur Prize. WILLIAM STAFFORD COBB Born on January 3. 1946 at Detroit, Michigan. Prepared at Dumont High School. Dumont. New Jersey. Home Address: 66 White Beeches Drive. Dumont. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Biology. Catholic Student Center. Varsity Baseball: Varsity Football. Leveret I House: Baseball. Softball. Track. Volleyball. DAVID RUSSELL COCHRANE Born on November 8, 1946 at Kansas City. Missouri. Prepared at Southwest High School. Kansas City. Missouri. Home Address: 516 East 66th Terrace. Kansas City. Missouri. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Phillips Brooks House Association; Returnees of American Field Service. Leserett House: Boxing. Fox Club. Harvard College Scholarship. ROBERT EDWARD COOK Bom on September 26. 1946 at Providence. Rhode Island. Prepared at Warwick Veterans Memorial High School. Warwick. Rhode Island. Home Address: 122 Potters Avenue. Greenwood. Rhode Island. Field of Concentration: Biology. Member of Army ROTC. Caisson Club; Natural History Society; Phillips Brooks House Association. Varsity Spring Track; Varsity Winter Track. PETER FREDERIC COONRADT Bom on November 6. 1946 at Los Angeles. California. Prepared at Midland School. Los Olivos. California. Home Address: 861 West Avenue 37. Los Angeles. California. Field of Concentration: Government. Keystone Movies: Students for a Democratic Society. Lev-erett House: Yearbook. JOSEPH EDWARD COOK. Jr. DANIEL SHELDON COOPER DOUGLAS FAIR MAN COW AN Born on July 14. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Andover. Massachusetts. Hook Address: 48 Berwick Street, Worcester. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Biology. Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association. Leserett House: Soccer: Lcvcrcll House Pre-Med Committee; Leverett House Arts Festival. Delphic Club. Bom on June 30. 1946 at Toledo. Ohio. Prepared at Clay High School. Oregon. Ohio. Home Address: 3528 Worden Road. Oregon. Ohio. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association; Pi Eta Club. Executive Committee: Hasty Pudding Theatricals. Varsity Football: Freshman Lacrosse: Varsity Rugby. Leveret! House: Fencing. Basketball. Baseball. Track. Harvard College Scholarship. Born on July 13. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Andover. Massachusetts. Home Address: 770Chestnut Street. Needham, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Member of Army ROTC. Caisson Club. Leserett House: Soccer. Squash. Fly Club. Harvard College Scholarship. JERRY DEAN CRAIG Bom on Nosember 24. 1944 at Helena. Montana. Prepared at Missoula County High School. Missoula. Montana. Home Address: 1639 Beck Avenue. Missoula. Montana. Field of Concentration: Government. Freshman Glee Club; Harvard Student Agencies; Karate Club; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. Varsity Wrestling; Freshman Wrestling, l.everett House: Wrestling. TIMOTHY CROUSE Born on January 10. 1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at The Browning School. New York. New York. Home Address: 141 East 72nd Street, New York. New York. Field of Concentration: History. Harvard Crimson; Freshman Glee Club; Harsard Dramatic Club; Hasty Pudding. Co-Author H.P.T. 119 A Hit and a Myth; Signet Society: YanBing. Editor-in-Chicf: Director Locb Ex. Two Pirandello Plays. Harsard College Scholarship. JOHN DIXON DAVIS Bom on January 8. 1946 .it Sheridan, Michigan. Prepared at The Choate School, Wallingford. Connecticut. Home Address: 209 Morris S.E.. Grand Rapids, Michigan. Field of Concentration: History and Science. International Relations Council; Phillips Brooks House Association. Chairman Tutors Committee. Leverett House: Leveret! House Pre-Medical Society. National Science Foundation Grant. RICHARD WATERS FARLOW. Jr. Horn on September 3. 1946 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Noble and Grccnough. Dedham, Massachusetts. Home Address: 75 l.assion Road, Needham. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Experiment in International Living; Harvard Yearbook Publications; Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association. Varsity Football: Freshman Football. Fox Club. CHARLES DEXTER DELONY Born on March 22. 1946 at Arlington, Virginia. Prepared at Gainesville High School. Gainesville. Florida. Home Address: 1930 Northwest 23rd Terrace. Gainesville. Florida. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Member of Army ROTC. Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association. Lcverclt House: Football. Boxing, Baseball. Fox Club. RAYMOND EDWARD FAUGHT. Jr. Born on August 3. 1946 at Jasper. Alabama. Prepared at Walker County High School. Jasper. Alabama. Home Address: 414 Clayton Street. Clayton. Alabama. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Discussion Group; Harvard Undergraduate Council; Pre-Medical Society; Verein Turmwachter son IS-56; Young Democrats; Young Republicans; Harvard-Toronto Exchange. Varsity Tennis; Freshman Tennis. Leverett House: Tennis. Basketball. Harvard College Scholarship. JEFFREY LEONARD DORAN Born on October 2S. 1946 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at Horsehcads Central High School. Horsehcads. New York. Home Address: 1952 Manor Drive. Rural Delivery I. Elmira. New York. Varsity Fencing; Freshman Fencing. JEFFREY MICHAEL DUNDON Bom on April 30, 1946 at Cambridge. Massachusetts. Prepared at Somerville High School, Somerville. New Jersey. Home Address: l.amington-Rattlcsnakc Ridge Road. North Branch, New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Physics. Gilbert and Sullivan Players; Harvard Dramatic Club; Phillips Brooks House Association. Leverett House: Twelfth Night: Swimming. Harvard College Scholarship. JACOB SIMON EGAN Born on September 5.1946 at Mossburg, Germany. Prepared at Hollywood High School. Los Angeles. California. Home Address: 1208 South Stearns Drive, Los Angeles. California. Field of Concentration: English. Gilbert and Sullivan Players; Mountaineering Club: Signet Society; Yardling. National Merit Scholarship. ROBERT DAVID EMERMAN Born on July 27, 1946 at Eric. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Geneva High School. Geneva. New York. Home Address: 35 Maxwell Avenue. Geneva. New York. Field of Concentration: Economics. Hillcl Society; Phillips Brooks House Association. GERALD BUDGE FOLLAND Born on June 4. 1947 at Salt Lake City, Utah. Prepared at East High School. Salt I_ake City. Utah. Home Address. 1571 Harvard Avenue. Salt l.ake City. Utah. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. Phillips Brooks House Association; Mathematics Society; Harvard-Radcliirc Music Club. Leverett House: Bach and the Beatles: Marriage of Figaro (Assistant Producer): Leverett Glee Club. Detur Prize; Harvard National Scholarship; Phi Bela Kappa. DAVID VOl.NF.Y FOSTER Born on August 30. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at St. Mark’s School, Southboro. Massachusetts. Home Address: Green Bay Road. Lake Forest, Illinois. Field of Concentration: History. Hasty Pudding. Porcellum Club. ROBERT FOULKES, III Born on May 19, 1946 at Providence. Rhode Island. Prepared at Tilton School. Tilton. New Hampshire. Home Address: 223 Martin Street East. Providence. Rhode Island. Field of Concentration: Government. Harvard Student Agencies; Pro-Law Society, Secretary-Treasurer; WHRB; Wireless Club. President; Young Republicans. Leverett House: Leverett News: Leverett House Radio President. Harvard College Scholarship. ALAN MACLAY GAULD Bom on October 5. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Noble and Grccnough. Dedham. Massachusetts. Home Address: 14 Farm Road. Weston. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Member of Air Force ROTC. Hasty Pudding. Varsity Crew. Leverett House: Hockey. Fox Club. ANTHONY McINERNY GLAV1N Bom on August 28. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Cambridge. Massachusetts. Home Address: 127 Lakeview, Cambridge. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard College Scholarship: John Harvard Scholarship. MAURICE JOSEPH HAMILBURG Bom on December 6, 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Noble and Grccnough School. IX'dham. Massachusetts. Home Address: 90 Holland Road. Brookline. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Rifle Club; Skin Diving Club; Young Republicans. Freshman Rifle. Harvard College Scholarship. JAMES W. GOODWIN Bom on March 27, 1947 at Kankakee. Illinois. Prepared at St. Paul's School. Concord. New Hampshire. Home Address: Box 12111 Seminary Post Office. Alexandria, Virginia. Field of Concentration: History. Harvard Dramatic Club; Jazz Dance Workshop; Harvard-Radcliflc Combined Charities. Levered House: Squash. RICHARD HARVEY GORDON Bom on May 2. 1947 at New York, New York. Prepared at South High School. Valley Stream. New York. Home Address: 55 Eastwood Lane, Valley Stream. New York. Field of Concentration: Physics. Conservation Club: Outing Club; Young Democrats. Levered House: Bach and the Beatles. Harvard College Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. WILLIAM CHANDLER GRAUSTEIN Bom on November 20. 1945 at New York. New York. Prepared at St. Mark's School. Southboro. Massachusetts. Home Address: Box 294. Route 22. Mount Kisco. New York. Field of Con-cent ration: Geology. Harvard Dramatic Club; Harvard Yearbook Publications; Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association. Coordinator Social Service Committee; Yardling: Geology Club. Levered House: Marriage of Figaro. ROBERT RUSSELL HACK FORD. Jr. Bom on November 2. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Middlesex School. Concord. Massachusetts. Home Address: Independence Road. Concord. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Chemistry. Harvard Policy Committee. Chemistry Department Audit. Levered House: Soccer. Basketball, Softball; Pre-Medical Society. JEFFREY CARL HAMM Bom on February 16. 1947 at Milwaukee. Wisconsin. Prepared at Solomon Juneau High School. Milwaukee. Wisconsin. Home Address: 542 North 93rd Street. Milwaukee. Wisconsin. Field of Concentration: Chemistry. Bach Society; Music Club. Secretary; Pre-Medical Society. Levered House: Opera Society; Cross-Country. Harvard College Scholarship. GARNER TRIPP HAUPERT Bom on June 22. 1945 at Farragut, Idaho. Prepared at Medford Senior High School. Medford. Oregon. Home Address: 222 Valley View Drive. Medford. Oregon. Field of Concentration: Psychology. Freshman Glee Club; Harvard Glee Club; Hasty Pudding; Pre-Medical Society; Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Varsity Crew. Levered House: Football, Crew, Coach; Organizer Levered House French Table. Harvard College Scholarship. PAUL WORTHEN HIGGINS Born on January 6. 1946 at Winchester. Massachusetts. Prepared at Washington-Lee High School. Arlington. Virginia. Home Address: Quarters F. U.S. Naval Station. Key West, Florida. Field of Concentration: English. Young Republicans. HAL VAN HALL Bom on Apnl 27, 1946 at St. Augustine. Florida. Prepared at Palatka Senior High School. Palatka. Florida. Home Address: 1400 High Street, Palatka. Florida. Field of Concentration: Biology. Freshman Council; Harvard Student Agencies; Phillips Brooks House Association; Pre-Medical Society; Young Democrats: Combined Charities Drive. Varsity Baseball. Levered House: Football, Basketball. Volleyball; Social Committee Chairman. WILLIAM BRUCE HILL. Jr. Born on October 18. 1945 at Houston. Texas. Prepared at Unmar High School. Houston. Texas. Home Address: 4126 Rice Boulevard. Houston. Texas. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Student Agencies; Hasty Pudding; Pre-Law Society; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Young Democrats; Young Republicans. Levered House: Basketball, Touch Football. Harvard College Scholarship. MICHAEL LYNN HILTON Bom on June 26,1946 at Decatur, Texas-Prepared at Decatur High School, Decatur. Texas. Home Address: Route 3. Decatur. Texas. Field of Concentration: History. Gargoyle; Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Levered House: Football. Harvard College Scholarship. LEVERETT BOISFEUILLET JONES. Jr. Horn on October 14. 1946 at Atlanta. Georgia. Prepared at St. Alban' School. Washington. D.C. Home Address: 2031 Golf View Road. Atlanta. Georgia. Field of Concentration: History. Har-sard Crimson, President-Sports Editor: Hasty Pudding: Jubilee Committee; Signet Society. Freshman Squash; Freshman Tennis. Captain. Spec Club. LUTZ JUERGEN HOEPPNER Bom on November 4. 1944 at Bad Landed;, Silesia. Prepared at Cathedral and John Cannon High School. Bombay, India. Home Address: 91c Bharat Bhuvan, Walkcshwar Road. Bombay, India. Field of Concentration: Economic . Harvard Student Agencies. Varsity Soccer. Harvard College Scholarship. SHERWOOD OHMER JONES Born on November 18. 1945 at Dallas. Texas. Prepared at Alamo Heights High School. San Antonio. Texas. Home Address: 4219 “Stanhope. Dallas. Texas. Field of Concentration: American History. Young Republicans. Varsity Swimming; Freshman Swimming. CLEMENT PORTER HOFFMAN Bom on April 23. 1946 at Bryn Mawr. Pennsylvania. Prepared at George School. Pennsylvania. Home Address: 20 Whittier Street. Cambridge. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Biology. Harvard Student Agencies; Pre-Law Society; Pre-Medical Society; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Young Democrats. I .eve ret t House: Soccer. Hockey. Wrestling. Harvard College Scholarship. THOMAS ROGER ITTELSON Bom on January I. 1946 at Dayton. Ohio. Prepared at Fairview High School. Dayton. Ohio. Home Address: 724 Golfview Drive. Dayton. Ohio. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Harvard Crimson. FREDERIC BEACH JENNINGS. Jr. Bom on December 29. 1945 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton Academy. Milton. Massachusetts. Home Address: Argilla Road. Ipswich. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. Ayn Rand Society, Chairman 1967-1968; Rifle Club; Young Republicans. Levercti House: Leverett Glee Club 1965-1966. MICHIO KAKU Bom on January 24. 1947 at San Jose. California. Prepared at Cubbcrlcy Senior High. Palo Alto. California. Home Address: 750 Christine Drive. Palo Alto. California. Field of Concentration: Physics. Harvard Band; Experiment in International Living; Phillips Brooks House Association; First Congregational Church Choir; Collegiate Club. Detur Prize: John Harvard Scholarship: Hertz Engineering Scholarship. JAMES PATRICK KELLY Bom on March 25, 1946 at Twin Falls, Idaho. Prepared at Jerome High School, Jerome. Idaho. Home Address: Box 211, Jerome. Idaho. Field of Concentration: American History. Phillips Brooks House Association. Leverett House: Football. Crew. Track; Leverett News: House Committee. Treasurer; Darkroom Club. Harvard College Scholarship. JOHN EDWARD KENNEDY Bom on February 18, 1947 at Minneapolis. Minnesota. Prepared at Texas Military Institute. San Antonio. Texas Home Address: 120 Perry Center. San Antonio. Texas. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Phillips Brooks House Association. Harvard College Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. ROBERT TODO KIDDER Born on September II. 1946 at Quincy. Massachusetts. Prepared at Tabor Academy, Marion. Massachusetts. Home Address: IS Brooks Street. Winchester. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: American History. Hasty Pudding; Harvard-Radcliflc Combined Charities. Varsity Golf. Fox Club. THOMAS HARTSHORN HODGES Bom on November 13. 1945 at Washington, D.C. Prepared at Tabor Academy, Marion. Massachusetts. Home Address: 572 W. Park. Olathe. Kansas. Field of Concentration: Economics. Hasty Pudding. Varsity Crew. Fox Club. DAVID WILLIAM JOHNSON Born on February 27. 1946 at Hanford, Connecticut. Prepared at St. John's Preparatory School. Danvers. Massachusetts. Home Address: 2 Page Road. Marblehead, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Yardling, Co-Editor; Harvard Yearbook Publications. Managing Editor-President; Cambridge JS-Associatc Editor. Leverett House: Leverett House Ans Festival Committee. ES. k 'Whajbj Cc , $• El x Corj , Sf«Ctt IE JONES U. lWgfc 'ar.:hc 'x -'.Tcui r -t;. V. DiUti «w: Ansa; ij, lamVimiSit. 21. IMiuSalct cduCtttc'cjVx CaifccaB s Dnvt. Mo A!t cf Cosocra Bird: Eiprioat «|: PM Box ion , Fint Capp dr; CcCcfttOi e Hirivi Sctar. -Sckfaaft DONALD RAYMOND KING Bom on November 24. 1947 at Green-villc. South Carolina. Prepared at Peter Stu vcvant High School, New York. New York. Home Addreu: 3222 Bay-view Avenue. Brooklyn, New York. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. Association of African and Afro-American Students; Mathematics Society; Phillips Brooks House Association. Co-Chairman Challenge 1966-67; Students for a Democratic Society. National Merit Scholarship. ROBERT EMERY KLITGAARD Bom on February 13.1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at Palos Verdes High School. Palos Verdes. California. Home Address: Box 612. Diablo. California. Field of Concentration: Philosophy. Christian Fellowship. Student Advisor for United Church of Chtist; Returnees of American Field Service; Sigma Alpha Epsilon: WHRB, Sports-caster. Varsity Baseball; JV Baseball; Freshman Baseball. Harvard College Scholarship. jOHN FRANK KOTOUC Born on November 15. 1946 at Lincoln. Nebraska. Prepared at Omaha Westside High School. Omaha. Nebraska. Home Address: 707 7th Street. Humboldt. Nebraska. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Christian Fellowship. Executive Committee: Phillips Brooks House Association: Pre-Medical Society. Leverett House: Bitch ami Bit Beatles. -a el 5V .S' JAMES MeGREW LAM ME. Ill Bom on September 5. 1946 at Los Angeles. California. Prepared at Walven-burg High School. Walscnburg. Colorado. Home Address: 528 Kansas Avenue. Walscnburg. Colorado. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Havty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association; Pre-Law Society; Young Republicans. Leverett House: Basketball. Boxing. Golf. Harvard College Scholarship. TERRY EDWARD I AUTZ Born on August 23. 1946 at Peoria. Illinois. Prepared at Utica High School. Utica, Michigan. Home Address: 4839 Dodson Drive. Hunnandale. Virginia. Field of Concentration: History. Member of Army ROTC. Freshman Glee Club; Harvard Dramatic Club: Har-vard-RadclitTc Combined Charities; Henry Adams History Club; Guys and Dolls. Leverett House: Tuelfth Night: Bach and the Beatles: Swimming. Harvard College Scholarship. LAWRENCE MORSE LAWRENCE Born on July 3. 1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at Madison High School. Brooklyn. New York. Home Address: 2938 Quentin Road. Brooklyn. New York. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Band: Harvard Undergraduate Council; Phillips Brooks House Association; Students for a Democratic Society. Harvard College Scholarship. KELLY IWeTrsf : er ceae Hgi , eAiixaBs.' defCaassw . iv - • i I writ a ack; Uertfn . Taws, 0 trd Cefege 'ARD KENNEM ruiry IS, sea. PnjMrf intt, Sr Asett - w.l’OfmyC' usFidicfCw kcs.P1 Huurf « ulSSciSdo EDWARD MILKOS KOVACHY. Jr. Born on December 3. 1946 at Cleveland. Ohio. Prepared at Shaker Heights High School, Shaker Heights. Ohio. Home Address: 14500 South Park Boulevard. Shaker Heights. Ohio. Field of Concentration: Economics. Hasty Pudding; Jubilee Committee. Varsity Lacrosse; Freshman Lacrosse; Varsity Soccer; Freshman Soccer; Freshman Winter Track. Leverett House: House Committee. Vice-Chairman; Leverett House Festival of the Arts; Leverett House Speaker Series Chairman. RALPH ARTHUR KUSINITZ Born on January 12. 1945. in Beverly. Massachusetts. Prepared at Marblehead High School. Marblehead. Massachusetts. Home Address: 27 May Street. Marblehead. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. Young Democrats; Skiing Club. Leverett: Footbal ■ REX Y. LEGHORN Born on May 19, 1945 at Yokohama. Japan. Prepared at Lowell High School. San Francisco. California. Home Address: 3458 17th Street. San Francisco, California. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Speaker's Club. Freshman Crew. Leverett House: Crew. ROBERT WINFRED LEUTNER Born on March 25. 1946 at Cleveland. Ohio. Prepared at Cleveland Heights High School. Cleveland. Ohio. Home Address: 876 Beverley Road. Cleveland Heights. Ohio. Field of Concentration: History. Experiment in International Living: Freshman Glee Club: Harvard Glee Club: International Relations Council; Young Democrats. Leverett House: Don G Oixtnni; Bath and the Beatles: The Marriage of Figaro: Leveret t Glee Club Harvard College Scholarship. I. ! W? z RONALD W. KRAM Bom on May 9. 1946 at Regina. Saskatchewan. Prepared at Scott Collegiate. Regina. Saskatchewan. Home Address: 3944 Qu'Appellc Drive. Regina. Saskatchewan. F'icid of Concentration: Government. Crimson Key Society. JV Football; Freshman Football; Freshman Lacrosse. Leverett House: Football. Track. ¥ ROBERT PAUL LEWIS Born on March 7. 1947 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at Lake Forest Academy. Lake Forest. Illinois. Home Address: 357 Madison Avenue. Glencoe. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Architectural Sciences. Harvard Glee Club. Manager. Freshman Soccer. Leverett House: Leverett House Radio. STEVEN HART LEWIS Bom on May 10. 1946 at Newton. Massachusetts. Prepared at Amity Regional High School. Woodbridge. Connecticut. Home Address: Apple Tree Lane, Woodbridge, Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Hasty Pudding; Returnees of American Field Service. Lcvcrctt House: Soccer, Basketball; Leverett House Radio. John Harvard Scholarship. JOHN CALKINS LIGHTBODY Bom on March 9, 1946 at Cleveland. Ohio. Prepared at Hawken School. Cleveland. Ohio. Hook Address: 32600 Fairmount Boulevard. Cleveland. Ohio. Harvard Dramatic Club; Outing Club; Harvard-RadclilTe Combined Charities. Freshman Basketball; Freshman Football; Varsity Rugby. Leverett House: Social Committee. Chairman; Squash, Basketball; Twelfth Night; Burnt ring (Winihrop); Toad o) Toad Hall (Lowell). Honorary Harvard College Scholarship. JOHN FREDERICK LINDOW Bom on July 23. 1946 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at Manhasset High School. Manhasset. New York. Home Address: 23 Bellows Lane, Manhasset. New Yoik. Field of Concentration: Scandinavian. Hasty Pudding: Yacht Club. Varsity Spring Track: Freshman Spring Track: Varsity Winter Track; Freshman Winter Track. Bat Club. ARTHUR SAMUEL LIPKIN Bom on November 25. 1946 at Cambridge, Massachusetts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin School, Cambridge. Massachusetts. Home Address: 16 Marie Avenue, Cambridge. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Young Republicans. Leverett House: President-Leveret! Drama Society. Harvard College Scholarship. KENNETH MARC LUDMERER Bom on January 13, 1947 at Long Beach. California. Prepared at Polytechnic High School, Long Beach, California. Home Address: 4220California Avenue, Long Beach. California. Field of Concentration: History and Science. Harvard Yearbook Publications, Editorial Board Chairman: International Relations Council: Phillips Brooks House Association; Pre-Medical Society. Freshman Cross Country. Leverett House: Leverett News; Leverett Glee Club. Harvard College Scholarship: John Harvard Scholarship; National Science Foundation Grant. ROBERT JOHN MACHIN Born on June 10. 1946 at Bahrain. Prepared at Edgemont. Scarsdalc. New York. Home Address: 10 Doris Drive, Scarsdalc. New York. Field of Concentration: Economics. Varsity Crew; Freshman Crew; Varsity Football. Leverett House: Volleyball. HARRY KKAI.MF.R MacWILLIAMS Born on July 8. 1946 at Summit, New Jersey. Prepared at Red Bank High School. Red Bank. New Jersey. Home Address: Dryden Road. Bcrnardsvillc, New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Biology. DOUGLAS ALFRED MAR.MON Born on April 12. 1946 at Kansas City. Missouri. Prepared at Shawnee Mission North High School. Shawnee Mission, Kansas. Home Address: 2911 West 47th Terrace. Shawnee Mission. Kansas. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. Harvard Student Agencies. Manager of Harvard Student Calendai: Returnees of American Field Service. Varsity Swimming; Freshman Swimming. I.cv-crctt House: Swimming; Chairman Social Committee; Leverett House Radio. Harvard College Scholarship. PETER ALAN MASON Born on January 26. 1947 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Brookline High School. Brookline. Massachusetts. Home Address: 60 Parkman Street. Brookline, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Phillips Brooks House Association. Mental Hospitals Committee. PETER DOUGLAS MATT I SON Bom on November 16. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton Academy, Milton. Massachusetts. Home Address: 32 Suffolk Road. Chestnut Hill. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Geology. Gilbert and Sullivan Players; Harvard Dramatic Club; Yacht Club. leverett House: Bach and the Beatles. Iroquois Club. JAMES EDWARD MeGUIRE Born on November 18, 1946 at Roseau. Minnesota. Prepared at Springfield High School. Springfield. Oregon. Home Address: 1495 North 8th Street. Spring-field. Oregon. Field of Concentration: Government. Young Republicans Leverett House: Football. Harvard College Scholarship. PETER JOSEPH McHUGH, III Bom on October 3, 1946 at Cambridge, Massachusetts Prepared at Chelmsford High School. Chelmsford. Massachusetts. Home Address: 114 Turnpike Road. Chelmsford. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Biology. Harvard Band; Catholic Student Center: Pre-Medical Society; Wind Ensemble. Leverett House: Don Giovanni; Finian's Rainbow (Quincy); Boys From Syracuse (Winihrop); Leverett House Arts Festival; Track. Harvard College Scholarship. I « Raffed.' So n Read, feJ FRED MA « red« a«aifc, d. Sana It Adlrm i {. oweeMaiaUk ntntix: v . 1 Attain, He it Cafcafa; I--. BtH Sava ia shews Snaa S XRn3(, CW-; «; Loss fa CdfatSckfcfa RICHARD HENRY MEADOW Born on October 23, 1946 at Rochester, New York. Prepared at Milton Academy, Milton. Massachusetts. Home Address: 48 Elm Street, Canton. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Anthropology. Hasty Pudding; Rillc Club; Young Democrats; Anthropology Forum, Freshman Rillc; Varsity Rillc. Leveret! House: Bach and the Beatles. Harvard College Scholarship. ALVIN RUSSELL MERRIAM Born on March 14. 1947 at Newton. Massachusetts. Prepared at Sanford High School, Sanford, Maine. Home Address: Brackett's Hill, Alfred. Maine. Field of Concentration: Economics. Member of Naval ROTC. Talfrail Club, President; WHRB, Sportscasier. MARK RADFORD NELSON Born on January 8. 1946 at Salt Lake City, Utah. Prepared at Southwest High School. Kansas City. Missouri. Home Address: 1222 West Gregory Street. Kansas City. Missouri. Field of Concentration: Physics. Hasty Pudding. Delphic Club. Harvard College Scholarship; Whitehall Foundation Scholarship. ANTHONY G. ORPHANOS Bom on September 9. 1945 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Arlington High School. Arlington. Massachusetts. Home Address: 1776 Commonwealth Avenue. Boston. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. Hasty Pudding. Dudley Hous : Basketball. Volleyball. Softball. John Thompson Scholarship. MASON r X. W Prtpinrf t hu rocUre. Mttackn •: 60 rtvi: fa acbjseWFijcfU ail Rdr«i N, : Auoca:cc, tfa aca CHRISTOPHER WARREN MORGENS Born on April 5. 1948 at Washington, D.C. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. Exeter, New- Hampshire. Home Address: 954 West Highland Avenue. Redlands. California. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Phillips Brooks House Association. Mental Hospitals Committee. ELGAR JOHN PENNINGTON III Born on January 13, 1945, in Danbury, Connecticut. Prepared at Moses Brown School, Providence, Rhode Island. Home Address: 1709 Rosenberg, Galveston. Texas. Field of Concentration: English. Phillips Brooks House Association. Young Republicans. Varsity Rugby. Freshman Council. Harvard College Scholarship. 5 LAS MATTOCK tferlUWifsM Prerarc4 t Ifa XL.MiuxhaaSB tolCte aettt FidiefC® tf.G rd DorabcCfet U: Hone: 8ri W is dob. WILLIAM CHRISTOPHER MORTENSON, Jr. Bom on May 28. 1946 at Orange, New Jersey. Prepared at St. Peter's Preparatory School, Jersey City. New Jersey. Home Address: 165 Wildwood Avenue, Upper Montclair. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Economics. Catholic Student Center. Varsity Football. Lev-crctt House: Leverett House Radio. PETER JOSEPH PINNOLA Born on March 18. 1946 at Far Rocka-way. New York. Prepared at Lawrence High School. Cedarhurst, New York. Home Address: 327 Mulry Lane, Lawrence, New York. Field of Concentration: English. Karate Club; Lampoon. Leverett House: Softball. Harvard College Scholarship. ARD NWUIE riber 18. IWrbs parol MlCrijcota onh fik 5«i Head cf Coe far Rqe r cat !!. HmriCif ERIC STEPHEN MULTHAUP Born on October 26. 1946 at Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Staples, Westport. Connecticut. Home Address: 4 Prince's Gate Court. London, England. Field of Concentration: Economics. Varsity Spring Track; Freshman Spring Track; Varsity Winter Track; Freshman Winter Track. Leverett House: Football. Harvard College Scholarship; Harvard National Scholarship. JAMES MICHAEL MURPHY Bom on October 9. 1945 at Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at St. John's Preparatory School, Danvers. Massachusetts. Home Address: 5 Cedar Road. Malvemc, New York. Field of Concentration: History. Harvard Dramatic Club; Phillips Brooks House Association. ANTHONY PLACERES Bom on October 3, 1945 at Havana, Cuba. Prepared at Lincoln High School, Los Angeles, California. Home Address: 1930 Thomas Street. Los Angeles, California. Field of Concentration: Biology. Experiment in International Living; Phillips Brooks House Association; Old Cambridge Student Association. Freshman Fencing. Leverett House: Spanish Table; French Table. Harvard College Scholarship; Harvard Club Scholarship. DAVID WALDON PORTER Bom on October 8,1946 at Jacksonville, Florida. Prepared at Palatka Senior High School. Palatka. Florida. Home Address: Route 2. Box 318, Palatka, Florida. Field of Concentration: Economics. Transferred From St. Johns River Junior College, Florida, 1966. Leverett House: Basketball, Softball; Social Committee. Harvard College Scholarship. •S3 t u ANDREW FOSTER POWELL r. Bom on July 5. 1946 at Boston. Mas ■7 sachusetls. Prepared at Sharon High W School, Sharon. Massachusetts. Home CCj Address: 232 New Canaan Road, Wfl-M ton, Connecticut. Field of Conccntra-tion: Economics. Leverett House: Alh- letic. Secretary, Soccer, Touch Football, y Basketball, Volleyball. Baseball, Soft- ball: House Newspaper. HAROl-D MOSHER PULLING, Jr. Bom on September 30, 1946 at Rutland. Vermont. Prepared at Rutland High School, Rutland, Vermont. Home Address: Chittenden Road, Rutland. Vermont. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Christian Fellowship; United Church of Christ Discussion Group Leader. Leverett House: Touch Football, Basketball, Softball; Leverett House Weekly Surrey of Pop Music: Leverett House Radio. Harvard College Scholarship. JOHN CARTER QUALE Bom on August 16, 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at New Trier High School, Winnetka, Illinois. Home Address: 417 Abbotsford Road, Kenilworth, Illinois. Field of Concentration: Economics. Harvard Band; Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association. Fox Club. Illinois Honorary Scholarship. DAVID FRANKLIN RANSOHOFF Born on July 30, 1946 at Cincinnati, Ohio. Prepared at Walnut Hills High School, Cincinnati, Ohio. Hook Address: 3S26 Biddle Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. Field of Concentration: Biology. Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association, Roosevelt Towers; Yacht Club; Young Democrats; Education for Action. Varsity Sailing; JV Sailing. Leverett House: Freshman Dorm Athletic Secretary. MARK JOSEPH RYAN Born on December 3. 1946 at Salem. Massachusetts. Prepared at Bcvcrl) High School. Beverly. Massachusetts Home Address: 34 Baker Avenue. Beverly, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Government. Member of Naval ROTC. Catholic Student Center; Young Republicans. Varsity Lacrosse Leverett House: Football. Basketball. Baseball. Volleyball. MICHAEL DAVID SCHLESINGER Born on April 18. 1946 at Cleveland. Ohio. Prepared at Hawken School. Cleveland. Ohio. Home Address: 17900 South Park Boulevard. Shaker Heights. Ohio. Field of Concentration: Government. Experiment in International Living: Harvard Dramatic Club; Harvard Undergraduate Council: Hasty Pudding; Jubilee Committee; Young Democrats. D.U. Club. PAUL ARNOLD SHAPIRO Born on October 30. 1946 at Framingham. Massachusetts. Prepared at Phillips Exeter. Exeter. New Hampshire. Home Address: 221 Winch Street. Framingham. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Government. Bach Society; Harvard Glee Club; Hillel Society. Council Member. Leverett House: Don Giovanni: The Gorgon, the Unicorn and the Manticore'. Glee Club; Opera Society. Harvard National Scholarship. JEFFREY GUY SHERMAN Bom on July 25. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at L nbrook High School. Lvnbrook, New York. Home Address: 210 Atlantic Avenue. Lyn-brook. New York. Field of Concentration: Economics. Freshman Glee Club: Harvard Glee Club: Phillips Brooks House Association. Coordinator of Book Exposure Program: Rifle Club: Teacher Aide Program: Young Democrats Lev-erett House: Drama Society. Harvard College Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. JOSHUA HERBERT RASSEN Born on June 6, 1946 at Germany. Prepared at Brookline High School. Brookline, Massachusetts. Home Address: 17 Warwick Road, Brookline. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Chemistry. Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. Varsity Tennis; Freshman Tennis. Leverett House: Glee Club; Opera Society; Pre-Med Society. HARRY MANUEL SHOOSHAN. Ill Born on November 7. 1945 at Wilmington. Delaware. Prepared at London School. Bethesda. Maryland. Home Address: 6310 Hanover Lane. Rockville. Maryland. Field of Concentration: Government. Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association. Blood Drive: WHRB. Sports Director: Young Democrats: Harvard-RadclilTc Combined Charities. Leverett House: Football. Golf: Newspaper: House Committee. KENNETH LAIRD RUSSELL Bom on March 13, 1946 at New York, New York. Prepared at Glen Rock High School, Glen Rock, New Jersey. Home Address: 79 Van Alien Road, Glen Rock. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Economics. Varsity Fencing; Freshman Fencing. Leverett House: Fencing. RICHARD ARNOLD SHORE Bom on August IS. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston I at in School. Boston. Massachusetts. Home Address: 6 Ledgewood Road. West Roxbury. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. Hillel Society. Executive Committee: Mathematics Society. Leverett House: Library Committee. Detur Prize: Harvard College Scholarship. « kc ciCcic kw k- WriSt .! D SCHUSxa ■ IWuCb s' HiiVa S , ,0®e Wfet IV( “i-Sata p Co n! 2m aiu Yo a ) SHAfttO . IW K fv_-1!' W. Nn Hew, ! 221 Wm fe Itsacbaa F«( Smuaitok GktOsb.Mik «kt. loon be Vtoxx: I, I , ■' ■. Gfct G Qp dNMolStav; V SHtXVUS !$. NX g Nci 14 MwiMLvjtailf ntNwYoiBs Ailed: A-oc U xt Fddcf(oK s FrcSreGsOl CH ; P P b icR.C«rtttJJb an:MeOfcfcr ; YCtt| DKU b Dtua Soaff; Hw inbip; wd NWfflWRfti atw 7. WMl e. fccswK-5-’ k S« toevet Ux W • eU d CiKtf Kul WfcFw :Asv J -:•'••■ u[ wr.V« «« sv«n Bw; ■ ' ajtr.HwC JONATHAN EOIN SILVER Born on June 16. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared ai Rye Neck High School. Mamaroncck. New York. Home Address: 5 Woodland Drive. Rye. New York. Field of Concentration: Physics. Outing Club: Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. Freshman Winter Track. Levcrctt House: Touch Football. Softball. Harvard National Scholarship. PHILIP JOSEPH SMITH Bom on September 3. 1946 at Great Bend, Kansas. Prepared at Wheat Ridge High School. Wheat Ridge, Colorado. Home Address: 3195 Kipling. Lake-wood. Colorado. Field of Concentration: American History. Pi Eta Club; Young Democrats. Varsity Baseball. Levcrctt House: Football. Basketball. Harvard College Scholarship. ROBIN DAVID SPITAL Bom on October 29, 1948 at New York New York. Prepared at Bronx High School of Science. New York. New York. Home Address: 1604 Metropolitan Avenue. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: Physics. Chess Gub. Harvard College Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. HOWARD STERN Bom on August 6. 1947 at Munich. Germany Prepared at Boston Latin School. Boston. Massachusetts. Home Address: 25 Curtis Road. Milton. Massachusetts. Field of Concent nit ion: German. Outing Club; Phillips Brooks House Association; Vtrein Turmwachter on I8S6. Vice-President 1965-66 — President 1967-68. Dctur Prize: Harvard College Scholarship. CRAIG ELMER STEWART Bom on September 21. 1946 at Cleveland. Ohio. Prepared at Mayfield High School. Mayfield Village. Ohio. Home Address: 1056 Eastlawn Drive. Cleveland. Ohio. Field of Concentration: Government. Member of Army ROTC. A1ESEC; Freshman Glee Gub; Harvard Undergraduate Council; Phillips Brooks House Association: Pre-Law Society; Harvard-Radcliflfc Combined Charities. Levcrctt House: Football: Newspaper: House Committee. Chairman: Glee Gub. Harvard Freshman Scholarship. RICHARD ALAN STONE Bom on October 14. 1946 at Newton. Massachusetts. Prepared at Newton High School. Ncwtonville. Massachusetts. Home Address: 46 Grcenlawn Avenue. Newton Centre. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Chemistry. Harvard Yearbook Publications. Secrc-taiy — Senior Section Editor; Phillips Brooks House Association; Mosaic. Levcrctt House: Elections Committee Chairman. Dctur Prize; Harvard College Scholarship; John Harvard Scholarship: Edwards Whitaker Scholarship. EDMUND KEARNS STUMP Bom on December 28. 1946 at Danville. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Juniata Joint High School. Milliintown, Pennsylvania. Home Address: 624 Washington Avenue, Milliintown. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: Geology. Freshman Football. Levcrctt House: Football. Wrestling. Volleyball. Ctcw; Levcrctt House Arts Festival. Harvard College Scholarship. WILLIAM FRANCIS SULLIVAN. Ill Born on November 14. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Belmont Hill School. Belmont, Massachusetts. Home Address: 30 Ficldmont Road, Belmont, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Levcrctt House: Hockey. EDWIN CHARLES SUMMERS. Ill Bom on September 18. 1946 at Liberal. Kansas. Prepared at Downey Senior High. Downey. California Home Address: 10434 Manzanar Avenue. Downey. California. Field of Concentration: English. Phillips Brooks House Association. Mental Hospitals Committee. Lcverctt House: Swimming. Bat Club. Vice-President. DAVID HENDRICKSON TAYLOR. Jr. Bom on April 7. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Groton School. Groton. Massachusetts. Home Address: Larch Row. South Hamilton. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Hasty Pudding. Treasurer. Varsity Tennis; Freshman Tennis. Levcrctt House: Hockey. Porcellian Club. WILLIAM H. TOBIN Bom on October 5. 1946 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at Hinsdale Township High School. Hinsdale. Illinois. Home Address: 520 South Grant. Hinsdale, Illinois. Field of Concentration: Government. Catholic Student Center; Young Democrats. Varsity Swimming; Freshman Swimming. Levcrctt House: Swimming. PAUL MICHAEL SILK Bom on July 27, 1946 at Keene. New Hampshire. Prepared at Belmont Hill School. Belmont. Massachusetts. Home Address: 16 Patriot’s Drive. Lexington. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: American History. Hasty Pudding. Varsity Crew; JV Crew. Fox Club. Harvard College Scholarship. KENNETH LEE WAI.LACH Born on April 16. 1946 at Nov York. New York. Prepared at Hotchkiss School. Lakeville, Connecticut. Home Address: 5 Sherbrooke Road. Scarsdale, New York. Field of Concentration: English. Hasty Pudding: Harvard- RadclilTc Combined Charities Treasurer. D.U. Club. KERRIN LEON WHITE Born on October 30. 1947 at Hartford, Connecticut. Prepared at Phillips Exeter] Exeter, New Hampshire. Home Address-45 Edward Raid. Watertown. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Psychology. Harvard College Scholarship. JOHN W. WEEKS. Jr. Bom on May 31. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Belmont Hill School. Belmont. Massachusetts. Home Address: 567 Concord Avenue, Belmont, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Romance Languages. Harvard Band: Club Hlspanko: Hasty Pudding: Young Republicans. Leverett House: Hockey, Baseball: Social Committee. Fox Club. RALPH HOWARD WILLARD. Ill Born on November 16. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Belmont Hill School, Belmont. Massachusetts. Home Address: 20 Village Hill Road. Belmont, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Biology. Harvard Band. Leverett House: Hockey, Crew. Fox Club. JOHN WHITNEY WEIDMAN Bom on September 9. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Collegiate School. New York. New York. Home Address: 1035 Fifth Avenue, New York. New York. Field of Concentration: History. Hasty Pudding; YardUng; Young Democrats. D.U. Club. Harvard College Scholarship, IP JOHN CAMPBELL WILLBRAND Born on September 21. 1946 at Cape Girardeau, Missouri. Prepared at St. Charles High School. St. Charles. Missouri. Home Address: 21 Oakwood Drive, St. Charles. Missouri. Field of Concentration: Economics. ROBERT GERARD WELZ Bom on February’ 11. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Catholic Memorial High School. Wat Roxbury. Massachusetts. Home Address: II Freeland Street. Mattapan. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Government. Hasty Pudding: Pi Eta Club. Varsity Baseball: Varsity Football. GREGORY DAVID WOLFE Bom on September 6. 1946 at Morristown. New Jersey. Prepared at Phillips Exeter. Exeter, New Hampshire. Home Address: Bemardsvillc Road. Mend-ham. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: American History. D. BRUCE WHEELER Born on December 21. I946at Brooklyn. New York. Prepared at Wantagh High School. Wantagh. New York. Home Address: Santitham Hall. Bangkok. Thailand. Field of Concentration: Anthropology. Member of Army ROTC. International Relations Council; Mountaineering Club; Pre-Law Society. Leverett House: Soccer. Baseball. Bat Club. Harvard College Scholarship; Harvard Club Scholarship. JOHN FOSTER WOODS Bom on August 17. 1946 at Baltimore. Maryland. Prepared at Anacostia High School. Washington. D.C. Home Address: 9623 Flower Avenue, Silver Spring. Maryland. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Phillips Brooks House Association. General Hospitals Committee — Assistant Chairman Tutors Committee. Leverett House: Leverett House Radio; Freshman Athletics Secretary. Harvard College Scholarship. ROGER GRAHAM WHIDDF.N Bom on April 13. 1947 at London. England. Prepared at Collegiate School. New York. New York. Home Address: Castine, Maine. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Esperanto Club: Harvard Art Rerifiv, Managing Editor; Phillips Brook- House Association. Harvard College Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. rsmxm ■5- Tl ... THOMAS MARSHALL WYMAN Born on December 24, 1946 at Lake Charles. Louisiana. Prepared al Lafayette High School. Lafayette. Louisiana. Home Address: 721 Jefferson Avenue. Metairc. New Orleans. Louisiana. Field of Concentration: Economics. Hasty Pudding; Pi Eta Club. Executive Committee: Combined Charities Leverett House: Football, Swimming; House Committee. ; V J JAMES ERIC GUTTMAN ZETZEL Bom on March 26.1947 at London. England. Prepared at Phillips Exeter. Exeter, New Hampshire. Home Address: 14 Hubbard Park. Camhridge, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Gas-sics. Classical Club, Secretary 1966 — President 1967; Harvard Policy Committee; Phillips Brooks House Association; Linguistics Club. Detur Prize: Harvard National Scholarship; Phi Beta Kappa; First Prize New England Latin Sight Translation Competition 1965-1966. PETER BROWN ZIMMERMAN Bom on March 26. 1946 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at Yorktown High School, Arlington. Virginia. Home Address: 4713 Rock Spring Road. Arlington. Virginia. Field of Concentration: Government. Phillips Brooks House Association; Pi Eta Club; Young Democrats; Harvard-RadclilTc Combined Charities. Varsity Football; JV Football; Freshman Football; Varsity Rugby; Varsity Spring Track: Freshman Spring Track. Leverett House: Football, Vo!-Ic ball. Softball. Baseball. RICHARD SAMUEL ZIMMERMAN Born on February 8. 1946 at Columbus. Ohio. Prepared at Whetstone High School. Columbus. Ohio. Home Address: 674 West Henderson Road. Columbus. Ohio. Field of Concentration: Economics. Married to Stephanie Alkire on August 5, 1967. Hasty Pudding; Pi Eta Gub. Varsity Football. Leverett House: Baseball. Softball, Basketball; Social Committee. Harvard National Scholarship. Dancil James Adams Warren Adler Paul A. Bartlett Jay Stuart Epstein Paul David Escott R. E. Faught. Jr. Barry Elliot Field Austen T. Gray. Jr. Richard T. Howe Clark H. Hutton. Ill Charles J. Kelly Alexander Keyssar Hugh Roland Law Robert J. Mitchell Carl Bliss Monroe Eric D. Moore W. J. Morgan. Jr. R. A. Moskovilz Conn James Nugent John C. Ogorzaly John Dayton Rich Michael T. Sawyicr W. H. Schwalm. Jr. John Joseph Szlyk Jerome D. Umansko Ralph A. Walker LOWELL HOUSE JOHN MILLARD ADLER Born on January 5. 1947 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Verde Valley School. Scdona. Arizona. Home Address: 1239 Canyon Road. Santa Fe. New Mexico. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. RICHARD GERALD ANDRONE Born on February 13. 1946 at Beloit. Wisconsin. Prepared at Memorial High School. Beloit. Wisconsin. Home Address: 1S51 Arrowhead Drive, Beloit. Wisconsin. Field of Concentration: English. Phillips Brooks House Association. Lowell House: The LomrMan: Lowell House Music Society. Harvard College Scholarship. DANIEL AUSTIN ARCHABAL Born on January 25. 1947 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Sebastian’s School. Newton, Massachusetts. Home Address: 11 Chatham Circle. Wellesley, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: American History. Catholic Student Center: Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association. LAWRENCE MARK ABRAMSON Born on November I, 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Newton South High School. Newton, Massachusetts. Hook Address: 44 Brush Hill Road. Newton. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. Freshman Council, ViccChairman: Phillips Brooks House Association; Pre-Law Society; Young Democrats; Young Republicans. STUART JAY BECK Bom on December 23. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Woodmen: Academy. Woodmerc, New York. Home Address: 18 Irving Place, Lyn-brook, New York. Field of Concentration: Government. Gilbert and Sullivan Players; Harvard Dramatic Club; Hasty Pudding; Signet Society. Lowell House: Drama Society: Football: House Committee. Harvard College Scholarship; Harvard National Scholarship. WILLIAM CHRISTIAN BULLITT, II Bom on June 9, 1946 at Bryn Mawr. Pennsylvania. Prepared at The Haver-ford School. Haverford. Pennsylvania. Home Address: Twinbrook Road. Berwyn. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: Government. Hasty Pudding. Theatricals: Young Democrats. Lowell House: Soccer. Phoenix Club. Harvard National Scholarship: National Merit Scholarship. JAMES PACF.Y BENNETT Bom on May 28. 1946 at Richmond Heights. Missouri. Prepared at Hall High School. Little Rock. Arkansas. Home Address: 5501 South Grandview. Little Rock. Arkansas. Field of Concentration: Government. ROBERT GREGORY BURDICK. Jr. Bom on December 31, 1946 at Spring-field. Ohio. Prepared at Shawnee High School. Springfield. Ohio. Home Address: 158 Meadow Lane. Springfield. Ohio. Field of Concentration: Economics. Phillips Brooks House Association. Lowell House: Football. Track. Baseball. STEPHEN SOULE ARNON Bom on October 14. 1946 at Oakland. California. Prepared at Carmel High School. Carmel. California. Home Address: 101 Southampton Avenue. Berkeley. California. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Harvard Student Agencies; Junior Usher: Mountaineering Club: Senior Associate. Lowell House: Cross-country. Track. Football. Fencing. Volley hall; Bell Ringers President; Hand-Printers. Harvard College Scholarship. JONATHAN DANIEL ASHER Born on December 2. 1946 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at Hyde Park High School. Chicago. Illinois. Home Address: 5021 Wood I awn Avenue. Chicago. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Government. Hillcl Society: Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. Varsity Fencing. r - T W'z d iki JEFF M. BORENSTEIN Born on June 5. 1946. in Newton. Massachusetts. Prepared at Brookline High School. Brookline, Massachusetts. Home Address: 273 Eliot Street. Chestnut Hill. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Chemistry and Physics. Ad-iwatt: Combined Charities; Young Democrats: Young Republicans. National Merit Scholarship. BARRY BROWN Born on October 20. 1946 at Newton, Massachusetts. Prepared at Newton South High School. Newton. Massachusetts. Home Address: 22 Bernard Lane. Newton. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: American History. Hillcl Society: Phillips Brooks House Association. Tutors Committee; Pre-Law Society; Young l emocratx. Lowell House: Tennis; Lowell House Yearbook JAMES VICTOR BAKER Born on January 9. 1944 at Grauesend. Kent. England. Prepared at Grauesend Grammar. Grauesend. Kent. Home Address: 7 Hall Road. Northflect, Kent. England. Field of Concentration: Romance Languages. Phillips Brooks House Association: Undergraduate Athletic Council: Senior Associate Program. Varsity Cross Country, Captain: Varsity Spring Track: Varsity Winter Track. Delphic Club. Harvard College Scholarship. JOHN ALLAN BUEHRENS Bom on June 21. 1947 at Pcckskill. New York. Prepared at Rogers City High School. Rogers City. Michigan. Home Address: 256 South Lake Street. Rogers City. Michigan. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. II Circolo Led-iano. President; Phillips Brooks House Association: Returnees of American Field Service. President: Young Democrats. Harvard College Scholarship. ROY IRVING BENNION Bom on November 17. 1945 at Spokane. Washington. Prepared at Lewis and Clark. Spokane. Washington. Home Address: Route 3. Glenrose Terrace. Spokane. Washington. Field of Concentration: History. Member of Naval ROTC. Harvard Student Agencies; TalTrail Club: Young Republicans. Lowell House: Toad of Toad Hall: Baseball. Football. WILLIAM WESLEY BURNS. Ill Bom on July 9.1946at Baltimore. Maryland. Prepared at Baltimore Polytechnic Institute. Baltimore. Maryland. Home Address: 1559 Winston Avenue. Baltimore. Maryland. Field of Concentration: Engineering Sciences. Varsity Cross Country: Varsity Spring Track; Varsity Winter Track. Harvard College Scholarship. CHRISTOPHER STUART CAMPBELL Bom on April 23. 1946 ai Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Browne and Nichols. Cambridge. Massachusetts. Hook Address: 11 Talbot Avenue, Medford. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. Harvard Drama Review: Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. Lowell House: Hockey. Squash. PHILIP NOBLE CHOR Born on March 22. 1944 at Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Milton Academy Milton. Massachusetts Home Addrrv. 56 East Division Street, Chicago. 111], nois. Field of Concentration: History Served in the Peace Corps. Ctrde Francois: Hasty Pudding: Phillips Brooks House Association; Pre-Medical Society. V'arsity Tennis; Freshman Tennis. Lowell House: Tennis. DUNBAR SCOTT CARPENTER Born on November 9. 1945 at San Francisco. California. Prepared at The Thatcher School, Ojai. California. Home Address: Route 3, Box 124. Medford. Oregon. Field ol Concentration: Social Relations Mountaineering Club. Assistant Editor of H.M.C. Journal; Outing Club; Phillips Brooks House Association: Young Democrats. Varsity Squash; Freshman Squash. Lowell House: Squash. Softball. Tennis. Phoenix Club. PETER FRANCIS CARR Bom on April 6.1944 at Dublin. Ireland. Prepared at St. Michael's College. Trim. Co. Meath, Ireland. Home Address: Ringlestown. Kilmessan. Co. Meath. Ireland. Field of Concentration: Economics. Varsity Winter Track; Freshman Winter Track. Harvard College Scholarship. KENNETH KAI CHANG Born on June 4. 1946 at Honolulu, Hawaii. Prepared at Punahou School. Honolulu. Hawaii. Home Address: Apartment 604. 1629 Wilder Avenue. Honolulu. Hawaii. Field of Concentration: Architectural Sciences. Americans for Reappraisal of Far Eastern Policy. Vice-President; Phillips Brooks House Association. Harvard College Scholarship. RICHARD WARFIELD CHEEK Bom on October 24,1945 at Richmond. Virginia. Prepared at Dcerlicld Academy, Deerfield. Massachusetts. Home Address: 4706 Pocahontas Avenue. Richmond. Virginia. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Crimson Key Society; Hasty Pudding; International Relations Council; Phillips Brooks House Association. Lowell House: Swimming. Volleyball. Football ; Lowell House Yearbook. DAVID LEE CHERNEY Born on May 10, 1946 at San Francisco. California. Prepared at Lick-Wilmcrding High School, San Francisco, California. Home Address: 2951 24th Avenue, San Francisco. California. Field of Concentration: Biology. Catholic Student Center; Freshman Council; Freshman Glee Club; Phillips Brooks House Association. General Hospitals; Young Democrats; Young Republicans; Russian By antinc Liturgical Choir; Har-vard-Radclilfc Combined Charities. Lowell House: Krapp's Lass Tape: Turn of ihe Screw: Look Back in Anger: House Committee; Lowell House Newspaper. National Merit Scholarship: Harvard Freshman Scholarship. PAUL DANTE COLITTI Born on July 28. 1946 at Framingham. Massachusetts. Prepared at Saint Sebastian's Country Day School. Newton Massachusetts. Home Address: 38 Phillips Brooks Road. Westwood. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Catholic Student Center; Young Democrats: Young Republicans. Lowell House: Lowell House Music Society. FREDERICK ALAN CONNELL Bom on May 3. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Rucrdalc Country School. New York. New York. Heme Address: 120 East 81st Street. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: Biology. Mountaineering Gub: Outing Club; Phillips Brooks House Association; Skin Diving Club. President. Lowell House: Football. Wrestling. Softball. National Science Foundation Grant. CHRISTOPHER TIMOTHY COUGHLIN Bom on February 9. 1946 at Boise. Idaho. Prepared at Grant High School. Portland. Oregon. Home Address: 2748 24th Avenue N.E.. Portland. Oregon. Field of Concentration: Chemistry. Young Republicans. Lowell House: Football, Basketball. Tennis. Ping-pong: Printer's Society. Harvard College Scholarship. JOHN KENT CRAFORD Born on December 5.1945 at Sioux City Iowa. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Andover. Massachusetts. Home Address: 1108 15th Street. Onawa. Iowa Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Freshman Glee Club: Glee Club. Asian Tour Group. Freshman Crew. ROBERT SCOTT CROSS Bom on June 12. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Arms Academy. Shelburne Falls. Massachusetts. Home Address: Hawley Road. Buckland. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Engineering and Applied Phy sics. Freshman Council. Lowell House: Softball-Baseball. Harvard College Scholarship- ■;CH 3$ cdutti « jv fCaxaaab ■fafatfe fcw«atSK ELIOT RAPHAEL CUTLER Bom on July 29. 1946 at Bangor. Maine. Prepared at Dcerticld Academy. Deerfield. Massachusetts. Home Address: 33 Grove Street. Bangor. Maine. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Hasty Pudding; Lampoon; Young Democrats. Lowell House: Drama Society: Football. Basketball. Softball. JOHN CHRISTOPHER CUTLER Born on August 29. 1946 at Danville. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Noble and Grccnough. Dedham, Massachusetts. Home Address: Boardman Avenue. Manchester, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: American History. Varsity Club; Freshman Jubilee Committee. Varsity Crew; JV Crew; Freshman Crew; Freshman Soccer. Lowell House: Soccer. Swimming, Cross-country. Basketball; House Committee. Porccllian Club. MATTHEW ISLE DOBROW Bom on March I. 1948 at New York. New York, Prepared at Horace Mann School. Bronx. New York. Home Address: 637 Maitland Avenue. Tea-neck. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Yacht Club: Young Republicans. Varsity Sailing. Harvard Club of New York City Scholarship. HAYDEN ABBOTT DUGGAN Bom on December 16. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Collegiate School. New York. New York Home Address: 47 East 88th Street. New York. New York Field of Concentration: History. Harvard Student Agencies; Phillips Brooks House Association. Roxbury Education Program. Students for a Democratic Society; Civil Rights Coordinating Committee. Lowell House: Hockey. D.U. Club. Harvard College Scholarship. ■ANCON ! •SUfayjtb libciiCar LNciYrtfo FtUrfCaas i KttrjfOi. ! Dvr Oik st: F M,la tisi asFis CHRISTOPHER CURTIS DAHL Bom on August 26.1946 at Brattlcboro. Vermont. Prepared at Appleton High School. Appleton. Wisconsin. Home Address: 123 Kensington Road. Garden City. New York. Field ofConccntration: English. Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. Lowell House: Drama Society; Lowell House Yearbook: House Committee. Secretary; Lowell House Musical Society . Harvard College Scholarship. STANISLAW MACIEJ DYRCZ-FREEMAN Born on January 23. 1946 at l.od . Poland. Prepared at Gloversville High School. Gloversville. New York. Home Address: 55 South Hollywood Avenue. Gloversville. New York. Field of Concentration: Government. Member of Army ROTC. Phillips Brooks House Association: Young Democrats: Krako-wiak Polish Dancers. Harvard College Scholarship. riUOIKY i . t« t ka GnaHtfSte Batten . fateiCtp iates: torts. leni aw LTadsfcf« Hir.vi IFW® nip : « Ofcfl ® ANTHONY BRIAN DAVENPORT Born on March 5, 1946 at Walla Walla. Washington. Prepared at Ingraham High School. Seattle. Washington. Home Address: 12704-Sth N.E., Seattle, Washington. Field of Concentration: Music. Harvard Student Agencies; Ski Club; Ye ran Tumiwachier von 1886. Lowell House: Music Society. JOHN HOLCOMBE DEWEY Born on July 25. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Andover. Massachusetts. Home Address: 9 Scarlcs Road. Darien. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Harvard Dramatic Club; Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association: Hasty Pudding Theatricals. Lowell House: Hockey. Soccer. Crew; Athletic Secretary. WILLIAM CLARENCE DICKINSON. Jr. Born on October 2. 1948 at Santa Barbara. California. Prepared at Livermore High School. Livermore. California. Home Address: 54 Panoramic Way, Berkeley. California. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Mountaineering Club: Outing Club; Phillips Brooks House Association. Freshman Crew. Lowell House: Swimming. Sculling. ROBERT S. EASTON. Jr. Born on November 28. 1946 at Peoria. Illinois. Prepared at Richwoods Community High School. Peoria. Illinois. Home Address: 418 Highpoint Road. Peoria. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Bridge Club: Committee to End the War in Vietnam; International Relations Council; Phillips Brooks House Association. Prisons Committee; Students for a Democratic Society. DAVID CARAM EKLUND Bom on February 22. 1947 at Lowell. Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Paul’s School. Concord. New Hampshire. Home Address: 21 Galligan Road. Lowell. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Applied Mathematics. Bridge Club: Chess Club. Captain; Phillips Brooks House Association. DENNIS JEFFREY FELDMAN Born on March 21. 1946 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at Menlo School. Menlo Park. California. Home Address: 806 North Alpine Drive. Beverly Hills. California. Field of Concentration: English. Signet Society. Varsity Squash: Freshman Squash. Lowell House: Dido and Aeneas: Krapp's Last Tape. Hi W £ 0 ANDREW FELTENSTEIN Horn on October 15. 1946 at Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Lawrencevillc. Lawrcnccvillc. New Jer-scy. Home Address: 124 Edgerstowne Road. Princetoti. Ness Jersey. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. Mathc-mattes Society. President; Kilk Club. HENRY MICHAEL FIELDS Born on February II. 1946 at Bronx, New York. Prepared at Verona High School. Verona. New Jersey. Home Address: 5 Howard Street. Verona. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Hillel Society; Phillips Brooks House Association: Young Democrats. Freshman Yard Council. JV Soccer; Freshman Soccer. Lowell House: Soccer. Baseball: Music Society. Harvard College Scholarship. JOHN JORDAN FINLEY Bom on September 8. 1946at Arlington. Virginia. Prepared at George Mason High School. Falls Church. Virginia. Home Address: 2346 Oak Street. Falls Church. Virginia. Field of Concentration: Government. Advocate: Harvard Band. Manager and Publicity Manager; Hasty Pudding: Schneider's Band. Lowell House: Toad of Toad Hall. GEORGE MICHAEL FLESH Born on December 21. 1946 at Srikszo. Hungary. Prepared at Hawthorne High School. Hawthorne. California. Home Address: 1115 Norman Place. Los Angeles. California. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Harvard Crimson. News Board; Film Studies. Freshman Fencing. Detur Prize: Harvard National Scholarship. HUGH MEREDITH FLICK. Jr. Born on February 19. 1946 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at Bethlehem Central Senior High School. Del mar. New York. Home Address: 15 North Hclderbcrg Parkway. Slingcrlands. New York. Field of Concentration: History and Science. Member of Naval ROTC. Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association; Pi Eta Club; TatTrail Club; Young Democrats. Varsity Crew; Freshman Crew. Lowell House: Football. Basketball. WAYNE MICHAEL FLICKER Born on October 17. 1946 at New York, New York. Prepared at Pembroke Country Day School. Kansas City. Missouri. Home Address: 5845 Sunrise Drive. Mission. Kansas. Field of Con-entration: Chemistry. Harvard Policy Committee: Hillel Society; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. Lowell House: Lowell House Printers. Detur Prize: Harvard College Scholarship: John Harvard Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. CARL STEPHEN FONTNEAU Born on IXxembcr 16. 1946 at Boston. .Massachusetts. Prepared at Winchester High School. Winchester. Massachusetts. Home Address: 18 Latin Way, Medford. Massachusetts, Field of Concentration: Biology. Hasty Pudding. PETER JOSEPH GABEL Born on January 28. 1947 at Hollywood. California. Prepared at Deerfield Academy. Deerfield. Massachusetts. Home Address: 465 Park Avenue. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: English. Hasty Pudding; lampoon, lias 1967; Yardling. Varsity Squash: Freshman Squash. Spec Club. Harvard College Scholarship. HAROLD NEIL GABOW Born on May 6. 1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at Marlin Van Burcn High School. New York. New York. Home Address: 82-09 Bell Boulevard. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. Mathematics Society. Lowell House: 1965 Christmas Play Harvard College Scholarship. LARRY STEPHEN GAGE Born on August 9. 1947 at Hollywood. California. Prepared at John H. Francis Polytechnic High School. Sun Valley. California. Home Address: 79 Maple Avenue. Clostcr. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Anthropology. Freshman Glee Club: Gilbert and Sullivan Players. Vice-President: Harvard Dramatic Club: Harvard Student Agencies Lowell House: Toad of Toad Hall: Look Back in Anger: Football. Basketball: Lowell House Society of Russian Bell Ringers. National Merit Scholarship. JOHN RAPHAEL GERSH Born on July S. 1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at Fastchcster High School. Eastchestcr. New York. Home Address: 204 Dante Avenue. Tuckahoc. New York. Field of Concentration: Philosophy and Mathematics. Young Democrats; Harvard Upward Bound. Varsity Fencing. Lowell House: Lowell House Printers. Harvard College Scholarship: National Merit Scholarship KENNETH WAYNE GIDEON Born on July 25. 1946 at Lubbock. Texas. Prepared at Montrey High School. I ubbock. Texas. House Address: 2207 48th Street. Lubbock. Texas Field of Concentration: Government Member of Army ROTC. Harvard Policy Committee: Hasty Pi Phillips Brooks House Assixiation: Harvard Rodclilfc Combined Charities Harvard College Scholarship. S, s fflGA£ .IL rttj.J? «t Ibyg? Sag 55§ Cte - tBLGMOi i f. IWgfclj ?S53Ll Jl tfes ; SM.VihU tfta.MHb 'at.NctWWi i: Jtosrafc tj. Ltvl Ssc '• j.ffavxiMgb PK£VG« J.IW Hfc« ptl kfclta gikioxSj U ee.Uta 'to ,t. Nr toe ?s l AsJrvcep! kGtaalttr teds. rirr: . mrfSMfcl n MfMIO i foW fcto. fadSJ rf iss1 tiUetkWr GSxsH I! fttJcK !. a. v Vrt • - 1 a Cacsau NXieom)« rfleuftes cv R«l.v- Vtos totor ROBERT ALLAN GOODIN Bom on February 5. 1947 at Berkeley. California. Prepared at Berkeley High School. Berkeley. California. Home Address: 97 Tamalpais Road. Berkeley. California. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. AIESEC; Freshman Council; Harvard Student Agencies; Mountaineering Club: Phillips Brooks House Association; Ski Club; Young Democrats. Varsity Skiing. Lowell House: Football. Basketball. Swimming, Tennis. Squash; Lowell House Yearbook. Harvard College Scholarship; Honorary Freshman Scholarship. BRADLEY MARK GREENBLOTT Bom on November 4. 1946, in Binghamton. New York. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. Exeter. New Hampshire. Home Address: 38 Front Street. Binghamton. New York. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Phillips Brooks House Association; Pre-Med Society: Hillel Society. John Harvard Scholarship; Harvard College Scholarship. JAMES ELTON GROVES Bom on Apnl 28. 1946 at Lubbock, Texas. Prepared at Lubbock High School. Lubbock. Texas. Home Address: 1611 Avenue Y.. Lubbock. Texas. Field of Concentration: Biology. Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association; Pre-Medical Society. Lowell House: Toad of Toad Hall: The Crucible: Arsenic and Old Lace: Asoka Table. Harvard College Scholarship. JONATHAN JOSEPH ENMAN GUSS Bom on June 6.1946 at Saint John. New Brunswick. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Andover, Massachusetts. Home Address: 70 Orange, Saint John. New Brunswick. Canada. Field of Concentration: Economics. Hasty Pudding. Lowell House: Skin of Our Teeth: Toad of Toad Hall: Editor of Lowell House Yearbook: Treasurer of Lowell Drama Society. FRANCIS JOSEPH HAGGERTY. Jr. Bom on July 20. 1946 at Detroit. Michigan. Prepared at Catholic Central High School. Detroit. Michigan. Home Address: I40S8 Mcttctal. Detroit. Michigan. Field of Concentration: History. Catholic Student Center. Varsity Cross Country; Freshman Cross Country; Varsity Spring Track; Varsity Winter Track. Lowell House: Cross-country. Harvard College Scholarship. WILLIAM WILSON HAIBLE Born on November 28, 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Cambridge School of Weston, Weston, Massachusetts. Home Address: 21 Moon Hill Read. Lexington. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Geology. JAMES BRYANT HEBENSTREIT Born on March 8. 1946 at Long Beach. California. Prepared at Southwest High School. Kansas City. Missouri. Home Address: 628 Greenway Terrace. Kansas City. Missouri. Field of Concentration: History’. Member of Naval ROTC. Christian Science Organization. Treasurer: Hasty Pudding: Young Republicans. Freshman Tennis. Lowell House: Squash. Tennis. Baseball. Football. D.U. Club. Harvard National Scholarship. dkSk DANIEL ALLEN HALL Born on December 24. 1946 at Parkersburg. West Virginia. Prepared at Parkersburg High School. Parkersburg. West Virginia. Home Address: 2901 28th Street. Parkersburg. West Vtrginij Held of Concentration: Social Relations. Freshman Glee Club; Gilbert and Sullivan Players; Harvard Glee Club. Freshman Football. Manager. National Merit Schotarshus. CURTIS WEBB HART Born on February 7. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Loomis School. Windsor. Connecticut. Home Address: 350 North Pleasant Avenue. Ridgewood. New Jersey . Field of Concentration: Fngltsh. Hasty Pudding: Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. Lowell House: Football; Lowell House Yearbook Editor. DAVID ROBERT HAYNOR Born on May 20. 1947 at Berkeley. California. Prepared at El Cerrito High School. El Cerrito. California. Home Address: 8644 Don Carol Drive. El Cerrito. California. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. Outing Club; Phillips Brooks House Association. Young Democrats. Detur Prize: National Merit Scholarship; Phi Beta Kappa. TERENCE JAMES HEAGNEY Bom on March 6. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Marian High School. Framingham. Massachusetts. Home Address: 37 Porter Road. Natick. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Catholic Student Center; Phillips Brooks House Association. Tutor; Pre-law Society; Young Democrats. Lowell House: 1966 Christmas Play. Harvard College Scholarship. WALTER HELLERSTEIN Born on June 21, 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Fieldston, New York. New York. Home Address: 285 Central Park West. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: Government. Harvard Band; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young IX'mocrats. Varsity Tennis: Freshman Tennis. Lowell House: Soccer. Baseball. Tennis. PEAK 1.MAN DAVID HICKS. Jr. Bom on October 20. 1946 at Hamilton, Ohio. Prepared at Garfield Senior High School. Hamilton. Ohio. Home Address: 1245 Wallace. Hamilton. Ohio. Field of Concentration: Biology. Association of African and Afro-American Students: Pre-Medical Society. Varsity Football. Lowell House: Football: House Committee Treasurer. Harvard College Scholarship. STAFFORD HUTCHINSON Born on September 22.1945 at Palestine, Texas. Prepared at Landon School. Bethesda. Maryland. Home Address: 5401 Albemarle Street. Washington. D.C. and 2529 Winsted Lane. Austin. Texas. Field of Concentration: American History. Member of Army ROTC. Freshman Glee Club. President: Hasty Pudding. Assistant Advertising Manager: Pre-Law Society; Young Democrats: Episcopal Chaplaincy (Christ Church). Lowell House: Soccer. BARRY LAMAR JOHNSON Born on June I. 1946 at Mullins. South Carolina. Prepared at Beaufort High School. Beaufort. South Carolina. Home Address: 2609 Boyer Street. Beaufort South Carolina. Field of Concentration: Government. Member of Army ROTC. Caisson Club; Freshman Council. Hasty Pudding: Phillips Brooks House Association. Pre-Law Society: Young Democrats; Harvard Southerners Club Vice President. Lowell House: Football; House Committee. Harvard College Scholarship. PETER WALLACE JOHNSON Born on August 4. 1947 at Trenton. New Jersey. Prepared at Lawrenccvule School. Lawrcnccville, New Jersey. Home Address: 926 West State Street. Trenton. New Jersey. Field of Com-cent ration: Social Relations. Harvard Dramatic Club: Hasty Pudding. Vice President and Theatricals Designer; Ivy Films Research; Signet Society. Lowell House: Soccer. PAUL VANCE HYNDMAN Bom on September 14. 1946 at Berwyn. Illinois. Prepared at Shawnee Mission North High School. Merriam. Kansas. Home Address: 11001 West 62nd Street. La Grange. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Far Eastern Studies. Freshman Glee Club: Harvard Glee Club; Harvard Student Agencies. Layout Manager of Harvard Student Calendar; Outing Club; Phillips Brooks House Association; Varsity Judo: Freshman Judo. Lowell House: J.B.: Football. Harvard College Scholarship. GARY ROBERT IMHOFF Bom on March 31, 1946 at St. Louis. Missouri. Prepared at Parkway Senior High School, Chesterfield, Missouri. Home Address: Box 73 Route 2, Chesterfield, Missouri. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Phillips Brooks House Association. Detur Prize; National Merit Scholarship. PETER ROBERT JONES Bom on January 1. 1948 at Brooklyn. New York. Prepared at Bay side High School. Bayside. New York. Home Address: 29 Little Neck Road. Douglas-ton. New York. Field of Concentration: Economics. Young Democrats; Catholi: Club. Varsity Tennis: Freshman Tennis. Harvard College Scholarship. NEAL PHILIP KATZ Bom on May 16. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin School, Boston. Massachusetts. Home Address: 55 Westmore Road. Mattapan. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Harvard Student Agencies. Bartender; Harvard Yearbook Publications. Photography Board: Karate Club. President and Treasurer: Outing Club. Harvard College Scholarship. JAMES WILLIAM ISAACS Born on May 16, 1945 at Youngstown, Ohio. Prepared at Gilman School. Baltimore. Maryland. Home Address: 315 Camden Road. Atlanta. Georgia. Field of Concentration: Applied Mathematics. Harvard Student Agencies; Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association. Chairman of Columbia Point Committee. Freshman Lacrosse. Lowell House: Football. Harvard College Scholarship. JOHN DARREL KENNEDY Bom on November 13. 1946 at Clarksville. Tennessee. Prepared at Clarksville High School. Clarksville. Tennessee. Home Address: Route No. 6. Clarksville. Tennessee. Field of Concentration: Applied Mathematics. Harvard Yearbook Publications. Lowell House: Photographer for House Yearbook. Harvard College Scholarship: National Honor Society Scholarship. HARRY EDWARD JERGESEN Born on March 4.1947 at San Francisco, California. Prepared at St. Paul's School. Concord. New Hampshire. Hook Address: 307 Richardson Drive, Mill Valley. California. Field of Concentration: Biology. Hasty Pudding; Skin Diving Club: Yereiit Turmwachter von 1884. Varsity Fencing. SEAN KEVIN KENNEDY Bom on June 25. 1946 at Worcester. Massachusetts. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Andover. Massachusetts. Home Address: Maple Street. Stur-bridge. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. Hasty Pudding: Phillips Brooks House Association Lowell House: Play of Daniel: Dido a -Aeneas. D.U. Club. Treasurer. THOMAS COBB KING Bom on July 2. 1946 at Charlottesville, Virginia. Prepared at The Episcopal High School. Alexandria. Virginia. Home Address: 543 Hillycr High Road, Anniston, Alabama. Field of Concentration: English. Hasty Pudding; Harvard Radclifle Forum Theatre. Phoenix Club. Harvard College Scholarship. HENRY LEE Born on June 10. 1947 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Brooks School, North Andover, Massachusetts. Home Address: 90 Mount Vernon Street. Boston, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Hasty Pudding; WHRB; Young Democrats. Varsity-Rugby; Varsity Spring Track; Freshman Spring Track. Lowell House: Football. Baseball. Golf. Owl Club. PETER WAYNE KOTILAINEN Bom on December 17, 1946 at Worcester, Massachusetts. Prepared at Millbury Memorial High School, Millbury. Massachusetts. Home Address: 15 Alpine Street. Millbury, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Phillips Brooks House Association. Freshman Soccer. SETH ATHERTON LIPSKY Bom on June 16, 1946 at New York, New York. Prepared at Mount Everett Regional High School. Sheffield, Massachusetts. Home Address: New- Marlboro. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Crimson; International Relations Council; Signet Society; Wireless Club. STEPHEN ROBERT KROLL Bom on September 21, 1946 at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts. Home Address: 3411 Woolscy Drive, Chevy Chase, Maryland. Field of Concentration: Government. Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association, Treasurer; Young Democrats. Freshman Council. Lowell House: House Yearbook. Harvard College Scholarship. THOMAS JOSEPH LO SAVIO Bom on April 13. 1946 at San Jose. California. Prepared at Bellarminc College Preparatory. San Jose. California. Home Address: 1633 Parksidc Avenue, San Jose. California. Field of Concentration: Government. Catholic Student Center; Pre-Law Society. President; Young Democrats. Harvard College Scholarship. RICHARD RANDOLPH LANGENBACH Bom on September 19, 1945 at Newion, Massachusetts. Prepared at Governor Dummer Academy, South Byfield, Massachusetts. Home Address: II West Cedar Street, Boston, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Aichitcctural Sciences. Harvard Yearbook Publications; Phillips Brooks House Association. Varsity Cross Country; Varsity Spring Track; Varsity Winter Track. Lowell House: Photographer for House Yearbook. GEOFFREY BENJAMIN LA SALLE LANNING Bom on February 8, 1946 at New York, New York. Prepared at Washington Lee High School, Arlington, Virginia. Home Address: 2948 North 26th Street, Arlington, Virginia. Field of Concentration: Government. Skin Diving Club; Young Democrats: Young Republicans. RANDOLF HORNER I.UNDBERG Born on May 12. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Horace Greeley-High School, Chappaqua, New York. Home Address: 598 Quaker Road. Chappaqua. New York. Field of Concentration: Physics and Chemistry. Phillips Brooks House Association; Yacht Club; Young Democrats. Lowell House: Softball, Tennis. Harvard College Scholarship. JAMES HAROLD MANN Born on September 18, 1946 at Albany, New York. Prepared at Albany Academy, Albany, New York. Home Address: 210 Lenox Avenue, Albany, New York. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association, Roosevelt Towers Program and Boston Children's Service; Yrrein Tunnnachter von I8S6: Young Democrats. Harvard College Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship; Institute for Comparative Studies Grant; New York Times Scholarship. PETER MARTIN LARSON Born on March 12. 1946 at Waukegan. Illinois. Prepared at Tower Hill School. Wilmington. Delaware. Home Address: 4619 Bailey Drive, Wilmington, Delaware. Field of Concentration: Music. Freshman Glee Club; Hasty Pudding: Jar . Dance Quartet. Lowell House: Play of Daniel; Music Society. Harvard College Scholarship. DOUGLAS KENNARD MANSFIELD Bom on September 17. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Andover. Massachusetts. Home Address: 26 Sterling Road. Wellesley. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Freshman Glee Club; Gilbert and Sullivan Players; Harvard Glee Club; Young Democrats. Lowell House: Cross Country, Basketball. Tennis, Baseball, Track. CHARLES RUSSELL MINTER Horn on July 30. 19-17 ai Bristol. Vir. ginia. Prepared at Baldwin High School, Millcdgcvillc. Georgia. Home Addre..: 611 West Charlton Street. Millcdgcvillc. Georgia. Field of Concentration: Physics. SERGIO MODIGLIANI Born on September I. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Westtown School. Westtown. Pennsylvania. Home Address: 25 Clark Street. Belmont, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Architectural Sciences. Freshman Coun-cil; Harvard Policy Committee. Chairman of Audit of Architectural Sciences Concentration; II Circolo lialiano; Outing Club: Yacht Club. Freshman Soccer. Lowell House: Skin of Our Teeih: Toad of Toad Hall; Arsenic and Old Lace. ELVIN MONTGOMERY. Jr. Bom on April 16. 1947 at New Orleans, Louisiana. Prepared at St. Augustine's High School. New Orleans. Louisiana Home Address: 1566 Foy Street. New Orleans. Louisiana. Field of Concentration: Government. Association of African and Afro-American Students. Vice President and Member-at-Large of the Executive Committee: Lampoon. Signet Society: Yacht Club; Editor and Chairman of the Editorial Board of the Harvard Journal of Negro Affairs. THOMAS HELLMAN MORTON Bom on February 10. 1947 at Los Angeles. California. Prepared at Beverly Hills High School. Beverly Hills. California. Home Address: 264 South Peek Drive. Beverly Hills, California. Field of Concentration: Classics and Fine Arts. Classical Club; Harvard Dramatic Club: Ivy Films Research; Film Studies. Treasurer; Signet Society. Varsity Wrestling. Lowell House: Dido and Aeneas National Merit Scholarship. THOMAS ADDIS EMMET MOSELEY, III Bom on January 28. 1947 at Lexington. Virginia. Prepared at St. Andrew's School. Middletown, Delaware. Home Address: 4104 Woodbine Street. Chevy Chase. Maryland. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Committee to End the War in Vietnam; Harvard Undergraduate Council. Chairman of the Committee on Houses: Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. Lowell House: Play of Daniel: House Committee; Lowell House Printers; Music Society: Don Giovanni (Leverett House.) Harvard College Scholarship. DENNIS JOSEPH MURPHY Bom on October S, 1946 at Irvington. New Jersey. Prepared at Scion Hall Preparatory, South Orange, New Jersey. Home Address: 24 North Terrace. Maplewood. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: History and Science. Catholic Student Center; Pre-Law Society: Young Democrats; Young Republicans. Harvard College Scholarship. NEIL STEPHEN MAYER J Born on May 13. 1947 at Milwaukee. W Wisconsin. Prepared at Nicokt High School. Milwaukee. Wisconsin. Home Address: 8720 Pelham Parkway. Mil-JL vvaukee, Wisconsin. Field of Conccntra- W tion: Economics. Lampoon: Young Democrats; Faculty Aide. Lowell House: Football. Basketball. Softball. Detur Prize; Harvard College Scholarship: National Merit Scholarship. JAMES PATRICK MeGRATH Bom on February II. 1947 at Waltham, Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Mary's Boys School. Waltham. Massachusetts. Home Address: 29 Ripley Road. Belmont. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Government. Member of Navy ROTC. Catholic Student Center: Hasty Pudding: Phillips Brooks House Association: Taffrail Club; Young Democrats: NROTC Photo Club; Co-Editor Loudspeaker (Navy ROTC Newspaper); NROTC Company Commander. Lowell House: Hockey, Basketball. Track. DAVID SCOTT McKELVEY Bom on December 3. 1946 at Sentekley. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Redford High School. Detroit. Michigan. Home Address; 10426 Grcenvkw. Detroit, Michigan. Field of Concentration: Government. Harvard Band. Varsity Spring Track; Varsity Winter Track. Lowell House: Dido and Aeneas; Crosscountry. JOHN STILES MERCER Born on July 23. 1947 at Newburyport, Massachusetts. Prepared at Governor Durnmer Academy. South Bylicld, Massachusetts. Home Address: 1 Elm Street. South Bylicld. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Hasty Pudding; Young Democrats; Harvard Radcliffe Forum Theatre (Secretary). Lowell House: Just a Quiet Note. D.U. Club. Keeper of live Keys. GEORGE VANDERNETH MERRILL Born on July 2. 1947 at New York, New York. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. Exeter. New Hampshire. Home Address: 1140 Fifth Avenue. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: History. Cercle Francois: Hasty Pudding: Pi Eta Club; Pre-Law Society; Young Republicans. Phoenix Club. Detur Prize; Harvard College Scholarship; John Harvard Scholarship. JOHN DUDLEY MILLER. JR. Bom on August 7. 1946 at San Fran-civco, California. Prepared at Valley-High School. Valley Station, Kentucky. Home Address: 6138 Middlcrose Circle, Valley Station. Kentucky. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Member of Navy ROTC. Harvard Student Agencies; Taffrail Club; NROTC Yearbook. Lowell House: Volleyball, Baseball : Member of The Icemen. •W M W DAVID CHASE PATTERSON Born on November 30, 1946 at Spring-field. Ohio. Prepared at Springfield North High. Springfield, Ohio. Home Address: 108 South Kensongton Place. Springfield, Ohio, Field of Concentration: Economics. Lowell House: Football, Basketball. Baseball. Softball, Squash. Volleyball; House Committee, Athletic Secretary. Harvard College Scholarship; Ohio Football Coaches Association Scholarship. BRUCE FRANKLIN PENNINGTON Bom on July 18. 1946 at Lexington, Kentucky. Prepared at Robert E. lee, Jacksonville, Florida. Home Address: 1640 Westminster Avenue. Jacksonville, Florida. Field of Concentration: Eng-lish. Advocate: Crimson Key Society; Freshman Council; Hasty Pudding; The Island; Phillips Brooks House Association. Lowell House: J.B.; Printing Society; Winner of Lowell House Literary Contest 1966. Harvard College Scholarship. CHARLES SAMUEL PESKIN Born on April 15. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Morristown High School. Morristown. New Jersey. Home Address: lOGodet Place, Morristown. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Engineering and Applied Physics. Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. Lowell House: Crew; Music Society; Apollo of Bellac (Quincy House). Detur Prize; John Harvard Scholarship. PETER ANDRAS NADOSY Bom on October 16. 1944 at Lengyetoti, Hungary. Prepared at Brooks School. North Andover, Massachusetts. Home Address: North Sea Road, Southhampton, New York. Field of Concentration: French. Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association; Freshman Judo. Varsity Soccer; Freshman Tennis; JV Tennis. Lowell House: Fencing, Tennis, Squash, Soccer. Delphic Club. Harvard College Scholarship. WILLIAM LAWRENCE NELSON. Jr. Born on March 18. 1946 at Springfield, Ohio. Prepared at South High School. Springfield. Ohio. Home Address: 837 West Mulberry. Springfield, Ohio. Field of Concentration: Biology. Phillips Brooks House Association. Freshman Basketball. Lowell House: Basketball. Harvard College Scholarship. GARRETT SCOTT OLMSTED Bom on March 21. 1946 at Charlottesville, Virginia. Prepared at The Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter. New Hampshire. Home Address: 4903 Lafayette Avenue, Little Rock. Arkansas. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. Hasty Pudding. JV Crew; Varsity Crew. Harvard College Scholarship. ROBERT ERLING OR DAL Bom on July 30. 1945 at Seattle. Washington. Prepared at Roosevelt High School. Seattle, Washington. Home Address: 3883 44th Avenue Northeast, Seattle. Washington. Field of Concentration: Physical Sciences. Young Democrats. Lowell House: Printing Society. DAVID BERNARD PALLEY Bom on March 15, 1946 at Ann Arbor, Michigan. Prepared at Berkeley High School, Berkeley. California. Home Address: 1617 Spruce Street. Berkeley, California. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Phillips Brooks House Association, Co-Chairman Roxbury Education Program; Students for a Democratic Society. FREDERICK WHITTEN PETERS Born on August 20. 1946 at Omaha, Nebraska. Prepared at Lake Forest High School, Lake Forest, Illinois. Home Address: 215 Oak Terrace. Lake Bluff. Illinois. Field of Concentration Government. Crimson Key Society; Hasty Pudding; International Relations Council: Young Democrats; Harvard-Rad-cliffe Combined Charities; Hasty Pudding Theatricals. Varsity Football. Manager. Lowell House: Drama Society; Soccer; The Lowtllkm; House Committee; Social Committee. Harvard College Scholarship; Harvard Gub Scholarship and National Association of Secondary School Principals Scholarship. LAWRENCE STEPHEN PETERS Born on September 9, 1946 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at Notre Dame International. Rome. Italy. Home Address: 2500 Valley Drive, Alexandria, Virginia. Field of Concentration: Biology. Chess Gub; Pre-Medical Society. Lowell House: Softball. LEWIS MICHAEL POPPER CORNELIUS BASILE PASSANI Bom on July 7, 1946 at Paris. France. Prepared at L eec Janson dc Sailly, Paris. France. Home Address: 266South Cliffwood Avenue, Los Angeles. California. Field of Concentration: Biology. Cercle Francois: Hasty Pudding; Jubilee Committee; Skin Diving Gub.President. Bom on December 29,1946 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at Woodrow Wilson High School. Washington. D.C. Home Address: 6116 33rd Street N.W., Washington, D.C. Field of Concentration: Government. Harvard Band; Phillips Brooks House Association. Auivlant Chairman of the Tntnfx CAm. GREGORY PRESTWICH RICHARDS Horn on March 5, 1947 at Norwalk Connecticut. Prepared at Phillips Acad-emy. Andover. Massachusetts. Home Address: 123 Five Mile River Road, Darien. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Economics. ROBERT CHARLES POXEN Bom on August 8, 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Bassiek High School. Bridgeport. Connecticut. Home Address: 1234 Capital Avenue. Bridgeport, Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Social Studies. Harvard Crimson: Freshman Glee Cub: Phillips Brooks House Association: Pre-Law Society: Young Democrats. Freshman Squash. Lowell House: Basketball: The Lowell-Ian. Detur Prize; Harvard College Scholarship. WILLIAM GERARD ROBERTIF..Jr. Born on July 9. 1946 at Cambridge. Massachusetts. Prepared at Arlington High School. Arlington. Massachusetts Home Address: Jeffrey’s Neck Road. Ipswich. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Statistics. Chess Cub. Captain. Harvard National Scholarship. WALTER CRAIG PREHN Born on July 30. 1947 at Plainfield, New Jersey. Prepared at Palo Alto Senior High School. Palo Alto. California. Home Address: 1850 Hamilton Avenue. Palo Alto. California. Field of Concentration: History and Science. Pre-Medical Society; Program on Technology and Society. National Science Foundation Grant. JOHN MICHAEL SANSONE Bom on April 24. 1946 at Ventura. California. Prepared at Servile High School. Anaheim. California. Home Address: 2448 Riverside Drive, Santa Ana. California. Field of Concentration: English. Hasty Pudding: Phillips Brooks House Association; Yacht Cub: Committee on Intcrhousc Drama: Hasty Pudding Theatricals. Lowell House: J.B.: Skin of Our Teeth; Toad of Toad Hall: Lowell Ian: Printing Society; President of the Drama Society. Harvard College Scholarship. PAUL VIRGIL PROFETA Bom on June 29, 1944, in Maplewood New Jersey. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Exeter. New Hampshire. Home Ad dress: 102 Maplewood Avenue. Maple wood. New Jersey. Field of Conccntra tion: History. Prc-l.aw Society. Fencing Spring Track; Swimming. Jubilee Com mittce. Hasty Pudding Cub; Fly Club DUANE RAY SCHERMERHORN Bom on June 5. 1946 at Portland. Oregon. Prepared at David Douglas High School. Portland. Oregon. Home Address: 4135 East 103 Avenue. Portland. Oregon. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. Phillips Brooks House Association: Young Democrats. Lowell House: Basketball. Baseball. Volleyball. Track. Wrestling. Harvard College Scholarship. PETER ALLEN PRUDDEN Born on September 28. 1946 at New York, New York. Prepared at Lawrencc-villc. Lawrcnccvillc, New Jersey. Home Address: North Broadway. Upper Nyack. New York. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Freshman Swimming. Lowell House: Swimming; Volunteer Work at the Boston Veterans Outpatient Cinic. CHARLES LEWIS SCHONFELD Born on December 24. 1945 at Imlay City. Michigan. Prepared at Imlay City High School. Imlay City. Michigan. Home Address: 665 North Fairground. Imlay City. Michigan. Field of Concentration: Government. Experiment in International Living; Harvard Student Agencies: Phillips Brooks House Association: Pre-Law Society: Young Democrats. Lowell House: Basketball. Football. Harvard College Scholarship. JOHN TYLER RAMSEY Born on July 13, 1946 at Auburn, New York. Prepared at East High School. Auburn, New York. Home Address: 250 East Genesee Street. Auburn. New York. Field of Concentration: Classics. Classical Club: Harvard Band; Pierian Sodality; Young Republicans. Harvard College Scholarship. LAWRENCE S. SEIDMAN Bom on November 19. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at New Rochelle High School. New Rochelle. New York. Home Address: 2 Elizabeth Road, New Rochelle. New York. Field of Concentration: Social Studies Students for a Democratic Society; Young Democrats. President; Young People's Socialist League. Freshman Tennis Lowell House: Tennis. Harvard College Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. STANLEY RUSSELL REHM Bom on July 28. 1946 at Washington. DC. Prepared at Blake School, Hopkins. Minnesota, Home Address: Route 5 Box 69, Excelsior. Minnesota. Field of Concentration: English. Phillips Brooks House Association. JV Hockey. Manager. Lowell House: Golf; Lowellimt. WILLIAM GEORGE SINKFORD Bom on June 15,1946 at San Francisco, California. Prepared at Walnut Hills High School, Cincinnati, Ohio. Home Address: 3543 Alaska Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Freshman Council, Chairman; Harvard Undergraduate Council; Young Democrats. Lowell House: J.B.: The Skin of Our Teeth: Toad of Toad Hall. National Merit Scholarship. JAMES ALLEN SERSICH Bom on June 27, 1946 at Warren, Ohio. Prepared at Warren Township Local High School. I.eavittsburg. Ohio. Home Address: 106 Virginia Avenue. Severn, Maryland. Field of Concentration: Engineering and Applied Physics. Catholic Student Center: Harvard Student Agencies. Varsity Baseball. Lowell House: Football. Basketball. Volleyball; Pnnting Society; Belt Ringers. Harvard College Scholarship. Q 5. Mr, ■5? 'Si? UUlDIBlQjj. ■ iw. S «.H 5 Jrfnys Vqk u cvOeiQir. UESANSONJ pi X ! c i ‘rewtf c 5n k •«=. C ra£ 9 R-vevC Ctnkj tatoi effaces YidrOiC = . OKU lod 5a r v w Mfl( i PrKejSo;. S Dm Sxr Ike iy sosuasn kINiMi !«t t tkiC top . PorS«l fttjx a 13 Eat KB Act If i FddorCoxsesa . fWkpi Brxu a YaagDearaW r fortC SCBARL' Xl j Or?. VrtFtp iWdrfC x Ewe 1 ; roiKw CHARLES SKLARSKY Bom on June 13. 1946 at Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Harlan High School, Chicago. Illinois. Home Address: 9818 Normal Avenue. Chicago, Illinois. Field of Concentration: Government. Phillips Brooks House Association. DAVID HUMPHREYS SMITH Bom on February 12. 1946 at Cushing, Oklahoma. Prepared at Elarding High School. Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Home Address: 1615 Westminster Place. Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Field of Concentration: Biology. Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Republicans; Harvard Cooperative Society Student Director; Senior Associate. Freshman Crew. Lowell House: Toad of Toad Hall; Crew. CARLOS O. SOUFFRONT Bom on July 29. 1945 at San Juan. Puerto Rico. Prepared at Colegio San Justo. San Juan. Puerto Rico. Home Address: 2313 Cacique. Santurcc. Puerto Rico. Field of Concentration: History. Catholic Student Center; Latin American Association. Freshman Winter Track. Lowell House: Baseball, Volleyball. JOHN GAGER SPENCER Born on March 20. 1946 at Rochester, New York. Prepared at Portsmouth Priory School. Portsmouth. Rhode Island. Home Address: 7437 North Mockingbird Lane. Scottsdale. Arizona. Field of Concentration: Economics. Phillips Brooks House Association; Ski Club; Yacht Club; Young Democrats. Lowell House: Play of Daniel: Ditto and Aeneat. Spec Club. Young and Rubicam Scholarship. STEPHEN GEORGE STAVRIDES Bom on March 18. 1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at Deerfield Academy. Deerfield. Massachusetts. Home Address: 334 West 86th Street. New York, New York. Field of Concentration: History. Hasty Pudding; Lampoon. Subscription Manager. D.U. Club. Vice President. EDWARD SAUL STEIN Bom on November 29, 1946 at Norfolk. Virginia. Prepared at The Lawrcnccvillc School, Lawrcnccvillc, New Jersey. Home Address: 1342 Windsor Point Road, Norfolk. Virginia. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Freshman Council, Representative of H.C.U.A.; Harvard Undergraduate Council; Hasty Pudding; Harvard Southerners Club; Senior Associate. Freshman Squash; JV Squash; Freshman Tennis; JV Tennis. Lowell House: Tennis. Squash, Swimming, Soccer; House Committee, Chairman. ROBERT DUNCAN STEMPSON Born on March 4. 1945 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Phillips Academy, Andover. Massachusetts. Hoove Address: 134 Russell Street, Waltham, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Varsity Cross Country; Varsity Spring Track; Varsity Winter Track. DAVID GENNET STERN Bom on August 12, 1946 at Milwaukee. Wisconsin. Prepared at Whitefish Bay. Milwaukee. Wisconsin. Home Address: 709 East Carlisle. Milwaukee. Wisconsin. Field of Concentration: American History. Hasty Pudding: Varsity Club. Varsity Wrestling. Freshman Wrestling. Lowell House: Football. Boxing. Baseball. Harvard College Scholarship: John Harvard Scholarship. RICHARD JUSTIN STERNE Bom on March 21, 1946 at New York, New York. Prepared at Deerfield Academy. Deerfield, Massachusetts. Home Address: 3 Upland Lane. Armonk, New York. Field of Concentration: History. Hasty Pudding; Senior Associate. Varsity Squash. Captain; Varsity Tennis. Lowell House: Soccer. CHRISTOPHER SHEPPERETH ST. GEORGE Born on May 12. 1946 at Somerville. Massachusetts. Prepared at Brooks School. North Andover. Massachusetts. Home Address: Box 26. Barnstable. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Freshman Glee Club: Harvard Glee Club: Phillips Brooks House Association. SAMUEL GILTINAN WHITI Bom oo Novcmlicr I. 1946 al Chicago. Illinois Prepared al Portsmouth Prior) School. Porlvmoulh. Rhode I viand. Home Address: Box Hill. Si. James New York. Field of Concentration: Fine Arts. Harvard Drama Review, Bunnevi Manager; Harvard Dramatic Club Freshman Winter Track. Lowell llouve Football. Hockey. Crew; Lowell ion; Music Society. Spec Club. STEPHEN ADRIAN WHITE Born on August 2.1947 at Framingham. Massachusetts. Prepared at Wayiand High School, Wa land. Massachusetts Home Address: 242 Stonebndge Road. Wayiand. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Catholic Student Center; Phillips Brooks House Association. Harvard College Scholarship; William Scott Ferguson Prize (Second Award). SUMNER RANDALL WILLIAMS Born on September 9. 1946 at Houston, Texas. Prepared at St. John's School. Houston. Texas. Home Address: 1400 Hermann Road. Houston. Texas- Field of Concentration: Biology. Hillel Society; Young Democrats; Newsand Views of Harvard Sports. Varsity Crew. HORACE REED WITHERBY Born on July 24. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Groton School. Groton, Massachusetts. Home Address: 60 Chestnut Street. Boston. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Freshman Glee Club: Hasty Pudding: Mountaineering Club: Young Republicans. Lowell House: Soccer. Spec Club. ERIK O. WRIGHT Born on February 9. 1947 at Berkeley. California. Prepared at Lawrence High School. Lawrence. Kansas. Home Address: 1538 Tcnnescc Street. Lawrence. Kansas. Field of Concentration: Social Studies. Harvard Yearbook PuMica-cations: Pierian Sodality. Detur Pnre. Harvard College Scholarship; John Harvard Scholarship: National Merit Scholarship; National Science Foundation Grant. DAVID MATTHEW YAM1NS Bom on November 24.1945 at Neptune. Nesv Jersey. Prepared at Newton South High School. Newton. Massachusetts. Home Address: 131 Dane Hill Road. Newton. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration : Physics. Outing Club. Secretary 1966 and President 1967; Young Democrats. Lowell House: Football; Music Society. RUSSELL LEON STOCKARD. Jr. Bom on April 5. 1947 at Nashville. M Tennessee. Prepared at St. Augustine High. Nesv Orleans. Louisiana. Home S Address: 4201 Mithra Street. Nesv 0 Orleans. Louisiana. Field of Concentration: History- Association of African bJ and Afro-American Students; Phillips Brooks House Association; Harvard Journal of Negro AlTairs Circulation Manager. Freshman Winter Track. Harvard College Scholarship. ALFRED JACQUES TRIA, Jr. Bom on August 30, 1946 at Brooklyn, Nesv York. Prepared at Xaserian High School. Brooklyn. New York. Home Address; 9401 Ridge Boulevard. Brooklyn. Nesv York. Field of Concentration: Chemistry. Catholic Student Center; Freshman Glee Club; Young Republicans. Varsity Hockey. Manager. Harvard College Scholarship. ERIC JEAN WALLACH Bom on June 11. 1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at Phillips Academy, Andover. Massachusetts. Home Address: 355 East 72 Street. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: History. Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association, Tutors Committee. Freshman Squash; Freshman Tennis. Lowell House: Soccer. Tennis. JEFFREY ALDEN WEIH Born on September 4. 1946 at Iowa City, losva. Prepared at Bennett Community School. Bennett. Iowa. Home Address: 401 Hampden Court, Sioux City, Iowa. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Harvard Glee Club. Publicity-Manager. Freshman Crew. Lowell House: Crew. Harvard College Scholarship. RANDALL DUNN WEISS Bom on May 28. 1946 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at Chcltcnhom High School. Wyncotc. Pennsylvania. Home Address: Randall Road. Wyncotc. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: Economics. Harvard Band; Harvard Yearbook Publications. Business Manager; Phillips Brooks House Association. Roosevelt Towers Program; Young Democrats. Harvard College Scholarship. CHARLES AUGUSTUS WHIPPLE, II Born on September 23. 1946 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Belmont Hill School. Belmont. Massachusetts. Home Address: 28 Percy Road, Lexington. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Hasty Pudding; Outing Club; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats; Boston State Mental Hospital. Freshman Squash: JV Squash. Lowell House: Squash. Tennis; Loweilian. REUEL ANTHONY YOUNG Bom on January II, 1945. in Boca Raton. Florida. Prepared at Redford High School. Detroit. Michigan. Hook Address: 10WN.E. 110thStreet. Miami, Florida. Field of Concentration: Archi tcctural Sciences, Outing Cub. Lowell: Track: Football: Life Drawing. Vaho Rebassoo J. M. Robinson. Jr. Podraic T. Spence Duane H. Timmons Pierce Barker Jonathan F. Cerf Winthrop A. Gross Paul M. Hackbanh Frederick S. Kantcr Vaho Rebassoo J. M. Robinson. Jr. Podraic T. Spence Duane H. Timmons QUINCY HOUSE MICHAEL HUGH ABELON Bom on April 9. 1947 ai Boothbay Harbor. Maine. Prepared at Brunswick High School. Brunswick. Maine. Home Address: 2 Sparwell Lane, Brunswick. Maine. Field of Concentration: Biology. Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats; Undergraduate Managers Council. Varsity Basketball, Manager. Bat Gub. Harvard College Scholarship. JONATHAN ALEXANDER FRANK B. ANTONSON Bom on February 5. 1946 at Roaring Spring. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Concord High School. Concord. New Hampshire. Home Address: 53 Auburn Street, Concord. New Hampshire. Field of Concentration: English. Outing Gub; Yacht Club; University Choir. Quincy House: Soccer, Boxing. Harvard College Scholarship. PETER JONES ARANOW Bom on June 12. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Hastings High School. Hastings-on-Hudson. New York. Home Address: 665 North Broadway. Hastings-on-Hudson. New York. Field of Concentration: American History. Hasty Pudding: Rifle Club; Young Democrats; Hasty Pudding Theatricals. Quincy House: Crew Harvard National Scholarship. LEE JARRELL ALEXANDER Born on November 21. 1946 at Fort Lauderdale. Florida. Prepared at Strana-han High School. Fort Lauderdale. Florida. Home Address: 708 Southwest 9th Street. Fort Lauderdale. Florida. Field of Concentration: Economics. Yacht Club, Quincy House: Soccer. Crew: College Boxing Champion 1965-1966. Harvard College Scholarship. JAMES DUDLEY ASHER. Jr. Born on February 12. 1947 at South Weymouth. Massachusetts. Prepared at Weymouth High School. Weymouth. Massachusetts. Home Address: 313 Central Street. South Weymouth. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Statistics. Ski Club. JV Lacrosse. Quincy House: Football. Bat Gub. Born on November 29. 1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at Stuyvex-ant High School. New York. New York. Home Address: 229 West 78 Street. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: Biology. Hunan! Crimson: Experiment in International Living; Hunan! An Review, Circulation Manager; Hasty Pudding: Phillips Brooks House Association: Pre-Medical Society; WHRB. Freshman Crew. Quincy House: Football. Crew: House Committee. Treasurer and Facilities Chairman: Senior Associate Harvard College Scholarship. Sf WHITNEY AUSTIN BEALS Bom on November 16, 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. Exeter. New Hampshire. Home Address: 2 Chestnut Hill Road, Southborough. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. Hasty Pudding; Outing Club; Rifle Club; Young Republicans. Varsity Rifle. Quincy House: Soccer. Fox Club. DAVID CARSON BRICK Bom on October 6. 1945 at Camden. New Jersey. Prepared at Lenape Regional High School. Medford. New Jersey. Home Address: 76 North Main Street, Medford. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: English. Phillips Brooks House Association; Sigma Alpha Epsilon. JV Football. Quincy House: Basketball. DAVID PAINE BELL Bom on October 28. 1946 at Cincinnati, Ohio. Prepared at Mariemont High School, Cincinnati, Ohio. Home Address: 5918 Price Road. Milford. Ohio. Field of Concentration: English. Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association; Pre-Law Society; Speaker's Club. Quincy House: Crew. ‘ JOHN WESLEY BUNKER Bom on June 8. 1945. in Sidney. Ohio. Prepared at Sidney Senior High School, Sidney, Ohio. Home Address: Rural Route 2. Sidney. Ohio. Field of Concentration: Economics. Pre-Law Society. Freshman Spring Track: Freshman Winter Track. Quincy: Drama Society, Finton't Rainbow: Football; Softball; Baseball; Touch Football; House Committee. GEOFFREY CLINTON BENEDICT Bom on August 20, 1944 at East Chicago. Indiana. Prepared at Withrow High School. Cincinnati. Ohio. Home Address: 5715 Beechnut Drive, Cincinnati. Ohio. Field of Concentration: Economics. Served in Ohio National Guard. Young Democrats; Young Republicans. Recording Secretary. Freshman Baseball, Assistant Manager. Quincy House: Touch Football. Baseball. Iroquois Gub. Harvard College Scholarship. TIMOTHY LEE BURKE Bom on February 4. 1945, in Buffalo, New York. Prepared at East Aurora High School. East Aurora. New York. Home Address: 493 Fillmore Avenue, East Aurora. New York. Field of Concentration: History. Phillips Brooks House Association. Tutor; Young Republicans. Football, Freshman. JV; Freshman Tennis. Quincy: Football; Basketball. Pi Eta. ROY WARREN BERNSTEIN Born on August 3. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin School. Boston, Massachusetts. Home Address: 100 Audubon Drive. Newton. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Student Agencies: Phillips Brooks House Association: WHRB. Business Manager. DONALD LEE BURNETT. Jr. Born on October I. 1946 at Pocatello. Idaho. Prepared at Pocatello High School. Pocatello. Idaho. Home Address: 701 South 19th, Pocatello. Idaho. Field of Concentration: Economics. AIESEC: Christian Science Organization: Debate Council: Pre-Law Society. Harvard College Scholarship. ALAN JEFFREY BIRCH Born on May 28, 1946 at Tuxedo. New York. Prepared at Western Reserve Academy. Hudson, Ohio. Home Address: 810 Irwin Avenue. Albion. Michigan. Field of Concentration: Chemistry. Varsity Swimming. EE CRAIG LEE BURR Born on February 22. 1945 at New York. New York. Prepared at The Hotchkiss School. Lakeville. Connecticut. Home Address: Avenue Saratoga No. 315, Col. Lomas Hipodromo. Mexico. Mexico. Field of Concentration: Economics. Member of Army ROTC. Caisson Club: Freshman Council: Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association. Fox Club. JAMES STEPHEN BOWER Born on February 26. 1946 at Tacoma. Washington. Prepared at Madison West, Madison. Wisconsin. Home Address: 4502 Wakefield Street. Madison, Wisconsin. Field of Concentration: Psychology. Young Republicans. JV Baseball; Freshman Baseball. Quincy House: Baseball; Quincy House Opera. Harvard National Scholarship. % PETER JEFFREY BURT Born on October 19. 1945 at New London. Connecticut. Prepared at Newton South High. Newton. Massachusetts. Home Address: 234 Pros idcncc Road. Annapolis. Maryland. Field of Concentration: Physics. Outing Gub: Yacht Gub; Young Democrats. QUINCY MICHAEL ALLEN CIVIN Born on February 4, 1947 at Eugene, Oregon. Prepared at South Eugene High, Eugene, Oregon. Home Address: 276S Spring Boulevard, Eugene, Oregon. Field of Concentration: Economics. Yerebi Turmwachter iw 1886: Young Democrats. Quincy House: Qutition «f Penance: Madwoman of Chaillot (Kirkland); Basketball. RICHARD BRUCE CLUSTER Born on January 17, 1947 at Baltimore. Maryland. Prepared at Baltimore City College, Baltimore. Maryland. Home Address: 1807 Kenway Road. Baltimore. Mao land. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Students for .t Democratic Society: Yerein Turn- wackier von 1886. National Merit Scholarship. WILLIAM BATES COBB Bom on April 26. 1946 at Moline. Illinois. Prepared at Central Community High School. Dc Witt, Iowa. Home Address: 1203 West 5th Street. IX- Witt. Iowa. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Harvard An Review, Circulation and Distribution Manager: Young Democrats. Quincy House: Drama Society. Harvard College Scholarship. RICHARD ALAN COHN Born on September 21. 1946 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at C. K. McClatchy High. Sacramento. California. Home Address: 4710 Joaquin Way. Sacramento. California. Field of Concentration: Economics. Harvard Yearbook Publications. Clerk. National Merit Scholarship. JAMES EDWARD COX Born on September 19. 1946 at Quincy. Massachusetts. Prepared at Frank Scott Bunnell High School. Stratford. Connecticut. Home Address: 330 Carol Road. Stratford. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Applied Mathematics. Mathematics Society; Pre-Medical Society; Young Democrats: Usher at Memorial Church. Varsity Baseball. Quincy House: Apollo of Belloc: Touch Football. Basketball. Swimming Harvard College Scholarship. SHELDON MARC BU NEY Bom on December 10, 1945 at Cleveland. Ohio. Prepared at Cleveland Heights High School, Cleveland I (eights, Ohio. Home Address: 1993 Goodner Road. Cleveland Heights. Ohio. Field of Concentration: Biology. Harvard Glee Club: Hasty Pudding; Kroko-diloes. Business Manager. Harvard College Scholarship. WEI-I CHIU Born on June II. 1946 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Browne and Nichols, Cambridge. Massachusetts. Home Address: 37 Gorham Street. Cambridge. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Biology. Harvard Crimson: Harvard Student Agencies; Phillip Brooks House Association. Freshman Crew. Quincy House: Hockey, Crew; House Committee: Social Committee Harvard College Scholarship. CURTIS RAY CANNING Bom on May 6. 1946 at Provo, Utah. Prepared at Skyline High School. Salt Lake City. Utah. Home Address: 3397 South 2910 East. Salt Lake City. Utah. Field of Concentration: History. Married to Rebecca Petersen on July 3. 1967. Varsity Crew. Quincy House: Football. Basketball. Harvard College Scholarship. WINSTON BROCK CHAPPELL Bom on June 12, 1946 at Hollywood. California. Prepared at Harvard School. North Hollywood. California. Home Address: 800 Tarcuto Way, Los Angeles. California. Field of Concentration: Fine Arts. Harvard An Review; Harvard Dramatic Club. Freshman Golf. Quincy House: On the Town: Crew, Football. GUILLERMO FEDERICO CARRERA Bom on May II, 1946 at New Orleans, Louisiana. Prepared at Isidore Newman School. New Orleans. Louisiana. Home Address: 31 IS Jena Street. New Orleans. Louisiana. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Catholic Student Center. Varsity Spring Track; Varsity Winter Track. Harvard College Scholarship. HARRY JOSEPH CEBRON, Jr. Bom on Apnl 27. 1946 at Windber, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Brewster High School, Brewster, New York. Home Address: 46 Center, Brewster, New York. Field of Concentration: American History. Catholic Student Center; International Relations Council; Young Democrats. Quincy House: Football. Baseball; House Committee. Bat Club. Harvard College Scholarship. PHILIP ( HAN Bom on October 14, 1946 at Oceanside. New York. Prepared at Choate, Wallingford, Connecticut. Home Address: 2547 Oceanside Road. Oceanside. New York. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Hasty Pudding: Karate Club; Phillips Brooks House Association; Pre-Medical Society; Vertin Turn-hoc liter von 1886. Quincy House: Evening of l.ow Comedy: Madwoman of Clmillot. Harvard College Scholarship. DAVITT ALEXANDER FELDER. Jr. Bom on May 19, 1946 at Minneapolis. Minnesota. Prepared at St. Paul Academy. St. Paul. Minnesota. Home Address: 2142 Iglchart. St. Paul. Minnesota. Field of Concentration: Biology. Quincy House: Hockey. BRIAN L. FOLEY Bom on April 26. 1946 at Newton. Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Sebastian’s C.D.S., Newton, Massachusetts. Home Address: 24 Wauwinet Road. Newton. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Quincy House: Basketball. HENRY ELLIOT FOLEY. Jr. Bom on April 10. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton Academy. Milton. Massachusetts. Home Address: North Water Street. Edgar-town. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Fine Arts. Phillips Brooks House Association. Quincy House: Soccer. Fly Club. JULIAN DE BRUYN KOPS Born on July 28. 1945 at Dayton. Ohio. Prepared at The Lawrcnccvillc School, Lawrenccvillc. New Jersey. Home Address: 3 Forrer Boulevard. Dayton. Ohio. Field of Concentration: Geology. Chess Club; Freshman Glee Club; Karate Club; Mountaineering Club; Natural History Society; Outing Club; Parachute Cub; Phillips Brooks House Association: Pre-Medical Society; Verein Turmwachler von I8S6; Wireless Club; Yacht Club. Varsity Crew, Manager. ARTHUR NICHOLAS DION Bom on August 27, 1946 at Jamaica Plain. Massachusetts. Prepared at Chicopee High School, Chicopee, Massachusetts. Home Address: 80 Cora Avenue, Willimansctt, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Dramatic Cub; Young Democrats. Quincy House: The Apollo of Belloc; Quincy Drama Society Board of Directors; Football. Basketball; Quincy House Drama Review. Harvard College Scholarship; Lockheed National Scholarship. WILLIAM PATRICK DUFF Bom on May 20, 1946 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at Suitland High School. Suitland, Maryland. Home Address: 5324 Que Street S. E.. Coral Hills. Maryland. Field of Concentration: Government. Member of Army ROTC. Quincy House: Baseball. Football. Army Two-Year ROTC Scholarship. RICHARD VAN DUIZEND Bom on February 4. 1947 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at North Miami Senior High School. North Miami. Florida. Home Address: 19521 Northeast 19th Court. Miami. Florida. Field of Concentration: Social Studies. Member of Air Force ROTC. Pre-Law Society, Vice-President; Young Democrats; Liberal Religious Youth Advisory Committee. Quincy House: On the Town; Christmas Shows 1965-1966: Evening of Low Comedy. Harvard College Scholarship. JOHN CLARK EDMUNDS Bom on March 8. 1947 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter. New Hampshire. Home Address: 45 Sparks Street, Cambridge. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. Bridge Club; Phillips Brooks House Association; World Federalists, Treasurer; Young Republicans. Freshman Swimming. Quincy House: Swimming. ROBERT BENJAMIN FEINBBRG Bom on August 20. 1946 at Long Branch. New Jersey. Prepared at Senior High School. Long Branch. New Jersey. Home Address: 384 2nd Avenue, Long Branch. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. Hillcl Society; Phillips Brooks House Association; WHRB. MICHAEL FRANCIS FOLEY Bom on May 3. 1946 at Everett. Massachusetts. Prepared at Mission High School. Roxbury. Massachusetts. Home Address: 60 Annunciation Read. Roxbury, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. Freshman Baseball; Varsity Basketball. Quincy House: Football. Basketball, Baseball, Softball. Harvard College Scholarship. LUTHER SAMUEL FOUTS, III Bom on May 19, 1947 at Atlanta, Georgia. Prepared at The Westminster School. Atlanta. Georgia. Home Address: 2473 Hyde Manor Drive, Atlanta, Georgia. Field of Concentration: Physics and Chemistry. Varsity Fencing. National Merit Scholarship. BARRY WALLACE FURZE Bom on February 22. 1946 at Dead-wood, South Dakota. Prepared at Lead High School. Lead. South Dakota. Home Address: 141 West Summit Street, Lead, South Dakota. Field of Concentration: Economics. Harvard Band; Catholic Student Center; Freshman Glee Club, Accompanist; Gilbert and Sullivan Players; Harvard Glee Club. MICHAEL NEIL GARIN Bom on July 7. 19-16 at New York. New York. Prepared at The Wheatley School. Old Westbury. New York. Home Address: 2 Arbor Lane, Roslyn Heights. New York. Field of Concentration: Economics. Harvard Crimson, Business Manager: Hasty Pudding; Signet Society; Students for a Democratic Society; Senior Associate. I.ANCL ROBF RT GREN I BACK Bom on October 16. 1946 at Rockford Illinois. Prepared at Winchester High School. Winchester. Massachusetts Home Address: 16 Mason Street. Winchester. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Government Bach Society; Harvard Band; Gilbert and Sullivan Players; Hasty Pudding: Pierian Sodality. Quincy House: Crew DONALD IRVING GRINBERG Bom on January 3. 1946 at Worcester. Massachusetts. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Andover. Massachusetts. Home Address: 8532 West Howell Road. Bethesda. Maryland. Fidd of Concentration: Architectural Sciences. Outing Gub: Ski Gub. Speaker's Gub; Yacht Club: Connection Magazine. Freshman Sailing. Harvard College Scholarship. GABRIEL GEORGE GRUBER Bom on September 4. 1946 at Shanghai. China. Prepared at J. M. Atherton High School. Louisville. Kentucky. Home Address: 2337 Carlton Terrace. Louisville. Kentucky . Field of Concentration: Biology. Crimson Key Society. Treasurer; Harvard Policy Committee; Harvard Undergraduate Council; Hasty Pudding. Quincy House: Softball; House Committee. Chairman. Harvard College Scholarship: National Science Foundation Grant. DONALD CHESTER HACKLING Bom on February 18. 1946 at New Britain. Connecticut. Prepared at Bristol Eastern High School. Bristol. Connecticut. Home Address: 37 John Avenue. Bristol. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Yearbook Publications; Phillips Brooks House Association; Teacher-Aide Program. Harvard College Scholarship; Harvard Gub of Northern Connecticut Scholarship. DOUGLAS ALEXANDER HARMON Bom on November 29. 1946 at Minot. North Dakota. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. Exeter. Ness Hampshire. Home Address: 16225 Eighth Avenue North. Wayzata, Minnesota. Field of Concentration: History. MARK HENRY HARRINGTON. Ill Bom on September 9. 1946 at Denser. Colorado. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter. New Hampshire. Home Address: Fern Road. Litchtidd. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: English. Undergraduate Manager's Council; Varsity Club. Varsity Cress. Manager. Harvard College Scholarship. DALE HUBBARD GIERINGER Bom on April 20, 1946 at Cincinnati. Ohio. Prepared at Walnut Hills High School. Cincinnati. Ohio. Home Address: 3016 Lischcr Avenue, Cincinnati. Ohio. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. Ayn Rand Society; Charles River Literary Society: Harvard Dramatic Gub; Young Republicans. National Merit Scholarship. KESTUTIS KAZIMIERAS GIRNIUS Bom on November 25. 1946 at Nurtin-gen. Germany. Prepared at Boston Latin School. Boston, Massachusetts. Home Address: 27 Juliette. Boston. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Philosophy. Catholic Student Center. Quincy House: Softball. Basketball. Harvard College Scholarship THOMAS JAN GOETT1NG Born on June 28. 1946 at Beaver Dam. Wisconsin. Prepared at Wayiand Academy. Beaver Dam, Wisconsin. Home Address: 519 Grove Street. Beaver Dam, Wisconsin. Field of Concentration: Architectural Sciences. Freshman Council; Outing Club; Yacht Club. Skin of Our Teeth (Lowell): Toad of Toad Hall (Lowell). DONALD JEFFREY GRATE Bom on June 17, 1946 at Canton. Ohio. Prepared at Norland Senior High School. Miami. Florida. Home Address: 2261 N.W. 196th Street. Miami. Florida. Field of Concentration: Government. Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Representative to 1967 National Convention; Varsity Club. Varsity Baseball: Varsity Basketball. Quincy House: Football. Volleyball: Quincy House Basketball Coach. LAWRENCE HENRY GREEN Bom on March 24, 1947 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Needham High School. Needham. Massachusetts. Home Address: 82 Deerfield Road. Needham, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Dramatic Club; Young Democrats; Loeb Experimental Theater. Lcvcretl House Opera Society. Harvard College Scholarship. NEWTON HENRY KERSHAW. Jr. Bom on April 14. 1946 ai Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Prepared at Catholic High School. Little Rock. Arkansas. Home Address: 519 North Pine Street. Little Rock. Arkansas. Field of Concentration: English. Christian Fellowship. JV Cricket; JV Football. Quincy House: Caesar amt Cleopatra; Opus Editor. Harvard College Scholarship; Boylston Prize. THOMAS ROBERT KILEY Born on January 2. 1947 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at North Quincy High School, Quincy. Massachusetts. Home Address: 139 Farrington Street. Wollaston. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Catholic Student Center. Freshman Football. Quincy House: Drama Society; Football. Basketball. Baseball. Softball, Volleyball. National Merit Scholarship. GEORGE OTTO KLEMP, Jr. Bom on March I, 1946 at Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Neshaminy High School. Langhomc. Pennsylvania. Home Address: 89 Sweetgum Road. Levittown. Pennsylvania. Hasty Pudding; Organ Society: Phillips Brooks House Association; WHRB. Program Director; Young Republicans. Bat Club. MICHAEL STURGIS KNAPP Born on March 29. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Groton School. Groton, Massachusetts. Home Address: 390 West End Avenue. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: English. Phillips Brooks House Association. Roosevelt Towers Program. Freshman Soccer. Quincy House: Soccer. ROGER EUGENE KOZOL Bom on June 5. 1947 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin School. Roxbury, Massachusetts. Hook Address: 78 Lakewood Road, Newton. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Dramatic Club: Hasty Pudding: Pi Eta Club; Young Democrats; Hasty Pudding Theatricals Vice-President. Quincy House: Soccer; Boys From Syracuse (Winthrop). JAMES THOMAS KURNICK Horn on September 23, 1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at Webb School. Claremont. California. Home Address: 12402 Janet Circle, Garden Grove. California. Field of Concentration: Biology. Harvard Yearbook Publications, Photography Chairman; Phillips Brooks House Association. Varsity Football. Manager; Varsity Hockey, Manager. WILLIAM HORACE HOLADAY Bom on September 21. 1946 at New Brunswick. New Jersey. Prepared at Planfield High School. Plainfield. New Jersey. Home Address: 882 Femwood Avenue. Plainfield. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: English. Teacher Aide Program; Young Democrats: Upward Bound Tutoring Program. Quincy House: Fiuian's Rainbow: The Apollo of Belloc. Harvard College Scholarship. H. RICHARD JACOBSON Bom on November 23. 1947 at Duluth. Minnesota. Prepared at Dcnfeld High School. Duluth. Minnesota. Home Address: 2713 West 7th Street. I uluth. Minnesota. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. Harvard Band; Harvard Student Agencies; Mathematics Society; Cycling Cub. Harvard College Scholarship. MOHAN SATISH KALELKAR Bom on April 24. 1948 at Bombay, India. Prepared at Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School. Bethesda, Maryland. Home Address: 7731 Rocton Court. Chevy Chase, Maryland. Field of Concentration: Physics. Bridge Club. Secretary-Treasurer; Phillips Brooks House Association; International Students’ Association. Freshman Baseball; Freshman Cross Country. Quincy House: Quincy House Film Review; Quincy House Arts Festival. Harvard College Scholarship. DENIS ROY KANIN Bom on February 22. 1946 at Boston Massachusetts. Prepared at Roxbur Latin School. West Roxbury, Massa chusetts. Home Address: 25 Bucking ham Road, Norwood. Massachusetts Field of Concentration: History. Har vard Yearbook Publications; Hillc Society; International Relations Coun cil; Pre-Law Society; Young Democrats Chairman of College Young Democratic Clubs of Massachusetts. Harvard College Scholarship. CARLETON WARREN KENDRICK. Jr. Bom on October 25, 1946 at Plymouth. Massachusetts. Prepared at Plymouth High School, Plymouth. Massachusetts. Home Address: 141 Court. Plymouth, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Phillips Brooks House Association. Freshman Basketball. Quincy House: Drama Society; Basketball, Volleyball, Baseball. Harvard College Scholarship. Bom on December 27, 1946 at North Wilksboro, North Carolina. Prepared at Wilkes Central High School. North Wilkcsboro. North Carolina. Home Address: 612 Winston. Wilkcsboro. North Carolina. Field of Concentration: Economics. Member of Army ROTC.Caisson Club: Harvard Dramatic Club: Hasty Pudding. JV Football. Quincy House: Football, Softball; Quincy Economics Table. Bat Club. Harvatd College Scholarship. KEITH CORWYN HENNESSEE ANDREW HI.INN LARKIN Bom on September 20. 1946 ai New Britain. Connecticut. Prepared at Tl c Taft School. Watertown, Connecticut. Home Address: 56 Woodland Lane. Kensington. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Chemistry. Hasty Pudding. Varsity Crew. D.U. Club. MICHAEL NILAND LaVELLE Bom on March 10. 1946 at Chelsea. Massachusetts. Prepared at Marmion Military Academy. Aurora. Illinois. Home Addtess: 2SOO West 83rd Place. Chicago. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Psychology. Member of Naval ROTC. Gilbert and Sullivan Players. Lighting Designer: Harvard Dramatic Club. National Merit Scholarship. CARL BENNETT LEE Bom on February 22. 1947 at San Antonio. Texas. Prepared at Thomas Jefferson High School. San Antonio. Texas. Home Address: 350 North Drive, San Antonio. Texas. Field of Concentration: Government. Member of Army ROTC. Caisson Club. Assistant Director; Hillel Society; International Relations Council; Young Democrats. Quincy House: House Committee. Harvard College Scholarship. CLARK ELLIOTT LEMKE Bom on July 29. 1947 at Milwaukee. Wisconsin. Prepared at Shorewood High School. Shorewood. Wisconsin. Home Address: 4124 North Prospect. Shore-wood, Wisconsin. Field of Concentration: Economics. Returnees of American Field Scrvcic. Freshman Football: Freshman Spring Track; Varsity Winter Track. Quincy House: Football. Baseball, Softball. Track: Quincy Muscle: Quincy House Society of Motorcyclists. Iroquois Club. Harvard College Scholarship. JOHN RICHARD GERALD LISKEK Born on March 21. 1946. at Providence. Rhode Island. Prepared at Moves Brown School. Providence, Rhode Island Hook Address: 303 laurel Avenue. Providence. Rhode Island. Field of Concentration: History. Outing Club. Treasurer; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young IX-mocrats. Quincy House: Soccer. CHARLES FREDERICK LOVELL. Jr. Born on September 17.1946 at Winston-Salem. North Carolina. Prepared at Seward Park High School. New York. New York. Home Address: P.O. Box 695. 116 Howard. Pilot Mountain. North Carolina. Field of Concentration: Biology. Association of African and Afro-American Students: Phillips Brooks House Association: Editor of Harvard Journal of Negro Affairs. Varsity Fencing. WILLIAM LOUIS MATASSONI Bom on April 17. 1946 at Turentum. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Andover. Massachusetts. Home Address: 6 Creil Drive, indianola. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: English. Phillips Brooks House Association; Senior Associate: Jazz Dance Workshop.Quincy House: On the To n: Soccer. General Motors Scholarship: Harvard National Scholarship. MICHAEL MATHERS Bom on February 3. 1945 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at Middlesex School. Concord. Massachusetts. Home Address: Cove Neck Road. Oyster Bay. New York. Field of Concentration: English. Hasty Pudding: Keystone Movies. Freshman Hockey; JV Soccer. Quincy House: Soccer. Hockey. Fly Club. HARRY ROY LEWIS Bom on April 19, 1947 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Roxbury Latin School. West Roxbury. Massachusetts. Home Address: 67 Emerson Road. Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Applied Mathematics. Harvard Dramatic Club; Mathematics Society: Natural History Society. President. Varsity Lacrosse. Detur Prize: Phi Beta Kappa: Harvard Honorary Freshman Scholarship. LAWRENCE EMIL McCREADY Bom on August II, 1945 at Norway, Maine. Prepared at The Lavvrenccvi’.lc School. I.awrenccville. New Jersey Home Address: 2 Tucker Street. Norway. Maine. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Phillips Brooks House Association. Wcllmct and Mental Hospitals Committee. Harvard College Scholarship. RICHARD ANTHONY LICHT Born on March 25. 1948 at Providence. Rhode Island. Prepares! at Moses Brown School. Providence. Rhode Island. Home Address: 344 Tabor Avenue. Providence. Rhode Island. Field of Concentration: Economics. AIESEC; Hillel Society: Young Democrats. Executive Vice-President. Varsity Swimming. Manager. Quincy House: Swimming. John Harvard Scholarship. ROBERT FRANCIS MEENAN Born on April 5. 1947 at Cambridge. Massachusetts. Prepared at Matignon. Cambridge. Massachusetts. Home Address: 535 Main Street. Stoncham. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Government. Catholic Student Center: International Relations Council. Varsity Basketball; Freshman Basketball. Quincy House: Basketball. Volley bill. Baseball, Softball; House Committee: Social Committee. Harvard College Scholarship. SEYMOUR MORRIS. Jr. Bom on March I, 1945 at New York. New York. Prepared at St. George's School. Newport. Rhode Island. Home Address: 67 Rosedale Road, Princeton. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: American History. Charles Riser Literary Society. Chairman: Hasty Pudding; Returnees of American Field Service; Young Republicans; The Harvard Constrrallve, Editor. Varsity Wrestling. Quincy House: Soccer, Hockey. Fox Club. DOUGLAS MARK MYERS Born on November 17. 1946 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at The Choate School, Wallingford, Connecticut. Home Address: 431 East San Marino Drive, Miami, Florida. Field of Concentration: Government. AIESEC; Chess Club. President; Debate Council: International Relations Council; Phillips Brooks House Association. Quincy House: Quincy Essay Society. Harvard College Scholarship. STEPHEN A LA STAIR NESS Born on January 13, 1947 at Minneapolis, Minnesota. Prepared at University High School, Minneapolis. Minnesota. Home Aildress: 2765 Thomas Avenue South, Minneapolis. Minnesota. Field of Concentration: Applied Mathematics. International Relations Council: Returnees of American Field Service; Vtrein Turmwachttr von 1886. President; Young Republicans Freshman Tennis. Quincy House: Quincy Drama Review. Harvard College Scholarship: Honorary Freshman Scholarship. TARRIN NIMMANAHAEMINDA Bom on October 29. 1945 at Chiengmai, Thailand. Prepared at Choate School, Wallingford. Connecticut. Home Address: 12-14 Vitchayanont Street, Chiengmai. Thailand. Field of Concentration: Government. Americans for Reappraisal of Far Eastern Policy; International Relations Council: Young Democrats; Students for Asian Studies. Quincy House: Soccer, Tennis. WILLIAM HENRY OVERHOLT Born on March 7, 1945 at Lexington, Virginia. Prepared at Newton High School, Newton. Massachusetts. Home Address: 6 Fairfield Street, Newtonville, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Studies. Harvard Yearbook Publications; International Relations Council; Phillips Brooks House Association; Collegiate Council for the United Nations; Students for Asian Societies. Quincy House: Volleyball, Softball, Football. John Harvard Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. MARTIN LEE PERLMUTTER Bom on September 3,1947 at New York, New York. Prepared at Jamaica High School, Jamaica. New York. Home Address: 51-15 Van Klccck Street, Elmhurst. New York. Field of Concentration: Social Studies. Bach Society; Harvard Band; Harvard Policy Committee; Music Club: World Federalists, President; Young Democrats: Young Republicans. Quincy House: Football, Baseball. Harvard National Scholarship; National Science Foundation Grant; National Honor Society Scholarship; Hohack National Scholarship. MICHAEL COGHLAN POLLACK Born on September 22. 1946 at New York, New York. Prepared at St. Paul's School. Concord, New Hampshire Home Address: 4 Wheeler Avenue, Worcester, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Government. Hasty Pudding. Varsity Crew, Manager. Quincy House: Squash. Spee Club. RONALD ETHAN PORTER Bom on May 9, 1946 at Cincinnati. Ohio. Prepared at Milford High School, Milford, Ohio. Home Address: Box 372, Ktondyke Road, Milford, Ohio. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Dramatic Club; Hasty Pudding; Radcliffc Grant-in-Aid Musicals: Jazz Dance Workshop.Quincy House:Quincy House Arts Festival. Harvard College Scholarship. STEPHEN BRUCE PRESSER Bom on August 10.1946 at Chattanooga, Tennessee. Prepared at J.E.B. Stuart High School. Falls Church. Virginia. Home Address: 5603 Colfax Avenue, Alexandria. Virginia. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Harvard Crimson; WHRB, News Director and Business Manager. Freshman Swimming. Quincy House: Finlan’s Rainbow. Harvard College Scholarship. ROBERT SIDNEY PYNOOS Bom on January 15, 1947 at Los Angeles, California. Prepared at Loomis School, Windsor, Connecticut. Home Address: 6176 Blackburn Avenue, Los Angeles, California. Field of Concentration: Government. International Relations Council; Phillips Brooks House Association; Pre-Medical Society. Freshman Squash; Varsity Tennis. Quincy House: Volleyball, Tennis, Squash; Opus. LAWRENCE BARTON NOVEY Born on December 8, 1946 at Baltimore, Maryland. Prepared at Baltimore City College, Baltimore, Maryland. Home Address: 3900 North Charles Street. Baltimore, Maryland. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Harvard Student Agencies; International Relations Council; Outing Club; Phillips Brooks House Association. EDMUND HAROLD OLSON Born on July 21. 1946 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Weymouth High School. Weymouth. Massachusetts. Home Address: 198 Pleasant Street, South Weymouth, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Biology. Harvard Band, Assistant Manager; Catholic Student Center. Quincy House: Ftnkufs Rainbow; Don Giovanni (Levenll); The Good Woman of Seizuan (Loeb). BARRY MARK SCHNEIDER Born on January 20. 1947 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin School. Boston. Massachusetts. Home Address: 27 Hollywood Road. West Roxbury. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Applied Mathematics. WHRB. Classical Music Director and Station Manager. Harvard College Scholarship: National Honor Society Scholarship. STEPHEN CARYLLE SCHOONOVER Born on January I, 1947 at Atlanta. Georgia. Prepared at Niskayuma High School, Schenectady. New York Home Address: 1099 Mohawk Road. Schenectady. New York. Field of Concentration: Biology. Varsity Spring Track: Varsity Winter Track. General Motors Scholarship: Harvard National Scholarship: Harvard Club of Eastern New York State Scholarship. PETER GLENN SEABORG Bom on May 31, 1946 at Berkeley. California. Prepared at Woodrow Wilson High School. Washington. D.C. Home Address: 3825 Harrison Street. N.W.. Washington. D.C. Field of Concentration: Flistory- Young Democrats. Harvard College Scholarship. JOHN FRANKLIN SEEGAL Bom on May 21, 1946 at Newton. Massachusetts. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Andover. Massachusetts. Home Address: 4 Channing Road. Brookline. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. Harvard Crimson. Associate Business Manager: Phillips Brooks House Association. Prisons Committee. Phi Beta Kappa. ROBERT PETER SCHAUSS. Jr Born on May 2. 1946 at Oak Park. Illinois. Prepared at Oak Park High School. Oak Park. Illinois. Home Address: 633 Park. River Forest. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Biology. Member of Naval ROTC. WHRB: Young Democrats: Young Republicans. Freshman Swimming. Quincy House: Swimming. DANIEL ROSS SNODDERLY Bom on July 14, 1946 at Leaksville. North Carolina. Prepared at Mount Hcrmon School. Mount Hermon. Massachusetts. Hook Address: Richmond Highway. Alexandria. Virginia. Field of Concentration: American History. Hasty Pudding: Phillips Brooks House Association: Young Democrats Quincy House: Soccer. Tennis. Harvard College Scholarship. PATRICK MICHAEL RICHARDSON Bom on January 13. 1946 at Atlanta. Georgia. Prepared at Richardson High School. Richardson, Texas. Home-Address: 11 IS Hamilton Drive. Richardson. Texas. Field of Concentration: English. JAMES FREDERIC ROTHENBERG Bom on July 16. 1946 at Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Shady Side Academy. Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania. Home Address: 5511 Aylcsboro Avenue. Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: English. Quincy House: Football. Baseball: House Committee: Social Committee: Athletic Chairman: House Grill. CHARLES HIEBERT ROUSF.I I. Bom on February 18. 1946 at Kansas City. Missouri. Prepared at Buhlcr High School. Buhlcr. Kansas. Home Address: 705 North West. Buhlcr, Kansas. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association: Speaker’s Club. Spiritus: Young Republicans. Varsity Crew. Quincy House: Crew Coach. PETER CHARLES SALERNO Bom on March 21. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. Exeter. New Hampshire. Home Address: Curiosity Lane. Weston. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: American History. II Circolo haliano; WHRB. Treasurer. Chief Conlrolman-Standards Committee. Quincy House: Jazz Concerts for Quincy House Arts Festival. HENRY WILLARD RAU. Jr. Bom on January 16. 1946 at Baltimore. Maryland. Prepared at Scacrcst High School. Delray Beach. Florida. Home Address: North Military Trail. Delray Beach. Florida. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. Harvard Band. Personnel Manager; Gilbert and Sullivan Players. z LEONARD HILL SAP1IIER Bom on July 10.1946 at New York. New Yrok. Prepares! at Sarasota High School. Sarasota. Florida. Home Address: 641 Tylct Drive, Sarasota. Florida. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Harvard An Review, Publisher. GLENN STEPHEN SPIEGEL Bom oo September 17, 1947 at Fall River. Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Paul's School. Concord, New Hampshire. Home Address: 3900 16th Street N.W.. Washington. D.C. Field of Con-ccntration: Economics. Harvard Band; Harvard Student Agencies; Young Democrats Quincy House: Soccer. Hockey. Wrestling; Quincy Music Society Publicity Director. ROBERT FLETCHER SPROULL Bom on June 6, 1947 at Ithaca. New York. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. Exeter. New Hampshire. Home Address: 108 Northview Road. Ithaca. New York. Field of Concentration: Physics. Harvard Dramatic Club; Harvard Yearbook Publications, Managing Editor; International Relations Council. Quincy House: Drama Society; Beggar's Opera (Adams); Adams House Drama Society. Harvard College Scholarship. MICHAEL BARRY STARR Bom on November 16. 1946 at Jersey City. New Jersey. Prepared at Montclair High School. Montclair. New Jersey. Home Address: 115 Lorraine Avenue. Upper Montclair. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Biology. Harvard Band; WHRB, Jazz Director; Mike Starr Quintet. EVAN ARTHUR STEINBERG Bom on January 30. 1947 at Newton. Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin School. Boston. Massachusetts. Home Address: 76 Woodland Road. Jamaica Plain. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Biology. WHRB. FRED ALEXANDER SUMMER Bom on June 27. 1946 at Columbus. Ohio. Prepared at The Columbus Academy. Columbus, Ohio. Home Address: 273 South Dawson Avenue, Columbus. Ohio. Field of Concentration: History and Science. Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association. Quincy House: Football. Volleyball. WILLIAM ELLISON TAYLOR Bom on July 24.1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Oak Ridge High School. Oak Ridge. Tennessee. Home Address: 143 Orchard Lane. Oak Ridge. Tennessee. Field of Concentration: Economics. Married to Jolinda Ann Kulji on September 9. 1967. WHRB. Business Manager. Freshman Spring Track; Freshman Winter Track. Harvard College Scholarship. T WILLIAM RANDOI PH THOMPSON ' ” Bom on September 24.1946 at Oak H.U £SS«rSS M«„Scho hiSh0,“rth,P: N'“00 , LOWELL DAVID TURNBULL Bom on September 16. 1947 at Albany. New York. Prepared at Phillips Acad-Massachusetts. Home Address: 77 Summer Street. Weston Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. Harvard Band; Young Democrats; John F. Kennedy Seminar on Local Politics. Freshman Soccer. Qvnncy House: Soccer; Quincy Essay Society; Quincy French Table. Detur pn«; John Harvard Scholarship. LANNY MEREDITH TURNER Born on November 25,1944 at Spokane. Washington. Prepared at Shadle Park High School, Spokane. Washington. Home Address: 5317 North Wall Street. Spokane, Washington. Field of Concentration: English. Pre-Medical Society; Young Republicans. Quincy House: Squish, Football. Harvard College Scholarship: National Merit Scholarship. ALEXIS VIERECK Bom on July 7, 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Hotchkiss, Lakeville. Connecticut. Home Address: 12 Silver, South Hadley. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Signet Society. Quincy House: Opus Editor. KENNETH W1LLCOX WACHTER Bom on January 13. 1947 at Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at The Pingry School. Elizabeth. New Jersey. Home Address: 550 Clark Street. Westfield. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Harvard Policy Committee. Secretary; Mountaineering Cub: Phillips Brooks House Association; Verein Turmwochter ton ISS6, President. Quincy House: Quincy House Essay Society: House Library Committee. Detur Prize; John Harvard Scholarship: National Merit Scholarship: Phi Beta Kappa. STEPHEN MITCHELL WATERS Bom on November 4. 1946 at Concord. Massachusetts. Prepared at Conard High School. West Hartford. Connecticut. Home Address: 20 Glendale Road. West Hartford. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Government. Crimson Key Society. Freshman Orientation; International Relations Council: Junior Usher; Young Democrats. Quincy House: On the Town; Football. Soccer. Volleyball. Baseball. Softball; Quincy Muscle: House Committee. Detur Prize; Harvard College Scholarship: John Harvard Scholarship: National Merit Scholarship. Kj RICHARD STEPHEN PHILIP JTT WEISSBROD Born on May 18. 1946 at Pittsfield. 2 Massachusetts. Prepared at Lenox High H School. Lenox, Massachusetts. Home Address: New Lenox Road. Lenox. Ay Mitssachusciis. Field of Concentration: w Economics. Hast) Pudding. Quincy House: Football. Owl Club. Treasurer. LLOYD ALLAN WELLS Bom on March 4. 1948 at Providence. Rhode Island. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Andover. Massachusetts. Home Address: Newell Drive. Cumberland. Rhode Island. Field of Concentration: Biology. Natural History Society: Pre-Medical Society. Quincy House: Quincy House French Table. Rhode Island State Scholarship. ALAN BRUCE WHITNEY Bom on July 21. 1946 at Van Nuys. California. Prepared at James Monroe High School. Sepulveda. California. Home Address: 31905 Richgrove Court. Westlake Village. California. Field of Concentration: Government. Member of Naval ROTC. Harvard Student Agencies: Phillips Brooks House Association; Pre-Law Society: Speaker's Club. Vice-President: Young Democrats. Quincy House: Football. Soccer: Quincy Masefe: House Committee. Harvard College Scholarship. ANIHONY WILLIAMS Born on January 12. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Westbury High School. Westbury. New York. Home Address: 688 Irving Street. Westbury. New York. Field of Concentration: Government. Catholic Student Center. Treasurer; Hanard Crtmwn. Editor. Freshman Council. Ereshman Baseball Quincy House: House Committee. Harvard C ollege Scholarship. JEFFREY LOUIS WOLF Born on September 2. 1946 at Los Angeles. California. Prepared at Scan-dale High School. Scarsdale. New York. Home Address: 14 Split Tret Road. Scarsdale. New York. Field of Concentration: Government. Mountaineering Club: Phillips Brooks House Association: Students for a Democratic Society. JOHN WINSTON WU Bom on February 9. 1947 at London, England. Prepared at St. Mark's School. Southborough. Massachusetts. Home Address: 108-34 Mih Rood. Forest Hills. New York. Field of Concentration: Economics. Harvard College Scholarship. Howard M. Butler Philip Chan Qu Paul J. Corkery L. J. Davidson Burton V. Edwards Lloyd Lewis Haft James L. Kilkowski James V. Looby Peter David Nurksc Spencer W. Roedder John C. Ver Steeg W. w. Wolbach. Jr. WINTHROP HOUSE STEPHEN WALLACE AUBIN Bom on February 28. 1945 at Boston, Massachusetts.Prepared at Belmont Hill School. Belmont. Massachusetts. Home Address: Pincy Point. Marion. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Architectural Sciences. Member of Army ROTC. Hasty Pudding. Winthrop House: Hockey Spec Club. CHARLES LUNSFORD AYRES Born on September 30. 1943 at Johannesburg. South Africa. Prepared at Sydney Church of England Grammar School. Sydney. Australia Home Address: 3c Riscrmcre. Alger Court. Bronxviltc. New York Field of Concentration: Physics. Served in Marine Corps Reserve. Rugby Club: Judo Club. Freshman Rugby. OWUYAW YAW ADU Bom on December 26, 1946 at Kumasi. Ghana. Prepared at Achimota, Accra. Ghana. Home Address: Box 20. Aburi, Ghana. Field of Concentration: Engineering and Applied Physics. Association of African and Afro-Amcrtcan Students: Experiment in International Living: International Relations Council: Phillips Brooks House Association Varsity Soccer: Freshman Soccer. Winthrop House: Soccer. Volleyball. Harvard College Scholarship. DAVID ERNST ANDERSON Bom on August 19. 1946 at Saskatoon. Saskatchewan. Prepared at Lutheran Collegiate. Outlook. Saskatchewan. Home Address: Box 28. Outlook. Saskatchewan. Canada. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. JV Baseball: Freshman Hockey. Winthrop House: Football. Volleyball. Hockey; Winthrop House Radio Station. WINTHROP GARY ROBERT BACHULA Born on January I, 1947 at Saginaw. Michigan. Prepared at Saginaw High School. Saginaw. Michigan. Home Address: 4012 Kctcham Street. Saginaw. Michigan. Field of Concentration: Economics. Young Democrats. Varsity Football, Manager. National Merit Scholarship. CHARLES SPENCER BARNABY Born on April 7. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at l.incoln-Sudbury Regional High School. Sudbury. Massachusetts. Hook Address: Concord Road. Lincoln. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Engineering and Applied Physics. Harvard Dramatic Club. Winthrop House: Burntrhr%; Rhinoceros (Adams House). Harvard College Scholarship; National Science Foundation Grant. GARY MICHAEL BEAN Bom on May 4.1946 at Everett. Massachusetts. Prepared at Chelsea Senior High School, Chelsea. Massachusetts. Home Address: 71 Central Avenue. Chelsea, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Applied Mathematics. Harvard Band: Hillel Society; Natural History Society; Phillips Brooks House Association; World Federalists; Young Democrats. Harvard College Scholarship. PAUL STEVEN BERGER Born on February 6.1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at Great Neck South Senior High School. Great Neck, New York. Home Address: 22 North Drive. Great Neck. New York. Field of Concentration: Physics. Americans for Reappraisal of Far Eastern Policy; International Relations Council; Phillips Brooks House Association; Yacht Club. Commodore; Young Democrats. Varsity Sailing. Harvard National Scholarship. ROBIN ALVIN BERNHOFT Bom on March 7, 1947 at Fargo. North Dakota. Prepared at Central High School, Fargo. North Dakota. Home Address: SOS 23rd Avenue, North Fargo, North Dakota. Field of Concentration: History. Harvard Band; Debate Council; International Relations Council; Outing Club; Yacht Club; Young Democrats. Winthrop House: Soccer. Softball; Lutheran Coordinator. Sloan Foundation Scholarship. DONALD MARK BERWICK Born on September 9. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Natlian Hale Ray High School, Moodus. Connecticut. Home Address; Town Street. Moodus. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Freshman Glee Club. Avvistant Manager; Harvard Glee Club, Assistant Manager; Harvard Undergraduate Council; Hillel Society; Phillips Brooks House Association. Executive Board. Winthrop House: House Committee. Detur Prize: John Harvard Scholarship. ’O •'vN iii iil % L JifetfJ I M ARNOLD LEE BORT7. Born on March 10. 1946 at Cincinnati, Ohio. Prepared at Walnut Hills High School. Cincinnati. Ohio. Home Address: 1146 Towne Street. Cincinnati. Ohio. Field of Concentration: Government. Crimson Key Society. President 1967; Hasty Pudding: Phillips BrooLv House Association: Young Democrats; Senior Associate. Winthrop House: Football. Basketball. Track. Softball. EDWARD MEIGS BROWN Bom on July 22. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton Academy. Milton, Massachusetts. Home Address: 341 Highland Street. Milton. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Biology. Freshman Glee Club; Outing Gub. Varsity Cross Country ; Varsity Spring Track; Varsity Winter Track. STEVEN NOLEN BULLOCH Bom on January 8. 1946 at Tulsa. Oklahoma. Prepared at Nathan Hale High School. Tulsa. Oklahoma. Home Address: 6797 East 25 Place. Tulsa. Oklahoma. Field of Concentration: History. Hasty Pudding. Varsity Swimming, Harvard College Scholarship. PETER RICHARD BRUNIM Bom on January 16. 1947 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Framingham North High School. Framingham. Massachusetts. Home Address: 69 Joseph Road. Framingham. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Government. Freshman Glee Club: Harvard Glee Club; Hillel Society; Phillips Brooks House Association; Pre-Medical Society; Yardling: Young Democrats; Young Republicans. Winthrop House: Football. Basketball. Volleyball. NATHANIEL GLOVER BUTLER Bom on August 6. 1946 at Salem. Massachusetts. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. Exeter. New Hampshire. Home Address: 1 Lake Shore Avenue. Beverly, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Government. Crimson Key Society; Harvard Student Agencies. Publicity Manager of Let's Go Trued Guide: Pi Eta Gub: Senior Associate. Varsity Lacrosse: Freshman Lacrosse. Winthrop House: Swimming: House Committee: Athletic Secretary. Harvard Honorary Freshman Scholarship. DONALD EDWARD CANNON Bom on April 22. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Braintree High School. Braintree. Massachusetts. Home Address: 656 Granite. Braintree. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Government. Harvard Student Agencies. Winthrop House: Soccer. Basketball. 1S JOSEPH ADDISON DAVIS. Jr. Bom on December 14. 1946 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at New Trier High School. Winnetks. Illinois. Home Address: 455 Sheridan Road. Winnetka, Illinois. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Crimson. News Board; liar-sard Dramatic Club. Winthrop House: Lion Rampart Managing Editor. PEDRO ANTONIO DE ALARCON Bom on December 13. 1945 at Guatemala. Guatemala. Prepared at Licco Guatemala. Guatemala. Home Address: 8 Avenida 16-55 Zona 10. Guatemala. Guatemala. Field of Concentration: Government. Catholic Student Center; Hasty Pudding. Varsity Soccer; JV Soccer. Winthrop House: Social Committee. MARCOS CINTRA CAVALCANTI DE ALBUQUERQUE Born on August 23. 1945 at Sao Paulo. Brazil. Prepared at Atlantic College. Wales. Great Britain. Home Address: Av. Rcboucas 3325. Sao Paulo. Brazil. Field of Concentration: Economics. Catholic Student Center; Hasty Pudding; International Relations Council; Karate Club; Latin American Association; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats; Young Republicans. Fly Club. JOSEPH MARK DE BETTENCOURT Bom on January 14. 1946 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. Exeter, New Hampshire and Newton High School. Ncwtonville. Massachusetts. Home Address: 18 Sterling Street. West Newion. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Member of Nasal Aviation ROTC. Catholic Student Center; Harvard Student Agencies: Hasty Pudding: Pi Eta Club. Executive Committee; Varsity Club. Varsity Football. Winthrop House: Basketball. Track: Winthrop House Radio. MONTAGUE WILLIAM DEMMENT. II Bom on October 23. 1945 at Troy. New York. Prepared at Trinity Pawling School. Pawling, New York. Home Address: 1630 Tibbits Avenue. Troy. New York. Field of Concentration: Architectural Sciences. Varsity Baseball: Freshman Baseball: Varsity Football; Freshman Football: Varsity Hockey: Varsity Rugby. Winthrop House: Football. Boxing; House Committee. Owl Club. Harv ard College Scholarship. BRUCE CLARK DIEFFEN'BACH Bom on January 8. 1947 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at Wakefield High School. Arlington. Virginia. Home Address: 3700 6th Street South. Arlington. Virginia. Field of Concentration: Physics. Member of Army ROTC. Bridge Gub; Yacht Club; Young Republicans. Detur Prize; John Harvard Scholarship; Phi Beta Kappa. PHILLIP GRATON CHASE Bom on September 14. 1945. in Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton Academy. Milton. Massachusetts. Home Address: Little Scvvickley Creek Road. Scwicklcy. Pennsylvania. Field of Hon-centration: Anthropology. Army ROTC. Rugby. Winthrop: Fencing. S Cr • • - •-1 - '•' ' ; . ;VW!5rj aerial ALAN RICHARD COHEN Bom on October 17, 1946 at Charleston. West Virginia. Prepared at Deerfield Academy, Deerfield. Massachusetts. Home Address: 311 Mckinley Avenue. Charleston. West Virginia. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Harvard Policy Committee; Harvard Yearbook Publications; Hillel Society; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. Winthrop House: The Boys From Syracuse. House Committee. Iroqucis Club. LSKUttB r L t« i la .aOuteiHa b 2 ta la oi cf Caaasj toegVerto CoiotSdoWs IUD aivv .b5«ii!fa=fE Setox tops i tin Ate f f Gaoxaurto rae Ge Ctt res. Me Sof. itaseca.Ma dn to Ctna raSs stmt to MARC SUMNER CORNBLATT Bom on March 6. 1946 at Cambridge. Massachusetts. Prepared at Newton South High School. Newton. Massachusetts. House Address: 154 Langley Rood. Newton Center. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Hillel Society; Young Democrats. Winthrop House: Tennis. Basketball. Squash. Harvard College Scholarship. STEPHEN WALTER CRUMP Bom on July 14. 1946 at Houston. Texas. Prepared at M. B. Lamar High School. Houston. Texas. Home Address: 2018 Timber Lane. Houston, Texas. Field of Concentration: Physics Hasty Pudding. BEN KEITH DAVIS Born on May 29. 1946 at Wilmington. North Carolina. Prepared at Waynes-ville High School. Waynesville. North Carolina. Home Address: 117 Oak Street. Hazelwood. North Carolina Field of Concentration: Biology. Outing Club: Phillips Brooks House Association; Pre-Medical Society; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Young Republicans. Varsity Baseball: Freshman Baseball. Winthrop House: Baseball. Harvard College Scholarship. u IP HD Of $ EDWARD JOHN DAVIS Born on October II. 1946 at Framingham. Massachusetts. Prepared at Marian High School. Framingham. Massachusetts. Home Address: 59 Henry Street. Framingham. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Member of Naval ROTC. Catholic Student Center; Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. Winthrop House: House Committee. Harvard College Scholarship. JOSEPH HERBERT DONNELLY Bom on March 24. I‘ 47 ai Framingham, Massachusetts. Prepared at Fr.im-ham. Massachusetts. Prepares! at Framingham South High School. Framing-554 Concord Street, Framingham. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Catholic Student Center; Phillips Brooks House Association; Pre-Medical Society. Varsity Football. Harvard College Scholarship. ALFRED WILSON DOUGLASS. Jr. Bom on March 12. 1945 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton Academy. Milton. Massachusetts. Home Address: 57 Shore Road. Cataumet. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Anthropology. Lampoon: Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Yardling. Freshman Soccer. Winthrop House: Soccer. D.U. Club. G. WILLIAM DUKE Bom on August 20, 1946 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at Crete-Monce High School, Crete, Illinois. Home Address: 35 Braebum Street. Park Forest. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Economics. Bridge Cub: Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats; Young Republicans. Winthrop House: Golf. Basketball. Baseball. Football. Harvard College Scholarship. HOWARD WALLACE FOSS. Jr. Bom on June 3. 1946 at New Bedford. Massachusetts. Prepared at Governor Dummer Academy. South Bytkld. Massachusetts. Home Address: 36 Harclton Drive. White Plains, New York. Field of Concentration: Government. Varsity Cross Country; Varsity Spring Track: Varsity Winter Track. Harvard College Scholarship. PETER AUSTIN GAGLIARDI Bom on May 22. 1946 at Montague, Massachusetts. Prepared at Athol High School. Athol. Massachusetts. Home Address: 438 Wallingford, Athol. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Government. CARLETON JOSEPH GOODWIN Bom on July 17. 1945 at Bangor. Maine. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter. New Hampshire. Home Address: 57 Alder Drive, Nashua. New Hampshire. Field of Concentration: America History. Phi Eta Club. Varsity Football: Freshman Football. Winthrop House: Basketball, Tennis. Softball. RUSSELL WILLIAM GRAY. Jr. Born on October 2. 1946 at Hattiesburg. Mississippi. Prepared at Central High School, Knoxville. Tennessee. Home Address: 1935 lair Drive. Knoxville. Tennessee. Field of Concentration: English. Returnees of American Field Service; Experimental Theater. Win-throp House: Madwoman of ChaUlot (Kirkland Moult). Harvard National Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. GERALD MICHAEL GREEN Bom on December 16. 1946 at Lawrence. Massachusetts. Prepared at Belmont Hill School. Belmont. Massachusetts. Home Address: 50 Sanders Avenue. Lowell. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Harvard Glee Club; Pre-Medical Society. DONALD LOUIS GRIMBLE Bom on March 17, 1946 at Edmonton. Alberta. Prepared at Strath-cona Composite High School. Edmonton. Alberta. Home Address: 11812-74 Avenue. Edmonton. Alberta, Canada. Field of Concentration: Government Varsity Hockey. Winthrop House: Crew. Owl Gub. PETER FRANCIS HAGERTY Bom on September 6. 1945 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton Academy, Milton. Massachusetts. Home Address: 355 Atlantic Avenue. Cohas-sett. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Member of Naval ROTC. Catholic Student Center; Hasty Pudding; TalTrail Club: Young Democrats. JV Soccer: Freshman Soccer. Winthrop House: Soccer. Hockey; Lion Rampant; Winthrop Art Gub. DAVID THOMAS HALI.ENBECK Bom on February 25. 1946 at Toledo. Ohio. Prepared at Maumee Valley Country Day School. Maumee. Oh:o. Home Address: 1720 Wildwood Read. Toledo. Ohio. Field of Concentration: Biology. Yacht Club. Freshman Soccer. Winthrop House: Lion Rampant. JAMES McKELL EDWIN HARPER Born on November 10.1946. in Harrow. England. Prepared at The Hill School. Pottstown. Pennsylvania. Home Address: North Forge Mountain Dnvv. Valley Forge. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: Physics. Freshman Glee Gub; Phillips Brooks House Association; Yacht Club. Vice Commodore: American Institute of Physics. Sailing- JOHN MARK HATCH Bom on August 15. 1946 at Idaho Falls. Idaho. Prepared at Idaho Falls High School. Idaho Falls. Idaho. Home Address: 1421 East 1st Street. Idaho Falls, Idaho. Field of Concentration: American History. Phillips Brooks House Association; Ski Club. Bom on May 19. 1946 at Nanticoke, Penns lvania. Prepared at Nanticoke H'gh School, Nanticoke, Pennsylvania. Home Address: 328 Koscius ko. Nanti-coke, Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Crimson: Signet Society. Harvard National Scholarship. JAMES E. HEARD Bom on February 12, 1946 at White Castle, Louisiana. Prepared at Dcla Salle of New Orleans, New Orleans, Louisiana. Home Address: 2412 Fourth Avenue. Lake Charles. Louisiana. Field of Concentration: Government. Catholic Student Center; Harvard Student Agencies; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats; Young Republicans. BRUCE GARDNER KARLIN Bom on March 2, 1947 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Newton South High School. Newton. Massachusetts. Home Address: 20 Old Farm Road. Newton, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Physics. Phillips Brooks House Association; Pierian Sodality, Manager; Young Democrats; Young Republicans. Winthrop House: Softball, Volleyball, Soccer. CHARLES STUART HENRY Bom on March 16, 1946 at Pittsfield, Massachusetts. Prepared at Pittsfield High School. Pittsfield, Massachusetts. Home Address: 127 Appleton Avenue, Pittsfield. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Biology. Outing Club. Varsity Sailing. DANIEL ORRA KEMMIS Bom on December 5, 1945 at Fairview, Montana. Prepared at Sidney Senior High School. Sidney. Montana. Home Address: 701 Fifth Street Southeast. Sidney. Montana. Field of Concentration: Government. Married to Elaine Dugas on June 17, 1967. Young Democrats; Young Republicans. Harvard College Scholarship. BRUCE HAMILTON HOWARD Born on July 2. 1945 at Kcntfield. California. Prepared at San Rafael High School. San Rafael, California. Home Address: 55 Montccito Road, San Rafael, California. Field of Concentration: History. Hasty Pudding; Ski Club. Freshman Skiing; JV Soccer. Winthrop House: Swimming, Track. MARVIN HAYNE KENDRICK Born on August 20, 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Andover. Massachusetts. Home Address: 720 West Braddock Road. Alexandria, Virginia. Field of Concentration: English. Phillips Brooks House Association. Winthrop House: Basketball. HAROLD RICHARD KERCHNER LARRY CLYDE HUNTER Born on October 17, 1946 at Ogden, Utah. Prepared at Twin Falls High School. Twin Falls, Idaho. Home Address: 129 Wiseman Avenue. Twin Falls, Idaho. Field of Concentration: Economics. Deseret Club. Varsity Baseball; Freshman Baseball; Varsity Football; Freshman Football. Winthrop House: Football, Basketball. FRANK MILLNER KAHR Be rn on January 27. 1947 at New York, New York. Prepared at Fiddsion School. New York, New York. Home Address: 25 East 86 Street. New York, New York, Field of Concentration: Chemistry. Harvard Dramatic Club; Young Democrats. Toad of Toad Hall (Lonrll House). Detur Prize. felt Bom on March 5. 1946 at Lewistown. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Juniata Joint High School. Home Address: Mifflin-town. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: Physics. Phillips Brooks House Association: American Institute of Physics; University Lutheran Student Council. National Merit Scholarship. DOUGLAS MICHAEL KINGSBURY Bom on January 12, 1947 at Kansas City, Missouri. Prepared at Rockhurst High School, Kansas City, Missouri. Home Address: 437 East 65 Terrace, Kansas City, Missouri. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Catholic Student Center; Harvard Dramatic Club; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats; Freshman Debate Council. Avon Corporation Scholarship. WALTER GEORGE KLEMPERER Horn on April 2. 1947 at Saranac Lake. New York. Prepared at Saranac Lake High School. Saranac Lake. Nov York. Hook Address: Lower Saranac Lake. Saranac Lake. New York. Field of Concentration: Chemistry. Varsity Skiing: Freshman Skiing. ERNEST F. KRUG. Ill Bom on June 20. 1946 at New York, New York. Prepared at Englewood School for Boys. Englewood. New Jersey. Home Address: 82 Walnut Center. Englewood. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Chemistry. Member of Army ROTC. Phillips Brooks House Association: Young Republicans: Har-vard-RaddifTc Undergraduate Religious Council. PHILIP ANDREW LEHMAN Born on November 3. 1946 at Hunting, ton. New York. Prepared at Milton Academy. Milton. Massachusetts Home Address: Lakeville. Connecticut. I acid of Concentration: Government. Member of Naval ROTC. Hasty Pudding. Phillips Brooks House Association Young Republicans. Winthrop House: Soccer. Cross-Country. Track. STEVEN ZALMAN LEVINE Bom on March 6. 1947 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Newton High School. Ncwtonvillc. Massachusetts. Home Address: 602 Walnut Street. Ncwtonvillc. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. ANDREW SAM LABOWSKY. Jr. Bom on July 21. 1946 at Passaic, New Jersey. Prepared at Hawthorne High School. Hawthorne. New Jersey. Home Address: 144 Emetine Drue. Hawthorne. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Engineering and Applied l hysics. Pi Eta Club. JV Baseball: Freshman Football: Freshman Lacrosse. Winthrop House: Football. Baseball; Social Committee. DAVID PAUL LANG Bom on February 21. 1946 at St. Paul. Minnesota. Prepared at St. Bernard's High School. St. Paul. Minnesota. Home Address: 71 West Geranium Avenue. St. Paul. Minnesota. Field of Concentration: Economics. Member of Army ROTC. Caisson Cub: Catholic Student Center: Phillips Brooks House Association; Pi Eta Cub. Freshman Football; Freshman Lacrosse. Winthrop House: Football. Baseball, Hockey. Harvard College Scholarship. EDWARD EARLE LAWSON RAYMOND ANTHONY LIDDELL Bom on June 26. 1945 at Cambridge. Massachusetts. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Andover. Massachusetts. Home Address: 34 Slade Street. Belmont. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Dramatic Club; Lampoon: Phillips Brooks House Association. Winthrop House: Hockey. Lion Rampant. Phoenix Club. DOUGLAS W ARREN LOFGREN Born on May 21. 1946 at Long Beach. California. Prepared at Woodrow W ilson High School. Long Beach. California. Home Address: 6400 24th Street North. Arlington, Virginia. Field of Concentration: Government. Harvard Student Agencies; Outing Club; Phillips Brooks House Association: Vtrtin Turmnac liter von 1086. Winthrop House: Football. Crew. HAROLD STEPHEN LUFT Born on August 6, 1946 at Winston-Salem. Noith Carolina. Prepared at North Shore Country Day School. Wmnetka. Illinois. Home Address: 435 Willow Road, Wmnetka, Illinois. Field of Concentration: Biology. Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Ski Club. W’inthrop House: Social Committee. GARY RAYMOND LEA Born on March 10, 1946 at Rutland. Vermont. Prepared at Fair Haven Union High School, Fair Haven. Vermont. Home Address: Waterman Street. East Barre. Vermont. Field of Concentration: American History. Member of Naval ROTC. Harvard Student Agencies: International Relations Council; Phillips Brooks House Association. Tutor; TalFrail Club; Young Republicans. Executive Committee. Naval ROTC Holloway Scholarship. Born on January 6. 1947 at Newark. Ness Jersey. Prepared at Brooklyn Technical High School. Brooklyn. New York. Home Address: 1825 Foster Avenue. Brooklyn. Ness York. Field of Concentration: Economics. Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. Harvard College Scholarship. CHRISTOPHER HANNA LUNDING Bom on June 15. 1946 at Evanston. Illinois. Prepared at North Shore Country Day School. Winnetka. Illinois Home Address: 1630 Sheridan Road. Wilmette. Illinois. Field of Concentration: History. Married to Elirabeth H. Soule on July S. 1967. Hasty lading; Young Republicans. Varsity Crew; Freshman Crew. Winthrop House: Crew. Ossl Club. DANIEL BARSTOW MAGRAW, Jr. Born on September 14, 1946 at Minne-apolk, Minnesota. Prepared at Central High School, St. Paul. Minnesota. Hook Address: 2237 Fairmount Street. St. Paul, Minnesota. Field of Concentration: Economics. Harvard Undergraduate Council, President; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats; Young Republicans. Freshman Crew; Varsity Swimming. Winthrop House: House Committee; Social Committee. Harvard National Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. EUGENE WALLY MARCH Born on August 17, 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Nicotei High School. Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Home Address: 12 Goldfinch Court. Willow-dale. Ontario. Field of Concentration: Government. Latin American Association; Young Democrats. Winthrop RODERICK RATCLIFF McKELVIE Born on May 26, 1946 at Malden. England. Prepared at Saint George's School. Newport. Rhode Island. Home Address: 2216 46th Street N. W„ Washington, D.C. Field of Concentration: Economics. Phillips Brooks House Association. Varsity Soccer; Freshman Soccer. HUGH SINCLAIR MeMULLEN Born on April 23, 1947 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Boston Latin School, Boston, Massachusetts. Home Address: 220 Newbury Street, Boston, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Government. Young Democrats; Young Republicans. Varsity Baseball, Manager; Freshman Baseball, Manager; Varsity Hockey. Associate Manager; Freshman Hockey. Manager; Varsity Lacrosse. Manager. Harvard Club of Boston Scholarship. House: Economics and Government Tables. ROBERT MARX MAULITZ Bom on October 18, 1946 at Birmingham. Alabama. Prepared at Indian Springs School, Helena, Alabama. Home Address: 2732 Southwood Road, Birmingham. Alabama. Field of Concentration: Economics. Hasty Pudding: Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. Winthrop House: Boys From Syracuse; Basketball, Track: Lion Rampant; Winthrop House Radio. Harvard College Scholarship. STEPHEN WARE MeBURNETT Bom on November 17. 1946 at Milwaukee. Wisconsin. Prepared at The Gunnery. Washington. Connecticut. Home Address: Box 32, New Milford. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Government. Phillips Brooks House Association; Prc-l.aw Society; Young Republicans. Winthrop House: Basketball. Harvard College Scholarship. ROBERT GOODl.OE MeGAHEY. Ill Bom on July 14, 1946 at Birmingham. Alabama. Prepared at Indian Springs School, Helena. Alabama. Home Address: 1445 Mohican Drive. Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Glee Club; Phillips Brooks House Association. Winthrop House: Football, Basketball; Lion Rampant, Editor. Harvard College Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. GEORGE HERBERT MeGEARY Born on May 16. 1946 at Ft. Knox, Kentucky. Prepared at Bend Senior High School. Bend, Oregon. Hook Address: 759 Roanoke, Bend, Oregon. Field of Concentration: Government. FREDERICK LLOYD MILLER Bom on May 6. 1945 at Cedar Rapids. Iowa. Prepared at Washington Senior High School. Cedar Rapids. Iowa. Home Address: 2037 Linden Drive, Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Field of Concentration: Government. Served in Army National Guard of Massachusetts. Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association: Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Yacht Club; Young Democrats. Freshman Tennis. Winthrop House: Tennis. MATTHEW DAVID MILLER Bom on May 21. 1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at Nicolct High School. Milwaukee. Wisconsin. Home Address: 175 West 13th Street, New York, New York. Field of Concentration: Ph sics. Natural History Society; Young Democrats. Freshman Squash; Freshman Tennis. Winthrop House: Squash. Tennis. National Merit Scholarship. ONESMO OLE MOIYOI Bom on February 16. 1943 at Loliondo. Tanzania. Prepared at Old Moshi School. Moshi. Tanzania. Home Address: D. O. Office, Loliondo, Tanzania. Field of Concentration: Chemistry. Experiment in International Living; Pre-Medical Society; East African Student Association President. Varsity Soccer; Freshman Soccer. Winthrop House: Soccer. Harvard College Scholarship. JAMES PRESCOTT MOODY Born on April 27, 1946 at Englewood, New Jersey. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Andover. Massachusetts. Home Address: 377 Harrison Street, East Orange. New Jersey. Field of Concern tration: Social Relations. Outing Club; Phillips Brooks House Association. DAVID BAXTER MOYER. Jr. Bom on June 27. 1946 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at Deerfield Academy. Deerfield. Massachusetts. Home Address: Box 512, Bernardsvillc. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Geology. Hasty Pudding: Mountaineering Club; Outing Club: Phillips Brooks House Association. Winthrop House: Golf. Swimming, Squash. Football, Tennis, Track. Phoenix Club. Harvard College Scholarship. JOHN GORDON MURPHY. Jr. Bom on June 21, 1946 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Lexington High School. Lexington. Massachusetts. Home Address: 27 Slocum Road, Lexington. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Government. Harvard Yearbook Publications, Senior Section Editor: Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats; Harvard Toronto Exchange. ROBERT IGNATIUS OWENS Bom on October 7. 1946 at Worcester. Massachusetts. Prepared at Marian High School. Framingham, Massachusetts. Home Address: 136 Dennison Avenue. Framingham. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Government. Catholic Student Center; Young Democrats; Young Republicans. DONALD GIBBY PAIGE Bom on March 16. 1946 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Milton Academy. Milton. Massachusetts. Home Address: 161 Clyde Street. Chestnut Hill. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Government. Hasty Pudding: Phillips Brooks House Association. Freshman Squash: Freshman Tennis. Winthrop House: Squash, Football. Fox Club. ANDREW SEARS PRATT Born on January 25. 1947 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Westminster School, Simsbury. Connecticut. Home Address: 16 Fayerweather Street. Cambridge. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. FRANKLYN ANDERSON REEVES Bom on April 25, 1947 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at McKinley High School. Washington. D.C. Home Address: 6639 13th Street N.W.. Washing, ton. D.C. Field of Concentration: History. Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. Winthrop House: House Committee. PAUL HERBERT REISS Born on September 25. 1946 at Brooklyn. New York. Prepared at Attleboro High School. Attleboro. Massachusetts Home Address: 42 Roosevelt Street. Attleboro. Massachusetts. Field d Concentration: History. Harsard Band; Latin American Association; Phillips Brooks House Association: Yacht Cub; Young Democrats. Detur Prize: John Harsard Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship. JAMES JOSEPH REMEIKA Bom on May 10. 1947 at Cambridge. Massachusetts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin School. Cambridge. Massachusetts. Home Address: 765 Cambridge Street. Cambridge. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Catholic Student Center; Pi Eta Club. JV Baseball: Freshman Hockey. Winthrop House: Hockey. Softball. Volleyball, Crew. Baseball. Golf. THOMAS BUSEY RESTON Bom on July 4. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at St. Albans School. Washington, D.C. Home Address: 3124 Woodley Road. Washington. D.C. Field of Concentration: Social Studies. Harvard Crimson: Hasty Pudding: International Relations Council: Latin American Association; Young Democrats; Young Republicans. Freshman Crew. Winthrop House: Crew. Spec Club. s-szrsti rxTLfcts KlOBfcKU Bom on September 4. 1947 at Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Central High School. Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. Home Address: 7031 Oxford Avenue. Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Phillips Brooks House Association; Sigma Alpha Epsilon: Tutor for Bureau of Study Counsel. Harvard College Scholarship. ' : - DANIEL P. MOSS Bom on September 4. 1946 at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Carnegie High School.Carnegie. Pennsylvania, Home Address: 24 Sigrid Drive. Carnegie, Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: Economics. Catholic Student Center: Pi Eta Club; Young Democrats. JV Baseball: Freshman Baseball. Winthrop House: Basketball: Winthrop Social Committee. Harvard College Scholarship. WILLIAM SAI.TI K REARDON Born on June 26. 1946 at Quine, Massachusetts. Prepared at Th yo Academy. Braintree. Masvachuiau Home Address: 110 Summer Street llingham, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Harvard Glee Club. Associate Manager. Winthrop Houie; Football. BERNARD THOMPSON ROCCA. Ill Bom on June 17, 1945 at Berkeley, California. Prepared at Acalancs High School, Lafayette, California. Home Address: 3S29 Happy Valley Raid, Lafayette, California. Field of Concentration: Government. Phillips Brooks House Association: Jubilee Committee, Chairman. D.U. Club. DAVID KENNEDY SCHOYER Born on October 21. 1946 at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Milton Academy, Milton, Massachusetts. Home Address: 5524 Dunmoyle Street, Piltv burgh, Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: Government. Phillips Brooks House Association. Spec Club. JAMES ROOSEVELT. Jr. Bom on November 9. 1945 at Los Angeles, California. Prepared at La Salle High School. Pasadena. California. House Address: 1870 San Pas-qual Street, Pasadena, California. Field of Concentration: Government. Member of Naval ROTC. Catholic Student Center; Hasty Pudding: International Relations Council; Pre-Law Society: Young Democrats. Executive Committee. Freshman Crew. Fly Cub. JOHN EARL RORER. II Bom on June I. 1946 at Canton. Mississippi. Prepared at Canton High School. Canton. Mississippi. Home Address: 552 East Peace. Canton. Mississippi. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Crimson Key Society: Freshman Council; Harvard Student Agencies; Phillips Brooks House Association: Young Democrats. Harvard College Scholarship. ROBERT GORDON ROSENBAUM Bom on May 28. 1946 at Newton. Massachusetts. Prepared at Newton High School, Newtonville. Massachusetts. Home Address: 18 Bellevue Street, Newton. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Psychology. Hasty Pudding; Karate Club. JOHN THOMAS SCHOLZ Bom on January 21. 1945 at Oak Park, Illinois. Prepared at Willow-brook High School, Villa Park. Illinois. Home Address: 4506 Beach Park Drive. Tampa. Florida. Field of Concentration: Government. RICHARD SCHOOLMAN Bom on October 15. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at MacArthur High School. Levittown, New York. Home Address: 14 Dell Ijme. Wantagh. New York. Field of Concentration: Government. Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. Winthrop House: Winthrop House Radio. Harvard College Scholarship; Belknap Prize. ALAN NEIL SCHULMAN Bom on April 19, 1947 at W'atcrbury. Connecticut. Prepared at Carmel College, Wallingford Berks., England. Home Address: Hcr ogspiialstr. 6. Munich. Germany. Field of Concentration: Chemistry. Phillips Brooks House Association; Vertin Turmwachter non 1886, Secretary. Freshman Crew. Winthrop House: Crew. Delur Prize; Harvard College Scholarship. DOUGLAS WALDORF SCOTT Bom on October 24, 1946 at Youngstown, Ohio. Prepared at Mathews High School. Vienna. Ohio. Home Address: Bclmar Terrace. Vienna, Ohio. Field of Concentration: Economics. Phillips Brooks House Association; Pi Eta Club. Winthrop House: Basketball, Football, Volleyball, Baseball; Social Committee. Harvard College Scholarship. ALLAN MARTIN SHAPIRO Bom on August 25, 1946 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Hebron Academy. Hebron. Maine. Home Address: 105 Conant Avenue, Auburn, Maine. Field of Concentration: Government. Harvard Dramatic Club; Pre-Law Society; Young Democrats; Young Republicans. The Virtuoso (Adams): Madwoman of Chaiilot (Kirkland): Andorra (Adams). JAMES EARNEST SHAPIRO Bom on October 1. 1946 at New Yerk, New York. Prepared at Milton Academy. Milton. Massachusetts. Home Address: 26 East 91st Street. New York City, New York. Field of Concentration: English. Advocate, Prose Editor; Hasty Pudding; Young Democrats; Harvard Forum Theater; Harvard Dramatic Club. JEWELL REYNOLDS SMITH Born on November ! I, 1946 at Council Bluffs. Iowa. Prepared at Chadwick High School, Chadwick. Illinois. Home Address: Mummer Avenue. Chadwick. Illinois. Field of Concentration: English. Karate Club; Keystone Movies: Wind Ensemble. Winthrop House: Lion Rampant; Thurber Carnival (Dunster): Caesar and Cleopatra (Quincy); The Garden (East House); Rurnering (Winthrop). Harvard College Scholarship. m - w. By Rt. : WINTHROP KENNETH JOHN SULAK Born on October 25. 1946 at Columbus. Ohio. Prepared at Welljburg High School. Wcllsburg. West Virginia. Home Address: R.D. 2. Wcllsburg. West Virginia. Field of Concentration: Biology. Outing Club: Phillips Brooks House Association. Winthrop House: Softball, Volley ball. Track. Crosscountry. Harvard College Scholarship. JAY B. STEPHENS Bom on November 5. 1946 at Akron, lossa. Prepared at Le Mars Community High School. Lemars, Iowa. Home Address: Rural Free Delivery 3. I.c Mars, Iowa. Field of Concentration: Government. Crimson Key Society; Hasty Pudding; International Relations Council; Pre-Law Society; I'crein Turin-wachier von ISS6: Young Republicans. President; Republican Review Associate Editor. Winthrop House: Football. Volleyball. Basketball. Detur Prize; Harvard College Scholarship. RICHARD JAMES STRATTON Bom on May 17. 1946 at Sandwich, Illinois. Prepared at Lcland High School. Lcland. Illinois. Home Address: R.R. 1. Lcland. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Government. Served in U.S. Army. Caisson Club. Class Representative; Crimson Key Society. Vice President; Experiment in International Living; Harvard Student Agencies; Hasty Pudding; Junior Usher; Young Republicans; Harvard Toronto Exchange. Winthrop House: Crew. Football; House Committee. Harvard National Scholarship; Rotary Fellowship. JOHN HERBERT STRAUS Born on December 15. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Milton Academy. Milton, Massachusetts. Home Address: 941 Park Avenue. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Hasty Pudding: YardUng, Business Manager. Winthrop House: Boys From Syracuse; Marriage of Figaro (Lerereii). National Science Foundation Grant. JAMES FREDRIC STRAUSS Born on August 24, 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Mark's School. I allas, Texas. Home Address: 6307 Glendora. Dallas. Texas. Field of Concentration: Chemistry. Outing Club; Phillips Brooks House Association; Students for a Democratic Society. Winthrop House: Soccer. THOMAS WILLIAM STUART Born on March 4. 1946 at St. Paul. Minnesota. Prepared at Borah High School. Boise, Idaho. Home Address: 6007 Northview. Boise. Idaho. Field of Concentration: Economics. Winthrop House: Football. Basketball. Softball. Volleyball. General Motors Scholarship. ALBERT JOHN TL'RCO Born on August 26, 1946 at Malden. Massachusetts. Prepared at Wakefield High School. Wakefield. Massachusetts. Home Address: 5 Beebe Lane. Wakefield. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Economics. Pre-Law Society: Sigma Alpha Epsilon: Young Democrats. Winthrop House: Softball. Football: Social Committee. Detur Prize CHARLES GRAVES UNTERMEYER Born on March 7, 1946 at Long Branch, New Jersey. Prepared at Memorial High School. Houston. Texas Home Address: 12 Legend Lane. Houston. Texas. Field of Concentration: Government. Member of Naval ROTC. Young Republicans. Vice President; Senior Associate. Winthrop House: Winthrop House Radio. Harvard College Scholarship. ANDREW PREVIN TOBIAS Born on April 20. 1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at Horace Mann School. New York. New York. Home Address: S60 Fifth Avenue. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: Slavic. Harvard Student Agencies. President; Hasty Pudding. Winthrop House: Swimming. Harvard College Scholarship. RICHARD FLOYD TOMPKINS Born on May 21. 1946 at Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Abington Senior High School. Abington. Pennsylvania. Home Address: 1911 Lambert Road. Jenkintown. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: Physical Sciences. Crimson Key Society. Executive Committee; Hasty Pudding: Young Democrats: Young Republicans. Varsity Swimming. BRIAN I). SULLIVAN Born on July 22. 1946 at Hartford Connecticut. Prepared at Conrad High School. West Hartford. Connecticut Home Addreu: 177 Sedgwick Road West Hartford. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Biology. Catholic Stu-dent Center; Hasty Pudding; Cheer-leader Varsity Crew. ERNEST ALBERT THURSTON. Jr. Born on August 31. 1946 at Plainfield. New Jersey. Prepared at North Plain-field High School. North Plainfield. New Jersey. Home Address: I la Summit Avenue. North Plainfield. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Physics. Harvard Band; Bridge Club; Young Democrats. Harvard College Scholarship. ’ • urw “ K ? %{£ (1 RITHUSJRtt xt Nrste e.VJiS :'jL-fac£diV.fe wext gChMiqfe O rkiriK; HS1C0W llWgfak rttBat rtNoVstas = AetxVi'.a i£ d Carae ! Salts Apz - ws i ei HnrfC (VO IClVfVX-.iWgfc-ua K xt t top IflLASefxte- •' j.-. St ixc . E«b«C Ictfm o JtCO . Sttfes Ri I Ip OfttjRlV Fosito hsln Sc . Y«|[ it UaI' at Dsrfc itlx •■ 5 iS er yI f V h ROY WILSON WADDELL Born on .March 16. 1946 at Cleveland, Ohio. Prepared at Western Reserve Academy. Hudson. Ohio. Hook Address: 3020 Country Club Drive. Muskegon. Michigan, l-'ield of Concentration: History and Science. Hasty Pudding; Phillips Brooks House Association; Speaker’s Club. Treasurer; Yacht Gub. Harvard College Scholarship. NILS CHRISTOPHER WATSON Born on June 29. 1946 at Council Bluffs. Iowa. Prepared at Concord Carlisle High School. Concord, Massachusetts. Home Address: 30 Heath's Bridge Road. Concord. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration; Biology. International Relations Council; Karate Gub; Ski Gub; Young Democrats; Young Republicans. Wjnthrop House: Tennis. Basketball. Detur Pri c; John Harvard Scholarship. ROBERT R. WELLER Bom on February 15. 1946 at Youngstown, Ohio. Prepared at Boardman High School, Youngstown. Ohio. Home Address: 50 Curies Avenue, Youngstown. Ohio. Field of Concentration: Economics. Freshman Council; Harvard Student Agencies, Treasurer; WHRB. Sales Manager; Young Democrats. Harvard College Scholarship. RICHARD GRANT WHITE Born on Marcy 17, 1946 at Cincinnati. Ohio. Prepared at Sterling High School. Somcrdale. New Jersey. Home Address: Winding Way. Stratford. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Hasty Pudding. Varsity Spring Track; JV Spring Track; Freshman Spring Track. Winthrop House: Track. Boxing: House Committee; Social Committee. Harvard College Scholarship. JOHN ROGER WILSON. Jr. Bom on June 3. 1947 at Blythcwood. South Carolina. Prepared at Blythe-wood High School. Blythcwood. South Carolina. Home Address: Box 125. Blythcwood. South Carolina. Field of Concentration: Engineering and Applied Physics. Member of Army ROTC. Caisson Gub; Phillips Brooks House Association; Pi Eta Gub. Varsity Spring Track: Freshman Spring Track. Winthrop House: Basketball. Crew. Football. Volleyball. Harvard National Scholarship. PAUL FREDERICK WILSON Born on January 15. 1947 at Palo Alto. California. Prepared at San Rafael High School. San Rafael, California Home Address: 219 Riviera Drive. San Rafael. California. Field of Concentration: Government. Pierian Sodality; Young Democrats. PETER MANN WINKLER Born on November 9. 1946 at Pasadena. California. Prepared at Fair Lawn Senior High School. Fair Lawn. New Jersey. Home Address: 9 Audubon Place. Fair Lawn. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. Bridge Club. Director: Young Democrats; Intercollegiate Bridge Team. Winthrop House: Squash. Tennis; Winthrop House Radio; Winthrop House Art Workshop. Detur Prixe; Harvard College Scholarship; John Harvard Scholarship. ALLAN BARRY WOLFSON Born on December 7. 1947 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at Walt Whitman High School. Bcthcsda, Maryland. Home Address: 7011 Pyle Road. Bcthcsda, Maryland. Field of Concentration: Physics. Phillips Brooks House Association: Young Democrats. Winthrop House: Burnerhtg: Rhinoceros (Adams); Wild Duck (Adams): The Garden (Tasi House); Crew. DAVID GRIFFITH WRIGHT Born on September 2. 1946 at Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Western Reserve Academy, Hudson. Ohio. Home Address: 416 South Linden Avenue. Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: English. Freshman Glee Club: Hasty Pudding. Freshman Rugby. JEFFREY GLYNNE WRIGHT Bom on April 18. 1946 at Cornwall. Home Address: 416 South Linden. New York. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Andover. Massachusetts. Home Address: 19 Deacon Hunt Drive. Acton. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Government. Freshman Glee Gub; Harvard Glee Gub; Harvard Student Agencies. Board of Directors; Young Republicans. Detur Prize. RAYMOND ZABLOTNY Bom on May 14. 1947 at Buffalo. New York. Prepared at Calasonctius Preparatory School. Buffalo. New York. Home Address: 24 W'estland Parkway. Cheek-towaga. New York. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Catholic Student Center; Phillips Brooks House Association. Harvard College Scholarship. WILLIAM EDWARD ZARRETT Bom on June II. 1946 at Lexington, Kentucky. Prepared at Bryan Station High School. Lexington. Kentucky. Home Address: 308 Mariemont Drive, Lexington. Kentucky . Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Harvard Undergraduate Religious Council: Head Usher at Memorial Church. Freshman Crew, Coach. Winthrop House: Social Committee. . ■ . ... ■ BARBARA ROSE ANSCHEL Bom on December II, 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Cambridge School of Weston. Weston. Massachusetts. Hook Address: 11 Riverside Drive, New York. New York. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Btggar's Optra (Adams): Andorra (Adams). MARY HEWIT ANSCHUETZ Bom on April 9. 1946 at St. Louis, Missouri. Prepared at Alton Senior High School. Alton. Illinois. Home Address: 1106 Slate Street. Alton. Illinois. Field of Concentration: English. Film Studies: Freshman Glee Club: Gilbert and Sullivan Players; Ivy Films Research: Phillips Brooks House Association: Universit) Choir. RADCLIFFE COLLEGE MARTHA-ANN ACKELSBERG Bom on June 5. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at College High School. Upper Montclair, New Jersey. Home Address: 126 Raab Avenue. Bloomfield, New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Social Studies. Hillcl Society, Vice-President and Secretary-Treasurer; Phillips Brooks House Association, Committee Chairman; Students for a Democratic Society. National Merit Scholarship. CAROLE ELIZABETH ADAMS Born on April 13. 1946 at Neptune. New Jersey. Prepared at Middletown High School. Middletown, New Jersey. Home Address: 42 Mclean Street, Red Bank. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: History and Science. Phillips Brooks House Association: RadclitTc Government Association: Returnees of American Field Service: Students for a Democratic Society. National Science Foundation Grant. RADCLIFFE SUSAN CAROL ARONSON Born on October 17. 1946 at Detroit. Michigan. Prepared at John Burroughs School. St. Louis. Missouri. Home Address: 6 West ridge Court. St. Louis. Missouri. Field of Concentration: English. Gilbert and Sullivan Players. Three Penny Opera; Harvard Drama Review; Harvard Dramatic Club. Spring's Awakening; International Relations Council: Phillips Brooks House Association. CATHERINE SINCLAIR ASHBROOK Bom on April 1. 1946 at Cambridge. Massachusetts. Prepared at Weston High School. Weston. Massachusetts. Home Address: 16 Summer Street. Weston. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: American History. Outing Club: Phillips Brooks House Association: Young Democrats: Students for a Democratic Society. East House: House Committee; Drama Societies of Dunster, Adams and Winthrop. MARGARET EI.MENDORF AUCHINCLOSS Born on February 21,1946at New York, New York. Prepared at Milton Academy, Milton, Massachusetts. Home Address: 623 Belmont Road. Ridgewood. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Hasty Pudding. Costumes for 119; II Circoto Indiana; Keystone Movies; Phillips Brooks House Association. Executive Secretary 66-67; Locb Experimental Theater. DAYNA ELLEN BAERNCOPF Bom on November 27. 1946 at Indianapolis. Indiana. Prepared at South Eugene High School, Eugene. Oregon. Home Address: 2830 Emerald Street. Eugene, Oregon. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Phillips Brooks House Association; RadchlTe Government Association; International Student Association. JULIE BALLER Bom on March 24, 1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at Palisades High School, Pacific Palisades, California. Home Address: 1119 Las Lomas. Pacific Palisades, California. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Phillips Brooks House Association; Raddilfc Government Association. North House: Dorm Social Chairman. DIANE BARBARA BALTER Born on November 29, 1946 at Rochester. New York. Prepared at Brighton High School, Rochester, New York. Home Address: 160 Willowcrcst Drive, Rochester. New York. Field of Concentration: History. Pierian Sodality, Treasurer. South House: President 1967; RadclitTe Junior Parents' Weekend Co-Chairman. (ARIA SONIA BARRINGER Boin on April 12. 1947 at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Miss Porter'i School. Farmington. Connecticut. Hon Address: 250 Ashwood Road. Villanova, Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: Economics. Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. HILDEGARD HELENE BASTIAN Born on June 3, 1946 at Flushing, New York. Prepared at Rondout Valley Hi h School. Stone Ridge. New York Horre Address: R.R. I, Box 92a. Kerhonksoo, New York. Field of Concentration: Biology. Catholic Student Center; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. BARBARA RACHEL BEATTY Born on March 7, 1946 at Palo Alto. California. Prepared at Claremont High School. Claremont. California. Home Address: 156 East 7th Street, Claremont. California. Field of Concentration: Romance Languages. Jazz Dana Workshop. Spanish Sophomore Essay Prize. MARY BECKER Bom on September 4. 1946 at Ocve-land. Ohio. Prepared at L.P. Goodrich High School. Fond Du Lac. Wisconsin. Home Address: Mary Hill Park. Fond Du Lac. Wisconsin. Field of Concentration: History. Experiment in International Living; Phillips Brooks House Association; RadclitTe Government Association. Ftnian's Rainbow (Quincy). ANN SUSAN BERGER Born on February 7, 1947 in New York. New York. Prepared at Great Neck South Senior High School. Great Neck. New York. Home Address: 19 Lincoln Road. Great Neck. New York. Field of Concentration: Applied Mathematics. International Relations Council: Young Democrats. National Merit Scholarship. TERESA ELAINE BERRY Bom on November 8. 1946 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at Oak Park and Ri' r Forest High School. Oak Park. Illinois-Home Address: 1443 Monroe, River Forest. Illinois. Field of Concentration: History. RadclitTe Freshman Chorus; RadclitTe Choral Society; Senior Sister. iNGE ’“telfe. rft cm ANDREA BERTOCCI Boin on June 15, 1946 at Lewiston. Maine. Prepared at Wellesley Senior High School, Wellesley, Massachusetts. Home Address: Town Hill, Wolcott. Vermont. Fidd of Concentration: German. Gilbert and Sullivan Players; Phillips Brooks House Association; Returnees of American Field Service; University Choir. GAYLA CHRISTINE BLASDEL Bom on October 17, 1946 at Los Angeles, California Prepared at Marlborough School, Los Angeles. California. Home Address: 3536 Griffith Park Boulevard, Los Angeles. California. Field of Concentration: English. Christian Fellowship. M WTl MARY-IVERS BEVER Bom on March 30. 1946 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Abbot Academy. Andover, Massachusetts. Home Address: 23 Highland Street, we Camdridge, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Government. LIGITA ASTR1DA BLUMBERG Born on November 29. 1946 at Brake. Germany. Prepared at Highland Park High School. Highland Park. New Jersey. Home Address: 117 South Fourth Avenue. Highland Park. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: History. RadclifTc Club of New Jersey Scholarship. i nm Mrttefc; eGesteSg C ruaa idd a Gaza Scftost AUDREY JANE BILLER Bom on November 2. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Newton South High School. Newton. Massachusetts. Home Address: 3555 Cote Dcs Neiges, Montreal, Canada. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Crim-ton. Editor; Keystone Movies; Phillips Brooks House Association: RadclifTc Government Association. Secretary; RadclifTc Freshman Choral Society. JOSEPHINE BORGESON Bom on August 15, 1946 at Duxbury, Massachusetts. Prepared at Duxbury High School. Duxbury. Massachusetts. Home Address: 119 West Street. Duxbury, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Biology. RadclifTc Freshman Chorus; RadclifTc Choral Society. North House: President of Wolbach Hall. n.ia c 1 1? Gate 3sUt®x £ r. K_ r. FdtfCxa ;r-r : :• -irGoerct SB srsv'.a M v •- CHRISTINE ELIZABETH BISHOP Born on October 6. 1946 at Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Ann Arbor High School. Ann Arbor, Michigan. Home Address: 1011 Lincoln Avenue. Ann Arbor, Michigan. Field of Concentration: Economics. Young Democrats; Radcliffe Choral Society; RadclilTe Freshman Chorus; Harvard Glee Club Asian Tour. National Merit Scholarship. GENE BETH BISHOP Bom on February 8.1947 at Far Rocka-way. New York. Prepared at South Side High School. Rockville Centre, New York. Home Address: 136 Broadway. Rockville Centre, New York. Field of Concentration: History. Hillcl Society; Phillips Brooks House Association; Students for a Democratic Society. DIANA JEAN BRESLICH Born on June 24, 1946 at Minot, North Dakota. Prepared at Minot High School, Minot. North Dakota. Home Address: 818 Fourth Street, Minot, North Dakota. Field of Concentration: Classics. Classical Club. BARBARA ANN BROWN Bom on June 26. 1946 at Washington, D.C. Prepared at Woodrow Wilson High School, Washington. D.C. Home Address: 30 Deer Path. Short Hills, New Jersey. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Experiment in International Living: Freshman Council; Harvard Yearbook Publications; Phillips Brooks House Association. East House: House Committee. National Merit Scholarship. MARILYN ALEXIS BROWN L :• ■■or SARAH CAMPBELL BLAFFER Born on July II, 1946 at Dallas, Texas. Prepared at St. Timothy's. Stevenson, Maryland. Home Address: 2 Briarwood Circle, Houston. Texas. Field of Concentration: Anthropology. Bom on Februa y 6. 1947 at Washington, D.C. Prepared at Woodrow Wilson High School, Washington, D.C. Home Address: 2730 Stephenson Lane N.W., Washington. D.C. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Crimson; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. East House: Cabot Hall Dormitory Committee; Senior Sister. RADCLIFFE JUDITH HRUCE Born on October 23. 1946 at Minneapolis. Minnesota. Prepared at Northrop Collegiate School. Minneapolis. Minnesota. Home Address: 1776 Knox South. Minneapolis. Minnesota. Field of Concentration: Anthropology. East House: House Committee. Social Chairman. HARRIET SOUTHERLAND BURGIN Born on July 15. 19-16 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Timothy's, Stevenson. Maryland. Home Address: 83 Raymond Street. Cambridge. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Fine Arts. Married to William Townsend Burgin on June 11, 1966. Harvard Yearbook Publications. LAURA LEE CALHOUN Bom on April 17. 1946 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at Millbum High School. Millbum. New Jersey. Home Address: 33 Wellington Avenue, Short Hills. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Romance Languages. Phillips Brooks House Association, National Merit Scholarship; Scholarship to L'Academie de Paris Through the Harvard Department of Romance Languages and Literatures. ELIZABETH DENISE CAMPBELL Bom on June 20, 1946 at Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Lycce Franco-Mcxicain. Mexico. Home Address: Lerma 179-3, Mexico. Field of Concentration: Biology. Phillips Brooks House Association. LUCY MICHELLE CANDIB Bom on May 30, 1946 at Brooklyn. New York. Prepared at Noithtlcld School. East Northfield. Massachusetts. Home Address: Bromley Road, Danby. Vermont. Field of Concentration: History and Science. Phillips Brooks House Association; Students for a Democratic Society. East House: Undergraduate Advisor to Freshmen. Phi Beta Kappa. CAROL ELAINE CARLSON Born on September 12. 1946 at Worcester, Massachusetts. Prepared at Edwin Smith School. Storrx. Connecticut. Home Address: Donovan Road. Storrs. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Outing Club; Phillips Brooks House Association. NANC Y RUTH CETLIN Bom on June 29. 1946 at Taunton. Massachusetts. Prepared at Taunion High School. Taunton. Massachusetts. Home Address: 6 Dale Street. Taunton. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Romance languages. International Re. lations Council. East House: Social Chairman of Jordan J. ELIZABETH MARIE CHAMPAGNE Bom on October 28. 1945 in Harrisburg. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Manatee High School. Bradenton, Flotida Home Address: 609 Rutherford Rood. Harrisburg. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: Classics. Freshman Chorus; Phillips Brooks House Association. Raddilfc College Scholarship. AIDA CHANG Bom on January 20. 1948 at Buenos Aires. Argentina. Prepared at Jamaica High School. Jamaica. New York. Home Address: 188-06 87 Drive. Hollis. New York. Field of Concentration: English. Phillips Brooks House Association. Rooscsclt Towers Committee and Secretary; Radclitfc Government Association. Nominating Committee Chairman; Radclitrc Freshman Council. North House: House Committee. EMILY DE HUFF CHOR Bom on May 1. 1947 at Annapolis. Maryland. Prepared at Fairfax High School, Fairfax. Virginia. Home Address: 33 Watcrvillc Road. Farming-ton. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: American History. Married to Philip N. Chor. Harvard Dramatic Club; Phillips Brooks House Association; Raddilfc Government Association. North House: Holmes Hall Treasurer and Social Chairman; Timber Carnival (Dumter). National Merit Scholarship. MARGERY L. CHRISTENSEN Bom on August 2. 1946 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at Morgan Park High School. Chicago. Illinois. Home Address: 2048 West 110th Place, Chicago. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Philosophy. Committee to End the War in Vietnam; Music Club: Radclitfc Government Association; Radclitfc Choral Society. Ditto and Aeneas (Lo ell). LESLIE SUZANNE CLAFF Born on March 8. 1947 at Malden. Massachusetts. Prepared at Newton High School, Ncwtonville. Massachusetts. Home Address: 144 Austin Street. Ncwtonville. Massachusetts. Field o'. Concentration: History and Literature Bach Society: . lo.'tnlc:h; Music Club. Phi Beta Kappa. JULIE CLARK Born on September 30, 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Timothy's School. Stevenson. Maryland. Home Address: 48 Highland Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Fine Arts. Gilbert and Sullivan Players: Harvard Dramatic Club: Phillips Brooks House Association. ANNE MILLS CONNORS Born on April 3, 1932 at Englewood. New Jersey. Prepared at Kent Place School. Summit. New Jersey. Home Address: 4 Prince Avenue. Winchester, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Mariicd to Thomas L. Connors on April 19. 1952. RadclifTc College Scholarship. lkstfev si IS ■ Vi y i Ccccscra “Ha.to ei Cceas dAGsea xej Cbc FaicuCtti Coodcs 20 SANDRA RAE CLARK Born on April 21. 1946 at Colfax. Washington. Prepared at Sheridan High School. Sheridan, Wyoming. Home Address: 520 South Brooks. Sheridan. Wyoming. Field of Concentration: History. Gilbert and Sullivan Players; Shield; Young Democrats: Episcopal Chaplaincy Vice-President. North House: President of North House: Senior Sister. National Merit Scholarship; Elks Most Valuable Student Scholarship. SARAH REED CLARK Bom on May 8,1946 at Portland. Maine. Prepared at St. Timothy's School. Stevenson, Maryland. Home Address: 18 Carroll Street, Falmouth. Maine. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats; RadclifTc Freshman Council; Radcliffe Freshman Chorus. East House: Dorm Committee. VALERIE EVE CLARK Born on October 5. 1945 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Belmont High School, Belmont. Massachusetts. Home Address: 1047 Concord Avenue, Belmont. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Romance Languages. Harvard Dramatic Club; Phillips Brooks House Association; Catholic Student Association. SUSAN HINSDALE COLGATE Born on September 4, 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Concord Academy, Concord. Massachusetts. Home Address: 5314 Hampden Lane. Bcthcsda, Maryland. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Gilbert and Sullivan Players; Phillips Brooks House Association; RadclifTc Government Association; Shield; Young Democrats. SUSAN JANE CONANT Bom on May 20, 1946 at Lawrence, Massachusetts. Prepared at Haverhill High School. Haverhill, Massachusetts. Home Address: 51 Fcmwood Avenue, Bradford. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. ELEANOR ELIZABETH COOK Born on June 13, 1946 at Summit, New Jersey. Prepared at St. Margaret's School. Watcrbury. Connecticut. Home Address: Windfall. Northficld. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Phillips Biooks House Association. ELAINE BARBARA CRESPOLINI Bom on January 5, 1947 at Hackensack, New Jersey. Prepared at Ridgefield High School. Ridgefield. New Jersey. Home Address: 510 Prospect Avenue, Ridgefield, New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Classics and Romance Languages. Ford Motor Company Fund Scholarship. KATHERINE FOLSOM CROLIUS Bom on October 2.1945 at Orange. New Jersey. Prepared at Cohassct High School, Cohassct, Massachusetts. Home Address: 271 Jerusalem Road. Cohassct, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Biology. Phillips Brooks House Association. MARY ADAMS DANOS Bom on July 3. 1947 at St. Paul. Minnesota. Prepared at American School of Madrid, Madrid, Spain. Home Address: Generalisimo 41. Madrid. Spain. Field of Concentration: Social Studies. International Relations Council: Phillips Brooks House Association; International Students' Association. RUTH NORTHROP DART Born on June 17, 1946 at South Bend, Indiana. Prepared at Claremont High School. Claremont, California. Home Address: 421 West 8th. Claremont, California. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. RadclifTc Government Association; Young Democrats; RadclilTc Choral Society. North House: Holmes Hall Dormitory Committee and Judicial Committee. Phi Beta Kappa. MERLE ANDREA DOREMAN Horn on iDctcfccr 28. 1947 ul New York, New York. Prepared at Staple High School. Westport. Connecticut. Home Address: 2 Pumpkin Hill. Wcuport. Connecticut. Held of Concentration; History and Literature. Young Democrats; Henry Adams History Qub_ North House: Dormitory Judicial Committee; Social Chairman. El.LEN WESCOTT DAY Horn on September 23.1946 at St. Louis, Missouri. Prepared at Mary Institute. St. Louis. Missouri. Hook Address: 9714 I.it singer Road. St. Louis. Missouri. Field of Concentration: Romance Languages. Harvard Dramatic Club; Phillips Brooks House Association; RadclitTe Government Association; Young Democrats. CLAUDIA LOUISE DEERING Bom on March 9. 1947 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Girl’s Latin School, Boston, Massachusetts. Home Address: 146 Chiswick Road, Boston. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: German. ANNE VELLINES DOWNER Born on July 4. 1946 at Pasadena. California. Prepared at West ridge School, Pasadena. California. Home Address: Box Y.Y. Z.Z.. Wickcnburg. Arizona Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Yearbook Publications. JUDITH NATALIE DERSOFI Born on October 31, 1946 at Malden, Massachusetts. Prepared at Everett High School. Everett. Massachusetts. Home Address: 15 Lawrence Street. Everett. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Shield: RadclitTe Freshman Chorus: Radcliffe Choral Society. South House: Guys and Dolls (Grant-lit-Aid). BARBARA BEATE DREIER Bom on August 9, 1946 at Asheville. North Carolina. Prepared at Niskayura High School. Schenectady. New York Home Address: Seven Gates Farm. Vineyard Haven. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Biology. RadclitTe Choral Society. LEONA MARGARET DRYDEN Bom on May 4. 1946 at Cheverl). Maryland. Prepared at Northwestern Senior High School. Hyattsvillc. Maryland. Home Address: 6112 43rd Street. Hyattsvillc. Maryland. Field of Concentration: Astronomy. Outing Club: Young Democrats: Physics Gub. National Merit Scholarship. SARA ANNE DEUTCH Bom on May 2. 194S at Washington. D.C. Prepared at Western High School. Washington. D.C. Home Address: 2820 32nd Street. Washington, D.C. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Phillips Brooks House Association; RadclitTe Government Association. North House: Moors Hall Dorm Committee. CAROLINE MERRIAM EASTMAN Bom on December 25. 1946 at Columbus. Ohio. Prepared at Hickman High School. Columbia. Missouri. Home Address: 600 South Glenwood Avenue. Columbia. Missouri. Field of Concentration: Applied Mathematics. Natural History Society; Outing Club: Phillips Brooks House Association: Young Republicans. SUSAN ELIZABETH DIETZ Bom on October 7, 1946 at Newton. Massachusetts. Prepared at Newton High School. Ncvvtonvillc. Massachusetts. Home Address: 93 Hancock Avenue. Newton Centre. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Hillel Society: Teacher Aide Program. East House: House Committee. CARMEN EVA IRIZARRY DE DOMINGUEZ Bom on July 3. 1945 at San Juan. Puerto Rico. Prepared at University High School. San Juan. Puerto Rico. Home Address: 207 Rossy Street. Baldrich, Hato Rcy, Puerto Rico. Field of Concentration: Government. Married to Daniel R. Dominguez on January 3. 1966. Catholic Student Center; Club Hispanlco; Latin American Association; Young Democrats. MARY ELIZABETH ELLIOTT Born on March 13. 1946 at Houston. Texas. Prepared at Jesse Jones High School, Houston. Texas. Home Address: 7101 Eastwood. Houston. Texas. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Young ITcmoerats. Speakers Committee; RaddilTe FreshmanChorus-J.l). (Louell). Radclilfc Scholarship: Texas National Bank of Commerce Scholarship. ■Mia .5bU ■“Gaife ta = -s W«-« 4 ! t Ore i Vr.isc “rsitf- scafe Wife CtaCe 75® 04V J(:- 5 ANNICK JANE FAFLICK Born on May 7, 1947 at Seattle, Washington. Prepared at Lexington High School, Lexington, Massachusetts. Home Address: 28 Moon Hill Road. Lexington. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Radcliffc Freshman Chorus; RadclitTc Choral Society; Returnees of American Field Service. BARBARA EILEEN FAINSTE1N Bom on October 5. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Day Prospect Hill, New Haven, Connecticut. Home Address: 47 Rockefeller Avenue, West Haven, Connecticut. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. CAROLINE ELIZABETH ERNST Bom on May 10. 1946 at Lawrence, Massachusetts. Prepared at Amherst Central High School, Snyder. New York. Home Address: 258 Burroughs Drive, Snyder. New York. Field of Concentration: Government. Phillips Brooks House Association. JACQUELINE RUTH FARWELL Born on January 2. 1947 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at Roosevelt High School, Seattle, Washington. Home Address: 5752 65th Avenue N.E., Seattle. Washington. Field of Concentration: Linguistics and Mathematics. Outing Club; Phillips Brooks House Association; Harvard Russian Choir; Peace Corps Experiment in Africa. ANNE COVINGMAN FEIGUS Born on April 25, 1947 at Uniontown, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Uniontown Joint Senior High School, Uniontown, Pennsylvania. Home Address: 123 Ben Lomond Street. Uniontown, Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: History. Phillips Brooks House Association. BARBARA JEANNE FIELDS Born on February 8. 1947 at Charleston. South Carolina. Prepared at Western High School, Washington. D.C. Home Address: 1241 Talbert Street S.E., Washington. D.C. Field of Concentration: Social Studies. Association of African and Afro-American Students; Harvard Crimson, Editorial Board; International Relations Council. MICHELE RHONA FLICKER Born on October 9, 1945 at New York, New York. Prepared at Shawnee Mission East, Mission. Kansas. Home Address: 5845 Sunrise Drive. Mission. Kansas. Field of Concentration: Chemistry. Hillel Society; Music Club. National Merit Scholarship. BARBARA TRAFFORD FLYNN Bom on June 27, 1946 at Washington, D.C. Prepared at Guilford High School, Guilford. Connecticut. Home Address: South Union Street. Guilford. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: American History. Students for a Democratic Society. MARTHA CAROLINE FRANSSON Born on September 19.1946 at Hartford. Connecticut. Prepared at Conard High School, West Hanford, Connecticut. Home Address: 11 Dodge Drive, West Hartford. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: History. Harvard Yearbook Publications. Clerk; Yacht Club, Executive Board; RadclitTc Sailing Team. North House: House Committee; New England Women's Intercollegiate Sailing Association, Secretary. SANDRA JOYCE FRAWLEY Born on April II, 1946 at Glen Ridge, New Jersey. Prepared at Lynnfield High School, Lynnfield. Massachusetts. Home Address: 15 Pine Street, L nnfictd. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Studies. Phillips Brooks House Association; RadclitTc Choral Society; RadclitTc Freshman Chorus; American Indian Project. North House: House Committee; Comstock Dorm Committee. Ford Foundation Grant Through the Social Relations Department. ANN ELIZABETH FREEDMAN Bom on October 18, 1947 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Centerville High School. Centerville. Ohio. Home Address: 1011 West Rahn Road. Dayton. Ohio. Field of Concentration: Government. Harvard Policy Committee; Phillips Brooks House Association; RadclitTc Government Association; RadclilTe Grant-in-Aid Committee Chairman. North House: Swimming; House Committee. PATRICIA JANE FLANCE Bom on March 18, 1946 at St. Louis, Missouri. Prepared at Mary Institute. St. Louis, Missouri. Home Address: No. 10. Westwood Country Club Grounds. St. Louis. Missouri. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Dra-malic Club; Returnees of American Field Service. East House: House Committee; Social Chairman of Barnard Hall 1965; President of Avon House 1966. RADCLIFFE NAOMI SUSAN FRIEDLAND Bom on June 16. 1947 ;ti New York. New York. Prepared at For Rockaway High School, Far Rockaway, New York. Home Address: 1309 CatTrey Avenue, Far Rockaway. New York. Field of Concentration: Government. Ilillcl Society. Executive Council; Phillips Brooks House Association; WHRB. SUSAN NAOMI FUKUSHIMA Bom on September 17. 1946 at Honolulu. Hawaii. Prepared at Punahou School, Honolulu. Hawaii. Home Address: 2386 East Manoa Road. Honolulu. Hawaii. Field of Concentration: Psychology. International Relations Council: Phillips Brooks House Association. EVELYN KATE GALLAND Bom on August 20, 1946 at Cambridge. Massachusetts. Prepared at Brookline High School. Brookline. Massachusetts. Home Address: 17 Strathmore Road. Brookline. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Phillips Brooks House Association; Rad-cliffc Government Association: Young Democrats. East House: House Committee. Work Chairman. Phi Beta Kappa. ALEXANDRA APPLETON GARCIA-MATA Bom on October 9. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Madeira School, Greenway. Virginia. Home Address: 1071 Oenokc Ridge, New Canaan. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: English. Catholic Student Center; Phillips Brooks House Association. National Merit Scholarship. DORCAS PEARSON GILL Bom on May 3. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Putney School. Putney, Vermont. Home Address: 44 Bradford Road. Wellesley Hills. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. RadclifTc Choral Society; Harvard Dramatic Club; Music Club; Teacher Aide Program: Young Democrats. National Merit Scholarship. MARGARET CHANDLER GILMORE Bom on November 19, 1945 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Wellesley High School. Wellesley Hills. Massachusetts Home Address: 105 Albion Road. Wellesley Hills. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Phillips Brooks House Association: RadclifTc Government Association: Bach Society; Pierian Sodality. East House Committee; Lowell House Opera Society. CAROL ANN GILTNER Born on May II, 1946 at Dallas. Texas. Prepared at South Oak Cliff High School. Dallas. Texas. Home Address: 1523 Ann Arbor, Dallas. Texas. Fidd of Concentration: Anthropology. Phillips Brooks House Association Radclilfe Government Association, Young Democrats. North House: House Committee; Fencing; Judo. CAROL JANE GLASER Bom on February 9. 1947 at Washing, ton, D.C. Prepared at Western High School. Washington, D.C. Home Address: 5000 Cathedral Avenue N.W., Washington. D.C. Field of Concentration: Government. Harvard Student Agencies. Calendar and Ring Agency; Phillips Brooks House Association, Tutor; Yacht Club; Young Democrats, Radclilfe Coordinator and Executive Vice-President; RadclifTc Freshman Chorus; RadclilTe Choral Society; Peace Corps Experiment in Ethiopia. North House: Swimming: Laity Luck (Law School). SUSAN FLORENCE GOFF Bom on August 12, 1946 at Newark. New Jersey. Prepared at West Orange Mountain High School. West Orange, New Jersey. Home Address: 41 Curtis Avenue, West Orange. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Phillips Brooks House Association. Roosevelt Towers Program; RadclilTe Freshman Chorus. DEBORAH JANE GOLDIN Bom on May 16. 1947 at Baltimore. Maryland. Prepared at Walt Whitman High School, Bethesda, Maryland. Home Address: 6416 Marjory Lane, Bethesda. Maryland. Field of Concentration: History. Phillips Brooks House Association. Roosevelt Towers Committee; Jazz Dance Workshop: Modem Dance Club: Harvard Dramatic Club. Flnnian's Rainbow (Quincy). FRANCINE PROSE GONICK Bom on April I, 1947 at New York, New York. Prepared at Brooklyn Friends School. Brooklyn, New York. Home Address: 937 Ocean Avenue. Brooklyn, New York. Field of Concentration: English. Advocate. Art Editor: Harvard Dramatic Club; Phillips Brooks House Association. CATHERINE MOROT-SIR GORDAN Born on November 20. 1946 at Patis. France. Prepared at Brcarley School. New York. New York. Home Address: SO East End Avenue, New York. New York. Field of Concentration: History-Married to John D. Gordan on June 21. 1967. Phillips Brooks House Association. Roosevelt Towers. ;tO v | ANN GLADYS GREENBERG Bom on February 12. 1947 at Providence, Rhode Island. Prepared at Classical High School. Providence, Rhode Island. Home Address: 78 Elton Street. Providence. Rhode Island. Field of Concentration: Government. Phillips Brooks House Association. General Hospitals Committee; Young Democrats; Radciiffe Freshman Chorus. LINDA JOYCE GREENHOUSE Born on January 9. 1947 at New York, New York. Prepared at Hamden High School, Hamden. Connecticut. Hook Address: 72 Rochford Avenue, Hamden. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Government. Harvard Crimson, Features Editor; Harvard Policy Committee. Hr -. lit rec- BEATRICE JOAN GREENWAI.D Bom on May 9. 1947 at Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at James Madison High School. Brooklyn, New York. Home Address: 1859 East 19th Street, Brooklyn, New York. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Dramatic Club; Phillips Brooks House Association; Radciiffe Freshman Chorus; Radclilfc Choral Society. The Crucible (Dudley). National Merit Scholarship. a ap Mils to «Ca JlCrj Jab Robbs to JOYCE BALLOU GREGORIAN Bom on May 5, 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Beaver Country Day School. Chestnut Hill. Massachusetts. Hook Address: 182 Highland Street. Holliston. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Radciiffe Freshman Chorus; Radclilfc Choral Society; Harvard Radclilfc Asian Tour 1967. EGCUB coa n: '■ FtLl'-X LINDA ANN GREY Born on December 9. 1946 at Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Lawrence High School, Ccdarhurst. New York. Home Address: 507 Redwood Drive, Cedar-hurst, New York. Field of Concentration: Government, Gilbert and Sullivan Players; Harvard Dramatic Club; Young Democrats. North House: Senior Sister. S' ZARA TEPPER HAIMO Bom on November 25.1947 at St. Louis. Missouri. Prepared at University City High School, University City. Missouri, Home Address: 7201 Cornell. St. Louis, Missouri. Field of Concentration: Fine Arts. Hurturd An Review, Designer. 5 ANNE CARROL FOWLER HAMMOND Born on May 5, 1946 at Portland. Maine. Prepared at Portland High School. Portland. Maine. Home Address: Cumberland Forcside. Portland, Maine. Field of Concentration: English. Married to William Hammond on June 10, 1967. Phillips Brooks House Association. J.B. and the Skin of Our Teeth (Lowell). ELIZABETH HAMMOND Bom on December 23, 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Miss Porter's School, Farmington, Connecticut. Home Address: 153 Brattle Street, Cambridge. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Fine Arts. Harvard Dramatic Club, Woyzck. Wild Duck (Adams); Beggars' Opera (Adams); Cost Tan Tulle (LeveretI). KATHRYN GAY HANSEN Born on October 10, 1947 at Oakland, California. Prepared at Southeast High School, Wichita. Kansas. Home Address: 346 North Armour. Wichita, Kansas. Field of Concentration: English. Phillips Brooks House Association; Radciiffe Choral Society; Radclilfc Freshman Chorus. Radciiffe College Scholarship; Harold Pitman Co. Scholarship. BARBARA GREENLEAF HANSON Born on May 12, 1946 at Greenwich, Connecticut. Prepared at Miss Porter's School, Farmington, Connecticut. Hook Address: Lander Lane, Greenwich. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: English. Phillips Brooks House Association. East House: Briggs Hall Senior Sister. JEANNE ELLEN HARRIS Born on July 5, 1945 at Eugene, Oregon. Prepared at South Pasadena High School. South Pasadena. California. Home Address: 409 Garfield Avenue. South Pasadena. California. Field of Concentration: Government. Phillips Brooks House Association, Reading to Blind Committee. Chairman; Young Democrats, House Coordinator; Esperanto Club, President. National Merit Scholarship. STEPHANIE BLYTHE HAWKINS Born on November 7. 1946 at Birmingham. Alabama. Prepared at East Denver, Denver, Colorado. Home Address: 2034 Ivy Street, Denver, Colorado. Field of Concentration: History. Radclilfc Choral Society; Episcopal Cliaplaincy at Harvard and Radclilfc. RADCLIFFE INEZ KATHLEEN HEDGES Bom on January 20. 1947 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at York town High School, Arlington. Virginia. Hook Address: 3648 North Oakland Street. Arlington, Virginia. Field of Concentration: Classics and German. Adrocale, Secretary. Harvard Advocate Poetry Prize 1966. ANITA ELIZABETH HERMAN Bom on September 19, 1946 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Cambridge High and Latin. Cambridge. Massachusetts. Home Address: 294 Howard Street. Cambridge. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Catholic Student Center; RadclilTc Government Association; Shield. President; RadclilTc Freshman Chorus; RadclilTc Choral Society; Senior Sister Orientation Week. North House: Vice-President of Judicial Committee; Dudley House Drama Society. RadclilTc Scholarship. MARJORIE JILL HERSEY Bom on November 13, 1946 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at Yorktown High School. Arlington, Virginia. Home Address: 3543 North Delaware Street. Arlington. Virginia. Field of Concentration: English. RadclilTc Freshman Chorus; RadclilTc Choral Society. MARY ANN HINRICHSEN Bom on January 25, 1946 at Ames. Iowa. Prepared at Ames Senior High School, Ames, Iowa. Home Address: 321 Pearson Avenue, Ames, Iowa. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. National Science Foundation Grant: Phi Beta Kappa. MARGA RUTH HIRSCH Born on February 23. 1947 at Minneapolis, Minnesota. Prepared at Walt Whitman High School. Bethesda. Maryland. Home Address: 6513 Kenhowe Drive, Bethesda. Maryland. Field of Concentration: Social Relations and Linguistics. Hillcl Society; RadclilTc Choral Society. North House: House Committee. SUSAN ALSOP HOLE Born on April 13, 1945, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Prepared at West I own Boarding School, Westtown. Pennsylvania. Home Address: 712 College Avenue. Richmond. Indiana. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Phillips Brooks House Association. National Merit Scholarship; National Science Foundation Grant. JOANNA GAIL HORNIG Bom on May 24, 1947 at Providence, Rhode Island. Prepared at Miss f ine's School. Princeton. New Jersey. Home Address: 2810 Brandywine Street. Washington, D.C. Field of Concentration: Biology. East House: House Committee; Cabot Hall Treasurer. DORCAS SCOTT HOUSTON Born on April 30. 1945 at Miami Beach. Florida. Prepared at Colorado Rocky Mountain School, Carbondale. Colorado and Milton Academy. Milton, Massachusetts. Home Address: 77 Ledge Road. Burlington, Vermont. Field of Concentration: English. Phillips Brooks House Association. Challenge Co-Chairman; RadclilTc Freshman Chorus; RadclilTc Choral Society. Andorra (Adams). EILEEN Yl NAN HSU Bom on November 26. 194S at New York. New York. Prepared at Evanston Township High School. Evanston. Illinois. Home Address: 310 Wesley Avenue. Evanston. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Rad-clitfe Freshman Chorus; Phillips Brooks House Association; RadclilTc Government Association. Vice-President; Har-vard-Toronto Exchange. North House: Holmes Dormitory President. ELIZABETH ANNE HUNTER Born on December 2. 1945 at New York. New York. Prepared at Albemarle High School. Charlottesville. Virginia. Hook Address: Cismont. Virginia. Field of Concentration: Anthropology-East House: Bumtring: Swimming, Tennis. DEBORAH MARY HURST Born on May 9. 1946 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at West High School. Madison, Wisconsin. Hook Address: 3972 Plymouth Circle. Madison. Wisconsin. Reid of Concentration: English. Phillips Brooks House Association: Students for a Democratic Society: RadclilTc Freshman Chorus. CATHERINf FRANCES HOLT Born on (Xlobcr 8. 1946 at Topeka, Kansas. Prepared at Brookline High School. Brookline. Massachusetts Home Address: 29 University Road, Brookline, Massachusetts, f ield of Concentration: English. Gilbert and Sullivan Players; Phillips Brooks House Association; Pierian Sodality. On tht Town (Quincy): Leverett House Opera Society. Raymond Woodman Memorial Scholarship. PAULA ELLEN HYMAN Bom on September 30, 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Girls Latin School. Boston, Massachusetts. Home Address: 80 Richmcrc Road. Mattapan, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Studies. Hilkl Society, Executive Council; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats; Mosaic Editorial Board. East House: Senior Sister; Combined Charities. WILLENE ALICE JONES Bom on January 10, 1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at The Bronx High School of Science, Bronx. New York. Hook Address: 778 Bushwick Avenue, Brooklyn, New York. Field of Concentration: Social Studies. Association of African and Afro-American Students; Jai Dance Workshop. •Connie ®c tea ‘ WVeaafa Wa6 rsz e Cm kr BENNETTA WASHINGTON JULES-ROSETTE Bom on February 21, 1948 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at National Cathedral School. Washington, D.C. Home Address: 408 1 Street N.W., Washington. D.C. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Married to Benjamin Jules-Rosette on February 22. 1966. Harvard Dramatic Club; Phillips Brooks House Association. National Merit Scholarship. MARCIA MIRIAM KAHN Bom on February 18. 1946 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at Ann Arbor High School. Ann Arbor, Michigan. Home Address: 2211 Avalon Place, Ann Arbor. Michigan. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Phillips Brooks House Association; Students for a Democratic Society; RadclilTc Choral Society. East House: House Committee; Jordan J President. t'- EVA IDA KAMPITS Bom on February 22, 1946 at Budapest, Hungary. Prepared at St. Mary. Greenwich, Connecticut. Home Address: 358 Greenwich Avenue, Greenwich Connecticut. Field of Concentration: History. Catholic Student Center; Christian Fellowship; Harvard Student Agencies, Let’s Co Associate Editor; Outing Club; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats; RadclilTc Freshman Chorus; RadclilTc Choral Society. North House: House Committee. Chairman Special Events Committee. RadclilTc Club Scholarship; Greenwich College Women’s Club Scholarship; American-Pannonia Society Scholarship. MARY MARGARET KEMENY Born on May 7. 1946 at Elizabeth, New Jersey. Prepared at Vail-Dean School. Elizabeth, New Jersey. Home Address: 376 Elmora Avenue, Elizabeth, New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Biology. RadclilTc Government Association. RONNI ELLEN KERN Bom on June 19, 1947 at New York, New York. Prepared al Pawtucket West Senior High School, Pawtucket, Rhode Island. Home Address: 568 East Avenue. Pawtucket. Rhode Island. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Dramatic Club: Hillcl Society. ELLEN HUME HUNSBERGER KERSTELLER Bom on April 24, 1947 at Washington, D.C. Prepared at Dana Hall, Wellesley, Massachusetts. Home Address: 3606 35th Street, Washington, D.C. Field of Concentration: American History. Married to William Kcrstcllcr in September 1967. RadclilTc Freshman Chorus, Assistant Manager: RadclilTe Choral Society; RadclilTc Government Association; Shield. East House: Social Chairman of Cabot Hall; Harvard-RadclifTe Soccer Team. MAEVF. T. K1NKEAD Bom on May 31, 1946 at New York, New York. Prepared at Milton Academy, Milton, Massachusetts. Home Address: 871 Hardscrabble Road, Chappaqua, West Virginia. Field of Concentration: English. Advocate; Harvard Dramatic Club; RadclilTc Modem Dance Group President. JOANNA KLAW Born on December 29, 1946 at New York, New York. Prepared at Elisabeth Irwin High School, New York, New York. Home Address: 24 Charlton Street, New York. New York. Field of Concentration: English. Advocate; Gilbert and Sullivan Players; University Choir. NANCY ELIZABETH KLECKNER Bom on October 16. 1947 at Los Angeles, California. Prepared at Palisades High School. Pacific Palisades, California. Hook Address: 1261 Las Lomas Avenue, Pacific Palisades, California. Field of Concentration: Biology. Phillips Brooks House Association; Yacht Club: RadclifTc Choral Society. RadclilTc Athletic Association; Tennis, Basketball, Sailing. Volleyball. NINA JANE KI.EINBERG Bom on November 18, 1946 at Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Philadelphia High School for Girls. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Hook Address: 6606 North 11th Strjrct, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Gilbert and Sullivan Players. Secretary-Treasurer; Harvard Dramatic Club; Phillips Brooks House Association: RadclilTc Government Association; Students for a Democratic Society. Airs Well That Eads Well (Adams House). RADCLIFFE JEANNE KLEIN Kl TINMAN Bom on July 6, 19-16 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Decring High School. Portland. Maine. Home Address: 12 Commonwealth Court. Brighton. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Married to Daniel E. Klcinnian on August 27,1967. Upward Bound Tutoring. South Pacific MARGARET WENDY KUHN Born on November 16. 1946 at Haiti-more. Maryland. Prepared at Aberdeen High School. Aberdeen. Maryland Home Address: 634 Barkley Avenue. Aberdeen. Maryland, f ield of Concentration: Applied Mathematics. Rad-clilfe Freshman Chorus; Gilbert and Sullivan Players; Music Club. Fast House: last House Mustc Society; Trial fly Jury (Adomi Home). National Merit Scholarship. MARCIA BRAYTON KLINE Born on April 25, 1945 at New Britain, Connecticut. Prepared at Kent School. Kent. Connecticut. Home Address: Annandale-on-Hudson, New York. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Harvard Crimson: RadclifTc Government Association. History and Literature Sophomore Prize. KATHERINE KUNREUTHER Born on July 18. 1947 at Houston, Texas. Prepared at Scarsdalc High School, Scarsdalc. New York. Home Address: 17 Dunham Road, Scarsdalc, New York. Field of Concentration: History. Phillips Brooks House Association. HADASSAH SYLVIA KOHN Born on November 20. 1947 at Lands-berg, Germany. Prepared at Girls' Latin School. Dorchester, Massachusetts. Home Address: 99 Loma Road, Malta-pan. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Government. Young Democrats. South House: House Committee; Dorm Work Chairman and Committee; South House Renovation Committee; South House Food Committtee. JANE LANDES Born on April 26. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Berkeley High School. Berkeley, California. Home Address: 24 Highland Street. Cambridge, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. SUSAN SCHIRO KOMINSKY Bom on May 5, 1946 at Hartford. Connecticut. Prepared at Oxford School, Hartford. Connecticut. Home Address: 25 Brooksidc Boulevard. West Hartford. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Economics. Married to Neil Edward Kominsky on June IS. 1967. Hillel Society; Outing Club; Phillips Brooks House Association. LYNN FLORENCE LANDIS Bom on November 19. 1946 at Los Angeles. California. Prepared at University High School. Los Angeles. California. Home Address: 143 Greenfield Avenue, Los Angeles. California. Field of Concentration: Romance Languages. East House: House Committee. ZOE ANN KRITZLER Born on July 24, 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Ridgewood High School. Ridgewood. New Jersey. Home Address: 650 Wall Street. Ridgewood. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Biology. Harvard Crimson, Associate Photographic Chairman; Education for Action in El Salvador. ANASTASIA ALEXANDRA KUCHARSK! Born on July 28. 1946 at Stamford. Connecticut. Prepared at Stamford High School. Stamford, Connecticut. Home Address: 1870 Shippan Avenue, Stamford, Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Harvard Crimson, Business Board; Phillips Brooks House Association, Mental Hospitals Committee; RadclifTc Government Association. President; Returnees of American Field Service; Shield; Education for Action. Pilney-Bowes Scholarship. JACQUELINE RUTH LANG Bom on January IS. 1947 at Westchester, Pennsylvania. Prepared at New Canaan High School. New Canaan. Connecticut. Home Address: 50 Brae-bum Drive, New Canaan. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Economics. Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. East House: Swimming. MEREDITH A. LARSON Bom on August 22. 1946 at Detroit. Michigan. Prepared at Cass Technical High School. Detroit. Michigan. Home Address: 141 West Parkhurst. Detroit-Michigan. Field of Concentration: Anthropology. Harvard Policy Committee; University Choir. ANDREA BABETTE LEVINGER Bom on May 26, 1946 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at Highland Park High School. Highland Park. Illinois. Home Address: 1040 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago. Illinois. Field of Concentration : English. Phillips Brooks House Association; Amateur Play-Reading Group (President). Guys and Dolls (Grain-in-Aid); The Glass Menagerie (Lowell House): Lion Rampant (Win-throp House). MARGUERITE LOGAN LE BRETON Born on August 19. 1946 at New Orleans, Louisiana. Prepared at Bc-thesda-Chcvy Chase High School, Be-thesda, Maryland. Home Address: 5302 Wakefield Road, Washington, D.C. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Catholic Student Center, Secretary; Phillips Brooks House Association: Young Democrats; The Current (Assistant Editor). RACHEL RADLO LIEBERMAN Born on April 17, 1947 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Newton South High School, Newton, Massachusetts. Home Address: 8 Nod Hill Road. Newton. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History. Married to Hal R. Licbcrman on December 16. 1967. Americans for Reappraisal of Far Eastern Policy; Outing Club; Radcliffe Government Association; Young IX mo-crats; RadclilTc National Student Association; Harvard RadclilTc Combined Charities (RadclilTc Vice-Chairman); Junior Parents Weekend (Vice-Chairman 1967); Ad Hoc Committee on Housing and Student Participation. Holmes Hall Dorm Committee. SHERRY GAYE LEERIGHT Born on February 3, 1946 at Hutchinson, Kansas. Prepared at Cheyenne East High School. Cheyenne, Wyoming. Home Address: 3420 Essex, Cheyenne, Wyoming. Field of Concentration: Economics. Harvard Drama Review; Phillips Brooks House Association; Pre-Law Society; Young Republicans. North House: Holmes Hall President and Work Chairman. RadclilTc College Scholarship; Betty Crocker Scholarship. KATHLEEN MARY LEST1TION Bom on August 14. 1946 at Buffalo, New York. Prepared at Riverside High School, Buffalo, New York. Home Address: 70 Pavonia Street, Buffalo, New York. Field of Concentration: English. Phillips Brooks House Association, Lyman Program; Harvard Radcliffe Current (Layout and Production Manager). RadclilTc College Scholarship; RadclilTc Club of Buffalo Scholarship. SUSAN BETH LEVENSTEIN Bom on January 21, 1948 at New York, New York. Prepared at Wantagh High School, Wantagh, New York. Home Address: 3268 Island Road, Wantagh, New York. Field of Concentration: Philosophy. Gilbert and Sullivan Players; Harvard Review: Students for a Democratic Society. National Science Foundation Grant. SUSAN PEARL LEVINE Bom on July 17, 1946, in New York, New York. Prepared at Emma Willard School, Troy. New York. Home Address: 52 Nassau Drive. Great Neck. New York. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Phillips Brooks House Association; Latin American Association; Outing Club. CHRIS ELLEN LAUR1TS Bom on January 5. 1947 at East Chicago. Indiana. Prepared at Cubbcrley Senior High School. Palo Alto. California. Home Address: 342 Quino-bequin Road. Waban, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. National Merit Scholarship. JENNIFER LEANING Born on April 4, 1945 at San Francisco, California. Prepared at Bethesda-Chcvy Chase High School. Bcihcsda, Maryland. Home Address: 3717 Chevy Chase Lake Drive. Chevy Clutsc, Maryland. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Phillips Brooks House Association, Volunteers for Africa; Freshman Council; RadclilTc Athletic Association Representative. Squash. Swimming. Tennis. Radcliffc College Scholarship. ANNE BRONSON LELAND Born on January 1, 1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at The Brearly School, New York, New York. Home Address: 5020 Henry Hudson Parkway. New York, New York. Field of Concentration: Biology. Experiment in International Living; RadclilTc Freshman Chorus; Gilbert and Sullivan Players; International Relations Council; Outing Club; Phillips Brooks House Association. Mental Hospitals Committee; Yacht Club; Young Democrats. «rt. Afertco. tnt-t. Atf ciA Frtvhsttt V v': Howe: Eis Kj.v ' TrJBi ADlHaoS Men: S uni 6 . DINA ROSE LASSOW Born on September 16. 1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at Bronx High School of Science. New York. New York. Home Address: 130 Gale Place. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Harvard Dramatic Club; Phillips Brooks House Association. The Wild Duck ( Adams). KATHfJdST U. Teui ntptraj K SdxxL Sand A4irtsi;17Dziia :r V- Yat Frij jfTj H av K cm Ml; Iks Ci at. If H Select la Ira HarAferSGr jt -ext U teau-s kCaxcaca be; b Kxx KmCcc fl!V£ ILTHLOC It SdwLVsU HantAnatf tUW 1(0 :r - JANE HUNTINGTON LEAVY Bom on October 8. 1946 at New Haven, Connecticut. Prepared at Day Prospect Hill School, New Haven, Connecticut. Home Address: 70 Autumn Street, New Haven, Connecticut. Field of Concentration: English. Advocate; Experiment in International Living; Phillips Brooks House Association. fS FU £YT LOcfi KATHIE JO MIKUCKI Born on March 24,1946 at Minneapolis. Minnesota. Prepared at Golden Valles High School, Minneapolis. Minnesota. Home Address: SOI South Meadow Lane. Minneapolis. Minnesota. Field of Concentration: English. Phillips Brooks House Association. LINDA LIU Bom on March 25. 1947 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Mira monte High School. Orinda. California. Home, Address: 71 ('ammo Encinas. Orinda. California. Field of Concentration: Architectural Sciences. Harvard Yearbook Publications; YanHing: Young Democrats: Harvard Policy Committee. Architectural Sciences Audit Committee. North House: Holmes Hall Treasurer 1965-66. BEATRICE S. LORGE Bom on April 9.1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at Hunter College High School. New York. New York. Home Address: 390 Riverside Drive, New York. New York. Field of Concentration: ISychology. Harvard Dramatic Club. ELIZABETH KELLETT MANNY Bom on June 28. 1946 at Michigan City. Indiana. Prepared at Milton Academy, Milton. Massachusetts. Home Address: 200 Lake Avenue. Michigan City. Indiana. Field of Concentration: His-tory. AIESEC; Film Studies: Gilbert and Sullivan Players: Harvard Dramatic Club; Students for a Democratic Society. MARY LYNN McCORMICK Born on June Ik. 1946 at Reno, Nevada. Prepared at Churchill County High School, Fallow. Nevada. Home Address: Fallow. Nevada. Field of Concentration: Government. Freshman Council; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats; Head Senior Sister. Max C. Flcishmann Scholarship. HOPE TRUMBULL MeGURDY Born on June 2, 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Shipley School, Bryn Mawr. Pennsylvania. Home Address: Shore Road. Cold Spring Harbor. New York. Field of Concentration: History . Yacht Club. Secretary 1966-67. RadclilTc Sailing Team. SARAH LINN McMILLAN Born on March 25. 1946 at Los Alamos. New Mexico. Prepared at Western High School. Washington, D.C. Home Address: 6 Hawthorne Place. Summit, New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Far Eastern Studies. LAURALEE ALICE MATTHEWS Bom on March 22. 1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at Staples High School. Westport. Connecticut. Home Address: 27 West Parish Road, West-port, Connecticut. Field of Concentration: English. CLAIRE ELLEN MAX Bom on September 29. 1946 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Ficldston School. New York. New York. Home Address: I West 67th Street. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: Physics. RadclilTc Choral Society. RadclilTc Skiing. KATHLEEN MARIE MCCARTHY Born on June 20. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Ithaca High School, Ithaca. New York. Home Address: 212 Kelvin Mace. Ithaca, New York. Field of Concentration: Philosophy and English. Phillips Brooks House Association. SIRI VERONIKA MELCHIOR Bom on April 2. 1946 at Birkcrod. Denmark. Prepared at Virum Statsskolc, Virum. Denmark. Home Address: Danish Embassy, Uzicak 48. Belgrade. Yugoslavia. Field of Concentration: Biology. Freshman Council; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young IX-mocrats; RadclilTc Freshman Chorus; RadclilTc Choral Society. North House: Dorm Committee. JUDITH ELLEN MERKEL Bom on April 15. 1946 at Baltimore, Maryland. Prepared at Garrison Forest School. Garrison. Maryland. Home Address: Valley Road. Garrison. Maryland. Field of Concentration: English. Experiment in International Living. National Science Foundation Grant. i SARAH JANE MORRIS Born on January 26. 1946 at Seattle, Washington. Prepared at South High School, Denver, Colorado. Home Address: 1635 South Steele, Denser. Colorado. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Yearbook Publications; RadclifTc Choral Society. Rad-clifTc Government Association Policy and Efficiency Committee. Seven College Scholarship. MARGARET ANN MURDICH Born on March 5, 1947 at New York, New York. Prepared at Scarsdalc High School, Scarsdale, New York. Home Address: 143 Madison Road. Scarsdale, New York. Field of Concentration: English. Phillips Brooks House Association; RadclifTc Freshman Chorus, Choral Council and Publicity Manager; RadclifTc Choral Society, Spring Tour Group; Senior Sister. North House: House Committee, Social Committee and Dinners Committee; Moors Hall Dorm Committee and Social Chairman. National Merit Scholarship. ELLEN RUTH NADLER Bom on March 13. 1946 at Brooklyn, New York. Prepared at Elmont Memorial High School, Elmont, New York. Home Address: 161 Fallon Avenue. Elmont, New York. Field of Concentration: Government. Pre-Law Society; Young Democrats. Phi Beta Kappa. AFSANEH NAJMABAD1 Born on December 29, 1946 at Tehran, Iran. Prepared at Hadaf High School, Tehran, Iran. Home Address: 52 Orfi Sheidh-Hadi Avenue, Tehran, Iran. Field of Concentration: Physics. WENDY ELLEN MILLER Bom on November 1, 1946 at New York, New York. Prepared at Scarsdale High School. Scarsdale, New York. Home Address: 18 Burgess Road. Scarsdalc. New York. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Dramatic Club; Phillips Brooks House Association. East House: Drama Society. kw rinom 1 J jx arl I Os muwista itacaJs !:, L iHwtScrafe Ftdi d Cob Stales MNUKa I t i ha is: tesri Her te ew , lam i xp Ftk i Csss raa Cam'. we Awxj Lad ha idede (Vri Sc Cerifxec: PAULA MINDES Born on August 3, 1947 at New York, New York. Prepared at Hunter College High School. New York. New York. Home Addrcs : 66-25 103rd Street, Forest HUB, New York. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Film Studies; Music Cub; Phillips Brooks House Association; RadclifTc Government Association; Yacht Gub; Young Democrats. North House: Movie Series 1966-67. MARY LEDYARD MITCHELL Bom on April 15. 1946 at Detroit, Michigan. Prepared at Concord Academy. Concord, Massachusetts. Home Address: 500 Round Hill Road. Greenwich, Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Gilbert and Sullivan Players; Harvard Dramatic Club; Returnees of American Field Service. ALICE SUZANNE MILMED Bom on April 14,1947 at Newark, New Jersey. Prepared at Millbum High School, Millbutn. New Jersey. Home Address: 111 Farley Road. Short Hills, New Jersey. Field of Concentration: English. RadclifTc Government Association. North House: Dorm Committee. Viliii -• t s- .t;. • taiCrst'-- LEE ANNE MORDY Bom on March 14, 1947 at Honolulu, Hawaii. Prepared at Reno High School, Reno, Nevada. Home Address: 1725 Davis Lone, Reno, Nevada. Field of Concentration: Physics. Outing Club; Teacher Aide Program; Young Democrats. MARY HOLLISTER NASH Born on December 14. 1946 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Buckingham, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Home Address: 22 Farrar Street, Cambridge. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Classics. RadclifTc Choral Society; Students for a Democratic Society; Young Democrats. Barber of Seville; South Pacific; Ubu Roi. at rrtJe'u MOBS MARCIA WINN MORGENSTERN Born on July 12, 1946 at Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at Milton Academy, Milton, Massachusetts. Home Address: 255 North Green Bay Road. Lake Forest, Illinois. Field of Concentration Enlgish. Harvard Dramatic Gub. VIVIAN CAROL NASH Born on February 6, 1947 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Lexington High School. Lexington. Massachusetts. Home Address: II Field Road, Lexington, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Anthropology. RadclilTc Freshman Chorus; Gilbert and Sullivan Players; Cantorida Chiesa. M 1 o Q 1 ABIGAIL SUE NATELSON Bom on January I. 1946 nt Newark. New Jersey. Prepared at Montclair College High School. Newark. New Jersey. Home Address: 24 Hudson Avenue. West Orange. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Harvard Dramatic Cub; Harvard Yearbook Publications: Young Democrats. J.B. (Lowell); Thurbtr Carnival (Dunster); Andorra (Adams). HOI-CHAN NGUYEN Bom on January 6, 1947 at Ha Hong. Vietnam. Home Address: 2 Le Thanh-ton. Dalai, South Vietnam. Field of Concentration: Biology. ELIZABETH NEWLON NICHOLAS Bom on January 17. 1948 at New York. New York. Prepared at Ridgewood High School. Ridgewood, New Jersey. Home Address: 340 Kenilworth Road. Ridgewood, New Jersey. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Yearbook Publications; Phillips Brooks House Association; Pre-Medical Society; Dunster Drama Review. EMILY ANN NORWOOD Born on November 26. 1946 at Chelsea. Massachusetts. Prepared at Hudson’s Bay High School, Vancouver, Washington. Home Address: 6701 East Buena Vista Drive. Vancouver. Washington. Field of Concentration: Linguistics and Mathematics. Radclilfe Freshman Chorus; Radcliffc Choral Society: Perrin Turmwachter von 1886; Young Democrats. Swimming. DOROTHY FLORENCE OESTE Bom on May 12, 1947 at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Olncy High School. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Home Address: 314 Fanshawe Street. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: English. Americans for Reappraisal of Far Eastern Policy; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats; Radcliffc Freshman Chorus; Radcliffc Choral Society. GLORIA MONSERRATE ORTIZ Bom on September 21, 1946 at Santurce, Puerto Rico. Prepared at St. John's School, Santurce, Puerto Rico. Home Address: 70 Washington Street. San-turcc. Puerto Rico. Field of Concentration: English. Catholic Student Center. Social Chairman; Radclilfe Freshman Chorus; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. North House: Dorm Committee Social Chairman; Radcliffc Art Show. FERKEL BARFIELD PAGE Born on October 15. 1946 at New York, New York. Prepared at Foscroft School, Middlcburg. Virginia. Home Address: 95 Fifth Street, Carden City, New York. Field of Concentration: Fine Arts. Radcliffc Freshman Chorus; Gilbert and Sullivan Players; Harvard Rad-clilfc Forum Theater (Great American Dr sen). South House: Briggs Hall Social Chairman; Radcliffc Art Show, South Pacific (IPinlhrop). SHEILA PAIGE Bom on August 28,1946 at Washington, D.C. Prepared at Miss Porter’s School. Farmington. Connecticut. Home Address: Carrington Farm. Dclaplane. Virginia. Field of Concentration: Fine Arts. Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. SUSAN ALICE PAUL Bom on August 30, 1946 at Spnngrield. Missouri. Prepared at Palisades High School. Pacific Palisades. California. Home Address: 531 Radclilfe Avenue. Pacific Palisades, California. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. South House: Daniels Hall Dorm Committee. VIVIANE PETER Born on August 18, 1947 at White Plains. New York. Prepared at Westlake School. Los Angeles, California. Home Address: 770 Bonhill Road. Los Angeles. California. Field of Concentration: History. JOYCE ELAINE PETERS Born on January 11.1947 at Ann Arbor. Michigan. Prepared at Lakewood High School. Lakewood, Ohio. Hook Address: 1355 Cranford Avenue, Lake-wood, Ohio. Field of Concentration: Economics. Radclilfe Freshman Chorus: Radclilfe Choral Society; Harvard Student Agencies, Information Gathenng Service; Phillips Brooks House Association. Blood Drive; Radcliffc Government Association. North House Representative: Radclilfe Basketball Team. North House: House Committee. Social Chairman; Comstock Sana! Chairman; Speakers Committee Chairman; Senior Sister. SYLVIA LAURA POGGIOLI Bom on May 19, 1946 at Providence. Rhode Island. Prepared at Buckingham, Cambridge. Massachusetts. Home Address: 30 Hillside Avenue. Cambridge. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Romance Languages. II Cirerfo Italiaito. All's Well That Ends H'e I (Adams). srvssi «« w A for 71a k n Sac ijj,,’ x QtaaB.Utj; wM ib, ; MARGARET RUTH POLATNICK Bom on November 24, 1946 at Bronx. New York. Prepared at Plainvicw High School. Plain view. New York. Home Address: 14 Pearl Drive. Plainvicw, New York. Field of Concentration: History and Literature, herein Turn-wathttr ron 1886; Yacht Club; Young Democrats; Toronto Exchange. South House: Briggs Hall Secretary-Treasurer. EILA MJGE ■ cc A42c3 stiij, ■VX Canaj, i Ctrsfx fe v ■ faid Casaj. « , t. ) «f 3XS BETH LURIE POLLOCK Born on April 22, I94S at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at University of Chicago High School. Chicago. Illinois. Hook Address: 5759 Dorchester Avenue, Chicago. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Biology. Harvard Crimson; Phillips Brooks House Association; Radclilfe Government Association. East House: Cabot Hall Dorm Committee. DRUC1LLA RAMEY Born on March 20. 1946 at Knoxville. Tennessee. Prepared at Walter Johnson High School. Bcthcsda. Maryland. Home Address: 6817 Hillmead Road, Bcthcsda, Maryland. Field of Concentration: Social Studies. Latin American Association; Teacher Aide Program; Young Democrats, Radclitrc Coordinator; Upward Bound. polly McWhorter quick Bom on March 17, 1947 at Evanston. Illinois. Prepared at Watcrvlict High School. Watcrvlict, New York. Field of Concentration: Anthropology. National Merit Scholarship. V AIXI toll tkjjiX.ktrz r. rhasj hcec habCg kttra Slta fe aooe Socasaal ii Hxac Uuxa a Sac Ha ikei PETE I45S 11 SClh ixil iX J im util BL E PfTEAS illftfatat mi i Um d a s«.v tkri A«js Is' ii d Ccnrsa A Fast to fceej.Hwsfc koicec Oos, trail riv ASV m lUttiGa x Sri Rtf 1 : 3as h.u f.esa foncxi to ARLENE RUTH POPKIN Born on December 12, 1946 at New York, New York. Prepared at Great Neck North Senior High School. Great Neck. New York. Home Address: 9 Birch Road. Great Neck, New York. Field of Concentration: Chemistry. Americans for Reappraisal of Far Eastern Policy; Hillcl Society; Phillips Brooks House Association; Radcliffc Government Association; Young Democrats, Speakers Chairman and Corresponding Secretary; Radcliffc Athletic Association. ADELF. RHEA PRESSMAN Bom on November 5, 1946 at South Pasadena. California. Prepared at River side High School. Buffalo. New York. Home Address: 76 Edge Park Avenue, BulTalo, New York. Field of Concentration: English. MARYANNE PUERNER Bom on December 2. 1945 at Mattics-burg, Mississippi. Prepared at Niagara Falls High School, Niagara Falls, New York. Home Address: 1235 Norwood Avenue, Niagara Falls. New York. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. Harvard Policy Committee; Phillips Brooks House Association. NINA M. RATTNER Born on September 24, 1946 at Ney York, New York. Prepared at High School of Music and Art, New York, New York. Home Address: 50 East 10th Street. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: History and Science. Radcliffc Choral Society; Phillips Brooks House Association. CLAUDIA M. VANDER HEUVAL REDWOOD Bom on September 5, 1946 at Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. Prepared at George Mason High School, Falls Church, Virginia. Home Address: 3031 Beech-wood Lane, Falls Church. Virginia. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Married to John Redwood on August 19, 1967. Harvard Student Agencies; Phillips Brooks House Association. RAE LYNN REICKERT Bom on August 4. 1946 at Chicago. Illinois. Prepared at Libcrtyvillc High School, Libcrtyvillc, Illinois. Home Address: 1015 Thombury Lane, Liberty-villc, Illinois. Field of Concentration: English. Christian Science Organization, President and Vice-President; Phillips Brooks House Association. j- ■' -- i . ANNA MARIA QUAGLIATA Born on August 21, 1937 at Rome, Italy. Prepared at Liceo T. Tasso, Rome, Italy. Home Address: 7 Via Mangili, Rome, Italy. Field of Concentration: History. Married to Louis J. Quagliata on November 19, 1961. MARTHA REID Bom on February 22, 1946 at Bethle hem, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Heller town Lower Saucon High School Hellertown, Pennsylvania. Home Ad dress: Williams Church Lane. Heller town, Pennsylvania. Field of Concen tration: English. RADCLIFFE JAMIE GOULD ROSENTHAL Bom on June 25. 1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Rosemary Hall. Greenwich, Connecticut. Home Address: Lakewood Drive, Stamford. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Advocate: Harvard Dramatic Ctub; Young Democrats. Skin of Our Teeth (Lowell): Twelfth Night (Leverett). MARGARET RAMSAY ROSTEN Born on July 19. 1946 at Los Angeles, California. Prepared at Dalton High School. New York. New York. Home Address: 36 Sutton Place South. New York, New York. Field of Concentration: Anthropology. RadclitTc Freshman Chorus; Harvard Dramatic Club; Phillips Brooks House Association; Jazz Dance Workshop; RadclilTcGrant-in-Aid Productions. South House Social Chairman: Quincy House Arts Festival. GAIL PAMELA ROTEGARD Born on January 25. 1947 at Minneapolis. Minnesota. Prepared at Wash-bum High School. Minneapolis. Minnesota. Home Address: 5321 Chatcacy Place. Minneapolis. Minnesota. Field of Concentration: Government. National Merit Scholarship. BARBARA SARD Born on May 22. 1947 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at Ba sidc High School. Bnysidc. Queens. New York. Home Address: 500 East 77th Street. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: Social Studies. Phillips Brooks House Association. Chairman of Community Organization in Cambridge: Young Democrats. Co-Chairman of Poverty Welfare and Housing Committee. National Merit Scholarship. VICKI LEE SATO Born on June 20. I94S at Portland. Oregon. Prepared at Nicholas Senn High School. Chicago. Illinois. Home Address: 4415 North Malden. Chicago. Illinois. Field of Concentration; Biology-North House: House Committee; Comstock Hall Dormitory President and Work Chairman. National Merit Scholarship. ELAINE REBECCA SAVITSKY Born on June 6. 1946 at Derby. Connecticut. Prepared at Shelton High School. Shelton, Connecticut. Home Address: 26 Union Street. Shelton. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Government. Hillel Society: Phillip' Brooks House Association: Radclilfc Government Association: WHRB. Clerk; Young Democrats- North House. Dorm Committee: Senior Sister: Moors Hall Proctor: Dorm Chairman Combined Charities Drive: Cedar Hill Conference 1966. HARRIET NANCY RITVO Bom on September 19. 1946 at Cambridge. Massachusetts. Prepared at Walter Johnson High School. Bethesda. Maryland. Home Address: 5013 Euclid Drive. Kensington. Maryland. Field of Concentration: English. RUTH ELLEN SCHECHTER RUB1NOW Born on June 3. 1946 at White Plains New York. Prepared at Scarsdale High School. Scarsdale. New York. Home Address: 14 Wildwood Road. Scare-dale. New York. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Pierian Sodality; Cellist for Memorial Church. MARILYN JEAN COZZENS SAGE Bom on September 18. 1946 at Toledo. Ohio. Prepared at Lincoln Park High! Lincoln Park. Michigan. Home Address: 19 Wendell Street. Cambridge. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Biology. Married to Jay Peter Sage on September 10, 1966. CHRISTINE ANNE ROBINSON Bom on March 9, 1948 at Urbans. Illinois. Prepared at University High School, Urbana. Illinois. Home Address: 1510 Alma Drive. Champaign. Illinois. Field of Concentration: Anthropology. ELISE NOEL ROSENHAUPT Bom on March 30. 1948 at New York. New York. Prepared at Miss Fine's School. Princeton. New Jersey. Home Address: Mount Lucas Road, Princeton. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: History. Advocate. VIRGINIA THOMAS ROWLAND Born on February 22. 1946 at Bouon Massachusetts. Prepared at Wmior School. Boston. Massachusetts Home Address: 154 Brattle Street. Cambridge Massachusetts. Field of Concentration’ History. Phillips Brooks House Avso! C if I ion; Students for a Democratic Society. ’'•Vi S' l Y ■■Jnu • ' ■r-flfcfciB tVNlA aiS|k ■ Wan,., l xk i WVqri, tevattfC -. tv KM ASUD KrZ.Vtlap K gfc 9h n lb Mb ®E )al«i£e i fate Ate MaitiS c c : . Uro jri; Sfjtf Js? V “ '--:v r‘ 0+t UK SUSAN HELENE SCHILDKRAUT Bom on September 6, 1946 at Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. Prepared at Miss Fine's School. Princeton. New Jersey. Home Address: Ovington Road. Morris-villc. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: English. Radcliffc Freshman Chorus; Radcliffc Choral Society. Asian Tour Groqp; Phillips Brooks House Association. Prisons Committee; Returnees of American Field Service: Yacht Oub;Canton Da Chiesa; Winant Volunteers. East House: Social Committee. CHRISTINA SCHLESINGER Born on November 19.1946 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at Madeira School, Green way. Virginia. Home Address: 109 Irving Street. Cambridge. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Dunstcr Christmas May. CAROL JOYCE SCHUPPIEN Bom on February 2, 1946 at Derby. Connecticut. Prepared at Milbridge High School, Milbridge, Maine. Home Address: Cherryfield Road. Milbridge. Maine. Field of Concentration: English. NAOMI EDNA SCHWARTZ Bom on January' 27, 1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at Ramaz School. New York, New York. Home Address: 490 West End Avenue, New York. New York. Field of Concentration: English. Phillips Brooks House Association. KATHERINE LITCHFIELD SCOTT Bom on December 9. 1946 at Oak Bluffs, Massachusetts. Prepared at Commonwealth School, Boston, Massachusetts. Home Address: Lamberts Cove Road. Vineyard Haven, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. SALLY STARLING SEAVER Born on July 27, 1946 at Marblehead. Massachusetts. Prepared at Fayetteville Manlius High School, Manlius, New York. Home Address: Beaver Pond Road, Lincoln. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Chemistry. Phillips Brooks House Association; United Church of Christ Fellowship. North House: Social Committee; North House Dinners Committee. Phi Beta Kappa. NANETTE SUSAN SEGAL Bom on November 8, 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at North Miami Senior High School. North Miami. Florida. Home Address: 1230 North East 176 h Street, North Miami Beach, Florida. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Hillcl Society; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. KATHRYN ELLEN SENCABAUGH Bom on April 24. 1947 at Medford-Massachusetts. Prepared at Medford High School, Medford, Massachusetts. Home Address: 43 Fountain, Medford, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Harvard Dramatic Cub; Phillips Brooks House Association; Radcliffc Choral Society; University Choir. The Unicorn ilie Gorgon and tlx Manlicort (Lcvcreti): Moors Hall Dorm Conunittee (Social Chairman); North House Social Committee; Daniels Hall Dorm Committee (Secretary). LAURA SHAPIRO Bom on June 20, 1946 at Cambridge. Massachusetts. Prepared at Needham High School, Needham. Massachusetts. Home Address: 28 Bird Street. Needham, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Radcliffc Choral Society, Manager. BARBARA ANN SHORE Bom on November I. 1946 at Dayton, Ohio. Prepared at Princeton High School, Princeton, New Jersey. Home Address: 348 West Kings Highway, Haddonficld. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Government. Hillcl Society, Council Member; Phillips Brooks House Association; WHRB; Young Democrats, Recording Secretary . KATHRYN ANNA SHORE Bom on June 12, 1946 at Detroit, Michigan. Prepared at Kmgswood School Cranbrook, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. Home Address: 1119 Covington Road. Birmingham. Michigan. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Experiment in International Living; Phillips Brooks House Association; Yacht Club. CONSTANCE MAINES SHROUT Bom on April 27, 1946 at Medina, New York. Prepared at L A. Webber High School, Lyndonville, New York. Home Address: 900 Memorial Drive 710 West, Cambridge. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: Fine Arts. Married to William Gay Shrout on June II. 1966. Phillips Brooks House Association. North House: House Committee; Social Chairman and Judicial Committee. RADCLIFFE CARY HALSEY SMITH Bom on December 17, 1946 at Princeton, New Jersey. Prepared at Miss Fine’s School, Princeton. New Jersey. Home Address: 62 Hodge Road, Princeton, New Jersey. Field of Concentration: History. Phillips Brooks House Association: RadclifTc Government Association. SARAH WINTHROP SMITH Bom on December 9. 1947 at Boston, Massachusetts. Prepared at Garden City-High School. Garden City, New York. Home Address: 160 Poplar Street. Garden City, New York. Field of Concentration: English. Advocate, Secretary; Harvard Art Review, Proofreader; Harvard Yearbook Publications; YardHng: RadclifTe Fencing Captain. National Merit Scholarship. MARY THEODORA STILLMAN Bom on December IS. 1945, in New York. New York. Prepared at Chapin School, New York. New York. Home Address: 820 Fifth Avenue. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: Physical Sciences. Radclitfc Freshman Chorus; Catholic Student Association. Treasurer. RadclilTc Basketball. TIMOTHY STILLMAN Bom on April 3.1946 at New York. New York. Prepared at Shipley School. Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania. Home Address: Clark Road. Litchfield. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: English. MARTHA GROSSMAN STAMP! I R Horn on February 24. 1947 at Nc York. New York. Prepared at White Plains High School. White Plains. York. Home Address: 2 Norths Place, White Plains. New York Field of Concentration: Biology. Married to Kenneth A. Stampfer on July 23. I%7 Hillel Society, Executive Council; Phil, lips Brooks House Association. MAREN ELIZABETH STANGE Bom on March 9. 1947 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at Northrop Collegiate School. Minneapolis. Minnesota. Home Address: 69 Chestnut Street. Boston. Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: English. Advocate. HELEN DELIA STEINBERG Born on November 10. 1947 at Nr York. New York. Prepared at Andrew Jackson High School. Cambna Heights. New York. Home Address: 117-21 225th Street, Cambria Heights. New York. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Outing Club; Yacht Cub; Young Democrats. JULIA CONGDON SPRING Born on October 30. 1945, in Melrose, Massachusetts. Prepared at Bellevue Senior High School. Bellevue, Washington. Home Address: 10817 SE 16th Street. Bellevue, Washington. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Phillips Brooks House Association: Young Democrats; Experiment in International Living. JEAN ANTOINETTE STILWELL Born on September 23. 1946 at Annapolis. Maryland. Prepared at F. C. Hammond High School. Alexandria. 'ir' ginia. Home Address: 409 Major Andre Road. Virginia Beach. Virginia. Field of Concentration: English. Catholic Student Center. North House: House Committee; North House Social Chairman. Holmes Hall Social Chairman. LAURA MARGARET SLATKIN Bom on February 28, 1947 at New York. New York. Prepared at The Drearlcy School. New York. New York. Home Address: 1185 Park Avenue, New York. New York. Field of Concentration: Classics. Hillel Society; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. Under Milk wood (D uniter); The Frogs (Dun ster). DEBORAH CLARE SLOTKIN Bom on April 3. 1947 at New York, New York. Prepared at Hunter College High School. New York. New York. Home Address: 510 East 20th Street. New York, New York. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Phillips Brooks House Association, Co-Chairman American Indian Project. National Merit Scholarship; Sperry and Hutchinson Scholarship. CAROLE DIANNE SMITH Bom on June 12. 1945 at Seattle, Washington. Prepared at Ingraham High School. Seattle, Washington. Home Address: 11350 Exeter Avenue North East. Seattle. Washington. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. CAROLINE WHITMELL STIMPSON Born on September 28, 1946 at Bellingham. Washington. Prepared at Bellingham High School. Bellingham, Washington. Home Address: 115 South Forest, Bellingham, Washington. Field of Concentration: English. MARY MILES TEACHOUT Born on June 29, 1945 at Fort Worth, Texas. Prepared at Beaverton High School, Beaverton, Oregon. Home Address: Box 216, Beaverton. Oregon. Field of Concentration: English. Married to Peter R. Tcachout on October I, 1965. Freshman Council: Phillips Brooks House Association: Radclilfc Government Association, Secretary. FRANCINE LIDA STONE Bom on March 29,1946 at Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. Pre| ared at Baldwin School, Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania. Home Address: 2100 Castilian Drive, Hollywood, California. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Drama Review; Harvard Dramatic Club, Corresponding Secretary and President. at Miat v ' . ■ v ;: mSaoeiKjJ' -ESS CHANTAL FRANCOISE TELLER Born on August 12, 1946 at St. Bermain En Layc, France. Prepared at Berkeley High School, Berkeley. California. Home Address: 267 Gravatt Drive. Berkeley. California. Field of Concentration: Government. Married to Paul Teller on August 26. 1966. Phillips Brooks House Association; Teacher Aid Program. DEBORAH STAKES STRONG Born on November 6. 1946 at Evanston, Illinois. Prepared at North Shore Country Day School, Winnctka. Illinois. Home Address: 326 Ridge Avenue, Winnctka, Illinois. Field of Concentration: German. Freshman Council; Rad-cliffc Freshman Chorus; Gilbert and Sullivan Players; Vtrtln Turmwachter von I8S6. SUSAN WENDY TELLER Bom on August 31, 1946 at Los Alamos. New Mexico. Prepared at Berkeley High School. Berkeley, California. Home Address: 1573 Hawthorne Terrace, Berkeley. California. Field of Concentration: Mathematics. Outing Club; RadclitTc Freshman Chorus. KATHARINE TRUE THOMPSON Bom on July 16. 1945. in Providence. Rhode Island. Prepared at Putney School. Putney. Vermont. Home Address: South Tamworth. New Hampshire. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Freshman Chorus: Phillips Brooks House Association. LESLIE JEANNE TAFT Bom on May 10, 1947 at Jersey City, New Jersey. Prepared at North Bergen High School, North Bergen, New Jersey. Home Address: 4401 Kennedy Boulevard. North Bergen, New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Fine Arts. VICTORIA GILBERT TRAUBE Bom on September 3, 1946 at Los Angeles, California. Prepared at Ficld-ston School. New York. New York. Home Address: 168 West S6th Street. New York. New York. Field of Concentration: English. Harvard Dramatic Club. Recording Secretary. The Beggar's Opera (Adams): Andorra (Adams); The Marriage of Figarro (LeveretI). SUSAN TALBOT Bom on December II. 1945 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at Woodrow Wilson High School, Washington, D.C. Home Address: American Embassy. Athens, Greece. Field of Concentration; History. Shield. East House: House Committee; Cabot Hall Vice President ; Head Senior Sister; East House Representative. JUV i Hr tas fed Cxcs C CLAIRE BARDIN TROTZKY Born on April 14. 1947 at Wilkesbarre, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Masters School, Dobbs Ferry, New York. Home Address: 35 Yeager Avenue. Forty Fort, Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Phillips Brooks House Association Raddiffc Government Association: RadclitTc Freshman Council. VIDOSAVA TARANOVSKI Bom on March 5, 1945 at Belgrade, Yugoslavia. Prepared at Belmont High School, Belmont, Massachusetts. Home Address: 309 Lake Street, Arlington, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Judo Club. Jordan J. Social Chairman. RADCLIFFE MARTHA ELIZABETH TUCK Bom on July 1.1946at New York. New York. Prepared at Garden City High School. Garden City. New York. Home Address: 95 Brook Street. Garden City. New York. Field of Concentration: English. CATHERINE SMITH VANDYCK Born on March 24. 1946. in Orange, New Jersey. Prepared at Columbia High School. Maplewood. New Jersey Home Address: 350 Mcadowbrook Lane. South Orange. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: History and Literature Kaddilfc Gosemment Association, Committee on Sophomore Standing. Co-Chairman. ANNE MARIE TURRELL Bom on February 25. 1947 at Eugene. Oregon. Prepared at Warren Senior High School. Downey. California. Home Address: 7435 East Quinn Street. Downey, California. Field of Concentration: History- House Committee. MARGARET ANN UTTERBACK Bom on March 25. 1946 at St. Louis. Missouri. Prepared at White Station High School. Memphis. Tennessee. Home Address: 350 North Perkins Road, Memphis. Tennessee. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Phillips Brooks House Association: Rad-clilTe Choral Society: RadclilTc Freshman Chorus: Wesley Foundation in Cambridge. MURIEL LUND VAN DUSEN Bom on December 10. 1945 at New York. New York. Prepared at Agnes Irwin School. Rosemont. Pennsylvania. Home Address: 314 Kent Road, Wynne-wood. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Phillips Brooks House Association. Mental Hospitals Committee: Radclitre Government Association. Dorm Representative. HELEN DE HAVEN VINTON Bom on March 2, 1946 at Buenos Aires. Argentina. Prepared at The Ethel Walker School. Scansbury. Connecticut. Home Address: Dogwood Lane. Rye, New York. Field of Concentration: English. RAJKA B. VUGLEN Born on December 16. 1946 at Zagreb. Yugoslavia. Prepared at Princeton High School. Princeton, New Jersey. Home Address: R.D. 3. Princeton. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: English. JANET PRENTISS WARD Born on May 8. 1946 at Newark. New Jersey. Prepared at Chatham High School. Chatham. New Jersey Home Address: 108 Fairmount Avenue. Chatham. New Jersey. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Shield: RadclilTc Freshman Chorus; RadclilTc Choral Society. Asian Tour. FUtian's Rainbe (Quincy); Quincy Evening of Low Comedy. ANN ELIZABETH SWANSON VANDERBILT Born on October 15.1946 at Milwaukee. Wisconsin. Prepared at Milwaukee Downer Seminary. Milwaukee. Wisconsin. Home Address: 726 Daisy Lane, Milwaukee. Wisconsin. Field of Concentration: Fine Arts. Married to Mr. Vanderbilt on December 22. 1967. CORNELIA HENRIETTE JOCOBA VAN DER ZIEL Born on May 6. 1946 at Eindhoven. The Netherlands. Prepared at Edina Mom ingsidc High School, Edina. Minnesota Home Address: 4405 Grimes Avenue Minneapolis. Minnesota. Field of Con centration: Chemistry. Radcliirc Fresh man Council: RadclilTc Freshman Chorus: Phillips Brooks House Association: Young Democrats; Jubilee Committee. Ditto and Aeneas (Lowell): The Tarn of the Screw (Lowell); Comstock Hall l)orm Committee. ELLEN BISPHAM WATERSTON Bom on December 10. 1946 at Boston. Massachusetts. Prepared at St. Mary's in the Mountains School. Littleton. New Hampshire. Home Address: 20 Stevens Street. North Andover. Massachusetts Field of Concentration: Fine Arts. Harvard Crimson; RadclilTc Freshman Chorus; Harvard Dramatic Club. RadclilTc Government Association: RadclilTc Skiing and Tennis. NANCY STIMPSON WATTERS Born on January 15, 1946 at Hartford. Connecticut. Prepared at Oxford School. Hartford. Connecticut. Home Address: 56 Bainbridge Road. West Hartford. Connecticut. Field of Concentration: English. 55s NANCY VIRGINIA WEBSTER Born on July 13, 1946 at Havertown, Pennsylvania. Prepared at Swarthmorc High School. Swarthmorc. Pennsylvania. Home Address: 60S Elm Avenue. Swarthmorc. Pennsylvania. Field of Concentration: American History. Americans for Reappraisal of Far Eastern Policy: Harvard Dramatic Club: Harvard Student Agencies; International Relations Council: Phillips Brooks House Association; RadclitTc Government Association;’ Yacht Gub; Young Democrats; Raddiffc Choral Society. Publicity Manager; Radclilfe Sailing. South House Drama Society; Guys and Dolls (Gram in aid) Costume Designer and Wardrobe Mistress: Dorm Committee Member; Freshman Representative. National Merit Scholarship: Radcliffe Club of Philadelphia Scholarship. ‘iClfN ns 03 IMfrVsi's Qccu Vi Jn?.s FcaastctCr toas difca bm Sss ■ JOYCE WEENE Born on February 14, 1961 at Cambridge, Massachusetts. Prepared at Somerville High School, Somerville. Massachusetts. Home Address: 257 Broadway, Somerville, Massachusetts. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Leverett House Optra; Quincy House Drama. CLAUDIA GUIOVNA WEILL Bom on December 20, 1946 at New York, New York. Prepared at Scars-dale High School, New York, New York. Home Address: 5 Paddington Road, Scarsdale, New York. Field of Concentration: History and Literature. Cercle Francois: Experiment in International Living: Film Studies; Harvard Art Review; Phillips Brooks House Association. South House: South House Art Show. ELISABETH RHOADES WINEBERG Bom on September 17, 1945 at Chicago, Illinois. Prepared at New Trier Township High School. Winnetka. Illinois. Home Address: 205 Chestnut. Chicago, Illinois. Field of Concentration: Fine Arts. Catholic Student Center: Phillips Brooks House Association; Yacht Club. FRANCES MARY WINSTON Bom on October 17. 1946 at Washington. D.C. Prepared at Garrison Forest School. Garrison, Maryland. Home Address: 6401 Murray Hill Road, Baltimore. Maryland. Field of Concentration: Government. Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. MARGARET ROSSOFF WINTERS Born on June 22. 1947 at Brooklyn New York. Prepared at Midwood HigI School. Brooklyn, New York. Horn Address: 13 Ml. Auburn Street, Cam bridge, Massachusetts. Field of Concen iration: English. Married to Stephen M Winters on September 16. 1966. Phillip: Brooks House Association; Students foi a Democratic Society; YardUng, Rad clilfc Editor. National Merit Scholar ship; Presidential Scholar. SUSANNAH HENDRICKS WOOD Bom on November 12, 1946 at New York, New York. Prepared at The Chapin School. New York, New York. Home Address: 133 East 80th Street. New York, New York. Field of Concentration: Classics. Radclilfe Freshman Council; Gilbert and Sullivan Players; Jubilee Committee, Secretary; RadclitTc Government Association; Young Republicans; Raddiffc Freshman Chorus; Raddiffc Choral Society; Phillips Brooks House Association, American Indian Project; Harvard Toronto Exchange; Harvard University Choir; Harvard Raddiffc Combined Charities; RadclitTc Sports. North House: Freshman Gass Committee (Chairman). ELIZABETH BUEL WRIGHT Bom on August 4, 1946 at Hartford. Connecticut. Prepared at Oxford School. Hartford, Connecticut. Home Address: 30 Sycamore Road, West Hartford, Connecticut. Field of Concentration: English. THERESA MARY WYSZOWSKI Bom on February 13,-1946 at Kassel. West Germany. Prepared at Lyman Hall High School. Wallingford. Connecticut. Home Address: 44 South Main Street, Wallingford, Connecticut. Field of Concentration: Social Relations. Catholic Student Center; Phillips Brooks House Association: Pre-Medical Society. East House: House Committee. National Merit Scholarship. NADINA YANKO Born on June 20. 1946 at Akron. Ohio. Prepared at Old Trail School, Bath. Ohio. Home Address: 8440 Wiese Road. Brecksvillc. Ohio. Field of Concentration: English. RadclitTc Freshman Chorus; RaddifTc Choral Society, Asian Tour. ROSEMARIE YEVICH Born on April 20. 1948 at Berwick, Pennsylvania. Prepared at St. Charles Senior High School. St. Charles, Missouri. Home Address: 700 North 5th Street. St. Charles, Missouri. Field of Concentration: Applied Mathematics. Byzantine Russian Liturgical Choir. EVANGELYN WISE Bom on September 3, 1946 at I-ong Beach. California. Prepared at Woodrow Wilson High School. Long Beach, California. Home Address: 780 Santiago Avenue, Long Beach, California. Field of Concentration: Biochemical Sciences. RaddifTc Government Association, Red-book Committee; Radcliffe Freshman Chorus; Radcliffe Choral Society. W E JANE AMANDA ZIRPOLI Bom on August 3, 1946 at San Francisco. California. Prepared at Convent of the Sacred Heart, San Francisco, California. Home Address: 1140 Greenwich Street. San Francisco. California. Field of Concentration: History. Catholic Student Center; Harvard Dramatic Club; Phillips Brooks House Association; Young Democrats. Mrs. Susan B. Babe (Bramhall) Brenda Sue Baker Celia Helen Bowers Rebecca J. Brown Alexandra Bruce Mary E. Butler Lucinda Munroc Carnahan Lavinia Chase Marga Cooper Patricia Brown Davidson Mrs. Katharine B. Davis Joel Heyward Demott Jane Zeni Flinn Phyllis Emily Granoff Susan J. Hertcr Lois Ann Hilfikcr Judith M. Jacobs Mrs. Susan M. Jameson Mrs. Deborah Stoke Strong Kaiser Jeanne Flora Laflamme Caroline Joan Leaf Norma Louise Levin Reeve Morrow Lindbergh Jacqueline Lindsay Jennifer Leaning Link Mrs. Helen C. Maniadis Leon ore Beth Max Elizabeth Craig Moore Mrs. Ann S. O'Connell Carolyn Parmet Deborah Ann Randall Mrs. Katherine F. Crolius Rhee Mrs. Judith Mebane Rowley Loretta Anne Ryan Deborah H. Schull Lee Sherman Emilic Heffron Sisson Sharon Margaret Smith Ellen Andrea Snyder Deborah Warren H. Whitney Wntriss Geraldine Zagarella Ann E. Zimmerman HARVARD INDEX « ton life kaala torreCfea Lcattfefc luxcCsits I Va .A= £ ctari Cerste Qaniteia! . Ifica? CaiJ nfagUsb; teatais Deos-fci lsSr= East a£s tr «-Tr:S= SeAsaSr OSotir: 8 ba? ci 2«rj teEZscr A Beals. Whitney A. Quirey Bean. Gary M. Wmthrop AWoa Michael H Quincy Bean, Jeffrey W. Dunster Abramson, Lawrence M. Lovell Bean. Slcsen M. EI.c Ackerman. David B Adams Beaulieu. John J.. Jr. Leserett Acomauxchi. Joseph M . ,Jr. Dudky Beck. Cary W. Eliot Adi mi, Daniel J. Leserett Beck. Stuart J. Lowell Adirm. John F. Llioc Beebe. Alfred S. Adams Adams, Peter M. Leseretl Bell. David Paine Quincy Adrlsbcrg. Bernard R. Elioc Belkr. Daniel J. Kirkland Ato, Join M. Lowell Belkr. Robert Kitkland Ad'er, Warren Leserett Belter, Keith B. Kitkland Adi. Owuyaw V, Wmthrop Bemis. John G. Elioc Aimer. James fi. Eliot Benedict. Geoffrey C. Quincy AJlllt. Chirks R. Kirkland Beoemeo. Harold B. Dudley Akunder, Jonathan Quincy Benntlt. James P. Lowtil Akundcr. Lee J. Quincy Bennett. Paul W. Eliot Allen. Broee C. Dudky Bennelt. Robert J. Adams All. James B. Kirkland Bennett. S. G.. Ill Adams All, Wanton D. Adams Bennion. Roy 1. Lowell Alter. Peter J. Dossier [tenuck. Jon C. Leserelt Amao'. Daniel Leserett Iter . Peter C. Kirkland Anderson. Daswl E. Winthrop Berger. Paul S. Winthrop Anderson. Sceet V. Dunster Berk man. Richard L. Kirkland AnJrcne. Riehatd C. Lowell Berner. Richard B. Kirkland Anura. Michael S. Dudky Berner. Thomas R Leserett Antoason. frank B. Quincy Bemhoft. Rohm A. Winthrcp Appel. Kenneth G Dunster Berr.itc.-i. Larry R. Eliot Apjlrtoo. Marc F. Dudley Bernstein. Roy W. Qurscy Aranow, Peter 1. Quincy Benin. Alan D. Kirkland Aranow, Philip T. Dudky Berwick. Donald M. Winthrop Archaha). Daniel A. Lowell Birch. Alan J. Q-« Arnold. Geoffrey H. Adams Bimhaum. Nathan S. leserett A moo. Stephen S. Lowell Black. Gordon M. Eliot Aren. A. M. Diot Black. Stanley E. Adams Asher. Jimet D.. Jr. Quincy Blackwell. Andrew G Adams Asher. Jonathan D Lowell Blankenship. Leroy W. Dunster Aubn. Stephen W Wmthrop Btodfet. Henry T. Leserett Ault. James. Jr. Dudky Bleed. Walter F. Eliot Aseritt. Neil W. Adams Blumberg. William A. Kirkland A«ten. Join. II Eliot Bcfdasarian. Ronald S. Eliot Ayres. Charles L Winthrcp Boggs. Roy E.. Jr. Leserett Arikrae. Naachuhra A. Dusstee Bohnen. Michael J. Leserett Bd.. Tcdd W. Dudley Bolster. Marshall G . Jr. Leseeett Bormstnn J. M. Lowell B Boright. Charks A. KirkUnd Bortr. Arnold L- Wmthrop Bachieh. Gecete A. Dunster (lottceuri, Thomas W. Dunsltr Bachila. Gary R. Winthrop Bowen. Stesen H. EI=ot Baker. James A. Dudky Bower. James S. Quncy Baker, Junes V. Lowell Bowles. Franklin G. Adams Baker. Paul Kirkland Boy an. Craig S. Dudley Baker. Hebert l .. Jr. Adams Boyk. Leo V . Jr. Dudley Ballard. Mm F. Dudky Boyntcn. John W. Dudley Balk . Travis W. Kirkland Bradtey. Robert L- Dudley Bandoan, John J. Dunster Bramard. Bruce M. KirkUnd Banys. Peter Kirkland Braun. William II. Eliot Barker. Pkrce Lowell Breen. Dennis R. Kirkland Barker. Wiliam B Kirkland Bncc. Edward W. Kirkland Bareaby. Charles S. Wmthrop Bnck. David C. Quatcy Barnes. Benya-nn A . Jr. Dudky Brillembourg. Attuio E. Eliot Barnett. Stephen D. Dossier Bromberg. Chantey V. Dudky Barrett. Wiliam J Dudky Brook. James Donated Bartlett, Paul A. Leserett Brooks. David C. Eliot Banco. Lee B Eliot Brooks. Robert T. Elk.1 Baronin. John Dudky Brown. Barry Lowell Batteau. Jokes M. Dudky Brown. Datvd F. Leserett Baumann.John R. Eboc Brown. Edward M. Winthrop Baunfart. Bruce G. Leserett Brown. John O . Jr. Dudky Bayne, John M . Jr. Leserett Brown. Lawrence D. Leserett Beale. Howard K.. Jr. Ehot Brown. Michael D. Dudky Browne. Howell E. Kirkland Cheek. Richard W. Lowell It run m. Peter R. Wiv.hrcp Cheney. Bryan C. Eliot Bruns. Eric W. Kirkland Chemey. Dasid L. Lowell Buckley. Richard F. Eliot Chessman. Robert O. Adams Buddenhagen. Paid S. Eliot Chiediro. Doesald J. KirkUnd Burhrem. Join A. Lowell Chirgwin. John M. Leserett Bullitt. William C.. II Lowell Chiu. Wei-l Quincy Bulloch. Steven N. Winthrop Chor. Philip N. Lowell Bunker. John W. Quincy Chrotnow. Chirks E- Leserett Burbank, Stephen B. Kirkland Chu. George T. C. Dunsltr Burdick. Robert G.. Jr. Lowell Cisin, Michael A. Quincy Burke. John M. leserett CUIlin, Robert I). Dudky Burke. Nicholas R Eliot Clark, Dennis P. Dunster Burke. Timothy Quincy Clark. Grensille. Ill Eliot Burlatctr. Nikolai Dumlcr Clark. Hugh C , IV Dunsltr R-rnes, Daniel C. Kirkland CUrk, Lyman II. Dunsltr Burnett. Donald L-. Jr. Q««r Clark. Theodore E. Dunsltr Burns, ChrittcpSer J. Eliot Clarke. Edwas K.. Ill KirkUnd Bums, William W.. Ill Loutll Ckgg. Paul T. Dudley Burr. Craig L. Quincy Ckment. John J. Eliot Hum I. KKhard W. Adams Clowes. Alesander W. Leseittt Burskm. John A Kirkland Cluster. Richard B. Quincy Burt. James H. Adams Coakky. Janies F. Leserett Burt. Peter J. Quincy Cobb. William B. Quincy Burnell, langden G. Dudley Cobb. Wiliam S. Leserett Butler. Howard M. Quincy Cochrane. David R Leseeett Butler. Nathaniel G. Winthrop Cohen. Alan R. Winthrop Bumcy. Sheldon M. Quincy Cohen. Mars in S. Dunster Bye. R eland E. Kirkland Coin. Richard A. Quincy Byrnes. Gregory W. Elsce Cole. Elkrte P. Ebot Cok. Garrick F. DuJJey Cole. Wayne L. Dudley Cobtti. Paul D. Lowtil CoCsss, Gregory P. KirkUnd Coflxaog. Thomas P. Kirkland Connell. Frederick A. Lowell c Connor. Peter Y. Eliot Connors. Laurence J. Adams Cabral. Marco A.. Jr. Leserett Comidase. Termee M. Eliot C'accamise. Paul L. Adams Coobs. James L. Jr. D.nster Cam. Martin H. Eliot Cook. Joseph E . Jr. Leseeett Calfee. David L Adams Cook. Robert E. Leserett Calkins. Peter II KirkUnd Coolidge. Francis L.. Jr. Kirkland Camacho. Manuel F. Adams Coooradt. Peter F. Leserett Camp. John M, II Dunster Cooper. Daniel S. Leserett Campbell. Christopher S. Lowell Copeland. Lawrence D . II Adams Canning. Cuitis R Quncy Cofcn. Rebert S. Adams Cannon. Donald E. Winthrop Coekery. Paul J. Quincy Caneoneri. Vincent J. Adams ComUalt. Marc S. WaMhrop Carbon. l_ T.. Jr. Aelams Cot ten. Stephen E. Dudky Carlson. William D. Dudley CougNm. Christopher T. Lowell Carlsson. Bo AW. Dudley Cowan. Douglas F. Leserett Carman, Ernest W. Like Cos. James E. Quincy Carrraehaet. Louis D Dudley Craford. John K Lowell Carpenter. Dunbar S Lowell Craig. Jerry D. Leserett Carr, Peler F. Lowell Crane. Peter G. Dudky Carr. Robert H . Jr. Eliot Crawford. M. B. Dudky Carrera. Guilkrmo F. Qnncy Crcspi. Michael A Eliot Caudy. Cott B. Adams Crigger. Gary B. Eho Casebeer. lane C. Dudky Crocker. John P,. IV Dunster Caudffl. FranUas T. Eliot Cross. Robert S Lowell Case. George E. KirkUnd Crourne. George P.. Jr. Dudley Ccteon, Marry J.. Jr. Quincy Crouse. Dennis N. Adams Cetf. Jonathan F. Lowell Creuse. Timothy Leserett Chaissen. Jeneph M. Dudky Crowe. Wiliam E. Elioc Chan. Philip Quincy Crump. Stephen W. Winthrop Chang. Kcneseth K. Lowell Cunningham. Robot T. Elioc Charpel. Winston B. Quincy Cuttis, Christopher C. KirkUnd Chase. Eric A. Dudley Curtis. Frank R. Adams Chate. Philip G. Wmthrop Curtis. George E. Dsdle, Chase. Philip S. Eliot Cutler. Eliot R Lowell Chassin. Mail R. G. Leserett Cutkr. John C. Lowell I D Dahl, Cnstopbtr C. law. 11 Daniel, Richatd II. Kirkland Dirndl E.S.. Ill Kirkland Darby. 1- A.. Ill Eliot IXnenpoit. Anthony II l.enxell Ikixcitpon. Edward A El ot Dividton, L. J. Quincy Davis, Box K. Winthrop Dxxn. Edward J. Wmthrop Davis, George F. Ad.xnix IXixix. John D. Lcxerett Daxn. Joxeph A.. Jr. Winthrop Dawkins. WiBie L. Kirkland DeAUrcon. IVxlro A. Wmthrop DeAlbquetque. Marcos C. C. Winthrop DeHcttcocourt. Joxeph M. Wmthrop DeBruyn Kop . Julian Quincy DeHart. Douglas A. Dunxtet IWore. Dax J V. Dudley DeYoung. Stephen W. Adarm Dean. Jamex P. IXmxtcr Delaney. Jeremiah T. Elk Dclcexy, Ouriex D. Lexeretl Demment. Montagoe W.. II Wmthrop Dcmuth. Chrixtophet C. Eliot D Erlanger. Rcdolfe F. Eliot IV®ey. Jcbm H. Lowed Dickinson. William C.. Jr. ix-.di DkLnxan. Paul R. Dudley DietTer.bxh. Brxxe C. Wmthrop Dion. Arthur N. Quincy Dohro®. Matthew 1. Lowed Dodd. Stephen M Dunxter Dole. Robert N. M. Dailey Dollotr. Donald B. Kirkland Donat, Jeffrey R. Dudley Donnelly. Joxeph H. Winthrop Doran. Jeffrey L. Ixxerelt Doran. Ncebert A. Dunxter Douglass, Alfred W.. Jr. Wmthrop Dowdell, Donald A. Daxxter Doyle. Richard B. Dunxter Duane. Joxeph M. Adarm Diabhn. Thomax L. Dudley Duff. WiJiam P. Quincy Duggan. Hayden A. Lowell Defend. Richard V. Quincy Duke. G. W. Winthrop Durxdon. JelTrcy M. Lexerctt Durham. George H . II D £ey Dyett. Michael V. Dairy Dyrcr-Ereefixin. Stanisla® M. Lowell E Fatly, Janxa F., Ill Dunxter Faxton. Robert S„ Jr. Lowell Eckcl. Malcolm D. IXaxxter Eddy. Andrew H . Jr. Adams Edmund . John C. Quincy Ldwardt. Archibald C.. Jr. Eliot Edwards. Burton V. Quincy Edwards. Thomas C. Dudley Egan. Jacob S. Lexerctt Einstein. Theodore L. Adams Eklund. David C. Lowell Ellis. Richard S. Winthrop Edrrunn. Michael W. Adams Emermaa. Robert D. Lexerctt Erxdcr. Jon T. Adams Entis. Elliot Z. Dudley Epstein. Jay S. Lcxerett Erdmann. Anthony C. Dudley Escotl. Paul D. Lexeretl Est«. Charla N. Eliot Evans. Thomas C. Dunxter F Fallow, Rachard W . Jr. Lcxrrcu Farr. Paul O Kirkland Faught. Raymond E-. Jr. Lexeretl Fedenco. James J.. Jr. Elio Lemberg. Robert B Quincy Felder. Daxxtt A . Jr. Quincy Feldman. Dennis J. Lowell Fridman. Mark J. Elio Fct ten stein. Andrew Lowell Fernter, Thomas J Dimuer Field. Barry E. Lcxerett F eld. Lincoln P. IXrfey Fields. Henry M Lowell Fields. Steven L. Adams Fmkelhoe. S D Dudley Fmley. John J Lowell Fish burn. JoFcx 1) Eliot 1 ether. John R Dudley 1 ixkc. Alan I . Dunxter 1 M pulrKk. Ihomix II Kirkland Fnetish. MkKicI M Dudley llesh, George M 1 owed 1 Sett lire, William A Kukl.mil FliCk. Hugh M . Jr. lowed linker. Wayne M l.cnstll Leu. K •chard I1. Kirkland Esdey. Ilnais I.. Q—cy lok). IXsxid R Dunxter Foley. Henry K-. Ji Qu-xcy lolty. .Mkh l 1 Quincy 1 ollaixd. Gerald B lexerctt 1 ontneau. Carl S. l.owell l orbes. Peter M. Adarm 1 orbuth. Nathaniel VI Admix Foss, Howard W.. Jr. Winthrop Foster. IXixkI V. Lexeretl loulkcv Robert. Ill Lcxerett 1 outs. I.uther S . Ill Quincy Fox. Frederick J Adams Fos. John G. Kirkland Frantz. Michael J Dunxter FrexJenckxon. G. J Kirkland FrexJo. Robert F . Jr IXaxster Freedman. Robert Adams Enexkl. David A Adams 1 nurf. Kenneth It Dudley Fuchs. Stuart 1. Kirkland lujita. Byron N. IXaxster Forty. W.lliamS Adams Furrc. Barrx W. Qumcy G GabH. Peter J. Lowell Gabo . Harold N. Lowell Gage. 1 airy S. Lowell Gagen. Thomas F. Adams Gagtiardi. Peter A. Winthrop Gahan. James C . Ill Winthrop Gailey . Timothy H. Kirkland Gall.. Stephen J Elio« Garcia Pcxlrosa. Jose R. Adams Gardner. Ian H Kirkland Cana, Michael N. Qumcy Gatnty. John P . Jr. Eliot Gatsin. Jama H„ Jr. Eliot Gasiium, Vincent A. Eliot Gauld. Alan M. Lcxerett Gexxge. Fbenerer P. Adams Gerry. Peter G. Eliot Gersh. John R. Lowell Gesmcr. Gabriel M. Dunxter Gibson. Paul T. Adams Gideon. Kenneth W. Lowell Gictmger. Dale H. Quincy Gilhatg. Daniel S. Adams Gill. Andrew D. Kukland Gilman. Andrew M. Dudley Girnius. Kcvtutn K. Qumcy Glannon. Joseph W. Dunxter Glavin, Anthony M. Lcxerett Glcasoo. Donald H. Adams Glenn. John D. Kirkland Goettmg, Thomas J. Quincy Goto berg. Marshall M. Eliot GoVdrn. J. S. Eliot Comer. Aleyandro C. Dudley Connies. Jose R. Dunstcr Goode. David H. Adams Goodhue. Edmund M. Winthrop Goodin. Robert A. Lowell Goodwin. Carkton J. Winthrop Goodwin. Jama W. Lexerctt Goodyer, Paul R. Dunstcr Gooe. Richard M. Kirkland Gordon, Richard H. Lexerctt Gotgatt. Edward J. Dudley Gould. Charla J. Adams Gould. Timothy D. Adams Graff. Re O.. Jr. Kirkland Crandme. Jonitlun R. Eliot Grate. Donald J. Quincy Graustein. William C. Lexerctt Gray, Austen T.. Jr. Ixserctt Gray . Morns. Jr. Eliot Gray . Russell W.. Jr. Winthrop Green. Gerald M. Winthrop Green. l reocc H. Qumcy Green. Michael A. Dunstcr Greenberg. Ira G. IXinster GrcenMot. Bradley Lowell Grccnlkld. Geoffrey M. Dunstcr Greeniigc. Stanley E. Kirkland Grenreback. l ance R. Qumcy CnmNc. Donald L- Winthrop Gnnbcrg. Donald 1. Qumcy Gmwotd. Jama B, Kirkland Grobs!cm. Paul Adams Gross. Winthrop A. ImtO Grossman. Richard W Dunstcr Groves. Jama 1. I ..well Gruber. Gabriel G Quincy Guidotli. IXisald It Dudley (iusx, Junalhin J. F. 1.0® ell H llacklxatth. Paul M. Lowell Ilackfotd. Robot R . Jr Lcxerett Hackling. Donald C. Quincy Haft. Lloyd L. Qumcy Ilagen. Charla T. Kirkland Ilagerty. Peter I-. Wmthrop Haggerty. Francis J . Jr. l ywed Hahnel. Robin E- Dudley llaiblc. Wiliam W. Lo- ed Hale. Jonathan Adams Hall. Darnel A Lowed Hall. David C. Eliot Hall. Hal V. Leverctt Hallos bock. Daxsd T. Wmthrop Hallowed. Christopher L- EJiOt Hamilburg. Maurice J. Laerett Hamm. Jeffrey C. Laerett Hammond. William P. Dudley Hancock. Das®] N. Dudley Hannum. Ken M. Adams Hanover. Stanley 1. Eliot Hansen. Charla R . Jr. Dud ex Hanson. Marxin A. Dunxter Hansen. Robert B. DoJky Harlo . Robert B Adams IFirmrl, Riclurd P . Jr. Kirkland Harmon. Douglas A. Qumcy Harper. J M E. Wmthrop Harrington. Matk H . Ill Quincy liams. Jonathan M. Dudley Harris. Perry H. Dudley Hams. W.llam B. Dunsier Harnscn. Philip Eliot llarmcm. Wmstcn G. Adams Hart. Curtis W. Lowell Hart. Robert C. IXxJky Hatch. John M. Wmthrop Kaupcn. Gamer T. Laerett Hauptmin. Ira J. Dunstcr Hayes. RichanJ L. Kirkland Ilaynor. David R. Lowed Heagney. Terence J. Lowell Heard. Jama E. Wmthrop Ikbenstmt. Jama B Lowed Keeker. Robert 1. Dunxter Haver. Warren H. Kirkland Hcderston. W. Lowell Helton. David E. Adams Hennaxee. Keith C. Quincy Henry. Charla S. Wmthrop Henry, lawrcncc M . Jr. Kirkland Herbert. Staen G. Eliot Htrfort. John A. Dunstcr Hew kit. Jama S. Kirkland Hicks. Pearlnun D . Jr. Lowell Higgns. Paul W. Laerett Higgins. Kchert F. Eliot Higmbotham. Harlo N. Jr. Kirkland Hill. VVillum B.. Jr. Lcxerett Hilton. George Q. Dunsier Hilton. Michael L. Lexeretl Hmvncl. Ilartan Dudley llimmdfarb. John D. Adams Hernia. Louts C. Eliot Hobbs. Matthew H. Adams Hodges. Thomas H. Laerett Hocppncr. Lutr. J. Laerett Hoffmann. Clement P. Laerett Hoffman. Paul Eltoe Hoffman, Robert S Dudley HorTnsann. Robert M. Kirkland HsxUday. Wiliam II. Quincy Honoroff. Bradley M. Kirkland Hooper. Donald M Eliot Hooper. John C. Dudley Hopkins. Rachard S Dunstcr Howard. Brxace H. Winthrop Herwarth. D. Kirkland Howe. Kachatd T. Lexerctt Huffman. Robert K. Wmthrop Hughes. Jama E. Kirkland Hunter. Larry C. Wmthrop Hunter. Timothy M. Dudley Hurwitr. Marc L. Dunstcr Hutchinson. Sufford Lo-ell Hutton. C1atk H. Laerett Huscile. Jeffrey G. Lliot lluxos. Chnstopher L. Dudley Hway. Philip J. Eliot Ilyndman. Paul V. Lowed Imhcff. Gary R Insalaco. Cirmmc R Ireland. ThommS. Duwe, Isaacs, Jama W Lo et Isenberg. Howard Met Itldson. Thomas K. Lrsirnt Ixers. Peter S AdM. J Jacobson. II R TXde, Adar, Jamcxco. John T. Jaros. Waiter Jain. Peter A Dudley Jennas. 1 ugenc H Dude, Jennings. Frederic B . Jr Ltstm Jergaen. Harry E. Lend Jimrrxon. David C. Lot Johnson. Barry L Usd Johnson. Dax J W Leveret Johnson. Gao Durea Johnson. Jan L Lot Johnson. Mark F. kella-sc Johnson. Peter W. Lonfl Jena. BonJesnTet. Jr Leveret Jona. Peter R. Lo®eJ! Jena. Sherwood O. Leveret Jost. Da s J A Djscer K Kahr. Frank M. Wmttrey Kntr. Mcmi A. Kirkiaad Kaku. Micfwo Leverei Kalelkar. Mohan S Quncy Kalin. Richard B. Adairs Kambhu. Tirachai KirUard Kanin. Denn R Qano Kanoo. Joseph A Wmtlrsp Kantcr. FrexJenck S. LcweC Kaplan. Stephen H Adam Kareliv. Wiliam R Dot Karim. Bruce G. Wntbrcp Katr. Neal P. Lowell Katun, Richard L. Bet Kay. Joseph A. Dade, Keefe. Robert D. KirklanJ Keith. Philip A Kiri lard Kciling. Douglas G . Jr. Kirkland Kedy. Charla J. Laerett Kelly. Jama P Laerett Kedy. John D Dot Kell). Wiliam C .Jr Kirkland Kdtner. Thoaxis N . Jr. KirUard Kemmis. Danel O Wmthrop Kemper. D. S Dot Kendrick. Cartel on W . Jr. Qurc, Kendrack. Marsm H. Wmthrop Kennedy, John D. Lowed Kennedy. John E. Laerett Kennedy. Scan K Loaet Kenney. IXvugLsi C. Adaas Keppel. Geoffrey H IXar.strr Kcrchner. Harold R Wmthrop Kershaw. Newton H . Jr Qamcy Keyssar. Alexander Laerett KhosU. Anil Diet Kidder. Robert Todo Laetett Kiev hr). Walter. Ill ElRt Kiley. Thonus R. Quncy Kilkowski. Jama U Qumcy Killeen. Henry W.. Ill Dot Kilton. Lao EJict King. Donald R. Laerett King. Franklin. Ill KirUard King. Thomas C. Lewd Kmgxbuo. D-uglas M. Winthrop K in rou-Wright. Jeremy J. Pul'ey Klcwx. Joseph S Diafcy Kkmp. George O. Jr. Quocy Klemperer. Walter C W inthrop Kline. Richard P. Winthrop Klitgaard. Robert E. laerett Knapp. Michael X Qiancy Kmbbs. Later A. Denver Knight. John S . Ill Eliot Koixunsiki. Victor A . Ill IXrJIey Komaneff. Outlet Dussiet Kopccki. Andrew J. IXmurr Kopeticn. Robert G Kirklasd Komhluth. Jaie L Adirev Koslow. Julian A. Adam KotiEiincn. Petet W. lowed Kotbuc. John F. laetett Koukiot. Ft ant J. IXinucr Kotachy. Eduard M . Jr. laerett Kowarxky. Stephen R Adjmi Korol. Roger E. Quod Kram. Ronald W. I oerett VH11V WM W'W'!,'!!! ! mmn 3 3o=-: - STr-jr © - § S S S For every type of paper used in business PAPtK HOUU CARTER RICE STORRS BEMENT SECRETARIAL TRAINING for PAST - PRESENT - FUTURE SECRETARIES Individual Attention... Individual Promotion Gregg and E2 Alphabetic Shorthand Start any time; graduate when ready. Full secretarial and special short courses. CRONIN’S Restaurant C vcrulluu Tome verylHnuj Famous for Steaks. Chops and Seafood Fine Imported and Domestic Beers, Wines and Liquors rvarcl its C r romn s THE INDIVIDUALIST AT KIDDER, PEABODY YES, IF YOU CAN TAKE NO FOR AN ANSWER. He's no yes man, so he'll disagree with you when he believes he's right. If you're an individualist you'll agreethis is the intelligent way to do business. Our registered representatives have been carefully selected. And then carefully trained by Kidder, Peabody management. We give them no formula, because no two investors, no two situations, are alike. But each is encouraged to incorporate the back-up of our wide range of financial activity with his own experience and judgment, and to bring this wealth of investment skill and knowledge to bear on recommendations for individual accounts- Here's what we mean: Kidder is a major underwriter. In the last five years we managed or participated in 1350 corporate financings totaling over 25 billion dollars. This involvement tells us a lot about a lot of top corporations—and their managements. Further, during this time we negotiated more private financings than any other firm, finding new capital for growth-minded companies. Kidder also ranks among the top half-dozen investment firms in the specialized fields of municipal finance, tax-exempt bonds, preferred stocks, and block sales. This same professionalism applies to mutual funds, international financing, Eurodollar securities, mergers and acquisitions, investment advisory service—and, most importantly, to the research department that supports these operations. What do our customers derive from all this activity? We believe some of the best investment thinking today. If you agree that the scope of the Kidder organization can improve your opportunities for making more accurate judgments and more profitable investment decisions, talk to one of our individualists. Tell him yes, you can take no for an answer. ■1 Kidder, Peabody II CO. INCORPORATED ISii Mtmkf! Niu York Antf Sink E«tni 20Exchange Place • New York, N. Y. 10005 Botovt Ptiiladclphii Oki«o U An« !t« S n FfUKixo AlUau Dillll 1'vJ J4 xhn (Uici i(K ihc SHOULD HE HANDLE YOUR INVESTMENTS? You Can Take It With You There are a lot of intangibles you take with you when you leave school: an education, fond memories, and lasting friendships. All will serve you in good stead over the years. But there’s a tangible item you can take with you as well. It’s your Coop membership card, and it should prove quite profitable to you over the years no matter where you are. Your Coop membership enables you to order books, records, clothing, stationery, appliances . . . everything we stock . . . by mail after you graduate and still receive an annual membership patronage dividend on all your purchases. Before you leave, make sure you renew your Coop membership. You can take it with you . . . by becoming a permanent member. HARVARD SQUARE MOO Mmichusttts Avenue. Cambridge. Mass. 02138 S 2' 17V IIH ii St U, - ’£1 %W-m ”3 P:'8 Kl 7) nw- V W XV.- v« . 1J ?h • — ,ss V.'i 5 I.v, I4H-J; u 1 4W 17V, 17U-HH ♦ I'H t ; 7v jry? K - 4J 4} — wh £-jih J'H- }!5 • ♦ J'H m 52 55 ■, 7H..... 41- ♦ it- !«■ ♦ h 18 19 ..... J4H J4H H 1 J’ M Salem •« 14 X%'“ .1V lit SovASip :j is sovev m«. i ill S4«en 4 So r FIW4' M S 40 7Vfe Sceee i-av-n )0V V'♦«' •• M 111 Scurry Rp'« 4 SMAIV I 38 111 Sealaclr Cp IT SeotM All i V m « B « ID S « Ce' «8 14 S • 10 « .86 rn se ,c w IS v.o Core IIH Se c-t- ot 7J i 8 SNMI yi 44 4H I 1H S •« Oe w • S-IIWJI VT - V-IBv w u H iww Ci i . Ss-vjir. l ■« ■•„ S. n 'OHA 19 h v«oi t i i UO'i j JJO ■ S- 0 1 Bf I 1 Silicon 7498 H Siivroy LI v Stmkin 40 1H Jim-. Prpc IV 5'mBliW 30 I JiOlMCA 18 ! SUtCVMOII 1 SBRVf I7 i s vfln« o 8 , IT SlK C« JJ 5 SMO Iml 738 , 118 S8'I 8 1 J 36 S n9«r B'S t M UH __ 173 sZ?5W l$ 1 SC 4 7Jp I Cl II SC 4 Mel IM IV SC 4 01.-4 1 8J W, JwC U'il IH S94 ReeUUt 91, SBK-B- 18 lev st—« op m JVi SB '- ' Asleep at the switch? Not us. Estabrook knows that your stock-invested capital requires careful and continuous attention. Seeking to make your dollars perform more effectively, we will analyze your present portfolio. We will advise you of new investment opportunities and special situations for income and growth. So. if you'd like to shed some real light on your investments, write or call Estabrook Co., today. We'll also send you a free copy of our latest list of Recommended Stocks. Estabrook's not asltep at the switch. Are you? Estabrook Co. IS Suit Street. Boston. MliuchvHtlt 07101 • (617) 742-3000 Other OHice : Cambridge. New York. San Francuco and 12 ether eitie Member New York. Amer can and Bolton Stock Exchange Cambridge Trust Company Member FDIC Sailor TRe Andover JurnUlirr Shop 22 HOLYOKE STREET CAMBRIDGE 38, MASSACHUSETTS 127 MAIN STREET ANDOVER, MASSACHUSETTS THE COOP The Coop Optical Department Harvard Coorcrativc Socictv 1400 Maiiachuhtti Avcnuc TRowbriocc 6-3000 Harvard Square. Caudridci tfuoud Jm'rnti toWfUMf, 3 tic. Harvard Square’s first and most famous retail liquor store With over 60 years service to the University and the Community Complete selection of Imported and Domestic chilled Liquors, Wines and Beers 92 • 94 Mount Auburn Street, Cambridge NOW ON SALE . . . THESE EXCLUSIVE PRIVATE-LABELLED BRANDS BEAM'S BOURBON GtLBEY SCOTCH LONDON DRY C N 90 Proof LONDON DRY C N 94.4 Proof AMS TEL $ 4.49 per tonic $50.40 per caic $ 5.19 per bollle $61.40 pee ca e $ 4.24 per QUART $50.00 per c-iie $ 4.75 per QUART $55.00 per cave $ 1.75 for 6 $ 6.99 per cave BAG ICE Free Delivery Chilled Wines Open Mon. thru Fri. 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. Sat ’til 10 Call KI 7 6684-6 SO CONVENIENT . . . • • • for Your Cheeking Account and All Ollier Bank Services Main Office — Harvard Square HARVARD TRUST COMPANY Member F.D.I.C. HARVARD BOOK STORE Always a sales table loaded with Book Bargains second hand and new Paperbacks Textbooks 1248 MASS. AVE. THE COLONIAL WATCHMAN SALUTES THE CLASS of 1967 TREADWAY MOTOR HOUSE HARVARD SQUARE • CAMBRIDGE. MASS MATTHEW F. DOOLING, Innkeeper UN 4-5200 IB LOEK. H1IOADES CO. 42 WALL STREET ■ NEW YORK, N. Y. 10005 MEMBERS NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE, AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE AND PRINCIPAL OOMMOOITY EXCHANGES Underwriters and Distributors of Corporate and Municipal Securities LONDON 375 PARK AVENUE. NEW YORK CITY Auburn • Buffalo • Elmira • Geneva • Horncll ■ Ithaca • Kingston • Middletown • Monticello Newburgh • Onconta • Poet Jervis • Sutton - Syracuse • Utica. New York Scranton • Stroudsburg. Pennsylvania • Detroit. Michigan - Dallas. Texas ANDERSON A MKUDWICK BENJ. D. BARTLETT It CO. BETTS. BORLAND A CO. BOETTCHER A COMPANY CHAPLIN. McGUINESS CO. COOLEY A COMPANY DITTMAR A COMPANY. INC. A. O. EDWARDS A SONS. INC. FOSTER A MARSHAL!. INC. HILL A CO. HOWE. BARNES A JOHNSON. INC. JANNEY. BATTLES A E. W. CLARK. INC. JOHNSON. LANE. SPACE. SMITH A CO.. INC. JOHNSTON. LF.MON A CO. LOEWI A CO. INCORPORATED PRESCOTT. MERRILL. TL'RBEN A CO. SUTRO A CO. THE PIERCE. WULBERN. MURPHLY CORPORATION VERCOE A CO. CORRESPONDENTS Richmond, Charlottesville. Fredericksburg. Virginia Beach. V.ipnU Cincinnati. Ohio Chicago, llknoit Denver. Bould«. Colorado Springs Foei Colin . Gr nd Junction. Greeley. Pueblo. Colorado: Chicago. Ill.no.i Pllttburgh. PenniyUarua Hanford. Conneclicul San Antonio. Da Hat. Houston. 8ro ns sBt. Cuero. Lubbock. Trial Si. Low . Clayton. Si. Ann, Sunset HiSs Mo.; Tuscaloosa. Ala : El IV-rado Fayetteville. Jone boeo. A'ek.: EaJ Gallic. turns Fi. Myers Fi Walton Beach. Lakeland. NapCes Orlando. Panama City. Pensacola. Si- Feteisb-rg. Sarasota. TalUhissee. Venice. FU.; Columbus Ga.. BellevsJle. Ea i Si. Louu. JacksomsBe. Spe.-.gN.-ld. IB.; Satina. Topeka. Wichita. Kan .. Lake Charles. Shre.epoet. La . LaureL Mi .; La.ton. Oklahoma Clly. Tulsa. Okla Mcmpha. Ten .; Amanllo, Bryan. Dallas Demon. El Pa o. Exchange Park. Ft.Woeth. Houston. Lubbock. Sherman. Widuu Fall . 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Ohio Sound big quote Newsweek the newsweekly that separates fact from opinion BARNES NOBLE FOR BOOKS INC. OF MASS. Our Specialty BUYING and SELLING Used - TEXTBOOKS - New We have the facilities to service all your book needs In Print or Out of Print ENTIRE STOCK OPEN TO BROWSERS TECHNICAL — SCHOLARLY — PAPERBACKS — REFERENCE — ENCYCLOPEDIAS and FINE BOOK BARGAINS 28 BOYLSTON ST. at Harvard Square AFFILIATED WITH BARNES NOBLE INC. OF NEW YORK Serving the Reading Public Since 1873 New ds SWANS SPECIALIZED CRUISES AND TOURS 1968 EIGHT 14-DAY Archaeological Cruises Accompanied by Distinguished Guest Lecturers BRITISH ISLES GREAT HOUSES and GARDENS Fifteenth Season: April-September Each Cruise a Different Itinerary Visiting: Italy, Yugoslavia, Greece, Turkey, Israel, Sicily, Tunisia, Malta, Libya, Cyprus, Black Sea, Romania, Bulgaria, USSR Cabins from $328.00 per person Accompanied by Distinguished Experts Visiting: Historic castles, abbeys, houses, gardens and ancient monuments ENGLAND SCOTLAND IRELAND WALES ROMAN BRITAIN 18 Departures: May-September Price from $230.00 plus airfare IRAN TEN SAFARIS Accompanied by Distinguished Lecturers FOUR 21-DAY Archaeological Tours Accompanied by Distinguished Zoologists and Ornithologists Visiting: Abadan, Shiraz, Persepolis, Isfahan, Hamadan, Ramsar and Teheran Departures: April 1, April 22, May 13, September 23 Visiting: KENYA UGANDA TANZANIA Also Independent Tours with Local Guides 16, 17 and 21 Day Safaris January, February, March, October and November Price $1,464.00 New York New York Price $1,525.00 New York New York Sec Your Travel Agent or U.S. General Agent: W. F. and R. K. Swan (Hellenic) Ltd. Esplanade Tours, Boston, Mass. 02116 Success is contagious at The Summers Office2121 New England Life Especially among Harvard men But, alas, we have no Raddiffe women — or any women — among our sales representatives. Believe me (Greely Summers, General Agent), we want one — especially a Radcliffe woman because there are marvelous opportunities developing now to provide a BALANCED FINANCIAL SERVICE to both men and women. We seek the Harvard man and the Rad- M. Greely Summ r cliffe woman who can profit substantially from these new opportunities. Please call (617) 482-0700 or write me at the above address. GOOD FOOD FOR OVER 50 YEARS' LUTHER WITHAM, INC. CATERERS 441 Chatham Street LYNN, .MASSACHUSETTS 01902 592-5581 m CHESTER A. BAKER, INC DICKSON BROS. CO. HARDWARE - HOUSEWARES - PAINTS LOCKSMITH - REPAIR SERVICE 26 BRATTLE STREET HARVARD SOUARE CAMBRIDGE , MASS. 02138 TEL. 876-6760 E. P. VER PLANCK. PRES. WE DELIVER CLUB HENRY IV 96 Winthrop St. CUISINE PAR PIERRE — CHEF, PROP. (Formerly with the French Line) Imported Wine and Aperitif Lunch 12:00-2.Mon. thru Sat. Dinner 6:00-9 Mon. thru Thurs. Open Friday till 9:30 p.m. Saturday till 10 p.m. (Closed Sunday) (Closed June 15 till August 1) 864-9061 354-8388 PRESCRIPTION PHARMACISTS SINCE 1898 LOCATED IN CAMBRIDGE AT 1358 MASSACHUSETTS AVE. IN THE HOLYOKE CENTER ARCADE Drugs, Sick Room and Surgical Supplies, Cosmetics WE SHIP ALL OVER THE WORLD Six Convenient Locations in BOSTON - BROOKLINE and CAMBRIDGE KE 6-2300 Connecting All Stores 876-1514 Cambridge Store Bob S ate j f tntirmpn For Student and Office Supplies 1288 MASSACHUSETTS AVENUE Kl 7-1230 VERMONT TWEED SHOP 44 Brattle Street Cambridge, Massachusetts Kirkland 7-1984 Coats . Suits . Skirts Scotch Kilts . Blouses Sweaters 'X K LOVERlHEaao •wioasoj, KUNSmdCUKs ■ WlAlbs Crcr tiEn U Welcome to SAKS FIFTH AVENUE Every year we extend this greeting, accompanied by a warm handshake, to thousands of Harvard men. Our University Shops on-campus at Harvard. Princeton, Yale. Stanford and the University of Michigan have ) } made us authorities on what college men like. Our complete collections of clothing and furnishings have been developed to answer every phase of University life. Everything is made according to our own exacting specifications, including suits and jackets tailored along natural lines, and furnishings coordinated to complement the preferred classic styling. We invite you to visit us soon. We’ll be glad to open a charge account for you. THE UNIVERSITY SHOP SAKS FIFTH AVENUE 73 Mt. Auburn Street, Cambridge ' ate pb £TTSAV0tf ;n SHOf fed SHERATON COMMANDER HOTEL It GARDEN STREET CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS 02138 ABC CODE «I7 3-47-A600 COLONIAL DRUG JOSEPH BOTINDARI. REG. PhaRM. 49 BRATTLE STREET CAMBRIDGE. MASS. 864-2222 John C. Paige Company boston NEW YORK PORTLAND ATLANTA LOS ANGELES HARTFORD MANCHESTER. N H MOLTEN. MAINE IRTHIURI| The Best m English and Foreign fe : i]lns 5§:5, KfltCUKWWSJWS. BOSTON NEAR THE PRUDENTIAL CENTER KE 6-7067 Crown Linen Service RENTERS OF Coats, Aprons, Towels, Gowns, Bed Linens, Industrial Uniforms SERVING HOTELS, MOTELS, SCHOOLS, RESTAURANTS, INSTITUTIONS MASSACHUSETTS So. Boston: 39 Damrell St., 268-2212 Worcester: 10 Sever St., 753-7602 Reading: 1 Avon St., 944-6262-3 Springfield: 2153 Columbus Ave., 781-5090 Hyannis: Corner Route 28 and Bearses Way, 775-6382 NEW HAMPSHIRE Manchester: Foundry and N. Turner St., 669-5323-4 Where to Stay When Visiting Harvard objSis3J Swja. OF CAMBRIDGE 1651 MASSACHUSETTS AVENUE Two Blocks north of Harvard Law School in Harvard Square CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS Reservations: 491-1000 Innkeeper: J. F. Incotv 1 Graduate from Coca-Cola? Never! Because T Coca-Cola has the taste you never get tired of, Always refreshing. That’s why things go better with Coke after Coke after Coke. BOTTIEO USDCR AUTHORITY Of THE COCACOIA COMRAW 8Y PATTERSON, WYLDE WINDELER, INC. Endurance 40 BROAD STREET BOSTON 9, MASS. j A lv;. J t| A. Cahaly, Ltd. GANT SHIRTS and The Finest Selection of Neckties in Cambridge 35 Brattle St. (617) 547-5200 James Sugden Company INCORPORATED Established 1905 Underground Electrical Construction 339 NEWBURY STREET BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02115 ASPHALT P A V ING PARKING LOTS WAREHOUSE FLOORS DRIVEWAYS ASPHALT TENNIS COURTS Cork-Asphalt Playgrounds, Tennis Courts, Running Tracks Worcolite Patching Mixture, Permanent Color Povemenr WARREN BROTHERS ROADS COMPANY BROCKTON. MASSACHUSETTS Tel. 588-3660 ALBERT D. HOWLETT CO. 65 Gilbert Street Quincy, Massachusetts PAINTING CONTRACTORS MAYTAG LAUNDRY SELF SERVICE Coin-Operated Washers and Dryers in Basement Laundry Rooms WASH — 25c FLUFF DRY — 25c In All Radcliffe Dorms and Harvard Houses BOTTLED LIQUORS WINES AND BEERS FOR SATISFACTION SEE BLANCHARD FIRST BLANCHARD CO. 874 HARRISON AVENUE BOSTON, MASS. COR. NORTHAMPTON ST. TEL. Highlands 5-0560 BLANCHARDS 103 HARVARD AVENUE ALLSTON, MASS. NEAR BRIGHTON AVE. TEL. STadium 2-5588 FAST SERVICE .. CONVENIENCE .. FREE DELIVERY OPEN 8 A.M. to II P.M. . . . FREE PARKING Seniors were photographed by LINCOLN STUDIO 147 Pleasant Street Malden, Massachusetts If you wish to order photographs , call LINCOLN STUDIO at DA 4-1186. Calls to the Yearbook office will get you nowhere. Babcock-Davis Associates Incorporated Established 1909 474 DORCHESTER AVENUE BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02127 Phone: AN 8-2241 STRUCTURAL STEEL ORNAMENTAL IRON WORK Furnished and Installed for many of THE HARVARD BUILDINGS Babcock-Davis Associates Also Manufacture STEEL AND ALUMINUM FLAGPOLES TILTING ALUMINUM FLAGPOLES EASY ACCESS ROOF HATCHES FLOOR AND SIDEWALK HATCHES MARSHARD ORCHESTRAS The Ootatandiag Favorite of Aaerica't Universities BOSTON 75 Newbury Street KFnmore 6-5175 NEW YORK BAR HARBOR RROPHY RYAN, INC. Fit HIT SECTIONS Fresh Frozen I It I! ITS AND VEGETABLES 179 Commercial Street Boston lUclimoml 2-0170 Custom Yearbooks For All New England unique creative distinctive (and on time) WOODLAND PUBLISHING COMPANY 520 Main St., Waltham, Mass. 02154 A New England Company Serving New England SCHOENHOF'S Large Selection of Foreign Books (French, German, Spanish, Italian, Russian) Grammars, dictionaries and record courses for the study of all foreign languages. Art Books. Domestic and imported prints. Frames custom made. 1280 Massachusetts Avenue (Opposite Widener) CAMBRIDGE, MASS. 02138 vanilla in the Handy Half Gallon! SEALTEST Division of NATIONAL DAIRY PRODUCTS CORPORATION II. Neivton Marshall Co., Inc. Painting Contractors 522 Harrison Avenue Boston 18, Massachusetts HUbbard 2-1422 yS PUBLISHER OF THE YEARBOOK OF HARVARD AND RADCLIFFE, AND THE HARVARD AND RADCLIFFE FRESHMAN REGISTERS STAFF Business Board James Allen '69, Richard Cohn '68, Stan Eleff '69, Jim Gray '69, Don Mayer '69, Alice Movius '69, Jeff Padnos '70, Carl Roberts '69, Jim Saum '69, Fred Strickland '70, Randy Weiss '68 Editorial Board Larry Berger '70, Nate Birnbaum '68, Matt Coogan '69, Dave Decker '70, Jim Doroshow '69, Eve Endicott '70, Al Fcnstcr '69, Lia Gartner '69, David C. Jimerson '68, David W. Johnson '68, Geof Kern '70, Ken ludmerer '68, Sean McCarthy '69, Rick Roth '69, Gary Sinawski '68, Sarah Smith '68, Bill Strauss '69 Production Board Bill Agnew '70, Doug Brenner '71, Alan Cohen '68, Tom Cook '71, Rick Deutsch '69, Andy Eddy '68, Melinda Furchc '69, Pablo Gomery '70, Norton Grubb '69, Roger Guthrie '70, Kenric W. Hammond '69, Mike Hiller '69, Kathy Hoyt '69, Jim Irving '69, Maryannc King '70, John Murphy '68, Karen Nelson '70, Jcanmne Ross '71, Bob Russell '68, Nancy Sailing '70, Bill Shutzcr '69, Dick Stone '68, Warnie Webster '71 Photography Board Harriet Burgin '68, Steve Bussard '70, Tom Clowes '70, Philip Coolidgc '70, Davis Drinkwater '69, Dick Fisher '69, Liz Gimbcl '69, Carol Ginandes '69, David Grant '70, Bill Graustein '68, Don Hackling '68, Robert Isscnman '69, Phyllis Joachim '69, Neal Katz '68, Darrell Kennedy '68, James T. Kurnick '68, Ran Langenbach '68, Sally Lasater '70, John Levine '69, Linda Liu '68, Steve McDaniel '69, Gary Mottola '69, Michael Nagy '70, Bill Overholt '68, Chien Chung Pei '68, Dan Pennie '68, Robert Post '69, Sverre Roang '69, Susy Saunders '70, Mark Silber '70, Arthur Small '69, Jeff Smith '69, Lee S. Smith '69, Mike Sobel ‘71, Robert Sproull '68, Joe Upton '69, Erik Wright '68 CREDITS Dust Jacket. KWH and RFS; 2-3, RRL; 6, RRL; 8. RRL; 10-11, LL; 12, MSilber; 14-15, RP and RFS; 16, CCP; 18, 21. RP; 23-24, RFS; 25-27, EOW; 34-39, JBL and MSobel; 40, LSS; 43-44, RTF; 45, CCP; 46. PJ and RTF; 47. CCP. 48-49, RTF; 50, DCH; 52-55, EG; 56-59, LL; 60, CCP and RFS; 64-65, PC; 68, PC; 70-73, LSS; 74-79, CCP; 80-83, CCP; 85 JDK; 87, NPK; 89, DP; 90, CCP and DP; 92, SWB and RFS; 94. CCP; 118-121, SWB; 123, RFS; 124, RFS and JTK; 125-127, JTK; 128, MN and RFS; 130, GJM; 131, SS; 132, JDK and MSilber; 133, JTK and LSS; 134, LL; 135, LSS and JTK; 136, LSS; 137, LSS and MSilber; 141, CCP; 142-143, JTK and CCP; 144-145, JTK; 146, SPR; 147, JTK and SPR; 148, SPR; 149-150, JTK and SPR; 153, JTK; 154, JTK and CCP; 156, JTK; 157, JTK and PC; 158, RFS and |TK; 160, CCP; 161, SMcD; 162, CCP; 164-165, LSS; 166-169, JTK; 170, JTK; 172, JTK and CCP; 173, JTK; 176-181, DP; 182-185, HSB and RP; 186-187, DWJ and JTK; 188, MSilber; 189, MSilber and LSS; 190, JTK; 191, GJM, 193, |TK; 194, RRL and RFS; 196-197, CCP; 198, LL; 201-203, CCP; 204, RFS; 205, CCP; 206, MSilber; 208, RRL; 209, PJ; 211, DP and RFS; 212-213, RP; 214, CCP; 21S, KWH; 216, CCP; 217, RFS; 219. CCP; 220-221, JS; 222, MSilber; 223. JTK; 224, SWB. 225, RRL; 226. RMI; 228, SWB. RMI and JDK; 229, JDK; 230, CCP; 231, MSilber; 232-233. JDK; 235, CCP; 236, SS. 237, SS and DCW; 239. LL; 240, SS; 241. CCP; 242, LL; 243, LL and SS; 244. SS; 247. LL; 248. LL; 250, MSilber; 251, LL; 252, CCP; 253, LL; 254, CCP. Special credits: David Hunsberger, 130, 131, 135, 224, 255; Bulent Bulat, 63-66; Chris Kirkland, 174-175; Dan Brody, 88. Special assistance: Mr. Toshihiro Katayama, Radio Station WHRB. Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts, Sports News Office, Football Coaching Staff.


Suggestions in the Radcliffe College - Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) collection:

Radcliffe College - Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

1928

Radcliffe College - Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

1929

Radcliffe College - Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

Radcliffe College - Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1957 Edition, Page 1

1957

Radcliffe College - Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 1

1966

Radcliffe College - Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 1

1967


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