Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT)

 - Class of 1967

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Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1967 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 318 of the 1967 volume:

r 3 R . Y 4 Q 2,- -. - , , 0 xxxx'-KNXW5 STAFF Executive Board Chairman ........ Managing Editor . . . Business Manager ..... Photography Editor . . . Production Manager .... Classbook Editors .... Treasurer Editorial Board . . . . . .Frank G. Berson Richard B. Devereux . . . .Theodore D. Sands . . . .Peter H. Nelson .Henry H. Atkins, II . . . .Alan E. London Donald K. Wiest .R. Scott Armstrong Elliot S. Azoff, '68, Nicholas H. Bancks, '68, N. Kurt Barnes, '68, Robert K. Byron, '67, David M. Doret, '68, Clement P. Engle, '69, Richard L. F arren, '69, jan A. Gardiner, '69, joseph B. Green, '69 Robert C. jimerson, '69, Samuel Kirkland, '67, Thomas L. Knutsen, '69, james R. Latimer, III, '68, George M. Lazarus, '67, Keith C. Marshall, '68, Mabry Rogers, '69, Robert A. Shlachter, '69, Elliot Schulder, '68, Robert W. Sheehan, '67, Edmund L. Wadhams, '69. Photography Board Lee R. Brock, '69, Walter D. Cantarow, '69, Daniel K. M. Chang, '68, Peter Koster, '68, Harold R. Mancusi- Ungaro, jr., '69, Robert H. Randolph, '69, john E. Williams, '68. Business Board David Benjamin, III, '69, Michael Blake, '69, john C. Crockett, '69, Bruce S. Fenton, '67, Paul C. Field, '69, Andrew A. Levy, '68, Nicholas W. NeWbold,'68, john R. Raben, jr., '67, james B. Rosenbloom, '69, jonathan ::c:c:n:1c:rc:z,.-:J r::: UD n:: cz: DE, :J 2ElI'.IllI!lIlCJi 1333331 EZSZCICJEUCDCZ iZl3l:l'C:lZ1 ZZZZC' r j r:1 :I Stern, '69. :R 3.535303 J any 3.45. 212'-:Qi j T SCHED -7 5 L 'I .Li ,,g','s.f,',, 2Cl:u:u::ec':1 A . 3 an . .S ,IDDUDC , , z ,,,, .':j'g3NsfI4gj.f3l5l fa.y.rV :.l jjjj Damon . . ., ........ ,VTX ,Z Q an rm. .mn im. .mr .1 is . 'Z' 1 HH vwvvvvw E M. . I!!!!!!j!!!!!!ll!!!!!j!!!!!!j,!!!!! !!!!!! A lIlllllEE - ..lD.l.. i H -'H Q-lllll Introduction . AA.........,....... . ...... p age 4 Faculty and Administration ...... ..,iii p age 6 The Year .................f.Yi....., ...... page 18 Colleges .,,.tt.l........l...... page 32 Yale-in-New Haven -, ..,.,,,i ..,... p age 112 Robert I. H. Kiphuth ..i... page 134 Fall Sports .....e......, ..... page 138 Winter Sports ....,., ., ..tee. page 148 Spring Sports -S ...,,.1, e,..,s..,1,..... ..... p an ge 166 Organizations and Activities ..... page 184 Politics ,.ge...,.....,V.............ggge,,. Aggg.. p age 204 Music ..,.-,,,ri,..,...... 1,.... p age 217 Honor Societies iiiige 8 gegggg page 228 Senior Societies .... ..giei page 238 Fraternities i,.,ee fge... p age 256 Issues ....11111i. . eeee,....ie ...d.. p age 266 Freshman Edition ....1 ,e,... p age 272 IM IM ' ' A an Q 5 1 i :::::::::: 3 5 . .- I I 'S' 'A' llllIlllll Nl Ill :'1'-T.-':-: - - elm fa :-.::::::::: Q Q I lllll' I 1 in l 'ii , F F .... . -ifganfilftii 1 is Un in im- - - - F - -1-V17 V - 7 11: ms f if X INTRODUCTION In April the days are growing longer and the scent of Spring is heavy in the air. On such a day, April 19, 1963, at 5 in the afternoon, A. VVhitney Griswold died. The University, hardly prepared by a brief notice of his illness in the NEWS the week before, was stunned. In thirteen years the austere and witty Professor of History had established him- self among America's foremost educators. He had assured Yale of continued eminence, and along the way had become the patron saint of American architecture. Then he was gone. Grief and mourning were mitigated only by the realiza- tion, phrased by Dean Acheson, that Whitney Griswoldis life was a happy one as the Greeks thought of happiness, for he exercised his powers to the full, achieving excellence in an environment affording him scopef, A. Whitney Griswold had from the beginning of his term recognized the necessity of defining clearly the University's role. He spoke eloquently of the need for educated men to be prepared for the demands of later life by a grounding in the Liberal Arts. In keeping with this policy, the Institute of Human Relations, the Department of Education, and Vari- our professional schools at the undergraduate level were abolished as being too seperated from the main stream of the University, and too vocational. Yet, in the paradoxical way that real situations often dictate that policy be formed, it was during the Griswold administration that Yaleis present level of involvement in the New Haven community began. For the Ivory Tower is an ambiguous blessing to the academic institution. At once the University is protected from the tumult of the everyday world, and isolated from the problems of contemporary society whose solution poses perhaps the greatest challenge to scholarship. The position of Yale in New Haven, physically central yet spiritually estranged, served only to emphasize her solitude. President Griswold had wanted to change that. He began to redirect the atten- tion ofthe school to the world immediately outside its doorstep. In 1953 a young newspaperman won probably the most significant election victory in recent New Haven history. Defeated by two votes in 1951, Richard C. Lee ran again two years later, to become the youngest Mayor in New Haven history. President Griswold's relationship with the former head of the University News Bureau was a close one. Follow- ing his lead, many members of the Yale community began to take integral roles in the initiation of new policies and the formation of new commissions. Then, suddenly, Griswold was gone, and the man who once said, 'SI came here in large part because of affection for and admiration of Whit Griswoldn had to take up his burden. Since that time, the University has continued to seek twin goals: advancement as a scholarly community, able to view the world reflectively, and greater involvement in the pressing concerns of the world around it. Yale students and faculty are playing a larger role than ever before in the revitalized New Haven which, thanks to the strong guidance of Mayor Lee, is undergoing an enormous and highly progressive program of urban renewal and redevelopment. As Mayor Lee has pointed out, the close relationship between city and University has not yet needed to be institutionalized: rapport on a personal level has so far sufficed. After many years as a nondescript city surrounding a great university, New Haven has won fame and respect quite independent of Yale. Yet this process would not have been the same without the height- ened involvement of the Yale community. Yet the involvement of the University in the city, important as it is, must be considered to be subordinate to the Uni- versityis own development as a community. In December came the announcement that Yale and Vassar intended to study the possibilities of closer affiliation. The Brewster administration seems to have found in unexpected guise the rich widowi' for whom it had been searching, and coeducation, a topic long facetiously discussed at fraternity debates, may soon become real for Yale. President Brewster noted to an alumni meeting in February the many changes to be ex- pected if and when Vassar comes to New Haven, ranging from greater liveliness in classes, to an improved social and moral quality at Yale. This is probably the most dramatic alteration and most decisive stand to come from the action of the present administration and the influence of the preceding one. Beyond this, however, are many smaller but yet significant changes in the academic life. One can now gain an M.A. in four years, a B.A. in Five, and leave the Graduate School with a M.Phil. The distributional requirements have been revised for greater flexibility, and student advisory committees have been created in many departments. The result has been to increase the flexibility available to the student in the formation of his curriculum. Undergraduates have found to some degree a new perspective for their academic and social lives. New men now occupy many posts in the University. Even as the University is remodeling its house for the years ahead, it has begun to participate more significantly in the world beyond its ivy-covered wallsf' The source of these changes lies in the past two administrations, and increasingly the University community we live in is the creation of the present administration. The quality of life in a particular community is dependent on many things. The major themes that we can discern have been outlined briefly in the preceeding paragraphs. The succeeding pages are devoted to a detailed account of our vision of Yale in 1967. We hope that in our reporting, and equally in our attempt to evoke images of more personal aspects of the little world we have lived in, we have seen with sufficient clarity to give a true picture. Richard B. Devereux FACULTY if ADIVIINISTRATIUN r 4 in' Q ,fl 9' 1 ii i .IA ... ,O '11 ' rf Y? 'vf'1'f!Q !'ff. I Z S1 .-n ,,4, . 'f4.,s.. ' ! iw W? ZMMQIL 'N' 'W A I aw ag, In 5 X K N55 392. i . Former University Librarian Iames Babb once confessed to an unfulfilled wish. He thougnt to inscribe over the entrance to Sterling This is not the library, it is within., So also the University is not a name, nor is it any number of buildings. It is people. Yale stands as a university on the contributions of themselves that men have made. For this reason we have chosen to portray a few men of the present. Yet there is a more serious, more personal reason. Students are also maturing men. As such we ask from time to time the question of what makes a man in this world. Professors stand at the pinnacle of the academic world, and are thus legitimate targets of questions. What ideals does a man hold? What fire inspires his actions, and what principles direct them? Perhaps the answers to these questions are more important than the actual information involved. Mutual shyness often inhibits dialogue, and much recent discontent may stem from a sad awareness of this fact. But interaction has not stopped. It is to the view that professors are important as men rather than titleholders, and careers important as develop- ment rather than the accumulation of credentials, that we didicate the pages that follow. O 8 B Q 9 41 'Tm not a positivist, Henry Margenau, Yale's first Eugene Higgins Professor of Physics and Natural Philosophy, firmly asserted- empirical methods are not the only touchstones of truthf' I thought of Newton and the apple, and listened with awakened curiosity in 11 Sloane Physics Lab. According to modern science, truth is not absolute . . . but we are approaching truth asymptoticallyf, Somehow the words seemed out of place within the cold, grey, rigidly commanding stone of the science complex. It seemed only proper that room 112 be pushed down Prospect Street into Harkness Hall, then the proper moral order of education would have been restored. But these were initial thoughts. In 1922 depression swept through Germany and Mr. Margenau left his formal study of the classics to become a farmhand in Nebraska. One year later, as a store clerk, he received an offer to attend Midlands College in Fremont, he graduated the next year with a major in Latin and Greek. Without citizenship papers, however, he was frustrated in his desire to teach Latin and Greek in high school, instead he read physics, became a graduate student at the University of N ebraska, and in his first year proceeded from introductory physics to research in spectroscopy. Yale was impressed and in 1927 Mr. Margenau came east. He began his association with Yale as an associate professor in 1931. The professoris eyes brightened as he related that as an Associate Professor of Physics he had pursued his first academic interest and sought to correlate the truths he found in the classics with the empirical evidence of science. 'R l 9 K A f 2 1 In 1951 his individual scholarship was recognized by his appointment as Eugene Higgins Professor. Now it was Henry Margenau, the philosopher of science, who spoke: Pure philosophy is no longer useful. Philosophy must have an object. Philosophy as such or metaphysics practiced in the blue or vacuole hasn't any real signifi- cancef, Professor Margenau quickly cited the first problem he dealt with as a philosopher of science-determinism. Ac- cording to Newton and the empiricists, the universe was carefully ordered, and the laws of physics were absolute. Modern quantum theory shattered Newtonis absolute universe, and for philosophy the implications of Heisen- bergs Uncertainty Principle, Professor Margenau as- serted, Were profound. Determinism was shattered, man was free to shape his own destiny. The meaning of truth itself now floats in a limbo of uncertainty. The professor presents his material deftly, taking time to answer questions from the floor as they arise. Students sit back to listen, then wonder, then smile in turn. Having begun with a chalk drawing and the simple statement, K'This is a childf' he has hy now progressed to the more concrete fact of discipline: . . . if you must, quickly and on the bottomf, The class laughs, yet will remember the point made by NVILLIANI KESSEN, Professor of Psychology. Undergraduate education on the level that Yale is involved in it contains some inherent conflicts of in- terestfl 'iUndergraduates too often fail to realize that the faculty has a responsibility to their professional area beyond the students and this University, and the faculty too often forget that a significant part of education takes place in the extracurricular interests of studentsfl Part of the responsibility for resolving this conflict lies with Mr. Kessen in his official function. The best indication of his success is his ability to combine the qualities of teacher, scholar, and adminis- trator, and still fire many of his students with enthusiasm. Perhaps it is, as one student suggested, by force of example. Returning to the University of Florida, he received his B.A. in Psychology, before proceeding to Brown for the Ph.D. At Brown 'The close-knit atmosphere of the . . . department provided for an extremely intimate inter- action between faculty and students, one that left a lasting impressionf, Following his thesis adviser to Yale, Mr. Kessen began the post-doctoral research that initi- ated his interest in human development. This led initially to studies of perception and sticking in the Hrst days of life, then to a consideration of the interaction between environment and innate capacities in the growth of childrenls intelligence. Over the years my orientation has become one of being more and more aware of the size ofthe problemf, One of the problems Xlr. Kessen faces is symbolized by the Institute of Human Relations, where he has his office. The building, cold and austere, is at a distance from most undergraduates, and might seem the epitome ofa research scholar's hideaway were it not for the bustle and almost electric warmth found around the offices on the second floor. There Professor Kessen shows the veggie I2 534, AJ. same intense and disciplined thought that characterized his lecture. In addition to child development, the subject now is the Psychology Department, the Course of Study Committee, of which he is Chairman, and the problems of undergraduate education. 4 16 6 Born in japan of missionary parents, jOHN W. HALL, A. Whitney Griswold Professor of History, had a direct exposure to japanese culture before he developed an historianis interest 'in it. Though his home-life was American, he was free to experience and partake of the surrounding japanese environment. And partake he did his reserved and dignified manner, his soft, well-modu lated conversation, and his sensitivity and extreme politeness are disarming when contrasted to the harsh and direct ways of Americans. When Mr. Hall returned to the United States to attend Andover it was only natural for him to feel a tension between certain of his japanese proclivities and standard American attitudes. His approach to history is somewhat unusual, and probably to some extent was conditioned by his early experience with japanese culture. He regards himself as more of a social scientist than a humanist: My kind of history deals with large spans of time and masses of data to get at structures and patterns of behavior, and this has taken me more in the social scientistis direction than the biographical approach with which I startedf, Professor Hall sees japan, a major and creative element in the modern world, as offering an alternative to the European standards which heretofore have been the sole criterion of judgment. japan brings a whole new stream of history into the modern world. Today, I would say japanis history is as significant to the world as are the histories of France and Germany. Now that japan has become a modern society on a basis of equality with our own, japanese ways of life and japanese ideas have become directly relevant to us. Their experience may help us understand some of our own problemsf, Q0-mlm A fanciful Klee poster and a tinv scrap ol' paper lmoldlv signed SCULLY distinguish the entrance to the office of Yales most outspoken art historian. There are no hours posted, for he is seldom in his office, lectures and seminars at the University. puhlie speaking en- gagements, and research for hooks and articles leave him little time to sit hehind a desk. Usually, he is in thc slide room, preparing another lecture. VINCENT SCULLY, Colonel John 'l'rumlmull ilmfilssoi- of Art Ilistory, was horn in New Haven and attended New Haven high school, which was destroyed to make Way for Morse and Stiles colleges. Hesitantlv he admits he preferred the high school. Alter receiving his B.A. from Yale in 1940, he served in the Marine Corps, and returned to complete his Ph. D. in 1949. A lfulhriglit iellowship to Italy in 1952 modeled his artistic sensi- bility, as subsequent conflicts with architects and gov- ermnent ollicials strengthened his mettle. HA lecture can he grand for imparting knowledge. lt is not spontaneous or informal. lt demands that the ., W 'ff ff 'v f i ff' ' M 'W 5 we if , iw , sm, W ' -L-Jw ,nv f :H I 4 4 ' f M2 'M Wf 'fm f'1fN w'9fs'LgQE..Uf f ,':,,2llfv, V. ' - . - ' ., I -- ' - , ' . , ,L g X ' ' 'v fl ' , ferr, -1 i av' ' , r sf K' ' .M A ' -' ,, MH-vf - f f ,l.iz'A7QE.':f4WW .6-!!l5E,Ei:55leff: , Mwww, f I f fel' . 5 lecturer organize it and give it form, and in this sense it becomes a work of artfi Like the works of art that he discusses and analyzes, his lectures pulsate with life and embody all forms of encounter with the envoronment. A German expressionist building confronts inan with the horrors and distortions of uDr. Caligarils Cabinetf' a Corbusier villa becomes a ship afloat in the destructive sea of nature. Architecture is not merely what man has built, but an expression of his emotions: MLe Corbusier exposes you up in space. It is as if you are in a ship. lt's as if he were saying, 'You canit merge with nature., You are a man. You want things that nature does not want. You would like to live forever, and nature will kill youf, To experience such a lecture is to become suddenly, ting- lingly alive with penetrating truth. Professor Scullyis activities extend far beyond the classroom. His primary concern is the destruction of cities that has resulted from employing already-dis- credited urban renewal principles. Returning from cere- monies dedicating the Post Office, a New Haven land- mark, he was confident that the building could be saved: K'The Cossacks have been dragged to the ground. Theyill never get that building down! ' That Vincent Scully is seldom in his office portends hope for a reevaluation. Articulate and forceful, he is the gadfly who eventually may cause contemporary planners to see their mistakes. If not, there is still hope in the next generation, for those who have studied with him have discovered the grandeur that man and his architecture may achieve. August 17, 1924-April 18, 1967 MM In Erich Segalis F ellowis Suite in Ezra Stiles College, an A.A.U. award is attached to the bottom of a Broadway showbill, and facing the showbill is an honors certificate from Harvard. These are the tangible testaments to the success of this versatile Assistant Professor of Classics. The New York Times, reviewing the iilm To Be a Manf stated that the 29-year old Segal is clearly a great teacher, regardless of agef' He often stays up the whole night preparing his lectures, to deliver them with a characteristic dynamism. Outside the classroom, professor Segal was once chosen to represent the United States as a runner in the Olympics. An untimely illness, however, forced him to withdraw to the more sedentary world of the theatre, the University, and the Boston Marathon. Too much in love with the world of scholarshipv to devote himself fully to the theatre, Mr. Segal continues with both. His play The Braggart Soldier, based on a Plautus comedy, still holds the house record in Westport, and he is now busy on the lyrics and script for a musical. From the theatre in Westport to the rural South during the Depression may seem a long way, But it was in photographing the latter that WALKER EVANS, Professor of Graphic Design, first made his reputation. Collaborating with james Agee in the publication of Let Us Now Praise Famous Men, he captured the condition . . . of life with stark realism. Now, at Yale, he teaches photography to another generation, em- phasizing the astraightforwardv style for which his is famous. When another part of the world was ravaged by flood last fall, a Professor of Art History took a leading role in rescue operations. In response to the oily waters that endangered the accumulated art treasures of Florence, CHARLES SEYMOUR, IR. was one of the organizers of the Committee for the Rescue of Italian Art. Known as CRIA for short, the committee sponsored films on cam- pus to raise funds for its operations. In this survey we have traveled a long way, from a one-time Nebraska farmhand turned philosopher and physicist, to an art professor, son of a former Yale President, turned rescuer. Intellectual adventure of the widest variety runs through this group of men, for each man is an in- terpreter of his chosen discipline. As interpreter, each man is both scholar and teacher, both con- servator and adventurer. mxiailhng, vqqmvir X .- Q v E . .+ f This has been a remarkable week with nie, with respect to despondencies, fears, perplexities multitudes of cares and distractions of thought, being the week I came hither to New-Haven. jonathan Edwards It begins in delight, it inelines to the impulse, it runs a course of lucky events, and ends in a clarifcation oflife- not necessarily a great clarification . . . but in a inornentary stay against confusion. Robert Frost U ,1 i 4 52 Gi 9? Af. The web ofour lijb is ofa mingled yarn Slzakespeure , ,'Hff?f'Q , , 351 l www .gm-5-4: film E Q, fs 5 51 MF in .,,- , ., gag wgv, qw Q1 7.45 'A f , ix Y , vv,, K -,LN-, f . . ., awp, 4 yi., L 1 . R.. T Q hm, ,-f 444 W ,,44,g,., 'r ., K A 4. .X-fled-.. a 5: nj , ww, Lf. -,rf an-fg :J 5.5. - . 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O T0 every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose . . . A time to get and a time to loseg a time to keep and as time to cast away. Ecclesiastes '11 . ': 43 V L 'V Q Zvi' , W, I S ,Q u 'h. I af . ,R 1 1 -1 ? I at wt 2234 Q Q F7 Q 556 3 6 1- f ' 9? lg' I Q f Y 'ff' f Y A,VA1 za A X , , ,Y Q' UK gg? M -i ' g -n-4 :fx 'o 14? 4 ' fig Q' f 2 . ,Q Q L Q 1 V4 f N 5 ,V 2 f ' ,MK 1 A 4 i n t E F S 3 Qs l gf fix W 1 I J a 7 fu W 1 M1 i K! ff . , gm x A 4, K J s Q Ah 5 43 5,5 . xi' , . Q Y . V . ?ff.. 5 I, if 1 if 1' 2 , gk .,, x 4 1 ,K 3 f t x --W rv , T yi 1 I l ,HV X'r 1 f --.4 V ,Q Q, Us. 'X 1 F, L? J,.,,,. , 3 emAA ' A 5 .- 'I I .J . . ' s,.- K ,,v my fl -fs f 1 wg f K E af if The fnllies which zz man regrets most in his life are those which he didn t commit when he had the opportunity. Helen Powland C N. gm!! Then we,ll pass and be jQ1rg0tten with the restf, '1 , ' fi fd BERKELEY BRANIFORD CA-HOUN DAVEAIPORT TIMOTHY DWIGHT JONATHAN EDWARDS MORSE PIERSON SAYBROOK SILLlN'AN EZRA STI-ES TRUMBJLL COLLEGES I 7 5 ? ' if 1 WM... n ,4v 1lv passed an introductory math course, but they have learned a method of life, they have learned to admire and to tolerate, they have expanded their curiosity, they may have acquired expertise in one academic field, they have developed a sympathy for other disciplines, and they have gained the insight that Yale is not a place, not a location, not a period of life, but that it is a com- mitment, a group of people who care, a way of living. For these, Berkeley probably has been home. Berkeley, for some, has been no more than the only College which is divided into two parts, but connected by a tunnelgv however, for most, Berkeley has combined two Yale traditions. One stresses continuous participa- tion in the fast-moving lives of the University and of the Outside Worldf' it is built on commitment and activity, the other one stresses a life of quiet academic pursuit, the advancement of knowledge through scholarship and its communication through an organic and slow educa- tional process. Berkeley and Yale welcome and need both. Only through a diversified student body can both be maintained, and only through the willingness of its students can Berkeley remain what it is: intellectually alive, emotionally active and involved-at the center of Yale. jorge I. Dominguez In junior year we take our ease, we smoke our pipes and sing our glees, F ol de rol de rol, rol, rolf' The Class of 1968 in Berkeley looms large as life and twice as natural: this year the junior Birdmen strutted their stuff in every university activity. In varsity competition, Don Schollander and Barry Wemple swam a little while Eric France and Greg Gallico roughed it up in the Bowl to the cheers of thousands. Rick McCarthy starred on the ice, Kim jessup excelled in track, and Bob Reissner was seen recently on cross campus carrying a lacrosse stick. In the undergraduate power structure, jay Feldman and Harold Chesnin captured the number one and two positions at WYBC. After a host of well-written articles, Gerald Bmck was elected co-editor of the News' Friday Supplement and junior SAB Representative for Berkeley. Rich Adler snapped enough candids to become head photographer of the News while moonlighting as junior Manager of the Student Sales Agency. With less fanfare perhaps, several Berkeley juniors gave their time to community projects. jim Vivian, with the aid of Casey Murrow, kept busy as student director of the U.S. Grant teaching program. Also involved in educational issues, Nick Herman joined with Dennis Cordell to promote Crossroads Africa. When not posing as a British imperialist, Chris Gray was active on the Episcopal vestry committee. No less, Berkeley ranks with the more cultured of Yale's colleges. Strangest per- haps was Ron Beyma's debut as an operatic impressario in New Haven,s first production of Pergolesfs La Serva Padrona. The Birds were notable too for their warbling- Tom Colwell and Charles johnson in singing groups, Paul Knutson, jim Rose, and Pete Yaeger Qwhen he's not studyingj in the Glee Club. Social life in Berkeley this year has been sparked by the frequent appearances of Sam Madeira's gal from Vassar and Bob Lefcort's unending assortment. Social Committee staffers Brian Comstock, Woody Hunter, and Paul Russell were successful in resurrecting Berkeley from its social torpor with a sundry lot of bands and beauties. Over in the North Court in the wee hours, the jr. Punt Club, like the Phoenix, rose anew from last year's ashes with hardy leadership provided by Duke Savage, Ken Raupple, Bob Anderson, and Mule Talbot. Meanwhile, john Breglio played his pregnant wit off straight-man George Dyke's Stoney mumblings. When not perched on a telephone book in the Main Reading Room, Bob Stoller could be spied carousing with Myron Danow over one of Pat's gala boilermakers at Moryls. When not drinking boilermakers at M0ry,s, Bill Burstein and Charlie Morgan matched wits with above-average rats and often won. All in all, it may not have been our shortest, gladdest, or brightest year at Yale, but the poet could never say, Hail to thee, Blithe Spirit! Bird thou never wertf, Bob Lefcort Pete Yaeger The Class of 1969 of Berkeley College faced an almost impossible task when Hrst they ventured forth from the dusty recesses of Welch Hall. Not only were they beset with the usual hopes and fears that accompany the sophomore year, but also they had to cope with the high standards of excellence set by the immediately preceding classes. Their performance in diverse fields indicates however that the Class of 1969 will uphold the fine Berkeley tradition. Perhaps most satisfying to the students themselves were their academic achievements, for certainly a hi her than average percentage have attained Dean's List ion- ors. This is only part of the story however. Berkeleyites Brian Dowling, Nick Davidson, and Mick Kleber have effectively demonstrated their 'prowess on the football field. Robin Waples and Dave johnson have made strong showings for the swimming team, and Scott Robinson and Lee Harrington promise to play important roles in shaping Yale's basketball and tennis futures. The contri- butions of the Class of 1969 to singing groups, publica- tions, and service organizations are seemingly limitless. The things that the members themselves will cherish are perhaps more subtle. No one can deny the harmful effects of having one,s room face the sleepy little inter- section of Elm and High Streets. The noise and the 'Q 'Wa W- .nhl And as the sun sinks in the West the beat goes on. gil! ug, 13534, ,L ., , Jn-, -Q-,, M 'Wi f ' ., 5' ' warn ,q!k.::g.,.f, -ig? 1941, ,4-'ink 1 M aster C lwrles A. Walker noxious gases Welling up from the street have produced a welter of aberrant personality types. It is this process of random mutation that has produced a uniquely diversified class image. For boundless energy and ingenuity it is difficult to outdo Admiral H. Doug Connell whose unseltish mission to pockets of marooned females throughout the trackless wastes of New England are immortalized in song and story. His closest rival is jobs Beach whose one hundred eighty-nine varieties compare favorably with Heinz. No less unconventional is the rugged polo play of seemingly mild-mannered Granny Kiesewet- ter. Musical virtuosity is remarkably prevalent among the sophomores, ranging from the clarinet of john Adams to the less aesthetically pleasing wail of Coddington's bagpipes. There are also those less fortunate than their classmates in attaining varsity athletic glory, who have starred for the Berkeley Birds Kenfield, Seay, Williams, Stewart, Pritchard, Connell, and Plishner toiled ceaselessly for a Birds' gridiron squad which, though clearly the best team in the league, never got the good break it needed. Bordley, Reed, Coit, and Coddington bolster the ranks of the hockey team, while Shevlin is high scorer for the bowlers. Who could ever forget the fluid gracefulness of Stewart on the basketball court or the polished talents of Denner, Seay, and Lord? Such is the skill of the sophomores that their play is indispensable to the incomparable Waterfowls', and the incredible soccer team. These are but a few of the many and varied strengths of the Berkeley Class of 1969. As that renowned so aptly remarked, O Babylon, how manifold are thy sins! john Davis At the head of the Berkeley dining hall, at the foot of Bishop Berkeleyis portrait, stands a long table marked out each noontime with clean, yellow Reserved,' signs. To this private preserve the fellows of Berkeley College each day bear their luncheon trays, and woe to the unescorted undergraduate who would breach the sanctity of their seclusion. To those who love her, the fellows table exists as the product and proof of the unwill- ingness of undergraduates to meet freely with the college fellows. But the ladies who set out the signs each day probably do not think of this, the table is a convention, and neutral in itself. But the distance, the block to communication between fellows and students which that table represents is a gap which Berkeley College this year, at Master Walker's prompting, has set out to bridge. Student groups now meet regularly in the Swiss Room with faculty members to discuss topics ranging from the future of the Christian Church to the problems of inter-dis- ciplinary exchange. The Commonplace Society, which has existed since 1960 to give students the opportunity to present topics of their own interest, the results of their own research, to their peers, no longer keeps its membership on an invitational basis and has opened its meetings to all Berkeley juniors and seniors. Also, following President Brewster's lead, Master Walker and Dean Bell have initiated a program of discussions on the various aspects of educational policy at the university. In the arts, Berkeley has continued to sponsor frequent chamber music concerts for the Yale community in addition to the productions of the Berkeley-Calhoun Bach Society. Preparatory to the establishment of an art studio in Berkeley, Professor jack Tworkov, Chairman of the Department of Art, has offered to meet regularly with students to discuss art and the techniques of painting. The dining hall is visited more frequently these days by graduate students and the graduate fellows-in-residence. Student meetings with distinguished visiting fellows such as Vernon Iordan, the head of the Voter Education Project in Atlanta, and Dr. Vivian Henderson, the President of Clark College, have also served to strengthen lines of com- munication with the college fellows. The convention of the fellows table remains, de- fended if not defensible, practical if not laudable, but the roots have been set this year of a true community, of Berkeley College. cynical historiographer might describe it as the Spirit of Camp Trinkausf, a dispassionate phenomenological observer as an absolute inversion of Spirit,', and an avowed cabalist as a mystical moment of spiritual unityf, But whatever it was, it made a dramatic impact on the customary Branford demeanor and attitude. There is little doubt-it was triggered by a changing of the guard, for it marked a sudden transformation from an established and somewhat rigor- ous academic environment to an environment brimming with incipient activism, fos- tered and bolstered by the new master and dean. Whether this umetamorphosisv was progressive or not-that is for us to reflect upon at some future date. Perhaps it was the fall sports rally that first outwardly evinced this new temperament, of which a basic ingredient was a renovated college spiritf, Mr. Trinkaus took an ac- tive interest in our team sports, encouraging participation through beer to the winners. Mr. Edwards, meanwhile, did not long remain content in his role as head cheerleader and consequently became himself a participant, minding the nets for the hockey team. And then there was the football game against Farnham Hall from Southern Conn: it is reported that the referee fa noteworthy bachelor of sorts, had entered into an entente with the opposition-that will suffice for the outcome of the game. Mr. Trinkaus assumed an unprecedented leadership in developing Branford's social potentialities. Calling a meeting in the dining hall early in the fall, he proposed a disco- theque, an idea that was acclaimed by all. The Branford aeclecticsv then went on a sa- fari, rendering homage to the established discotheques in other colleges, collecting data and ideas. Only through the constant urging of the master did work on it progress, without that urging, the proposal would have been stillborn. Finally, there was the rein- statement of the master's beer party, a first hand physiological study of the effects of massive and rapid alcoholic consumption: the juniors were the most rapid-and the most affected. Although the master and the dean occasionally provided for similar studies else- where, more often than not, their parties were directed toward more informative goals. Their residences became a milieu in which we could meet the fellows and grad fellows of the college as well as share our experiences with each other. Above all, both the dean and the master relentlessly promoted the intellectual life of the College. They helped set up the Branford Forum, the Branford Science Forum, the Branford Cinema Society, and they further provided unlimited opportunities for stu- dents to meet with Branford Fellows. But not all innovation was initiated by the master and the dean, some of the more enterprising amongst us inaugurated two new seminar programs, one on the university structure, the other on assorted subjects in the liberal arts. Meanwhile, the Medical Forum highlighted an extremely successful year by host- ing an overflow crowd on the subject of birth control and morality. And of particular significance to a large number of us was the adoption of a formal constitution by the Branford Council. If there was a coherent theme which pervaded the many aspects of Branford life, it was that of a rediscovered adventurism, an adventurism which extended beyond the realm of the academic. For Branford men, this was truly the year of the extracurricular. We have spent four years here in Branford, together in a whole panorama of en- deavors-personal and collective, significant and trivial. Now we think increasingly of the future: graduate study or military service, the challenges of government or the temptations of business. Yet we have lived the most human moments of our Yale lives right here in Branford-the endless daily routine of planning, preparing for, and then perhaps rationalizing away the next class, the next date-or simply the next morning. It is these memories which will entertain and support us as we move on from Yale. Our years in Branford have witnessed many changes in the collegeis administration, both in the deans, and in the master's positions and entourage. Each change has intro- duced different attitudes and philosophy to the college, and we have profited there- from. But variety was not the monopoly of the administration, we have been varied ourselves, in both our personalities and accomplishments. Al London, Mike O'Neal, Hal Reames, and Vic Lieberman were Branford's chosen in Phi Beta Kappa, while Bob Greenlee, Warren Celman, and Bay Godfrey captained the mv l ab? ' S'----' af!-K' 4 . Wkrn ,gfffiffi fsiffk 'f ORD CQLLEGE F BRA I v - 1mwv ix f-G. ,rf 42 4: A 3,:V ug dxf? - Y X K X K ii. ' , :js vb x 'I r -W . 'E F1 , Le 33' V 4 I ' fini? A eng? .W--ASL...-4 2- . f 5. .-...-... qw... WK' ,.,n.. Master I ohn P. Trinkaus Q T it list of Branford men in the world of Yale sports. Bill Seiler directed WYBC through a period of change and renovation, while Mike Rhodes, Tom Goldstein, Vic Ashe, Dick Van Wagenen, and Bruce Breimer sat on the Board of the News, and Dave Storrs ruled at AISEC. The troika in charge of our social affairs, Dick Quintal, Mike Leahy, and Doug McClelland first increased our fee and then compensated with a fine bill of entertain- ment-in the process elevating poster jargon to a fine art. Many were the Branford men who distinguished them- selves at college parties, not least among them were Master Trinkaus and Dean Edwards, with a special mention for a Friday night of a Princeton weekend. We were at once very civilized and very casual. Bill Albinger spearheaded the attempt to impart some French high culture to our Yankee Souls-with the blessing of le Maitre-while Bruce Breimer and Tom Goldstein set out past the power plant to discover the lowest in rhythm and blues. Dick Whitten's resonating baritone, pruned for formal concerts, thundered just as frequently through our courtyard, where the croquet contingent met in end- less championship matches. The first snows affected us differently: Hap Happel and Randy Meyer vacillated between skiing it at Stowe and spreading it at Conn. College. Chuck Stetson opted definitely for the former. john Born was relieved simply to move from a cold shell to the warmer indoor rowing tanks. Our ranks were usually thin at breakfast, rumor would have it that more than a few failed to pay a morning visit to the dining hall all year long. Lunch was an inter- esting meal, with Fred Pollack, bearded. preaching for co-education and Bob Litman threatening to brew a better beer. Only at dinner, however, did Vic Ashe really hit his oratorical stride, on any topic from walk lights to Washington. jim Orme negotiated Council matters over endless desserts, with Alan London as an articulate Devilis Advocate, and Bob Van Valkenburg wailed for someone to reassemble the 'gBranford Pressf, Terry Rogers, as often as not, previewed busy Saturdays by sur- prising us with a midweek date. Breakfast, lunch, and dinne1+then-we have had inter- esting days here. Chief Aid Zissimos F rangopoulos has kept us entertained and organized through it all. Steve Stearns served as our official voice on the SAB, while Bruce Barnet presided over the Inter-fraternity Council. Mike Rhodes is the Chairman of the 1967 Class Gift Com- mittee. We will be hearing from him .... Zissimos Frangopoulos Dick Quintal It took the Branford Class of 1968 two years to become adjusted to its college environment. But by junior year it was clear that it had Yale and Branford clearly under control. In every field, no matter how momentous or trivial, Branford juniors began to show the fruits of two years of careful preparation for leadership. But the Class of 1968 was aided in its relentless drive towards Fame and Strength by Master P. Trinkaus, who in his first year as Branfordis Leader in Residencev saw our potential. Acting with the advice of the new dean, T. K. Edwards, whose experience with the junior class dated from two years before when he was one of our freshman counsellors, Mr. Trinkaus began to appoint juniors to Branfordis most prestigious student positions. Featuring, symbolically enough, red floors, blue walls, and white ceilings, the Branford Discotheque was built under the leadership of Phil Huber and Foster McGeary. Completed in February, the Discotheque became an immediate success. Dance-starved Branfordites took ad- vantage of the latest tunes played in the Main Room, while more fundamentally starved students basked plea- santly in the Quiet Room. One of Mr. Trinkaus' more dynamic changes was to institute Croquet in the Branford courtyard. Quick to take the challenge, juniors practiced with mallets in hand to the breaking point, even when there was snow on the ground or when the sun had set hours before. But the practice payed off: gradually, one team emerged which appeared to be the envy of any college croquet team. Consisting of Ditlev Knuth-NVintericldt, Gerry Oyama, and Bill Hixon, the team was never defeated, at least in its memory. On a slightly more cerebral level, the Towermen were also active. Co-chairmen Lars Lih and Harold Gabriel organized the Branford Cinema Society. An elite group, all of whose members had to be able to recite the name of every Bogart film in backwards order, the society brought to Branford such films as To Be a Mani' and The Savage Eyef, Following the latest trends in student government, Branford revised its Council elections to guarantee that its representatives would serve Branford well. The new Council, headed by Dave Cluchey, debated policy with vigor and concern, its other junior class members were Dick Brodhead, Geoff Garwick, and Roy Ryan. The heart of any college is its dining hall. Here once again we did our best to abet the collegeis spirit by famil- iarizing ourselves with the dining hall establishment. Particularly outstanding in this category were Tom Ber- mingham and jeff NVoolf, both of whom demonstrated great willingness to communicate with Rita, who clears dishes, and the girl who checks off names. The Branford newsletter, formerly known as the Branford Tower Bulletin, featured the New Look. Calling itself in successive weeks The Gothic Flash and The Four-Court Report, the journal was edited by Gene Lyman. The Branford Lit also changed its name, to be- come known as The Eclectic and printed stories which were exactly that. The Eclectic was edited by Geoff Garwick. Rick Lander, and Bill Reed. I11 the field of extracurricular eating, the Branford Buttery reigned supreme. With star junior cooks jim Rossbach, Bob Reiffel, Phil Maechling, and Gerry Oyama, the snack bar served such delicacies as the 'ihamburgerv and the grilled ham and cheesefi In short, the Branford Class of 1968 had an outstand- ing year of achievement, one which would probably leave future junior classes breathless. But the Class of 1968 still had one year left, the sky would undoubtedly be the limit. jacques Leslie Men will lie on their backs, talking about the fall of man, and never make an effort to get up. -Henry David Thoreau Erudition succumbs in the spring, and thereafter wanton sophomorism reigns supreme-at least that was the case for many of us who transferred from the comparatively commodious cells in Wright Hall to the cramped quarters here in Branford this fall. A lot of us fell, many of us have yet to get up, and some of us who did-they left. Fortunately, the question of our fall remains strictly academic. Why worry about such an irrelevancy when more important things were on the agenda? i. e., bridge, poker, pool, chess, Diplomacy, and burdensome telephone and hotel bills. A few, however, enervated by the continual self-sublimation that monosexualty entails, took postive measures to alleviate their lassitude. Pete Lacouture was the first to swear at the altar, and Tom Early is vigorously competing with Marc Cooperman for runner-up honors. lim Piubright and Lee Mundell were more timorous: they merely pinned their girls. But this contest is one in which the booty remains illimitable and ubiquitous, that is, with the sole excep- tion of New Haven proper. On the other hand, Ken Brown and Mike Flanagan came close to taking even more drastic measures. Ken fell asleep at the wheel of his VW at sixty miles per hour, and he awoke just in time to find himself upside down and the car a de- molition derby dud. His most serious injury-a broken nose. And Mike was innocently but savagely mauled by a spurious pimp in the Dixwell section. On the whole, it was not a good year for nonchalance. There were those, however, who deemed themselves called,' and got up to distinguish themselves in the Yale com- munity. In Varsity athletics, monster back Bill Evans, Iamie Woolery, and Keith Nelson saw action in the Yale Bowl, Dennis Ahearn and Andy Armbrust competed with the likes of Don Schollander in the Delaney Kiphuth Exhibition Pool, Don Joseph wrestled against the finest in the East, Ion Kastendieck participated both as a varsity cheerleader and as a sprinter on the track team, Phil Case rowed varsity, and Jim Walker stroked the lightweight crew. In the political realm, our neophyte politicians batted only 333: Mac Thompson decisively won the vice-chairmanship of the Conser- vative Party, while Skip Hobbs and Ed Ferraro both lost tensely tight races -for Chairman of the Progressive Party and Speaker of the Union respectively. Not to be denied, Ed, the top sophomore orator at Yale, along with Steve Davis flamed their ways to berths with the varsity debate team. And the Glee Club received much needed vocal support from baritone Dan F riedlander and bass Bo Riehle. Others engaged themselves more busily within the Branford community itself. Greg Karampalas and Ed F erraro collaborated to set up a series of seminars on the University structure, Mike Medved, Ion Waxman, and Danny Gottlieb pooled their efforts to create the Branford Seminar Program, sponsoring Hve non-credit seminars open to all Branford students, and Morrison Bump and Todd Everett laboriously procured speakers for the Branford Forum. Others, like Mark Hildebrand, Walker Knight, Steve Dunwell, Buzz Yudell and Tom Graham contributed their time to the develop- ment of our much belated discotheque. And there were some, like Randy Schiffer, who diverted themselves by seeking disillusionment in the Branford Dramat. If the scandalous impropriety of an elite coterie of Branford sophomores last fall portended anything for our class, it must have been that we would not long lie smugly on our backs, that our skulls and bones are worth more than the mere ashes of a toilet paper funeral. Richard L. Farren Perhaps the most concrete measure of the change which Branford has undergone this year Qoutside of the intellec- tual spherej has been the relative success of our athletic teams as compared to last year. Every team, with the sole exception of the volleyball squad, has either maintained a winning record or else has fared better than last yearis cor- responding entry in Tyng Cup competition. The football team, boasting a tenacious defense headed by Doc Marshall, a defense which outscored the offense, compiled its best record in several years. Captains Lew Ortmayer and Dave Wenner aroused considerable enthusiasm for the squad at the fall sports rally, the type of enthusiasm which parlayed into a record turnout. The loss of two quarterbacks, however, stifled the offense, but with such reliable stalwarts as Bill Hixon racing back punts for touchdowns, Branford really didnit need that powerful an offense. Where the football team picked up, the Branford soccer and touch football teams kept going, both bettering last year's dismal won-lost statistics. And if our fall sports' success provided us with any stimulation for future success, the progress of our winter teams clinched the issue. The hockey team won seven of its last eight games to wrap up its first winning season in Cap- tain John Bornis memory. Bn Basketball, under Kemp Slaughteris dynamic leadership, won its first game in two years- an infinite improvement over last yearis record. Meanwhile, the Av Basketball team was barely thwarted in its drive toward another South League championship by a one point loss to Saybrook. While Dave Brownlee belligerently bandied with John Carlson for eighth and ninth positions on the ladder, the squash team, paced by Todd Everett and Lee Patterson, was headed to a strong winning finish. The bowling team spurted in mid-winter to win seven out of nine games after a slow start and then to defeat the previously undefeated team for its biggest win of the year. And de- spite several early forfeits, even the swimming team, captained by Phil Huber, saw its fortunes ascend this year. Branford managed to keep her place in the Tyng Cup standings during mid-winter, fluctuating from seventh to fifth place in the standings. But Branford is traditionally strong in the spring, and if several teams can equal last year's championship performances, maybe we can take it alll w- ,Q-f ,..,..-v- 'l-w .,-or ifif C ,Y ' . ' x , ,,.-v- .gf ,Ff- .4- ' -.6 ,M XI-Tr: d.,-1.. 591 W 1 'sxvlf-L: y. :T- :.:4-. 75.4 hi . gfafff' 4,- ,. Aan! we . wiigqv L-,gm sf K W1 ip , ,, 'Er i RZ' 45 To Old Calhoun, to Old Calhoun, We have to leave you much too soon . . .', hen Maury Yeston and Dick Pechter wrote these words for the Calhoun Christmas party they had little idea how deeply all of us felt them. But as soon as we heard them we knew. For us, the Class of '67, Calhoun was a unique and formative experienceg we were all different and better for having lived here. And Calhoun, we hope, was considerably improved by our resence. By any normal measure, no one could have guessed how unique the Ifreshman class which moved into Lawrence and Welch Halls in 1963 would be. We were a bizarre collection, to say the least, but hardly a group which would leave the college so radically changed when we left. Yet appearances are deceiving. True, the middle entry way of Welch was so rowdy that it was assigned its own campus cop. Yet out of that entryway would come five Phi Beta Kappas: Pete Gilkey, John Baron, Tom Morri- son, Charlie Corcoran, and Maury Yeston Qthere were two refugees as well, joe Feit from T. D. and George Bermann from Morsej. True, the first entryway washed out Dean Powell's office at least once a week with cataclysmic water fights, but included in the flooders were Tony Dean, the future head of the New Haven Tutorial and Tim Timberlake, later a Director of the Transitional Year Program. Freshman year may have been the year of the Great Mattress Party, but it was also the year in which our class began to gain a sense of cohension and continuity. We were to need all the unity we could get, for the end of freshman year. marked the end of the long and prosperous reign of Mr. F oord as Master of Calhoun and the beginning of a steady turnover in administration. The next two years with Master B. Davie Napier were exciting, but they were all too brief. In the course of four years the continuity of the college would have to come not from any administration but from our class. Girls in the Houn tonight, Girls in the Houn tonight, Please don't tell Morris, heill die of fright, It wouldnit be right. The rules get tighter . . But by the beginning of sophomore year we had unity to spare. We were solidly welded, not as an aggregate but as a group. We did everything together: we com- mandeered all the long tables in the dining hall and made our class the biggest in- crowd in the world. The other classes who attended dances had to contend with the Sophomore Line Dance, a huge string of fifteen or more couples all dancing together. The keyword of the day was Togetherness. Waite, Mr. Waite: The only one whoid wait for us to graduate . . And together we accomplished a lot. A bunch of sophomores got together with Mr. Waite and formed the Calhoun Music Makers. This group was the genesis of what was to be the Yale Symphony Orchestra, and three of the founding officers of the Yale Orchestra-Paul Gacek, Lohn Baron, and Bill Krinsky-were Calhoun sophomores. Dave Spiegel revived the Cal oun debate team and made it a winner. joe McDermott and Tom Maciolek with the aid of Steve Campbellis technical skill took a dying drama program and made the Calhoun Independent Actors a force to be reckoned with in Yale dramatics. And were it not for co-chairmen Mike Beierle and Paul Longo with the STRONG support of Dick Hart, Clarkie, Snapper, Pea and the Bag, our Social Committee program would not have continued its tradition as the best in Yale. Our class formed the core of the football team-Y.A. passing to Burlinghof and the Eff while Freddy and Van blocked. Every game was cheered on by Kramer the Cripple and Maybelle, Official Cheerleader and surrogate mother of the team. Even Eric Coble was inspired to come out. What's this on my plate, Mr. Somma?v It wasrft all heaven. Consider the food. Larry Iones did. C'Somma!vj But groupness,', as Mr. Napier would say, 'clasteth not foreverf, By the end of junior year we looked at ourselves and wondered what had happened to our class unity. If sophomore year was the year of group identity, junior year was the year in which each one of us discovered he was an individual. And as individuals many of us started to find out exactly why we had come to Yale. Steve Douglas, Morgan Grace, and Bert Rodriguez became Calhoun's resident artists. Dennis Jaffe discovered phy- cology and became a founder of the New Haven Halfway House. Stan Herr worked diligently for ARF EP. Bill Krinsky usacrificedi' hundreds of rabbits at jackson Labora- tories to evolve a whole new theory of fertility in lower mammals. Ted Sands found he really did have a green thumb. Larry Schultzis News moguling carried on the Calhoun tradition. Bob Callahan and Mark Laidig enlivened the Yale Charities Drive, while Bag Crawford chaired the junior Prom. If a Yale dramatic production didnit have music by Yeston, it was an inferior play. Time magazine started quoting Bob Benard's drama reviews, and we began to wonder who was doing who the honor. Walt Buhl and Tim Rice became Whiffs, though the best singing group at Yale was still the CALHOUN COLLEGE castle. Mark Triffin did for the Party of the Left what jim Saxon did for varsity football, Bill Stephens for varsity baseball, and Tom Maynard for the cycling squad, each was an inspiration and a workhorse. R.W.B. What did you see When B. Davie Napier gave you the keyf' This, then, is how we presented ourselves to the new Master, RWB Lewis, a.s senior year began. Napier had gone to Stanford, Chet to XVells. Master Lewis and Dean Barnouw had brought their own spirit to the college, but leaned heavily upon us to pro- vide leadership as we had always done. For example, Marty Rader infused new life into the Calhoun Council with his hard work, Butch Ptoelle, Dave Coleman, and Larry Edge kept Calhoun running smoothly as the stalwarts of the aide staff. In short, we pro- vided the college and our class a renewed unity, yet somehow different from the ugroupnessv of sophomore year. Too much had happened since then, we had changed too greatly to go back to that pattern. Look- ing back, we saw that the only path we had to follow was one of maturity, each one of us pursuing his own individual course. And drawing together again in the senior year we realized that we enjoyed each other's company not because the other guy held a membership card in the Class of ,67, but because he was an interesting guy. We met each other freshman year and were amazed at how interesting everyone had become. The spirit of senior year was not the frenzy of the i'Houn dancef, it was sitting in the courtyard with the other guy, quietly dis- cussing what we had here and what we hoped to do in the future. It was discussing stocks with Mr. Curran, math with Mr. johnson, or almost anything with Mr. Kessen or Mr. VVaite. It was basketball in the squash court at 12:30 P.M. and endless conversations at coffee hour. It was watching Phil Rosen- thalis experimental films even if you were a . . -ci' , f . W x- math major. But most of all it was dropping by somebodyis room just to find out what he had to say, even though you really hadn't seen much of each other for a while. In approaching each other as individuals, we formed anew many friendships on a more honest basis. The grades weren't that good. A lot of us wasted time, maybe we didn't learn as much as we could have. VVe spent too much time in the poker room, and too much time at George and Harry's. But we made some good friends and some important decisions. And we all grew a little. To Old Calhoun, to Old Calhounf, We had to leave you all too soon. Robert Callahan Martin Snapp If it is the seniors' choice to reminisce and the sophomores to look ahead, it might seem that it would fall to the juniors to do both. Instead, we are likely to do neither. Maybe it is because looking backward or forward makes us more aware of how quickly time passes, or perhaps it is because 'Houn '68 is such a busy group, there is only time for the present. The Great Society, General Hershey, and even the ASFPCA have had profound effects on the junior class. It seems that no matter how much we attempt to Ivy Tower ourselves, the world still breaks in and casts its radiance upon us. Readers of the Times were surprised to discover Tom Schmidt, later selected all-Ivy middle guard, immortalized in several paragraphs, the surprise was even greater when Rick Stoner was listed as the second sharpest basketball shooter in the nation during the early season. Not all newspapers were as favorable to 'Hounmen as was the Times. john Skrobat, despite the efforts of the OCD, had an outstanding season as goalie for the soccer team, while Mike Harvell, graduating from the Calhoun team, became the Yale jV soccer captain. Calhoun's academic distinction was reflected by Arnie Polinger and Al Weiner, both were elected junior members of Phi Beta Kappa-there are only eight. joe England, 'Houn repre- sentative to the Yale Key, also served on the Prom Committee and was elected manager of the 1967 football team. He made news of greater consequence when he was married during Christmas vacation. Neither LBj nor General Hershey have beards, a few bene- factors of the ASFPCA do! The proliferation of beards in Calhoun might be attributed to Frank Dubinskas, whose flaming red beard may be seen for hours on end in the Calhoun dining hall. Frank, a recruiter for the Volunteer Services Council, was one of the many 'Houn juniors who have been moved by a new, remarkable commitment to the community. Not only did we hold the top offices in Alpha Phi Omega, but we were working in other surprisingly, diverse charitable work. Bob Gewecke, Steve Rosenthal, Sandy Thompson, and Al Weiner worked with New Haven Tutorial, Gordy Gafford was a Yale Hope Mission volunteer, and jeff Marcus was an assistant at the West Haven Veterans Hospital. One wonders whether we will have as great an effect on the community, come spring. The Times may not recognize the sincerity of purpose in 'Houn '68, nevertheless, Steve Kovacs and George Geer prepared themselves for the arduous task of rowing on varsity crew, while john Anderson and Ping-Pong Acei' Bob Haar waited for the snow to melt so they could recapture places on the strong tennis team. Bob Gewecke, perennial basketball Free-thrown champion, expected to become one of the top cyclists in the East, but was afraid he would be dis- qualified if the campus police discovered that he hadnit registered his bike with their office. Though the Calhoun Social season may never rival the Inter- national Debutante Cotillion, the 400,,, or the Grand Prix de Monaco, Calhoun again maintained its out- standing tradition of social excellence, through the efforts of john Anderson, Mike Harvell, and other social committee mem- bers. QGary M., however, wasnit the most attractive dancing partner for Cannibal and the Headhuntersl. Though the Great Society has not seriously affected Calhoun, no Wash- ington Green Bookersv or Philadelphia Mainliners', were invited to THE debut of the season. Leopolda la Chatte, of 461 Cal- houn and New Haven, bowed to society Princeton weekend. Guests remarked that she was the cat's me-owl Commenting on his youth, john C. Cal- houn once said, I went on to Yale College, fresh from the backwoodsf, And so it was with the Class of Sixty-nine making the transition from the rusticity of Lawrance to the brave new world of Calhoun. Striving to emulate their beloved namesake, the men of this class have incorporated their back- woodsi' talents into the mainstream of college life, for the edification of all. NVanting to apply their simple, nature- loving background to the more refined aspects of iHoun life, Bob Dering, Dave Click, and Don XVeigandt, members of the Calhoun Council, were instrumental in the suspended tie decision, in the formulation of the Talladega program, and in the rejuv- enation of the Grotto. Directing the Napier Fund Allocation Committee, they were able to set up a series of lectures and seminars in which members of Calhoun could meet in- formally with members of business and the arts in order to discuss mutual interests. Kurt Barnes Duncan Carmichael jim Lansing participated in the Council- supported companion program at the Conn- ecticut State Mental Hospital and joined NVilkes NIcClave in providing scholastic help to students through New Haven Tutorial. Recognizing the need for a more down-to- earth, ubackwoodsv atmosphere, Pat Mol- teno, chose to represent the 'Houn in a sort of dust to dustv capacity-in the Battell Chapel mid-weekly worship committee. john C. Calhoun loved the sounds and sights of his beloved country plantation. Familiarity with the sounds and sights ofthe wild have enabled Calhoun sophomores to excel in creative expression and the arts. In the musical realm, Dave Friend, john Lehr, and Dave Becton harmonize with the Apollo Glee Club, Bob Brush and Scott Howard regale the public with song from the limelight ofthe Baker's Dozen. jerry Smith takes time out from behind his desk at the Political Union to join Dave Gleason in the marching band, while Bill Call, john XVingard, and Gary F auth make melody in the concert band. The iolksy tunes of Stephen Foster are not like the music of the steam pipes of Lawrance Hall, but 1Houn ,69 has coordinated the rustic clangs of the Old Campus with the new rings. Bill Call john XVingard . 5' T 5 f .. 1 , , f ,Ethyl f 4 N53 ',,..... Fall . . . ,bb ix-fm' A if-f 2 1 4. 5' Lx i 1 i .xr ,Q A an 71 l ' fm: . omen for the most part are prone to love-making-as nature has intended that they should be, but there are women from whom all such follies seem to be as distant as Skittles and beer are distant from the dignity ofthe Lord Chancellor . . . Anthony Trollope, Orley Farm We too were prone to love-making, and laughing, and tube-watching, and winning, and skittles and beer. To have all these things and the dignity of the Lord Chan- cellor as well was perhaps asking too much, in any event, not many of us main- tained that dignity, a lesser number missed it, and fewer still cared. We truly be- lieved that we were, like Cassius Clay, The Greatest, and decorum had nothing to do with it. We were Felons, an amalgam of bluster and bravery, energy and empathy, secret sharers in a spirit that marked us far more deeply than could mem- bership in a publication, or a singing group, or a service organization, or a senior society-marked us more deeply because it was more pervasive, more popular, and more ours than any of Yale's organized fragmentations listed on our transcripts under Extracurricular.,' It was not always so. When members of Davenport ,67 were hardly more than twinkles in their fathers' eyes, back in Yaleis salad days of maids and one-bedroom-per- man, 248 York Street was a shoe address, indeed, but the mystique was vastly different. Then the esteemed Davenport pass was made not against Leverett House but Vassar, and undergraduate shows still bore some resemblance to those on Broad- way. Then the only application a student made to his residential college was the initial one requesting admission. The college was a place to sleep, the master and dean lived there, beyond these things the conglomeration of red brick, green shutters, and brown stone connoted nothing. In the spring before we crossed the New Haven Green from the railroad station or wherever to begin our Yale careers, Davenport finished dead last in the Tyng Cup standings. Spirit wasnit far behind. And now, in the Fall of 1963, this was our college. Dean May was to compare our career at Yale to a marriage. Through Dean Thompson's adroit and arbitrary card shuffling, our assignment to Davenport was more like Operation Match. Where had we come, and to what? Eclectic,', declared Time magazine in its November feature article on Yale architecture, Davenport College is eclectic. F lushed with the prestige of having our new home make Time only eight weeks after our arrival, we rushed to our dictionaries. Noah Webster fYale 17782 defined it: composed of jarring partsf' Surely crossing a medieval moat into colonial Virginia was unsettling-but then, so was freshman year, and the word eclectic might have been applied to the whole of it. We had the finest accomodations on the Old Campus in Vanderbilt Hall, and the longest walk to Commons. We had the most ambitious magazine in Yale history, and an entryway under the Damocles' sword of probation by virtue of a community dis- ciplinary pledge signed under duress because we had gained some practical engineer- ing experience' with a superslingshot. We were ninety fellows who were to become perhaps the closest college group in the Class of 1967, and we didn't know the guys in the entryway on the other side of the Vanderbilt arch until we piled bicycles across that same archway, keeping the campus police from putting out the burning couch in the courtyard, and we knew the heartsick sorrow of our first Harvard Weekend, when we tried to talk to suddenly superfluous dates and drank a little and felt badly because a specific death had done much more than spoil the big date: we were re- minded so as never to forget that even in these cloistered, mock-gothic walls, we could never remove ourselves entirely from the real world. And what of those we met when we walked across High Street, up between Branford and IE, across York and over that moat, for those ten meals a month in the ornate vaulted dining hall? The upperclassmen-was it possible to look as big to those behind us as the upperclassmen looked to us, those giants in the earth who dared to keep girls in their rooms or to flunk comps? Master Merriman-were there ever before such whiskey sours? Dean Porter-who can forget the whistle on the lanyard, the blue tennies, the boater, and the Phi Beta Kappa t-shirt of the Hudson Strode Memorial Games? Or that in our first College Weekend during those games, he disqualified the freshmen for obscenity after the infamous grapefruit race in which we used our hands so as not to bruise the fruit? DA VE N PORT CULLEGE 1 As we moved into the last-choice rooms, sophomore year officially brought us all these things and more: mixers where some found love but most found simply bad Screwdrivers, showers which scalded if a toilet two floors above and an entryway over was flushed, a fellow- ship which was long on titles, but short on time for undergraduates, and the good Dean's history of music 10c, the indispensable gut for music loversf, The lecturer, continued the Felon's Head announcement, is clearly a victim of infatuation with his own voice, but the music is wizzard, with two z's.', But the ultimate wizardry of sophomore year was the rise of the Felons from athletic oblivion to a new Tyng Cup record. With some upperclass help, brilliant sopho- more quarterbacking and defense took Davenport to the intercollege tackle championship over Calhoun on Princeton Weekend. We were on our way: winter and spring sports championships followed to bring us 686 points tout of a possible 9601 and seven beautiful pieces of silver. Students from other colleges eating in our din- ing hall hinted darkly that the inscribed on the ceiling stood not for John Davenport but for jock Dorm. The exuberance spilled over into other facets of college life as the sense of community engendered by the teams began to make our house a home. The tube engaged us, and bridge, and skittles, and the Old Libe fwasn't that above the Common Roomfflj saw us oc- casionally. The 1964-65 social season boasted a Carib- bean steel drum band under the crosspiece and Yaleis Hrst discotheque, but it took a sophomore in a topless bathingsuit at Mardi Gras to make it a season to note and a night to remember. junior year Betty, Molly, and Flo the Dessert Lady were still in the dining hall, guard Mike Burns was still at the gate with his tilted fedora and gravel-voiced Hi, boysf' and we still won almost everything in sight, to the growing dismay of the other eleven. In the Fall we beat Leverett House 13-6, their first defeat in years, in the Winter two hundred howling fans and the Hve- piece Davenport Irregulars watched the hockey team down Eliot House, the Spring found us with over 741 points, another record and just under 260 points in front of second-place Silliman. Davenport t-shirts became de riguer. Rumblings were heard from those dissatisfied with our jock image who decried the lack of cultural activity Cbeyond The Man From U.N.C.L.E.i'j and the emptiness of fellow-student relations fbeyond watching them come down the stairs after cocktails on Wednesday night to see if anyone might stumblej. Looking for new frontiers, Diport '67 took up the challenge. juniors won the ma- jority of prizes in the writing contest, and the literary magazine was born. In March, the D'port Dramat, refounded and refurbished by juniors, merrily managed to offend the entire college with Aristophanes' Lys- istrata and to bring the New Haven Fire Department clanging to our gates to extinguish a few too-successful smoke bombs. What the Felonis Head styled proof to the world that physical prowess and mental agility are not imcompatiblev was given by the '67-dominated debate team, which won our first intercollegiate title in a decade. And as for student-fellow relations, Kingman Brewster, Ir., will never see a group of carolers to equal those Diporters young and old who together rousted the President and his family out of bed the evening of the memorable Christmas party of 1965. Spring brought the Great Skittles Tournament, the first Davenport Festival on College Weekend, and the retirement of Master Daniel Merriman. The man who had once said that success was ours, as it must and should be, whose gentle hand and dignified enthusiasm had wisely provided the freedom that made it possible, was leaving Davenport after two decades. Senior year we welcomed Master and Mrs. Horace Taft, and the new courtyard football power composed of young john, Hugh, and Ho-Ho made this, for the old men that we had be- come, a younger place, and a different place. President Brewster said that Master Merriman had symbolized continuity, certainly he helped to symbolize ours. Now, after two years of watching the classes ahead about to graduate, we found ourselves in the same position. Envelopes from the Class Council, placement notes, the group photograph in the courtyard-we were initiated into all these mysteries. We were those who would struggle back to visit with tales of graduate school, office, or perhaps Southeast Asia. Like the Whif- fenpoofs, we would 'Spass and be forgotten with the restf, Senior year had fled by with boards overshadowing the last football game and envelopes with official-looking return addresses becoming more important than the last weekend date. We may not have pledged our lives Cthough a goodly portion was dissipated herej our for- rrii . 1.4 E il-Sf yf' ri c I' ,-V1.1 an -5 KW t 'l'-Jun w,.,,,gs tunes Qwith a few happy exceptionsj, or our sacred honor Qhard enough to keep, much less to pledge? to Davenport, but we looked back on what we had done and been together, and it was good. We smiled when we remembered. -David Alan Richards In junior year we take our ease, Fol de rol de rol rol ml, We smoke our pipes and sing our glees . . . Well, some. It was a busy time, what with their reminding us that, of all our years at Yale, this one would be the most important for getting into grad schools. Maybe this was why junior jam seemed far more likely than sophomore slump ever had. Otherwise, things were fine. The college had a name and was riding the tide of a successful previous year, and everyone felt that Davenport was a good place to be. The Tyng Cup was on its whelf, the Intercollege Debate Trophy sat on the mantle, and the Deanis Davenport vignettes were forthcoming. It was a year of accessions. Court Shevelson took the reins of the Armour Council and began spring term weekends with the Mardi Gras. Don Crawford became president of the reorganized Dramat, and the Felonis Head and Davenport Public Speaking Society were ably guided by Steve Rourke. Ned White spent hours at his typewriter as Editor-in-Chief of the Lit, Jerry Shulman led the Yale jewish Appeal, Bill Peck ascended to the Program Directorship of WYBC, and Tom Herman be- came Political Editor of the News. Varsity Soccer elected Roy Austin its new captain. It was the year in which Bob Day made Halloween better for everyone by swooshing up and down the din- ing hall in his famed Great Pumpkin outfit, scattering goodies to the masses as he went. Randy Rall bought up all the nickles from the skittles machine and built up a fine nickel collection from scratch. And of course our class continued its unbeaten record in the Hudson Strode Memorial Games Crew Race. The sights and sounds of the college made memories: the cacophony of a dozen different stereo complexes on football weekends, the din in the dining hall on Satur- days, the subterranean echo from the squash courts, the sound of the piano and the dull clacking of Skittles balls in the common room after dinner. We'll remember the cold football practices and the rooting section at the Davenport hockey games. Weill remember freezing our ears in the laundry line and hearing the common room door clank at three in the morning as the last grind left the library. And the courtyard the morning after a snow- storm, and trees in bud in the spring. We felt a quiet satisfaction with being in Davenport. It was a very good year. Frederick Schroeder Fearing little and knowing less, the Davenport class of 1969 set out to fulfill their destinies as joe F elons in the truest sense of the word. A memorable year in F arnarrfs ivied halls had honed our intellectual dex- terity and our social sauoire faire to a keen edge, and even the impending evil of the sophomore slump could not dim our spirits. Sharpening our pencils and oiling our slide rules, we cleaned off our desks, bought note- books, made lists, procured signatures, and finally, with a tremendous sense of anticipation and accomplishment, slept through the first Poli. Sci. lecture because, after all, the guy next door would probably go and he took better notes anyway. i-Lo P It didn't take us long to figure out that maybe our true talents lay outside the classroom-so, leaving the few incorrigible grinds behind to amuse the Registrar, we set out to search for new horizons. Ned Captain Road Trip Culver led the Vassar diehards on to Pough- keepsie, and Pete jacobfs muffler-less pink and silver '56 Cadillac barge was duly chosen as fleet flagship. Meanwhile, others were trips of their own-road and otherwise. Some of the more sedentary types, however, developed a taste for bridge. Taste turned into ap- petite, appetite into a kind of ravenous hunger, and before long, three-day bridge orgies were routine. Exam time, it turned out, was an especially good time to hold these festivities, since you didn't have to worry about going to classes or buying football tickets and could really concentrate on the game. In keeping with Davenport's time-honored tradition of superior athletics accomplishment, sophomore Felons helped vanquish the usual scruffy inter-college com- petition with customary poise. Marc Klein's goaltending for the soccer team earned him the co-captaincy for next year. The sophomores on the football team were legion. Charlie Peck and Kim Morsman paced the pucksters, and Lussen cracked heads on the nationally-ranked B basketball squad. Some of us even made the big time: Tim and Kim started for the soccer team, Ed picked off passes in the Bowl, and le Grand Richards and Sheldon pulled big oars on the Housie. And now, knowing more and fearing everything, we turn to our pencil sharpeners and slide rules once again ready to go out into the great world of academe-in the words of Dean Porter, Through the front door. 'x ,,,, ,Q . Y ,frrnn . - -F - ------- - -f- mici-like Yale itself TD has offered us a surfeit of good things. Much of The Republic is unchanging. The springtime rite of TGB, venerable as his Dante, presiding over the Tang Cup fray in striped jacket and straw hat fClass of '28j, is always as colorful as the entrance of the TD drinkers. Despite David Cossman and the touch footballers, Procul este a Craminev remains the motto of the Republic. And Christmas will always be celebrated on the second Monday of December. Almost as traditional is the legend of Dave MacKenzie, who in the latter part of his decade at Yale introduced us to the glories of kegs in the courtyard and educa- tional movies. Charles Garside, whether plodding pajama clad into the buttery for a burger or marching barefoot into the dining hall, also was a facet of TD His- tory. And the Class of '67 will always remember Mrs. Bergin's green spaghetti and explosive rum concoctions. TD's men will ever face the agonizing choice of fried or scrambled four times a week, ominous notes from a good Dean Davie, and the long walk to the Co-op. But we'll remember especially the night we played Tom jones, TGB's cryptic epistle in search of a wagonwheel, and Santa Pooh giving gifts and gossip to the college. Doug Rund was living humor for us, while Doug Melamed regalled the college with his eloquent irrelevancies. The Mott Woolley Council found an able chairman in Tim Bingham. Ted Ducas brought the Fellows to lunch. There were girls- in the college, some even married to men like Ed Beck, Bob Lewis and Bil Brewster. Most of us sought the permanent coeducation of the roadtrip, often following in Dave Cocke,s footsteps. On winter weekends we watched Howie Dale star for the Eli basketball team. A colorful college we had. We savored the irony when the zoo went up in real flames. Our directory turned out to be a yearbook in january, and we athletes leamed much on the graceful art of losing. We did once beat Harvard, thanks to coach Terry Segal, but the Tang Cup really had to be our forte . . . one point three dryv was a welcome shout from the happiest practice sessions of any team on campus. What mattered Tyng ere we had Tang? There,s been some talk about Paris around TD, perhaps overheard from Alan Shelden at the coffee hour. TGB once mentioned that TD's fortunes are great for though we be furthest from the Co-op, weire closest to Paris, the language lab and Silliman fthe latter being a rather dubious distinctionj. Our trans-Atlantic week- ender, jimmy Mitchell, might shed a light on the subject, but the real experts are Tom Devine and Roy Bird, back from junior year abroad. More significant may be our proximity to Interstate 91. Three years of memories are here in Timothy Dwight, our rooms, our friends, each other, and there'll always be a feeling for TD, well embodied in the immortal words Forsa et haec olim memimisse juvabit. Dick Beeman The class of 1968 in Timothy Dwight approached its third year at Yale with roughly equal parts of anticipation and trepidation. Hailed in 1964 when we grad- uated from high school or whatever as the Hrst of the post-war babies to enter col- lege, a lot had been expected of us. Some were sailing along in their third year as ranking scholars while others had resigned themselves to their defeat at the hands of the damned systemv or were planning one last try. Since none of us looked ready to spend our first two years as Old Blues wading through rice paddies, the big push for graduate school had begun-some aspiring to Harvard Law or Columbia Med Schools and others confidently predicting, Well, if I go to Ohio State I can,t miss the Law Reviewf, A lot of freshman physicists, economists, and future Presidents of the United States had been forced by a year in a Dirty Durfee or Filthy Farnam quad or triple in T.D. to reorient their goals into statements like Even if I go to Vietnam, I'm too smart to be sent to the front lines or If we get married I'll get her pregnant pretty damn fastf, We had spent two years leaming that Mr. Egan had spoiled us freshman year, that Dean Davie really did have office hours, and that green spaghetti tasted better than it sounded. Some of us had become prominent in the University-Prom Chair- man Phil Curtis, sportsmen Ioe Wolcin, Robbie Keith, Carl Crew, Jeff Wein, and Walt Zorkers, but the rest were content with matters like a new color TV, sleeping, or even studying. TIMUTHY D WIGHT ' The Chubb Fellows, 1966-7, fleftj Representative jonathan Bingham CD-NYJ, fright olockwisej former Governor Robert Smylie KR-Idahoj, Mayor Richard C. Lee CD-New Haoenj, Sir john Glubb, former Mayor Robert Wagner KD-New York Cityj. We saw ourselves one of two undergraduate classes that remember Richard Bernstein-and part of the group that will remember Karl Deutsch. The departure of jolly Charles Garside brought the whole apublish or perishv thing home, and watching Mike Kahn go made it all the more real. Many laughed at Stokely Carmi- chael as men like him-Staughton Lynd, Mark Lane, and Robert Cook-were challenging the very bases of what our parents wanted us to inherit. Our junior year was not one of preparation as the other two had been. Secure in our knowledge of Yale, we looked ahead apprehensively to grad school applica- tion, the law boards, and to the unknown that lies be- yond a special New Haven day in june, 1968. john Cahoon When I was a freshman, many members of Timothy Dwight assured themselves of success by rubbing old Timothyis nose under the archway on Temple Street. As a sophomore, I find the gleaming bronze nose has faded. However, some of us have reaped the benefits of schol- astic and social success. It is true that T.D. pulled in most of the sub-80s in Anthro. 20 last Winter. Undaunted, the ,69ers, inspired by Dante, Coffin, and dining hall coffee, revealed their individual and group prowess in the Drinking of Beer. From the tube patrol QArmstrong, Burkhard, Ganahl, Leonard, Loumiet, Sacerdoti, and Spattb, we find a potential Westchester slum lord, a budding Mafia gen- erallissimo, and a third or fourth party presidential candidate. Iudging the sophomore contingent to the MWC, we predict that Bob Wood, as Massachusetts' Congressman from the 33rd district, will introduce a bill providing free doughnuts to his constituents. Out of the depths of TD will emerge Ray Nunnis Save the American Indian March on Washington. Ever since Walt Cummings got pinned, he and Bill Scranton have been figuring how to bring the University of South Africa to New Haven. On a less earth-shaking plane, the T.D. sophomores will continue to bring T.D. to unprecedented heights of athletic and alcoholic achievement. Herb Stiles may very well win back his black belt next week, but D.D. Ebersol, heir apparent to Curt Gowdy, will have to wait until 1972 to bring us Al Richardsonis attempt to swim the Pacific. Socially, T.D.'s heretofore mediocre reputation among womens colleges will be bolstered by the '69 Winter Prom, featuring the Underground Movement and tunnel-parties. It is a little known fact that Wharton, Raish, Lant, and Castelli spent most of the winter term transcribing Iohn Phillip Sousa marches into scores for The In- vadersf, Harvey, Streicker, and Tankoos ran a branch of Moryis in the basement of the Harvard Crimson. Rivest didn't go to a single class in the spring term, and dropped his average to 89. T.D. is off the beaten track, true enough. But we are closest to France and Hagman's, and are cuddled by Smithies and nurtured by Mrs. Bergin's buffet suppers. Peter Burkhard Q-6:-vF4',w-,.,. 1 13 We ffm fm - f - gf I 1 x Q, f 5,31-, 'X , ,A R ,., : L. - L Wg' Q my ir Q WL g p H mf 1 g x' , , V if I-Q V W - an WM 4 Im ,fi ,,f ,a X .. im , ff. . .mf , -if Vggtgfzsfkkim f if new ,av - rw ' -f F' jg? P' K4 . ,L X . f- , Qgv , E .sf 1 54, V 11. is 4 ,5 s. -if H , S' uw up M lm U 1 x 1 oi? , V. V px X X ., NL rom 1. E. we left last Spring, but to the same I. E. we did not return in the Fall. A sparkling new buttery in the Weir Hall basement was turned over to Tom Harmon for operation. Landscaping added a grassy plot behind the Masteris House on what had been an ivy strewn mess. The physical changes were more significant than the less finite alterations. Master Cannon continued his active role in the life of the college, encouraging membership to greater participation in many fields, particularly the arts. Dean Robert Kuehn completed his second year as the friendly but firm arbiter in suite 716. Continuity was the theme through- out as Chairman Bill Hilgendorf was followed by Phil Stevenson, and the Advisory Board continued its searc for an effective role in the college. Individual members gained recognition in fields ranging from scholarship to sports, causing one to ob- serve with a touch of pride, He's rom I. johndroe, Milum, Alexis, and Nelson led the Spiders to a South League football championship, setting the pace for other teams. Each class, as we see in the sketches that follow, developed features and an identity unto itself. What it's meant to be is Camelot, make no mistake about this. In a couple of years, it is true, when someone asks you to describe the residential college ex- perience, you will find the question about as meaningful as a query about the migratory habits of the American house wren. But that's the whole trouble, it isn't something to describe. A year in organizes itself into indecipherable confusion of dinners, events, and gross-outs, complicated by a bewildering menagerie of invitations to get you to them, programs to read during them, and parties to help you understand them. Now, as a condensation of a year in IE, that is a touch harsh, but it's what you'll get for trying to describe it. What it is is a state of mind, an experiment in high density living that is too elaborate to be believed. And for us, it became necessary from the beginning to make a balance between living in a manor house and living free. Admirab y enough, the college permitted that. We were pretty cynical about Yale,s answer to Oxbridge, but the atmosphere was contagious after all. For instance, the effect of IE is best measured by a glance at freshman year. Nothing. We are the last class to remember precisely what we were doing on the Old Campus the day the President died, and that is important. But I defy anyone to remember what we did on the Old Campus any other time. Two entryways, as remote from each other as Montana is from anywhere, and our only decision was when to use the ten meals Mae allowed us. Of course, there were ominous signs of jE's interest all year long. The first night, we watched them pass berobed into the Great Hall, mistily asking would they serve steak often. There were invitations to the wondrous elegance of the Gala Bally and to the wondrous obscenity of the Orgy. And then, some of us had been elected to the aide staff and the advisory board, except the therapeutic functions they connoted were as yet unexplained. So we began sophomore year. The reputations we established in JE were merci- fully more human than the ones we established outside, where we were being elected to fratemities for our poise and regularity with the same frequency with which we would be tapped the next year. It was the year of excess. We had more dates, got drunk more exotically. When we were conscious, we perceived the odd lawn in the middle to be landscaped, rechristened, and forbidden. Plans soon materialized that would move the TV room into the buttery, the buttery into the library, and the library into the castle. And the people? Well, somewhere Mar- lantes was acquiring a blue denim winding sheet that he would pass off as a sports jacket for three years. Meyer had the most awesome things to say about Gold- water, and Wilkinson had the most awesome things to say back. Shannon left the fold. Barnett protested that there were fish in the tank that has nothing in it but water to this day. Entry A seemed to be the land of the free, home of the excessive. junior year was pleasant enough. We found out we had a hockey team and enough of a football team to keep us going to the bowl. We spent a lot of money on Alice in Wonderland and were broke the rest of the term. Lunning grew a beard, and Pattison wrote urbane but firm replies to David Merrick. But the events do not matter much. While the service bureau galumped about preparing the new library, we sat back and made value judgments. It was an easy year for most of us, and we had time to see that the Master was genuinely concemed about is i A 2 ll' JUNA THAN ED WARD5 , f , the balance between college life and life, that Mrs. Cannon really was inexhaustible, and fevenj that we made fewer pretensions about student-fellow relations than the other colleges. Mellowing, we began to like some of what it was meant to be. We returned for the swan song to find the hanging gardens at the east end of the courtyard. We dis- cussed whether it belonged there fit did? and whether it was worth the money fit wasn'tQ. Prewitt became a grind, Colson became a cynic, and Lafex became engaged. We all became worried. As we were told, there was a culture shift in the conversation, that is, from the flick at the Lincoln to what we were doing next yearf' A disturbing per cent of us were going the way of all flesh as a preliminary decision. Noveck and Herzer were the next to go, but we convinced ourselves with typical sagacity that they wouldn,t be the last. Not that we were feeling old, just acutely un- young. Lunning grew another beard, Dorf took to wearing a beretg and Iohnson was by now organically tied to his pipe. The end was near, and we still kept changing our opinions of each other. The funny thing is, the only thing that stayed stable was Camelot. All of its events happened over and over again, like a one-act play on a three-night stand. It may be that there was not enough here of what was going on in DKE or the field house, but we more or less survived without it. If you will forgive my senility, it is what they mean about the brightest years, and it is the only thing we have that approaches one brief shining moment. Perhaps I think we all think that, and, after all, perhaps I only hope so. Paul L. Monette Upon the junior class of came the realization of a hereafter. For some it was to be a welcome re- lief, for others, something forced unwillingly upon them. Lacking the creativity of the class ahead and the devi- ations of the class behind, the future of the class of 1968 appeared to be in the professions rather than in the arts, a group of regular guys with all the positive and negative images that phrase brings to mind. Some maturity crept in as the question Whaddaya doin next year? took on ever more urgency. A little crept out, too: witness the dinner table. The big, not-so-happy crowd that appeared in Bing- ham in September, 1964, has sorted itself into more defined and closer groups. Entry A discovered that sophomores can be nice guys. Cole, Thacher, Shoul- ders Guadnola became resident experts of the good life. Todd Sweeney won the flame-that-never-fails award for his two week Mardi Gras vacation. He competed with Horning and Rothkopf in a bilateral contest with Rosenbaum and Burling as the mainte- nance of the biggest zoo on campus. Horrified room inspectors called it a draw. The painters in March scraped the custard pie off the walls of entry B after some fraternal blood-letting of two months before. Doug Seaver proved to be a real showman as well as sailor on his twenty-first birthday. Both the campus cops and roomates Alexis, Dowling, and Hussey are grateful that he won't be twenty-one again. -..,.. f,,.. 4, K ll.. f 1 QWQQJ ,fr yfQpx91f 91 vip? wr 3247 Lf . tiff? 3 -sv,-,few While entryways became more self-contained, indiv- iduals sought and found roles both inside and outside the college. Lance Hidy decided to take some ad- vanced courses, thereby becoming the first Yale under- graduate to go through the five year B. A. program in four years. Sandy Greene chose to extend Gigfs fellow- ship at Yale for another year. The torch was passed. The juniors accepted the challenge. Stevenson, Rosenbaum, and Young guided the for- tunes of the Advisory Board, Leader, the speakers committee, Livie, the social committee, and Alexis, the fortunes of the Spider eleven on the gridiron. Bill Zucker and Andy Sharkey took over the Buttery after a year's efficient operation of Tom Harmon. Glenn the Big Goosev Greenberg, Rob McCallum, Sharkey, and Don Terry gained recognition in the sports world. Peter Krause continued to be Peter. The water fights of B entry in Bingham reappeared in B entry of E., but lots of things changed in be- tween. Groups of associations are smaller, friendships closer, the future nearer, and the end closer at hand. The big world looms ahead as something to be faced. But for one more year, at least, we will rest content under the reproachful gaze of Mr. and Mrs. Edwards in the caverns of the E. Dining Hall. Cy Elk This year the Class of 1969 matured into sophisti- cates. It was appalling the way we started-out our Yale careers, we had no idea of what was in and what was out.', However, we have changed-no longer do we stop and chat with Mae in the dining hall line, because that is out.,' We learned that it was in to pray no attention to Mr. Cannon's two affectionate dogs, Bruno and Hadrian, and we learned to address the fellows by their first names. Individually, we astounded everyone, including our- selves, with our success. Del Marting led the way athletically, competing on both the varsity football and basketball teams. Charlie Lerman threw the shot for the track team. Steve Holahan became the star goal- tender for the Blue Hockey team. Hal Valeche, Dave Ioseph, Irwin Sentilles, Iohn Nelson., and Wayne Willis led the great Spider football team to a near perfect season. Tod Wheeler was the college con-man, selling everything from stationery to Yale sweetheart rings. Iohn Gazzoli and Nat Adams tried to demonstrate their musical talents. Carney Mimms and Iim Besancon were slightly more successful in the Yale Marching Band. Robespierre Gennis, Harvey Meyerson, Eric Lenck, and Steve Haworth again turned to juvenile delinquency for kicks. Brent Taylor, Frank Aronson, and Bob Gib- ney thought that girls were the answerf, This year, the Class of 1969 had three transfer stu- dents. Iohn Meyer came over all the way from Ezra Stiles, Nat Wallace decided to come north from the Carolinas, and Diamond', Darrell Boss arrived from Haverford. Fred Hayden, Dave Meter, and George Singer were chosen for the five year B.A. program, and will spend next year in underdeveloped countries. All in all, class of 1969 promises to be even more sophisticated next year. Iohn Gazzoli Led by Andy Sharkey and Don Terry, stars of a for- mer freshman team, the A basketball season started fast, and had an early lead in the South League with a 2-1 record. Hockey suffered, in contrast, since IE's top hockey players performed for the varsity. Captain Rick Sperry's charges could not gain a single victory early in the season. On November 11, 1966, the IE tackle football team met North League champion Ezra Stiles in the most exciting game of recent IE history. The IE Spiders were undefeated through five preceding games. The championship game was characterized by great defense and ball control. Stiles, in a tremendous show of spirit and ability, put together an offense that de- feated the Spiders 12 to 6. After the long season a game with one of the Har- vard houses would be an anti-climax. Yet the next week the football team travelled to Cambridge, only to lose to Eliot House, 8 to 6. Fourth place finishes characterized both other fall sports. Nelson and Tod Sweeney led the scoring in touch football, while Captain Ron Kadden led the soccer team. The Bowling team, under Captain George Noveck, was undoubtedly the most distinguished winter sports team. Led by Tod Sweeney, best overall bowler in the South League, and a host of others, the team had not lost a single game at press time. E 0 af , . .. M-X, . gi E ...., J, M .H - W... f fy s A 1 If wk, R rf 3+ Wi :xii--1 A he mgrf Q X X 'Q-.yu 7 a: 'Awww' E -,ff .-2 5 Q f gglgifl . iflgiggigfk Q, ,, . wail-iigggv fu 3: V - ,M L,-,k., - www -an Winter uw -fx., sl Q35 .bf 'w5xg,2Nm 3' n the northern boarder of the New Yale,', a New Morsel' could be seen attempting to struggle to its feet during 1966-67. With the advent of Master Hall and Dean Behan emerged a theme of increased communica- tions and respectability within the college. Progress toward those goals was reflected in the dynamic atmosphere at Morse. All improvement, however, was not realized so gracefully, as student unrest forged major issues of the year. The sincere interest and charm of Mr. and Mrs. Hall won them the universal respect and admiration of Morsemen. The Master introduced fellows, associates, and assistants galore to help cultivate a sense of community. There were parties, receptions, and forums which further fulfilled the potential of Morse life. The Christmas Party, planned by Mrs. Hall and Mr. Barz, was a masterpiece of food and song. And who can forget the study break in the Master's House during exams, when Mrs. Hall, expecting fifteen students, found herself hostess to 200 people? The Master adopted the open door policy fa Far Eastern scholar, hej and gained many friends by it. There was turmoil, too, as Morsemen re-evaluated many features of the college and decided to change what they did not like. The flies and ties controversy in the dining hall gained fame throughout the University, and the search for a place to grind forced the library to change its system and reopen on a twenty-four hour schedule. Dissatisfaction with the work of the College Council led to an examina- tion of its role in the college and a much-debated February election. In an issue with much larger repercussions, the Morse pot debacle instigated the great debate at Yale on marijuana and the law. Morse activities carried on in sterling fashion. After a mediocre year in sports, the Axemen gained supreme glory on a chilly Friday in Cambridge. Despite a heartbreaking season including several last second defeats, the football team rose to steamroll Dudley House, 12-6, to become the only Yale team to master their Crimson opponents on the gridiron. Urged on by a capacity crowd, supported by the Morse Marching Band, and inspired by the moral support of Coach Churchill, the Mashers responded with a valiant effort that was not to be denied. More genteel pursuits also sparkled. The Morse Forum sponsored discussion series on architecture, Asian studies, and urban problems. Ghost Sonata' high- lighted the productions of the Morse Experimental Theater. The Social Com- mittee kept the common libido satisfied throughout the year. From the Harrison Brothers on Princeton Weekend and the Great Townie Mixer, to the Winter Ball and the sacrifice of the virgins on Druid Weekend, Morsemen joined in celebrating the splendor of Stonehenge. It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of security, it was the age of anxiety, it was the epoch of studying, it was the epoch of punting it was the season of rejections, it was the spring of deferments, it was the winter of induction notices, we had everything before us, we had nothing before us, we were all going direct to graduate study, we were all going direct the other way fto Vietnamj-in short, it was our senior year at Morse. There was a king with a wide smile and a queen with a fair face, in the House of the Master, there was a king with a wide smile, and no queen at all, in the Apart- ment of the Dean. In both places, it was clearer than crystal to the Seniors about to depart that, for them, things in general were settled forever. Life in Morse was revitalized by the new administration of Acting Master john W. Hall and Dean David P. Behan. The receptions given by the ever-punning Mr. Hall and his ever-gracious wife, and Saturday night frolics at the Dean's added new dimensions to the social life of the college. The cocktail parties with Fellows, given by Assistants to the Master Bob Kapp and Angus Macbeth, also served to enliven the year. A number of seniors found their own way to a new social life. jim Angelo, Toby Atkins, M.ike Davey, jed Devine, jim Ruebel, and Bob Wagner were married fnot to each other, of coursej over the summer, and Bill Pahlka, Morse's Gutenberg-in- Residence, tied the knot during winter vacation. Even Valerie, the Dean's secretary, felt the contagion and became Mrs. Carlson in late October. Ken Adams and Bob Kapp were already engaged, and Kevin Learned, Chuck Lidz, jamie McKenzie, Mike Slater, and Bob Schuster found themselves in similar states before the year was over. Mandibular hirsuteness was rampant. jim Angelo, jim Bourne, Dick Devereux Steve Doan, Sten Lotgren, Mike Matill, Rick Shaw, and Tom Wilson all sported 3 L LLEGE , beards. Tom Laughlin's goatee caused many to mistake him for Ho Chi Minh, but Andy Walker settled for a mustache. Rick Cagney and Andrew Garvin Cwho, The New York Times informed us, is known to his friends as Andy j starred in the Yale Promo film, To Be A Manf, Other celebrities of the college made their way in cafe society: Bob Kapp, Doug Gibson, Fred Addison, and Dave Malkus were the foremost table-hoppers of the dining hall. Grad student Gibson also made a hit with his kilt and his homemade lemonade. Randy Alfred, jim Angelo, Greg Anderson, john Her- man, Gordon Kerr, john Lowe, Larry Macon, Bob Schuster, Mike Slater, jerry for was it Mike?j Turner, Andy Walker Qas Vice-Presidentj, and Tom Wilson were busy making trouble on the Council. Chief Aide CFirst Aid?j Larry Macon and his staff of Librarian Jim Angelo, Athletic Secretary Greg Anderson, Cultural Czar Mike Qor was it dIerry?Q Turner, Business Manager Fred Crowley, an Executive Administrator Gary Drobnack all helped the charming Mrs. Bailey manage the official affairs of the college and keep the underclass aides hard at work. Gordon Kerr, Andy Walker, and Bob Allison acted as social impressarios, and Bob Schuster, Lanse Crane, Ho Laughlin, Mike fSeven-Packs-A-Dayj Mattil, and Elliot Porter catered to more intellectual needs with the Morse Forum. Tom Wilson, Mike QF ive Sleepless Nightsj Matill, Ierrymike Turner, Jim Bourne, jamie McKenzie, Fred Addison, and Andy Walker kept things moving in the Morse Experimental Theater. Randy Alfred, Kevin Learned, and Art Butler pub- lished the revitalized Telegraph, and Tom Wilson edited the Stonehenge Review. Andy Garvin and Rick Taft on the News, Dick Devereux and Toby Atkins on the Banner, Rami Arditi as chairman of Criterion, Ken Adams and Neil Cohen with their letter in the New York Times Magazine, and Kevin Learned, Steve Doan, and Boris Baczynsky, as Times delivery boys rounded out the publications contingent from Morse. Magazine Agency mogul Rick Kirkwood had to hire an answering service to handle irate Playboy subscribers, and Jim Bourne spent most of the year pardoning his progress on VVYBC. Rickshaw retained his junior year room because his weekly re-arrangements had not yet exhausted all the possible permutations and combinations of interior decorating. jim Peters decorated his room with a pet kitten. Derek Bush captained the varsity soccer and rugby teams, and led Devine was the primus inter pares of the baseball squad. Ho Laughlin managed the varsity swimmers, and Rod Bacon and jim Avery blistered their hands for the lightweight crew. Avery also saw service on the Morse Roadtrip Team, along with floor- mates John Lowe, Greg Anderson, and Bob Stevenson. Morse was one big, happy family. Rami Arditi, Steve Gray, and Sten Lofgren all had brothers in the Fresh- man class. Andy Garvin's brother Phil was a member of 1969. Ewee CDoug Ewaldj, Shewee this girlj, and Peewee CPete Resnikj comprised a triumvirate with a distinctly musical sound, but it was Paul Lamar and Lonnie N essler who stirred us with praiseworthy post- prandial pyrotechnic piano-playing per- formances. Wayne Hening, Jim Kugel, Dave Mal- kus, and Karl Seitz returned to Morse, albeit to the Junior class. Sadly, Dave Birnbaum and Dale Griffith had met sudden and tragic deaths and would not return. It was the best of times, it was the worst of times . . . -Randy Alfred And it came to pass that the sopho- mores became juniors. Verily, the land of Eli had never seen the like. The tribe of Morse was heralded throughout the Kingdom for its men of muscle, sons of Varsitus, known to idolators as Foster of the Hoop, Henneke of the Cinders, Southwick of the Mat, Hahnfeldt of the VVater, Chu of the Rapier, and the great- est of these, Watson, cult king of the Hide of the Pig. Others there were also, each a giant among men. And the Master saw these, and it was good. And there were those who belonged to the tribe, and to other clans, too: the actor Bassford, who let Saigons be Saigons, the technician Braun, wise in the ways of DeForest, the shutterbug lah, 'TV' uw-umm-wg -nw-W' ' W, R 4' ,ix if 1 -'N A' fn .M 54 2 X S wx ' , E f1::.sH.,.w...,F 4 if I x .X , ,..,n.,.-' ., iv, V 4, Q39 ,. ' - , ' av 4 i 7 fffa' . f -- kxP sQxivx?:?5.kA! 'R ' V - , J , ,Q . wa, A A x K rv xl fl W- nw Chang and the mahatma Azoff, who did hold their Banner aloft. And there was Carter, who planned the ceremonial dances and Newman who imbibed there. Town criers there were, too. Barge, moneychanger in the temple of OCD, and Weisman, elder of the Strobes and agent of a foreign empire across the big sea water, crafty. These there were, and others too, ranging far and wide, yet loyal to the tribe of Morse. There was Farber, known throughout the land as worshipper of the Sun God, Pasadena, and members of this Eastern tribe did berate him for it. Schwartz there was a one, Leroi Delarue, kin of the road, beguiling local concubines. And there was Eli of Flatbush, too. Into the kingdom of the feathered and the finny descended, cavalierly, Raleigh, cohort Hendryx P. Pending turned blue and took flight. Warner and Finley of the puck-ish expressions belonged to the tribe. And the Dean of us all saw them, and it was good. The Chamberlain did set an example of Frankenstein and Myrrhth unsurpassed from that time to this, as did the gentle strains of lute and sounding brass heard at the times of the Trials of the Skin of the Hog, with the tribe of Ezra and the na- tion of Dudley, when Darwall and Silver did occupy the times of rest with melody. And for all of these did the one, yclept Gonzales, keeper of the images of manly grace which decked the walls of the place of common nourishment and flies, provide a happy marriage of beauty and art thereon, numerology notwithstanding. Others did choose their mates for life. One, Durman the Mild, did leave the tribe to dwell at the Place of the Lake, with his chosen one. Verily did other tribesmen conjoin their fortunes with those of women. Wily Foxman, Woglom of the City of Gardens, and the tribe's Hunter, though not yet its Archer, did taketh the plunge. And the junior members of the tribe of Morse did prosper in the land of Eli. They grew stout as staffs of Elm and gained goodly wisdom as well. Verily they did pore over their tomes, and looked upon the next harvest-time, when they would all be senior. as a time for hope and maybe work. And the Master knew them, and it was good. Mitch Silver As the towers of Stonehenge beckoned in September, it seemed that the freshman malaise was over for the Morsemen of 1969. Some of us explored the potentials of our relationships at Yale with renewed enchantment, some of us followed our in- tellects into scholarly pursuits, some of us devoted our services to campus organiza- tions. Many of us, remaining true to our Vanderbilt heritage, forsook more noble involvement for a year of partying. Our athletes, though, were the first to return and start working for their goals. Of a large Morse delegation at football practice, Fran Gallagher and Pat Madden stood out. Ollie did it to Columbian and Pat scored in the same game. Dave Heckler and George Bass also won gridiron letters. Doug DaRif won a starting position in varsity soccer and Frank Shorter, Chuck Hobbs, and Ken Davis, ran su- perbly in Cr0SS-Country and track. What, however, the public didn't see was what happened after the games. The B-entry double party has already become legend, although it took place only last Princeton VVeekend. Christmastime saw its share of parties, too: one for the orig- inator of the traditional Dean's Punch, and another for Herb Wright on the occasion of the termination of the class, bachelorhood. The jelly set was just getting onto the right track when exams intervened. Rock and roll was the cultural forte of the '69ers. Though Andy Scott's band, the Lunatic Fringe, was short-lived, it was around long enough to provide sound for two Morse mixers. Moreover, the Fringeis noise was not dead. Andy's neighbors could testify to that. A telephone answering service handled all complaints. Ron Mills, Morse's answer to Tom Swift, designed that contraption, but Ron's master- piece remained, typically enough, his illuminated Jelly-No jellyv sign outside his door. Meanwhile, there were those who directed their efforts into different channels. Scott Newman was the News' Mr. Everything, while julian Fisher found one of his photos in Lqfe magazine. Ion Bell and Will Bogaty took turns as chairman of the Party of the Left, and closer to home, Ieff Thompson, Bill Pitt, and Ray Lebov represented the class on the Morse Council. There were others who were more interested in construction for themselves-mainly making money. Morse saw the creation of the Student Car Rental Agency, which at least got its agents to Cambridge for Harvard Weekend. Then there was the friendly Morse SAB delegate who wanted to investigate the Morse Buttery transaction. Spring not only brought flowers into bloom, but also provided greater oppor- tunity for sophomores to do nothing in style for even without itj. Though we may have had athletes, scholars, and helped run the campus, none of these achievements could approach the lasting contribution of the Morse Class of 1969. We could 'ell like nobod else. J Y Y jon Bell Clem Engle ' lass of '67, Pierson College, a flock of black sheep singing fol de ro? Chuckle in the beer of future reunions to remember Dean McMahon's .clipped tones ringing up a blacked out stairwell during the spring riot freshman year. This infantile behavior will not be tolerated, I will have no mercy. In those days Roy Sussman and Bill johnson lounged away the small hours de- bating the meaning of the universe. Rick Hayden constructed proofs of God and held black masses in his living room. Mac Hansing, jim Teevan, et al. followed the pagan cult of the Vikings. Bagpipes, amplified saxophones and twelve string guitars harmonized behind t e turmoil of freshman year. In the Spring one could ascend the sepulchral pallor of the Conn. Hall basement to find the Wright Hall court under seige. Subtle and slight mellowing over four years comes out by the way anecdotes stick in the mind. Now, having read Nietzsche and heard Beethoven's ninth, we remember what we did with our dates Kennedy weekend in a somewhat different light. Such is education, the growth of ivy that changes profiles. One could try to write our short history by recitation of the facts. Bill White, Mark Fennessy, and jim Venit were scholars of the house. Beaver Knight, Russ Leonhard, Tabor Chamberlain, Dick Moggio and Ted Carey were married. A record number dropped out. Tony Swil played rugby, Dan Jones rowed, Daetz played shortstop, Hashimoto swam, etc., etc. In a hundred books the story could not be told that way. On the other hand one can write history around invididuals who burst suddenly upon the public for unusual reasons. Hector Huertas drove himself each dawn through setting up exercises to make himself push-up champion. Gene Siskel, man of odd hours, brow furrowed by the weight of his enterprise, stripped from tux to bat suit before a college dance audience an sang Don't Fence Me In. We had serious and sentimental heroes as well. A pang of sympathetic fascina- tion was aroused by a dinner table bard reciting the saga of Tabor Chamberlairfs Great Weekend in New York when judy said yes. A semester's savings blown for the last Staten Island Ferry ride. Buy an extra dribble burger at the Iason- Weigel Buttery to save Kathy from the rent collector. Somewhere on the same stage there was room for Ken Kusterer's fast. He used to walk into the dining hall toward six o'clock to drink his single glass of milk while self-conscious friends grumbled at Malvina serving pot roast. Vietnam became quite an issue in those days. Senior year Tom Miller, a devil-may-care sort between times, packed his socks and left school to investigate that cause on his own. The rest of us, longing perhaps to do something in the real world, were already com- mitted to graduate school, of course, and got our kicks vicariously, toasting his fare- well. Beaver Knight moonlighted, married, ran for state assemblyman, and started a novel. History-conspicuous acts-if searched in vain for meaning, leads on quickly to the ranks of colorful characters and the constitution of groups. Call back Iere james' overalls and Georgia tongue, john Reid's red convertible, George Naito smiling at his girl friend, Aphn Stumreiter drinking coffee, Bob Polk cutting trees, Gary Goodbody after Whi ap, the career of the hearse, Von Buch's ascot, endless bridge games, jack Carey and crew road-tripping by horse, van, and plane. From such elements the groups developed an amorphous dining hall demography, not inflexible, but evident as people stood by the salad table, tray in hand, pointed be- tween the pleasant philosophizing of Steve Witty and Marty Kahn, and the belly laughs of Misarti, McKellip, and Merrick. A phenomenon of junior year was the emergence of a few half secret societies for thought and discussion, an idea as fruitful as presumptuous. Popik, White, Kimberlin, Swil, Kahn, Miller, Lee, and Bingham started the first by inviting john Hersey to spend an evening discussing life and art. They had a speaker a week through most of the spring term. Gene Siskel and Flick Hilficker founded similar ones. -Whether because of the Kennedy years, o.r reasons found by Kenneth Ken- iston in The Uncommitted, many people took their social responsibility very seriously. Sussman and Rouse, gamblers on one hand, worked for the Transitional Year Pro- gram, and Gordon Henry organized the Wilberforce exchange. Stackhouse and others tutored. PIERSON CULLEGE ,, ., mv- X .,f 4 ',,WM'igyg'-ix 5? E .A NN .XY TQ ., -x . V ' 'ANL 'WZQQ ' f-ww .W M 4' 11 f'-.Wn'E.-'flQ-if ' L ? z'r.x2A::f7'f?f-r,g:'ww ---f 4 W 4 A -.'-Mfr. 3, If such things had a left-wing flavor, vocal Republicans preserved the balance. Mack Hansing, Renny Scott, and George Pataki became synonymous with the right, even as early as freshman year. And groups formed for art and entertainment. Bert- man, Sherman, and Weigel had bands, the last perhaps most memorable for Kathy,s voice and IIorjorian's vocal personality. There were the Pierson P ayers who rose to glory in Pal joey, partly on the comet trail of Nancy Lane, but also by the special efforts of Harry Chittenden, john Collodi, and john McCormick at the head of half the college. Steve Kimberlin shall scarcely forget the chore of building risers for the seating. No more shall Barry Vasios forget the pleasures of acting. The core of the Players, plus jim Teevan, set out after graduation to run a summer stock theater in Asheville, N. C. One purpose of such gala affairs as plays and dances is of course to publicize the private specialties that adorn them: Wayne Eleyis printing, Mark Fennessy,s great bugs and playing cards, Kit Ebersbach's piano at candle light meals. Perhaps such reminiscences will in the future serve to cast up visions of the landscape, right at the point where the roads diverge in the yellow woodf' For many who walked out of Pierson into grad schools, the Peace Corps, the services, Pierson was that point, and part of the beauty of it lay in the pot luck group of characters present when each one made his decisions. Part, a major part, of course lay in the observations of those who watched us approach the junction-of McMa- hon, Porter, and Hersey, of Singleton and Rich Giegen- gack. They, too, may be remembered by epithet for humorous erudition, unconscious hilarity, olympian ideals set in viciously modern decor, course changes, loquacious bridge games, and the understanding we got or thought we didn't. The epithet only approximates their credit of course. How did they see us if not expressed by the shouting up a dark stairwell? I, sitting a bit self-consciously on a checkered chair while leafing through his latest book, heard Hersey say something to the effect that, Yes, yes, I met you all junior year, and you were a terribly energetic class, at least in community things if not always in grades. Then senior year came, and after having tasted of the glories of the group you started looking over the edge and each began to go his own way again, almost by himself. Sam Bingham junior year, we were told, is traditionally reserved for serious scholastic work that will produce the grades necessary for gaining acceptance to a preferred graduate school for, at least, some graduate schoolj. By September, both the serious Pierson scholar and those among us struggling to stay out of the rice paddies had decided that this would be a year for intellectual committment. Our determination probably lasted until the UConn game, when most of us opted for a life of extracurricular and social committment with an occasional flurry of intellectual activity. Some Pierson men, however, were already deep in Yale activities before the year began. Don Barrows, Rey Stroube, and Britt Kolar had re- turned to these hallowed halls early to consecrate their efforts on making our Saturday afternoons in Yale Bowl a little more pleasant. All three won regular positions on the 1966 varsity football team. In the fall, the Pierson Players produced Pal joey. Frits Angst, Dave Everetts, and Greg Croquitte,' Hay- den added vigor to the chorus line. Those Pierson juniors in singing groups revealed another side of the class musical talent. Bruce Keary, Bill Stafford, and Art Kidd of the Bachelors joined Ollee Transue of the A's and B's and Kit Brown of the Augmented Seven to give the class vocal representation. Completing musical ensem- bles were Britt Kolar, singing with Cleopatra and the Seizuresf' and john Smolowe, a member of the Back- doormenf' Fall yielded to winter, and a new group of Pierson juniors entered the athletic spotlight. Ed Goldstone, who also plays third base for the varsity baseball team, was a high scorer and rebounder for the basketball team. Al Evans, Tom Rauscher, and jim Moore displayed their talents in Coxe Cage. Pierson's prize Hsh', was Rick Schneider, a versatile varsity swimmer. As the year progressed, the list of athletes and organi- zation men continued to grow. Von Koch pitched for the Eli nine, and Don Wilson played lacrosse. If Piersonites were unable to produce the necessary grades, they nevertheless had the extracurricular qualifi- cations. A chronic spleen injury prevented Bill Hammer from playing wing for the varsity soccer team, but he worked with the Pierson booters. Hoping to follow in the footsteps of Henry Luce, William Buckley, or President Brewster, members of the junior class assumed their new offices after the NEWS elections late in November. Guiding the fate of the NEWS were Executive Editor Don MacGillis, Advertising Manager Ken Strassner, Programs Manager Fred Morris, and Social Chairman Con Brooks. Adding interest to the publication were Sports Editor Phil Hersh and Assistant Sports Editor Steve Bedrick. In social activities, Ron Whitney was Pierson's prom committeeman, Jack Mason handled the Pierson segment of the Charities Drive, and Al Evans served as one of Piersonis representative to the Yale Key. Al Brown QPierson Social Chairmanj and jack Edsall fthe classls first fatherj were the motive force and the example of the success of Pierson social activities. WYBC D.j.'s jeff Menkes and Steve Curelop supplied us with tunes, while Nick Newbold and Keith Marshall devoted their efforts to the BANNER. Other music makers were George Taylor, George Feldman, and Tom Rauscher QYale Bandj. Mike jeck, one of Yale,s repre- sentatives to the Columbia University Trivia Contest, was Pierson,s man in the University Theatre. Some Pierson juniors were also fraternity officers. This group included Al Evans, Ken Strassner, Fred Morris, and Nick Newbold QZeteD Britt Kolar and Scott junkin fBetaj. For all of us, it was a year as much of trial as of hope. Next year will be better, we thought. But perhaps it won't be. Phil Hersh Ken Strassner Alas, Pierson sophomores, the curse of lethargy has been upon us! After having expended the last of our energy on freshmen identity crises, we were cast sans merci into that inescapable pit of psycho-physical inertia commonly known as the sophomore slump. Fortunately, however, there were the lucky ones- those who managed to mitigate It's fury, those who, in the face of veritable oblivion, managed to hold on to some remnant of active life. There were Cal Hill and Bruce Weinstein, who rallied their strength so that they might contribute to the betterment of football at Yale College. Bob Arras and Toli Fliakos did the same in the name of soccer, as Bob Struse and Rick Barrier did for track. Nick Price held his own in wrestling and Webb Burns mastered judo. Then, there was Pat MacQueen who was so deter- mined to punt that he did! Still able to withstand the vicissitudes of public life, Bill Shapiro maintained a formidable mastery of rhetoric in his debates, while Al Hurwitz reasserted his political prowess in the Republican Club and Bob DeLorenzo secured a position on the Pierson Council. Ralph Penner conjured up his talent to play the protagonist in Pal joey, Tom Buccello escaped his stupor in the Dramat's Shoemaker's Holidayn and Waiting for Godotf, Also not permitting themselves to succumb completely to the enveloping doldrums of sophomore slumber, Richard Brodhead created gymnastic piano impro- vizations, joe Gray and Art Klebanoff toiled selflessly for the News, DerekAHuntington sought asylum in the enticing cacophony of The Beat, and Brett Cooke found relief in the soothing pleasures of Yoga-all under the brilliant Pierson Sun, sustained by Bruce Volpe and Mike Blake. Vocalization was another sector of resistance to the slump, still able to articulate the golden notes of joyous music were john Darrow in the Alley Cats, Brian Ibsen in the Bache ors, Gary Reeves in the Duke's Men, Paul Houston and Larry Smith in the Spizzwinks, and Bruce johnson and Bob Wittebort in the Russian Chorus. Last and certainly least of all yielding to the forces of academic inervation was Pierson's herd of ranking scholars led by Gary Morsen, whose diligent preserver- ence kept the torch of knowledge steadily aglow. That the sophomores-Wise Fools-could actually ac- complish all this-and much more-in the light of The 'Kslumpn is a marvel and, I think, indicative of things to come. The curse having passed, we can now await in eager anticipation the astronomical achievements that, no doubt, next year will bring! I. I. Bell ave you ever noticed the strange variable pressure system in which Say- brugians live? Perhaps there is something about the architecture of the college which causes it-built high around two small, symmetrical courtyard wells, with four corner portals for entry or escape. One might postulate that the seasonal direction ofthe winds, or ofsome unidentified ether, whipping around and over Saybrook roof tops, evokes a flu or exhaust system which tends subtly to suck us in or spit us out of the college. One might speculate further that the suck-spit pressure system operates in a cyclic way with spit pressure reaching a peak every other year- before-leap-year, with maximum suck pressure comincg a neat four years earlier, comparative suck and spit seem to fluctuate unevenly uring these four years. Then again, it may all originate, as some suspect, merely from a button in the Duke's second upper left-hand desk drawer which when pressed causes a slight motive vibration or peristalsis in the walls. At any rate it is 1967 and we have been feeling that strange pressure which pushes us out of the protective stone courts onto Elm Street, into the city and out in the world at large. This has affected members of our class in strange ways, we feel Saybrook spitting us out and we are sometimes eager and impatient, sometimes panicky, sometimes resolute, sometimes confused, sometimes just myopic and cool. Younger members, new officers, rushees, rookies have by now completely displaced us from the groups and squads and organizations which once sucked us up and kept us from bothering with the name of a Saybrugian classmate, his belabored wit, or his pondered opinions. It was this year or never, you see, so we had to become awash with tolerance and disgustingly mature. Soon we would go our random private ways, to face the responsibility of an ideal, of a love, of a scholastic goal, of a profes- sion, ofa war-kindred concerns this year. The pressure upon us, be it astronomical or mechanical, occasionally resulted in what Dean Martin Griffin, with brief chuckle and wag of head, referred to for might as well have referred toy as the senior syndrome of last minute madness. I cite the Brook Bingo Union which changed the common room into a honky tonk parlor of chance, where Rothchild, Griswold, Fates and pals razzmatazzed us out of our pocket money, and Towle and MacLeod kibitzed with their collars up. BBU subsequently became legend through its disheveled banner which is still lodged in the kite-eating tree of Saybrook court. But the madness had other forms. A few rediscovered the need to log late tube hours, and a silent cult grew, of which Kule, Herrup, and Fairclough were sometime members crouching in pagan adoration of the flickering box. Around Febru- ary, Senior projects began to be dropped, or, as Urowsky put it to Hayden Phillips, OOOooo . . The ardor of politicoes Burdick, Byron, Dillon, johnson, and so forth, leveled off somewhat as real life constituents seemed to dawn beyond the gates, and Bean for was it Goldfarb?l finally attained a year-sought bullseye by hitting Hornsby smack dab with a rice ball. Graduate school ambitions quivered among us and there were intermittent whoops with acceptances waved aloft. Berson's mouth changed pathologically to the shape of an HD and he began to balance a small card file on his head in a drunken way, Chaseis eyes took on the same configuration but with guilt edges-Tim Iackins wasn't saying much one way or the other. Some disappeared almost entirely: Ebersole to stimulate cat brains, Fessenden to the reserve book room, they say. Conrad stopped wearing his tiger fuzz bowtie, and Fichter loused Latin, accepted a Clare fellowship, and mumbled something about a Loostee Bacheloref' Preston and some others began finding juniors more friendly than ever, Childs actually began to live here, and Hossein gave up this nonsense Qmail clo Elizabethan Clubl. Walsh and Krech began to experiment with body toughness and high speed ground transport but retumed to the Doodle for health. Combs began to ask serious questions which was frightening-Dean and Crowley had their minds on other things. I even think that Beard and Czaja stopped trying to find Bryon a date at Aggie Mag, and that Willsey and Swenson had to give up their little table outside the dining hall door. These changes have been subtle, but the pressure outward has been relentless and Hnally complete. If Saybrook has spit us out, still we keep affectionate memories. Dan Wright Saybrook '68 is a melting pot in which nothing -melts. The University's ideal of college life, in which all the members of one class know each other, at least, and hopefully enjoy each other's company, has never come close to being realized. One need only take two consecutive names in the Saybrook Directory, Clark and Claussen, to see how far apart people in physical proximity can be. We cannot claim to be united even by these hallowed, pseudo-Gothic walls, for some of us, like Bruce Cronander and Ernie Singer, are spread out all over the world, while others, like the anachronistically moustached Richard Hooper are spread out all over Southern Connecticut. The things which apply to all of us-complaints about the food and love of a good punt-apply to the members of all the twelve colleges, so we find that the easiest way to classify this class is by what we do outside the Brook for how we spread ourselves out in the University communityj. 5 00K COL F if S 5 K, ,L W ,STICK THE JPUCK IN CREASE Ever since the departure of Chuck Mercein, Saybrook has not been what one would normally consider a jock college, that is, while there are many who indulge in wishful thinking, we have among us few outstanding varsity stars. Paul Ioneis stellar performance during the football season was the source of pride as one of our own made good. In winter sports, the Brook had more to contribute: Barry A1- lardice played aggressive hockey as sec- ond line wing, Wally Roettinger grap- pledv once in a while, Neil Piller, when healthy, was a valuable player on the successful basketball team, while john Cornuelle was the tallest. In the spring, Brian Burns took some time off from D- Day to play lacrosse, while Konrad Kot- rady rowed for the Elis, and Keith Whitelaw signed up for rugby again, though his enthusiasm, as usual, was limited to the after-game beer parties. If one had to classify Saybrook, one would have to call it an organizational college. We all know, and are bom- barded by the fact each year at rush, that Saybrook has the highest percentage of fraternity members. This might change, of course, if the food on Tuesdays and Wednesdays and Fridays were to im- prove significantly, and if Mark Willis' Social Committee keeps up its good work. But, for the moment, Saybrugians like frats, and frat members seem to like Charlie Scholhamer, who is President of Fence Club and also heads the Inter- fraternity Council. Another popular figure Qalthough his figure has little similarity to Charlie,sj is Steve Schau- bert, who is President of Phi Cam and a junior Phi Beta Kappa-a rather unique combination. But we go in for meritocratic organi- zations as well. The News occupied some spare time for people like Bill Males, Charlie Brinkley, Rich Coplon, jim Cardner, Pete Cennet, Ken Mauzy and David Zorensky, and more time for Dan Church, Steve Armstrong, and Mike Rosenhouse. Ken Cohen and Fred Krim- gold rose nearly to the top as business manager and photographic chairman respectively. And for John Brim, the managing editor, the News was almost a fulltime job. Rich Anderson con- tributed consistently to WYBC, as did Bill Martin, though Mike Pertschuck appeared only occasionally. jan fthe umanvj Laitos regaled the Yale Campus with the latest news on Nebraska. john Hall was Productions Director, while Phil Schuyler toiled as Director of Public Relations. Saybrook,s only junior contributor to the Banner was Elliott fBatD Schulder, whose efforts to disguise himself with whiskers proved futile. The Brook even produced a demagogue or two from the class of ,68, notably Howard Kroop CProgressive Party Chairmanj and Bill Owens fParty of the Right troubleshooterj. There are, of course, certain personalities who endow our college with a distinct flavor. Bruce Quick, an institution in himself, knows just about every member of the Brook, as can be evidenced by his election to the College Council and the Prom Committee. Stylishly-attired Tony Schemmer adds his thespian presence to the scene. Coplon and Silverman have the double distinction of being our best bridge team and our premier pick-up crew. As for animals of another variety, Wallyis Flubadub and Keithis Bulldingle imitations are both welcome changes from the variety of Ken johnson. Tom Brown's eating contests were gone this year, too, and were missed more than Kenis bird calls. And finally, Mike Potterfield must be thanked for oc- casionally decorating the Brook with another kind of bird, even if she wasn't in her working clothes. So thatis it, or at least the more visible part of it. In the end, however, it probably does not pay to attempt making much sense of ourselves as a group, random conglomeration that we are. Philip Schuyler Itis not really Gothic-Saybrook, that is. It puts on a front of medieval imperiousness and stony serenity. But most know that this pose is a sham, that there are steel and wires and electricity humming under- neath, that this is what actually is called neo- Cothic. And most will tell you that those who have just moved off the Old Campus and into Saybrook are not really freshmen anymore. For a while, a couple of weeks maybe, they seem akin to freshmen-freshmen once removed perhaps. Neo-freshmen perhaps. Yet something hums under- neath, something that soon gets built-up into the Sophomore Class. Somehow, the sophmores are always second or third-best. Theyire behind the freshmen at SAT scores, second to the juniors in savoir faire, third to the seniors in responsibility. It seems like youid have to say that the sophmores try harder to give them any justification for existing at all. Probably they do try harder. At least they have to climb harder. Sophomores in Saybrook are almost exclusively the fourth and fifth floor people. They are up there where pigeons fear to tread, where seniors seldom bed. Up there where the gargoyles perch and the rooms get small. But despite the height, despite the grotesque figures learing outside the windows, the sophmore atmosphere is neither thin, nor all that bizarre. They join together Mc- Clellan and Vanderbilt, build new friendships, cement old ones, construct a class. This is the architecture of the sophomores, one still in the pro- cess of construction. One embellished by the Hen- nings during their parties, refined by the fellows, fortified by Dean Martin Griffin. Many Saybrook sophomores spend a lot of time just going up and down. Those four flights of stairs! Their heads are not up in the clouds, nor are their feet down on the ground. They are in-between, winding up and winding down those spiral stairs. But mostly they are just wound-up. Wound-up in lots of things. No longer can those photos hanging in the common room seem quite so flat! The new images are now of Andy Vorkink struggling with the Duke's Christmas tree in the , list ml c a 90 Killingworth Court, Carl Pierce pacing the cross-country team, Burkett, Mannis, and usley painting their room over red, john Waldman shutting out the Morse hockey team, Dick Mag- nus muscling his way into a crowd for a NEWS picture. Perhaps you can picture Rob Lyons and his psychedilic bed-springs, or jerry Rosenbaum hawking the Lit, or Bruce Myers fiddling around with the New Haven Symphony. But perhaps you canit. It's a moving picture, and itis hard to stop. Alan Boles For several frightening moments, the Seals appeared on the verge of extinction. Suddenly, though, to the utter confusion of the opposition, and to the pleasant surprise of many a dis- couraged observer, this strange creature, the seal, arose, phoenix-like from its own ruins. Often the Hennings enjoyed reminiscing about the Golden Agev of Saybrook sports, while un- able to explain the disastrous fortunes which have befallen their beloved college in recent years. But in 1967, a ray of sunshine broke through the gloom, and we experienced a ren- aissance of sorts. Things managed to get worse before they got better. At first, it appeared as if athletics at Saybrook had ceased to be merely mediocre and had reached the level of the theatre of the absurd. In fact, many Saybrugians treated the demise philosophically, as just another mani- festation of the moral decay of American society. Others pointed out that many of us had not been born late enough to benefit from the Presidentis physical fitness program, while some pointed accusing fingers at that perennial scapegoat: Brook food. At any rate, despite occasional flashes of brilliance, the football team, captained by Chip Vincent and coached by Bozo Emerson, ended its season with nary a win. Chuck Iackson's soccer squad saved face by garnering a victory and a tie. The most successful of the fall teams was the touch football team, maybe because it enjoyed the luxury of two captains, Dave Wilson and Keith Whitelaw. Anyway, the t-ballers had a respectable 3-2 record in the league, and finished with a 3-4 record overall. Then things got better. This spiritual rejuvena- tion was evident in the numerous signs that were posted on the bulletin board, urging all would-be jocks to answer the call, and exhorting all others to take up the cry from the spectator stands. The volleyball team, headed by Keith White- law Qwho was assisted by Ted Wilson, Eric Henrikson, Sy DeVoe, Dave Mannis, and Bernie Shaftonj opened its undefeated season by edging Stiles, former league powerhouse. The hockey team followed suit, as Dick Fates, Sid Towle, Dave Stevens, and crew, overcame tough Daven- port with an outstanding performance in the nets by goalie john Waldman. Both the pinmen and the racquetmen, led respectively by Howie Claussen and Rich Eittreim, played strongly, while the mermen, captained by jon Knud- Hansen and Halil Berktay, did a creditable job Cnot only did we win many meets, but nobody drowned all seasonj. The basketball teams started their season late in January. Ted Wilson led the A's, while john Lungstrum commanded the Bis. The volleyball crew, in running up its im- pressive string of eleven consecutive victories, was not seriously challenged after the opening victory over the potent Stiles unit. Only twice during the season were the Brook spikemen ex- tended to three games in capturing their matches. Playing with deliberate precision, the V-ballers achieved incredible heights of efficiency in des- troying the opposition. Devoe's perfect sets were usually complemented by Wilson's or Henrikson's vicious unreturnable smashes. A high-scoring first line and a flamboyant de- fense paced the undefeated Seals to first place in the intercollege hockey league. Spurred on by the exuberant squad, the icemen alternately battled and coasted to a near-perfect 10-0-1 record. Securely ensconced in first place, the Seals bowed to a IV-studded Eliot House team in the annual Harvard-Yale house championship in a 4-3 heartbreaker. The Swimming team finished the intercollege season with a nine and two won-loss record, tying Silliman for second place. The only losses were in close meets: one against Stiles, the other against undefeated league champion Ber- keley. Among the top performers for the Brook mermen were Laszlo Eger, Dave Bergman, Larry Robinson, Mark Willis and jan Laitos. The A Basketball team, laden with raw fresh- man and sophomore talent, succeeded in surpris- ing the other teams in the league. Starting a lineup of Wilson, Henrikson, and freshmen Shu- tack, Kielty and Cohen, the hoopsters drove for the South League title with a fine display of speed, strong shooting, and aggressive play all over the court. After capturing the league crown with a 5-0 record, the Seals came within a point of providing the biggest upset of the season, bowing to Silliman 51-50 in the A League cham- pionship game. Midway through the winter season, the Brook found itself at the top of the season standings, and somewhere in the middle of the pack overall. The spring captains, entrusted with a new legacy of winning in sports, included Bob Fairclough Cbaseballl, Chip Vincent fsoftballj, Tom Collier Ccrewl, Ed Brown fgolfl, and Whit Conrad Ctennisl. Hopefully, this reacquired victorious spirit will not fade for a while. Elliot Schulder Spring Jn 'I' 2' QW? Q A., , if ,1 .1 in- 1 ,ywivsv is is ,nf . . 22 ' Q Y. af fwiwrsggz 3 Q, sf, Q' ,A nf 'Q Q3 515 5' ,K if at ' 6. 455293 .Q 36:15 f?f ff 'S91 4 K bfi , V 'lim f Swifiip Q W , X -1 JV' 2' XYZ, 'vii' qv,-A -,g , f ,Q 1 W ,L W f , ,H if - 1 Q Q ig Bear, Tough Bear, howl growl grrr, our team can never fail . . . And has Silliman ever lived up to this billing during 1966-67l The academic, ath- letic, and social slavings began with Master Clark's flat statement, This year is one of crusade for all of usl While Dave Corcoran-in charge of the Silliman Buttery-alleviated our hunger pangs by night, Bill Whitesell alleviated our thirst for blood by day. Employing the traditional 5-3-2 type of play, Bill captained the soccer team to an undefeated season. The team was strong in depth as well as talent, as Romey Glenn, jabes Phiri, Bill Palmer, Gary Thompson, Brent Goodsell, jeff Graham, and john Simonides all vied with captain elect Dave Car- mody for positions on the forward line. Showing outstanding teamwork in the Pierson championship game were Merv Fernandes, jack Merrill, Pete Steele, Bill Zager, Art Larabee, and Hopey Darneille as they supported john Kent in the lat- ter's incredible record as goal tender, Kent not only retained an unscored upon record throughout the season, but also scored a goal himselfl Taking it a little bit easier was the touch football team, led by Roger Challen and Rodger Myers to a 2-3 season. Tom O'Brien's tackle team reversed this to 3-2, as such notables as Harry Bryans, Dave Carmody, Dan Crean, Dave Corcoran, Dick social Grote, Fred hi-boy Heller, Al johnson, Roger Ohse, Rich Panebianco, Tom smelly Pitts, Uthai Wilcox, andlohn Wooten adde their brawn to the crusade. At one point during the end of the Hrst semester, Silliman stood number one in the Tyng Cup standings, but then the social life of the college caught up with the athletes--and no wonder, for the year had included thousands of girls and kegs at more mixers than Mary likes to think about, the Vassar Night-Owls at dinner, a discotheque affair a la squash court during Dartmouth Weekend, an enormous Christmas dinner complete with chimes, carols, and plugs for miniskirts, candle- light, wine, gambling, and female singers during the Princeton Weekend show, and of course, Dick Grote as chairman of the Social Committee. Phewl But then finals left everyone with vigor to spare, so Harry Bryans and Rodger Myers took it upon themselves to lead their teams to undefeated seasons. Last heard, jeff Graham, Romey Glenn, Malcohm Brown, and Dave Roe had amassed a squash team total of 8-0, while the A Basketball team culminated in a 7-0 total. Vic Siegle kept up the pace by helping Don Denman, Ricky Robinson, and Bob Bucholy-champion of the inter-college league-to a 5-3 bowling season. Of course swimming fed itself on second place with an 8-3 result, ably captained by jack Shinkle and Dave Barrett, the salamanders were helped by the consistency of Brian Cragg and Tom Moore. jeff Lustman and Mark Friedman lent their smiles to the fray. Tom Patterson's Bw basketball team met with a poor season, as did Bill Mantis' hockey team and Dan Crean's perennial volleyball team. However, we're all still alive, thanks to the heaven-sent food of Mr. Waight! Master-Elias Clark Dean-john E. Palmer Student Council Seniors-Richard D. Munoz Thomas C. O'Brien William C. Whitesell Juniors-Stephen E. Schulte Harry K. Bryans Samuel C. Pease Douglas S. Eakeley Sophomores-David F. Hurcheon Richard Panebianco Thomas E. Pitts, jr Marshall M. Taylor I n-College Aides Chief Aide-Thomas C. Patterson Athletic Secretary-William C. Whitesell Librarian-Robert L. Kelley Printer-jay R. G. Ortiz juniors-Roger W. Challen Richard T. Hale Kenneth V. Heland Iohn H. Livingston Roger E. Myers Stephen C. Schulte Sophomores-Dwight C. Brown Fred K. Heller, Ir. Terry A. Landers Richard E. MacKay Eric H. Prosnitz Stephen A. Rose Gregory S. Vogshenian Robert C. Wheeler SILLIMA COLLEGE No. 1. The Silliman Butt,' No. 2 But Alice, Fm sure I put them on this morning. No. 3 Darling, when are you going to get a new set of dentures? No. 4 They might eoen serve the passengers coffee! No. 5 Mary, Foe got to hand it to youg except for a little less red hair you haoen't changed a bit in twenty- jioe years. w g X 1 R E V w M .34 ,. 05 ' bQfwfm,.3m ' wma 55952, O 'Hia-,, .- , . . ' Q .ff wr if i - fm. J' L v . 1 X 310 Elf wg! .IK x V ,., X.. R fi f Q Rx' 5 ,ff ,N 'I n'f', : X 1 , ,S V ' A 3 1' 1 'B W, . , 'u 42 i f ai Mya V .od ' J . .V X ' 4 H d Rr' 0 4f'n 4 1 ...f 44, 'X Av f' ,YQ A 4 fr M 3 fy fr SJ, X NK M99 1 3 'f 1 f ifig- -,. ' 4 .., I Y' I 1 I . 'Wk MV? Q, f A 22 'g , . J . V XY f LWB . . ,,9,. ii . ,M I V' .V fi k , a Wm 5 v -f fm 1 . ga, ' 5 fl. k L'g' in , ' Q, 1 3 pf: x 2 f pw: N NW al? - f gm 3 A+ ws? K' E513 fi vii' I , as JA 11- , fa, ' f, . 2 i Q ff 3. f A 5 if AT f Q LXN fi! -Q ' ia N-lv iv 2 vw fr , +2 XAM fl up . 4 4., . my , my .,, fi TE yn ,L . .iw 1 ,yr ,. :. , ' 1, fd wwf lwffi' 9 1-ff , mgaff' 1, iii? sw f A i si ax. f K 'ww Ax , f x in. , L' Q' ,A I , gk Ar, g,..,, H we 1 ' 1. Mfg' , l'll raise you cz hundred, cmd see ymfre blond . . . Y xt! dvi' But Darling, don7t leave now! . . . f1lllS we bid adieu, ,til 1992 oo preoccupied with thoughts of our girls, graduate schools, and draft boards to indulge in the niceties of undergraduate nostalgia, we drift over the op- portunity to evaluate the last four years and analyse ourselves as a group. Sociologists and newspaper columnists have written so much about our gen- eration that we find it easy to take their cliches about us for granted. To many of us, we are not men of Ezra Stiles or even Yale College but rather a part of the great mass of the country's college students. We are too sloppy about our clothes and show too little respect for the conventions of our parents. Yet we are the most active generation of college students our country has ever seen, the most dramatically interested in the rights of their fellows. We read that we are indeed the hope of the future and wonder if we have the guts and brains that they look to us for. As a group of millions, we wield a frightening amount of power and influence. Individual- ly, however, we tend to look on ourselves as a disaffected class. Within the walls of Ezra Stiles College, the problems of the world can seem far off. The blight of the ghetto only two blocks away is carefully screened from our view, and we try to maintain some semblance of the scholastic ivory tower. We have the time to study, work on our own special projects, or just talk with our friends. On week-ends we have the parties and dances pointed to by the col- umnists as the epitome of the new education in the 60's. The break with the past is evident everywhere. Perhaps this break is more pointed at a place like Ezra Stiles. If many look on Yale as a symbol of tradition, Stiles-simply by its architecture- may stand as something of a novelty. Yale, however, prefers to look on it as some- thing new in the whole aura of the university because the transition is equally ap- parent in the other residential colleges. The great gulf between the Yale student and the rest of the American people is narrowing. We may not yet represent the heterogeneous population that we should, but the old ways are definitely on the way out. The new spirit of heterogeneity is one that enlightened people look on with favor. Nonetheless, it produces problems that some of us are just learning to cope with. We have been taught to tolerate the differences in others, but we are finding it considerably more difficult to learn to appreciate them. No longer can we sit down at lunch and be sure that we will all have gone to the same schools and want to talk about the same things. For some students, it is an insoluble problem, they retreat to the groups where they know they will be safe. It is unfortunate because we know it may set a pattern for the rest of our lives. For others, new people from towns we have never heard of may even be interesting. Unexpectedly we may find as we leave this june that they are good friends. No matter what background we come from, it is a problem that most of us have faced and some of us have worked out to our great advantage. This is a pattern that we hope will continue and develop after we leave college. Perhaps it is one element that has brought the senior class in Ezra Stiles together more than any other. It is important, too, because it is a way by which we lower the walls between us and the rest of the world. Like no other college students before us, we have had the chance to participate in the world we are going to live in. As we go about our ways in the next few months, the value of Ezra Stiles and Yale in our lives may escape us. We may be too close to it to see it for what it has meant to us. But as we look through the Classbook of 1967 in the years to come, we will recall the things we learned at Yale as well as the things we should have learned. Only then will we realize some true bond that held us together. Hope- fully it will be the bond that still unites us. Stephen Roos Saturday night and it's cold in New Haven, for a change. Charter buses on Tower Parkway, Mixer Night at Stiles, the place between Liggett's and the gym. Mixer Night stockyard-Stiles vestibule. Forty nervous, overpainted girls from Effluvium College. The Stag Greeting Line heralds their arrival Q Oh, esus, the Social Committee strikes againlvj. The girls herd through the door an into the john fwhy, WHY?Q, all forty of them. But before Stiles, sturdy john door can mute the juniors' cries of anguish and lust, they are graded. Stiles tradition requires a satisfactory-unsatisfactory rank with the first fleeting for is it fleeing?j glimpse and a more definite numerical or descriptive commitment by the time the first keg runs EZRA STILES CULLEGE f m wwmfwmm :W Lg is ,,hk we a fx dry. Final grades range from Grunt,u VVeak,', HHell, letis go to Betaf' to Strong,v HALL RIGHTIU uLet,s go to my roomf, uCraaack,D says The Leader, enig- matically. Parker comes in, carrying a bottle of Milleris. Mixer beer isnit good enough for Tony, who prefers the Hner things in life, like Italian ties in pink and gravy. uAre THESE the girls? The Strangler enters in a red ski parka, decomposing Leviis and sandpapered cowboy boots, complete with his Beta-mate Qprobably NOT from Vassar? and a full stomach of Fitz arrives, accompanied by his red Mixer-Night pants and a new army jacket. Daly comes prepared with ads for Man- lius clipped from the Times, while Dan johnson lights up his first cigarette since the last Mixer Night. And in a corner, oblivious to the non-quantifiable objects around them, Leighton and Milch argue about the in- tensity ofthe spotlight on the band. The junior class readies itself for a blast. Suspended from the ceiling in a wicker basket, Zuska, waited on by Donald and William, talks of Susan Sontag and how far fleas jump. Paul polishes his best sword and wishes that he'd brought his blackjack, too. john Kohring strolls through looking lost, carrying the inevitable Mixer Night book and coat and explaining that heis on his way to study. t'Hi, john, have some beerf' Heis still lost at 11:30. A-rod, disdainfully ig- noring the more common sort of girl, is seen talking with the lady from Albertus Magnus about the prob- lems of the hotel business. Don Rieger opts for the tube room and Wishes that Nevvlander and his Mixer Night wastebasket full of beer were still with us. Miss- ing also are Larry Daressa, who is in the library act- ually READING Susan Sontag Qin the originalj, and B. Zundell, who doesnit give one damn about Sontag and spends the evening lifting Weights and Hi-C cans in his room. Mike Wise comes in with a load of lovelies from the nursing school, bemoaning the fact that there is no snow to throw at the campus police. Try the area under the Wicker basket, Mike. The Mixer Night aura penetrates even to the inner- most reaches of Stiles. Tarp may be found racked since 10:30 on the floor of Entry Gfs first floor john. Back in the Mixer, Andy L. looks for someone to buy :ibm '95'u..,,W 3 his hockey ticketfsj and Dennis P. looks for someone Willing to give him a cigarette. The Dean looks dis- gusted. Keep the faith, baby. 'iCraaack. Rich Sandor searches for a girl with a surtboard and knobs on her knees while George, John, Steve, and Pete are seen comparing notes on the band, confident that they can make more noise on a Tuesday night in the Dining Hall for tree than these guys can. The Dean looks more disgusted. Susan Sontag would love it. Say, asks Ira, udoesnit she go to V assar?', Craaackl Mike Drilling Dave Munro x N We arrived at Stiles convinced that we were easily the best class in the college, and should undertake the reform of what had seemed to us as freshmen a place that had failed to live up to its reputation of excitement, liberalism, and the encouragement of individual talent. The fault, it seemed, lay not with the college but with the undergraduates who, lacking the exuberance of newly found freedom, seemed curiously old and staid, kept to themselves more than we had in Vanderbilt. Having sprung from the Old Campus fully armed and found that there were no dragons to kill and no walls to beat down, we found that although our ideas were good and our energy boundless, the retorm of Stiles was more fun to think about than to effect. When it came down to expending time and effort remodelling the social aspects of the college, it became apparent that our freshman railing at the college had been simply a fashion of directing energies for which we had little other outlet. We found that our personal interests had become Specific and important enough to absorb most of our efforts. In entryway A, the Zamcheck nexus continued its naive Qin the best sense of the wordj search for truth through Art and History. The Eve Katz following Qyou know who they arej continued its sentimental search for Art through Craft and Criticism. Rhonius and Mc- Carty refined their astounding discovery that alcohol ingested in large amounts produces all the effects of 94 f, 95-. + , . ,A 3 ly -,K A X www Xxl. 3 ,W ,,.--f' M, . iff u W V. u gg I1 , A 3 fm' X ' A ur- X, V. Q H V. A , A .f ,. gg n ' I 1, A . x, ' M-yw a14 xl+5 W N X A XX-. A x M f - , fx ... X , ,L, 4 V ,-uv.-,Wg Y jrmqw., - A, nl F W5 ef- --w--vw-my-4-F-Q...-r ----W 4 -W...--'wr Y--- ---,Y e M -N Y- -W --W fa -- - errence, this is stupid stuff, said Lloyd Thompson to Terrence Harrison over at Moryis. Look into the pewter pot, to see the world as it is not,'i returned Terrence, thinking that someone else might have said it but per- . haps not, because we make a multitude. We are all members of the same family of man. And so we were. Even Larry Yavorsky would have agreed, the morning he woke up in the Dunham Laboratory after he had slept all night in preparation for waking up there. Nor am I, said lim Ratner, merely a skin-deep misanthrope, as Bob Bares intimated in his article about Trumbull juniors last yearf' Bob had nothing to say about that charge though, merely pointing out that he had also de- clared that Trumbull juniors were all members of a large, many-faceted club, which, for lack of a better name, may be called Trumbull '67.,' Bob stuck to his guns. Penn Glazier, on the other hand, mellowed a bit, arguing less, smiling more, making us all realize, basically, that there had always been a smile behind even his most staunchly argued arguments. Carl Zipfel and Ed Weisberger, for their part, mel- lowed completely. jake Blum, john Wilhelm, and Mike Russom dropped in for lunch once in a while according to jordan Luke, who ought to know because he has a motorcycle. Frank Berliner refused to give them idealogical support either at lunch or in the Yale Daily News, and stopped writing left-wing columns as well as most other variations of columns. Bill Steele stopped shining his shoes as often as he used to and, according to sources close to him, had a few cigarettes. So did juan Marina, as he regaled all Womanhood in the room Marty Oberman made famous, the room with the Checkerboard rug and two American Gothics hanging side by side. Said juan, Mark Greenwold, 1966, once said 'Look at it this way: What other college had Marty Oberman? I say, look at it this way. What other guy in Trumbull had Marty Oberman's room this year? Iuanis boast, however, was shortlived, as Larry Baker moved in to share the glory with him. Said Baker, juan Marina's not the only guy who had Marty Oberman's room this year. Who,s this Marty Oberman guy? asked Rich Wind, and rightfully so, although ironically so also, because big Rich was clearly the inheritor of the celebrated Cberman sense of humor. What Tom Weisser, who shared Obermanis room with Oberman last year, said of Oberman, He saw the movie, but he missed the bookf, could well have been applied to Big Rich. As Wind himself put it, I am you, you are me, we are all singing, I have the mouthf, Floyd Kail tunefully agreed with Big Rich, while joe de Raismes toasted both of them appropriately enough. Cheers,,' Bob Bourgeouis again indicated and no one did. Someone forgot to re- mind Francis McGovern to run for Trumbull Council. Immersed in phrenology, he left his head up in his room this year. Bob Kessler tried his hand at skiing and broke his arm. Eric Steiner took a single but for all that people still wouldn't leave him alone. Park Schaefer didnit come back. Bob Sindel, with a kind of modern-day Lone Ranger flair, blew into town and then out again in his white jaguar. Reece Burka made a few more trips home to New Orleans than he used to. Terry Harrison, on the other hand, made his girl Friday come to him, Friday, Saturday, Sunday, Mon- day, and, yes, sometimes Tuesday. Asked to comment, he replied, Okay, but that doesn't mean I've mellowed completelyf, And he proved it by being a three- sport man in Trumbull athletics. At last compilation, Trumbull was last in the Tyng Cup standings. Frank Ber- liner died young on the gridiron, breaking his leg after thirty minutes of competi- tion. jim Caver, at center, lost some weight, then broke his leg and gained it back. Beleagured Rick johnson defended the Trumbull hockey nets against the Trumbull defense as well as he could, but succumbed valiantly at last. Said johnson, I just couldnit get the puck out of theref, I And so there we were, we and some thirty-three others, all members of the same family of man. We made a multitudef, added Lloyd Thompson ironically, while joe Keefe, grinning, looked into the pewter pot once again. Frank Berliner V - --' x L- 3' ' . 1 5 NX' x . ff' MBULL CULLEGE V Q 1 f , .ff ' ibn Z? Wil' , Nz ef A by f Q ' ,-1 .:', L X 1 -EW M 10.1 Qbl The lonely Trumbull court-yard tree ldj has watched yet another year of activity swirl around its quietly spreading branches. This year, ,66-67, is one that will stand out in the chronicle of the tree,s annual rings. Two masters left, one to pursue his studies, the next in the services of the state department, and now Master and Mrs. Dworkin have stamped on four years of Trumbul- lians an indelible print of intellectual activity coupled with social ease and grace. Despite for maybe due toj at- taining the highest academic stand- ing in ,66, Trumbull managed a myriad of other activies. The dining hall faf became a shown place, even in its quietest moments, as our own favorite bursary boy ex- emplifies here. When the dining hall was full, as at the P. I. party lbj, the frolics usually featured one of the five on the bed. But parties are not everything, as Terry and Myrd helped prove in the Bull Dramat production of The Acharnians Ccj. Trumbull athletes were everywhere, everywhere, with Golden Toe Begel making the PAT's fej. And the Beer and Bike Race, well, just ask Bish iff about that . . . lc: ai' Kei It X. Y 'WM V tiff lilfkfi w A , M LLAL. .M . . ,ff Ml! M Sure you say you'll do it. Some guy on the Banner asks you to do the bit for the yearbook coverage of your class fujust reduce the year to its highlights, knock off a couple of pages, and try to drop it off in a couple of weeks .... Dj. Sounds like a good punt, lots of old memories and repeated chuckles. But then you realize that your classv includes a lot more than your own circle of pals, and perhaps you take your first really good look at the now out-dated college composite. And maybe for the first time you begin to wonder just what is happening in each of the fifty-odd individuals that are sharing your Trumbull experience. Suddenly you feel that your year or that of your roommate or friends or that of those quiet guys no one sees anymoren shares perhaps little else save a common calendar or the college courtyard. But go a little further. Perhaps out of this you can sense some- thing more, maybe the 'Bull does have all in some vague and common grip. Certainly, all of ,68 have shared a common feel- ing of excitement and eager anticipation as av new and then newer master swept into the college. And who among us didn't feel that always growing closeness to the college as we trudged through the first fall meal, perhaps still tied to our summer selvesv, only to re-affirm our Trumbull ties to the tune of the now familiar white-hatted figure of Bill greeting us all with the broadest of grins and a hearty 'Tm good-how 'bout your- self? So if a year really is fifty-odd years, you can still try to find those particular people or places or events that all can share. If not an important part of the Yale year, these highlights are at least a part of the Trumbull year. To those of you outsiders who stumble upon these pages, I can say only that the history of Trumbull juniors will make but little sense to those whose Yale centers about another college courtyard. To those fellow Trumbullians, I hope all can find many shared memories within this following Bull', . . . . To cite those who have shown particular interest or college participation, we might begin by tipping our horns to the varsity athletes, Begel, Markle, Wood, Hume, Malsnee, Tilgh- man, Mayberg. Special note must be made of that rugged corps of Trumbull inter-college athletes-Stewart, Soper, Ternes, Shee- han to name just a few. Within the College Council, leadership was ably supplied by Mssrs. Macllroy, Mayberg, Thalinger, and Stewart as repre- sentatives fall term later to become President, Social Chairman, Treasurer, and T.T.U. Chief respectively in the spring term. White and Macllroy continued to serve the class as Yale Key representatives. The Trumbull Dramat, under the able director- ship of Rodriguez, presented The Arcamians, a production graced by numbeous junior thespians, including Iacobs, Leister, and Johnston. Clement and McDowell continued to sing their way through these shortest gladdest yearsf, In the Yale business world, Hellman managed things between the sheets down at the laundry offices, while Hingson continued to be the Freshman Butti' . . . . To turn to areas of more dubious aleadershipf we focus on such memorable events Cno one could have missed thesej as Steinglass, demonstration of his particular version of the most spectacular pass of the football season fcompleted on Trumbull's very own courtyard to the amazement of allj. Although all of Trumbull welcomed our new master early in the fa-ll, it was not until Davis delivered his own particularly warm personal greetings at our Christmas bash that he could even begin to decipher the peculiar spirit of the Trumbull junior class. just rambling now . . . Bill Bailey hasn't gone home, though May continues to laugh . . . The gods or drink and merriment con- tinue to plague Wulff among others CMany now maintain these gods reside somewhere on the fourth floor of Entry L, enter- tained nightly by the Cartoon Show . . The road trip con- tinued to attract a hard corps CYou could always count on the ubobsie twinsvl, though it has lost an increasingly large number of devotees to the Yale brand of co-education, the two to four day weekend . . . A lot more people and places could and perhaps should be mentioned, but, alas, there were those for whom even the tiny world of Trumbull was just too far to walk .... i' Loopy and Loony Were goldenlli' Rallying behind this slogan, severity cocky Trumbullians returned as sophomores in September. Forgetting that we were ever freshmen, the group severed all ties with dirty', Durfee and set up camp across the street. The migration was not very difficult or frustrating in itself, but looking around we noticed that three of us had not returned to Yale. We at- tacked the year typically-dropped a fortune at the Co-op and changed a few courses in the hectic first days of the semester. VVhat was different was that our rooms were a little nicer and that the freshman dining hall became a thing of the distant past. Kept busy with demanding courses and girls, we saw the Fall slip by too quickly. Looking back, We plea-santly remember the fat kegs in the courtyard after the football games and similarly shaped girls at the mixers. In effect, we began identifying with the Big Timev. Mory's opened up its arms to us for the first time as did the fraternities, and we willingly responded. The Big Timev also meant owner- ship of cars and parking tickets, more road shows, and late parietals. Riots on the Old Campus became vague childhood memories like our high school football days, this year, smarter and more adroit, we carefully kicked down a door or two. Saturday night dinners in Trumbull dining hall acquired an unprecedented significance for us as they Cwith our helpj be- came the sports spectacle of the week. This year we were determined not to let events or situations control us, NVe found out about all those organizations we heeled last spring, or began to hell more-Gascoigne, Rogers, Shlachter to the Banner, Soifer, Yates, and Carey to the News, Plyer and Bookbinder to the Dramat, Craig, Froehlich, Solokowski, Light, Derbes, Boyer, Priebe, Yahn, Bolnick, and Mueller to the various sports squads. Four of us fPayne, Funderburk, Prather, and Criffithsj were of the ten smartest in Yale ,69. Lawrence and Heifetz led the opposing ideologies of Mod vs. Beat, while Ralpher, Edder, Mules, and Berg abendoned Mother Yale more than they stuck around. Prather, Payne, Kaplan, and Brubaker challenged the Italian Blue Team While Lozier spent his time running into fists, carbon monoxide fumes and political roadblocks. Some of us became addicted to polemics with Dingle and Derbes leading the group, only Beanhead could tell why everyone else was wrong. In trying to capture the essence of Trumbull '69, generaliza- tions and stereotypes are not difficult to drum up, but on second thought, we were not all golden-we're less a group than a menagerie. Last year, we were more united by virtue of entry- way ideologies and cohesiveness, this year, after a mad scram- bling for rooms and roommates, we scattered ourselves through- out Trumbull. Guys whom we shared sinks with Freshman year disappeared. Many of us are miles apart in regards to interests, ambitions, and opinions, we do find some common base, how- ever, in that many of us experience similar frustrations and mel- lowing. Perhaps we are most a Trumbull brotherhood when We spend a relaxing exam-break evening at the Dworkin,s-learning how to mix beer and bagels. Mabry Rogers Bob Shlachter NEW HAVEN 934 'L-'L L- 4 5 ff M gl? g I gs n ff: 5 8 ,mx X.. ...J fam.. , r KW 1 :e,.Q. .EAQIQ .ff VAN- 'HAANQP .N I . A nl I 1' 4 . 3 E - 5 A Q is! f 0 H I 'i 5 IN R CAA 11 Arg AA 91 if Q 1 5 iff!! fffgi 1 ll ! W 114 In little more than a decade, the City of New Haven has undergone a pervasive, dramatic transformation. It has changed itself from a blighted, decay-ridden old New England town into a modern and growing urban center-one that in an era of increasing concern over what to do about- our citiesv has attracted wide notice all over the country, and indeed, in other countries as well. So too, Yale,s relationship to its New Haven environment has changed, but in a less visible and uncompromising way. The University has ever been a kind of citadel for its members, who have always been able to secure themselves within its comfortable quadrangles. Yale can be an ivory tower, a world unto itself, whenever one would have it that way. The fact is, however, that in recent years members of Yaleis more or less transient population have bit by bit begun to come out of the citadel more often, to identify with the City and to share in its life. Not completely, to be sure, any university, by its very nature, must remain to a certain extent aloof from its environment. But significantly. Yale people at all levels-student, faculty, and administration-have participated actively, in various ways, in New Havenls great bootstrap achievement. Whether the Universityis presence in the City was a critical factor, a sine qua non, of that achievement is a moot question-one that, really, is of no great consequence. The important fact is that Yale and the people connected with it have played, and are playing, significant roles in the City's effort to rid itself of the human and physical problems of poverty. New Haven is not yet a slumless city, but that goal is perhaps as near realization here as anywhere. And the evidence seems clear that both Yale and New Haven are the better for the effort. It is also clear, however, that New Haven's renascence is more than anything else the result of the apparently inex- haustable energies of a single man, one whose connections, with Yale, at least at the start, were mostly incidental. Had it not been for the efforts of Richard C. Lee, the City's mayor for the last 13 years, it is hard to imagine New Haven redevelopment ever getting started when it did. Yet redevelopment and Mayor Lee are the end, not the beginning of our story of Yale and New Haven. Halfway House, the Yale Hope Mission, Troop 105, the Link Project, U. S. Grant, the APO -Blood Drive, the Tutorial, the Hillel Community Action Program .... All of us have heard at least something about Yale Volunteer Service pro- grams. We read posters about them in Yale Station or leaflets sent out to recruit volunteers. But few of us realize the extent and depth of involvement in the New Haven community which the Volunteer Services represent. We are un- aware of the dedication of the student volunteers, on the one hand, and of the needs of the community, on the other. Yale student volunteers put in, on the average, at least four hours per week. Some become so deeply interested in their work, be it tutoring or scout-leading or whatever, that they spend well over twenty hours. The result is that the commitment of the over seven hundred volunteers amounts to about 82,000 man-hours per year. Where does all this time and effort go? There are over thirty programs and projects at Yale concerned with all areas of community service. These programs are sponsored either separately or jointly by the seven organizations which constitute the Yale Volunteer Services Student Council: Alpha Phi Omega, Dwight Hall, the B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation, the Inter-Fraternity Council, the St. Thomas More Center, and the Yale Civil Rights Council. The Volunteer Services Council, under the guidance of Director Herbert A. Cahoon, attempts to coordinate and counsel the numerous organizations in order to serve the community best, with the least amount of overlap or wasted effort. It has built up a backlog of experience from which each group benefits in initiating and conducting its programs. Dwight Hall, the YMCA organization on campus, sponsors the bulk of these service outlets. Its sixteen programs provide assistance to the mentally ill, to the adult illiterate, to the senior citizen, to the indigent, to the convict, and, perhaps most important, to the child and teenager of the New Haven Community. The Companion Program and the Psychiatric Aide Project, for example, provide friendship and a link to the outside world for the mentally ill adult. Work at the Children's Center is concerned with the emotionally disturbed child. Indigents are given food and shelter at the Yale Hope Mission. The important LINK Project provides leadership for young boys through a program which is unstructured, community wide, and educationally oriented .... And there are many others. Special attention must be given to the New Haven Tutorial Project, which is co-sponsored by Dwight Hall, APO, the Hillel Foundation, and St. Thomas More. Involving 180-200 students who tutor for a minimum of three hours per week, the Tutorial is probably the largest single volunteer service at Yale. Its purpose, in the words of past chairman Tony Dean, is to prevent another group of children from going out of their schools inadequately prepared to operate in our society-to give the kids, through education, an opportunity in lifef, The Tutorial works through community schools to help children in the Dixwell, Hill, and Wooster Square areas. Alpha Phi Omega, the National Scouting Fraternity, provides another type of outlet for the service-oriented student. Four years ago, Yale's chapter of APO received national recognition for initiating the first inner-city Boy Scout Troop in the nation-Troop 105. Besides running this and other Cub Scout, Boy Scout, and Explorer Scout troops, APO sponsors the New Haven Boys Club in co-operation with Dwight Hall, and a number of YMCA groups and Swimming and Life- saving programs. Besides these, the twice-a-year APO Blood Drive provides 4095 of the New Haven community's blood requirements. The essence of APO is that it provides these community services in a fraternal atmosphere of social cooperation and education. pf! '-'Q F Ja, ,,,L, 3p',,p VUE. ' W 5 Wy , T K , Y Q 2 , -J , Q '14 -'fx 4 in fx 5' gf 3'9F'4 E. wwqnaxw '- iw 414 ,W . .W WW? 5 H ,,,,,5,.. Q, we- '9 f'1 V 5 WWW ,t,,,.auW kd 5 3. v 'v 'U . r 2 'fd 4 f' Q, Q f K m,.,,NA his .Q xg. I r V if E, V L 1' ffm E 1 1 fi if Lk I , , Mfgj f '4:f1 ,N . ,, 2,- Av , 1 .div-, H-.T ,QgN,. , 4 x Q I if in The Community Action Program, which is a working seminar in the problems of poverty and deprivation faced by the com- munity today, forms the nucleus of the Hillel F oundationis volunteer services. Hillel also runs the Prince School Program which gives underprivileged children a chance to learn under a flexible student-teacher relationship which runs the gamut from formal to in- formal activity. St. Thomas More contributes to the com- munity through the two programs it conducts at the St. Martin de Porres Catholic School in a low-income inner-city area. It has or- ganized a friendship club and a tutorial program. A basketball league is sponsored by the Inter-Fraternity Council in another inner-city area. The Civil Rights Council assists in organizing such projects as the Hill Neighborhood Union and in coordinating the activities of the various civil rights groups in the Yale community. The Ulysses S. Grant Foundation provides a unique program of stimulating after-school activity for one hundred ten high school students, with the goal of prep school or college ahead. Forty undergraduates con- duct classes on the Yale campus, and decide on the curriculum and teaching methods they will use. The hope is to instill in the boys a real love of academic life and of a college-type situation, besides the immediate aim of improving their scholastic skills. But what exactly is the relationship of these Yale Service programs as a whole to the New Haven community? Herbert Ca- hoon, Director of Volunteer Services, feels that there are many crucial needs in a com- munity which people point out but which no one has either the time, idealism, or drive to cope with. The college student, especially the Yale College student, is one who can attack these problems, even when nobody else will. He acts as a creative force to initiate the vitally necessary programs. Mr. Cahoon cites the New Haven Halfway House as such a case. In the fall of 1965, a number of students working in the Com- panion Program learned of the need for a residence in which former mental patients could make the transition from the mental hospital back to society. They set out to create an advisory board, find a suitable residence, and raise money. Now, in june 1967, Halfway House will open officially. iw :Jus-f v .w.5x,m. . M L W ma P. U,-.wav -0-Sli' M: MEN ,.. Q mv- LM pg Mr. Cahoon, moreover, feels that the real principle behind all our volunteer programs goes beyond direct service. The programs are to help the individuals andlor groups to help themselves. A good program, a suc- cessful program, is one which goes out of existence eventually as a student-mn or- ganization. In other words, once the stu- dents have created something, it ought to be integrated and assimilated into the com- munity itself, and not remain solely depen- dent on the Yale student body. For example, some responsibility for the New Haven Tutorial could eventually be accepted by the Board of Education. Students would still tutor, but only in subjects for which they are most capable. Professional teachers would take on some of the burden, in order to make the Tutorial effective and efficient. APO has run into a similar problem with its Boy Scout troop. They are looking for people in the community to help lead the troop so it will not always be totally dependent on Yale. APO created the troop, but it is im- portant that the community also become responsible for it. That way, Yale will have helped them to help themselves. But why is the individual Yalie concerned with helping others to help themselves? What motivates him to volunteer his time and effort to a community project? As one person put it, There are almost as many different motivations as there are volun- teersf' Thus, there are no pat answers. How- ever, the past head of the New Haven Tutorial came up with an appropriate in- sight. He feels that for many Yale men schoolwork is not very satisfying in itself These students have a real desire to find themselves in other people-in helping them, teaching them, advising them, and inter- acting with them. Volunteer service pro- vides this type of satisfying experience for the seven hundred students now involved in one or another of Yaleis many community programs and projects. Yale's undergraduates are not the only ones in the University community who serve the city in which they live. Not surprisingly, a large number of faculty take an interest in their home community, as members of commissions and boards, as voters, and in many cases as vital supporters of progressive programs. Yale,s contribution to recent develop- ments in New Haven has obviously been important: vital agencies have many Yale faculty in significant roles, and call on ex- perts for advice. Yet one must be careful to keep the University's contribution in proper perspective. It is very easy to over- estimate what it means to a city govern- ment to have a university aroundf, Herbert Kaufman, Professor of Political Science and Chairman of the New Haven Housing Auth- ority, continued, I think Yale does a lot for New Haven. But the things it does are in- directly the consequences of its being a large institution. It brings a lot of people. It brings a lot of business. It brings a lot of prestige. Yet I don't believe that there wouldn't have been a rebuilt downtown New Haven if Yale hadn't been here. I don't think Yale was responsible for that. I think Dick Lee was. Dick Lee and the men around himf, Professor Kaufmanis work on the City Plan Commission, of which he was chairman be- fore taking charge of the Housing Authority, is an example of how the city and Univer- sity interact-on a personal level. I don't say We achieved all our goals during my years on the Commission, but I think we began to see them clearly for the first time. This kind of interest comes naturally to an aca- demic, I hope its effects will be regarded as a small extra dividend of having a major university in a city of this kindf, Yet for all the activity going on, there are many men who are dissatisfied with the university's contribution to its native city. Louis Pollack, Dean of the Yale Law School and a member of the cityis Board of Educa- tion, is one such man. His tenure on the school board spans the time when bussing plans provoked a major uproar, and the years of greatest construction and innova- tion. He notes with pleasure that Yale is taking more of an interest in New Haven than previously, but feels, It,s still true, in my book, that Yale has not yet undertaken half what it should be doing as a leading citizen of New Haven. I would hope that within another genera- tion we would figure out ways of making some larger portion of our more directly educational resources available to people living and working in this part of Connecti- cut. Not only our service resources-the Medical School, for example, is already a major participant in the life of the city and the state-but our educational resources. Men with Dean Pollack's point of view seem to be becoming more numerous and outspoken. William Horowitz, President of the General Bank and Chairman of the Con- necticut State Board of Education, recently won election as an Alumni Fellow of the Corporation on a platform emphasizing Yale's responsibility for education in New Haven. The pace of change is never fast enough for some, any more than it is slow enough for others. Last fallis election campaign saw Robert Cook, a young Assistant Professor of Sociology, run for Congress on a third- party ticket. His platform emphasized op- position to the war in Vietnam and support for the War on Poverty. When the votes were counted, it was again shown that Yale's political sympathies do not mirror those of the town. Some de- cided that the dismal showing of Cook, Capra, and Knight proved what they had suspected all along: local politics were not worth the effort. Bob Cook claimed, We will be here in '68 definitelyf, And yet others concluded that at long last the University Q in-N had come down from its Ivory Tower, and become Involved. For Yalies generally think of themselves as being quite apart from the town. When someone comes to Yale, he makes the Uni- versity, not the city, h-is home. The first few days on campus he looks around to Hnd out something about the town: 'Is it as bad as I've heard?' The shops around the Old Campus seem to charge too much for too little, with hardly a smile. Townies drive one to the expedient of roadtrips, and green parking tickets badger the student with a car. It is usually only a matter of weeks before the Yale student has adopted an at- titude of moderate hostility to the city in which he lives, an attitude that seems amply reciprocated. Yet a striking number of Yale students work at some kind of civic action. Many have worked in local political campaigns, particularly the more dramatic. When one looks around for a place to eat, there are surprisingly many decent restaurants in New Haven. When one looks for entertainment, there is the Long Wharf, the Lawrence, the Shubert for what it's worth, and the New Haven Blades for desperation. But there is little sense of community. For it almost seems to be in the nature of a Yale education, that the city is something to be used for four years, but never to be taken to heart. An alien place, seldom understood, rarely important. There is much that goes on in New Haven that is interesting, exciting-to use conven- tional words-even dramatic as an example of a city aspiring to be something. For all the publicity about New Haven as a model of civic progress has a basis in sold fact. Little more than ten years ago Yale was bounded on three sides by slums and deteri- orating commercial districts. The Elm City had all the attributes of a decaying factory town. As old residents like the Sargent Lock Company considered moving to more at- tractive sites, the city seemed destined to continue its decay. Separating the University proper from the Medical School was the Oak Street district, distinguished as perhaps the worst slum in New England. The downtown Church Street-1948. Church Street-1958. core was a dilapidated assortment of ram- shakle businesses and dated residences. To the north, in the shadow of Payne Whitney gymis tower, sprawled Dixwell, both a ghetto and a slum. The contrast should already seem striking to one familiar with New Haven now. Dix- well is being transformed by a large and complex urban renewal project. The Oak Street area now has the look of a Los Angeles transplant fVincent Scully claims the new buildings look like ubrontasaurus' braying across a gulf ,Q that gives the center- city area new vitality by making it acces- sible. The most visible manifestations of change are downtown: the city's first new hotel in forty years, its first new office tower in thirty, the towering new headquarters for the Knights of Columbus. Plans now in progress envision much more. Urban renewal in New Haven has invol- ved more than a quarter billion dollars, drawn almost equally from public and pri- vate sources. This represents a per capita expenditure of roughly 81,600 for every resident, a figure not approached by any other American city. Not only have the re- newal projects been large, they have also attracted distinguished architects. With construction by Breurer, Pei, Roche, and Rudolph these projects read like a whois who of contemporary architecture. Church Street-1 96 7. More important than statistics and archi- tecture to a community, however, is the life of its residents. It is in the renewal of the inner city neighborhoods that New Haven is realizing its greatest success. Wooster Square, a slum area ten years ago, is now one of the most beautiful residential neigh- borhoods in the city. The entire core area of Dixwell is being redeveloped, and in a few years it will be an attractive, integrated neighborhood that could be the ideal for urban renewal throughout America. If the time is not yet come when New Haven is a slumless cityf' at least that ideal seems now within reach. The Source of all this activity is not hard to locate-Mayor Richard C. Lee, the dean of U.S. Mayorsf, A small man physically, the Mayor brings unending enthusiasm and energy to his job. He extends himself so fully into every city activity-inspiring others, coordinating, demanding action from them- that it seems impossible to separate them. New Haven has been and is his city in a unique way. At times Dick annoys people by talking about New Haven as if he owned the joint and were personally responsible for every brick taken down or put up, an as- sociate once said, but I suspect that the reverse is closer to the truth: he is possessed by New Havenf, Since he moved from the Yale News ,gays ,..,. , i S Z Bureau to City Hall in 1953, he has led the attack to make his city the nearest thing possible to the nslumless cityf, Born and raised in Dixwell, the Mayor realizes that the problem of the slum, in the broadest sense of the work, is essentially a human one. In order to make a program like this succeed- and lim talking about a massive program of renewal-you have to approach it not only in terms of your core city and replacing gin mills and pool halls with new structures that produce a maximum tax yield, youive got to worry about housing of all kinds, about new uses for old areas, like getting quality tenants back into the center. At the same time, as you begin to move these other families into established neighborhoods, youive got to give them the kind of assistance they need to solve the problems that plague the family from a blighted neighborhood .... This is where we began to see the lightf, The University showed it was acutely aware of Mayor Leeis achievements when it granted him an honorary M.A. in 1961. The citation read in part: 'iWith steadfast courage, faith, and vision, you have lifted New Haven from the middle of slums and stagnation and set her on the high road to a bright and prosperous future .... Sharing with you a vital concern for the well-being of this community, Yale gratefully confers upon you the degree of Master of Artsf, In a very practical way, few in the univer- sity and no one outside of it has contributed more to Yale over the past decade than May- or Lee. What he has done as Mayor of New Haven has made the community a far more attractive one in which to live, one in which both students and faculty find numerous challenges if they look. His presence on campus has not been inconsiderable, as a speaker, as an informal teacher, and this past year as a Chubb Fellow. What Richard C. Lee contributes as a man, in addition to his effect on the city, is an example ofa politi- can, working with rare devotion, extraf ordinary energy, and perceptive vision. to meet the human needs of his constituents. He is a living example of idealism merged with practicality: uThe great ery today is tear down the slums and replace them with decent housing. A noble sentiment, but it doesnit work. People make slums, and un- less you can teach them not to make slums. they go on doing so wherever you put them, Urban renewal thus has to include people renewal. and this means all the things that condition people for responsible citizenship. lt is a terrible problem .... You have to do everything at once, which is impossible. So you do what yon can. It's very discouraging, but you have to go On tryingf' 493693 ' . - S f' rl UWA. n 4 s un' -his fwfr -Sikh' '3 ',, N 4 If 'wir 3 'w' Q Q va f i.ff- U' KAL- wapauqun ,W .,..x,L, w Lf+1q:.-i,, 5 . t , as wc.f,,,. - . , 1ufqg-- -- .. fy, M., .,,. ,, : ' ' , .z . ' '. if My 1? V ..':,r,f ' .,1fW.:', 'u v f' .b M x . ,- N'4'8-'Qr-l-Mew ll' ' f...,.W3gm gg.. N. 5 .., ,, I' '5 1f .V. g fn J' gr: Hff an .hwy zsgtv. Q ,gl V i ,uf . ,... ig, Q, ,KL Q., . u 15.4 Q 'QR :wr vw all 'Jap Q ' 3 . lm- H ' 5 O 5 'xx Q' 1 as eq .l 3, I1 ,, . if 1 Q ka: K. 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V6.1 l Bruce Corhridge Chris Wick Ianies Avery Lacrosse Wrestling Lightweight Crew Rick lohnson Bob Creenlee Doug Kennedy Bas etball Football Swimming Track 1 john Rydell Steve Boyer Ray Godfrey Golf Cross Country Squash john Devine Baseball Handsome Dan Stud XVarren Gelmzm Hockey Derek Bush Soccer 1967 YALE CAPTAINS john Saylor Robert Emmet F encing Crew BOB KIPHUTH November 17, 1890-january 7, 1967 Bob Kiphuth was a teacher. He came by accident into the Held of coaching swim- ming, but if he hadnit been inspired in the old Carnegie Pool he would have achieved excellence teaching something, somewhere. Bob was a perfectionist. He disciplined himself to a Spartan regime of personal con- duct, and expected of his associates the same degree of excellence he demanded of himself He scrupulously discharged what he considered his responsibility to the Uni- versity and to the job he held, and no re- sponsibility has ever been interpreted more rigorously. Bob had a great, almost mystical faith in the worth of every individual. It was this which kept him from ever underestimating an opponent, and made him such a loyal and lasting friend to those of us privileged to enjoy intimacy with him. His was an inquiring, ever-active mind, because he felt so strongly his responsibility to contribute to the growth of the young men he influenced, and because he was always ready to hear the contribution of any interested individual, bull sessions with Bob were often enlightening affairs which leaped nimbly from subject to subject and explored fields far removed from the athletic sphere. Often a discussion, begun between heats of a practice session, would continue long after the swimmers had quietly climbed from the water, and the turbulent pool sur- face would slowly settle down until, sud- denly aware that things were unnaturally quiet, Bob would turn and see the tranquil, empty pool and his team sitting dry on the deck, and with an abrupt exuberant laugh heid end the discussion and get back to the work at hand. While we enjoyed prolonging such discussions whenever we could, we soon learned that the work in the pool would get done, no matter how long we had to stay to make up for time lost. Bob's relationship with people was an uncomplicated one, and he had no patience with those who were unable to return his directness. He expected people in high po- sitions to do their jobs as well as he did his, and he wasted no time finding fault unless evidence of it was abundantly apparent. Bob expressed an interest in all forms of creative human endeavor, and his splendid library is testimony to the diversity of his tastes. He deeply appreciated a fine artistic performance, be it by a painter, dancer, sculptor, or musician, perhaps because such achievement revealed the same commitment to the pursuit of excellence Bob so admired in an athlete. He enjoyed fast cars. We were all familiar with the sight of his old green Buick, and later the jaguar, careening around town, running lights with abandon, or contesting the rightoflway with an ambulance or fire engine. And we listened appreciatively as he regaled us gleefully with stories of his latest driving exploits. We congratulated ourselves for being on such good terms with Bob, only later did we realize that he considered it great good fortune to be associated with us. Bob made himself available to us all, and in so doing provided the means for us to learn what he recognized as a great lesson. He cajoled and abused us through long and tedious early-season workouts, and for those who persevered improvement was inevit- able. As our swimming ability and con- ditioning developed he set up competitive situations in which awareness gradually emerged of the great fundamental simplicity of competitive athletics. We learned, and none of us could tell just when or where, that excellence in athletics was attainable- all one must do was perform to the limit of his ability each time he entered the pool. The simplicity was appealing, it was an important daily emotional experience to leave behind momentarily the frustrations and annoying endecisions of the academic sphere and throw ourselves into an activity whose goals were clearly defined and the means to attain such goals always apparent. Swimming was simple, but it was far from easy. It wasn't difficult to embrace the ideal that the good athlete was the one who always performed to his physical limit, it was such performance that was difficult, and in disciplining our bodies to sustain the demands of each workout assignment we learned how insignificant were the physical limits we had previously considered unsur- passable. As we watched these barriers crumble before our own personal onslaught of technique and conditioning, we became aware that, even when totally exhausted after a series of all-out Sprints, we could still push off and do another, and another, and another, when goaded into successive total efforts by the harsh Qand briefly hatedj voice of the Master. Occasionally we were allowed a short-lived moment of elation after a wholly unexpected word of praise. Bob knew that our limitations were ephemeral and only psychological, and to him the triumph of an athlete over a pre- viously unsurpassed performance was a great victory of the mind over the body and a stirring confirmation of what to him was the essence of athletic competition. At some point in our careers we recog- nized that the fundamental simplicity of competitive athletics isn't restricted to the artificial environment of the arena, but applies equally well to all human endeavor. We learned to bring the philosophy acquired in the pool to other problems we were to face in our academic pursuits and thereafter. We knew a fierce attachment to our team and to the free and easy exchange we en- joyed with our teammates and coaches, but it was only retrospect that showed us how significant a part of our Yale education the swimming experience had been. While Bob was fiercely devoted to Yale, he was even more dedicated to the ideals of competition. He never let his loyalty to Yale obscure his awareness that the swim- mers from other schools were as deeply in- volved in the same game, and he afforded every opponent the opportunity to perform to the best of his ability in the Yale pool. For many teams that we met, the Yale dual meet was the ideal opportunity to improve a number of best performances, and such opponents could be assured that their better men would come up against at least one swimmer if nearly equal ability. The amphi- theater would come alive with mounting excitement while such a close contest de- veloped and approached its climax, and we could often hear Bobis rich, penetrating, thunderous laughter as he savored fully this moment of truth. Bob was a friend of all competitors, and he dearly loved a good race. Bob Kiphuth leaves an important legacy for future generations of athletes. He did much of the leg work for the sport of swim- ming, revealing it to the world as a compet- itive expression. He also made manifest the whole spirit and philosophy of the sport, and imbued it with his infectious enthusiasm. To todayis undergraduates, Bob Kiphuth is just a name, now borne by the Exhibition Pool. To the observant few he is a kindly countenance, frozen in a rare moment of calm, smiling from the portrait in the Payne Whitney lobby. These young men will never hear the stone-floored corridors echo with Bob's boisterous laugh, will never sit en- tranced, listening to his special blend of reminiscence, wisdom, and humor, will never experience the ups and downs of Bob's flamboyant personality. But Bob Kiphuth's contribution to corn- petitive swimming is a continuing and vital reality, much of it readily accessible to each undergraduate who feels motivated to join the swimming team. Under Phil Moriarityis sensitive guidance todayis student will find satisfaction in knowing that he is contribut- ing, by his hard work and personal commit- ment, to the development of a truly memor- able team spirit, he will discover the in- significance of imagined limitations to his development as an athlete, and, because his body is better conditioned and his mind better prepared, he will know time and again the exultation of defeating a tough opponent in a -good race. Thatis what it's all about. That's how it was to Bob. Foster dejesus ,60 Bob Giegengack ,60 V? ,i V 5 V ,W Y I FOOTBALL 'KGreat Expectationsf the title of Charles Dickens' classic, summed up the outlook of second-year coach Carmen Cozza and five assistants when last September they greeted a group of nearly ninety candidates for the 1966 varsity football team. A good deal of the optimism centered around the varsity debuts of two of the countryis most heralded freshman players of the 1965 season. Brian Dowling, a 6' Z , 185-lb. quarterback, and Calvin Hill, a hard- running, 6' 3 , 215-lb. halfback, were counted on to provide the bulk of an open-throttle offense. While much was whispered and spoken openly of the two sophomores, Cozza also counted with pleasure 21 returning lettermen, including a defensive line which was expected to be the Ivy Leagueis best. The team's biggest problem appeared to be in the offensive line, where junior center jack Emmons and senior split end Bob Kenney were the only returning starters. In addition to the offensive line gaps, Cozza repeatedly emphasized before the opener with U-Conn that Yale did not have a proven varsity quarterback in either Pete Doherty or Dowling. Positions began to be filled as the September 24 en- counter with UConn neared. A number of starting berths were nailed down and Yale football followers heartened when the team defeated Bucknell, 20-6, in a 'game-situation, scrimmage at the Bowl. The starting quarterback slot belonged to Dowling, the ubiquitous runner, passer, and punter. Bill Gales, a junior, and senior Doherty served as his under- studies. Rounding out the Yale backfield were: the pile-driving junior Don Barrows at fullback, speedy jim Fisher at right halfback, and Hill at left half. The offensive line for the UConn game consisted of ends Kenney and Del Marting, tackles Rey Stroube and Kyle Gee, guards Eric France and Rick McCarthy, and center Emmons. The defensive line was spearheaded by the jolly Green Giantsi'-Captain Bob Greenlee Q6' Z , 246D and junior Glenn Greenberg C6-2, 235D-at tackle. Hustling junior Tom Schmidt, a 187-pounder, turned out to be the starter at middle guard, while junior Rod Watson and sophomore Fran Gallagher started at the ends. Senior Bill Hilgendorf and junior Britt Kolar returned as starting linebackers. The defensive backfield was somewhat depleted by the graduation of safety Chris Beutler, and halfback jim Howard, both second team all-Ivy choices as sen- iors. Defensive coordinator Bill Narduzzi selected sopho- mores Bob Levin and P. Goldsmith as monster back and safety, respectively, and juniors Paul jones and Dan Begel as the other backs. Yaleisv 88th football season got off on the right foot before a bowl crowd of 30,000 with a convincing 16-0 victory over the upstate rival from Storrs. It was sweet revenge for Cozza whose 1965 team, his first as head coach, had lost to a Connecticut college for the first time in 86 years. The second game of the season with Rutgers was a veritable nightmare. Driving rain put footing on the Bowl turf at a premium, Dowling suffered ligament damage to his knee early in the game and was helped off the field-his promising sophomore year ended al- most eight games early. Yale, without Dowling, had more than its share of trouble, fumbling five times. Rutgers converted three fumbles into scores to take a 17-0 lead early in the third quarter. Senior Pete Doherty was called on to fill the quarter- back position early in the second half. A 15-yard re- turn of an intercepted pass by linebacker Bill Hilgen- dorf gave the Elis their first score in the fourth quarter. Ilill swcc as end against Cornell. l tw The next time Yale got the ball Doherty drove the team 33 yards Qafter a Rutgers fumblej as Fisher went over from the 6. Trailing 17-14, Doherty continued to play come- from-behind football, but his well-aimed passes slipped off the hands of receivers time and time again. And the score remained Rutgers 17, Yale 14. Pass to F islier ovcrtllrown. A very weak Brown team was easily defeated by the Bulldogs, 24-0. The workmanlike offense scored in the first quarter on a 25-yard field goal by Begel, in the second quarter on a 6-yard pass from Doherty to Bruce Weinstein, in the third quarter on a one-yard plunge by Hill, and in the final period on a one-yard dive by senior Weigel. The Yale offensive unit's finest hour came in a 44-21 Ivy League victory over Columbia in the Bowl. Doh- erty passed his way into the record books with five first half touchdown passes. Messrs. Hill, Weigel, Wein- stein, Pat Madden, and Kenney were on the receiving end of the T.D. tosses. Next on the agenda for the improving Yale team was a game at Ithaca with a Cornell team regarded in the early stages of the season as the team with prob- ably the best chance to dethrone defending champion Dartmouth. One hundred twenty-two yards in penalties, the most ever in an Ivy game, nullified record-breaking efforts by Doherty and Kenney as Cornell squeezed past the Bulldogs by a 16-14 margin. Yale drove past the Cornell 30 three times in the fourth quarter after Pete Zogbyis field goal had given the Big Red a two-point lead, but was unable to put three points on the scoreboard. Doherty ended the afternoon with 24 completions in 42 attempts fboth Ivy recordsj for 304 yards passing. Kenney had nine receptions for 153 yards, also a league mark. ' A crowd of better than 54,000 filled the Bowl on the last Saturday of October for the Yale-Dartmouth game and saw the powerhouse Indians pull away from I Y a slim 14-13 halftime lead to win convincingly, 28-13. Yale scored first as Weigel took a 20-yard pass from Doherty. Dartmouth scored twice on long drives toward the end of the first quarter, but Yale came right back early in the second period, with Doherty firing ten yards to Weinstein for the score. The superior Dartmouth team scored two touch- downs in the second half and had several other op- portunities fall short as quarterback Mickey Beard, fullback Pete Walton, and halfback Gene Ryzewicz made life all too miserable for the Yale defense. A trip to Philadelphia to play Pennsylvania proved a fruitful journey as the Bulldogs pulled out a come- from-behind 17-14 victory. Begel booted a 29-yard field goal with 21 seconds remaining after Watson's pass interception and 28-yard return. The much-anticipated Princeton game was next on the schedule. Unpleasant memories of five consecutive losses to the Tigers were more than enough to whip the Yale team into a frenzy. Intermittent rain threatened to make the game a sloppy affair at kickoff time, but the skies held off for most of the regionally-televised contest. The 'sky-high' Yale team was well in command of the game both offensively and defensively in the first half as Chris Kule, playing for the injured Calvin Hill, scored on a plunge to cap a 70-yard drive early in the second period. An earlier Yale touchdown, coming on the first of- fensive series of the game, was called back when an Eli lineman was detected holding. Thus, the home forces held a slim 7-0 lead at half time. Princeton made a game of it early in the final quar- ter when fullback Dick Martin bulled over from the one to end a 42-yard drive. Ted Carciais conversion attempt was wide to the left. Yale held a 7-6 lead late in the game and appeared headed for its second touchdown when an illegal pro- cedure penalty stalled a march at the Tiger 31. Kenney, taking a low snap from center on fourth down, attempted to get off a punt. Princeton captain Walt Kozumbo, rushing in from defensive end blocked the kick and reserve end Larry Stupski scooped up the loose football and romped 40 yards for a touchdown. Carci made good on the conversion to give the Tigers a 13-6 lead with three minutes left. That was the final count. 16 Connecticut 0 14 Rutgers 17 24 Brown 0 44 Columbia 21 14 Cornell 16 13 Dartmouth 28 17 Pennsylvania 14 7 Princeton 13 0 Harvard 17 Whereas the Princeton game had contained every- thing but a victory in the way of excitement for Yale fans, THE GAME with Harvard had nothing as the Elis found it extremely difficult to get the ball across midfield. A 29-yard field goal by jim Babcock little more than a minute into the second quarter gave Harvard a 3-0 advantage. Six minutes later the Crimson turned a fumble recovery into a touchdown as halfback Bobby Leo plunged the final yard and Babcock converted. Leo sealed Yale's fate on the Hrst play of the fourth quarter when he skirted right end and ran 52 yards for a touchdown. Babcock's foot again added the point after to make the final score an unpleasant 17-0. Princeton, Harvard, and Dartmouth all tied for the Ivy League championship with 6-1 records, in fourth place was Cornell, Yale iifth, then Columbia, Penn, and Brown. The Eli's outstanding defense had four of its starters in recognition on the All-Ivy first team. Tackle Bob Greenlee, end Rod Watson Qcaptain-electj, middle guard Tom Schmidt, and linebacker Bill Hilgendorf all made the first eleven. Phelps T. Riley LETTERWINNERS: Donald A. Barrows, '68, George M. Bass, '69, Daniel M. Begel, '68, Michael F. Bouscaren, '69, .Clayton E. Day, '68, Norman N. Davidson, III, '69, I. Peter Doherty, '67 , Brian I. Dowling, '69, john R. Emmons, '68, Richard I. Fater, '67, Maurice E. Franklin, '69, james D. Fisher, '68, Frank E. France, '68, David Foster, '67, Francis P. Gallagher, '69, Gregory G. Gallico, '68, Peter B. Gilkey, '67, Joseph P. Gold smith, '69, Glenn H. Greenbert, '68, Robert F. Greenlee, '67, David W. Heckler, '69, William Hilgendorf, '67, Calvin Hill, '69, Paul B. jones, '68, Robert D. Kenney, '67, Merritt B. Kleber, '69, Britton W. Kolar, '68, Christopher A. Kule, '67, Robert E. Levin, '69, James P. MacQueen, '69, Bernard P. Madden, '69, Walter A. Martins, '69, john R. McCarthy, '68, Thomas M. McLaughlin, '68, Frederick W. Morris, '69, james M. Saxon, '67, Thomas C. Schmidt, '68, I. Courtney Shevelson, '68, Daniel T. Smith, Ir., '67, Irwin B. Somerville, '67, H. Reynaud Stroube, '68, Rodney H. Watson, '68, Iohn T. Weigel, '67, Bruce Weinstein, '69, john S. Whitehead, '67, Richard A. Williams, Ir., '69, Mark T. Young, '68. 143 Coach Hubert Vogelsinger SOCCER The 1966 fall season marked the beginning of an- other era in Yale soccer. This yearis team was the first under the direction of Hubert Vogelsinger. Mr. Vogelsinger, formerly a professional soccer player in Europe, brought a dynamic, ambitious and imagina- tive attitude to the job. Inexperience was a key factor on a 1966 squad, which had only six returning lettermen from the 8-3 team of 1965. Indicating Coach Vogelsinger's ambition and enthusiasm, pre-season training began two weeks before the start of the term, a full week earlier than in prev- ious years. The introduction of modern European train- ing techniques by Vogelsinger featured intensive drilling in ball handling. The new coach also switched the team formation to a European style, the teamis un- familiarity with this formation may have had consid- erable effect on the season's results. Following a victorious scrimmage over the Coast Guard Academy, the Elis hosted last year's N.C.A.A. Eastern champs, powerful Army. The hard-fought con- test included some of the finest soccer played on the Coxe Cage field in some years. Yale stood up well under the pressure of the swiftly-paced Cadets. Army had to come from behind to tie the final score at 2-2. Roy Austin played an outstanding defensive game at ustopperf' Control of the ball midfield by Captain Bush set up the breakaways by Griswold and Mueller, lead- ing to Yaleis two scores. Encouraged by their play against Army, the Elis confidently squared off against the defending Ivy League Champions from Providence. With Yale drawing rst blood on a goal by speedy sophomore Mueller, Brown bounced back with three straight goals to go ahead 3-1. Griswold cut the margin to one goal with a hard shot in the right-hand corner. Another goal by each team left Yale with a 4-3 defeat. In a midweek game, Yale shut out a Spunky Spring- field team 1-0. Left wing Ted Hume scored the only goal of the game. In search of their first Ivy League win, Yale hosted the Lions of Columbia. Carrying a 3-1 lead into the last period, Yale suddenly lost its rhythm and Columbia managed to put in two goals for an overtime situa- tion. Columbia managed to score in overtime and hand Yale a 4-3 defeat, despite outstanding perform- ances by Captain Bush, Center forward john Griswold, and right wing Tim Oppenheimer. Senior Paul Ward returned to his left-fullback posi- tion when the Elis met the University of Bridgeport in a rain-soaked game, but to no avail as Yale fell under a dripping 4-1 drubbing. Again looking for an Ivy League win, Vogelsinger's squad travelled to Cornell. john Griswold made the offensive difference with two goals, one of them made with only 55 seconds left to play. Griswold made good use of superior speed and tricky footwork to score on a pass from Derek Bush. At the same time, junior john Benson made good his starting debut in the nets as he co-starred with Griswold. Kim Morsman and Toli Fliakos at left-and right-half-backs showed promising development as sophomore defensive standouts. Darn' against Princeton John Griswold The Cornell victory foretold a change in fortunes for the team as it came up with a superior effort against Dartmouth the following weekend. Benson made a dozen saves in the game, of which at least four could be termed spectacular. Captain Bush, playing some of the finest soccer seen in current college leagues, capped off his successful day by booming a tremend- ous shot past Dartmouth goalie Bob McGee. john Griswold, playing his typically fine game, scored the second goal. Defensemen Briney, Ward, and Austin consistently blocked Dartmouth attacks far from the goal and allowed the Elis to dominate play. Ball control kept the action almost entirely on the big Creenis end of the field. Again plagued by poor field conditions, Yale took on the University of Connecticut in another midweek con- test. Both teams played mostly defensive games with scoring threats with his powerful clears. U. Conn's short- lived 1-0 lead was erased on a goal by Mike Mueller. With the game tied at 1-1, time ran out and necessitated an overtime period. This gave Mueller a chance to top his best day of the year with his second and the game- winning goal. For the first time in the season, the Bulldogs possessed a winning record of 4-3-1. With high hopes, they travelled to Philadelphia. Commanding play for the first three periods, the Blues took numerous shots and were rewarded with two goals by Griswold. T oli F liakos Then, content with their 2-0 lead, the Elis retreated into a strictly defensive game and the team collapsed as the Quakers scored two quick goals and threw the game into overtime. Yale woke up in the overtime, but not soon enough to break a begrudged tie. Having lost the Penn. game, the Elis took out their an er on a weak Princeton s uad and trounced it 3-1. gV'th d f532 qll d321' th I 1 recorso --overa an --in evy League on the line, Yale hosted high-riding Harvard in a televised game. The spirit of Vogelsinger's team was not enough as Harvard slipped by, 4-1, despite the highly improved performances of Doug Franchot and sopho- mores Kim Morsman, Tim Briney, and Toli Fliakos, Captain Derek Bush and Ilohn Griswold fthe league's leading scorer with 9 goa sj were Hrst-team, All-Ivy selections, attesting to their soccer talents. Even though the overall record of the team was not as great as it perhaps might have been, the performances of most players in several of the games would seem to indicate that Coach Hubert Vogelsinger is off to a com- mendable start and is likely to have much success in the future. LETTER WINNERS: john Benson, '68, Paul Ward, '67, Timothy Briney, '69, Roy Austin, '68, Kimball Morsman, '69, Apostolns, Fliakos, '69, Thomas Oppenheimer, '67, Derek Bush, '67, john Griswold, '67, Douglas F ranchot, '68, Michael Mueller, '69, Douglas Darif, '69, Robert Arras, '9, Tad Thacher, '68, Manager, john Skrobat, '68. Army 2 Brown 4 Springfield 0 Columbia 4 IOTQ Bridgeport 4 Cornell 1 Dartmouth 0 Connecticut 1 KOTJ Pennsylvania 2 IOTJ Princeton 1 Harvard 4 CROSS COUNTRY , W .uwky 25 Brown 31 .1-W, ay 29 Fordham 27 20 Cornell 37 20 Connecticut 39 Yale 15, Dartmouth 475 Yale 21, Columbia 395 Columbia 26, Dartmouth 31. Harvard 23, Yule 36g Princeton 26, Yule 30, Harvard Princeton 38. H21l'N'lll'd 31, Princeton 49, Yule 51 NVON: 5 LOST: 3 Lettermen: Stephen Bittner ,695 Stephen Boyer '68, Capt., Ben Hennecke ,685 Carl Pierce '69, Francis Shorter '695 Robert Yahn ,695 ...nd V . mf ' -vsfqgfx Q1 ' Z rw Q SWIMMING That inimitable sports publication, Sports Illustrated, once called Yale an insdtution of higher swimming. The 1966-67 Yale varsity swimming team fortunately did little to dispel that i-mage. Coach Phil Moriarity molded a powerhouse out of a talent-laden junior class and some outstanding sopho- mores and seniors. The Elis rolled through 14 dual meets without a loss, ran away with their fifth Eastem Seaboard Intercollegiate Swimming Championship Meet title in a row, and performed extremely well in the National AAU Indoor Swimming Championships at Dal- las. The only flaw in their record was a sixth place finish in the NCAA Swimming Championships, but Moriarity,s superswimmers were illness-ridden during that competition. Junior Don Schollander, the winner of four gold medals in the Tokyo Olympics and a perennial AAU all-America, was the mainstay of the squad. Schollander was again beset by numero-us illnesses, but when he was healthy he lived up to his billing as the world's greatest freestyler. Classmate Rick Schneider, the extremely versatile Ohioan, had an outstanding year, setting a Yale record in the butterfly among other achievements. Olympian Bill Mettler gave the Elis butterfly depth, while Mike Buckley and Barry Wemple, also juniors, maintained their positions among the top breastrokers and back- strokers in the East. The senior class had three top freestyle sprinters, Captain Doug Kennedy, Mike Ahern, and Steve Stack. Kennedy did pa-rticularly well in both the big meets, while Stack made rapid improvement, hitting 46.9 on a 400 free relay against the freshmen. Ahern started very well, but was slowed by illnesses later in the year, and was forced to miss the NCAA meet entirely. The other senior ace, Rich Lawler, was a formidable breastroke threat in the East, as was big sophomore Al Richardson, who still holds the Yale freshman mark for the 100 yard breastroke. Illness and labs cut heavily into Dave Iohnson's swimming program, forcing the sophomore individual medley star to miss almost seven weeks of practice, although he won both IM's in the Easterns, Dave ha-d hoped to do better than he did in the nationals. One of the most pleasant developments of the 1966- 67 season was a fulfilment of potential by sophomore freestyler Robin Waples. Waples, who shares the NCAA freshman record for the 100 yard freestyle, scored in both the 50 and 100 sprints at the NCAA's, placed fifth in the AAU 100 free, and was named to the United States' Men's Pan American Swimming team. The dual meet season was generally dull, entirely be- cause the caliber of opposition was so low. The high points were the battles with North Carolina State, Army, Princeton, and the Eli freshmen. The N.C. State team, a new name on the Yale sched- ule, was given a fair chance to upset the Elis, mainly because the meet was held in December. But Moriarity did a superb job of getting his team ready, and they put on an awesome display of power for the near sellout crowd at the Kiphuth Exhibition Pool. Only N. C. State sprinter Steve Rerych, who won the 50 and 100 free, prevented the contest from being a debacle for the Southerners. Yale ran away with both relays, and Schollander won the 1000 and 500 yard freestyles with excellent early season times, and Schneider hit career best times in finishing second by inches to teammates Bill Mettler 1200 fly? and Mike Ahern 1200 freej. The final and quite lopsided score: Yale 71, N.C. State 33. Last year, the Army mermen had defeated Yale, 48- 47, at West Point, to snap a 42 meet Yale win streak, and win the Eastern Swim League crown. The bulldogs got sufficient revenge on Ianuary 7, however, as they routed the Cadets 67-28 to stop an Army skein that had gone over 20 contests. Between Army and Princeton, came the annual Yale Swim Carnival, and, almost as a custom, Yale set a record. This time it was an American standard for the 800-yard freestyle relay. The team of Ahern 11:-17.01, Schneider 11:45.5j, johnson 11:44.81 and Schollander 11:41.59 bettered the old mark by over two seconds. The only real significance of the Princeton meet is that beating the hated Tigers is always a source of joy. This year it was by 62-33, and when Harvard fell 60- 35 the following week, Yale had 23 wins in a row and the EISL title again. The victory over Springfield the Wednesday before Princeton was Phil Moriarity's 100th Yale win 1against three lossesj. The varsity ha-d its work cut out against the freshmen. Schollander and Johnson were sick, and the ,Pups were really up,' for the meet. Moriarity had to throw the medley relay to the freshmen to rest his swimmers, and the contest went down to the free relay, which was won by the varsity to give them a 52-43 victory. Iron Many Schneider played the key role, winning the 200 fly and getting seconds in the 200 free and 500 free-900 yards of swimming in an evening. Buckley, Johnson, Schollander, and Schneider were the Yale standouts in the Eastern Seaboard meet. Buck- ley won both the 100 and 200 yard breaststrokes, setting a meet record in the former. Iohnson swam to corne- from-behind victories to capture the 200 and 400 yard solo medleys, with meet records in both. Schollander double won in the freestyles, setting an NCAA record 11:42.41 in the 200 and a meet record 14:46.01 in the 500. He also took second in the 100. Schneider came up with a Yale record 11:58.01 and a career best 14:51.22 to score surprising second-place finishes in the 200 fly and 500 free, respectively. The NCAA meet saw Schollander, Ahern, Johnson, and Schneider all in sub-par physical condition, and the Elis finished over 100 points behind victorious Stanford. Schollander was upset by Stanford's Greg Buckingham in the 200 free, and came in fourth in the 100. Neither Yale freestyle relay could win, although the 400 team of Waples C46.8Q, Stack 146.91 Kennedy, 145.61 and Schollander f45.4j turned in a 3:05-plus clocking, almost two seconds under the old American record. The AAUs were a different story. The team was healthy, and finished third, only 13 points behind the victorious Santa Clara Swim Club. Schollander beat Buckingham to win the 200 free this fifth AAU victory in a rowl with an American record C1:41.2j and anchored both freestyle relays to victory, turning in an. incredible 1:39.7 leg in the 800 relay, in which he made up nearly two seconds on Buckingham. His 400 split was 45.4. The rest of those relays were: 400-VVaples f47.1j, Ahern f47.5j, Kennedy f46.3Qg 800-Schneider 11:45.91 Kennedy f1:45.7j, and VVaples C1:44.9j. The medley quartet of Wemple 454.41 Buckley C58.8j, Waples C51.9j, and Ken- nedy C46.1j established. a Yale record of 3:30.8 in. finish- ing third. This time was almost three seconds better than their NCAA effort. Yale's other AAU points were earned by Waples Qfifth in the 100 freej, Schollander Cthird in the 100 freej, and Buckley Cfourth in the 100 breast with a 1:00.0, a Yale recordj. In addition to NVaples, Schol- lander was named to the Pan Am squad. All in all, the AAUs were a true measure of the teamis strength and a fitting climax to a fine season. -Philip F. Hersh, Sports Editor, Yale Daily NEWS RESULTS 81 Southern Conn. ..... ........ 2 3 86 Pennsylvania .......... ........ 1 8 57 Cornell ............................ 1 ...... 38 71 No. Carolina State ..... ...... 133 67 Army .......................... .......r 28 59 Villanova ................ .....i.. 3 6 68 Colgate .... ........ 3 6 53 Navy ....r..... ........ 4 2 62 Columbia ..... . ....... 33 74 Brown ....... .. ........ 21 76 Dartmouth ....... . ...... 19 68 Springfield ....... 1 ..... 27 62 Princeton ..... ....... . .. ...... H33 60 Harvard ............................. ........ 3 5 ESIS Championships: lst NCAA Championships: 6th AAU: 3rd Medley relay against North Carolina State: Kennedy Hfaples Richardson n E film L35 ,k., - v-., if ff: ifwf Agia 11.ffilggw..3.Y1H,,,Wgqgjv-,gy as ag 1 we tim 1 .Vw,s'f'A2s:s,g1,,fwfpa,gQ':er mt fr fa 1.aJfe2wmQ54:afsfff1z A t I K A wwf, -531 tgmtkw A. f Q ie. 15,5 1 4 gg. J if , , I L. 3 t ,V tt . ,,.-fm. .iezf ifwfhiiifw M y at at-as --my ,,.. .wmv -' in . -W, i -K 11- , ig N H' , , f 1 ' - 7 f ,. A . J gui . - A.: ' Hr. S . 1 , f.,, y: K 5 5 1 2 s E i 6 E E Don Schollander Dave I ohnson 1 w , l i Al Richardson Fred Hahn BASKETBALL The 1966-67 campaign was the most success- ful for the Yale basketball team in several years. An 11-8 Ivy League record, 14-7 overall, gave the Elis a tie for second place with Cornell. The Ivy League champions from Princeton, ranked fifth in the national polls at the end of the season, barely squeaked past the hustling Bull- dogs. In two games the Tigers, total margin was three points. VVith just a couple of good breaks, a successful season could have been an outstanding one. From the beginning, Coach joe Vancisn and his charges were eager to improve on last yearis disappointing 9-112 record, and were confident that they could do it. Using desire and hustle to counteract a lack of height, Vancisn deftly substituted among his top eight players: Captain Rick Johnson, Howie Dale, Ed Goldstone, Rick Stoner, Neil Piller, Craig Foster, Frank Wis- neski, and Rob McCallum, to get the right com- bination for each particular situation. An unex- pected victory in a preseason scrimmage with Bob Cousy's nationally-ranked Boston College team indicated good things to come. The Elis mauled Colgate 108-74 in the season opener, and then upset arch rival UConn 65-57. Fordham caught the Bulldogs looking ahead to the Holy Cross game, and handed them an 80- 70 setback. The team came back with one of the seasonis best efforts against Holy Cross, highly rated on the strength of some tall sophomores and the coaching debut of Lew Alcindoris for- mer high school mentor. All five starters hit double figures, with Rick Stoneris 26 points leading the way to a 90-73 victory. A sluggish 76-65 victory over Brown and a surprisingly easy 78-67 win over Cornell ex- tended Yaleis record to 5-1 going into the Christ- mas trip. But on this trip, the Bulldogs never played the caliber of basketball that they had displayed in earlier games, and they fell to Tulsa, Memphis State, and Tulane. Returning to the North, Rick Iohnson's 31 points led the team to an 86-74 win over Penn. Then came the frist Princeton game. After a miserable first half which left them behind by 19 points, the Elis gamely battled back. The rally was stopped just two points short when, with eight seconds to go, Rob McCallum, driving for the basket, was called for an offensive foul, Princeton then ran out the clock to preserve a slim 77-75 victory. After the exam break, the Bulldogs dropped a crucial game to a vastly improved Cornell squad 80-73. At Ithaca the Big Red later upset Princeton. A victory over Columbia followed before the second encounter with the Tigers from New Jersey. With Ed Goldstone in foul trouble and Rick Iohnson hampered by a painful back injury, the Elis fell behind by fourteen points early in the second half. But again the Yale five gamely fought back. Rick Stoner, who finished with 27 points, sparked the rally with five deadly 25-foot jump shots. The Elis tied the score, then led momentarily as the crowd in Payne Whitney roared. Princeton came back to take the lead on a foul shot by Cary Walters. When Howie Da1e's last second shot bounced off the rim, the Tigers had salvaged an 81-80 victory and preserved their commanding lead in the Ivy League race. After this heartbreaking defeat, Yale bounced back to finish the season with six straight vic- tories and a tie for second place in the Ivy League. Rick johnson led the Ivy League in rebounding, was named to the coach's first team all-Ivy squad, and received an NCAA scholar- athlete fellowship to continue his studies. Ed Goldstone finished the year with a 6096 shooting average from the floor, one of the highest in the nation, and was elected Captain for the coming season. The team as a whole had over- come a lack of height and a difficult list of opponents to post the best record in several years. This was the year as it was, marked by suc- cess and full of promise. But the slim margin of defeat at the hands of Princeton causes one, when reflecting on the season, to wonder about the aifsv of this successful year, and about what might have been. 108 65 70 90 76 78 65 43 106 86 75 59 73 71 80 71 84 71 100 71 86 1628 B A S K E T B A L L VARSITY Coach: Joseph Varcisin Captain: Richard Iohnson Colgate .,,...,.oC5ooo5CY 7 77 7 74 Connecticut ,,,7,,, 7,,, 7 57 Fordham .,.,.,777 7 77 80 Holy Cross 75757 ..c. 7 73 Brown ,,cc,r 7 65 Comell ..5.. 7 .55555 77 67 Tulsa ........,...... ,77,,7 7 1 Memphis State 7 77 ,i,,, 7 57 Tulane ,.,.,7,,.,,,77,,, ..77 7 118 Pennsylvania ,,,,, ,...,. 7 4 Princeton ,,,,,,,,, 7 77 77 Columbia ,... 77 7 47 Cornell .,,,....,.. ,,,,,, 8 0 Columbia .,.t,,e ,.e,ee 6 1 Princeton ee...,... 7 77 81 Pennsylvania .,,.. . .e.,, 64 Harvard eeee. 77 78 Dartmouth A7777 61 Harvard 77777 7 7 75 Dartmouth 77777 777777 5 6 Brown 7777777777 777777 6 5 1481 WON: 14 LOST: 7 Yale scores against Cornell I ack Walsh HOCKEY A-in I ack Morrison For the first time in many years the Yale hockey team not only finished above the .500 mark but also showed Ingalls Rink fans play that rivaled the best in the East. The undefeated freshman team of three years ago had finally matured. Supported by a talented group of under- classmen, these seniors formed the nucleus of a team with explosive scoring potential and tight defensive ability. Probably the most impressive feature of the 1967 squad was its ability to bounce back with the big win after suffering defeat. Battered by perennial power B. C. I3-2, they completely crushed Northeastern, one of the top teams in the East, 9-2. Dropping an overtime decision to St. Lawrence in the Carden, they eliminated Princeton the next day-in overtime! Beaten by a tough Clarkson squad 13-7, they recorded successive upsets over St. Lawrence and Cornell. In every case, after what seemed to be near disaster, the players were able to collect them- selves as an effective unit which not only compiled a winning percentage, but also defeated Princeton four successive times, gained an ECAC ranking that went as high as third, and produced a first team All-American. The victory over Cornell Q4-3 in overtimej was the lone defeat handed the eventual NCAA champions 127-1-IQ. All-Ivy, All-East, All-American jack Morrison, destroy- ing every existing Yale scoring record Cgoals, assists, total pointsj led the way to success with a smooth skating style and an explosive scoring punch. Always a scoring threat, it had to be jack who pushed the puck past Ken Dryden to end Cornell's undefeated streak. It could only be jack who won Coach Dick Cagliardiis accolade as the finest American college hockey player in the game. His counterpart, Jack Walsh, would also have scored a career total of more than 100 points had he not suffered a knee injury in the Army game. He had scored the winning goal against the Cadets C4-3j, and the following rout of Dartmouth C12-2D was ufor Iackf' At seasonis end he received the award as the most inspiring member of the team-by performance and attitude. Captain Warren Celman rounded out the first line: his outstanding play and determined effort appropriately complemented his role as the teamis leader. When Walsh's career met an abrupt end, Gelman began to average close to two goals a game, scoring an incredible four against Brown. While the offense was rapidly accumulating astro- nomical statistics QRPI 11-9, Dartmouth I2-2, 7-3, North- eastern 9-2, Providence 7-2, St. Lawrence 5-25, the de- fense used experience plus a Canadian sophomore of equal talent to carry out Coach Gagliardiis system of tight coverage. Moose', Miller and Ted Carey de- veloped into a starting pair that was second only to Cornellis in the Ivy League. Often their aggressive play drew more cheers from the crowd than a goal scored! Mike Brooks, a three year veteran, matched his consisten- cy with sophomore Bill McKenna's strength to form the second defensive line. Throughout the year the goal was one of the most interesting positions to follow. Zef Fessenden, standout on last yearis team, but was faced with three other fine players. Rick Tilghman was a temporary replacement, but soon gave way to sophomores Steve Holahan and Mark Dayton. Holahan played his first varsity career game against Cornell, and established himself as the most sensational of the four. Brilliant efforts, particularly in the two Cornell games, brought great confidence to the team about mid-season, and when Steve fell off, Dayton displayed a careful, conscientious style that provided continued success. But this team was more than just a list of names on a roster compiling another equally long list of statistics and honors. More important than the impressive record, this team was 18 players, along with a young, determined coach, who were tremendously enthusiastic about play- ing hockey and who were tremendously proud of them- selves individually and as a group. ,.,,., ,W .,., y My itagf l trtut M ,..,..,.a-ww K . , i I K A Q 9 :gi V S X.. ,fi 2.-1 CGACH: Dick Caliardi CAPTAIN: Warren Celman 1 St. Nickis 2 3 Univ. of New Hampshire 1 3 Boston College 12 9 Northeastern 2 11 B.P.L. 9 3 Cornell 5 5 St. Lawrence 6 7 Princeton 6 5 Princeton 2 7 Clarkson 13 5 St. Lawrence 2 4 Cornell 3 4 Army 3 12 Dartmouth 2 7 Providence 2 3 Boston University 8 5 Brown 10 7 Princeton 3 7 Dartmouth 4 4 Princeton 2 3 Harvard 7 2 Brown 3 3 Harvard 7 2 St. Lawrence 4 X --U ' -1 -Q' Gadsden against Princeton Steve Orth wei n Yale 9 Pennsylvania Yale Yale Yale 9 8 6 Amher Yale Yale Yale Yale Yale 8 9 8 6 9 st8 POLO ..,WhA-MW giilli-xsH Fordham 0 Yale 4 Trinity 0 Dartmouth 1 Williams 3 Yale 1 Cornell 1 Wesleyan O Anny 1 Princeton 3 M.I.T. 0 Yale 2 Steve Orthwein versus Georgetown. .4 an. A , .W , . . ,Wm WRESTLING Springfield 25 14 Rutgers 17 6 Lehigh 28 8 Army 29 28 Columbia 15 9 Brown 23 5 Pennsylvania 30 1 1 Cornell 25 7 Princeton 32 7 Harvard 31 10 C.C.N.Y. 7 N.Y.U. 13 Rutgers 7 Columbia 8 Cornell 8 Pennsylvania 11 Princeton 8 Harvard Won: O Lost: 8 FENCING W-Us XR, W W lil? A . ' Q71 V4P'Qff ' iQf3SfQ?M?4TY'-f SH ff fm:a': az - ' 21. f-fif. - 'wwf-fr?- A Y . J , 1 , -7 ,, ' zf:'f 4 .N PM K 'H' ' - 1' Q1 W-.wiikv 29- L21 ':'E':lW'3if5 FfiI v'?.s.'?fi'?'- :-: ' 3'755'1:E-5 g - ' L . G' W '-'k Q-if 1 ' X , 'Q 1 ' f v ' , ,,.. ' if-, R , M if 45 1 . . , A L . , ,,,,.v-f .V 1 A ., A Aw-......,N .....v A-..... ' Hu. ,. .. M ... ' 4' M V. ,Haan M- 4-.0 ,,5,,w.M, M , .- . V-, ' .V I 4 4MlL'K , L1 ,A 7 - k' T MW.. VW W f ,:f:.xw-nw 4 'W 'i 'vvrxwdk 3 . 'L LAT ,,.,, A ew-rf, Q 1' up S 1 .Q 'Svu'r'GF -'flu 4 ,MQ-If A . Z ' W 52, ,M i V , wg, Q ws. . ,X X Q-:Av U...2?ssf . ' Q , 17 41:,.,g 2- .x 1 ,, A,-f Www M -.....M,,,,, 4 S ' 2 bk..V A my Coach james Rathschmidt You say Yale beat MIT by six lengths, and so early in the season! Say, this crew has real potentiallv Unfortunately for the 1966 Yale varsity crew, all this potential materialized elsewliere-namely, in the Vfs. By the time ofthe Harvard race, tour men from the original Varsity had been moved to the V., and apparently they took the Varsityls ugutsv with them. At the end of the season, the combination of Bill Taylor, Duke Klauck, josh Jensen, Dave Pinkham, Ollie Edwards, Bill Harzard Qcaptj, Dan jones, Bob Ramage, and Cox Pete Lee could be rated the top junior varsity of not only the East Coast, but in all Yale rowing history. It all began in the fall of 1965, when Coach jim Rathschmidt decided to try some new techniques. A one-speed slide, a lot of small boat rowing, and some 4 miles head-of-the-river rows helped mold all the boats into fair crews by the end of 1965. During the winter Mr. Rathschmidt put everyone on a program of weight-lifting. Whenever 6'5 , 210 lb. Frank Wat- son complained about all the exercise, the coach simply pointed to scrawny 170 lb. Sam Kirkland and asked, Do you want to look like that?l Invaribly Watson resumed his diligent efforts. In the weight rooms, the crew growled and clanked its way toward the strength ofa Kayser lion, and sweated through interval rowing in the tanks. Once everyone took to the waters of the Housatonic, the coach worked hard on the heavier men, hoping to prepare them in time for the long New London haul. Thus it came as a surprise to him when Steve Spare, a 180 lb. sophomore, emerged as the best stroke Yale had. The absolute steadiness of Spareis rhythm engrained a real confidence in the men behind him, and the RathU looked forward to Rutgers with pleasure. After Rutgers had been easily disposed of by the Vfs Coach Rathschmidt sent the Varsity on the water with a special strategy: whenever the opponent falls behind by a length, smooth off to 314 power. Excitement grew intense when the Eli coxswain called for this move prematurely and Rutgers almost edged by . . . but to no avail. The jubilant Rathschmidt commented after the race, We wonit try that move againli' In the next race, with MIT, the Varsity was faithful to the coach,s decision. Flying from its opponent with every stroke, the Varsity won by a six length margin in near record time. But a week later, in a very strange race, the Varsity simply lost its nerve, and never regained it. Two lengths ahead of Penn with a mile to go, the crew seemed to stop pulling, and Penn zoomed by and couldn't be caught. Although at Ithaca the Vfs beat Cornell, Princeton, and Syracuse to continue their unbeaten record, the Varsity led at the mile mark but then suddenly fell apart. At the Eastern Sprint championships, the day was carried by Harvard in both the Varsity and V. races. Meager compensation to Yale was her second place in the point trophy standings. Then on to New London, still hoping for success. The coach settled on a Varsity of Bob Emmet, Rennie Schoonmaker, john Chandler, Sam Kirkland, Dave Hathaway, Frank Watson, ohn Bockstoce, Steve Spare, and Leo Kayser as coxswain. In The Race, the MVU rowed a fine first two miles, but then et Harvard roar away to a record clocking. But the I. V.'s-theirs was a classic race in its embodi- ment of determination and superb oarsmanship. Utilizing its unique ability to practically go backwards during a start, the Elis made Harvard completely overconfident for the first mile. Down a length with a mile gone, the Bulldogs forced the Crimson to burn up its steam in a mid-race sprint, and then pulled even with three miles gone. By this time the crews had reached the blaring assemblage of yachts which each year crowd together for a 10 second view of the regatta. No longer could the oarsmen hear their coxswains over the screaming din, Yale just pulled and pulled. For Old Blues the race was a supreme moment. The perfection of the timing and the strength on the oars was sheer excitement to view. Harvard kept slipping under the pressure, and suddenly with a half mile to go Yale simply steamed away for a three length victory. 1967 will mean trouble for Harvard! LETTERWINNERS: john R. Bockstoce, '66, john R. Chandler, '68, Oliver Edwards, '68, Robert Emmet, '67, David R. Hathaway, '66, William L. Hazard, '66, jonathan E. Jensen, '66, Daniel W. jones, '67, Leo Kayser, '66, Samuel N. Kirkland, '67, Iohn A. Klauck, '66, Peter A. Lee, '67, David E. Pinkman, '66, Robert W. Ramage, Ir., '67, Raymond B. Schoonmaker, Ir., '68, Steven B. Spare, '68, William C. Taylor, jr., '67, Francis E. Watson, '68, Bennett L. Fisher, '66, Manager. 1 J' if . 1 V V ' 1909-. i n ,SQ ffgf. i ' , . t M.. N ...f'2?f!emm ...H ,... .3 '2... g, .f ' G. . . -3'-in-.,E 1: , L' M , 'K ,..17laf.....' ' sfxi.. . M The 1966 lightweight crew began training in Septem- ber with only two returning lettermen and a decided lack of depth. However new coach Peter Heagney, who brought with him a fine coaching record, gave every- one hope of a successful season. Fall and winter practices gave badly-needed confi- dence to the crew. Spring practice at Derby enhanced this feeling as the varsity turned in some fast time trials, confidently on several occasions coming close to the lightweight course record. The crew entered its first race against Kent School who were out to avenge their defeat of the previous year. The crew was: Bow, Bob Day, 2, VVard Wellman, 3, jim Avery, 4, Rod Bacon, 5, Chris Tilghman, 6, Iohn Munson, 7, Lanny Carroll, stroke, Peter Neely, and coxswain, Nick Nedas. Despite Kentys higher stroking, the lightweights won by more than a length over the one mile course in a time of 4:49. This time broke the Derby course record for the distance, enabling Yale to retain the W. S. Pearce Challenge Cup. Yale,s opponents for the following week were Dart- mouth and M.I.T. In the closest race of the season the three crews raced neck and neck along the Connecticut River at Hanover, until in the last V4 mile M.I.T. drove ahead to win by 1.1 seconds. Yale and Dartmouth finished in a dead-heat for second place. Since Yale had won the Durand Cup the ywr before, and M.l.T. was ineligible to receive the trophy, the Elis brought the Cup back to New Haven. Despite this narrow defeat, spirits were still high as Yale approached its next meet-the Dodge Cup Regatta against Penn and Columbia, in Philadelphia. But in the race itself, the Yale combination just did not jell. Trailing in third place by three lengths after a mile, the Elis managed to pull themselves together and pass the Columbia shell. Yale relinquished, the Dodge Cup to Penn. The following week Yale hosted Rutgers at Derby. ln appalling conditions the Yale shell, coaxed by Chris Combes, barely managed to overcome a spirited Rut- gers crew, winning by one second in a time of 7:21.3. The crew was tense as they prepared for the Coldth- Waite Cup Regatta against Harvard and Princeton. The following Saturday on the Charles River, Yale came in third behind Princeton and a Harvard crew who later went on to win the Thames Challenge Cup at Henley, in England. Spirit and confidence struck a new low after this defeat. Yet at the last meet of the season, the E.A.R.C. Sprint Championships at Worcester, Mass., the Elis sur- prised themselves. Yale finished a close second behind favored Cornell in the morning's qualifying heat, how- ever, in the afternoon final Yale finished in sixth place. The J.V. lightweight season was marked by a similar lack of success, as the problem of depth in the squad took its toll. The I.V.'s defeated only Dartmouth in their regular season races, however in the E.A.R.C. regatta they did manage to avenge earlier defeats by Columbia, and Georgetown. At the annual post-season banquet, Peter Neely was awarded the Crossman Trophy, and Charlie Seymour received the Outstanding Spirit Trophy. jim Avery was elected Captain for the 1967 season, a season in which, it was felt, Yale could only improve. LETTERWINNERS: C. James Avery, '67, Rodney I. Bacon, '67, Laurence B. Carroll, '67, Christopher S. Combs, '67, Seth B. Frenon, III, '67, john B. Munson, '67, William H. Rodgers, III, '66, Thomas I. Scott, Ir., '66, Charles Seymour, HI, '66, Christopher L. Tilghman, '68, Edward W. Wellman, Ir., '67. William Peace Trophy, two miles. Derby, 1. Yale, 4:49.05 2. Kent, 4:45.8. Durand Cup, 2000 meters. Hanover, 1. M.1.T., 6:08.9, 2. CTiel Yale and Dart- mouth, 6:09.5. Dod e Cup, one and 5116 miles. Phila- delplgria, 1. Pennsylvania, 6:32.05 2. Yale, 6:26.8, 3. Columbia, 6:44.7. One and 5116 miles. Derby, 1. Yale 61560, 2. Rutgers, 6:57.0. Coldthwaite Cup, one and 5f 16 miles. Candridge, 1. Harvard, 6:58.0, 2. Prince- ton, 7:05.5, 3. Yale, 7:07.7. E.A.R.C. 2000 meters. Worcester, Heat 2-1. Cornell, 6:36.4, 2. Yale, 6:36.2, 3. Princeton, 6:37.5, Finals -1. Harvard, 6:40.5, 2. Cornell, 6:42.55 3. DaI'tmOutl'1, 6:47.4, 4. Princeton, 6:52.1, 5. Pennsylvan- ia, 6:53.9, 6. Yale, 6:57.5. RESULTS OF ELECTIONS: Captain- jim Avery, ,67 Charles Seymour, '66, won the Outstand- ing Spirit Trophy. Peter Neely, '67, was awarded the Shedd Crossman Cup presented to the individual who has contributed the most to 150-lb. crew during the year. TENNIS 8 Pennsylvania 7 Cornell 9 Army 4 Williams 9 Columbia 8 Amherst 9 Brown 3 Princeton 3 Harvard New England Championships: 1. Yale 2. Williams 3. Harvard 4. Dartmouth 5. Vermont Trinity The success of the varsity tennis team of 1966 did not come easily. The team returned from its spring tour having suffered defeats at the hands of Georgia Tech, Southern Illinois, and the University of Miami, and the future was anything but certain. Nevertheless, led by jack Waltz playing number 1, Mike Brooks 121, captain jay Westcott QSQ, sophomore Bob McCallum Q4j, and Bill Keeton Q5j, the Blues opened their Ivy League season by defeating Cornell, 7-2. They then avenged' a previous year's loss to Penn by trouncing the Quakers 8-1, and followed with a clean sweep of Army 9-0. After a disappointing loss to Williams 5-4, the team swept by Columbia 9-0, Amherst 8-1, and Brown 9-0, setting the stage for the big matches with Harvard and Prince- ton. Unfortunately, the Tigers came out ahead in several extremely close matches and handed a disappointing 5-4 loss to the Blues. Harvard followed with a 6-3 win, and the season appeared to be over. The iinest moments, however, were still to come in the New England Tennis Championships on May 17. Led by Bob McCallum, Mike Brooks, and jack Waltz playing singles and a Brooks-Waltz doubles team, the Varsity came out on top of the 22 team field winning upset victories over Williams and Harvard. The strong finish was even more rewarding in light of the fact that only one player will be lost for the 1967 season, Captain-elect Waltz may be justified in expecting the best. Letterwinners: john G. Anderson, '68, Hamlet I. Barry, '66, Michael C. Brooks, '67, Richard I. Fates, '67, Robert A. Haar, '68, William R. Keeton, '68, Robert D. McCal- lum, Ir., '68, Stephen A. Orthwein, '68, Jack R. Waltz, '67, jeffrey B. Westcott, '68, john H. Westcott, jr., '66, J. Michael Ladd, Manager, '67. D, . .ww Nw-riigsw.-.zwzzza ie-wi, .a-.f,. fig , Q 3, a.. tswmfathlfu-.w... a,--'mm-wwaww,-y'-M-5-ev 'P I' ug U LETTERWINNERS: john Badman, III, '66, Timothy M. Bradford, '66, Perry H. Burr, '66, Bruce D. Cor- bridge, '67, David I. Foster, '67, Douglas W. Fran- chot, III, '68, Tone H. Grant, '66, James G. Groning- er, '66, W. Gibson Harris, II, '66, Henry B. Hoff, '67, Manager, James E. Howard, '66, Gregory D. jones, '66, Thomas F. Judson, Ir., '67, Douglas C. Kennedy, '67, Iohn F. Kerry, '66, Frederick V. Mc- Carthy, '68, Howell Mallory, '66, D. Perry O'Connor, '66, David R. Patterson, '68, Richard W. Pershing, '66, Thomas P. Preston, '68, john H. Reid, III, '66, Denis R. Tippo, '66, joseph Upton, III, '66, R. Craig Woodward, '67. LACROSSE The H166 lacrosse team had great confidence even hefore its memhers started playing together. By the time the squad was ready to go on spring tour, all were in good shape from hody-huilding and running six minute miles every day. However, a trip around the South in a hus, with no female company, while everyone else is in Aspen or Bermuda, is not the most pleasant prospect. Yet the team's sense of' humor was more than adequate for the task. After dispatching North Carolina 8-5, and XVashington and Lee 14-6, the Elis victimized johns llopkins 12-10, the high point of' the tour. Virginia suhsequently fell, 1:2-6. Upon returning to New Haven unscathed the men settled down to more serious husiness, though with no less extensive joking. Somewhat tired hy the trip and perhaps a little overconhdent, the team squeaked hy Penn, 5-3. The Blues were not so lucky the following WVednesday against Brown. The 5-10 defeat slowed them somewhat in the next match, as Cornell won 13-1 l. The humiliation of' two consecutive defeats might have hroken the spirit of a less unified team, hut the Varsity's spirit was indomitahle. Built around the con- scientious leadership of Captain Mac Bradford, this spirit was manifested in the hard-working dedication of' all the players. The humor and sincerity of' trainer Dan Casman, and Chief Corrigan's knowledge and love of' the game inspired successive wins over Army, Butgers, Dartmouth, and XVilliams. Earning the Big Three crown, hy defeating Princeton, 7-4, and llarvard, 12-3, was overshadowed hy the team's final ranking ofthird in the nation. The 1966 Yale lacrosse team knew how to win and did, simply hecause it could not allow itself' to he discouraged hy defeat. TRACK The 1966 outdoor track season was an incredible reversal of Yale's successful indoor track meets. In ad- dition to a very serious lack of depth in most of the field and distance events, catastrophe struck the Eli trackmen. First, superb jumper Paul jones was lost due to mono- nucleosis. Then Ken Donovan succumbed to bad grades and Rich Robinson never fully recovered from a pulled- muscle suffered during the winter. It was a substantially weakened team that went outdoors to face a contingent of strong opponents. The first meet was with St. Johns and Rutgers. The outstanding Yale performance was turned in by sopho- more Al Evans who showed versatility by scoring in four events: second-place in the long jump, triple and high hurdles, and fourth-place in the high jump. A good effort was also made by Mark Young, who won the 220 and the 440, and was anchor man on the victorious mile- relay team. But Yale's 59 to St. Iohn's 73 and Rutgers, 59 was an ill omen. Next in the Army meet, the always strong Cadets beat the Elis 95-59. The bright spot in this meet for Yale was the emergence of jim Moore as a solid liurdler, thus filling the empty spot left by Donovan. Moore won both the 440 intermediate hurdles and the 120 yd. high hurdles. Bob Greenlee upset a favored Army trio in the shot put with a toss of 53'5 . Mark Young won the 440 yd. dash and the mile relay was again a Yale victory. uw sm Am fy -ie .2 ,W ,A,,1,, .J 45 . x ,I-QW'-, 9, gg jx 5 -'n W gk 1' QW wg' ' 1 1 3 -ggfsz 5 is i F341 Q .QF , X 8' if f Sw f , fx ' X r' WF vi W was X RQ 2 A Q 'S . 333 2 , , K gt , i 5 I r Q V ,A xx RQ ., 3, if 1 :W as 5 , , if ,,, Y, 4 MMM' if IK , M I Mffiey gh Q 0' K 3 S fm ,N X an 3 f wg W 2 if t W , ,. Q fi, Iii -K, w --.5 ! S ,., V if A vit R , .,. is 5 Qi fx S if . Q 35 f A.. If 3' , A ' is 4 2 .nam 'Q' ,ff Qs - .. X - x K., 0 3 T., si f W is f 1 ' 55-f V 4: M M J 1. 5 Y 15 ,fi ,,:,. 7 flf' r , L b mc Q il' F k fi, , Mn 11, 4' 34 WM . W 3 V' ,W L, 4 W r S 3, 6 f' kg Rutgers St. johnis Yale Army Yale Princeton Yale Harvard Yale Heptagonals: 1. Army 73 315 2. Navy 35 115 3. Harvard 62 4. Cornell 28 5. Princeton 21 115 6. Yale 16 7. Brown 7 8. Pennsylvania 6 9. Dartmouth 5 10. Columbia 4 mf! LETTERWINNERS: Daniel Begel, '68, Duncan C. Carmichael, '68, Henry E. Cole, '66, Charles W. Daniels, '67, john Emmons, '68, Ioseph S. Freeman, '66, David Grady, '67, Robert F. Greenlee, '67, Thomas Har- mon, '68,fBen G. Henneke, '68, Richard Her- mann, '68, john M. Jessup, '68, Paul Iones, '68, Donald Liberman, '66, jonathan Lieff, '66, Leignton Longhi, '67, William Mathers, '66, james Moore, '68, Randolph W. Rall, '68, Peep Rebassoo, '66, Grafton Reeves, '67, Gregory P. Theokas, '68, Mark T. Young, '68. The 1966 Yale Rugby Club thought it stood at the top of the heap when spring season began. During the 1965 Thanksgiving Tournament it had beaten convin- cingly all the major East Coast teams. During a fabulous trip to Iamaica, the Jamaican Army was dispatched 6-3, the University of the NVest Indies fell 28-3, and the Jamaica Arawaks and Privateers were whitewashed 14-0. March 23 provided more of a test for the Ruggers as they took on the Jamaican All- Stars, a team which represents jamaica against other Caribbean island teams. A try and a penalty kick by Capt. Derek Bush, and a try by medical student Bernie Bightman, combined with a gutty performance by john Criswold secured the Elfs 9-8 victory. After impaling Kansas State, I6-0, the Club returned to New Haven to settle matters with the Harvard Busi- ness School. The latter was an experienced team with an almost impregnable defense. The team could afford no mistakes. The 22-0 score shows they made none. The 3-8 loss to New York,s Rugby Club was more a defeat by circumstance than one to superior skill. Bush- league play,', said the Yale Captain, awe had to set up the goal posts ourselves! In following games the Elis de- feated Army 11-8 with a come from behind sneak and avenged a 1965 loss to the Animals of Dartmouth. These games had less importance to the team than their Hnal match with MIT. Both superstars Bush and Griswold were absent due to injuries, yet the club showed its development by playing its best team game of the season, winning by a 20-3 score. Karl Marlantes was elected President of the Club, Tony Swil, Captain, Pete Coates, Treasurer, and Ian Wood, Secretary, for the following season. RUGBY COACH: james Root CAPTAIN: Derek G. Bush Exhibition Tours 6 Iamaican Army 3 9 Iamaica All-Stars 8 28 U. of West Indies 3 14 jamaica Arawaks and Privateers Combined XV Q 14 16 Kansas 0 22 Harvard Business School 0 3 New York Rugby Club 8 11 Army 8 23 Dartmouth 6 20 MIT. 3 25 Southern Trip All Away Gamesj Florida Florida Stetson Stetson jacksonville jacksonville South Carolina North Carolina Atlantic Christian North Carolina State Virginia Delaware WON:3 LOST 8 TIED 1 Regular Season NYU Brown Fordham Army Springfield Pennsylvania Navy Wesleyan Connecticut Dartmouth Holy Cross Comell Princeton Colgate Columbia Harvard No. Haven T Princeton Princeton Harvard WON: 8 LOST 11 10 inningsj Exhibition game? raders LETTER WINNERS: Robert A. Bartlett, '66, Peter M Bower, '68, Denney M. Daetz, '67, john E. Devine, '67 Edward C. Goldstone, '68, William B. jonasson, '68 Stephen G Kemas, '66, Lear Von Koch, '68, Robert D Kenney, '67, William I. Stephens, '67, Robert W. Riordan, 66, Charles E. Skudas, 66, Andrew G. Sharkey, 68 Martin A. Sear, '67, Donald F. Terry, '68, john M Walsh, '67, Peter G. Gilkey, '67, Manager, Bruce H. Eckert, '67, Paul D. Wans, '67. over to first for double play S . 9 7 Brad jonasson relieves against Harvard GOLF The Yale golfers ran their consecutive win streak to twenty as they captured the Ivy League championship with an undefeated season and placed second in the Eastern Intercollegiate Golf Association championship. The gold team opened the season by defeating Wes- leyan 4-3 and Hartford 6-l in a triangular match in Middletown. Amherst was beaten 6-l in the first home match four days later. Traveling to Columbia, Yale squeaked by the Lions 4-3 with Bill McKee and Dan Hewins winning big. Back at the Yale course, Holy Cross, Brown, and U. Conn. were crushed easily. jon Slater led the way as he won his three matches 6 Sz 4, 6 ISI 4, and 7 Sz 5. The U. Conn. match marked the 100th win for Coach Al Wilson, who has compiled the best won-lost percentage of any major college golf coach. At Williams, the linksters played their poorest golf of the year as they staggered to a 4-3 win. But the stage was set for the traditional Big Three matches. Winning three individual matches on the final hole, Yale defeated Harvard 6-1. junior John Rydell, who held down the number one position all year, fired a 69 and thus became the first collegian to break par on the Yale course in ten years of matches. With a final 4-3 win over Princeton, Yale finished a disappointing second to Penn State in the Easterns, but, with six lettermen returning in l967, there is high hope of recapturing the crown. Rydell 0n'10th Green GOLF Jonathan Coles, '685 Daniel F. Hewing.'67, William S. McKee, '66, Timothy T. More, '675 Bruce P. Myers, '67, Martin A. Rader, '67, Manager, john R. Rydell, '67, Thomas F. Slater, '66, Edward I. Snyder, '66. As 1966 blossomed into spring the Yale sailing team captured three major New England titles, and placed high in several other events. The season opened immediately after spring vaca- tion with two major intersectional regattas: Allen Chauvenet and Rich Eittreim placed fourth in a fifteen-school field of Skipjacks at the Middle Atlantic lnvitationalg meanwhile Clark Abbott and Pete Doherty placed 5th out of a 14 school field in the Boston Dinghy Club Cup. The Dartmouth Bowl regatta saw Pete Doherty and Al Chauvenet come within a few feet of upsetting highly favored MIT C64-662 as Yale qualified for the New England champ- ionships. In preparation, Doherty and Rich Eittreim crushed all opposition to sweep the Connecticut Valley championship thus regaining the trophy from the Coast Guard Academy. However, the New England championships proved to be a dissappointment for the Elis as Doherty suffered one of his rare off days. Pete redeemed himself in spectacular fashion the following week-end by winning the New England Single Handed championship when he defeated MIT's Terry Cronburg fthe defending titleistj in the final race. This victory must be considered the highlight of Yale varsity sailing of the past several years. SAILING ORGANIZATIONS I I Q I I xt I If AI ACTIVITIES 0' :D Q Ol C , Q 1- v 'f -4 ' s W X. f 4 ' ' w,.- ' ff x ., fy: A A V i X 1 K 7 ' ' 1' f 'A . 1 yt 5. f .I ! 9 , 3 8 . , 'O , I A 1 ,v A , A ,,,,,, tr t I A ' ' 5 2 ,xg ' I n f , . QF 5 W V F . I C Q V ,f f , E wx f 0 139 fi f 'Y' ' - ' Q 2 ,,, Q f W 1 , U Q 1 .0 I 1 'v ' , i A QB ' L VV , A , . . .. a 0' l . 1 M 0 W ,. . ' 'Q H . , l k: . lc9X' x A 1 v N t y . . L' 1 I - ' , W M, , 1 ge 5 cusp - '. ' .5 4 f N + ' . 1' - , . -... J an .......,.....,. li 1 gf an L..... ' ' ' -Iv-----'ik ,, 0 in 5- ' ,4 r O PUBLICAT 0 No, Lanny Davis did not invent Vassar. But coeducation, THE event of the season, was the top priority for the yearis Yale Daily News crusade list, and for once it paid off. Under the able management of Rick Taft, the Coeducation Forum was easily the News, greatest contribution. The forum received national coverage, and was quoted con- tinuously when the Vassar-Yale link was finally announced in December. Thus the unabashed, impetuous, some- times ill-considered editorial crusade this year marked the News, which turned inward to the Yale scene for its issues. Taking over, as they did, just after Staughton Lynd re- turned from Hanoi, the 1967 Board could hardly have escaped the War in Vietnam. More memorable, however, was the cascade of endless, often heavy-handed and patron- izing editorial harangues on teaching, ten- ure, distributionals, and the rest of the parochial issues which would probably go unnoticed at Yale if it werenit for the News. The new Boardis first edition, brash and confident, displayed a redesigned front page and a photograph of Managing Editor Iohn Rothchild challenging his female counterpart at the Harvard Crimson to a game of jacks. Rothchild brought to his post an innovative and creative spirit which stressed liveliness and readability. There were bigger pictures, and they were used more often, along with an abundance of cartoons and 'icolorn stories. The News moved to a new press in Stratford for more make-up flexibility. Muckraking john Brim revealed scandals in the Classics, Ralph Bunche speaks at News press conference. Geography, and Phys Ed departments. Strobe Talbott on University policy issues, Don MacGillis on Radcliffe, Dan Yergin on Robert Brustein, jerry Bruck on Stokely Carmichael, jim Gardner on resident theater, Mike Rosenhouse on educational issues, Steve Weisman on the junior faculty, and Jacques Leslie on the executive committee- all these were the staples of a newspaper which capably performed its essential job of covering the news. Under Political Editor Victor Ashe, the News covered local politics better than ever before. Editorials endorsed peace Candidate Robert Cook for Congress and Republican Clayton Gengras for Governor. Bob Benard's indictment of Viet Rocky' was quoted in Time Magazine. Equally forthright were David Detweileris music reviews. The most consistently penetrating and keenwitted columns were those of Dick Van Wagenenis Ivory Towerf, Mike Winger alternated between inanity and thoughtful- ness. Jim Kugel reported wittily from France. And Victor Ashe . . . certainly did make his views known, didn't he? Sports coverages professionalism was continually enhanced by Bruce Breimeris fa- cility with sportswriting argot. Breimer protege Phil Hersh was capable, but less than circumspect, particularly in an incen- diary and ill-fated column criticizing Soccer coach Hubert Vogelsinger. Sports Editor Tony Barclay managed to keep his 'Bulldog Talesv above it all-philosophic, broad- niinded, and appealing. . g 2 AEM The Friday supplement provided another facet to the News, creativity, and editors Barry Colson and Frank Clifford manned the supplement well. Another News publi- cation, the Course Critique, used computer cards for the first time and provided thereby the most reliable evaluation of the Yale curriculum the community ever had. And, this year as usual, the News made news. A riot-I,0O0 students seeking uskin flicksv descended on the Art Callery to see an experimental film they had read about in the OCD. The wheel, you see, comes full circle. From the Coeducation Forum to a manifestation of the human beast seeking satisfaction. On all fronts, the year was eventful, and the News succeeded well in hringing all the events to its readers at Yale. LANNY Davis, Chairman WALTER W. CARNSEY, IR. Business manager JOHN H. ROTHCHILD Managing Editor WINTHROP B. CONRAD, IR. Executive Editor ALBERTO LAU Photographic Chairman CONLEY BROOKS, IR. Advertising Manager ALBERT H. BARCLAY, IR. Sports Editor MICHAEL WINCER Associate Managing Editor MICHAEL R. RHODES Executive Manager RICHARD D. VAN WACENEN Vice-Chairman MICHAEL R. ALFORD ANDREW P. CARVIN THOMAS COLDSTEIN I. LAXVRENCE SCHULTZ THOMAS A. COLLIER BRUCE JOHN BREIMER IOHN M. NELSON, IV Chief Photographer News Editor News Editor Personnel Director Projects Director Assistant Sports Editor Assistant Sports Editor HARRY BLUMENTHAL Program Manager YALE BANNER In the beginning was the wilderness. Then came the town and the college. Final- ly, in 1769, Isaac Doolittle built in New Haven the first colonial press of commercial scale. The parts were ready, but the time was not yet ripe. Roger Sherman went from debtors, prison to Philadelphia to ratify the constitution, and generations of Yalies graduated, with no regular record made of their passing by. In 1841 the long foreseen event occurred. The Yale Banner was founded to commemorate the achieve- ments of august Elis. Mistaken in their eagerness to publish, the first editors adopted a newspaper format. After some years of publication and lengthy thought, their wise successors abandoned that field, which later was occupied by a younger publication, and turned to the due historic form, the book. By the turn of the century the Banner had established it- self beyond doubt, and absorbed erstwhile competitors, such as the Pot Pourri. Then began the succession of illustrious officers that has continued into recent times. Henry Luce succeeded Stephen Vincent Benet in a typical sequence. The present year began, for reasons of transcendent and inexplicable logic, one Tuesday evening in March, 1966. The membership gathered in the wood-paneled setting of the Calhoun Common Boom to elect officers for the coming year, prep- aratory to the traditional good cheer at Mory's. Frank Berson opened his tenure as Chairman by saying he intended to work hard coordinating the Banner, so that everyone else would work at least as hard, a promise he fulfilled. And Bill Bosenblatt refused valiantly to make any election unanimous, including his own as co-Sports Editor. Spring is a time of hopeful portent. An excursion to the Hofbrau Haus and Mory's for the annual Banner banquet kicked off activity after spring vacation. Then the more serious work of the year began. Arm- strong had the idea to do a new College Weekend Program, Sands cultivated money with which to pay for it, and Keith Marshall accomplished one of the most polished jobs of editing in recent Banner history. May was consecrated Fun-and-Games-with- Printers Month. After a flight to Alabama and a joke from Boston, the stage was set. Mr. O'Neill came to dinner at Moryis brought his bid into line with the competi- tion, drink by drink, and secured the Ban- ner for another year. To be the best ever, ofcourse. Chaos is appropriate to the beginning of the school year. Freshmen were offered the opportunity to purchase a three-year subscription, or just one Banner if their budgets were tight, and many did. They were wise, for the book was later to sell out. joe Green, Mike Blake, jim Rosen- bloom, and even photographer Dan Chang proved distinguished salesmen, heelers Dave Benjamin, Clem Engle, Paul Field, and Ion Stern carried a major share of the load. The whole staff functioned smoothly. J That was lucky, for next came the Tele- phone Directory. College dining halls began to reverbrate with a constant Do we have your phone number? Last name in no more than fifteen charactersf' and then c'Have you bought your phone directory?', The directory was a success, due to the unflagging efforts of Chairman Berson, who visited all the College Deans for permission to sell, of Elliot Azoff, who compiled the directory after the cards were assembled, of Ted Sands, who organized the best ad campaign ever, and of Scott Armstrong, who ran the chaotic office. In the end we were big businessmen, selling one thousand directories to the University in a week, and public successes to boot, as the en- larged directory with new four-color cover was Well-received. After first semester exams were over, the year began in earnest for the editors and photographers. As a warmup, the Prom Program was ably dispatched by Iim Lati- mer and Mabry Rogers. Then all were faced with the rapidly approaching dead- line for the Banner itself. Production Man- aging Toby Atkins culminated his long labors by doing a monumental job of lay- ing out the book, while Photography Editor Pete Nelson, working quietly and without stop, kept shooting, to provide the Banner with what might be the largest and most brilliant portfolio ever seen at Yale. But all this is not to say that a few peo- ple did most of the work. During February and March, the Banner office was alive with activity CV6l'y afternoon and most eve- nings. Elliot Azoff continued his mammoth task as Copy Editor, ably assisted down the stretch by Tom Knutsen. Elliott Schulder oversaw the Freshman section, and Sam Kirkland served with distinction as Sports Editor. Kurt Barnes, Ioe Green, and Mabiy Rogers undertook assembling large sections of the book, and the latter two were seen in the office late into the night. Charlie Banta and Dave Doret gave both fresh ideas and invaluable assistance on layout. Dan Chang always was doing something for the photo board. With all this talent, the Banner could not fail to be an artistic success. Harried Business Manager Ted Sands, growling for was it gobblingj as usual, saw that it was properly financed, with the aid of an en- ergetic sophomore staff. Dave Benjamin, Mike Blake, Paul Field, Brad Gascoigne, jim Rosenbloom, and jon Stern all assisted in a massive advertising campaign. Scott Armstrong, onetime encyclopedia salesman and used car dealer, Mr. Strongarm of the overdue bills, wrote his second constitu- tion in two years. Frank Berson, as Chairman, coordinated all the Banner's diverse activities, serenely waiting for disputes to resolve themselves, and solving those that didnt As he kept the strong-willed Executive Board together by diverting its members, ire, the year took form in a satisfying way. Sales of year- books, Telephone Directories, and adver- tising set recent records. The Classbook, Frank G. Berson . . . . . Chairman EXECUTIVE BOARD Richard B. Devereux .... Managing Editor Theodore D. Sands . . . . . . Business Manager Peter H. Nelson ...... .... P hotography Editor Henry H. Atkins, II . . .... Production Manager Alan E. London Donald K. Wiest . Class Book Editors R. Scott Armstrong .. .. Treasurer under the Editorship of Al London and Don Wiest, was better coordinated with the Banner than it had been in years, and reached the highest standards of workman- ship in addition. And both books con- tained the first color section ever in a Yale yearbook. It was a good year. With such a glorious past, how could it have been otherwise? To the future, however there is always the opportunity of real greatness. Ccontinued in Patronis sectionj :ll- ' Bernard Shaw once said, There are two great tragedies in life. One is not to get one's heart,s desire, the other is to get it. With this in mind, the dauntless, irrepress- ible staff of the YALE RECORD, headed by mildly charismatic, Timemagazinecar- toonreprinted Chairman R. L. Miller, ush- ered in the New Haven Spring to the Yale Campus with, of all things, the Parapher- nalia Issue. Freshmen, who, having .chortled their way through the Freshman Issue in the Fall, pushed their way through the crowds clust- ered around the RECORD box in Yale Station with its pithy comments on News clippings and other absurdia. The Grass Roots Issue drew critical ac- claim and treated Yale to Miller and Alkusls Superprexy and a sheaf of Iirstrate articles with a political slant. The RECORD was on top now, and they moved ahead with confidence. February saw the beginning of an Office Enrichment Program. As heelers watched open-mouthed, a totally redecorated office arose, combining the best elements of Lin- onia and Brothers and Nuschwanstein. Pleased with itself, and justifiably, the magazine put out a treasury of its Creat Old Cartoons, including the previously ob- scure work of Robert Grossman. A new season saw everyone surprised by Aprilis Surprise Issue, and generally amazed by the unparalled success of the Reader's Digest Parody which rounded out the year and provided a fitting monument, or perhaps capstone, to a truly great Board. Vigorous Record M onopo- ly game. Jeanette Nichols at Lit poetry reading. YALE LIT YALE RECORD YALE SCIENTIFIC CRITERION Distributed free of charge twice a year to all undergrad- uates, Criterion is Yaleis biggest little magazine. Primarily a literary magazine, Criterion accepts essays, photographs, graph- ics and original musical composition, as well as short stories, one-act plays and poems. The magazine itself performs two closely related functions. First, it provides an opportunity for prospective contributors to discuss their work with the Staff, and second, it serves as a medium through which the best of undergraduate expres- sion is disseminated. Criterion fills an obvious gap in the Yale setting. Aside from a small handful of English 77 classes and the lone Eng- lish 64 section, there is virtually no place an undergraduate can go to discuss his literary and creative pursuits. Prospective contributors have always been welcome to read their work to the Criterion staff, which is notably adapted to this task. It is a very informal group of undergraduates who attend the meetings purely out of interest in writing at Yale. There is no formal heel and no rigid requirements. One becomes a staff member simply by attending the meetings regularly. VVith this in mind, Criterion asks only one thing from the Yale community: that the magazine be read, with a realiza- tion that the contributions are a statement ofthe whole under- graduate body. BLADDERBALL I Ylxf. THE TEAMS L., ,. X EQ M THE ACTION 3V ID su.. ', rg ,WL N Hey, letis flick tonight. What,s on?v UI don't know, letis find outf, Weekdays, as well as weekends, the Roger Sherman, the College, the Lincoln, the Crown, the Paramount, the Whalley, and 'fthe birth- place of hits, the Shubert, are filled with Yalemen seeking relaxation from the week's grind. For many, the theatres are the only source ofweekday entertainment. Fortunate- ly, the flicks appeal to a wide range of tastes-from the skin of I, A Woman, to the hilarity of A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forumf, to the intri- cacies of Funeral in Berlin? Not to be overlooked are the Yale Film Society and the Law School Film Society. The former is an undergraduate-run organi- zation chaired by Robert Edelstein. It at- tempts to present to the Yale community some of the more important and rarely seen films of world cinema. The range of its program included in its ,66-,67 series such varied land well-rememlJeredf selections as Andy Warholis dark sexual satire, 'iMy Hustlerf, Hitchcockls rarely seen Under Capricorn,ll Samuel Fuller's violently gothic 'Shock Corridorf, and Eisensteirfs lyrical ulvan the Terriblef' Premiering in New llayen through the Yale Film Society were Carl Dreyeris Certrud,, and jean-Luc-Cod- ardis i'Band of Outsidersf, The Societyis activities do not end with these outstanding presentations. The Yule Film Bulletin, though sporadically issued, published in- terviews with the master of suspense him- self, Alfred Hitchcock, and with Roger Cannan as well as essays on directors and films. Andres Sarris, film critic for the Vil- lage Voice, was a guest lecturer during the fall term, and lean Renoir was scheduled for the spring. The Society also keeps a library of film literature, stills, and films, bought with the profits from the showings. In addition to the chairman, the officers TERTAI ME i Ei. are: Martin L. Bugin, Treasurer, Geoffrey OiBrien, Secretary, and john Collodi, Pub- licity Director. About two and a half years ago, a com- petitor of the Yale Film Society began presenting its own flicks in 101 Linsly-Chit. Founded on the premise that not enough Films of general entertainment and eseapist interest were shown, the Yale Law School Film Society opened with such classics as 'cShaneU and uXfVar of the WVorldsf' The present board of directors, presided over by Geoffrey Ienemann, has continued this policy, maintaining that their principal cri- teria for choice are personal preference and success in the market place. Their films seem to illustrate many ofthe complex motifs which form American culture-the taste for violence, the emphasis on single- ness of belief and action, coupled with comedy displaying its contempt for hy- pocrisy. Some of the big attractions of the ,GG-'67 season were 'The Bank Dick and 'cYou Can't Cheat an Honest Man, both starring perennial favorite NV. C. Fields, 'iSeven Days in Mayf, lligh Noonf, HThe Guns of Naveronef the Marx, Brothers comedy A Night at the Opera, Stalag 17,v and Hud.,, Presented exclusively on Monday nights, these films provide an in- teresting and provocative contrast to the generally more serious presentations ofthe Yale Film Society. All the on-campus entertaimnent is by no means found in Linsly-Chit. XVYBC, ANI and FM, is listened to a great deal on the Old Campus, and by an increasingly large number of upper-elassmen. Perhaps the reason for XVYBCS growing audience lies in its metamorphosis in '66-i67-'ithis was the year that wasp for VVYBC. The most important change, was the conversion of NVYBC-FM to stereo multiplex broadcast- ing. Immediately after assuming office in Ianuary, 1966, the new Executive Board, headed by Chairman Bill Seiler, purchased and prepared the necessary equipment for installation during Spring Vacation, thus culminating over a year of planning and research. XVith the helpful advise ofNYABC- FBI, New York, Teclmical Director John Maclraine chose a Collins Stereo Console so advanced that YBC received serial num- ber 00002, and was the first station in the country to put the console on the airl Along with this new equipment, YBC's new emphasis on professicmalism undoubt- edly accounts for the stations's enlarged reception on campus. To this end, all heel- ers were required to obtain FCC 3rd class licenses with broadcast endorsements. The results of this more professional approach have been readily apparent on XYYBCI 5340, where less grossness, more coherence, and modern cartilage tape machines combine to produce R iii' B shows comparable to. Ian and Sylom and in many cases better than, the best shows on local commercial stations. Events on the Yale campus were given more coverage than in the past as Seiler's Viewpoint, introduced frequent editorials on controversies within the university. WYBC made use of more extensive on-the- spot shows, ranging from Freshman Com- mons to out-of-town sports events. In September, the new members of the class of '70 were en- grossed in the Freshman Show, which attempted to answer the thou- sands of questions they all had on arrival here. And, of course, WYBC put up its usual game showing in the Bladderball Contest, even appearing with Batmobile and fire engine, but to no avail. Program Director Tim O'B1ien coordinated everything that WYBC broadcast and man- aged to inspire a new standard of excel- lence in the format. He arranged for a WYBC-first: continuous casting over the '66 Christmas Vacation with classical music and jazz by request. Election eve, ,66, saw the station in all major headquarters in New Haven, providing direct, live coverage. In addition, a number of the WYBC staff were in New York for the Ivy Network Election program, produced by WYBC's own Iay Feldman. The program provided extensive, nationwide election coverage for college stations from coast-to-coast, along with com- ments and interviews with correspondents spread from the WYBC studios in Hendrie Hall to the Cow Palace in Los Angeles. Unfortunately, one of the most interest- ing entertainment groups at Yale is often better-supported by New Haven teenagers than by Yalies. Indian Neck Folk Music Festival, Inc. is a non-profit organization which brings folk artists to Yale and stages its own folk festival. The group is a highly informal one whose membership consists primarily of Yale students, but also includes as members local high school students and Southern Connecticut coeds. DRAMAT Indian Neck produces a Woolsey Hall concert in the Fall and several smaller ones during the rest of the year. Because of conflicts with other happenings, the events are usually poorly attended by Yalies. Pro- ceeds from the concerts are spent on the festival, which is attended only by Indian Neck members, performers, and a few agents. Under Jack Bertman, the group brought city blues singer Spiderv Iohn Koerner and blind street singer Reverend Gary Davis to Yale before the April, 1966, festival. The festival was a three day affair attended by Mel Lyman, Geoff Muldaur, and a hundred other musicians, singing, strumming, and hollering all night long? The new Lost City Ramblers bluegrass sound started the new academic year off with a twang. Ian and Sylvia followed them up with a VVollsey Hall Performance. Besides their customary repertoire of ballards and contemporary folk music, they introduced Sylviais haunting Motown folkv style. As a measure of their success, the audience clamored for more even after their second encore. Despite the general apathy, folk music is finding a receptive audience at Yale under the guidance of the Indian Neck Folk Music Festival. W 4 'Q A , 1 H S sz 5 Yin N 'Q as 3 if I Mk as fa- .My 3, 47' Q ,S V A A ak ww f f,:-',n- , a-fix wr- 3, - -oem,-1, I R 3' Q5 ef? Q 3 5 1 1 Q ,R fr X 1 L ,, f ' ,ij ., EX -.52-QF - Q ' K' 1 If as MF ffm , J , , f 7 52 355 Y. A 144552 was Q- ff'- 1., gkq-,ffiwi 5 ,V-m ,, 1,Qm A rgfgf-fa' I. zrvrw K, V 52, k ',.4e,5, 'wives Y Q' AE, X In a year of great change in the dramatic arts at Yale, the Yale Dramatic Association strived to participate in the ferment resulting from a new Drama School administration while maintaining its undergraduate identity and its sixty-seven year old traditions of quality and service to the Yale and New Haven communities. Entrusted with this task were President Edward C. Curnen and members of the 1967 Executive Board: John W. Jacobsen, Vice-President, Michael H. O,Neal, Secretary-Business Manager, Mark E. Cho- doff, Member-at-Large, Gerald R. Fierst, Production Manager, and William Clay Howe, Personnel Manager. In attempting to provide a balanced, stimulating and entertaining season, the Associa- tion presented the Bertolt Brecht-Kurt Weil masterpiece, The Threepenny Opera last spring, followed by Thomas Dekkeris The Shoemakerfs Holiday in the fall, and Samuel Beckettis Waiting for Godot in the winter. In addition, the Dramat hosted the Tenth Annual Yale Festival of Undergraduate Drama over Spring vacation-an event attended by over six hundred students from the United States and Canada. Threepenny marked a return to the traditional spring musical, but the acerbity of Brechtis condemnation of avaricious society was far from standard Broadway fare. E. Lawrence Houghteling played the boorish, small-time Macheath trying to mimic the upper classes. Kelly Monaghan was the calculating Peachum and Bunny Cohn the sweet but steely Polly. Valda Claire's K'Pirate enny stopped the show each night, while John Jacobsen's sug- gestive settings and Ci Wechsler's lighting contributed to the mood of satiric bitterness. The Dramat gave The Shoemakefs Holiday a visually delightful storybook production, with sets by John Jacobsen, lighting by John Araher, and costumes by Margaretta Ma- ganini all contributing to the bright splash of color. Visual aspects of this Elizabethan classic peaked in a rousing Morris Dance choreographed by Yvonne Parker. Robert Ward dominated the production as Simon Eyre, the mad Shoemaker who rises to become Lord Mayor of London. Rob Lyons and Marlene Hyson appeared as the dynamic Firk and earthy Sybil. One Hartford reviewer wrote: I would easily put it down as one of the halfdozen best pieces of theatre I have seen in the last ten yearsf, QHartford Coarantj An exciting staging of Waiting for Godot resulted in the best-attended winter show in Dramat history. Bob Ward and Harry played the two tramps, Vladimir and Estragon, and played each other's reactions with comic or pathetic effect as the case demanded. Jonathan Marks as Pozzo, the ludicrous man of actionfi Perry King as the servant Lucky, a dying intellect, and Tom Buccello as the Boy all turned in standout performances. Rick Cantoris dry and desolate set and Stephen Campbellis stark, cold lighting enhanced the depressing monotony of the play's situation. Looking forward to a repeat of the tremendous success of last yearis Spring Festival and the spring production of the English-language world premiere of Eugene Ionescois Hunger and Thirst, the coming year promises the kind of theatrical excitement which the Dramat at its finest can provide. Thus, the student can find his type of entertainment, no matter how diverse it may be, right here on the campus-whether it be the Indian Neck productions, WYBC, the film so- cieties, or the Dramat, quality is ever-improving. Disappointingly, however, too few stu- dents take advantage of these opportunities. XVaitingjQ1r Goclot The reason I stay at this campus is be- cause I have the highest hope for the stu- dentsg they have the least amount of de- fenses, theyire willing to look toward the future, and they still have a high degree of idealism combined with realism .... Here We can produce fantastic combinations of passion and judgments, warm hearts and cool headsf, Under Chaplain William Sloane Coffinis leadership, religious activity at Yale has centered around attempts to define and reach the individual. The Reverend William Sloane Coffin has the highest hope for people, and he com- bines a sort of relentless honesty with a moral passion in his involvement with man- kind. My interest is talking about things from a religious perspectivef he says. Chris- tianity,', Mr. CofHn offered, Uhas something to say in every field in regard to almost every problemf' Often criticized for his in- volvement in political and social matters, he feels that if one's religious insights can't be carried out into public life and policy, if they have nothing to say about the big issues of the day, there's no point in hav- ing religious convictions. If you think that the world sets the agenda, then you just canft duck out. How can you walk beside the still waters with all that drowning go- ing on out there'?D Mr. Coffin doesnft duck out, and he definitely doesn't walk beside the still waters. He has been one of the strongest proponents of an activist clergy. There are no sacred cows, all is not peace. Mr. Coffin is one of several university chaplains who have engaged in civil rights work. Recently he was one of the moving spirits in the advertisement of Americans for Reappraisal of Far Eastern Policy which appeared on December 17, 1965, in the New York Times, signed by 1800 Yale stu- dents and 300 faculty members. He has also campaigned for a more rational and humanitarian consideration of U. S. policy in Vietnam. He has urged President john- son to stop the bombing and has sought medicine for all sides. In short, he acts in accordance with his beliefs, without fear of controversy. But this activism, though not timid, is constructive. We must think of actionf, but while we are thinking as men of action, we must also live as men of thoughtf, At Yale, Mr. Coffin can be found each Sunday in Battell Chapel. His sermons are enthral- ling, thought-provoking, and often outspoken. As University Chaplain since 1958, when he succeeded, the Reverend Sidney S. Lovett, he has found many students who are willing, intellectually serious, and morally acute, who know what the content is, but who are looking for the contextf, These people, he says, are turning with a new look at religion to see if it really can provide the context. Most of them have been born conservative and haven't had an important experience. But there's a sizeable and grow- ing minority which is exciting. They are more intellectually serious, have more ima- gination, theyire more sensitive and they want to take on some of the problems of the worldf, Mr. Coffin also immerses himself deeply in Yale life, counseling and advising, ful- filling the pastoral side of the ministry. Coffinfs type of concern for human beings also involved him with Yale's educational policy. He thinks that Yale emphasizes a studentis ability uto meet outer demands rather than to set inner goals. Much of our education is an antiseptic type of in- tellectualyolleyballf, It doesn't cut very deep. He sees the need for a change in the kind of teaching with a combination of in vitro and in vivo education, in allowing more students to live off campus and par- ticipate in more interdisciplinary groups. K'But the vested interests in the present structure are so enormous that itis going to take a lot of screaming on the part of the students to get changesf, Who will ever forget Mr. Coffin's monu- mental altercation with William F. Buckley? Buckley,,' he says, Mis about as brilliant an adversary as he is bankrupt an advocate, and he's brilliant as an adversaryf' In the P.U.,s fall debate, Mr. Coffin was the Defender of the Faithv and argued that the federal government has a duty not only to protect liberty but also to promote equality. Buckley played the adversary role brilliantly, but not well enough. As Mr. Coffin quipped, When we were at Yale together, Bill Buckley was only one year behind me. Mr. Coffin was voted the win- ner. Si CHM. 201 The Yale Hillel Foundation dedicates itself to the needs and desires of the Yale jewish Community . . . I The Hillel Cabinet interpreted this sentiment as mean- ing that it had a responsibility to each jewish student. In weekly Cabinet meetings conducted by President George Webber and stimulated by the arguments of Vice-President Elliot Cohen, Secretary Randy Alfred, and Sergeant-at-Armsl' Iohanan Levine, constant tur- moil was sought. It was a year-long dual effort, first to continue reevaluating the Hillel program, and sec- ond to keep expanding its activities IH order to serve more people better. The Social Committee, led by the untiring Neil Cohen, staged gala mixers, dances, and study week- ends with the young lovelies from our favorite schools. The Sabbath at Hillel Program, with Sam Menaged as chairman, included Friday night services and lec- tures. The HILLELITE, starring jim Kugel and Steve Weisman in various and sundry roles, took on new di- mensions as an informational, inspirational, humorous, frustrating, sympathetic, avant garde newspaper. The Yale Jewish Appeal had a very successful cam- paign under the direction of jerry Shulman. In addi- tion, sherry parties, Sunday morning brunches, and Elie Weiselis Lovett Lecture were held. Dr. Zalman Schachter spoke on LSD and four faculty members debated the role of the Latke and the Hamentasch in the many kinds of universities and colleges. Rev. Cof- fin spoke about Vietnam and his medical aid program, an issue to which Hillel was to address much debate. But above all, it was a colloquim year at the Hillel Foundation. In mid-February the Yale-Princeton-Har vard Hillel Colloquium happened. Under the skillful planning of Ron Meister and his committee, socials, sherry parties, services, lectures, discussions, and social action merged into three days of concentrated effort to probe into the ideals of Yalies, Tigers, and lawns, and Seven Sisters, the structure of Iewish America was laid bare. Speakers spoke, students questioned, all found new people, new ideas, new interests. A few answers came out, slowly and uncertainly. Much was left un- learned. Yet one truth was evident to each participant: there is still a warmth to be found in the Jewish fel- lowship, at Yale and elsewhere. St. T homas More Chaplain Richard Russell Hillel Harvard-Princeton-Yale Colloquium St. Thomas More Rock Mass POLITICS Governor john Dempsey of Connecticut E. Clayton Gengras, G.O.P. Gubernatorial Candidate Even before most students had furnished their rooms last fall, Robert Cook was blasting student apathyf' In retrospect, perhaps he would have done better to blast voter apathy, for if last fallis local political campaign established anything, it was that a surprisingly large number of Yale stu- dents were actively interested in the local political scene. The Yale community focused upon three races: the Cook race for Con- gress, the Capra-Harris race for the state legislature, and the Knight-Griswold race for the same. Although in each contest the outcome was a foregone conclusion, Yale students nonetheless put thousands of man hours into the campaign. Campus leftists rallied around the Cook-Harris ticket of the American Independent Movement, the more energetic of campus Republicans committed the hulk of their time to the Capra and Knight campaigns, and hard core Demo- crats worked avidly for Mrs. Griswold. For most who participated in the cam- paign, it was a disillusioning experience. Except for Mrs. Criswoldis campaign, al- most every student worker found himself Bob Knight debates Mrs Mary Griswold Sen. Howard Baker KR-Tennj 206 Sen. Peter Dominick IH.-Coloj je Buckley-Coffin Debate Sen.john S. Cooper IR-Kan.j jrst Y-R Fellow l Governor Carl Sanders of Georgia struggling against a deeply intrenched and highly unscrupulous political machine which considered no tactic too unsavory so long as it led to self-perpetuation. The Harris group and the Capra camp each wished the other maximum success in hopes of defeating an incompetent machine candi- date. Capra workers were particularly dis- heartened by the fact that many Republican Ward leaders had tacitly agreed with their Democratic rivals to maintain the status quo for perhaps a little patronage power. . . And Harris people, along with Cook sup- porters, were immensely disappointed by the puny percentage of split ballots cast. In his own ward, Fred Harris received less than 35 the votes which were intended for him-voters simply did not know how to split their tickets, and therefore pulled the top leverf something which they had been doing ever since they were first taught how to vote. Collusion between Republican and Democratic Ward leaders was not at all uncommon, and AIM was quite often the victim. Robert Cook ran by far the most stream- lined campaign, sponsoring a fund raising rally with Harry Belafonte, another rally with James Meredith of Mississippi fame, and a third with Senator VVayne Morse, who pleaded to stop nsending rubber stamps to the Congress of the United Statesf' Cook himself voiced every intention of defeatingv the Republican candidate, ex- radio newscaster Stelio Salmona, but when the votes were tallied on election night, he could muster only an anemic 5? of the total votes, almost 60,000 votes behind the Republican runner-up to Congressman Ciaimo. About all that Cook won was the support of the student body, Which, ac- cording to a PU-sponsored poll gave him 56.371 of the votes counted, unfortunately, their votes didnlt count. Dr Ralph Bunche U N Undersecretary for Special Political Affairs Although an earlier poll had established that the Freshman Class wanted to hear Bill Buckley more than any other public speaker, the PU pre-election poll demon- strated conclusively that Yale was still a moderate Republican bastion as Rocke- feller. Percy. Brooke, Hatfield, and Tower all drew over 607 of the vote while Con- necticut gubernatorial candidate Gengras and Senator Griffin of Michigan won by lesser margins. Out often races listed in the poll, Republicans carried seven, In- dependents two QCook and Arnall in Geor- giaj, and Democrats carried the last, de- feating Reagan in California. Despite waning student participation, the Political Union, under the competent di- rection of Iohn Townsend, sponsored an extremely successful fall and spring speak- er program, bringing many notable public servants to the Yale community. The high- lights ofthe fall program were the Hershey appearance and the Buckley-Cofhn debate. The latter event drew a full capacity crowd in the Law Auditorium-in fact almost 200 students had to be turned away. Mr. Cof- fin opened the debate with a reference to his undergraduate Clays when Bill Buckley 'twas only one year behind mef, Not to be outdone, Mr. Buckley, the dangerous para- gon of the champion high school debaterw according to Mr. Coffin, glibly remarked that Mi: Coffin demonstrates the perils of being runner-up. Most students, however, were disappointed with the color of the debate as well as with the seeming in- ability of the two principals to speak the same language. And this discontent carried over to the winter PU elections, in which Mr. Townsend had to stave off a last min- ute campaign to win re-election narrowly. In the annual membership race, the Con- servative Party triumphed once again, close- ly followed by the Liberal Party. The Party of the Right, as usual, boasted the highest percentage of qualified voters, and the Party of the Left, despite its blasts at Yaleis administrative bureaucracy, found itself on probation due to inadequate at- tendance. The Liberal Party captured first prize in the party prize debates for the second year in a row while the meta- physicians in the POR had to settle for second. And while the Conservatives out- drank them, the Progressives scored the points to win the second annual Beer Bowl. Other campus organizations similarly ex- perienced losses in numbers, particularly the Republican Club. But, for the first time in recent history, it participated ac- tively in local politics, contributing 56600 to the local Republican Party for cam- paign expenditures. In a rally outside of Commons, it greeted candidate Clayton Gengras with a five piece rock-and-roll band, cryptically called the Underground Movement. During the first half of the year, Club President Larry Could con- tinuously castigated Democratic aldermen for their failure to live up to their prom- ises or to attend meetings, and in one case, he forced a negligent alderman to resign after having failed to locate him with blood hounds. Among the guest speak- ers whom the club hosted were two gov- ernors, two U. S. Senators, and four con- gressmen, not to mention the six congress- men and the one governor that the club planned to host at its second annual Leader- ship Conference in the Spring under the direction of Mac Hansing. The Yale Democrat Club also had prob- lems of its own to deal with. Its refusal to endorse Congressman Ciaimo resulted in its censure by the state-wide organization. Under the leadership of jeffrey Zacker, it merged with the Vassar Democratic Club and subsequently provoked a serious schism between itself and the Albertus Magnus Young Democrats. Other than this one instance, Yale fared remarkably well in intercollege political diplomacy. At the Model UN meeting in New York this spring, Yale, representing the United Arab Republic, successfully as- sembled a strong Arab bloc and even formed an unusual but not surprising al- liance with the Brazilian delegation Qwhich hailed from Vassarj. And at the Connecti- cut Intercollege Student Legislature in Hart- ford, the Yale delegation dominated the ac- tion, winning two important elections: Iohn Lungstrum won overwhelmingly in his race for Speaker of the House, and senior del- egate Cliff Mann had little opposition in his race for the presidency of the Senate. Outside of the Cook campaign, there was very little organized effort on the left. An anti-Vietnam war petition was circu- lated throughout the campus in mid-Febru- ary, netting only 252 support from the student body. The right was more organized, but had very little impact: the Conserva- tive Club hosted several speakers who fo- cused upon events in the Communist world, to be the most active of rightist groups. Vietnam was a dead, if not hopeless issue, civil rights, except for the appear- ance of Stokely Carmichael, was unheard of as a political issue, and many students had become disenchanted with the politi- cal inlighting of organized student groups -so on the surface students political par- ticipation seemed minimal. The accent, how- ever, was upon informal and unpublicized action, and the focus was upon such in- terests as revising the state narcotics law and lowering the voting age. Most students seemed more inclined to follow the Weissian model of student behavior-they just could not bring themselves to the pitch of Mr. Coffinis Sunday morning evangelistic fervor. Richard L. Farren Sen. Robert F. Kennedy KD-NYJ SINESS Life within the University is often de- scribed as an ivory tower where students are sheltered from the real world. To.an extent, this is true, but amidst the swirl of academic pursuits and extracurricular ac- tivities, there is still some contact with the world out theref, This is especially true of the business organizations at Yale, which range in size from the Associated Student Agencies and AIESEC, with fifty or more members, to the Ivy Network, with only three or four members. The ASA is, indeed a large organization, but appearances do not tell the whole story. It is, in reality, no more than a title for a large number of business organizations, each autonomous and providing specific monopo- listic services to the University. The profit- making potential of these groups became such a point of controversy several years ago that the University, amid cries of creeping socialismf, decided to place the ASA within the framework of the bursary system. Fi- nancial aid students were encouraged to heel the organizations, and profits of in- dividual board members were restricted. An ASA Council of University officials was established to provide some control and supervision. The Universityis move has ap- parently had little effect on the efficiency of the agencies, for they still provide extra- ordinarily good service despite the irregular hours required and the taxing nature of the work. Whether it be magazine subscriptions, mugs or rings, typing, a room for your date, clean shirts, Christmas books, or stationery you want, all can be found somewhere in that kaleidoscope of organizations, the ASA, each housed in the corridors of Hendrie Hall. Probably the most prominent member of the ASA is the Student Laundry. It is the most representative of business activity as well. Founded in 1924 as a means of under- cutting local merchants, uniformly high cleaning prices, the laundry is now the largest college laundry in the country. It employs up to a hundred students per week, and is administered by a fifteen-member board chaired by Robert W. Anestis. Like the other student agencies, its stated pur- poses are threefold: to render services to the University, to enable students to pay their way through Yale, and to provide students with valuable business experience. The board of directors supervises the nine sopho- more competitor-managers and sets prices each school year so that the laundry will compete favorably with local merchants. The officers, in addition to the chairman, who are responsible for this undertaking include: Ted Hellman, Executive Manager, Mark Laidig, Senior Sales Director, Barry Chase, Senior Operations Director, Michael Proctor, junior Sales Director, and Iunior Operations Director, Richard Hussey. Outside the ASA, and lacking their profit benefits, is the Yale Management Associa- tion. Comprised of more than fifty students who are seriously considering careers in business, the YMA tries to bring speakers from the world of upper-level management to the Yale campus to lecture and to partici- pate in discussions with the students and faculty. President Bruce Heintz has kept the meetings as informal as possible this year to facilitate free discussion of particular interests. An even more ambitious program of business education and opportunity is that administered under AIESEC-Yale. The AIESEC corporation operates on a nation- wide- basis with firms including Xerox, IBM, Bankers Trust, Intemational Silver, and over five hundred other American business con- cerns. AIESEC arranges for its members to train during the summer in foreign banks and business firms to gain experience in international management. Fifty members are taking these traineesships this summer in locations from Paris to Tokyo. In a re- ciprocal exchange, AIESEC is placing fifty foreign business students in American com- panies for two-month traineeships. This year, members of AIESEC-Yale contacted the executive officers of some five hundred firms, mostly in this area, with regard to participa- tion in the program. Yaleis member of AIESEC was the largest of the 85 AIESEC- US branches and won the organizationis President's Cup for outstanding success. The officers are: David Storrs, President, William Baker, Executive Vice President, David Kramer, Vice President CSolicitationsj, Bruce Fenton, Vice President QStudent Co-ordina- tionjg Susan Eggers, Vice President QRecep- tionj, andjames Mitchell, Regional Direc- tor. The Ivy Network Corporation, incon- spicuously housed in Hendrie Hall, is the national sales representative of the student- operated radio stations serving the Ivy League campuses. Two major projects high- lighted 1966-67: the successful expansion of the network, to include as affiliates the radio stations of Colgate, Lehigh, MIT, Rutgers, Union, and Williams, and a series of special programs on the fall elections, sponsored by Western Electric. The personnel who have sparked these remarkable achievements are: Iames T. Hill, Harvard, ,67, Chairman of the Board, james R. Peterson, Yale, ,67, Presi- dent, and Mark W. Hinkley, Yale '67, Secretary-Treasurer. This diversified group of organizations has provided many Yale men with business experience and contacts with the real world as well as of providing funds for education at Yale, either through rewarding summer jobs or service jobs right here in the Ivory Tower. ,,,,,,,-4--0' I u,,,..m1.-we - f - X. ,,.....---- CLUBS There does not seem to be any unifying motive behind the Club activities at Yale. They are small organizations, each function- ing in its own individual manner. None has any regular meetings or practice sessions. Disregarding these somewhat minor techni- calities, numerous organizations provide an opportunity for students to meet others who have similar recreational interests. Everyone reads of the Haunt Club, but few people find the impetus to arise from their beds in the morning hours-10 to 11 AM-on Yale football Saturdays. In fact, it was very surprising to see a Haunt Club haunter awake before noon on those morn- ings-even though their elaborate headgear, bright clothing, and charming dates had a somewhat more measurable effect on the on- lookers than did the usual cold morning shower and cup of black coffee. The Yale Ski Club, founded in November, 1966, was immediately met with enthusiasm by undergraduates, graduate students, and faculty. Before this year, Yale had never had a ski club. Although a racing team was founded at the beginning of the century, recreational skiing was always on an in- dividual, unorganized basis. The Yale Ski Club has been effective in providing gather- ing places for students and faculty on winter weekends, it has been able to reduce the cost of skiing, and most significantly, the club has encouraged and provided support for the ski team. The clubis present program is the result of many months of hard work. In spring 1966, Ed Migdalski, the University Director of Outdoor Recreation and Club Sports, organized interested Yale Students and alumni. With the guidance and encourage- ment of Richard Kahl, Ionathan Foote, and many other alumni, the Yale Ski Club took shape. Two members of the Ski Team be- came the co-chairmen of the club. Charles Stetson and Ernest Godshalk worked closely with Advisors in establishing policy for the club, and the two worked endlessly in order to put the organization into operation. The Board of Directors includes Steve Judson, Edward Foss, Richard Hawkins, and Chris Chapin, all of whom, except Hawkins, will graduate in Iune, 1967. Anticipating this loss of valuable leadership, the club has sought to give experience and responsibility to competent underclassmen so that the transition from one year to the next might be accomplished as easily as possible. This transition should be simplified as the newly- formed alumni association of skiing becomes more active. Since the beginning of club activities, a sincere interest in the sport of skiing has materialized. The Yale community has found that the benefits of membership in the Club extend far beyond the monetary savings afforded by the organization. Skiers find excitement in traversing the course from top to bottom, they Hnd little interest in the ascent to-the top of the run. Not so with the members of the Yale Moun- taineering Club, who consider the descent a thoroughly unchallenging feat. 1966-67 was a fairly active year for the YMC. During the summer, members climbed in areas around the world: at Chamonix and in Wales, in the Selkirks, Yosemite Valley, the Sierras, the Tetons, and Seneca Rock. In September, club members Sam Streibert, john Reppy, and President Bob Crawford, completed the first ascent of the YMC Dike on Cannon Mountain, this was the second Crade IV climb accomplished in the East. Club activity then settled down to training beginners and new members, and climbing at local areas in Connecticut and in the Shawagunks. The team began new climbs and continued the work of compiling a general guide to the state's climbing areas. Winter did not dampen enthusiasm. Climbs continued in spite of the cold and members trained in the gym in anticipation of the spring and SL1ITlH161'. There is great interest among the Club members for trips to Yosemite and the Bagaboos or NVind Rivers during the Summer of 1967. Outing Club members participate in ven- tures that vary from simple hiking and camping trips to more sophisticated activi- ties which include rock climbing, spelunking, snow-shoeing, skiing and canoeing. These trips range as far north as far north as the White Mountains of New Hampshire and the Green Mountains of Vermont, and as far south as West Virginia. This Spring Vaca- tion one group backpacked to the Bahamas. On f'inamve', weekends, members simply observed the scenery of the Berkshires from the living room of their cabin in northwest- ern Connecticut. Led by Truman Sheck, the coordinate Yale Speleological Society makes numerous trips to the caves of New York State, and when vacations permit, the group speeds to West Virginia, location of the best, caves in the East. The Outing Club, headed by President Paul Starr, consists of an executive board known as the Blueshirts.v It is from these ranks that leadership for all trips is drawn- each blueshirt leading expeditions which are his particular specialty. The YOC is active in the Intercollegiate Outing Club Association, an organization which loosely knits most of the Eastern college outing clubs. IOCA trips in which the Yale Outing Club has participated have included Spring and Fall journeys to Lake Ceorge, and canoeing trips with Smith and Vassar. Social life is not lacking in the YOC, most trips are co-sponsored with womenis colleges and there are many opportunities to meet people in circumstances somewhat more natural than the traditional umixerf, The Yale Rifle Club has about fifteen undergraduate members who are active during the season, which extends from 4 November to April. The Club uses the range facilities of the Army ROTC and much of the ROTC equipment. The Club has two divisions-Rifle and Pistol-though, lacking sufficient undergradu- ate interest, the Pistol Team is now dormant. During the fall the varsity rifle club com- petes against all Ivy League schools, and the other colleges that play Yale in football. The spring season is comprised of matches with other schools, gallery matches, and tournaments. This past year was a disappointing one for the varsity. The members are excellent competitors, but the team has few members and lacks the depth needed to win meets, Club President and Varsity Captain Skip Miller was placed on the NRA All-American Second Team. Milleris skill is matched by the enthusiasm of the other members of the team, however, enthusiasm does not win matches and the YRC placed poorly in all ofthe matches ofthe 1966-67 season. Headed by President Chip Vincent, the Yale S.C.U.B.A. Diving Club presented a series of films and lectures, hoping to attract interested undergraduates to join the group. The club works under the direction of gym instructors, Bob Iohnson and Al Sholz, two of the finest SCUBA experts in the East. This Spring Vacation several of the members completed the first annual trip to Jamaica. Though the group was still young, extensive dives were made this spring in Rhode Island and nearby Connecticut lakes. In future years, the SCUBA Diving Club will un- doubtedly become one of the most attractive and active clubs at Yale. Unlike most clubs at Yale, the Yale Gym- nastics Club, under the coaching of Don Tonry, is definitely indoor oriented. This may be one of the factors in the the sparcity of competitors for the team. However, de- spite its limitations, the team has competed against some of the strongest teams in the East, the dual-meet schedule includes West Point, the Merchant Marine and the Coast Guard Academies, Southern Connecticut, MIT, and Dartmouth. Beginning with the 1967-68 academic year, the Yale gymnasts will compete against each Ivy-league teami Of the eight members of the team, Mike Gawel, Bruce Bolnick, and Bruce Myers are Connecticut State A.A.U. Iunior Cham- pions on the still rings, side horse, and free exercise, respectively. Tonry, one of the better college gymnastics coaches, repre- sented the U.S. in the Olympics and many other foreign competitions. He notes that the Yale Gymnastics team suffers from lack of depth-often Winning first and second places in an event, but losing the meet by the inability to capture the third and fourth places. With Coach Tonry, our gymnastics team should compile a creditable record in the next few years of competition. The Chess Club amassed many successes this year. As the 1966-67 season of the Connecticut Chess League closed, the club had not been beaten and was tied only by the Hartford Chess Club. President Hannon Russell and senior Allen Chauvenet are confident that their team will perform well enough to capture top-standing in Ivy League competition during the spring. Whether they sought excitement high above or far below sea-level, many Yale men found that excitement through partici- pation in one of the groups which comprised an important segment of extracurricular life on campus. Qfvwffi L1 Mg in ' , 4 Og X' mg: ' his 'br 1- ' Q ., ..,.. ...- ,H ' A k., ILL! Q' ' 4' ,,, .a,,-. - .f - 1 4 fww, ..- .R -3-35 f. 5-' Y - MY? u 1 XS 2'4- , .. g Q: iw .Q ,sux M ' ' . 1' 35' . - ,ar f , ' 'g ' me 1 X 1' 4 h 1 IX , li. :.5. ,l '. ,K If 'Q '55 , N . 51, 15, .F H' ffm' 154. in ' L my ' Q A 'W - I 3 f I A 2 yy V! ' ' 0 K , -0 'L V' Q N ' W 'Q ' xx A ws' QQ' . 'Q 3 h . - 4? ' ,, ' 3' 'N' 'S' 'ff 'Ph if f R W' H ' 'L i X1 . , ar if v y X .. H 'Q g g5,1i iQ .,, , W eg- M 1, V , , 2 ,-, W M I f -1 154 i3aWf39laxJ-:vw - 5' W .J ' M ' g I JP I ' Q ' F ' 3 K N f ' , . Q' 4 ya -E 4 X fx 1 Q 'fp'-EfY'!'sl542f '5 25 ' gl! ' F24 ' A f-- ' i tri:-zafkffuv : . Dt.. :famine auH . 1 r X 5 P 'M -a YALE UNIVERSITY ' SCHOOL OE MUSIC is privileged to present Vladimir Horowitz in a special concert WOOLSEY HALL SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1966. AT 5 P.M. MUSIC The big weekends of the fall season are consistently packed with color and excitement as mobs of broad-minded Yalies and their dates flock to the Yale Bowl to view a performance of talent and imagination in action. The prominence of the Yale Marching Band is sometimes hard to believe, but year after year it continues to share top drawing honors with the varsity football team. Whether the band's performance or the teamis, which takes place before and after, is the bigger attraction is only a matter for speculation. The Band sloshed its way into action this year against Rutgers with the heralded ZONK formation and the accompanying theme song from the ap- propriate TV show. The next week it opened the Ivy season against Brown with an undulating performance of military precision as it formed a stomach and churned to the sound of No Matter What Shapef, Against Dartmouth, the Band displayed the ZOO formation, as its subtle comment upon a cer- tain Ivy institution, and the scatter formation of blood corpuscles acted out to the tune of live Got You Under My Skinf, In the big contest with Princeton, the Blue Band displayed its wide range of versatility with a salute to Old Nassau, spelling out the initials of Prince- ton University. The inevitable question was then asked of the Tigers: What's New, Pussycatfy' To cap their performance, the Band formed a symbolic piece', of advice for all Yalies and their dates, delivered to the tune of Sixteen Going on Seventeenf, At THE GAME up in Cambridge the next week the Band went through a psychedelic experience for the benefit of the many knowledgeable Crimson, after playing I Want to Hold Your Handi' in a formation of two linked squares. The most lasting impression of the Band for most Yalies, however, probably comes at the end of each half-time performance with the all too familiar and beloved ELI formation. The memory of the Band marching to midfield, facing the Yale fans, playing Down the Fieldf, makes one forget the humor of the performance and think for a moment about what the Yale Band and all Yale organizations really represent fat least until the reappearance of the other half of the afternoonis programl. With the football season over, many members of the Marching Band turn in their blue blazers for the more sophisticated black tie of the Yale University Concert Band. The Concert Band, augmented by the Vassar jug Band, continued its tradition of a Pops Concert in Woolsey Hall in October with pieces ranging from Shostakovich's neo-Romantic Symphony No. 5 to lighter pieces like David Rose's Holiday for Trumpet. The annual winter concert, also held in Woolsey, featured Norman Dello joio as guest composer. Mr. Dello Ioio conducted some of his own compositions, including 4'Variants on a Medieval Themef' The Band gave additional concerts for the Yale Club of New Hampshire, the New York State University at Albany, an audience in Cheshire, Conn., and then finished the year with a crowd-pleasing annual twilight concert. When the Yale School of Music reorganized several years ago to concen- trate upon its graduate program, undergraduates were left without an orchestra. A solution was found last year in the formation of the Yale Symphonic Society. The purpose of the Orchestra is not only to provide qualified undergradu- ates with the opportunity to play with an organization, but also to develop each individual's ability to promote the highest quality of music possible. During the past year, the Orchestra was very active for a relatively new organization. The debut in Sprague Hall on parents' night proved that the Orchestra was truly capable of playing a wide variety of classical and baroque music. In November, the troupe made its first road trip to Connecti- cut College. A fine performance in late February at Mt. Holyoke demon- strated that the group had discovered an easy way to beat the ride board. The next week, the Orchestra was featured in Woolsey Hall during Prom Weekend, with a style labelled by the Prom Committee, society band music. The year ended with a concert at Pembroke Cthere they go againj. 9 Q 534 221 Bakerls Dozen Left to Right: Booth Dyess, lim Hallett, Bob Wheeler, Steoe Wilmer, Scott Howard, Les Newton, Charlie Peck, Sam Frederick, Wayne Henderson, Bob Brush, Chuck Bates, Tom Col- well, Towards the end ofthe dinner hour the group at one of the distant tables suddenly starts to sing, transforming the rushed, noisy dining hall into a more pleasant and peace- ful room. Three nights of the week NIorv's, too, is enlivened with singing. And during the week before Christmas vacation the University rings with carols as the different singing groups stroll ovcr the campus sing- ing-in their new members. Although the quality of their music is generally good, Yale,s eight singing groups are not simply groups of students who like to sing and who sing well. They are singing societies-closely knit groups who work together because they want to. Since the groups meet to rehearse daily, perform in a large number of concerts each year, and travel South in the Spring, the members form strong, lasting friendships. Each ofthe groups is unified by a tradition of good singing and close friendship. THE ALLEY CATS returned to New Haven a week before classes began to pre- pare for the coming season. After this week of practice under the direction of Pitchpipe john Woocher, they commenced their busy concert schedule which led the group from New Hampshire to Florida by the end of the year. In the fall, the Alley Cats sang at college mixers, local banquets and clubs, as well as at resorts, schools, and womenls colleges in the East. During the Winter, the group prepared for the spring tour by train- ing the newly rushed members in the forty songs of the repertoire. After a few concerts, the Alley Cats were ready for the rigors of the Florida circuit, and sang in Sarasota, Ft. Lauderdale, Daytona, Nliami, and other cities. Ball-in-the-Jackfl uTea for Two, and the new arrangement of This is a Lovely Way to Spend the Eveningl' were the tea- tured songs of the tour. Having returned to New Haven, the group rehearsed for its new record which it cut in Columbia,s studios. As retreat drew near this fall, and group members trekked to lay Pitchpipe', Stevens' home in Madison, Conn., it was apparent that another good year was ahead for THE AUCMENTED SEVEN. True to form, Tod Lueders was the first to scour the beach and produce females. Fall term activities cen- tered around trips to various schools, and culminated in an outstanding performance at the Vassar Iamboree. But defeat lay ahead, for the Seven dropped their only football game ofthe year to the B.D.'s. VVinter brought a rash of concerts, ar- ranged by Tom uAh,' Tsui. These included performances in Ridgefield, Conn., at the Wellesley Club of New jersey, and an ap- pearance with T om Paxton at Southern Connecticut College. As spring vacation approached, tour time drew near, accompanied by the task of perfecting the products of an excellent rush: seven new voices .... New songs, Here, There, Everywheref Yesterday,v and The Impossible Dreami' were added, and soon the group headed off to the sun The Society of Orpheus and Bacchus N. Adam, T. Brown, M. Carey, P. Coleman, S. Drum, R. Haile, T. Iorde, A. Kern, T Lauerman, T. O,Brien, R. O'Neil, D. Petrie, H. T horn, O. Transue, I. Watts, S. Weisman, S. Lucas, H. Rornaine. S NGI G GROUP The Bakerls Dozen R. Alfieri, C. Bates, B. Brush, G. Cameron, T. Colwell, B. Davenport, B. Dyess, R. Elchols, S. Frederick, I. Garoan, I. Hallett, W. Henderson., S. Howard, W. Littlefield, M. Mariner, L. New- ton, C. Peck, B. Biehle, P. Steele, K. Strohl, H. Wheeler, S. Wilmer. 'bw' B S H! ' -fl. Yale Bachelors A. Abraoanel, G. Anderson, M. Bressack, I. Coulton, M. Curchack, C. Carter, M. Goodman, B. Ibsen, B. Keary, A. Kidd, D. Larson, S Lembo, I. Lund, D. Sauoage, F. Shorter, B Stafford, D. Stretch, I. Thompson, W. Tift, B. Versachi, G. Waldorf, R. Whitten. ' ia l. of Florida's East Coast, with a new record in hand. The BACHELORS wasted no time in resuming their musical and fraternal associa- tion in the Fall of 1966. They immediately began their busy and enjoyable concert schedule, welcoming freshmen at Vassar and Yale. New Pitchpipe Dave Stretch quickly worked the group into shape. There were numerous concerts throughout the fall at country clubs near New Haven and at pri- vate schools in New England. The group followed the football team to Harvard for a weekend of singing in the Boston area. The job of business manager was passed from Dick It's Arrangedi' Whitten to Mark Cur- chack in the midst of this activity. The Bachelors returned from their South- ern trip in good spirits, and completed their year with trips around Connecticut and to Long Island singing at schools and clubs. The group parted company for the summer awaiting the next season of close friendship and good singing. The year 1966-67 was memorable for the SOCIETY OF ORPHEUS AND BACCHUS, as it celebrated its twenty-eighth year at Yale, singing before larger and more respon- sive audiences than ever before. Weekly ap- pearances were begun at Mory's on Tues- days. Returning to Yale for an intensive week practicing the arts of both Orpheus and Bac- chus, the group was quickly whipped into shape by Pitchpipe Buff Kern. With five arrangements added to their repertoire, the S. O. B. embarked upon a whirl of concerts which did not abate until Christmas. In the first few weeks, they sang at Wheaton's Campus Soundsf' mixers at several of the Colleges, and lost to the VVheatones in touch football. The S. O. B.s broke the usually staid at- mosphere of the I. E. Iamboree when they sang Alexis from Texasf, In October, the group sang at Elmira College for Women, sang the next night at Cornell, and the fol- lowing afternoon at Cornell Sherwood,s An- nual Fall Tonic, where it shared the stage with groups from all over the East. Appear- ances at Yale and Smith with the Smiffen- poofs, and at parties with the VVheatones and Connfs Shwiffs completed a busy fall term. The highlights of the Winter were initia- tion of new members, an appearance at the Collegiate Sound in Hartford, and an en- gagement at Conn. Tom Iorde, Business Manager, planned the recording of a new LP which was cut at Columbia Studios in April. The spring tour, arranged by Sam Weis- man, took the S. O. B.s to Maryland, Vir- ginia, the Carolinas, and down the East Coast of Florida to Islamorada in the Keys. An appearance at Wheatonls Spring Week- end was the high point of the Spring, and was followed by a week's tour of the Mid- west in Iune. The Dukefs' Men D. Allclrews, D. Badger, R. Barton, R. N. Gould, f. Fjielcl, C. Hayes, P Howard, C. johnson, S Kang, F. Lewis, R. Mun- ning, R. Morrow, G Noble, NV. Prouty, G Reeves, Rosslmelz, R Slllflllllif, R. Shoemaker F. Sprole, P. Steege, D Young. A f 'N ff? are V. qi ,- I MA- 3: Hp' X 'lla dvaf fi :vi : wx . ? 4 . Spizzwinks R. R. Birge, P. W. Clement, F. E. Damaree, D. Friedlander, R. K. Guthrie, P. L. Houston, W. A. Mackfw C. F. Miller, F. 1. Platt, Ill, T. L. Smith, jr., A. Tarclino. The BAKER,S DOZEN met to renew fraternal ties and voices with a ferry jaunt to Fisher's Island. After several days, the group moved to Oyster Bay, Long Island. Despite the rigors of the summer deb circuit, Pitchpipe john Garvin led the group in wel- coming the freshmen at Dwight Hall. With new arrangements by several members, the group had a pleasant fall term, singing their way to victory on the football field. The B.D.,s finished the first temi with a good rush and two trips to New York to cut their latest album, Reflections, at Columbia Studios. Anticipating a spring trip, the B.D.,s started the new term with ventures to Wash- ington, Wilmington, and Boston. Having been received well in the North, the group set out for Jamaica and an incredible tour planned by Steve Wilmer. The members and their guests were interrupted in their revelry by concerts at the Myrtle Bank, Casa Monte- go, Carib Ocho Rios, the Golden Head, and other clubs. The B.D.'s ended the year with concerts for the new group under the direction of the new Pitchpipe Bob Brush, as Business Manager Booth Dyess passed on the rolling pm. Two weeks before the first term began, THE DUKE,S MEN, directed by Paul Steege, hiked into the Adirondacks to warm up for the coming season.. In the wild woods, Pitchpipe Roger Shoemaker regrouped his forces to polish away the rust accumulated over the summer. After sufficient prepara- tion, the Dukes staggered back to Yale. Sing- ing alone or with the Smiffenpoofs, Welles- ley's Widows, or Princetonis Footenotes, the Dukes shared their musical enthusiasm with the campus. They also maintained their fif- teenth perfect football season, led by Wil- liam Crazylegs Prouty. When the football season ended, the Dukes turned their attention to taking in new mem- bers. With the disorganized but effective technique of Rush Manager Whit Shepard, the Dukes attracted seven new members who were sung into the group one snowny night before Christmas. At the start of the second term, everyone felt the anticipation of the spring tour. Al- though he had to be prodded, R. Nash Could managed an enjoyable and busy 1967 version of the Duke's annual Nassau tour. Once back in New Haven, the group, led by James Rossbach, prepared to cut a new LP. jim organized the mechanical aspects of the production, and Gary Reeves, the new Pitchpipe, handled the vocal problems. After that, finishing the year with the traditional banquet at Mory's was easy. It had been a good year: Punchmaster Charlie Johnson had kept all in good spirits, and I.R. Manning, Business Manager, had provided ample chance to sing. A two week fall retreat on Lake Erie started what was to be a good year for the SPIZZWINKS. Five new song arrangements by Pitchpipe Iohn Birge enlarged the reper- toire of traditionally intricate and difficult songs to prepare for making a record early in the Fall. The recording, which required several trips to New York, and many hours in Columbia's Studios, was the most exciting part of the year. One of the F all's most exciting concerts was the Jamboree at Bay Path where the group brought down the house with their best performance of the year. The perennial Wednesdays at Mory's as well as thirty other concerts at schools, colleges, and clubs kept the Spizzwinks busy during the rest of the year. After singing at Silliman for the Prom, the group left for two sunny weeks in Puerto Rico, its ranks filled by nine new members. VVith new voices, new arrangements, and a new record, the Spizzwinks of 1967 finished the year successfully. The WHIFFENPOOFS of 1966-67 had an excellent year. They chose a repertoire of twenty-five songs during their nine day re- treat. To this selection additional tunes and variations of arrangements have been added, including a favorite: When You and I Were Young, Maggie, Bluesf, In addition to their Monday nights at Moryis and the usual concerts at the colleges, the Whiffs travelled more this year than in the past. Among their appearances were per- formances at New Yorkis H219 Club, the Waldorf, six television programs, and con- certs at other schools, clubs, and alumni functions. A high point of the fall was their Jamboree which featured groups from Smith, Vassar, Harvard, and Princeton as well as the Whiffs. After exams, they sang in Puerto Rico for ten days, and then returned to cut a new album at Columbia. Following the record- ing, they went to Mont Tremblant for a weekend. In the Spring, the NVhiffs returned to Bermuda for their annual tour. What is more important, though, than the concerts themselves is the Whiffenpoof ex- perience, the discovery of what it means to be a XVhiff. The long tradition behind the group and the importance of its image at Yale and among singing groups in other schools is a part of being a Whiff. The realization of this image, the development of the members as a unified group have made the experience a significant part of the lives of the W'hiffs, and with deep regret they relinquish their position to the Whiffen- poos of the year to come. llflzjfeliprifjs P. Bc'c'.s'm1, P. Bonojjf ll Kuil. ll. Kill-S'CllClf D. .llc Neill, .llflll0l', G. A'Cl,QlICl T. Rica, C. Von Smile. WHIFFENPOUFS 227 Bulzl, R. Burltff, G. Good body, N, Ililc, T. Hilo. lf PHI BETA KAPPA Class of1967, First Election George Alan Bennann Steven Ernest Boer Theodore Evan Dushane Harold Morris Hastings Victor Benet Lieberman Thomas Leeds Morrison Bradford Curie Snell Thomas Parker Wharton, jr. William Tobey Wickner Class of1967, Second Election Randall Harlan Alfred jeffrey Allen Bader john Anthony Baron Frank Gerald Berson Timothy Woodbridge Bingham Peter MacDonald Coates Charles Francis Corcoran, III john William Crowley jorge Ignacio Dominguez Bjarne Lee Everson joseph jay F eit Peter Belden Gilkey Robert David Goldfarb Alan Harris Goldman Marc Stephan Heilweil Glen August Homan David Reynold johnson Ronald Steven Kadden Floyd Michael Kail William Allen Krohn, jr. George Mitchell Lazarus David julien Lebwohl Raymond William Leyden, jr. Class Gregory Lyle Cherlin jonathan David Melvin Arnold Lee Polinger Stephen jay Schaubert Alan Edward London Ronald William Meister Harry Guess Meyer jeffrteiy Lewis Millman Geo re Mark Neigher Richard, William Nelson Michael Hal O'Neal Christian Rudolf Hubert Raetz Harold Rawson Reames, jr. David Alan Richards Charles MacDonald Sexton George Whitcomb Shuster Michael Roger Slater Donn Edward Smith Roy Antony Swil Richard jay Urowsky james Sheppard Venit Albert Carl Weihl William Lawrence White Uthai Vincent Wilcox, III john Warren Wilhelm David Bruce Wolf Maury Alan Yeston of 1968 Kenneth Michael Steinglass Alan Matthew Weiner jonathan Steven Woocher Peter Emmet Yaeger Academic Honor Society: Oldest American Fraternity ELIZABETHAN CLUB 1967 William joseph Albinger, Michael Brian Arnall Raymond james Barnett john Anthony Baron Robert Michael Benard Frank Gerald Berson john Franklin Carter II Graham Montrose Clark, j joseph Nicholas DiCorcia Theodore Evan Dushane Andrew john F ichter David Reynold johnson Philip Rashleigh johnson Alexander Kerr Alberto Lau David Harris Lippman jr. Everette Melbourne Lunning, jr. Babcock MacLean David Murray McCarthy joseph Peter McDermott Paul Landry Monette Richard Scott Pechter james Lawrence Schultz john Sellars Paul Adams Sitney Stephen Curtis Stearns jeffrey Wood Stookey Richard jay Urowsky Andres Maximo vonBuch Paul Moore Whitbeck Daniel Godwin Wright Maury Alan Yeston Hossein Ziai 1968 R. Scott Armstrong john Thomas Dow Stephen Richard F riedlander jonathan Bridgeman Hankin Archibald Hobson Andrew Angrist Levy Charles Casey Murrow Alan E. Rubottom john Anthony Schemmer Timothy C. Weiskel 1969 George Maulsby DeVoe Davi Friend David Glenn Meter Devoted to intellectual discussion, good conversation, and tea. YALE KEY SOCIETY Carter Collins Willsey Michael john Siris ....... Bruce Frederick Brand ..... Louis Lohman Ortmayer . john Francis Breglio joseph William England Donald Etra Albert Lewis Evans Craig Richard Foster Edward Charles Goldstone Gary Reynold Howard Daniel Lee johnson Paul Byron jones jacques Robert Leslie Robert David McCallum john Whittington Macllroy . President Treasurer . . . . .Admissions Secretary . . . .Athletic Secretary Robert johnson Morehouse Robert Henderson Murray Bruce Rogers Quick Robert Alan Reisner Stephen Eugene Schulte Philip Sanford Stevenson Rodney Howard Watson Alan Matthew Weiner Kenneth Eugene White Charles Edward Wilde Michael Brent Wise Walter Stephen Zorkers Extending University Hospitality to Visitors. TAU BETA PI ASSOCIATION Science and Applied Science Academic Honors. Eustace E. London Archibald Knutsen, VI Thobias Sands Mortimer S. Azoff, V Yevgeny Z. Berson Samuel F. Benjamin Hubert X. Weist Odo D. Atkins Russell Q. Armstrong, Ir. Therus V. Devereaux, VII Simon Q. Nelson Peter MacDonald Coates Andrew Angrist Levy Stephen jay Schaubert Douglas Franklin Schofield Enrique Francisco Senior Paul S. Thompson David Lee Wenner William Cedric Whitesell Dishonorable Honor Society TA PPA KEG Larry Paul Bradley Royal Daniel CANNON AND CASTLE Donald George Glascoff Thomas Rush Gottshall Hector Rafael Huertas Samuel Manley, IV Richard William Nelson john Henry Schulz Paul S. Thompson, II QUARTERDECK SCCIETY Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps Honor Society. Reserve Officer Training Corps Honor Society Harry joseph Blumenthal, jr. Bruce Edmund Bradley Robert Gifford Burke Clifton Bledsoe Cates, III Laurence Bradner Carroll, III Charles Arthur Daly Edgar Paul DeVylder, jr. james Michael Farmer Geoffrey Howard Hamway james Arthur Humphreys, III Gregory N. M. N. johnson Earl Kunio Kishid-a james Barris Lepley, jr. Andrew Kennedy Long, jr. Martin Anthony Rader joachim Werner Schnabel Reginald Tremaine Wheeler, III jay Killian Bowman Williams Stephen Giles Wing AURELIAN SOCIETY Victor Henderson Ashe Raymond james Barnett Lanny Iesse Davis jorge Ignacio Dominguez Howard William Hilgendorf, Ir. james Lewis Kugel Alberto Lau David Alan Richards john Harmon Rothchild Bradford Curie Snell Edward Francis Swenson Lloyd LeGrand Thompson, III Richard Iay Urowsky Richard Day Van Wagenen john Nelson Walsh, III Ronald Bruce White Iohn Warren Wilhelm Iames Harvie Wilkinson, III Maury Alan Yeston Hossein Ziai Honorary Honor Society Williams Phelps Carter 'Roger Weise Challen Philip Herbert Curtis Michael Drilling john Raum Emmons joseph William England Alexander Maury Greene Stephen Wright Mayberg Douglas Quentzer Meystre Bruce Rogers Quick Richard Kemp Slaughter Ronald F rink Whitney Political Science Honor Society. PI SIGMA ALPHA JUNIOR PRoM coMM1TTEE George Alan Bermann joseph Napoleon deRaismes Jorge Ignacio Dominguez joseph lay F eit Robert David Goldfarb john Edward Croman William Thomas Hankinson Marc Stephen Heilweil Thomas Neil jones john Watson Lungstrum Arthur Douglas Melamed Michael Hal O'Neal jeffrey Howard Orleans H. Lawrence Smith Bradford Curie Snell INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL Fraternity Presidents. john A. Bers Anthony Obiorah Chude Stephen Merrill Dungan Christian Emil Kaefer Michael Louis Kent David Julien Lebwohl johanan Sidney Levine Robert Barry Litman Stephen Mazur Iohn Faulkner Morrow Christian Rudolph Raetz Douglas Franklin Schofield Frank Seinsheimer Robert Lee Williams Carl Evert Youngstrom Fall term George Walker Bush Charles Everett DuPont Edward Schackford Mundy Winfield Scott Settle, Secretary Charles Frederick Scholhamer Lloyd LeGrand Thompson, President Spring term George Walker Bush Charles Everett DuPont, Secretary Albert Louis Evans Stephen jay Schaubert Charles Frederick Scholhamer, President Nelson Strobridge Talbot Chemistry Honor Society ALPHA CHI SIGMA , W f if f w79j,gz. WW, ic r , ' ff ' 35517 ff if 7' ' f ifin if , X VN f, ,iyfpg yy- ,wer I nfl,-1,fIQj , ' ,yf 41, fe f .1 .wff ,f.m,. 11 , fifrfifff f ff fW 'rf ff! ' A 'T f 'jf ffl' X gf V, 175, Q, 70' .lj 'ff fiefff4,,W,f. 14 W 1' a' f fO'f ff f fvf vw 9 1 f , ' W' f ff f 471 f W X Goff!! ' J , , 1 ff f ' W ff fr Afffff iff V'f vrfr, V fi, 'fM,n,Vl,?l7Q. I Mx? 5, WMM fmff ' 'I f' 1 f, ! ,I f ' - ' MORY'S ASSOCIATION A Private Club President: Stanley S. Trotman, '34S Vice-President: Robbins H. Miller, '26 Secretary: Carlos F. Stoddard, jr., '26 Treasurer: H. Everton Hosley, '38 Governors to Serve Until 1968 Ralph W. Halsey, Ir., '42 Herbert S. MacDonald, '29 Burnside Winslow, '04 Iohn E. English, '40 Governors to Serve Until 1969 Richard M. Grave, '50 Archibald S. F oord, '37 Edwin F. Blair, '24 H. Everton Hosley, Ir., '38 Governors to Serve Until 1970 Harrison F . Turnbull, '25S Basil D. Henning, '32 Reuben A. Holden, '40 Robert S. Reigeluth, '39 Austin Dunham Barney, 2d Charles Frederick Childs, 2d VVilliam Ward Crawford, Ir. Jorge Ignacio Dominguez Alan Reed Holleb Edward Kelly Monaghan Robert Bruce Pattison Lawrence Spencer Pratt james Marshall Preston Roy Antony Swil Maury Alan Yeston THE PUNDITS !mWQ:.,,gf'1, , SKULL AND BDNES Bernard Ikecukwu Afoeju Victor Henderson Ashe, II Derek George Bush David john Foster Walter Wood Garnsey, jr. Robert McGregor Lilley james Whipple Miller Harold Coleman Mitchell, Geoffrey Mark Neigher Iames Marshall Preston David Alan Richards Iames Martin Saxon Bradford Curie Snell Roy Antony Swil Ir. Stephen Eberly Thonipson, I I' 1 1 21gQQ5t WW Q. 41g4 -. iff' .P if ,mi Q SCROLL AND KEY Allard Albert Allston, Jr. Timothy Woodbridge Bingham Stonewall Iackson Bird Frank Warren Cliiford Iohn Harville de Forest Robert Thomas Farrell l john Edward Flaherty, Ir. Alfred Whitney Griswold, Ir. Stanley Herr Ieremy Walker james Richard Albert johnson Floyd Michael Kail Richard Francis Lawler, Ir. Neal Plantinga Enrique Francisco Senior , rr? mg' ' TK, 3 J xx ,gf E, J QW 1' X 8 xg X Qi if Q K Q f W ,gan ij! 4, Q 4 V, f Q -'JJ' J , ' A I V ,. Q A ,Q W A 9' :A A TW' 1 ..Q 5 E f J, ,, l I M Vi si 1 l .. X2 W1 . . Q ,sw , K ' kv s ' ,I n 3 H st ' ' x v Q f v , , , Q' N' Y : T 'fb' 1 1 4, H Y 4 Qi Q ,M 1?,, . E 5 - , Q ap ,. ,, . M L., .., A - 4 'lr A 1. JY- 6 f A' tv' 'Q fx . , A 'A' fe si 2 K 'Air I K ,A K g if ,Y f aw , . N Qafmwf if W K as R v' 3 7 N. W ' 'Y I ' 'F . 4' pq W' f' K X Y a rw 1 A 'lf fu, A if y rg K. ,Sm 7-N 1 .A 52 qi-nfl' W , A A as M. 1 V A I is y A g 4 A T yi gl. Fx . vffiflfj xxx, , Wx L? . ldap. san.-,1 V if., 5 9 ' Q 11 gk: 1 HA .f z 4 4 ,I W X J' sy A Q . 1 Q-Q' J' Xi 1 lx L ya . E - riffliil .fK4f.' litigp he ff I L, 1+ fl!-Q qi It if W R. ,',.2 g .45 A IX I -, 7594, , 'b nfl I .4 1 V .,,fih 3 4- 5 ,A 1, .4 E XM If' A A V .bn W I A - 4 n, .A ,J 'Q , b , ,E 1 If ink 8 aff .Ui 3.1 , 3 . s M 'X - . - -' 61' f V J A '-sv H 5 5 .W 4' ' Q ' Q, igxfr ja Wg ' 'wlf'4,f A 1, If V if V V 5, ' 1 F . 'X - HM 1, 'Y F 1 .im :Q 'ay 4' 'iv 14 W ' Vx f Q. f 1 M 'E aw W ,L Q F ,XYX I xg' .Q ' A 4 1 I: .- ff f , J, 1, -y ff xf ' if W fn- A 1 , X 4 VG? QW? my Q ,. , Jil , 1 ,ho , Sf, ,Q , . R .ie 1 , f b rw , --: ' . Vpnltfkg 6' 'V wr' if Q if f ' vi v' ,J lg lg 4 f 'bf ,- me' 'H ! ,. L 'J' - '4 3,1 vw' ,:'?f'5F'3H.:w 1 if ip G A ...:V X N A wwf A 5- J , Q g is A A , MQ U ' gi 3353 ff ? fb 'ihi in A? W f 'US' if 4 34 - ,Q J yy, N jg 4 gm, 5 V , .7 'Bu I Q is A ' i v , ,aft P mx' . .1 ' fs, ,gig Q5 J 1' f MW 1 f L' - 3 R Q bl gr Ui!! 4' 1' 0 'E . Y 1 5 .. W it kr 3 N 7 - ' Q VW. ok 17 'E-f'..4?'f.4f1av?f?' Q :aff ,Q , f W : P f, .,w L,,.!-wth HW' ' V. Q t Q .5 -'-1i3'Vf f .. x,,f'4..,-ni Egg v. . qv diyfgl! Q n ::.f-'Fig X vt ,,ffv:i1iQ,:,: ,XML I X. ,W Q gg ,:5.iY:,: gm ,, ' wg, , ,, W 3 3, ij,..L Yg 15? fm . V . N A H if Q 2 'O .2 rr . K .1 J. ggi af 'M' I ff f ' , I ,,,, 242 BERZELIUS Richard Wayne Balasa Frank Walden Berliner jacob Blum Charles Frederick Childs II John Edward Collodi Dana Bruce Corbridge john Edward Devine II Robert Fargo Greenlee, Ir. John Sloane Griswold, Jr. Bruce F. Heitler Victor Benet Lieberman Foster MacKenzie, III john Merrill Bruce Calvin Smalheer Iohn Timothy Weigel J -xx .MX X Q.. N-X .K 4. N X. , rx xx ' X ,.. xv,-1 -, ,,g,N v- ,.f' ,kk '-nv., ff' if 1 1 -. ?f -r 1 ,f ..- BOOK AND SNAKE Gaylord james Avery II Samuel Almeron Bingham II Robert Gifford Burke Robert Duane Claassen Winthrop Brown Conrad jr. Peter Champlin Crall David Fletcher Currier joseph Peter Doherty james Keith Freeland Richard Hamilton Greeley Robert Barry Litman james Gilmore Manor jr. Malcolm Douglass Odell McNeill Douglas Andrew Rund jack Reed Waltz -8 .' 1 v ,Z 1 .r Q-J , . i, , .55 . 4 . A. il 4.-9 . .ix I s., ,, 1 X 'Egg I . C QQ' WOLF'S HEAD Edward Charles Curnen, III Andrew john F ichter George Barry Golson David Warren Hilfiker Douglas Chesney Kennedy Richard Gustave Kinseherf, III Shepard Krech, III Everette Melbourne Lunning, Ir Timothy Moore john Lewis Morrison George Whitcomh Shuster Sydney Tucker Taylor William Curtis Taylor, Ir. john Nelson Walsh, III Stephen Keith Witty 1 ,X 1 K' Y 4 Q 'L Q ,R b , Q -I iief' pc X AL f , - X1 f 5 Z, vig? I. 3 -QQ CQ 9 . 1 -' H 1 ,sf W, , ,I qw, x-,-:A 1, EA . -pf' N , xfvw - ' xywx . -x f ,gi ,ixvlr wx, Y'. New . ,A , . :FX-X --.C :X 'X 5 , fgt3.X Rx ST. ELMOS Boris Maria Baczynskyj Albert Hampton Barclay, jr Peter Gerard Beeson john Craig Bolles Bruce Frederick Brand William Bradford Brewster Roy jefferson Byrd, Ir. Richard Storrs Childs, jr. john Boland Hughes Andrew Paul Garvin Robert Huntington Knight, Thomas Edward Miller Harold Rawson Reames, Ir. Stephen Kelley Roos Daniel Godwin Wright -. ,,. Ev - , -ss.. w IJWMRQ K' I . 1, X w,, ? 1 f 1' 5 W f M ' 'Y 3 I X 43. ' ,f if Y gf' Xiu A fwk WZ ,, ,Y jx X Q E! A 'N f X 5 fi W N . ' -My ' lin , iff wif. fr'--. WF. ' A ff' ly-5 A , , .- - K Ex ' K: ' ' -. A K . 9 xx M, iff Q X Z . , Mg, , ' ff' I 4 K N. ., , . . - 1, X , . V- . .fo 5 R ,A ' 3 ,. , - X -Mx -vw WN, YS V .. W, W ,Q - .3 1 W 4 .Rx ! ,Y ,NV Q 1 K ww, P- nn is ,, ,, W m P 9 M M aw -at ' '-4,. 'f ?:,'17:,'. fn 1: 2.-ww . , F W f ,, jf , S ' f 5 i .,Q., a, Q I Xqkx Q7 E 4' I N,sv K X m X . X K4 i . ...G 1 , ,. .,,..,. S N1 Q in fi Q F53 as F WK 5 J 'S X ly is , 3 f 1 X 1 MV 1, ,.-up -la' ' L ' J' A ,J . 'mf- lx J MM Q ff' 4 I T 1. G xv X I we N ,,LV . X Nr is ,.A. if M.LM f ll X 'mn ,, ., KN x . fv ., Mfg, , 352 2 if -W Q. ZAA. s ,-q::5,f-:- -.: 1- .,-1, f-I 4 , ,am . M L . . ,- 1 A f my Q K .Sm X X wil X ff' 'N .f f 5 mm HX X' Q my K XX!! X X X!! I K N125 K 4 ' r,,, ,, ,af my . w fu Q , ' Q:?:' I . N ,ffpyi S r 4 Yr ' ,f. 5 k,,f f ig fr i K'.: Q I D 4 0 3 5 f Qi 0 f' s 41,9 ,, , fi? 1824 ' 1 'YA 0355 Q v X I ,g mafia- Q, 9, urge if lf: rm, mf L Q, 4: A ini , , i fgf x TBM' 4 , , wg? 32 ,E ' ilu 2 .. M '24-, 'T 2 U . ELIHU Christopher Hamlin Coe Blake jorge Ignacio Dominguez Howard William Hilgendori jr. Henry Louis jones, Ii. Robert Dennis Kenney Iames Lewis Kugel Paul Landry Monette Michael Ray Rhodes William Harry Seiler, jr. Frederick Irving Taft Richard Iay Urowsky Richard Day Van Wagenen William Lawrence White Richard Marc Wind Maury Alan Yeston w- , .. n ,' sleep' 250 ici' ' f L 7 if 'f Q ii H , Qin g, A he -. b -iff. . n i 1 1 'nf ' , ', w .'1,+i,ig!Ju wwviis rr 5- T if ' fix, gig .1 v 1 'Sh - . A ima Q - - 4 f A ' 'B P fi i AH, QQ HRSA 1 y X ,A H A mae, Q ww W im C u L r -ffff T S.. F A'vd 4. .xi 23, ,M is 4 I my fm Q 5 'K - M ,, :, ' 3 .K I v T5 PA, f .mf , Y' m1e?wf?P' 5' 1 Q f X ' tv Q 4 P rf in J, vs . lv -A ' Q X AMX A ,Z 'F'2f'fY25Q f Q .,,.. K 5 . Abi law fl V , ,. ffiif E555 a ,, mggmagg-75 s V f Qi Q f New K . 2' ' 4 X 1? ig 5, ' as 1 , , f-Q-- 5 f f ' f g, M '11 4 H g,, -,gf MA H-w f '1f 2 , W 1- Q r W H ' 2 MANUSCRIPT Michael Robertson Alford Edward jay Amarant Abraham Albert Arditi james Russell Bourne Charles Francis Corcoran, III Theodore Lewis George Allan William Graham Kenneth Edward C. Haltenhoff Iohn Walter Jacobsen David Reynold Johnson David Laurence Kasdon William Allen Krohn, jr. Edward Kelly Monaghan Iuan Fetter Negrin David Duncan Robinson 1' if 'I i'W'T.iE.TL3llilT+'4'W w wiv 'Ni bi Hg 543 ag, wi B ,, .fyx X E R v , Q Eff f' V . H-.. NK in ggxfs? Q ,I in W f'fi x ki, 'Sm fr S' S ' mm L : 5 :Wx A fix , I q A M n Anka 1 ,Stax KL Y E .L M Nm wif W 'if wwQ'f T g iS' im'-f W F wi nk ' nm:-f . nk- 'il -1 ' ' V1 'QW l V ,Q X ixizwxhg ' i K ,ri ' :ki 1 W,-kkefyifk , . ' 'EZWEJ VF ' W f' A .gggwwn Q K4-..,!X t x x M H 'E Qui, K arm R Ji V 1 - ' f ,Wg sf .. 'w X N fra. Y Q mf 7,4 : W , ,' h, A am xx Wx? HE Vt Q A M K 'M ,. bn w ,Q 1 '- 25 4 SAINT ANTHONY HALL Peter C. Akwai Paul V. Applegarth Daniel B. Badger john Baker Raymond Barnett Bennet Bernblum David H. Bundy C. A. Carden, III john F. Carter Graham M. Clark David M. Detweiler Alfred Dickinson Todd H. Everett Edward C. Foss Mark F. Friedman Thomas Cilooly Garrett Coodbody, j Robert S. Creenberg William A. Hammer William B. Hoyt Peter DeC. jacobi Robbin S. johnson Stephen Y. judson Anthony F. Kaiser David M. Kaplan Stuart Kellogg Alexander Kerr Alberto Lau Eugene Linden David H. Lippman Babcock MacLean john M. Mason Anthony N. Miles Kenneth R. Mischner Harry R. Moody, jr. Mark H. Moore Robert Morehouse Stephen L. Mosko Robert H. Murray, jr. Kevin C. O,Keefe james H. Oliver C. Hayden Phillips Philip B. Rosenthal Michael K. Schonbrun Roger P. Shoemaker john M. Simonides jeffrey W. Stookey Peter B. Storey, jr. David K. Storrs N. Strobridge Talbott, III Lloyd L. Thompson Christopher L. Tilghman Lloyd F. Timberlake Robert B. Trukenbrod Andres M. Von Buch F. R. Warren-Boulton Edgar J. White j. Harvie Wilkinson, III joseph P. Wise Carter S. Wiseman Hussein Ziai I ' '3 1' 1 f 91 Q i 6 fab 5' I ' s . Wg Lf Q ,. Sa A if figs: A V5 1 3 , i , X f - y A w I Q F 0. ' 5 3 az J :Ev 505324 I H A W x iii? mfg? Q we S if ' ' I -' Q, X H32 A A f' ' ww agua 9, 1 A fag? f -fag? ' 1 'N W 2 :gk 7 .. W? , ,ww Q gg? M 9 ZETA P I Class of 1967 M. L. Ahern, M. R. Alford, M. I. Beierle, 1. R. Bourne, C. K. Chapin T. C. Chase, F. W. Christie, C. S. Combs, I. L. Cox, L. L. Edge, Ir. H. M. Galpin, J. A. Carver, A. S. Gilchrist, T. I. Goldstein, S. W Hazard, H. B. Hoff, 1. VV. jackson., 1. W. James, I. I. King, Ir., S. B Knight, Ir., R. Mendoza, I. M. Millkev, W. L. Mitchell, III, T. T More, M. G. Morris, I. D. Morton, E. S. Mundy, J. M. Nelson, IV A. Phelps, Ir., M. Philpott, R. M. Quintal, S. R. Resor, Ir., I. W Rouse, Ir., G. M. Thompson, Ir., A. B. Trevor, A. C. Van Schaick III, R. K. Vincent, Ir., P. M. VVhitbeck, R. W. VVhitten, jr. Class of 1968 I. C. Bachman, N. H. Bancks, T. C. Banever, K. B. Binkley, R. R Birge, S. I. Blatt, M. T. Boyce, C. Brooks, jr., A. D. Brown, D. C Carmichael, P. W. Clement, W. N. Conner, I. K. Coyne, H. H Darnielle, III, M. D. Digiacomo, M. Edsall, A. L. Evans, Ir. D. R. Everetts, R. I. Farrell, Ir., I. S. Garvan, III, S. F. Gates, R. C Hamilton, A. D. A. Hayward, R. P. Hoffman, W. C. Howe, C. P Howland, E. S. Hrelec, P. I. Huber, jr., P. B. Kelsey, D. B. Kimel- man, E. K. Kishida, S. J. Lembo, R. B. Mann, D. S. McClashan F. H. Morris, N. VV. Newbold, W. W. Reed, Ir., P. T. Riley, D. T Roble, I. M. Rossbach, P. D. Schyler, H. O. Smith, III, K. A. Stras- sner, 1. F. Tilghman, jr., C. T. VValdrof, H. Watson, III, M. A VVillis. Class of 1969 H. A. Austin, III, J. C. Becton, D. J. Benjamin, III, M. A. Bressack, M. MCD. Brown, W. H. Call, R. C. Chalmers, R. C. Cleaveland D. F. Click, I. C. Crockett, R. L. Danlv, I. S. Darrow, K. H. Ferris, S. E. Finch, Jr., E. R. French, L. M. Gates, I. A. Coulka, J. H Grew, Ir., P. L. Houston, D. F. Hutcheon, E. Y. Iohnson, W. B Kiesewetter, jr., T. L. Knutsen, L. M. Konselman, I. S. Lawson III, P. S. McAuliffe, S. A. Malsin, L. C. Mundell, C. J. Petre, F. I Platt, III, R. B. Platt, T. E. Rast, R. B. Santulli, R. B. Schiffer, T L. Smith, Jr., D., L. Stretch, C. E. Strong, Ir., R. M. Struse, C. H Taylor, M. M. Taylor, R. P. Thomsen, Ir., F. B. Utley, III, E. L VVadhams, S. N. VVhitney, Ir. 5 jf I J! f I PHI GAMMA ALPHA Class of 1967 C. H. C. Blake, A. K. Bridges, B. O. Chase, R. D. Crawford, E. G. Flynn J. S. Graham, J. E. Groman, A. T. Hadley, III, H. E. Hallet, Ir., I. R Iohnson, N. F. Kaiser, W. F. Kroener, T. Kreiling, Ir., I. W. Lungstrum M. L. Mclver, D. L. Metzger, A. P. Misarti, J. I. Mitchell, T. A. Moss: man, T. J. Oppenheimer, I. Y. Reid, IV, W. W. Rosenblatt, I. I. Russell I. R. Rydell, W. S. Settle, S. J. Small, D. E. Smith, W. E. Sudow, H. A Sullivan, D. C. Templin, P. D. VVard, R. R. Wilson, C. I. Zipfel. Class of 1968 S. K. Ambler, C. F. Babbs, jr., W. T. Beard, P. C. Blanton, A. M. Brody C. W. Brown, P. D. Cummings, H. C. Davis, W. A. Donnelly, D. M Doret, O. Edwards, R. A. Gilbert, B. H. Glatzer, T. C. Glaza, R. A Gobeille, A. I. Goodman, J. Harris, B. L. johnson, A. H. Kern, I. I Martin, III, D. T. Morgenthaler, jr., A. R. Morse, R. L. Newman, I. R Parker, jr., T. R. Potter, Ir., E. W. Pugh, III, W. F. Roettinger, II, 1. A. Rubright, Ir., R. S. Sandor, S. I. Schaubert, E. Sherman, R. K. Slaughter P. C. Sleight, J. C. Soper, T. C. Squire, II, I. E. Steffenson, P. B. Stoneri R. T. Sweeny, Jr., O. M. Transue, Jr., K. Von Kohorn, I. K. Weir, P. V Wessling, M. Whitaker, Ir., C. E. Wilde, III, F. B. Wulff. Class of 1969 C. P. Engle, D. A. Gates, III, R. W. Goldman, N. F. Heller, 1. R. Hodg- son, R. M. Lebov, D. H. Martin, II, S. D. Newman, J. S. Nippes, T. N. Robinson, E. S. Seligman, D. R. Shields, J. L. Stewart, III, J. W. Willing- ham. 7 5 J FENCE CLUB Class of 1967 G. Avery, R. Bacon, A. H. Barclay, B. A. Barnet, P. F. Bonoif, j. R. Born, E. C. Brown, III, B. Carey, M. G. Cassels, T. A. Collier, III, W. B. Conrad, E. R. Detchon, III, S. B. Dodge, R. Emmet, E. Flaherty, jr., R. A. Frandeen, W. W. Garnsey, E. L. Godshalk, III, A. W. Griswold, S. Griswold, jr., R. K. Guerry, G. A. Hambrecht, D. S. Harris, P. A. Harvey, M. W. Hinkley, B. Hughes, C. H. Hull, W. E. john, D. W. jones, N. joyner, R. G. Kinscherf, S. Krech, III, L. G. Lower, II, B. H. Macleod, jr., D. V. McNamee, III, T. Moore, P. Neely, M. Preston, R. Raben, jr., R. W. Ramage, jr., G. D. Reeves, M. R. Rhodes, E. W. Ritchie, A. V. Rogers, III, S. K. Roos, H. L. Scott, M. A. Scar, W. S. Straight, H. Taylor, S. T. Taylor, W. C. Taylor, jr., B. S. Thorne, S. N. Towle, C. P. Vaughn, III, C. S. vonStade, E. W. Walter, jr., C. C. Willsey, jr., R. C. Wood- ward. Class of 1968 R. B. Allardice, III, C. Barnes, jr., G: Brim, R. M. Buckley, K. Burbank, jr., R. M. Burton, B. Calfee, E. K. Carmody, F. C. Chap- man, II, P. Chubb, T. B. Clarke, C. P. Coggeshall, K. S. Cohen, R. H. Co gate, R. P. Day, H. Devor, G. Fogg, III, D. W. Fran- chot, III, S. A. Frederick, C. H. Gadsden, G. M. Gafford, III, P. A. Gerard, G. L. Glenn, R. N. Gould, R. T. Hale, jr., T. V. Harmon, R. H. Hawkins, III, T. K. Helm, III, A. Humphreys, III, D. L. johnson, A. jlohnson, R. T. Keppelmann, F. Kinney, W. R. Mettler, jr., S. A. Or twein, L. R. Palmer, D. L. Parsons, S. C. Pease, D. L. Perkins, T. P. Preston, A. Schemmer, C. F. Scholhamer, jr., D. A. Schrom, D. Smith, G. L. Smith, F. S. Southwidk, S. V. Spare, R. S. Sperry, B. Stevenson, A. B. Thacher, A. C. Towle, F. E. Watson. Class of 1969 S. R. Antell, R. G. Austin, D. N. Bannard, M. Barge, E. Bart- lett, III, T. R. Beal, jr., D. R. Bordley, M. F. Bouscaren, P. B. Cherry, E. M. Collier, jr., S. P. Garvey, C. C. Glover, IV, D. A. Graham, T. Graham, G. M. Gorelik, S. Holahan, M. Hertz, R. P. Howard, jr., G. H. Hume, D. U. Huntington, T. P. Kuhn, R. R. Larkin, R. H. B. Livingston, P. Loumiet, j S. McCarty, W. Mc- Clave, III, C. McGuire, C. T. MacNamee, III, G. C. McNamee, D. Martin, P. Moore, III, H. Norton, III, L. W. Reed, L. Richards, R. A. Riehle, jr., W. W. Scranton, C. Sheldon, II, R. Sidenburg, jr., H. R. Valache, N. P. Watson, III, P. B. Watson, H. j.Wheelwrignt, F. K. Wolfe, B. Wood, D. P. Woodlock, M. T. Yang. ,,, X. L., P. MN, an Q mu: f :M 2 sfiiig 22214 wifi ia 'As fsiiaffw 51 fi fa uf' I' Class of 1967 A. D. Barney, Ir., P. M. Bliss, D. A. Bolliot, D. R. Brewer, W. B. Brewster, M. C. Brooks, C. R. Burkhead, H. B. Carey, D. L. Craw- ford, C. W. Daniels, L. Davis, P. Doherty, G. P. Dyer, W. L. Eflinger, R. Fates, R. Fesjian, E. E. Fessenden, Ir., M. Formo, D. Foster, G. T. Fuller, F. B. Carvan, W. B. Celman, R. F. Green- lee, Ir., L. T. Himes, Ir., S. G. johndroe, III, R. D. Kenney, H. Kent, K. Kiefer, P. Laffoon, IV, L. R. Longhi, D. H. McCaffrey, F. Mackenzie, C. P. Marshall, W. F. Messinger, D. A. Miller, L. Morrison, D. Ogden, jr., G. Padmore, R. M. B. Polk, Ir., P. H. Prewitt, W. S. Reyner, Ir., Roche, Ir., R. K. Sawicky, M. Saxon, I. B. Somerville, III, W. Spires, jr., R. E. Thompson, Ir., R. A. Tilghman, Jr., N. Walsh, III. Class of 1968 R. H. Allen, R. E. L. Beebe, D. M. Begel, D. A. Bergman, R. W. Betts, G. W. Bush, C. E. T. Cleveland, E. M. Cullman, M. M. Davidson, D. W. Davis, R. Dieter, R. Emmons, D. B. Ensenat, I. D. Fisher, S. L. Friedman, C. G. Gallico, III, M. T. Gay, R. C. Heeseler, W. L. Hixon, D. F. Houston, R. T. Hume, M. Iessup C. johnson, III, C. johnson, Ir., P. B. Jones, R. Keith, A. C. Knowles, D. W. Koerlin, S. Kreuttner, K. R. Kurtz, F. H. Levy, B. Lock- hart, III, F. V. McCarthy, L. McDowell, P. R. Markle, S. P. Martin, S. B. Mayberg, D. L. Miller, D. R. Patterson, R. Pelzer, I. E. Potter, C. T. Randt, R. A. F. Reisner, C. Rogers, S. R. Rus- misel, T. Sartore, R. T. Savage, W. H. Sawyer, D. A. Schollander, S. M. Shapiro, C. Shelvelson, K. B. Schulman, C. C. Taylor, R. Teevan, R. Ternes, II, D. S. Townend, P. R. Tully, T. Ward, W. B. Wemple, K. E. White, R. F. Whitney, D. K. Winterfeldt, G. F. H. Woglom. Class of 1969 R. E. Arras, jr., B. Babcock, C. W. Banta, F. A. Boyer, T. P Briney, P. S. Bush, III, H. D. Connell, II, XV. Cummings, III D. M. Darst, B. W. Davenport, N. N. Davidson, III, M. B. Dayton S. C. Dixon, B. Dowling, M. Dwyer, III, H. Elkus, VV. B. Evans I. S. DuV. Cary, P. Goldsmith, T. Harris, D. W. Heckler, C Hill, R. C. Hoban, W. HOWCITOH, Jr., M. Keeling, M. B. Kleher, P. M. Laughlin, R. E. Levin, F. C. Livingston, R. E. Lussen, W. F. McKenna, M. Mackey, W. Marting, jr., W. C. Owens, W. A. Palmer, C. S. Peck, C. D. Petrie, Ir., Pomeranz, A. Rechter, C. P. Resor, B. A. Rothstein, R. S. Sando, D. A. Selander, R. Sokolowski, K. A. Spangenberg, F. Sprole, Stern, C. N. Thomas, D. M. Tucker, B. Waldman, A. VVelles, N. M. VVood, N. Worcester, III. 9 7 a DKE BET THET P T. Ba-rtholow, W. M. Belding, jr., D. G. Bush, P. M. Coates, D. A. Gor- coran H. L. Dale W. M. Dean, L. Dumas, I. M. Fairbanks, A. Garling, D. I. Griffith, R. K. Hagmann, H. H. Happel, D. T. Harvin, D. F Hewins, H. W. Hilgendorf, R. B. Hoffman, L. Iason II, I. C. Kane, jr. D. C. Kennedy, R. McG. Lilley, I. W. Lowe, F. E. McGovern, K. A Marlantes, R. E. Meyer, R. Milbank, jr., T. E. Miller, J. L. Millman, I W. Morris, T. C. O'Brian, K. Olsen, D. E. Rhodes, H. S. Semple, Ir. H. T. Shinkle, A. E. Skodol II, B. S. Smith, S. A. Stack, D. S. Stevens E. F. Swenson III, W. L. Tift, A. Vanetten, R. Vincent, R. Waltz, C Watts, Jr., I. T. Weigel, D. L. Wenner, C. M. Wick, P. F. Ziegler. Class of 1968 W. H. Baker, B. D. Barnes, G. R. Bedell, J. R. Benson, H. S. Beukema, F. A. Bland, P. M. Bower, M. H. Carey, W. P. Carter, G. T. Cole, S. H Corey, T. P. Cutler, R. K. Deveer, C. E. Dupont, D. S. Eakeley, W. W. Eddy, S. R. F mley, H. E. Fuldner, B. Geiger, I. A. Golden, G. H. Green berg, R. L. Haig, A. R. Hayes, T. G. Hellman, G. P. Holsenbeck, I. C jakobeck, S. A. Iunkin, C. N. Knight, L. V. Koch, B. W. Kolar, T. R Kuhn, R. M. Loomis, T. F . Lott, I. W. Macilroy, S. W. Madeira, Ir., R. D. McCallum, jr., H. R. Mc.Combs, Ir., D. M. McVeigh, D. Q Meystre, M. T. Murphy, C. L. Neiman, P. I. Panzarino, Ir., R. I. Pope, R. S. Reiffel, R. D. Schneider, H. R. Stroube, A. Swain, R. Talbot, D R. Terry, S. M. Turkowitz, S. H. Tyre, R. 1. Walker, D. A. Warner, I. B Wescott, I. R. Wood, M. T. Young. Class of 1969 R. C. Alexander, C. A. Armbrust, S. M. Bookbinder, W. C. Cooley, E. H. Culver, Ir., G. Czopiwsky, Ir., P. H. Fuge, G. B. Gascoigne, III, I. K. Gee, Ir., R. M. Godley, G. H. Hamway, F. L. Hart, F. K. Heller, I. R. Higham, H. L. Hobgood, D. VV. Jacobson, T. M. Iorde, T. K. Mc- Caughey, W. W. McMonies, Ir., B. P. Madden, I. P. Meyer, M. E. Meuller, R. A. Netter, S. F . Newhouse, H. H. Newman, M. G. Pfeifer, N. N. Price, P. P. Priebe, C. K. Rich, A. B. Richardson, W. B. Rose, R. C. Schmidt, J. P. Seay, W. R. Shapiro, D. G. Smith, T. G. Stanko, S. A. Sutton, A. P. Tan, j. B. Thompson, R. S. Waples, B. W. Weinstein, A. M. White, J. D. Winer. 7 2 3 A-A ,..,,v5i- ..r.-.a..W.- . .., .. VASSA ? It came to pass in the days of Brewster the King that a great commotion raged in the land of the sons of Eli. And the young men of the tribe were angry, and walked in lines with pickets, and waxed sore dis- traught. And the elders of the tribe shook their heads and were perplexed. And ancient members of the clan, clad in rich raiment of old blue, wrote great epistles, saying they did not understand. For the young men of the tribe of the sons of Eli were angry at the custom of their fathers, that they should live for four years without the company of women. Crying times have changedf' they set out to change the ancient customs of the tribe. Yea, verily, did not our elders, five years hence, write on the tablets of the Freshman Year Report that the Eli should take women into their midst? Yet for five long years nothing had happened. And it seemed to the young blues that their cries fell on deaf ears, and were heard only in the wilderness of their own hearts. During those days the only light was cast by the eternal, strident flame of the News and its legion of pen-armed warriors. Griswold the austere, and Brewster the magnificent, Presidents of all Yale, cast their gaze upon the people, and saw what was wrong. Saying, Verily, something is indeed wrong: we need a Rich Widow to finance the changef, they set out to find her. Clad in robes of utter discretion, Brewster the King asked after the Rich Widow far and wide. Finding the foundations all poor and the alumni all married, he continued the great quest. And when it seemed he had suc- ceeded, Kingman Brewster, the President of all Yale, came back to his people to tell them of his good fortune. For in the course of his travels he had come upon Allan Simpson, and had spoken to him long and earnestly about the troubles that vexed the Yali. And lo, Simpson then unburdened his heart, and spoke of the vex- ations that troubled the Vassarae, of which tribe he was in like manner President. For, high above the waters at Poughkeepsie they found the nearest of mankind to be only a long gray line, and the scientists among them suffered mightily from the absence of great laboratories. And in their own wilder- ness they cried. Even the land of the Vassarae was coveted by a powerful tribe new to the land, named mysteriously IBM. Never could two Presidents have been more mightily troubled than were these. Yet each saw in the troubles of the other an end to his own. And both Presidents thought, Yea, I have found an end to my troublesf, Putting on their cloaks of wise policy, they sat down to think in solitude. And, lo, a vision came to them, and spake a word since known by its power to be Good News: Coordinationf, In the beginning was the word, and from the word came many more. For the two Presidents, Brewster of the Yali, and Simpson of the Vassarae, having consulted with the council of great elders of each tribe, set out to tell the members of both tribes, and of all the tribes even unto both seas, that they were oflicially Thinking of Coordination. Vast was the acclaim and far-reaching the fame of this thought. In the days before the great Festival of Gifts, the season was ripe for writers and newscasters to spread the message. WOR first cast the word upon the airwaves, and Time and Newsweek carried it to the farthest reaches of the nation. And even the Register took up the cry. Greatest of all was the rejoicing among the sons of Eli. What Lanny Davis and Rick Taft had written so long to prepare, as Newsmoguls, the King then wrought, as President. Many among the Yali had long awaited that day, and it was theirs. From Boise to Demopolis they knew in their heart of hearts that future generations would find Yale a warmer place, and were glad. And having savored the fruits of Bacchus, and partaken of the joys of Orpheus during the holiday season of the Festival of Gifts, the young men of the tribe set their backs upon their homes once more, and turned their faces toward New Haven. For as soon as they were once more among the Yali, the Sons of Eli again put on their scholarly robes and prepared themselves, as before, for the time of testing. KL A generation of students weaned on the TV fare of Mr. Wizard witnessed last fall the greatest burst of scientific activity at Yale in years. Within a month the new Kline Biology Tower was dedicated, the Arthur Williams Wright Nuclear Structure Labora- tory was inaugurated, and the Peabody Museum celebrated its 100th anniversary. All the activity focused attention on the hilli' as it has not been in years. During the past two years students and faculty alike were prepared to accept the new eminence up Prospect Street by the steadily growing structure of the Kline Biology Tower. Rising in majestic and mas- culine grandeur above the entire City and University, the tower has been the center of a storm of architectural controversy. Called by one of its designers, the renowned Philip johnson, the best University building he had ever done, it was termed by Earl Carlin, a New Haven architect writing in Progressive Architecture, immoral', in its monumental pretensions. Monumental the building is. And few others object. For, whatever one,s opinion about the design, the Kline Biology Tower stands as a symbol to the University com- munity of Yale's scientific renascence. What the late A. Whitney Griswold began when he undertook to build the Gibbs Laboratory as a risk, has now proceeded so far that it was only half in provincial jest that the Record recently ran a cartoon that featured a billboard in Sage Square plastered with Go Yale, Beat Berkeleyf, For the working scientist, the inside of the tower is its most important part: 65,000 square feet of space for research laboratories, and a library that can house more than 200,000 volumes. Added to the buildings for the departments of Chemistry and Geology, provided for also in the 1960 gift of C. Mahlon Kline, 1901, the tower brings the total space devoted to science to twice what was available fifteen years ago. The names of Glenn Seaborg and Arthur Van der Graff have a familiar ring even to the non-scientist. Both were drawn to Yale last fall to speak at the dedication of the Wright Laboratory, and its resident, the Emperor Accelerator. The Emperor, the largest of its type in the world, is a facility that assures Yaleis continued eminence in the Held of high-energy physics. When the current Peabody Museum was opened, it was the first in the world to exhibit its collections in evolutionary order. It was only natural that when the 100th anniversary of the original museum was celebrated last fall that a distinguished group of scientists would gather. When all was taken into account, a remark of President Brewster's summarized every- thing best. The talks and papers, the new buildings and the revised curricula of recent years in some departments, and the new men now making their influence felt up Prospect Street, all serve to emphasize the oneness of education and researchf, john Constable, Hadleigh Castle, from the Paul Mellon Collection THE ELLG CCLLECTIG Excitement spread through the steadily expanding circle of those in the know the morning of December 8th. A News photo- grapher came to breakfast early, sipped his coffee without paying attention, and went hurriedly off to polish his lens. The shot he snapped was later to grace the cover of the Alumni Magazine. By midmorning a campus policeman outside George and Harryis was overheard telling what a nice young man Paul Mellon had been as an undergraduate. That afternoon everyone knew that Mr. Mellon, 1929, had donated a major art col- lection to the University, along with the funds to construct a proper gallery to house it. By the next morning it took the combined journalism of the News and Times to dispell all the rumors that had been generated. In one stroke the Yale University Art Gallery acquired the outstanding private collection of British art of the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries, one rivaled in importance only by the Tate Gallery. Portions of the Mellon collection had been exhibited at Yale in April, 1965, to great critical acclaim. Even a fraction of the whole had been overpowering. Now the entire collection was to come to rest in a new building across Chapel Street from Louis Kahn's present gallery. Included in the 4,000 paintings, prints, and drawings were numerous works by Turner, Hogarth, Constable, and Gains- borough. These artists mark the golden age of British art. Nearly ten thousand books, most of them dealing with art, trace the course of printing in Britain from William Caxton, through Blake's creations, into more recent times. At the press conference announcing the gift, President Brewster pointed out that Paul Mellon,s donation symbolized in a very real way Yaleis concern for three themes. First is the concern for continuity in a world which is so racked by revolutionary discontinuity .... Second, as a great art collection, it reaffirms the fact that Yale intends to leave room for the expression and appreciation of feeling, even as we move forward into a computerized society. Third- ly, this collection and the gallery testify most eloquently to Yale's determination to see to it that in the face of increased speciali- zation, the life of learning is concerned with things as a whole and the whole of things. 3 In case you haven't learned it yet, baby, a year is people. For those of a meditative sort, Maharishi Yogiflj lectured in Woolsey Hall, and offered for a price to find any- one's natural sound. Mike Kahn spent his last turned-on year at Yale, while Lt. Gen. Louis Hershey QSD reminded us of something we would all rather forget. Mayors Lee and Lindsay Q45 sang to good old Yale While partisans flinchedg and Miss Mead Q55 . . . Well, what more is there to say? For those of you who missed practically nothing, architect Philip johnson 16D did speak at Yaleg for those who missed prac- tically everything, here,s President Brewster UQ, and for everybody . . . 8 1 A -,M X 1' 5v:.mKg:5Li.'f'L1 f 'ZA 2 is Y'- N l dx. 1 v I EQ had-f l' i , I Q5 1 S A I G 5 '35 4- 'lf ,' QF? j F .i llb- A I .Q I s l' ' 1' t S 3' 5 f . .. , . , V 'ge J T 'QQ' rift' F5552 ' 'I Q! ,Iskra 2 1 'l IK 3 . ' FQ if 'fax ., f' 'V f,232 s r' , if - . x L,-s,,. 54 ..,,f, at : X 1' , q ' G ' 3'-nfs 5, ga 'AQ X , ,.. '36 Q -'- 'kg Rza 24 zi- ' 'f ' a ', Q 9 - - , ' -, H E Wav Q N .s r ' ' 0 3 1 1- 1 v-.1 -4,1 ' ? gp v . 9 f. ' . jg lf 4 1 1 Q' ' - f 1 - I - 4 Sv gf fl ' Q0 ' fl, f , Q f ' 'TQXVQ ,MQ .-,fi xr 0' I QQ ' .fb . 4 0- ' . . xr? 'IQM-f Aw G U? 4 , x ' 1 Ji I , ii 11 y Sk Y Q 3 I fu.. FRESHIVIEN In bits and pieces, standing proudly and peering meekly, the Class of 1970 ARRIVED. Who could have guessed that this diverse group could possibly be the greatest class ever to enter this community of schol- ars?'i Those foreboding and ancient gates watched the athletes, musicians, scientists, intellectuals, and other distinct types among us file past into the sacred quadrangle ofthe Old Campus. But by seven Battell chimes on September 12, we were all Yale men. This spirit of 'Kbeing at Yalev has ever since pervaded the atmosphere for the 1022 mem- bers of our class, even through the most trying mo- ments. Yale is ours. It is the Everest of our aca- demic careers to date. Yale, the Cranfalloon,' as some imaginative chap once chalked, is that aetherial in- stitution, all encompassing in its diversity, its scope, and its 270 years of tradition. Which of us were not ecstatic? WVl1o can say that he was not thrilled to be at Yale? Before long, though, the Old Campus began to look just as it must have looked at the beginnings of many past years. Football formations took shape on the al- ready sparse lawns, adding to the mayhem of registra- tion. At the same time, many enterprising freshmen answered the call of the University facilities. Surely many of the members of the class of '70 will remem- ber their first glimpses of the campus, especially the contrasts. VVe felt much the same way as previous classes must have as we tried to comprehend the scope of broadening, but confusing endeavors encompassed by the University community. Philosophic inclinations, however, could not hold out forever against the practical considerations of reg- istration. In row after row we filed through Con- necticut Hall to sign ourselves away for four years at Yale. It was rumored that at least one timid person fled the campus before that first day had passed, but the rest of us carried out the demands of the bu- reaucracy and followed the directions given by our little slips of paper and our big envelopes of regula- tions. Dormitory counselors and busy, but helpful faculty advisors made the days run reasonably smoothly -their patience with the harried and indignant fresh- men was amazing. Keys in hand we marched into the experience of a Yale room. This bed is like a plank was proclaimed more than once, and the lack of overhead lights was another common complaint. For the fortunate few there were those rooms in Vanderbilt-private baths, wood panelled walls, spacious window seats and broad, warm fireplaces, others found the atmosphere in Bing- ham or the freshly lacquered pine of Durfee walls . . . and then there was F arnam-not even a nice place to visit. FURNITURE SALE BIGGEST EVER Q OUR LOSS YOUR CAIN 1' VISIT ACME FURNITURE SERVING YALE FOR OVER 40 YEARS. The letis-sell-the-freslr man-everything week had commenced. What could be more essential than the studliness of a Yale mug?. Nothing, perhaps, save a Yale banner or the splendor of a Yale ring. Good Lord, you idiot, you mean you haven't made arrangements for dry cleaning? . . . Thatis preposterous . . . Why sure the Student Laundry does an excellent crushing-QOOPSJ pressing job . . . only twenty dollarslv OK-gee what a bargain! We soon learned the use of the word NO. After late nights battling off the salesmen, some oi' us had our first chance to fall asleep in lectures. Some of us did. Still, for those who stayed awake, there was much said in those introductory lectures that was worthwhile. The lectures provided our first encounter with Yaleis aca- demic giants. Blum on history, Kessen in- psychology, Galston in Biology. All added to the excitement of those Hrst days and Hred the imagination and curiosity to the intellectual endeavors which lay ahead. Oh the pain of the physical fitness test! It only hurt when we laughed or learned that we had some in- credible condition known as lordosis. Bod classes soon filled, and it was rumored that several stalwarts of the freshman eleven attended posture sessions. Classes began on a Thursday and were held on Sat- urday, thoroughly disrupting the secure lives of those whose entire school careers had begun of Mondays and ended on Fridays. We all had a high sense of self-esteem, and a be- lief in our ability to do excellent work. At Yale for almost the first time our self-esteem was tested. Some of us accepted the challenge of studies with an in- terest that far outweighed the inconveniences of missing our leisure and the tube, and others were awakened to the responsibility of gaining an education by the ever-present spectre of grades sent to parents and past principals. Through it all, the spirit of being at Yale remained. Eight o'clock classes took their toll in the lives of those numerous freshmen enamored of the hours just after midnight. Any other group of college men might have started going to bed earlier, but rugged Yalies valiantly fought to live and work without sleep. We found that the long-dreamed-of college bull sessions are for real, and collectively constitute one of the greatest social and educational institutions anywhere. Dorm life also gave us chances to meet many peo- ple and helped us to become more broadminded, to accept great differences in people, and to see and ap- preciate other points of view. We lived together. It sort of made us alike, we were all in the same cir- cumstances and we all faced similar problems. Routine rapidly became the order of the day, and those who had high aspirations for their college careers were hard pressed to maintain their courage. Then again, many found the value of keeping at least one gut on the string for amusement and survival. Fol- lowing in the footsteps of innumerable previous classes, Freshmen labelled certain classes for emergency meas- ures and filler material. Fall celebrated with pagan exuberance gave an over- whelming sense of freedom and a cheerful unconcern u t , 5 ' ri H 5 for next yearis inevitable accounting-the exam. In those days we studied because we were interested in new concepts and were not saddled with the mernorization of picayune details. Football season loomed large in the eyes of most Yale students, and the Class of 1970 could be no exception. Those who had dates were considered fortunate, but most of us who, by quirks of fate, could not escort young ladies to the game with UConn, were entertained enough by the Yale Bowl and Ivy League football. The cheerlead- ers did great jobs that day, but it is sus- pected that the Yale Marching Band stole the hearts of its new spectators. With precision marching and delightful forma- tions, the band gave a small preview of what proved to be a high point in every succeeding halftime. Another important event in the life of each college man is his first mixer, a pagan ritual, zoolike in its orgiastical and an- imalistic components. There were several mixers during those first few weeks, and many young Bulldogs sampled the local talent and imported fare. Many of us suffered indigestion, but hope kept drawing us back with the faint, tantalizing aroma of success that still lingered in our minds. One or two of the mixers were complete disasters-the others appeared just promising enough that we continued to use the ancient technique of class-switching. Ambitious frosh counted non-existant credits and created majors in the attempt to deceive females. Some were successful and actual- ly made progress, but the ancient tech- nique was usually unsuccessful. Any future Yalies who read this will do well to keep in mind that the proper mixer technique requires at least three essential compo- nents: be at the mixer location early, be bold and inventive when approaching girls, and exhibit your Lindsay-Brewster cool. It is now a well-established fact that the Yale weekend is not all it is made up to be. Still, it really warms a Blue's heart when he picks up his weekend date. A whole week of work with little of the liv- ing female form around can go to a guy's head-the remedy is, of course, a little of the female form. Surprisingly enough, we found that even Frosh could have a taste of the action in reward for diligence. Ever- increasing in wisdom and ability, we searched for the out-of-the-way mixer, the friendly daughter of New Haven, and the I'll-set-you-up-with-a-blind-date situation. Midterms in November caused some Freshmen to seek their first all-nighters. Those who had taken it easy through one- test courses had to take the test and found it not so easy. Yale as the liberal education seeks to provide breadth, to introduce the student to thought styles of many different intel- lectual types. It aims to give experience in depth, to make accesible to students a proHcient understanding in at least one dis- cipline. The particular emphasis is on mas- tering the peculiar mental exercise required for a chosen field. At times, the work became so heavy that we felt swamped. It was challenging. We didnit have as much physical work as we did just plain thinking. The work was not always too much harder than what we had done before, but it was considerably more intensive. The total process called for arrangement of time and effort in relation to the whole program. Even mid-terms could not detract from the excitement of the fall season and the coming games with Princeton and Harvard. The weath- er men, of course, obligingly provided rain for the Princeton game here and below freezing winds for the Harvard game in Cambridge. Ex- citement generated by the meeting of age-old rivals passed through the Freslnnan class again and again those weekends, and we did our best to contribute to the general confusion and celebration both before and after the games. We left each weekend hoping that future games would bring sweet revenge next time. In spite of the official sanction of the foot- ball team, we all know that the game every- body waited for took place on the morning of the Dartmouth game. Challenges were prop- erly issued by the major groups involved in the dispute. The Subject under consideration proved to be a large, patched sphere referred to as the BLADDERBALL. All of the big or- ganizations played around with it for a while and then were treated to a sight destined to scare them into submission. The class of 1970 fat least part of itl formed into the time- honored flying wedge, seized the bladderball with grace and power, and proceeded to throw it over the fence behind Linsley-Chittenden. Pursued by campus policemen and the shat- tered remains of student organizations, we bounced the ball onto the Creen where it was graciously deflated by the campus police. A few indignant Bladderballers immediately sat down in the middle of College St. in pro- test, but the Yale peace officers soon broke up the strike to restore the usual order and tranquility. At seasonis end, social activities slowed down and work once again occupied a dan- gerous amount of our time. Thoughts of va- cation-soon-coming invaded every stray thought. Quickly, the time was right for dancin, in the streetf' and Bulldogs began Christmas evacuation in massive numbers, but not before the gala commons Christmas party which fea- tured the Freshman Clee Club and the proces- sion of Comestibles. While some went home, many others stayed as far from home as pos- sible and sought their fun in far-removed corners of the con- tinent. Ambitious study schedules rapidly gave way to the ordinary vacation delight as we took every possible oppor- tunity to display our growing Yale images. Soon enough, however, holidays melted into the reading period and froze into the dreaded EXAMS. Faculty members and advisors had tried to explain to excited and worried frosh that the reading period was not set up to provide extra time to catch up on the term's reading, but rather to give students a chance to read some outside material. No one really believed them. Part of the class took books with them into hibernation in the library for the major portion of the finals period, the others seemed to get more sleep and have more free time during exams than during any other part of the year. With many members stunned, our jointly resourceful and rugged personality exerted itself and looked forward to bigger and fhopefullyj better things. Predictably, the term,s results were not as terrible as most had expected. Life continued and the patterns for the second semester began to crystallize. New Haven,s most violent snowstorm in years was a major incident in the first part of the second term. Some Yalies who had never seen real snow before gloried fat least for a whilej in the splendor of the white stuff. When wet shoes became a problem, our rosy snow picture became slightly tarnished. Still, with inclement weather the only really spec- tacular thing around, it was bound to be a very important part of our lives. Enormous snowballs were rolled and the Old Campus snowbuilt version of Chartres Cathedral made the front page of the news. Heeling was another of the big flurries during the second semester-eager freshmen sought positions on the many student organizations. Some of us even heeled the dreaded Student Laundry f Well, ya' gotta' make a livin, somehow! 'ij or the News. For almost all who participated, though, it was a very worthwhile experience in learning and working with other people. Soon enough it was Prom Weekend-and right in the middle of midterms, too. Three distinct freshman types evolved for the weekend: those with dates and a reasonably secure three days, those going out of town Cespecially to New Yorkj to escape the sight of promgoers, and those who studied or brooded in their rooms. As expected, it was all a gala af- fairg well worth the thousands of dollars that it set back the collective class. By early March it was apparent that Yale winter sports had produced some excellent teams. Both swimming teams in particular stood out from the rest. Both teams went un- defeated, leaving numerous opponents in the swirling wake of shattered NCAA, American and Yale records. Both teams went on to spread Yale athletic prominence in the NCAAS and AAUS. New Haven weather proved itself as Hckle as ever, fre- quently capping morale-raising periods of shirtsleeve weather with depressing days of gop. The premature Saybrook cro- cuses, first harbingers of spring, found themselves buried in white. Lacrosse sticks and baseball gloves soon became com- mon around the Old Campus, however. Work loads seemed to get easier-or at least less was done. Spring vacation was on everyone's mind and plans were set for Bermuda esca- pades or for a trip to the heavenly comfort of home and Mama to flee an irritating roommate or lack of sleep. i X , 1 -f 1 7, N 1 v ...J nn if 1155 WMA' Un I Se ' ,gif Y., . 9 if , ww., Ha wwgw , i H t 4 M M4 RQ -'IMG i ,f .f ...r Sweet April returned to New Haven, and so did we for a spring term which was to fly by and take its toll in picnics, college weekend, and finals. It became a struggle to study. The warm sun shone and beckoned us to the outdoors. The thick grassy carpet of Morse-Stiles and the New Haven Green invited numerous froshies to cop bennies or ZZzz,s. The combination of Springs effects, the temporary panic of exams and preparation for leaving were not all that oc- cupied freshman minds. Still to be contemplated was the dream of coeducation at Yale which we learned to our cha- grin would not occur until 1971! Also summer jobs had to be obtained, and many searched for ideas that would trans- form the summer into as interesting an experience as fresh- man year. Exams would create few gaps in the ranks. Year- long friendships would be interrupted, but the following Sep- tember would send its call to regroup for a continuation of the granfalloon-the Yale experience. For some, Freshman Year at Yale had been hell, to others, a lark. Some were indifferent and others were bitter. But to most of us Freshman year proved to be a year of change and oscillation. It was a beginning, an introduction into col- lege life, and more importantly into Yale life. It was a year in which we all expected to mature and to find some direc- tion in our search for what to do ultimately with life. Some suffered the shocking sensation of failure in their first confrontation with the academic world of Yale and determined to pull themselves out of the slump. Some would not pull out. Others would lead the league. We formed an attitude toward Yale which would oscillate over four years from our initial enthusiasm to indifference, from aspiration to despera- tion until we found ourselves and realized that we could do real things in the real world. But these attitudes varied from individual to individual and all will get out of Yale what they put into it. We all shared common experiences and our yearlong com- muting to Commons and our universal Yale spirit,' tended to unify us. Freedom, little supervision and living together made us more aware of ourselves and others, of our problems and potentials. We were confronted with all sorts of realities and forced through one means or another, by grades, athletics, organizations, or women, to come to terms with ourselves. FOOTB LL Before the beginning of the football season, fresh- man coach Harry jacunski said, 'iWe canit put our fingers on the strong points just yet. Talents donft become evident until the first gamef, While it was apparent that such prospects as Lew Boney, captain and glue-fingered first-string end, and Dave Henley, whose passing formed the backbone of many a long drive, would become vaunted Wunclerkinder during the course of the season, there were several pleasant surprises. The strong running provided by backs Terry Stonewallv jackson and Bill Harper, the consistent speed and agaility of halfback Buzz Potts, and the amount of grinding punishment the unplatooned Eli line was able to take-and give-were all unexpectedly large assets. The season opener against Brown proved to be dull -especially from the Blues' point of view, as they left the field at halftime trailing 13-3. There were fire- works enough in the second half. Several long drives highlighted by Stoney jacksonis running, Dave Henleyls passing, and a 4th-quarter goal line stand by the Eli defense preserved a close 23-20 victory. In the next game, the Lion Cubs of Columbia proved to be meek kittens for the Bullpups. The superb rushing of Buzz Potts and the passing tandem of Henley to Roney fthree touchdown passesj ran up the score. The parsimonious Yale defense held Co- lumbia scoreless until Coach jacunski relented. Final score: Yale 31, Columbia 16. Against Cornell the Blues took the opening kickoff and drove straight down the field to a score. The supposedly weak Ithacans recovered sufficiently to leave the field at halftime ahead 19-6. In the second half a determined Cornell defense twice hung on within their own 30-yard line to earn a 25-20 win. The Dartmouth game was another example of low tragedy. The Bullpups scored first, but the Peagreen scored more-one point more. A potential Yale score late in the fourth quarter was stymied and the boys from Hanover ran out the clock to clip Yale, 7-6. Returning to action against Princeton after two weeks, rest, the Elis found themselves up against the only team in the league actually superior to them. Prince- ton jumped off to a 14-O lead in the first quarter be- fore the Eli defense jelled, the Orange and Black were held scoreless for the remainder of the game. Later, an apparent Eli touchdown was called back 55 yards for a penalty, a potential touchdown pass to Honey was deflected, and a 4th-quarter Yale drive was halted on the Princeton ll-yard line, as the 14-O score took on dismal Hnality. Despite injuries to Harper, Potts, and Hinesly, the Bullpups fought hard against Harvard,s Yardlings. After a Crimson-dominated first half, the Bullpups came back on a long touchdown pass from Henley to end Earl Downey, and another drive highlighted by Henry Swigertis long run to lead 14-7. Only a last-minute shoestring catch in the end zone gave the Yardlings a 15-14 victory. The freshman soccer team won six games and lost four, and, therefore, the season can be called success- ful on the record books. But the true measure of its success cannot be found in the won and lost columns, but in something far less tangible. This is the spirit with which the game is played, and the feelings each member of the team associates with his experience. By these standards, the season can be considered more than just a statistical success. Under the inspirational leadership of Chief, Dick Corrigan and captain Tom Scattergood, the team showed moments of superb playing ability, but also moments of disappointment. The opening victory over Andover on that cold, rainy, and miserable day will not soon be forgotten. After a close setback by perennial power Brown, the team began to roll chalking up five straight victories over Columbia, Bridgeport, Coast Guard Qa whopping 10-OD, and the University of Connecticut. Going into the last three games, hopes were really high, but disappointment followed. The team lost in the last minute to Springfield 2-1 after goalie Steve Greenberg, who had played his typically excellent game although injured, was forced out. Then came Princeton, and one of the most frustrating afternoons of soccer ever played. The Blues generally outplayed and outshot the young Tigers, but could not score and fell in the last half 3-0. The following week at Harvard, the scoring drought continued and the seas- on ended with a disappointing loss. Off the field, however, there were plenty of mem- orable moments. Who can forget the African chants on the bus rides -to away games led by the one, and only, Sunny Oyekan, or a unique rendition of Lollipop by K. Ohene-Frempong. After all, a team is really made up of personalities, and to list names worthy of recognition such as Harry Adamu, the amazing Dan Pele', Warren, Gerry Hughes, Robin Hogen, Bob Miller, jay Hesselgrave, Larry Dautch, Steve Iones, jeff Bernard, Phil Moncharsh, Abu Bakarr Sadik Timbo, and many others, cannot do justice to these people as more than good soccer players. These were the ones who gave the freshman soccer team its own unique personality. Everyone who participated contributed something to the memory of this season. If nothing else, one thing should be remembered- Let's go horse. COACH: Dick Corrigan CAPTAIN: Thomas Scattergood 2 Andover 0 2 Brown 4 2 Columbia 0 7 Bridgeport 1 9 Coast Guard Acad. 0 3 Exeter 1 5 Connecticut 0 1 Springfield 2 0 Princeton 2 1 Harvard 3 32 13 WON: 6 LOST: 4 OCCER ASKETB LL The Yale Freshman Basketball Team proved the old sports adage that to win, a team must be greater than the sum of the individuals who make it up. Without any single super-star to carry them, Coach Vito deVito had to rely on general team con- sistency to provide a successful season, and he was not disappointed. There was always someone ready to take up the slack, and the team, led by captain Terry Finn, Hnished the season by winning ten straight games and sporting an impressive 12-2 record. After taking its first two games from Colgate and the University of Connecticut, the Bullpups suffered their Hrst loss to the Fordham Frosh, and followed with a disappointing last-second setback at the hands of a strong Holy Cross five. From then on, there was nothing but a string of victories and an undefeated season against Ivy League op- ponents. Probably the highlight of the season was the battle with Princeton on February 11. The young Tigers came into the game with an 11-0 record and acclaim as possibly the best Fresh- man team in the East. With Thatcher Shellaby doing a fine defensive job on Princeton's highly touted jeff Petrie, the Yale quintet pulled off a stunning upset and the team from Old Nassau re- turned home with their first loss of the year. In addition to Finn and Shellaby, the team this year was led by 6' 9 center John Whiston, Bob jackson, Glenn deChabert, Lew Roney, and Dan Peters. Many spectators who watched the freshman swimmers in action this year found them hard to describe. Awe- some,', sensational,', amazing,,' the best ever, bril- liant all seemed to fall short of describing this team. Even before they entered Yale, the freshmen swim- mers had reputations as outstanding individuals. But when the season began their combined talents mold the Hnest freshmen team ever anywhere. The team boasted eight high school All-Americas, two prep school All-Americas and an Olympic Silver medalist. When the season was over, 14 opponents were left gasping in the wake of 40 broken records, including 7 NCAA Freshman records, as many Yale Freshmen records, and 3 Yale University records. An unusual camaraderie developed among the team members during the year. They were always ready to take time out to help one another and a superb in- dividual performance or the agony of a defeat and lost event was shared by the entire team. When Olympian john Nelson was struck by mononucleosis and learned that he would be sidelined for a good part of the season, the team shared his dissappointment, but deter- mined to swim all the better. A great deal of the credit for the team's success should go to coach jim Barton. Supervising as much talent as this Yale team had put jim under a great pressure to make them produce-and produce at just the right moments. jim always stressed the gradual drop in individual times. If the times are coming downf, he says, we,re getting the job donef' Jim def- initely got the job well done. He had a knack for getting people to produce. There was not a single mem- ber of the team who had not equalled or bettered his best times by the end of the year. While concerned about sharing seconds, jim had that uncommon ability to get people up for a meet. Work-outs were fun. Up for Princetonv was a favorite slogan of the freshmen even if they were swimming against Dartmouth. The swimmers even complained about too much rest in between repeats, as the bigger meets grew near. The team began its record breaking escapades against St. Mary's High School on December 6. john Nelson's Yale Freshman record in the 400 free, 3:5l.1, and St. Mary's pool record of 1:46.2 for the 200 free highlighted the record 81-14 romp. In a series of meets with local high schools who af- forded little competition, the Frosh continued the win streak which was to last all season. Nelson also con- tinued his record spree breaking his own 400 free record with a 3148.0 clocking. These early meets afforded Barton,s swimmers the chance to enter events which they wouldn't have the opportunity to swim later in the season. Soon after Christmas recess, the F rosh met the tougher competition of Lawrenceville, Andover, West- Held and Hill. All resulted in lopsided scores as Nelson, Chuck Coettsche, Bill Crooks, and Paul Lawler starred. Nelson swam to a Westfield pool record of 2101.1 and Goettsche broke his brother's Roger's Yale Freshman 100 yard backstroke record with a 54.7, a feat which he was to repeat several more times in the season. Crooks and Lawler battled twice to best times in the 50 oz 100 frees. Lawler won the 50 in 22.3, as Crooks prevailed in the 100 with a 49.2. On the eve of the Westfield meet, the F rosh elected Chuck Coettsche captain. C-etch proved to be an in- spiring and spirited leader throughout the remainder Phil Long, lefi, if Axel Kairies Pulling to a 1-2 in the Breas- troke NCAA 400 yd Free Relay Record Holders- Crooks, Lawler, Bettendorf, job F reestyler Bill Crooks in Princeton meet Captain Chuck Goettsche Backstrokes to record Olympian john Nelson thrashing to 3:48.0 in 400 Free ofthe season. The Williston meet proved to be fruitful in terms of records. The 200-yard medley relay team of Goet- tsche, Long, Iob, and Lawler set a new NCAA Fresh- man record of 1:39.0. The NCAA 400-yard relay record was tied by job, Bettendorf, Lawler, and Breaststroker Phil Long also turned in a Crooks. season best 1101.4 to win the 100-yard breaststroke. The Swim Carnival pitted Freshmen against Var- sity in the medley relay. Coettsche, Long, Ioe Sheehy, and job outswam the varsity opposition in 3:34.9, faster than the listed NCAA freshman record. The first college competition for the frosh was Brown. The following Saturday the mermen began to demonstrate their power against Dartmouth. The 65-30 score avenged last year's defeat by the Indians. This year revenge was sweet as the Elis broke four NCAA freshman records. Captain Coettsche began the assault by leading off the medley relay, breaking his own standard with 54.4 in the 100-yard back- stroke. The relay which followed won in a record 3:35.6. Later Cetch tied the NCAA frosh record in the 200-yard backstroke with a 2:00.2 and Phil Long broke the Yale frosh record in the 200-yard breast- stroke with a 2:15.4. Iob, Bettendorf, Lawler, and Crooks set a new NCAA freshman record of 3113.1 in the 400-yard free relay. The swimmers than posted an easy 69-26 win over Springfield before meeting the Princeton frosh the following Saturday. The Tigers were undefeated. Yaleis freshmen defied Webster in this meet as they broke or tied 15 marks on the way to a 62-33 rout.Coettsche: 53.7, 1:57.33 Long: 2:12.8g Sheehy: 2:00.8, job: 47.2, Kelley: 1:47.7, 5:00.0. . . these were just a few of the outstanding times. Both relays swam faster than ever before. The medley relay time was the fastest in the nation to that date last season, and the freestyle relay chopped the record to 3:10.9. The splits for the free relay were: job, 47.2, Lawler, 48.1, Bettendorf, 47.9, and Crooks, 47.6. Ed Bettendorf also swam the 200-yard individual medley in 2:01.6. Every Yale time was a season best. The frosh wound up their dual meet season with every team member receiving numerals. The final Harvard meet was memorable, as the Elis let each swimmer- enter only one event, yet managed to win every first place and every second except in the diving, where Yale has only one entry. No one there will ever forget the mute expression on Harvard faces as Steve Job gained half a poolis length to win the final relay by a touch. His split was 46.6. The Eli frosh lived up to every expectation, and went on to spread the word of Yaleis swimming promi- nence at the AAU Championships in April. It was undeniably the best freshman season ever. WIMMI Iob reaches for 45.9 Nelson catches Breath after l:45.0 200 Free Coach j im Barton ' . -.,,-'ff C 'Q I if .X ,,,,W,,,,.,,,1,.,Z 1 ,,,,i,4,W I , : ,L.,,. my , if 1 Q: If . as 'E 11 fl gf Q :42??617':i:r3Tls'f5xrlfsH- C -,fALiH2.f' ' ' - , :ix tr f A . - ' ft . 1' 'f?'CQfIi?fZ' ff' , 'af ffl., H. iii 2 .. I f 1 .-M-:frm-sf:-r-1 - Q rf.-ffggf QQ- :M-ew:--::Ja1::-z, I 5 e '2:-5:5234-I ' . L Q , Q 1 -- . , 7 X H 4 1' 1 1 1 '3 ' ' Squash COACH: Tony De Yegn CAPTAIN: Andy Higgins 4 Trinity 5 7 Dartmouth 2 7 Williams 2 8 La Salle Coll. H.S. 0 1 Andover 6 7 Wesleyan 2 1 Deerfield 6 1 Princeton 8 4 M.I.T. 5 0 Harvard 9 Winter Track 38 Dartmouth 70 56 Brown 38 Pennsylvania 43 2035 Harvard 5834 Princeton 58 Fencing COACH: Albert Crasson CAPTAIN: Brandon Tartinkoff 9 Roger Ludlowe 7 15 Rutgers 12 11 Columbia 16 19 Lenox 8 10 Riverdale C.D.S. 17 11 Princeton 16 22 Harvard 5 Hockey COACH: Ken MacKenzie CAPTAIN: Charles Pillsbury 2 Boston College 7 6 Choate 5 2 Melrose H.S. 0 5 Taft 1 8 Lynn English H.S. 3 5 Army 6 2 Dartmouth 10 1 Providence 6 0 St. Mark's 4 O New Prep H.S. 2 1 Brown 8 2 St. Paulys School 3 3 Princeton 5 7 Pennsylvania 5 1 Princeton 8 1 Andover 2 5 Brown 6 Qotj 1 Harvard 9 PATRONS Every year we extend this greeting, accompanied by a warm handshake, to thousands of Yale men. Our University Shops on-campus at Yale, Harvard, Princeton, Stanford and the Uni- versity 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. Every- thing is made according to our own exacting specifications, includ- ing 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 AVENU 290 York Street, New Haven Yale Pnnceto Harvard ' University of Michigan - Stanford - New Your - White Plains ' Springfield - Garden City ' Chicago Sk he Detroit Beverly Hills ' Palo Alto ' Phoenix ' Miami Beach - Ft. Lauderdale 3 5 5 E E Q if-A Xxxx X Sm1th, Barney 8: Co. f i Incorporated 2 Member: New York Stock Exchange X f Ilil IIIIIIIII lflllllll 20 Broad Street, New York, N. Y 10005 Smith, Barney 81 Co. is one of the largest firms offering complete financial services as underwriters, brokers, dealers, and advisers in investment securities. Our functions are to bring management and capital together in the right combination and to provide investors, whether individuals or institutions, with opportunities to put their money to work. The methods of putting money to work include the underwriting The Organiza CORPORATE FINANCE DEPARTMENT The work of this department is to study carefully the financial structure of the prospective issuer of securities. Analysis of current and future operations is required to create an appropriate financial plan to cover both present and future developments. The offering prices of new securities are determined by careful consideration of market conditions and may be established by negotiation or by com- petitive bidding. We are active in both domestic and international finance, with an oflice in Paris for our European representatives. We are experienced in arranging mergers and acquisitions. SALES DEPARTMENT We are members of the principal stock exchanges and have branch oflices in Philadelphia, Chicago, Boston, San Francisco, Albany, Allentown, Pa., Cleveland, Dallas, Hartford, Milwaukee, Minneapolis, and Tampa. We do a general commission business in the purchase and sale of stocks and bonds, and also are dealers in unlisted securities. Our customers include individual investors and institutions such as banks, trust funds, and insurance companies. The International Investment Department is active in serving the investment requirements of a wide range of international clients. MUNICIPAL DEPARTMENT Smith, Bamey 81 Co. has a long record of financing American and Canadian cities, states, and provinces. We are also active in the underwriting of special purpose and revenue bonds and are fre- quently retained as financial advisers to public authorities. Con- stant research in comparative municipal credit is maintained for buyers of municipal bonds. TRADING DEPARTMENT Most bank and insurance company shares and a very large number of other securities are not listed on any of the exchanges. The over-the-counter market is important and large. The Trading A Career in A very limited number of carefully chosen college graduates are selected each year for training. The training course covers all phases of our own operations as well as the background of the business as a whole. The nine-month training program is carefully supervised and includes classroom work, seminars, and rotation through the various departments. In selecting from among the candidates for our training course, the primary considerations are: faj aptitude for the businessg fbi motivation, including interest in the businessg fel indications of potential ability. A physical examination, psychological tests, and interviews are required. Because an important part of your working life will be spent in dealing with people, an ability to get along with others is necessary. An aptitude for working with numbers and their use in analysis is also helpful. The chances of success in our business are not too good for the extreme introvert who prefers to work alone, nor the extreme extrovert who has little interest in the analysis and study of intangibles. One indication of your interest in the business would be if you had taken courses in corporation finance, investment management, tio and distributing of securities, either to raise new capital or to effect advantages by refunding previous issues. In addition, markets must be available for the convenient purchase and sale of securities, either through stock exchanges or through providing facilities for dealing in unlisted securities. It is also part of our business to advise and help corporations and municipalities with their financial plans. n ofthe Firm Department is active in this market and maintains close contacts with other important dealers throughout the country. RESEARCH DEPARTMENT This department is engaged in the study of individual companies, industries, and market and economic trends. It undertakes to main- tain a flow of current information to our sales organization and clients. Through this research it is the purpose of the department and all staff members concerned directly with investments to recommend opportunities that may be presented to clients for their consideration. The work of the department is organized on the basis of covering 31 major industry groups. INVESTMENT ADVISORY SERVICES The firm is registered under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940. Our advisory services include several departments. The Investment Advisory Department serves many individuals and trusts on a fee basis. It provides continuous supervision and detailed records and valuations on a monthly basis. The Pension Fund Investment Department provides special services and facilities to help the managers of Health and Welfare Funds, Pront Sharing Funds, and Pensioh Funds for both labor organizations and corporations. The Institutional Advisory Service assists the investment man- agers of banks, insurance companies, and other financial organiza- tions with a variety of services to help attain their investment objectives. Frequently several departments are involved in providing spe- cialized financial services, such as the private placement of secur- ities, the sale or purchase of large blocks of securities, appraisals, and the purchase or sale of entire businesses. Administration, including operations, accounting, data proces- sing, systems and procedures, and other areas, provides attractive opporttmities. Our Business accounting or economics. Although these are not absolute require- ments for selection, they are important background aids. Our firm provides a wide variety of fringe benefits including savings plans, group insurance, physical examinations, profit shar- ing, and pensions. You should know, however, that the investment business is one which appeals primarily because it oHers oppor- tunities rather than personal security. Its appeal is to the young man who is interested in advancement and would prefer working in a smaller organization. Although one of the largest firms in our business, we employ less than 800 people. Our firm and its predecessors have been in busi- ness since 1873. If you are interested in a career with Smith, Barney 81 Co., you should review your interests and training with your vocational counselor. Then, if you believe that you have the required abilities and interest in our business, write to the Personnel Director at our main ofiice, 20 Broad Street, New York, N. Y. 10005, telling him about your background and qualifications. Of course, you will want to know a great deal more about us and our business than we can tell you in this brief introduction to our firm. We suggest that you tell us soon so that we can consider each other and reach a decision by the time you graduate. 5 5 E 3 E S E wumlmne IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIII IlIllIIIIIIllIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIII lllwwt it-.1 .wiw .mmm ,Mu . ,. i , 1. . IllIIIllllfflllllllfflllllllIIll!llIlIIlllllllllIlllllllflllllIlllllWIIIIIIHIIIllIIHIIllllIIlIllllllllIIIIIllllllllIIIIIIIIIlllllIlllIIIIIIlllllllllIIIIIllIllllllIlIllllllHIlIIIIllIIIIIllIIllIIllllIIIHllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIllIIIlllllIIllIIIIIIIIllllllllillllllIllllIIIIIllllIIIIlllflllI1IIllIllllIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIllIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllIIllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIWMHIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIEIIllIIIlIIIIHlllIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIBIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIWIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIII Paul Mellon Collection Purveyor of Turkeys. G M LEVIN JR Cambndge Mass . . , . Harvard Business School For Sale Black 1962 Contmental Convertible White Leather Seats 4 Door A Baker Duncan Orange Va For Information, Contact: , . SWIFT 81 CO Wlth Fine Meat Products For Over 50 Years 316 Food Terminal Plaza New Haven Conn. Serving Yale Dining Halls Frank G. Berson Chairman BANNER Theodore D. Sands Business Mgr. B I I I R. Scott Armstrong Treasurer C ONI1 LINIENTS OI4 FOREST CITY FOUNDRIES Gray Iron Ductile 61 Aluminum Castings Cleveland Ohio , , 1 Products of , . 7 M B FOSTER ELECTRIC CO , Inc Electrical Contractor 81 Olive Street New Haven, Conn CREATIVE TECHNIQUES Industrial - Institutional - Residential Commercial Connecticuts Largest Painting Contractor Painting - Decorating - Waterproofing Joseph Cohn 81 Son, Inc Established 1905 NEW HAVEN Painting Contractor for Kline Science Tower 'e?'EzV 15713, A .. -, aff.. 3,3 ,X M I P, ,-114 fc, ,mm -as --1 , 4, my ,ly jg 4 z g we-I , ,J My f-f.3:g:T,jf5- - .if MQ I .P 'I' - wit. Ng 2 '-ZH - X .titiemzx- 1: -A W ' ,fig p Qt ,' MY,e'?4:Wf- . - if w S,:'f1'??-5 3'- 5J:r,:f-'it 1 ,,.f ,exif . :wg - Nye' gs: 'bil-1? -.f wt E- 'ft is 'ie ' 'Q ' Qffsilfrfii U 'gfw-'fq1fr', -i'5 Qfw5y ' ff? ' l h iiiiiifl S' -. ' N' -f- A Y M- .NW ., , W A ,, r-34 sw' XE . E ff? 'b--'- A . ffwtgri elk., QA az. Yr ' .- . 'W - Q51-', .:'f- -t - , ' -, , tt. eisef-M ' aff af W.- . --- , , n'i .f:Q:aE '- A fu -'.' A i. ina : ,ti ' .xl-iii' 1 ,5' X' X Va 1 3 kc evil --4 5 v' .gui 'A-W :A .,,5M':N H , u n if . Q ,-,1,h,,,Mf ----- 1'2,, .,g , 1 E , it .ia ' it E lt T ff fa . . , A Ci 1 iii 'I 1 2 V1 ' -I It 2 'll -Q. , I s g, ' 2 ms 4 2?- , Q'-' ' or 15 eggs i f i g, it ,.,,1 ,, A Q ' 'AAA it. H, N ..,,. 'E ., ,l ',.A AA-,,. - ,- Wm--w-at fr p , 16 EAST 44TH STREET, NEW YORK 82 MT. AUBURN STREET, CAMBRIDGE Our New York store is advantageously situ- U ated to serve Yale men when in the city. Simi- larly our establishment in Cambridge is recommended to Yale men in that vicinity. In 2 pp addition regular monthly visits are made bY A 3--j W, - . , our traveling representatives with complete Q H L . T..J ' f 'f ranges of J. PRESS productions to the follow- ,E A Y ing cities. Dates mailed on request. 1 Wilma uv if ii 8 in ' if .ft Atlanta Louisville Beverly Hills Memphis T5-:iELf.Tg,::i,...,:g: ,A,:,,, 6, ,. A W... Birmingham Milwaukee MEM H Charlotte Minneapolis Charlottesville Nashville 262 YORK STREET, NEW HAVEN Chicago New Orleans Cincinnati Philadelphia Cleveland Pittsburgh Columbus Portland Dallas St. Louis pl u p ,K 3- , , f Dayton San Francisco i M M A 43 Q I A3 Denver Seattle -,146 Detroit Toledo it fphmnaw Houston Tulsa 3 U indianapolis Washington, D.C. is iwgfavg ak 1 -V, V ansas City Wilmington gggxwryhi, Yo Los Angeles M 'efe V ,S . if A' im 93 'A ' A W1-Ylihraf -V-if XE -E A if gi gifs: T 5, .7 iff is 3' THE F5 lflllf EL EL'77?l!.' C' 0114!-7AlV V TRADITION OF QUALITY FOR OVER FORTY YEARS All CONDITIONING YORK 89 GOFFE STREET NEW HAVEN CONN 06505 Compliments of A FRIEND For Your Room Classroom - Personal Needs L l G G E T T ' S Your Campus Drug Store York and Elm items Q TELEPHONE: 865-4103 JAMES J McDONNELL Hugh Grade Coffee and Teas for over 35 years 1366 Chapel Street New Haven Conn Supplying Yale University We expect the pace of change to accelerate in the next few years Financial institutions today face the perplexing problem of selecting investments which will per- form well in a world of change. Our entire econ- omy is in a surging state of flux. Change is occur- ring at an awesome pace. New industries emerge each day as others stagnate and die. A modern industrial revolution is here. Faulkner, Dawkins 8: Sullivan is oriented to help institutional investors meet the pace of change. Our investment research is geared solely to institutional needs. We anticipate change. Our research staff is inventive and imaginative. In their hands analysis becomes a creative process. The latest computer techniques are applied to studies of the general economy, to financial anal- ysis and stock price movements. We provide investment management services for institutions which are not staffed to carry out the research function themselves and we also provide invest- ment banking services to companies in rapidly growing industries. Whatever the need, it becomes our challenge. FAULKNER, DAWKINS 81 SULLIVAN Members of the New York and American Stock Exchanges 60 Broad St., New York 10004 f HA 5-4200 THERE,S ALWAYS THE RAIN I donit suppose any of us really ever have an adequate ex- cuse-about ourselves, I mean. Especially here, at this school. What everybody wants here is promises, not always just about grades, or going to class, or that last paper, or even about if someday youill be one of the big boys-so that they can name a building after you . . . or your money. No, there are other kinds of promises too, like, Yeah, I love you, or, Hey, Char- lie? You feel like You feel like you want to talk about it? or, like mine, I know what I wantf, But no excuses. So I guess youire probably wondering what the hell this sort-of-story I'm about to tell you can be, now that it can't be an excuse. Well, call it an epitaph . . . yeah, that's good . . . an epitaph. As I left the post office that drizzling Friday morning and walked out onto the street, I remember thinking how strangely yet fittingly real it would be if the great, stark buildings and towers were suddenly no longer inanimate and stolid, and could, like the people hurrying across their shadows, also feel the rain and react to it-hunch their craggy stone masses up about their proud peaks, and weave back and forth between the drops, and finally begin to wrinkle and shrivel from their ines- capable exposure to the continuing, sullen rain, and then, like the trees in a Disney cartoon, grow sad faces from whose mouths a mournful, wailing chorus would emit. I tried to laugh at the thought of it, but somehow only a choked, alien sound was all that escaped from my own mouth. It startled me with its foreignness, and as I had felt so many times in the past weeks, I again felt my conscious mind. withdraw slightly, from perception and from the external world. I wondered behind how many of the other faces whose vague images came at me through the rainis distorting blur the same battle was being fought . . . and lost. And I wondered, distressed at the dif- ficulty it took to remember what was so recent-in time, at least, about how war had come to be declared in the first place, how I had come to the point I was at on this day. And I thought back through it again .... 0 43 0 D 0 Can you describe in words what was never more than feel- ing? In gentle, flowing music of wind whistling low at the sky and singing softly to the earth, perhaps . . . or in wildly screaming patterns of color and flame. But in words? . . . words you can hold tightly in your mind, or say aloud with your voice . . . and make so completely-too completely-real. But is there a choice? Will there ever be? . . . because there is no escape. Suddenly, simply, she was just there, her long, honey-brown hair wisping down to frame wide, startled eyes, that seemed to hold deep within them a nakedness that was her soul, as if she, and all she ever was or would be, lay behind those two tiny seas of misty blue and green. The sea-where life began- was reflected in her eyes, its eternity floated in their depths. How much of that eternity was consumed in the brief moment before she looked up and saw me standing in the room, staring at her? A remote, other part of me seemed to hear her voice then, . . I was lost . . . couldn't find my way out . . . gates were shut . . . ask directions . . . wandered in . . . your room . . . sorry if . . . , but I was still staring into the beauty of the face before me-or I might have been curious of how she wan- deredv into my room, on the fourth floor. I might have . . . but would I have let myself care then?-about that? . . . would I have wanted to? . . . once I had seen her, would it-would anything- have mattered? And then my own gaze was being returned by her eyes, and I wanted to make love to her-I wanted to love her-this girl whose spirit I knew when she looked at me, what would I find in her embrace, her caress, her kiss? I reached out to her and our fingers touched ..., and there was no time, no universe, only her. And I loved her, oh, I loved her, for all the lovers who had once loved, and for all those who had never loved. I kissed her and Death died. I fell . . . down, down, farther into the sea, back into the Earthis kiss, its womb, and lay there while a thousand stars grew dim, until two tears from my loveis eyes fell upon me, and made me born again. And as I grew and loved, a new world appeared, and only love was on it, I was the sun to warm it with my love. I was love, all love, and only love existed, only I existed . . . only I ...only...I...alone.... She had gone. I noticed that at the same instant that I noticed the rain. And I knew what had happened, and what day it was, and how many days ago she had gone, and how many she had stayed. I didn't blame her, or whoever else had been in on it-joke, game, whatever it was. No, I put no blame, it had all been there inside me already, or else it couldn't have worked like it did. It was all so completely-so oddly- real, that I went through it twice, asking myself questions and answering them, and I even started it a third time around, but then I slept. As the next few days went by, I began to suddenly catch myself thinking about her, as if she were beside me or waiting for me somewhere. I would silently yell at myself for it, scold- ing-and sometimes another part of me would scream back . . . and I would feel myself drowning, far out in some cold, gray sea, when at once she would be there, floating close above me, like a gull, and the water would be warm and blue-green again, and beams of light from her eyes would lead me safely to the shore. At first, when this feeling would come to me, I drowned more often than not, or struggled desperately for a long, long time, before she came to save me. But after a while, it got so that no sooner did I feel like I was out in that swirling, numb- ing water fit was the worst on a day that it rainedj, than she was there and saving me. As if, finally, I just didn't want to believe that it wasn't really love, because if I did, then what would I ever have? It wouldn't stop-back and forth it went in my mind-what I knew fighting with what I wanted to believe, and, with each blow, my mind crawling further and further into whatever warm, safe hole it was that it had found. As far as wanting anything anymore . . . ever-how could I? Whether I was drowning or being saved at the moment didn't make any difference-she had been everything, and she was gone. I suppose I could actually go try to find her, this time for real . . . but then there's always the rain. -WILLIAM L. VOCEL OTTOWA SILICA COMPANY OTTAWA ILLINOIS GEORGE A. THORNTON-Y 22 EDMUND B. THORNTON-Y 54 l 'vbsov 'YK I Mmers and Processors of Pure Silica Sands Serving Industrial America-Coast to Coast I 1900 I Y 1 Chairman President 431 J' 4 P 04 .Unshtufwn foz CHERRY ELECTRICAL PRODUCTS com' 1650 Old Deerfield R ad H ghla d P k Ill 0 s 60035 the long-life line of precision switches 0 0 , i n ar , in i CROWN ZELLERBACH CORPORATION SAN FRANCISCO CALIFORNIA Cont1nu1ng growth of markets for the company and the mdustry provrde srgmfrcant opportumtles for grad uates Wlth both techmcal and non techmcal back grounds It you are cur1ous as to what the future mrght hold 1n the management of a World leader 1n the paper and packagmg 111dl1StI'y drop a lme to our Dlrector of Salarred Recrultlng H1s name IS Thomas L Shaw and he would be mterested 1n hearrng from you Crown Zellerbachxav Wd thpp One Bush Street San Franclsco Cahf 94119 O 7 'Z , . e ont stop wz a er , , I There is a form of death, of dying, That knows no pain, only heartache. Wonder at the insides of a man Without guts without heart Yet filled to a complacent roundness! Rain is falling on the Island tonight. Garret windows are closed. The drops are too big to be real, Coming hard, driven, striking, falling again, Finally landing to lie naked on the pavement. I feel the chill of the naked raindrops Penetrating the soles of my feet, My legs and spine. Ah marvelous! But my head can't feel at all. At the Bowery, a skeleton seagull dives for a bread crust Lying in the serene, oily water. Observing spectres folded on a park bench, nestling three day beards into rags, Spitefully cough out their jealousy. Pigeons swim through a gorge Of artificial monuments, gravestones: From dust to dust, and in the meantime, Maggots live well. We dance, we sing Like beautiful tin puppets. Painted and new. Yes, you would almost think it real, Except for a man's low groan In the dark ofa stoop. He's drunk, Too much of life, And not enough, Of living. C. Richard Kirkwood -4' zfifmm ' ' 'V' A4561 I 2,5 in Qfa ,Ak-3-3 W 'K w . . 'ff' mr- M' ff- 'Y Y' , i f 'ff 9 Q, a 'NW QA . -'sf 'ff V,.. .1 5 Q THE LEHMAN CDRPURATIUN A DIVERSIFIED INVESTMENT COMPANY: Essentially a common stock fund invested in industries which appear best situated to profit from expansion of the American economy. 1965 Annual Report available upon request THE LEH MAN CORPORATION Listed on the New York Stock Exchange One South William Street New York, N Y 10004 f . 2 'QM 3.- o1Qi3!b'5'gg,gIg9Igf Mg- . 2' 4 X K lux iiYfg?z,!'A:1 . If. ,:-km. ,aw mf 2 y-J,.-gwfggwh .7 -QB Xwffiff ,grid Q WA 4 It 3 . W It f ,. Qfirfgrsf' Caution: Cigarette Smoking May Be Hazardous To Your Health ri S 4 'lu v ,3,5' 5 BATTER LUMBER CO., INC Mason Materials Lumber 224 CLAY STREET NEW HAVEN 7, CONNECTICUT Tel.: 777-6541 GO WEST YQUNG MAN! The Colorado hills no longer hold the gold The people do One out of seven Coloradans owns stock compared with one out of ten nationally The number of Colorado share owners has risen 55'Z1 since 1962 about three times the national average The Colorado population has grown at mcome in Colorado has risen more than 5073 since 1957 And the livin lS easy The Colorado sun shines 305 days a year You can play golf 328 days a year In Denver the hum1d1ty is the lowest of the 30 largest cities in the U S And you re only an hour from ski country If the combination of superb climate and excellent invest ment career potential interests you contact Boettcher and Company Colorado s oldest and largest mvestment firm Call or write Mr Pat Fellows Boettcher and Company 828 17th Street Denver Colorado 80202 Phone 303 292 1010 Boettcher and Company Members: New York Stock Exchange American Stock Exchange Midwest Stock Exchange Offices: Denver New York Chicago Boulder Colorado Springs Considering the investment business? 9 a faster'rate than that ot the U.S. for 25 years. Personal Pueblo, Grand function, Foit Collins ,and Greeley. 012 fracfom' BUCHINGHAM ROUTH CO HEATING S- VENTILATING AIR CONDITIONING POWER PIPING PLUMBING 64 GROVE STREET NEW HAVEN CONN. O65lI TELEPHONE 624 9653 COHEN Gu. POWELL - ' STQPAG IW W' E fl-- I I H 'I 33 X-N X c W , F . Yes ,,...,, VAN A- YT T f s E9 so VAULT-SAFE VANS Household goods are as safely stowed as in a vault in our' modern vans Moreover your most intimate home furnishings are as san:- tarily cared for as though they were still in your own rooms. Your articles are almost magically picked-up and set-down with care on your mind when we Move or Store your effects' Cornell IS if 1 Compliments of JOTY LAMP SHOP Lamp repairs and Custom Mountings Lamp shade construction and repair 993 DIXWELL AVE. HAMDEN CONN 624 02I8 ' I . . , . ' , no - I , ll! 'This is an advertisement and does not reHect the opin' of the editors. Progressive fast growing Good body oli'ers you I Afliliation with one of the country s largest and most expan sion mmded brokerage and in vestment banking firms ll00 Registered Representatives over 80 offices in 80 cities across the nation I Facilities and services in every area of investing stocks mutual funds bonds commodities Good body is also an aggressive invest ment banker raising new capital for corporations and money for municipalities through a variety of public and private financing techniques I A major Sl million a year Re search Department that backs up your selling I A comprehensive 6 month training program in the securities business The first three months in the branch office or depart ment where you will go upon completion of the program The next three are spent in school at Goodbody s Home Office in New York City You are paid a good salary while a trainee supple mented by a cost of living allow ance for the time in New York I Salary potential which is vir tually unlimited At Goodbody merit alone determines advance fringe benefits are provided I Help in generating new bust ness through extensive year around advertising and promotion campaigns lf you are ambitious and attracted by the greater than ever oppor tunity for rewards both material and personal in this vital Ameri can lndustry write for more 1n formation Just address Dr Gab riel T Kerekes Director of the Training Program in New York Think Goodbody GOODBODY 8: CO. 2 Broadway, New York 4 Members New York Stock Exchange - Private Bond wires I0 our qfficcx in: Atlanta Boston Chicago Cleveland Dallas Denver Detroit Ft. Lauderdale Jacksonville Los Angeles Miami Palm Beach Philadelphia St. Petersburg Tucson Thinking of an investment career'-' K La Salle Street Press 325 West Ohio Street Financial Legal and Commercial Printers Chicago, Illinois 60610 Montgomery, Scott 61 Co Members of New York Stock Exchange American Stock Exchange Philadelphia-Baltimore Stock Exchange Chicago Board of Trade Commodity Exchange Inc Natl Assn. Securities Dealers C2121 964-4800 123 S. Broad Street Philadelphia 9 Pa C2151 735-7400 52 Mason Street Greenwich Conn. Q203J 869-8614 25 E. Salem Street Hackensack NJ. C2101 488-8500 120 Broadway New York, N.Y. WNW BIBBQ The first Nam: in TEXTILES YOU LIVE WITH BIBB lt would be hard to find a home in America to which Bibb Textile Products have not contributed beauty, comfort and utility in some measure. Bibb Yarn and Fabrics are woven into luxurious carpets, fashionable draperies, beautiful upholstery materials and many other household textiles. You'll find Bibb also in the office.. .in industry. . .and in the wardrobes of America. Twenty great Bibb Plants odd to the wealth and prosperity of Georgia and the South. You live better with Bibb! BIBB MANUFACTURING CO. MACON, GA. Since 1876: ci Good Company, oi Good Citizen, o Good Place to Work the only complete service for a successful yearhoolf from photography to lithography Arr! g fG ph Ars p dd pltlyfl bib tty ddlq f at aooaatk AW VJ Editors are always surprised when the book, whatever it may be, is finished. Then a little puz- zled to explain how. It is especially difficult this year, for the 1967 Banner is the product of un- stinting effort by many individuals. Without doubt the greatest contributions to this book were made by Toby Atkins and Pete Nelson. Toby, in his role as Production Manager, first dangled before the Banner's Executive Board the concept of a square yearbook, devoid of copy, and divided into sections by wondrous- colored tip-ins. He then smiled, confessed he had meant it only halfway so, and set about his task of designing the book. In the end Toby elicited ideas beyond number and effort far beyond expect- ations from the staff. Pete, with a wry grin and his usual gentle manner, took on the job of Photography Editor know- ing full well he might have to take most of the pictures himself. Prophecy proved for once frighten- ingly true. Yet it was Pete who in the end pointed out what had happened to us along the way: those who had undertaken a year ago to direct the Banneris fortunes had, somewhere along the way, become truly excited about their charge. Whatever enthusiasm started from the top was more than fully reciprocated by the rest of the staff. Dan Chang, termed superheeler,,, surpassed everyone else by his efforts to become the cru- cial number two man of the photo staff. The Editorial Board was blessed with greater numbers: Elliot Azoff and Tom Knutsen performed with distinction as Copy Editors, Kurt Barnes, Dave Doret, Joe Green, and Mabry Rogers gave extraordinary aid in assembling the book, while Iim Latimer took the load of editing the Prom Program off the rest of the staff just when the Banner made its greatestdemands. Only the limitations of space prevent naming at least a dozen more, the quality of whose work and the spark of whose enthusiasm was as high as anyoneis. It would be the height of egotism to imagine that only editors and photographers contributed to this yearis Banner. Under the sceptre of Frank Berson, our urbane and efficient Chairman, the Banner was a smooth running organization in which everyone could exercise his particular arts of creation under almost ideal conditions. Sharon Good, the Banneris secretary, accomplished quiet wonders for a most demanding group of employers. Many heelers gave that term a more noble meaning by their extraordinary labors. Nor can we let pass unmentioned assistance of far different sorts. From Sharon Armstrong and Alice Atkins, whose understanding acceptance of the great time demands the Banner placed on their husbands allowed the latter to perform Herculean labors. And from Scott, who raised the tone of the office when he became a Rolls-Royce agent in March. From julian Fisher, a News photographer, whose good-humored banter lightened the year, and a few of whose pictures grace these pages. From Rick Kirkwood, '67, a patient listener, who allowed the editor and Production Manager to talk out frequent Banner frustrations. And from the Banneris business staff, who though mentioned only briefly here, both financed the book, and contributed greatly to the personal comraderie of the organization. In Bradbury, Sayles, and O,Neill we were blessed with a printer who combined efficiency, excellence, and patience. For this we must thank Mr. Victor H. O,Neill, partner and representa- tive, Miss Margaret Lawrence, with whom it was a real pleasure to work, and others of the staff, particularly Mrs. Curtin and Mr. Findley. In New Haven We were offered cooperation wherever- we turned. The New Haven Redevelopment Agency and the Public Information Office provided both photographs and information. From the Yale University Art Gallery came reproductions of paintings donated during the year by Paul Mellon and Miss Melvina Wetmore. The Yale Daily News graciously provided pictures of the freshman swimming team. Mr. O,Neill sent Mark Gott- lieb and Mike Folsom to our aid in moments of photographic need, while Gary Abrecht. ,67. and Mike Finkbeiner, '69, lent their talents to the photographic excellence of the book. And finally, thanks are owed to Walker Evans, Professor of Graphic Design, for his criticism in some respects, and his encouragement in others. The pleasant task of acknowledging, however inadequately, the contributions of others to the book is now over. For all the assistance mentioned above, it remains yet to the editor to point our his responsibility for all errors in fact, all failures of conception, and above all any lapes in tact. Finally, there remains only to marvel at numberless personal actions during the past year, at unexpected times and in such an unexpected setting as the Banner, which have partaken of what Edmund Burke once found an admirable phrase for, the unbought grace of lifef, r g ,, , YW, ,,, H, ,, , ,, , 1. ' s P TM A , r 1 f , 1 J wj fa v Q., fe.-Sf ' ii ,Jr . f x A, K ,A , X . nl x ' , . ' ' I ' K- J- '1 . 1 - 13' . fx, 5 -5.5 5 -75 fs - ,, , v . may V ..,,. A M .f'1, . ' f-' I -. seq' ' . 3-uw., 4.-n ,'-. , TC-uc 1 x.L 5'vTf 3,4 f., -,fl . , ',G'!.f3 .if4 L X ,,gs....,4, ef 2322, 15 Q xp g,.,,,,5 1 n..Q N . 'QQ fail: ,bw , f, Q Q if V3.3 , ed Z? url Q, 'Fa' + 34 ff , : i. 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Suggestions in the Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) collection:

Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1955 Edition, Page 1

1955

Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1957 Edition, Page 1

1957

Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 1

1958

Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1960 Edition, Page 1

1960

Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1961 Edition, Page 1

1961

Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 1

1966


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