B RO WN A LU M NI MO NT HLY

MA Y 1 986

Vol u m e 86 . 8 , No

Editor 1 8 A Rite for Ev er R eason h y Robe rt M . R odes B M ana i n Edito Sixteen years after George ass took g g r ’ ’ t B A nne m Diffil 73 over the direc ion of rown s A fro Hin an y m m Ri A erican theatre co pany , tes and Assistant Editor Reason con tinues to present original Katherine Hinds plays in inventive ways .

’ 24 Carl e Piete rs s Lo v e Affair

with A Crater on The Moon

’ This geology faculty member can t just wander out with a pick-axe to gather

m . speci ens Her lunar resea—rch depends on sophisticated telescopes including m oa d of Ed itors one high atop a Hawaiian ountain B r — and rare samples of moon rocks . Chai rm an

’ Donald B . Smith 42 29 jan e Good : One of The i ce hai rman ’ V C Nav al cadem s B est ' A y Linda Mason 64 W m m m ’ o en faculty e bers are rare at r . 70 Harold Bailey , j ’ 7 . 2 M A . T . ’ Annapolis , but j ane Good M . Charles Bakst 66 ‘ : m a 74 enjoys a special notoriety She teaches Pa ela Const ble R ' ussian studies to a very conservative E w r . 55 Stuart P . r in , j — m ’ m ’ group of students the Acade y s ale R . F 43 obert P isler “ and m m . Deborah Pines Livingstone ‘ 80 fe ale ids ’ Cathleen McGu igan 7 l ’ 55 john j . Monaghan ’ R i tr John V . e s u p 58 ' Robert P . Sanchez 58 m 7 Wendy j . Stroth an ? ’ Wallace H . Terry 59 ’ D e art m ent W 73 p s Elizabeth B . est ‘

W . Billy R . ooten 70 PhD Nati onal Ad v erti si ng R ep resentati v e - The Berkowitz Van l u gen Co . 1 45 East 63rd Street Y 1 002 1 New ork , NY (2 1 2) 753- 9740 Cov er photograph by J ohn F orasté

1 986 b B rown Al umni M onthl u b shed y y. P li mo nthl w th comb ned ssues in Decem y . i i i he r/ anuar u nej u l and Au u st/Se J y . j j y , g p tembe r b B rown U n ers t rov de nce . y iv i y . P i .

R I . nted b The Lan e ress PO . Box Pri y P . 1 30 V Bur n ton t . 05402 . Ed tor a offices li g . i i l are m N cho son Ho use 7 ] G eo r e St i l . g

ro dence R. l . 02906 . Me mber Co u nc P vi . , il for the Advance ment and Su pport o f Ed u cat The Monthl i ion. y s sent to all B ro wn alu mni . Please allow eight weeks for chan es-of-address wh ch shou d be sent to g . i l Box I 854 ro v dence R I . 029 l 2 . . P i . M ust Horace Co mpromise?

’ Editor : Anne Diffily s profile of M m Ted Sizer , ust Horace Co pro m ? ” BAM M ise ( arch) , is unquestionably ’ the finest piece I ve seen in over twenty years of reading the B rown Al u mni M onthly . I f there are national awards for such things , as I su ppose there are , I should like to know where I might send a letter of nom ination . B esides being splendidly written , ’ Diffil in Ms . y s essay is notable for its cl u sio n of materials (not hers) critical of ' —c Ho ace s D r . Sizer arpin g reviews of r ’ Compromise and Sizer s own modest and m wry confessions of fallibility . Such a te rial alone m akes this article stand out m m a ong the usual such things , unifor ly and predictably laudatory and one- sid m in ed . This is honest journalis that ’ profession s highest tradition , of which Anne Diffily is an ad m irable exem plar . I conjecture , however , that the ’ piece s excellence owes as m uch to Sizer

m Ms . Diffil . hi self as to y That is , I daresay that Sizer m ust have insisted on inclusion of negative material as a con - insis dition of his co operation . Such tence would only be in character , namely that of as wise and honorable an educational leader as Anne Diffily is a brilliant writer .

R PhD . RI CH A RD H . EIS

M arion M ass. ,

’ Editor : A nne Diffily s cover story on Ted Sizer in the March issue intro du ced some of the schools in our Coali m m tion of Essential Schools . Alu ni ight be interested to see the entire mem ber ship : Coal i tion of Essen tial Schoo l s

m B N . Y . ; Adel phi Acade y , rooklyn , S W B_ronxville High chool , estchester

C N . Y . ; ounty , Central Park East Sec o ndar D #4 y School , istrict , New York ; City ; Hope High School , Providence m Park Heights Street Acade y , Balti m ; F ore Paschal High School , ort W ; orth , Texas Portland High School , n Donov a Brace of cs: dean of as rofes o cl si P o es, s r so om men and ph r fresh

Thi e r co e and s summ , m share a classro w t h om it h em . ' S er Co lle e 86 umm g , J ne 2 2 -2 8 o n t he ca u , mpus

' As some of this y ear s facu lty for ’ B ow n s w e - on u mm o e e r e k l g S er C ll g , ’ they re getti ng ready to w elcome you r oa , mi n for the w e f - c ch d e k o J u ne 2 2 2 8 . ate Team ’ W e re planni ng sev eral u niq ue offer n : m o ni n cou e in The Emotions i gs a r g rs , an i nterdiscipli nary l ook at how w e are affected by our emoti ons in ou r relation s s all of em : w h en s hip th it par t , c en o e s and how e hildr , l v r gr at w riters such as A ri stotl e and Shake speare dealt w ith ou r essential ele ments; and a seri es of afternoon w o ho s on tness lm ublic s eakin rks p fi , fi , p p g , and strategic planning for business and o he un e a n t r d rt ki gs. Su mmer College is a great w ay to stretch y ou r mi nd and you r vacati on ' o a at the m W d ll r sa e time. ou ldn t you like to do something different and stim u lating this su mm er? For mo e nfo ma on c 4 0 1 - 8 63 r i r ti , all 2 7 8 5 or retu rn the cou pon to S u mmer o l e B ox 192 0 B ow n U ni e s C l ge , r v r ity, P ov n e ce RI 02 9 12 . r id ,

NA M E CLA SS YEA R

A DDRESS

A prOgram in B rOw n U mv em y 5 Connnuing Coll ege B rown ’ s ad m ission office react ? ’ ’

P U B U R 70 72 A M . A L KE ,

Washin ton D C. g ,

P roud grandmo ther

: m Editor As a proud grand other , I particularly enjoyed the article on the Pandas (Mardie Corcoran and Lisa

B BAM M . ishop) ( , arch) I thought the enclosed list of B rown alum ni m ight be of interest :

P 1 887 . Herrick latt Young , Howell T ’ 2 1 u Young , Elizabeth Lee (Yo ng) j ef ’

W 24 R . fers insor , Theodore j effers ’ 23 B B ’ 54 , etsy Lee (l effers) ishop , j ohn ’

56 D . Herrick j effers , avid K j effers ’ ’

82 B 86 . 3 B , Lisa ishop I have rown banner with these classes on it . O ther fam ily mem bers who have ’ 3 1 B : . D attended rown 1 onald j effers , ’

20 F . B Edward Howell , Edward ishop ’ ’

54 B 59 . , and arbara (Clark) j effers W R ’ 4 ELI ZAB ETH ] . I NSO 2 P rov idence

Penned i n w ith Greenhouse reno vation

’ Hin l osel -hel d stock ? Editor : Katherine ds s vignette y m of j a es Conary , horticulturist of the B BAM F rown Greenhouses ( , ebruary) , ’ man Bear wi th u s and and w e l l show nicely captured the spirit of the _ p . y ou how y ou can be bulli sh wi th and his lace of work Your botanically inclined readers may be interested to stock in a closely-hel d corporati on g m p Wi if of sel - l know that we are nearin co letion of th a g t clo y he d stock , a major renovation of the u pper y ou will e ei e i e r c v a char tabl greenhouse . The single large area has i m tax u ti of f ir m nco e ded c on the a now been divided into three roo s , m lu of the e uri i arket va e s c t es at each of which has separate tem perature the tim f th if e o e g t The stock will and hu m idity control . The renovated be hel d by the U ni versity and facility will perm it experiments u nder m e l e ou g m can be redee d at r by y or ri orously controlled environ ental . m su i ou conditions and will thereby enhance your co pany, as r ng that y

m . n tr l our research and teachin g progra s retai con o . m For fu i f m ti if The renovation was financed by inco e rther n or a on on a g t m M 1 860 fro the Horace George iller , , of in - l stock a closely h e d corpora F 1 9 1 0 und , a bequest received in for t : ion contact general purposes of the biological lab

i . Of of Pl G vin orator es The fice anned i g R M FR ANK G . O TH AN Brow n Uni versity P rofessor and D ean of B iology Box 1 893 Campus P RI 0 2 1 2 rovidence , 9 (40 1 ) 86 - 2 3 374 A nniversary

Editor : This March an im portant anniversary occurred which I do not O n M believe should go unnoticed . arch 3 1 98 1 B m M , , rown E ergency edical ’ Services Association s response corps began operation of a student-run vol M D e u nteer m . BA a bulance service ( , Planned Giv in g cember 1 98 1 /january D uring the past five years this grou p has con tinu ed to serve the B rown com munity . Many changes have happened over the STAN DAVIS ’ 68 Wa ne M aine y , I t The Univ ersity did not expel the students. “ ” r h t eri d e th disen olled themfo a s o p o . S e e r r— April issue of this magazine Editor

Editor : The recent hunger strike by several students was heroic in intent but m isguided in fact . Like the stu ’ m a dents fast , divest ent is headline grabbing gesture whose time has come and gone . 1 9705 m m I n the late , such sy bolis served the purpose of making com pa nies explain their South A frica policies ' and perhaps think twice about expan B u sion . t the agenda in South Africa has moved past sym bols . I nternal polit ical forces have generated econom ic pressures vastly more powerful . The international business com m unity is quietly backing out of South m u ltina Africa as a result . Two dozen tional corporations , including General F m oods and Apple Co puter , have been m reducing their holdings . Last Septe ber , foreign banks refused to roll over 1 4 - $ billion in short term loans . Pretoria froze repayments of debts and the cur ' m m reney collapsed . So e A erican banks have halted all new loans . South Africa m ust now choose political accommodation as the only alternative to chronic econom ic insta bilit m y , which da ages all its citizens .

W . B m President P . otha has oved in that direction , by declaring apartheid “ ” m m an ’ out oded and ost recently by Brown s Al u mn i Rel ati ons O ffi ce has an no u ncing an end to a seven -month state m op ening for a M inority A l u m ni p rogram of e ergency . rdi nator Sophisticated B rown students coo — should be looking to Washington not ’ We are k n for me e fi l the i i of their dinner plates or B rown s stock loo i g so on to l pos t on Assistant Dire l m ni Re i i e bili for min i ortfolio+if ctor, A u lat ons w th r sponsi ty or ty p a g S - they w nt chan e in outh iti ill be e alumni program s and fund raising. The pos on w op n Africa . Look at Haiti and the Philip thi s summer . p . ’ ines Both experienced change for the We re looking for a Brown graduate who has excell ent g g m iz ti and mm i i ill em e better with strate ic nud es fro organ a onal co un cat on sk s , d onstrat d W . e i in in e f l e e e of ashington And that without the xper ence runn g succ ss u v nts , knowl dge ’ B m e i l i the li guidance of rown s student activists . pro otion t chn ques and pub icat ons , and abi ty to work LA WRENCE jO SEPHS ’ 80 wi th a wi de variety of peopl e and the will ingness to occasionall y New York City work unusual hours . The e e ? W i i b n fits ork ng in the U n v ersity atmosp here .

i in i of i e . W in wi S cce of another kind Stay ng touch w th the world d as ork g th

e in . in f l n u ss interesting peopl e . Trav l g Involv g your e low alumni i

n e pe ie e . : the Brow x r nc Editor I keep seeing news of vari If are in e e e e m e i e , p m you t r sted l ase send your r su to Assoc at i e e l . R 1 920 U i e i ous class ates and others with stories V c Pr sident Sal ie K iggs , Box Brown n v rs ty ,

g vi e R e 0291 2 M a 23 . If ou are of reat financial successes and decided Pro denc , hod Island by y y not

. A f in e e e e e ll fri d m e mi be to share a success of another kind t r st d , pl as ca a en or class at who ght i t ter fifteen years of being out on my n erested and who fits the descripti on above . sam e ob n for e p . own , I have yet to hold the j for Tha ks your h l m W ore than three years . hile being B own ni i ua u m m m r U vers ty is an eq l opport nity employer . co fortable in bla ing school syste s , ad minis the politics therein , or various trato rs me for not accepting , I have finally been able to accept the fact that panies in and around the Portland area . well as others will lend hope to those “ m ’ it is my own inability to confor to I can t offer the kind of stories who have failed . m standards established long before y most B rown graduates send to the I hope to appear for the reunion

We . B . . BAM . arrival eing, or feeling , right is no , at least not at this point B ut I can this spring shall see ’ —in 7 1 m m R RD . O R O guarantee of e ploy ent fact , the b p ICH A K H T N attest to . the a ility of the s irit to

mas rv w i i . . su e B ath M aine opposite is generally the rule A ncred ble odds I know there , ’ ’ ter s degree in counseling, achieved are those who can say that this isn t bad m m within two se esters rather than the at all , there are people starving, ho e Street i n — s g s m . . etc nor al two years , has not necessarily less , etc , etc , but each person has m m : hel ped the e ploy ent record , though things significant , and until I face star Editor I was appalled to see your

m m . m men the infor ation gained is certainly vation , ho elessness , etc , this will do jocular treat ent of the who had I ’ m . . m . worthwhile just fine , thank you not altogether stolen signs fro area roads These im m No , the success of which I write is certain , anyway , that hardships pranksters had lined their roo s with ’

. m at of another , less tangible kind It is one posed by one s ind are any less for stop , yield , and danger signs in an - m - , m idable , m at m . of survival , of growth , of self discovery than those i posed by Nature te pt boyish char and derring do F r m . o and it took place over a long and tortu Politics , or Society yself I can say However , such warning signs exist D m m ous route (as the Grateful ead once that the worst of any of the events of to warn drivers , and so eti es without ’ m m W . said , hat a long, strange trip it s the past onths has been y own fear , those warnings accidents happen In m m im oc been and , resulting fro that fear , y one particularly sad incident that m me M m m . m m m y arriage of eleven years ended obility The ajor learnin g for curred near y ho e town , a other O m am mo last ctober in divorce , with y chil has been that , when I afraid , and her daughter died at a blind inter ne dren now living with me only on week tion is the best defense . O step at a section because they thou ght they had — m : ends the bitterest pill to swallow , as ti e , but take that first step and the the right of way . B ut all in good fun ’

m Fo r m e . they are more important to e than next and the next . that works that sign probably hangs on someone s m m . anything . The last two years have been So , on the tangible side , y two bedroo wall m m m 7 BAM the ost difficult I could i agine , with children , N icholas (al ost ) and Ash I n the future , the should m p g (j g m e m m g the last five or six ont—hs ex lodin in ley ust turned ive the ajor think twice about pro otin such care one crisis after another the divorce in strokes in m y life and represent the less and idiotic activity . ’ ’ ’

O m reatest o . I m R M R U 86 ctober , y grandfather s death in g j y living with a wonderful CH IS A I A LT ’ m m m su bse m P ov iden e Septe ber , y grand other s lady na ed Susan who reinforces and r c o We quent sudden death in j anuary , a p adds to that joy . struggle , we ache — W ‘ tentiall D m m . y fatal accident in ece ber , but ost of all , we grow hile I still A modest propo sal m ajor and expensive auto repairs , vari face serious financial battles , largely : am ous court battles related both to the due to the fact that , in the divorce , I Editor I writing in agitated divorce and to the state of my finances was granted (l) responsibility for all concern over the survival of B rown . As am m U m (I literally too poor to file for bank utual debts , and while I could at any the niversity beco es larger and ru tc m m m p y) , and job prospects hopeful yet ti e be hauled into court again , I view ore diverse , increasing nu bers of m . m un productive this ti e as valid , as positive , as alu ni are ending their contributions ’ - m m . The success , then , co es fro the growthful and I can t wait to view it in protest over one thin g or another ability to withstand all this and still look from a m uch higher level of achieve Although it is difficult to make p re all I ’ m m in positively ahead . Throu gh it I have ment . ore than ready for good dictions where virtual gifts are m m m m m —o r m anaged to aintain a hopeful and ti es to co e y way rather , for volved , the two develop ents are cer

m . O ptim istic attitude without resortin g to me to go out and pursue those good tainly incompatible . Hence y concern - i m . F m drugs or alcohol or child beating, or t es urther ore , there is clearly nothing to — -m m - So — m m wife urder , or suicide ( y ex wife the success is unusual but I p revent these alu ni fro soon de

me : D m m . tells of a shirt which states ivorce see it very uch as success , in not anding the return of past gifts as well m ! 1 ’ is better than urder would want to buckling under to the pressure (though I f such a trend develops , it won t be ’ : m add to the back But don t push I God knows I ca e so very close) , in long before the entire B rown endow m m m realiz m have learned to live each o ent as it re aining a positive person , in ent is gone , there will be a negative m m in co es , without ignorin g to orrow but g, too , that in those things I do have I cash flow into B rown , and the rest of us without spending m uch ti m e in fear or am a lucky man and a deserving one . will have to begin sending money di

. m rectl D m . worry of it It is y hope that this letter w—ill y to the isgruntled Alu ni m m BAM be m . I do have a job to report , which is so ehow find roo in the Hence y agitation m on an occasional basis . I facilitate the cause I am sure that the B rown degree B rown and its loyal alu ni are in D fi nancial eo ard m Navy Alcohol and rug Safety Action has failed to guarantee success for oth grave j p y , and ust take

P m a m ma m . rogra at the Naval Air St tion in ers beside yself, and it y give heart grave easures for survival As one M - m B runswick , aine , which is a week long to those who are struggling and who such easure , I propose a use tax on m - m se inar of self awareness , values clar see little ore than the countless stories the rights and privileges granted by the - m m u nica i n m co . ificat o D m . , decision aking, of financial and corporate success Not B rown i plo a ( Because they are m — l I m tion skills , and so e substance aware that I knock that at all look forward nowhere explicitly spelled out , assu e 1 . m m u ness and education do this well , and I to adding y own to the class we are free to ake p whatever rights — ; m love doing it , althou gh by its occasional notes but I know how discouraging it and privileges we please I choose the nature it is not life - su pportin g as I need has been for me to see all of my friends to be : the right to sm ile sm ugly when ! m men . O I v a job to be therwise , while awaiting who have done so well and ade their ever the words y League are - m m m 1 m . tio ned full ti e and per anent work , do securities during y struggle Perha ps , the right to defend elitis with ’ m i m i co m m te porary ass gn ents at var ous news of one who hasn t ade it quite as condescending tolerance , and the priv ilege of believing that , even though you ’ you rself don t have a average m household inco e , you are still very important to BAM advertisers . ) This tax will be aimed chiefly at D m isgruntled A lu ni , and will be levied each tim e such an alu m nus is conceded some measure of social distinction di rectly attributable to The I ncreasingly Prestigious B rown D iploma . Ad mitted l y , this will be difficult to enforce , ex cept in those obvious cases where the alu m nus is caught at the I vy League Club basking unasha m edly in a new found sense of fraternity with his co m patriots from Harvard and Yale . O u r D m m isgruntled Alu ni ust , e how ver , retain a voluntary channel for their generosity , as they obviously have V a c a t i n P l a nn i n G u ide m - o g a co pelling urge to give , which they Fo r can restrain only with difficulty . this I propose associations of D isgru n l d m t e Alu ni who are united in their We t hink we can be o f assist ance t o y o u in p l anning y ou r m m m co on disbeliefs . To for such an i e ff in f e next v acat io n . List ed be o w are adv e t s s o e e D m l r r r g r association , a isgruntled Alu nus d ec iv e his bo o k et s o r b o chu es . A ll ou need o t o e t would locate all others who share his l r r y r m m at e ia is ci c e t he co esponding n u mbe s o n t he co u po n own special vision ; then , each ti e r l r l rr r ’ W he e ! som e individual at B rown offends and r et u r n it t o u s . e ll do t r st m m . , x g the they all e chan e oney A L NI F LI GH TS A R A D — u u rance I n The dd e es mon s n hts and 1 . U U M B O l x ry F Mi l Ag ; k , k ig nfortunately , it is very unlikely travel program excl usively for alumni of I v y townsmen: Spai n and P ortugal ; a golden era of

D m Lea ue and ce ta n othe d st n u shed u n e cu tu e an on a e of ower. C rc e No . 4 . that any isgruntled A lu nus of g r i r i i g i iv r l r , ir g p i l t n n N e e on o n o s es. c udes d a, pa , C y , e , DA B i i I l I i l l B r A Y N I SLA ND A N ( ) 5 . J U Y B , L G , B rown hereafter called a will be Sumat a J a an and southeast s a East A f MB O , p , r A i — e e ate e s e TI G UA e y e c us , y p , y p m ca E t G eece s a no the Ga a a os v r x l iv v r riv v r . gy p , , , p g , able to locate even one other alu nus ri r A i Mi r l - d u cial . 34 de u e su tes on a 300 acre s an . S - New G u nea A ustral ia/ New Zea and as we as l x i i l , , o f i l ll o t n w ter o t e h beaches tenn s cr ue a d a s s. who exactly shares all his petty opin p , , q p a d st nct e ser es to Eu ope. C rc e No . 1 . r i r i i iv i r i l - w n n n w th wor d c ass nes. . O e of ions and prejudices (a condition which — Fi e cui si e i l l i H CA A L A T C P A Y Le the C own J ewe s in the Ca bbean. e 2 . FRE NC N N BO OM r ' l ri Fiv DA B — ’ ill n h h m n t n Hideawa R e ort J an. 86 . Conven P a o t e cana bar e for t e d sc a sta s. . is nevertheless necessary if the is p l g i ri i i g r y p , to r emain fi rm t a e e Each wee from r throu h cto ient fl hts f om all ma o c t es. C rc e No . 5 . consistent and in his r v l r. k , Ap il g O ig r j r i i i l ber its fou - membe crew am e s f om one to , p p — . m r r r r N N T t on in ) , 6 . A TUCKE T R S S aca fu y convictions Therefore the sche e will six guests float ng th ough the g o ous ench OO v i ll i r l ri Fr fu n shed one and two bed oom apa tments DA B m mmodat ons count s de . The u u ous acco r i r r p y , work best if each beco es a se a r i l x ri i N ntuc et ha bo cab e TV hone a ongs de a ( , p , f ne food and w ne and su e or se v ce all con l i k r r l m . p , i i ri r i w/ d nens) . O r, e a in Bed ea fast rate autono ous Association unto s re to c eate a ho da e e ence ke none , li r l x Br k p y p ’ m i r li x ri li wha er ca ta n s home that o e oo s town . ) h n wn ( p hi self The tax advantages alone you a e e e o . C c e No . 2 . l i v rl k v v r k ir l k d mu ffi n f u t e e a e and harbor. a e s b s m m ( B , r i v r g . m — W GLE NC E an nt mate reso t inn on wate se ed each morn n . al k to e e th n ! Bro should reco end this Each ti e a 3 . O i i r r rv i g ) v ry i g DA B - Box 2A 2 ant c m 7 2 4 P . k h r r din h e . 61 2 8 9 80 . O 5 N u in a et a s . G ac ous se ce. De c ous c u learns of so e reprehensible P g p ri i vi li i r ( ) ,

h rm n r m w th t 02584 . C rc e No . 6. in on ate f ont te race. C a oo s e am m g w g . MA i l , r r r i i event on c pus he si ply sends to his h ba con e te aces. N ea tenn s o f beac es s , g , l i rr r i l 7 FFSH RE SA I LI NG SCH L— wee DA B . sho n in Ham on. Sa sw m sno e or O O OO k p d pp g , , own ersonal fun the check that i ilt il i rk l n n t uct on acat on in o da ong sa g s s , m d W n rf n c e onfe ence f c ope . dsu g pa ag . C a l ili i r i v i Fl ri m e n e -d i i k r il n nd a ne. o he was on the verge of sendin g to rg s a s, C p e s 3 ay - - - t es. Ca D ect 1 800 468 1 500 ; C c e No . 3 . Vi i I l M i r h iv ir l in N w o t RI d t and i i ll ir e an NY . cou ses p , , C y s , B rown , and then dashes off an a ppro r r i I l — mm n ed f r o e d t n to 4 I LEE N H U HE S TRA VEL d sco er a Reco e d o c e c e . Lea sa . E G g riate ll r i r il BAM . i v p p h anced n n n ll letter of rotest to the wor d of ea n n as ou t a e . Con en a sma throu ad c u s g a d ac g . A l l r i g y r v l g i l , ll g v r i i r i r r nt d w nt - n r h cou ses ua a ee . e seco d ea . Fo Contributions diverted in this way group tours emphasizi ng theme and leaders ip . g T y y r h r n n co o broc u es ca 800 22 14 32 . I n New — h ee e c us e de artu es in 1986. En a d a d ( 6 p g l r , ll ) , T r x l iv r l would be tax deductible and the indi - o k 2 12 885 3200 . c e No 7 Wa es and of oets a aces and r nces; Y , ( ) , C . . l ; l p , p l p i r Or ir l vidual DA B funds could be invested in some secure asset a pproved by the m W n alu nus , like a in ebago . (The tra I v y Lea gu e A l u m ni M a gaz i n es d itio nal letter of protest should be re P . 0 . B ox 2 8 69 tained ; after all , these epistles of self — ' C i n o n I A 5 2 7 3 5 2 8 69 congratulatory bombast are the DA Bs l t , way of announcing to classmates that Please send t he v acat io n / t rav el information correspon di ng to t he n u m m m they suffer an e barrass ent of riches bers I have circled: that grossly violates their sense of fair mad worth , and that they are in a hurry to dispose of it . )

Given the severity of the situation , m this is a fairly odest proposal , but one ’ which will preserve B rown s linancial future while allowing her Disgruntled m m value ost highly . a ong us are led to our livelihoods by a ’ MA RTI N M U R PHY 7 3 patient and encouraging mentor who

Los Altos Cali . e m , f b co es equal parts teacher and Fo r me man a friend . , such a was J y ’ The worst Barry 50 . The sad news of his death brought back memories of his prom i Editor : The news this week was the nent place in my fond memories of - B l worst that an ex student of B rown can rown , and how inf uential j ay was in be ex pected to take . We have had shaping my young career . m et a 1 978 cheerleaders that refused to extend the I first j y in the fall of , me proper respect to our national anthem . when he hired to cover the fresh We have had a faculty that voted m an football team for his B rown Foot F m against having NRO TC return to ou r ball Association newsletter . ro the m W . e m ca pus have had students that first story I sub itted , j ay was unfail advocated the issuance of cyanide tab ingly com plimentary while managing to lets to the student body as a protest al most sublim inally offer tips to how I

. W against nuclear weapons e have had could do better . m students that actively de onstrated The following two years , when I against the CI A . We have had students wrote a colum n about the varsity team ’ and undoubtedly faculty members tell for j ay s newsletter and sports features U BAM m our niversity that it should sell all its for the , his always affable anner m holdings in co panies that do business never failed me . in South Africa . Now we have what At least once a week in the fall and m appears to be a p rostitution ring at our al ost as often in the spring, I would ’ What wil e the U . l b next beloved niversity drop by j ay s office , which was always evelation a a ostitution i n ? r , g y pr r g Enough cluttered with a variety of sports books is e ou h m m n g and football ga e progra s , novels , M m B m m . I for one believe that it is ti e for and rown e orabilia ostly , the all of the alu m ni who are as disgusted meetings were on the pretense of dis B u t m as I am to get together and organize a cussing a story idea . in any ways grou p that will work for a return to the our talks were a m uch - needed refuge days when B rown was respected by from the often overly competitive na

m B . everyone . So e changes m ust be made ture of student life at rown and we cannot look forward to the jay always made m e feel good m m present liberal grou p now running our about yself and y ability , even when U niversity to make those necessary som e m em bers of the faculty were not W hav e at n th i i . . e s o e s del nes lon changes g as flattering He was a good listener , a h and m t n enou we us do somethin and do it . g g trusted advisor , and a cherished frie d as t I t is time r han W fas as possible. fo a c ge and hen I needed advice about a trouble

a bi chan e. m m m m g g so e su er job choice , j ay welco ed I do not know how many B rown my somewhat frantic late -night tele m W -m alu ni feel like I feel about this but I phone call . hen I needed last inute have a hunch that there are enough tickets to the Pops Concert on my u a m people who are fed p and will stand graduation weekend , j y anaged to i t Your Logo Emb o dered ere u m m m —in n . e r i H p and be cou ted If you feel like I do , find seats for and y fa ily the me U Better Than Lacoste please drop a line and after seeing front row , at the elbow of the niversi if there is any su pport we will decide ty president . ’ or Ralph Lau ren what our next step should be . Please I have tried to take j ay s lessons m e 8C M me n m B contact at arsh Harbor , Star with since graduati g fro rown 1 00 % o on pol o shir embroi R . 5 B 1 c t t ts t 29902 98 1 . , eaufort , South Carolina in As a federal courts and legal d r d wi h ym logo or d ign . e e t es and I will keep you advised as to our affairs reporter for the Dallas Times Th b es d ff e e be een ueen ’ e gg e a Q sbo o H e a d 1 m . l i t i r nc tw r progress Any suggestions will be sin r , still try to e ulate j ay s and a a os e or Ra au e sh is a Shirt L c t lph L r n irt th t r - ce el . flowin . s , a ueens o o omes our o or y appreciated easy g writing style As a per on Q b i i y ! _ r Sh rt c w th am libe alism des gn. no e dea a o d y g out for I convinced that r on I try to be the sensitive friend to others i A —v l i in w rl cr in o a on ou asso a es e s em m a m e . inn v ti y r ci t , cli nt , the part of our faculty and past ad in that j y was to ’ lo ees and f w p y ri ends will enjoy fe of your istratio ns has brought all of our p rob Many times since learning of jay s acq u isitions more . m le s to fruition and if you feel the death , I have read over a letter j ay Our m mum o de i s us six s s, and e e m m M a 1 984 j y me m . e ini r r t hirt v r sa e , let hear fro you wrote to in y , soon after he s we ma e is gu_c_tranteed un ondi onal y for at ’ RO R . HN N 43 . hirt k c ti l O SO R . B E T A j , j learned his cancer had returned eas an ent re ear. For a y p e s , b oc ue and l t i ric li t r h r B eau o t S . C. REE C M E e or C f r , Typed , of course , on B rown stationery , F LOTH SA PL S , writ ALL - F or an u date on the v ice obe see Unde m u REE l H R ( in 718 782 p p , the letter delivered so e typically p TOLL F S I T NY — r r the E lms Editor beat words for me before he ever men

tio ned . In two and a a f weeks yo u can have you his health h l r “ - s s. m m hirt R emembe ring J ay B arry j ust re e ber one thing as et im good as you g , you can always “ ’ The u eensboro Shirt Co . : O m . So Q Editor nly the ost fortunate p rove , he wrote don t level off at

De t . [0 3d o p 19 Nort h l l th Sr. Green o nt NY l 1 2 1 1 , p i , any point in your career and become television is apt to show Negro police m n in m too satisfied . e blue unifor s clubbing inno m dem oc True for writing, and true for any cent Chileans who cla or for ” a ! other endeavor . J y Barry followed that racy To keep the record straight , the ’ m advice . It s his legacy for all of us . Chilean Carabinero dresses in a uted ’ RO B F EI NSTEI N 8 1 gree n/khaki and there are no blacks in all D as Chile . ’ I could pull Ms. Constable s article apart line by line . She obviously has M aking a po int based her interviews and im pressions of w ith h o r Chile by talking to people who consider um — them selves opposition plus her own : Editor It was good to find the let very Am erican idea of democracy . This

m D r . m F m of ter fro Hoff an , in the ebruary shows an abys al lack knowledge of BAM m R m . , who could write hu orously Latin A erica eporters cannot base m m without nastiness , and still ake his de ocracy on what they know as de

m . . a m ocrac U S . point I t see s few have th t gift y in the I n fact , no Latin Thanks . nation can be sum marily grou ped with ‘

R . 39 RO B R . m . E T L SEEKI NS , j another to for a generalization i e e sonv lle N . Y. R j ff r , The ussians call their satellite The l ette e er ed to conce ned a ul t and m . r r f r r f c y nations de ocracies I t would be , tudent o osition to R OTC and P esident s m . pp r then , a atter of definition ’ Edito Reagan s defense policies. r There are serious truths to be aired : I n 1 973 the m ilitary here in Chi Lo uis R edding le (non - political by tradition) were vir tu ally forced by the population to take Editor : The profile of Louis Red over after the three - year chaotic reign m be ding was the only one I read fro of Allende , Castro , and thousands of ginning to end in as lon g as I can re com m unists that had taken over this P m m mm member . lease do ore likewise about land fro every co unist country in m truly distin guished , but unknown , the world . Too any people do not alu m ni who represent and sustain what know what really happened here be - . 7 m 1 970 1 973 . R 1 9 3 ight have been learned at B rown tween ussia , in , lost RICHA RD KO STELA NETZ ’ 62 m iles of southern Pacific coast New Y k it m m o . r C y line It was i portant to the , but they R lost . ussia does not [like to] lose out all A no ther view of Chile and for this reason , they are behind of the exaggerated international im age : Editor I have just now [A pril] that Chile has had all these years . received my Nove m ber issue of the I t is rather frightening to realize

m e U S . B rown Alu mni M onthly . Slow boat ail that ev n out of the we are getting - m m bo m . and Christ as g downs , I presu e the results of false i ages of Chile by m m The undersigned , as well as other way of travelers fro here , fro leftist m et long residents of Chile ( A ericans) , opposition parties (where do they g so find themselves in a bitter shock over m uch m oney for so m any trips to the m m u U S P . co the slanted article written by M s. ) Since we know who the m l nists Pa ela Constable , Life in Chi e To are and what they are saying , we ’ Fo r m day : A Reporter s Notebook . this are now ore than disillusioned by the so- Christian D e mocrats , P m reason a e broke grad of earlier called l who Who m m years requests equal time . knows clai they are de ocrats but who more about Chile than som eone who form alliances with the ultra extreme — has lived here for twenty - five years ? left to enhance their ranks aim being ’ ? Dem Who speaks fluent Spanish You can t to get into power . The Christian com pare a knowledge of Chile and ocrats handed Chile into com m unist - m so Chileans based on a two onth hands , based on a series of guarantees — - m m journ as against twenty fi ve years . they de anded fro Allende on his We are very used to reading and taking office . Allende happily tossed ’ hearing that Santiago s streets are these guarantees into the nearest waste et F bloodied , that ships cannot g through basket and invited idel Castro down to

Ma ocho R him . W the p iver because of th- e dead show how to do it ere we not all bodies—and other absurd news items here for this treason? m that only reflect the political leanings of Ms . Constable talks to an unna ed ’ the reporter in question . Incidentally , banker who doesn t recognize the Chile D Ma ocho m . m the p is a ere trickle , virtually of his childhood oubtless , like ost - m m m . non existent in dry su er onths Chileans , he is panicked at the rise of We have also been told that European the urban guerrillas who , periodically, 1 989 call for a pacific protest , and they are confident that will take Chile back m out on the streets throwing rocks , to a cleansed de ocracy . Now that m burnin g ho es and businesses , setting urban guerrilla warfare is worldwide , m m bo bs , killing Carabineros who , by law , we can only hope that so ething can be are there to protect the citizenry , and done to curb this disease , a disease that m R overseas , the re porters again clai that is playing into ussian hands without I Q - m m m illion Chileans are crying for her having to exert uch ti e , and it is m democracy . spreading ore and more . o bv i No international reporter , As a partin g note , I often wonder ou sl m m d y , wants to report on the any ex what y native land would o should trao rdinary works done for the m ost some major cities break out in periodic : dispossessed in these years low cost leftist guerrilla warfare . Would the U S . m housing by the thousands , new and then understand what so e countries m m e ? odern schools , lunch progra s , free hav to cope with How easy it is to m m edical and dental care , an al ost zero criticize , to fabricate situations that ’ m m e r infant ortality rate , a cultural boo in don t exist , to twist facts to suit a p theater , art , higher education , etc . No sonal political philosophy and above all , reporter would ever print that 67 per to be stu pid enough to believe the sto ’ cent of Chile s national budget (in a ries carried around the world by paid — recession and a poor nation) is des democrats who only want to return to — tined to social work and public works . power a power that left Chile in the ’ ? ‘ W hy don t they talk about it Because it hands of a com m unist governm ent . ’ O RO Z FF RB D E isn t convenient . D TH Y I E LATT ‘ The Chilean man on the street is RO SA LES 45 S ntia o hile m . C not a political ani al He needs and a g , m wants econo ic security , and the eco nomic problem s Chile faces due to low er copper prices , a worldwide recession u that is still hurting , all add p to food for the extreme left . I might add here that we do not live under a dictatorship in the sense m o used by the glib . We co e and g as we

like , no one is bothering anybody . If this m ixture of delinquents and ex tre m ists have gotten in bed together to m m a t burn , ai and destroy , they are p to be jailed and p u t on trial . We A mericans who have lived here for many years are aghast at the naive Learn how to h ve attitude on com m unist infiltration in a m m . O our bo k li Latin A erica nly now is there so e y o pub shed . — preoccu pation about Nicaragua lost m m m You are i nvi ted to send for a free ill us a , r alre dy no atte how uch oney is trated u deb ook c e a ns how ! g i whi h xpl i . O poured into the contras ther coun ou ook can be ub s ed omoted y r b p li h , pr , . , , n tries will fall bit by bit I f then Chile a d mark ete d . was able to get out of a comm unist Wh eth e r y o ur subject is tic takeover , why are they crucified over “ t on non-f ct on m i , i i hu an rights when it is only the vio o oe s c i r p y , ? tr g entific sc o a lent left that is bein controlled , h l r m l s ec a ed I n the three years that re ain until y , p i liz , in 1 989 v m ( e e n c o nt o elections , the go ern ent is v r v e rs i al ) t s goin g full steam ahead on laws that deal hi h and s o me 4 0 with voter registration and political page broch ure parties . These parties are operating out will sh ow y ou m how to a ang e in the open for a long ti e now , so rr m for p ompt p ub nothing uch will change except , we r Iication.

, hope , that instead of fifty parties we t o s e s e c a U np u b s e d au , p y , m m m li h h r i ll wi ll n ok e a ua e and nfo m ight see the co e down to three or fi d thi s. bo l t v l bl i r m m men . F o r o u r t e e c o w te to at e . four This govern ent has any iv y r p y , ri - min VANTAG E PRES S I nc . Dept. Y 69 in responsible positions in all the , Ne w Y o k M. V . 1 0 0 0 1 - 5 1 6 W . 3 4 S t . , , istries m . r , ayors , under secretaries , etc who are civilians . These are the trainees for the future . Those of us who have interesting connections all around are fully 1 0 UNDERTHE ELM S

’ P eelin ai nt on the New ort B ri e was ntral t one rensi c e i neer M arc R i hman cou rt c ses next a e g p p dg ce o offo ng c s a ( p g ) .

Stil e na ed rad ate ’ m s m g u tory for I nterface Science . Stiles s hob while aintaining responsible oversight

m . m . c hoo l dean inn by is usic I n his spare ti e , he studies over the size of the faculty He has held s , Q u acoustics and builds classical m usical leadership positions in his professional dean of the fac ulty instru ments . societies and conducts an active re m ” The chairman of the search co m search progra . a m ittee P m Two physics professors have been p , Engineering rofessor La bert P F pointed deans , resident Howard reund , said Stiles had strong su pport B ro w n hantie o Swearer announced in April . for the position from all areas of the s s g up ' P . m m p U . hili j Stiles has been na ed niversity He s a highly acco plished and co e do w n dean of the Graduate School and cl ean scholar and researcher and has exten m , m of research , and j ohn Q uinn has been sive experience in ad inistrative work peacefully m ’ . a na ed dean of the faculty Their p in the U niversity . He s a very talented i me nts B F Co o nt 1 . p begin on july person , a very strong candidate in The rown ree Southern Africa m en ’ alitio n er Swearer described both as everyone s eyes . requested , and received , p m in m m m , M Glicksm an U outstanding faculty e bers whose , r ission late A pril fro the niver aurice the cu rent “ ” sit reputations for excellence and integrity provost and dean of the faculty , had y to construct a shanty on the in teaching, research , and service to this requested that his two positions be Green for the specified length of one

m m . . B m . co unity are un paralleled oth ade separate once again Q uinn , the week m mm were unani ously reco ended by new dean of the faculty , has served as Students nationwide at universities u m m fac lty search co ittees , which de associate provost for the faculty since that have not fully divested have built m m voted several onths to the selection 1 984 . A theoretical physicist who began shanties on their ca puses as a way of ’ . 1 965 process a g a , Q focusing attention on the apartheid is te chin t B rown in uinn s “ M Schu ack semicondu c . o f Stiles is replacing ark p , research interests are in sue The purpose the shanty on the - ad who resigned his position as dean of tors and solid state physics . Although College Green is to present to the m m the Graduate School last Nove ber in he has not tau ght since taking over his inistration , the B rown Corporation , m r a testimony contributes to a conviction important thing in this work is asking the ad inist ation and coalition h d ”

ve R m . m m . g , ag , w r and so ebody gets a long sentence I the ri ht questions ich an says reed both shanties e e dis antled “ m u r the next Thursday . worked for the defense on other You have to enjoy being snoopy and ’ me m . der cases , and believe , it s a uch paying attention to detail You also better feeling when your man is found have to be willing to state an opinion . r n ic en ineer M arc ” ' F o e s g innocent . I n a court case , the litigants can t wait ’ ‘ R m , , p R ic h an : F ac in l io n ich an however does not base years for you to rovide a definitive ini n m g s . o o his participation in a case on any prior answer They want your p , based ex eri i n the co urtro o m judgment of guilt or innocence . A few on your scientific expertise and p years ago he was asked to consult on ence . ’ Expert witnesses seem nearly as nu behalf of the owner of a toxic waste Rich man doesn t like to take out ' - merou s of . M R l s m . p g , state cases ost of the hode as attorneys in toda—y s court du After he a reed he found he d m . P m . roo s These professionals octors , was so ething of a pariah at B rown A land trials are held right here in rovi m e ’ psychologists , econo ists , engineers , lot of people her were involved with dence , he says , and I don t have to — F m m . and others are called u pon to hel p the Conservation Law oundation , an iss teaching any of y classes I will juries untangle the conflicting claims of environ mental interest grou p that was not let this interfere with my teaching plaintiffs (or victim s) and defendants in getting a restraining order on the O ne of his most popular courses is ! “ “

m R m . P re 4 12 : m . 9 P a variety of civil and cri inal cases du p , ich an recalls eople Engineering , roduct Liability

O ne m m e . veteran of the courtroo s is fused to talk to in the hallways The Engineer , the Lawyer , and the ‘

M . P m . rofessor of Engineering arc H Their attitude was , How could you do Consu er Students taking the course R m 1 957 ? ’ m ich an , who since has testified that I looked at the place , and I this year staged a ock trial on the

; . m , Challen e m in cases involving helicopter crashes , agreed it was terrible In y opinion g r ex plosion , atte pting to - as m . m elevator failures , g line explosions , the du p should have been shut down pin point the cause of the tragedy fro a o B u t and fire fatalities . A few years g he what I was being asked to testify a technological perspective . R 6 mil R m m saved the state of hode Island 35 about was , Could the wind carry odors ich an feels his courtroo ex ?” W lion by helping to prove that peeling in a specific direction on a specific day perience enhances his teaching . hen B R m m ro p N wp r g wa His own philosophy , ich an says , is I was in college , I learned fro p aint on the e o t rid e s “ - caused by im properly prepared steel . that everyone deserves their day in fessors who would cite examples from ‘ ’— m u . War m W War The steel co pany had to foot the bill co rt They have a right to technical the eaning orld I I , he “ . m m . B u t m for repaintin g the bridge advice says . I need ore odern exa R m B R m m . Last fall , ich an , an energetic ich an is one of several rown ples for y students So I talk about — man whose office is decorated with faculty who are called u pon to be ex things that go wrong today for in o f u arterhorses . [ Pan photographs of the q he pert witnesses Professor Engi stance , helicopters falling on the m D ] A m and his wife own and breed , co bined neering onald Avery and I are on building, the skywalk collapsing at ! m R Challen e ex lo several of his professional interests opposite sides in any court cases , a Hyatt egency , the g r p — bioe n i R m . m m . et etallurgy , physics , and g ich an says He handles an average sion I g students in their sopho ore e — in m , 4 1 ma n ering a urder case involving of five court cases a year and serves as year in Engineering , the first

. U m what had appeared originally to be an advisor on others He began doing terials course . sing conte porary m 1 957 m me m sim ply a fatal car accident . A wo an forensic work in , when he was a exa ples allows to show the how was found dead in her car after a colli doctoral student and an instructor of engineering plays a role in current ' M m M I T . m ta sion on a busy road in iddletown , etallurgy at The idea of engi events , and how i por nt what they re n r Da R 1 977 . ee s . a , g as consultants dates back to y learning is hode Isl nd one ni ht in The “ m O ne R m . M I T prosecution clai ed her boyfriend had , ich an explains A t , The helicopter case was one of the u m interestin o b beaten her to death , then placed her people wo ld co e wandering through rare instances when an g j R m R body in the car and staged the accident . the hallways looking for an engineer to has drawn ich an out of hode Is

m . a o I was hired by the prosecution to testify for the land . Ten years g , a helicopter land ’ do a scientific automobile accident re Rich man com pares consultants ing on the roof of New York City s Pan “ M m . A m R m . construction , says ich an That such as hi self to detectives aterials Building crashed , killin g several ‘ ’ means you apply billiard -ball physics en gineers can look at fractured surfaces people and hurling metal debris as far ” m R m m . R to a collision . ich an exa ined the of any kind , he says , and tell you all as six blocks away ich an studied the : Did ? car . He scrutinized the accident site and kinds of things it break all at once wreckage and the roof. He found there ? W — — in the position of the car when it was O ver a lon g period as it due to cor had been a crack a design defect ’ m m rosio n ? Was found . He studied the edical exa or stress there a defect in the helicopter s landing gear ; the craft ’ ’ m ? iner s m . report of the wo an s injuries the etal If a glass container explodes , rolled over onto the deck , and the W R m hat ich an told the jury , in was it an external blow , or excess pres blades hit the roof and shattered vio “ ? “ ! : lentl m . essence , was this There was no way sure inside j ust as a fingerprint expert y , like a land ine going off the car could have ended u p where it looks at whorls and can identify whose I t helps if an ex pert witness has a m ’ did without the steering wheel being they are , to an engineer every fracture thick skin . I n the courtroo , it s the ! “ ’

R m . m m . ; . , anipulated by so eone And , the is a fingerprint it leaves a trail heat of battle ich an says You re a ’ — woman s injuries were such that she Providing engineering assistance gladiator among the lions the law ’ — couldn t have received them if she had and testimony in court cases has be yers and the ju ry is the audience . ’

D m . et been in the driver s seat . espite the co e a specialized field There is now a Your pulse races ; you g all psyched ’ m R u blicat io n ournal o F or u . O defense s atte pts to discredit ich professional p , ] f p under pressure thers find the m m an t he u r ens ic E n i neerin ; R m . , j y found the boyfriend g g ich an is on its edi ex perience less exhilarating So e “ - m . to rial guilty of second degree urder You board , and he is also hel ping to people who are the best engineers in m R m o u t . m o feel funny , ich an says , when y ur p together a handbook The ost the world will not g near a courtroo R m ’ . g , m . after tryin it once ich an says . D “ ' dis issed Learn to dance on the high wire on t p p get m B m totte I ve known eo le to sick fro the A rown spokes an indicated that just r across , but dance ; have fun ’ . m p p . , ex erience They don t like the res S ith had taken a personal leave of with it Yet Violet added , such an , . m U m tem sure and they lose their cool absence fro the niversity , but that adventurous approach ust be R , m , m Court cases today ich an says Kidd re ained in school and intended pered with reflection . Your spirit will ’ . en m A . O . often are battles of the experts He to graduate this onth . be robbed if you don t take tim e to ” ; , joys being one of those ex perts in fact , , u ‘ reflect she said and you can end p m ’ ” , if he didn t love teaching so uch he d dancing on other people . “ — do forensic engineering twenty four Suc cessful w o en face B - m m m ” m etty Collier Tho as re e bers

. m hours a day I n so e ways , the job g M y “ ec ial challen e —an d takin risks when the ar Bethune m him : sp g s M m re inds —of teaching —You have to H istorical useu was founded nine g o n a o W D C ive a lecture to the jury a tech pay a spec ial price years g in ashington , The nical ' — topic , without talking down to field of black women s history and m ’ too . — the or being technical You have to The title of the April 1 0 foru m was women s studies in general was seen m “ m , g p . m M ake everythin si le to strip away Challenges of Success A fter the third then (and still is by so e) as a fad . ale -flow g n p . W the hi h hrases In the arson and last panelist had finished speaking, scholars who know her will ask , hen case , I had half an hour to explain what those in the audience of about 500 in are you going to move back into the m m m would take two weeks to cover in Engi Sayles Hall ight have a ppended to the ainstrea (of she said . — “ “ 4 l And P m - neering and to an audience that , . g ’ title roble s of Success It is risk takin to create an institution ” g m - m didn t have an en ineering back The wo en who spoke were out of dust and dirt , Collier Tho as g . of R round This sort challenge fits hode Island Attorney General Arlene conceded , and in nine years elevate it ’ R m m m exactly into ich an s view of hi self Violet , historian and director of the to an institution of national pro i ’ ! . M as a teacher fi rst You re there , he ary Bethune Historical Museu m B et nemce . m - , t m m m m - U S . says of the courtroo to interpret and y Collier Tho as , and for er To illustrate how co unally held

. A . D . B to educate vice presidential candidate (and rown definitions of success have changed , - m ) F . mes 1 960 parent Geraldine erraro Their Collier Tho as noted that until , ’ sages from the top of the mountain m ore than 60 percent of this country s B ro wn enio r indicted ’ s ranged from Violet s exhortation to go black women were em ployed as domes ’ ’ - m m m . i n ro tit tio n -rin for it , to Collier Tho as s cautionary tics To y other s generation , she p s u g m “ re arks about expectations and indi said , you were a success if you were ’ inve ti ation F m not s g vidual satisfaction , to erraro s so ber able to work , if you were su pported recollection of the personal wounds by your husband . Today , a new set of P A rovidence County Grand jury on delivered as part of her own success aspirations motivates m any black wom ’

1 1 D . m 86 : B m April indicted ana E S ith on package . en lack wo en are viewed as suc m cessfu l nine counts relating to an alleged pros The afternoon foru was part of a if they are educated , have ’ titu tion BAM - - ( , ) . W m F B ring A pril The charges day long o en s air at rown spon white collar jobs , and live an u pper ! - - , mm m m include transporting and conspiring to sored by the Coordinating Co ittee iddle class lifestyle , Collier Tho as

o n W . transport , for purposes of prostitution ; Services for omen . noted ; m m m - m loitering for prostitution aintaining a Violet , a for er nun who is the Each wo an , Collier Tho as said , mm co on nuisance ; and other sex first woman attorney general in the m ust arrive at her own definition of m . U S m . cri es , wears her suit and pu ps with the success within a context of her needs Also indicted was Providence ih - r a m r u p Your goals m ust be realistic and at off handed ai of to boy d essed “ i ble m F ta na . m surance agent Stanley Henshaw I I I on for co pany . orthright and unaffect , she added Achieving y m twelve counts , including pandering, ed , she began the panel discussion by goals (as a scholar and ad inistrator)

, m com a R m other sex offenses aintaining a defining, with hode Island accent , has required organizational and ti e mon “ , . : m m m nuisance and drug possession It her view of success Keeping faith with anage ent skills , as well as su pre e ’ Henshaw s B M m m . was in enefit Street apart your own talents , and stretching the confidence in yself ost recently , it m M 7 - m ent on arch that police seized to the u tmost . has required Collier Tho as to learn “ m 1 00 - ore than photographs of forty six Violet added an ad monition for not to overwork herself. I learned how ‘ ’ “ m - m . m . nude and se i nude young wo en young aterialists . I look at the free to say No , she explained I watch F m — ' dom o or . ive of those wo en were identified as we have , the educational pp TV now I ve learned how to relax m B p , tu nities a o , m me resent or for er rown students but , and the contrast with the But two years g y doctor told I m ’ ” “ ” m m u . none of the has been charged with a world s proble s , she said , and I have was suffering fro chronic fatig e m ‘ . Wh m W m cri inal offense to ask , y is it that so few A ericans o en , she concluded , should pursue “ ’ B R t ou — rown senior ebecca Kidd , who ever ge around to addressing the criti goals so y will be happy and that s m ? ’ g of . alon with S ith had been charged in cal issues our day As a lawyer , the only thing M am arch with loitering for prostitution , Violet was known for speaking her Since her hectic days on the c ’ . m m ai n W M was not indicted by the grand jury She ind on atters of social conscience . p g trail as alter ondale s run m - was , however , one of three wo en and She has taken a hard line as attorney ning m ate in the 1 984 presidential ’ man m co - m F one na ed as unindicted con general against organized cri e and election , Geraldine erraro s face has ir s ators. m m . D p The original charge against ethics violations beco e fa iliar to us . uring her m , m m m both Kidd and S ith a isde eanor , Violet urged students to refuse to re arks in Sayles , however , that face m had been dis issed at the district court be mediocre and to take risks in their seemed to lack its usual brisk enthu si

l 4 . re m p . a flo , asm . m level on A ri It was incorrectly careers You y p she said , but you She see ed to have been brooding ported at the time that all charges will no longer be held back by a fear of for som e time over the costs of her vice B ’ against the two rown seniors had been failure . She cited her mother s advice : presidential candidacy . ’ - m W . 1 1 1 eolo U . Success is a double edged sword , j a es Head , professor of g purview of the nited States I t s “ “ ’

m . F . O . W erraro said quietly nce we have it , gy e ve exchanged infor ation , vis benefited our country a great deal B ut ’ n m . O ited we realize it can also inflict pain each other s labs , arranged s all the Soviets have increased their tech “ i m m . F nolo cal the plus side , There were highs you sy posia our to six Soviet scientists g ca pabilities re arkably , and ’ m couldn t i agine in your wildest have visited here once a year , and a their dedication to the study of the rm dreams . I got letters in four sim ilar nu m ber of B rown students and planets has always been fi . months ; people gave me a piece of their faculty have visited V ernadsky . The The major difference between the ’ B u t m m m lives . as the first wo an and the agreement we ve signed for alizes space progra s of the two countries first Italian -Am erican vice presidential those exchanges for the next five m ay not be so much technological as m “ m F m . m no inee , erraro said , she beca e a years . ad inistrative The Soviet syste is “ — - national target for potshots~ from O ne of the im portant elements that m uch more amenable to the long term m extre B - V ernadsk conservatives , fro religious has sustained the rown y plannin g you have to do for planetary “ ’ - m m m s m . ist , fro traditionalist I talian A eri relationship , Head says , is the co ple exploration , Head explains You can t

m . m . . m U S o m . cans , and fro the press I f so e of entary nature of the and Soviet just g to Venus anyti e you want to

F m . Fo r her critics had had their way , erraro space ex ploration progra s ex Venus needs to be in a certain position ’ cam m U — ii m said , I wouldn t have been on a a ple , the nited States has explored happens every eighteen onths or n m paig trail ; I would have been in the Venus largely fro orbiting craft with a so . The Soviets can plan five years ”

m . m . confessional , on y knees few at ospheric descent probes , while ahead I f you contrast that with our W m F U m o en , erraro said , often face the Soviet nion has landed its space syste , we have to push the reset but

h . W added pressures if they are successful . craft o Venus to study the surface and ton every fiscal year ith elected “ ” U - They are labeled firsts and made into perform geochem ical analyses . niting officials on two four or six year m - m m . m role odels I n her own case , her entire data fro those different perspectives ter s , the short ter issues tend to be ’

m m m m . fa ily ca e under intense and painful can yield a uch better picture of what the ajor ones So , if you re trying to “ W . U . S . et m scrutiny by the media . ill the spouse Venus is like and Soviet space sci g a ission funded ten years down ’ m . d . of the next fe ale candidate sit still for entists have a great deal to talk about the line , it s really ifficult W the kind of inquisition my husband was [The Soviets] also had looked at ill the rising cost and increasing ! ? F al m m m m in subjected to erraro wondered , Venus in the sa e scale as we had co plexity of space issions ake M m ternatio nal m inevita luding to investigations of j ohn Zacca looked at ars , and the co parisons cooperation al ost ! ’ ’ ’ “ - ? r m r a a were very exciting and interesting, ble I wouldn t say it s inevitable , o s inco e tax eturns nd re l estate “ “

. . dealin gs . Head says They were also very Head says I would encourage inter “ ’ m . If I d known the price , she said , strongly into co parative planetology , national cooperation No doubt about ? — . B u t would I have settled for less [success] which is the approach we use here not that we could do it ourselves , just

F m , . p Geraldine erraro did not s ile , and just studying a planet for its own sake like we did with A pollo It all de ends “ ’ I m m m , m m . her voice was subdued . still sorting but trying to co pare the to study on the scope and ti e fra e I f we m m in A . D . that one out , she concluded . the es of how planets for ed and wanted to do Apollo in two years m m evolved . Given the co ple entary stead of ten , for instance , we probably re nature of our approaches , the quality of could not do it without pooling

B ro w n So viet eo lo i t m m . , g gs s the data , and the co on interest of sources with other nations So interna tio nal , p i n a ree ent for the scientists it was a real natural to coo eration is not absolutely s g g m m m m continue our co unications with required , but it akes a lot of sense to sc ientifi c co operatio n V ernadsky and try to develop it into do jo int things or at least to do things in m m m . something scientifically productive . a com ple entary way I t axi izes

m U . S . . In the ovies , it finally happens like Head has been involved in return and costs each country less - : m U S . 1 973 O ne m this An unoccupied but i portant Soviet scientific exchanges since , long ter goal was frequently — space station the one with HAL when he traveled to Moscow for a joint mentioned by the U . S . and Soviet sci — - rn d aboard is in a decaying orbit around space science m eeting . The agenda entists who signed the B rown V e a m m — r M : m j u piter . A rescue ission ust be reporting results of the A pollo p o sky agreement in late arch a hu an mm m m — M . m launched i ediately , but a suitable gra and various Soviet issions and ex ploration of ars A ission of such ’

S . U . spacecraft won t be ready for at laboratory visits made it clear to Head com plexity and ex pense would be a

. m least a year Enter the Soviets , who are that scientists fro the two countries natural candidate for international ready to travel , and the Superpowers had a great deal to share . He and the cooperation . “ find them selves forced by circu m stan Soviets saw each other at meetings and A pollo showed that hu man ex m m m ces to join in a ajor ission to the kept u p a regular correspondence . The ploration of the planets is i portant

1 . . 20 0 m 1 982 m outer planets The year is p a , w not only for our hu an spirit , but als coo er tion blosso ed in hen “ - m id 1 9805 1 3 . m Here in the , interna the Soviets landed their Venera and for science , says Head A hu an ca tio nal m cooperation in space science is a 1 4 craft on Venus . do kinds of exploration that auto ated m m uch ore cheerful proposition , albeit Exchanging data and cooperating spacecraft are not as well suited for . m ’ — m . B O . M on a uch s aller scale rown s plan on research the kinds of scientific bviously , we need both ars would etary geologists and some of their contact provided for in the B rown be a fantastic place from an exploration — counter parts in the Soviet U nion have V ernad sky agreement represent in and a scientific point of view . It could fi ve - m scien m signed a year agree ent for ternatio nal cooperation at a basic level . well be done by a ajor international tific — cooperation between B rown and A whole range of possibilities exists , expedition with Soviets , Europeans , m V ernadsk incl u din o int m U . the y Institute , a branch of Head says , g j issions to and the nited States Sending hu ans m “ . m m the Soviet Acade y of Sciences other planets . Generally , the high to the oon see ed incredible at first , “ ’ W inf r - e ve been cooperating o technology and fi rst order planetary but we did A pollo in less than ten M a k Nickel m . ally for three years already , says exploration has historically been the years r By j ames R e

’ ’ ’ M il isa Gal azz i 88 i s the first w oman to serv e as coxswain of B rown s m en s varsity cre

m W omen sailo rs w in cautious about predicting another title . ho e a ppearance of the season , the m D This has been a rebuilding year , and no B ruins had an easy ti e with art ’ New En land title, m m u 9—1 g one on this year s tea sailed in the outh , building p a advantage by - m 1 5 6 . . y Softball I v y cham ps nationals last year the half, and ro ping to a victor The promise that was s pring for Sted man had five goals and Gagnon ’ ’ M 86 m l . olly Starkweather and her crew , en s acrosse was nipped in the bud had three goals and five assists ’ ’ 89 B m T o m 86 m Sonya Stevens , led rown to victory first by Virginia , then A r y and Syra Gagnon beca e only the ’ m U Mas in the wo en s intercol cuse , regional rival niversity of third player in B rown history to score

m m . le iate s il i n sachu setts m . 1 00 g a g cha pionship at the , and , ost cruelly , by Penn goals or ore in a career He R re— m fi v e Edgewood Yacht Club in Cranston , anked seventh in the p season achieved that ilestone with his ’ m ’ m R . hode Island Starkweather was the coaches poll , the B ruins quickly fell goal effort in the tea s triu ph over — - fiv e- m . leading skipper for the regatta , taking fro grace and the list of nationally Harvard His three goal and assist m — m D m eight firsts , two seconds , and three ranked tea s as a result of the losses perfor ance against art outh gave him a- 202 m him 2 1 m . thirds for a low score of points over to Virginia , A r y , and Syracuse The total of points , aking ’ - B . U Mass u t 200 the two day event There were strong, loss to p an end to the B ruins the first rown player to surpass ’ gusty winds and choppy seas for both regional dom inance . career points . Gagnon s statistics for the ’ - — m 28 25 53 . days , conditions to Starkweather s lik I t was an u phill fight fro the very current season are “ ’ in : m W m l g The wind was heavy in the orn beginning, battling the national powers o en s acrosse defeated in u 9 - 8 m g, dropped off a little , and picked p for recognition , but at least the B ruins Princeton , , in the final I vy ga e of - 3 - 3 again in the end . We like heavy air and had found sanctuary in the the season and posted a best ever — We . . we take advantage of it . know the that is , until Penn kicked in the door Ivy record The win over Princeton was ’

B . 88 boats and the area , she said . In the I ronically , it was Penn which last beat the first for the B ruins Sue Cutler ’ 7 m F 8 m 1 984 . division , Ellie ield tea ed with B rown in Ivy co petition , in The led the attack with three goals , and ’ 88 32 m ’ 87 j ean King to take first place with recent double overti e loss halted Lauren Becker , Elizabeth Hearn ’ ’ ’ - 8 m 8 M 89 . points . B rown s eleven ga e unbeaten streak , and Erin aguire each had two u t I n The victory was won in a newly in the I vies and p their chances of earlier Ivy League action , the B ruins D 4 205 . . christened fleet of The B rown securin g an NCA A berth in jeopardy beat Yale and Cornell , but lost to art m F m . Sports oundation raised nearly After the loss to Penn , B rown ca e outh and Harvard In the win against - D m . D . for the tea Two thirds of the back with victories over Yale and art Yale , Cutler had six goals At art m u m e m m . to st oney was used for the new boats and outh The B ruins li ited Yale j outh , Cutler and Becker led the s or the rest to start an endow m ent fund for one goal in each of the first three quar ing with three goals each ; and Becker ’

m . m m m . the sailing progra ters , while scoring twelve ti es j ohn beca e the fourth B ruin in wo en s ’ The nationals will be held at the Keogh 86 led the attack with two goals lacrosse to to p 1 00 career points . Cut ’ - Ma 30 2 . m 45 . 88 Edgewood Yacht Club , y j une and four assists Bernie B uonanno , ler , who leads the tea with goals , ’ B t m To m 86 m rown is the defending na ional cha Gagnon , and Tony Sted an netted seven in the win versus Spring ’

D . 86 . pion , but Coach B rad ellenbau gh is also scored twice I n their final field and four in the loss to Harvard In seaso n~ ending non - league ac and their hot streak cooled down in a U niversity of California at Berkeley - B #4 U ni . m tion , the ruins lost to ranked hurry Shocked by a loss to Eastern and ca e away with two wins in the m n re B F m R . versity of New Ha pshire , the Connecticut , which saw the ruins take edwood Shores Classic resh fro to bounded with wins over Holy Cross and the lead with four runs in the p of the that success , the varsity crew evened its ECSU - B U . B 4 4 oston niversity ecker and Hearn seventh , only to have score three record at by defeating Cornell by m 9 -8 m - m each had five goals in the Holy Cross in the botto of the inning, for a al ost two lengths in a eter B m . ga e , and eight B ruins scored against win , the ruins quietly slipped to a race on Lake Cayuga B rown won four m 1 2 - 1 3 2 1 - 1 5 Boston U niversity . That ga e saw two New England record ( of the five races that day . ’ ’ 9- 9 . B M n s u r ra k w new records established ecker s sin overall) , and an undistinguished in e o tdoo t c s ept a tri - gle season point scoring record of 70 the EI B L . Pitcher and designated hitter meet against D artmouth and Harvard Dan R m m 63 . B m 4 m shattered the old ark of ecker ice leads the tea in hitting with at B rown stadiu . IC A cha pion ’ ’

9 . im D 88 leads the Ivy League in scoring with 1 3 a . 3 3 average j uchesneau Gerry Donini 86 won the shot pu t with goals and 1 9 assists for 32 points . She turned in one of the stellar pitching a heave of m eters . Sprinter ’ n eeds only three points to become performances of the season when he Tom m y Smith 88 broke the tape in the ’ - - - m 1 . B rown s all time leading scorer with blanked A r y 0 The right hander 1 1 0 meters in (into the wind) . u - m . D first one season left to play Cutler broke the went the distance , giving p seven hits , espite those two place perfor

43 . ances record of goals scored ( ) in a single walking none , and striking out nine and eleven other firsts in track ’ f bal l m 45 . M W m n s s D m season with her new ark of ara o e o t gained a share of events , B rown led art outh by only ’ 86 to 1 982 Spaulder is the p goalie in the Ivy its first Ivy League title since by one point going into the final event , the

. m f an e . 588 m . o L ague with a save percentage , splitting a twin bill at Harvard A fter ile relay The tea j Nordgren ’ ’ ’ - m 2 - 0 B M 8 . m 86 F 89 Herc 8 goals against average In all ga es dropping the first ga e , , the ruins , Keith easter , y oore , ’ 1 24 4 - 0 88 m played she has a total of saves and a bounced back to win the nightcap , and j on Singer turned in a ti e of

B m . . win the goals against average rown finished the Ivy season with a to | race and the eet At ’ M n s asebal l D 6- 2 m R M e b gave Coach ave slate , tied with defending cha pion the Boston College elays , ark ’ ’ 7 - Stenhouse his 1 00th career victory at Princeton . Tracy Goldstein 8 blanked Thom pson 89 won the 1 1 0 meter hur ’ an 8- 1 the m 88 B rown with win over Providence Cri son on two hits , and Sue dles , and Chris Schille set a B rown ’ ’

M DiChiara 88 B 86 m . College . ike posted his eaulieu provided the B ruins with record of in the eters At R the only runs they needed , going one p , third win of the season with four solid the Penn. elays in Philadel hia the m m - RB I s m m M R innings on the ound , and Eric Ki ble for three with two , including the distance edley tea of ark uday ’ ’ ’ 89 B ob 86 m . 89 F , Harrington , j ohn Plansky ga e winner in the first inning , Nordgren , easter , and Greg ’ ’ ’ ’ 87 im 87 D B W 89 h , , j Garofalo , and ave New rown s only other Ivy loss was to hiteley won their eat and in so ’ - man 86 o . Pe 2 1 . pr vided the hittin g As of this nn , Earlier in the week , the doing set a new school record m m ’ 88 m 2 1 B R . m writing, the tea has wins , tying the ruins split with hode Island Gold The ile relay tea of Gene Si s , - m a d m 1 982 . M school single season record set in stein pitched both ga es , losing the oore , Nordgren , n Tho pson ran W five m m m 1 -0 a m m 3 : ith ga es re aining, that ark first , , and winning the second by _ co bined ti e of ’ CCRI n u d ac k D should fall and be replaced by a new the sam e score . After trouncing Wom e s o t oor tr beat art R s standard . in in the quarterfinals of the hode I mouth and lost to Harvard in their tri i m 7 m ’ 86 T e U n m . h B ruins lost a pair to the land State Cha pionships on April , eet j ennifer Loo is broke the versity of by identical 4 -2 the B ruins lost their sem i - fi nal m atchu p B rown and the stadiu m record in the ’ ’ - m T m 89 et P 3 2 . u t . o scores Conners couldn t g against rovidence College , The shot p eters) , and also won 22 The mile any su pport in the opener , and in the season total of wins breaks the old the discus relay m D ’ 89 o 2 1 . m Ki nightcap , the B ruins stopped every ne record of set last year tea was victorious , and easy

Ram B . but catcher rian Hagberg who The highlight of the season , thus had an exceptional day Besides run ’ B ar m en s c re m drove in all four runs . rown then f , for w was a tri p to Cali ning in the ile relay , she placed sec traveled to Cornell and Princeton for its fornia for the Redwood Shores Classic . ond in the 200 meters third in EI BL e Eager to prove themselves in the eyes the 400 meters and ran a l eg of final' weekend of doubleh aders - m and came m 2 2 . W 4 x4OO ho e with a record The of perennial est Coast powers , the the relay tea , which finished B i B m R B . ruins won the opener against the g ruins ca e away with wins over Stan second At the Boston College elays , - m D Red W . m with a six run seventh inning ford and ashington I t took a course the two ile relay tea won , onna ’ which featured a three - run triple by record by U niversity of California at Neale 86 was second in the 400 meters Harrington and a two -run hom er by B erkeley to beat the B ruins in the Loom is was second in the shot ’ m ’ 89 m . Dan R 6 t . . 8 o u t Garofalo ice g the win cha pionship race And , in fact , the p , and Lori A os placed third in ’ ’ ’ P n P o To m W m 88 B m 1 00 m . A gai st rincet n , ickha s ruins ti e of tied the old the eter hurdles At the enn m o . B R d uble in the seventh inning spoiled course record ack on the Seekonk , elays , Loo is placed first in the col ’ LaF r - I n D m o est s . B Scott bid for a no hitter rown defeated art outh for its fifth lege division of the discus , setting a new ’ ’ m 87 . 1 50 1 0 the second ga e , j ohn Plansky sin win of the season , winning every race school record of ’ ’ gled home j oe D ucharm e 88 with the The crew s only other loss was to Har Going into the final weekend of the ’ m en s nni s winning run as B rown rallied for two vard , by less than a second , after wins season , te was cruising at a U - W 1 3 runs in the seventh inning and held on over Boston niversity and Northeast record breaking pace . ith wins , ' ’ - Ki hkill 86 4 . s for a 5 win . ern Varsity ca ptain j oe the team was closing in on the 1 983 - m im D m 1 4 . U After co piling a 9 2 season feels the tea is showing constant record of nfortunately , the art m “W ’ m m F . m war u p record in lorida , including a prove ent e re getting better and outh and Harvard tea s had their - - m m b , trip ending eight ga e win streak that etter all the ti e he said after the own plans , and the visitors prevailed on tied the B rown record for m ost co nsec Dartmouth win . Friday and Saturday by identical scores ’ B W m en s c W - 5 4 . utive wins , the ruins retu rned to a o rew took on estern of Although the season ended with c U W m co m p g p g, p , g , g , 1 6 ty ically hilly New En land s rin owers CLA ashin ton and the those two tou h losses the tea

Actor and play wright Aki n B abatunde center ore r ound took R i tes and R ea ( , f g ) ’ son audi ences inside a troubl ed man s

head in P eel in s whi ch remi ered at g , p ther t r rtr ed B rown in M arch. O ac o s po ay “ ” the orces Guardheads f , “ ”— ’ and Trash P eople behi nd the mind s

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’ Ev erything abou t B rown s black theatre r u is ri i nal— the research the g o p o g , la s the im a inati ns of its direct rs p y , g o o

By A nne Diffily Photographs by j ohn Foraste

The eative challen e is m cr g dier , or one about a fa iliar grou p of “ ” to see tragedy in the triu mph forest critters with names like B rer and t iu m h in eein R m r p s g abbit and B rer Bear . They ight see the t a ed - r g y . four dimensional computer graphics —Geo e H ouston B ass m s m rg spinning on television onitors , y ’ P rogr am notes for boliz ing the conflicts within a man s “ a e O r m T l s of Americaj amming head . they ight see two bag la ” dies slu mped on a platform in the l m Churchill House obby , rising fro the here are things an audience rags and debris to sing a plaintive duet will never see when it attends about loneliness . m W R Rea a perfor ance in Churchill hatever they see , ites and R R House by ites and eason , son audiences know they are seeing it ’ the research theatre of B rown s Afro first . Every production is an original m m . re A erican Studies Progra It will nev play , generated out of scholarly The Wiz Raisin in the Su n er see , or , or search and brought to the stage by a Dream i rls m o m g , or any of a nu ber of p p tea of students , professional actors , ular black plays and m usicals that make and members of the Rhode Island u p amateur and professional theatre comm unity . The unique process that B repertoires elsewhere . creates these plays at rown is called W m - — m m hat audiences ight see is a play the research to perfor ance ethod . about a black Revolutionary War sol No other theatre grou p or u niversity is m m Ri Rea the theatre grou p , which was chris a g H g , y there should be ore to tes and “ ” years with L n ston u hes ex R R We tened ites and eason soon after his periments with Black A rts Theatre : son . had been trying to explore

. B m m arrival ass , a Nashville native edu New Haven while a graduate student at different for s of theatre perfor ance cated F NYU D m - m at isk , , and Yale , had a S r , based on Afro A erican tradition , he Y le chool of a a and various “

. a worked as an assistant to the poet professional associations with Esther M . recalls And we had run into a st le

m 1 m . 959 1 964 . Langston Hughes fro to j ackson , Vinnette Carroll , Alice Chil ate Although we were doing inter “ M O D R D ee m y associations with Langston dress , ssie avis , uby , Lou Gos esting experi ents , the interpretations - m m me m . Hughes , he wrote recently , ade sett , Luther j a es and others of Afro A erican reality that we were keenly aware of the im portance of myth The first R ites and Reason play doing were pretty m uch the same as ’ ’ 1 and history in the making of plays u nder Bass s direction was B lack others . I n the late 9605 and early ’ ” m 1 9705 . M as ue . about black people s experiences q , which he wrote Perfor ed in , black theatre artists were saying “ B 1 97 1 ow ass helped his students at B rown April , it was described as a p that they had a responsibility to inter m m develop a research theatre of black erfu l ritualistic dra a that explored pret the selves and their reality . Rites m re R u yth and history , using their own and asserted the reality of black lives in and eason was caught p in that fer m ” 7 W . B 1 9 2 sources to produce original perfor the New orld y the end of , vor , but we began to recognize the need

. m m m m m ance works I n writing plays for the the co pany had staged six ore plays , for so e ore syste atic way of doing ’ - B Oh Lo d . F R group , he recalls drawing inspiration including ass s anti war fable r , that ortuitously , hett jones hel ped m “ fro the rich cultural experiences of This World! and a drama by B arry to suggest a way . ’ m m B m 66 M continu ed y youth in the South , y college years eckha about arcus Garvey , as m m Fisk u bilee - - m m a e ber of the j Singers , who led a back to Africa ove ent in ex posure to a deep understanding of the 1 9205 . - m m 1 97 3 B Afro A erican traditions during y By , ass began to feel that 1 9 D eep in the wou lds of plenty for a playwright who shapes the schol ’

m . Stuck with the coulds of many ars ideas into a perfor ance work Ri P lenty could if many wou ld That work is then produced by tes R o m Do what the should or an . , y f y — and eason using actors fr Equity G eorge B ass as well as B rown students and area res m Liner notes or . f idents Perfor ances are free , and r R W there is a discussion session called B re abbit hole “ ” Folkthou ght after the last matinee 5 m m the first chair an of perfor ance of each play , featuring ’ B - m rown s A fro A erican com ments by scholars . P r m Studies rog a , which was The first Rites and Reason pro 1 969 R ’ established in , hett duction to result from Bass s and B ’ ’ j ones often ran into George ass on jones s collaboration was 1 975 s The

m . R ca pus He also attended ites and P ovidence a den B lues. w r G “r It as the cul R . eason productions j ones , a historian m ination of O ral History as An I ndex m 1 973 with research interests in ulticultural to Change , a independent study societies , had two goals for the new project conceived and su pervised by m : progra he headed To strengthen it j ones . His students in the course stud m u acade ically and str cturally , and to ied race relations in Providence be m get knowledge out to the black co tween 1 920 and 1 940 by interviewing m “ ’ unity , to the people who don t read elderly blacks throu ghout R hode 1 5

The Ame i an His torical R ev iew . o f r c In both land . The transcripts those taped R cases , his thoughts turned to ites and interviews were the raw m aterials for a

R . eason w r g pap r a a fi a pap r , “ o kin e nd n l e both I knew if we wanted to build a written by j ones with input from the

, m , g g p g u . F m B ood stron black studies ro ra r fi p p r , “ st dents o the nal a e ass , 7 1 9 4 . j ones says we needed to build to our wrote the play in The result , “ g U . Ri stren ths in the niversity tes and jones says , was a very different kind of ” R m . , eason was clearly one of the Also I theatre . m ’ was concerned with getting the ost I f Rites and Reason weren t differ mm . m m recent research out to the co unity ent fro other theatre co panies , m ’ p , g The roble was you could brin j ones says , he wouldn t be involved in “ Wh - Di- P oo Doo , rofessor p who is inter it . I knew nothing about the theatre — ” , B nationally known to rown for a lec absolutely zip! he exclaim s . As a ’

m . B u t , p p m ture and eo le wouldn t co e scholar , he derives satisfaction fro the w u ld m R R they o co e to ites and eason successful development and the con ’

m . - - perfor ances A nd if they wouldn t tinu ed viability of the research to per m , formance m co e George was not adverse to going ethod , particularly as it is — “ m d , P to the oing street theatre putting em ployed at B rown . art of the life m m . Ri on plays in co unity centers So tes blood of Rites and Reason is this con R m me nectio n U . and eason see ed to to be an ex to the niversity , j ones says cell n i “ ’ ’ e t vehicle for gett ng recent schol It s the reason we re able to do original r hi ’ a s i . W c m p r ght to the people p . r r r ar “ lays e e lo ated in a ajo ese ch Rhett and I talked about m y institution where we have access to m ’ ” B proble with the plays content , ass p p ar g g “ eo le who e on the cuttin ed e of . We says He talked about two kinds of scholarship . never lack for ideas , : knowledge the knowledge we gain and we never lack for good , hard data from the disciplinary training of the when we ask questions of our col U , u niversity and the knowledge that is leag es , both inside and outside of m m - acquired fro experience , fro living Afro Am erican Studies . We felt that if we could find a way to O bviously there are theatres all bring those two kinds of knowledge over the country that work without m m g , g to ether we i ht be able to ake access to a university , j ones says , but m m r so e inroads into a ore accurate pe for m e that would be very difficult to ce tio n m ’ p of how black people see the conceptualize . I don t know of any oth selves . er black theatre grou p at any other col en ’ These conversations were the g lege or university that s doing this . - esis of the now entrenched research - to W hen I go to other places and I see m m ’ p gu m P urlie me erfor ance ethod that distin ishes the doing things like , to it s R ’ R . U ites and eason nder the direction a great waste of resources . Can t they ’ - of Bass , who is artistic director , and see the treasure houses they re sitting ? j ones , who is research director , each on R R g g B season ites and eason en a es ass agrees , and adds , Not only 0 “ fiC scholars to p roduce papers SPCCl do such theatre grou ps have different i i n W m R R ’ ssues that affect blacks the estern purposes fro ites and eason s , they

m . he isphere The papers provide grist also value traditional works as being the ‘ M m W B m R sit y argu ent was , hat has rer after e ancipation if B rer abbit was y where we have access to all kinds of ? ’ . . M Rabbit done for me lately says j ones allowed to evolve The idea of a aoist researchers and scholars . The kinds of “ ’ 1 sim was arguing, in effect , that these rabbit wasn t incorporated , but it did questions George is posing are not myths and fairy tales that George loves suggest the possibility of someone who ply answered by the historians and the ’

. W m really didn t do anything for anybody finds a transformation point where he folklorists . e need contact with usi ”

W . colo i sts i hat we really need are people who can take on another shape g , anthropologists , sociolog sts , ’

er . W R are going to lead us . The students Bass first helped his wife , p dance specialists e ve gotten a ock ’ u fo rm ance R m W efeller picked p on this , and that s when one artist a ona ilkins Bass grant that will enable us to bring ‘ ’ m W M ao 72 m of the said , hat you want is a , do a storytelling production of the two scholars to ca pus for each of the ’ ’

m m 7 . rabbitl R 1 9 8 . ist jones laughs so e ore , B rer abbit tales in Several years next three years A nd we re picking “ I I m m ’ reflects , and adds , guess did , in a later he began writing a usical about people fro disciplines we ve not worked with before , such as urban planning, so they can give us a different ” perspecti ve . j ones feels the progress of Rites and Reason can be divided into two D 1 9705 eras . uring the , the theatre “ concentrated on getting the research to- performance methodology down ” pat . Both j ones and Bass believe that effort came to fruition in 1 98 1 -83 with m F the perfor ance series , inding a ’ B People s Ideology . Since then , ass R R m says , ites and eason has shifted fro focusing on the method to an em phasis

on aesthetic issues . I n particular , it has reflected Bass ’ s concern that A m eri m cans , and specifically black A ericans , “ need to develop and to codify a m ythic consciousness for the New W orld experience . “ I ’ m concerned with the question , ‘ What is the critical difference in A merican society ? ’ This society has held ” “W together ; why? Bass asks . hat is it b m a out the i agination , the values , the

’ R amona Wilkins B ass 72 and hn beliefs inherent in the culture that j o m ’ p p p B elcher 75 starred i n her la The ake it ossible for eo le who share p y , the characters in the tales . significant differences about lifestyle T ic k rack al s this s ri n . r T T e , p g B re Rabbit Whole er ? W r , which was p and world view to coexist e do not m in M 1 985 m for ed arch , portrayed the pp g r p r “ see this ha enin in any othe a ts M ’ title character as a aster of Critter of the world . I m interested in m yths in ” ’ in —c ritterin I nterestingly , that is perhaps g g being Bass s word for the way the anthropologists and histo B e R abbit Wh l o e m O ne . where r r was born , Bass the art of taking care of Nu ber rians of religion use the term : poetic

. B R , t . says I started thinking How do we I n the play , rer abbit begins a search truths of a collec ive experience take B rer Rabbit out of the seem in gly for a self that goes beyond the one in m m individualistic perception of coping the irror . He ust abandon his crit ?— said with life but also ex ploit that tradi tering ways and learn to trust and to , meanin echoes o death tion . There are two different collections care for others . Bass called the play a g f of B rer Rabbit stories that I have celebration of the search for self and and re- creation as in the an e s o looked into . The more widely known comm unity and went so far as to say g r f collection was gathered by j oel Chand that it distilled all he had learned in transformed i i . er as v is ons o l ht. ler Harris But there was another p fifteen years at B rown , incorporating f g m W m F — son , na ed illia aulkner not the the influence of other faculty such as — Sin in with a swo d in novelist who collected the stories . He p g C . g g r j ones and sycholo ist Aaron resson — was a black theologian and dean of the What I want to point out about George B ass ’ “ it P o r am notes F . F B e R abb chapel at isk aulkner s collection of r r , Bass says , is that the dia r g , tales presents a more complex charac logue that occurs at B rown is very im Tal es of America j amming B R m er ter , in the sense that rer abbit is not portant to the develop ent of a p R R fo rmance . purely selfish , but he is also engaged in work You can never anti hile ites and eason by the defense of his comm unity and in cipate when an idea is going to spark a definition is a theatre by m - m m . the protection of his fa ily play , or what ight be your next and for Afro A ericans , 1 then tried to balance B rer Rabbit source . it has always drawn audi ’ ’ in terms of his function for the imagi That s why it s particularly helpful ences representing all races . Recentl y it nation o f black people before em anci to have a m ultidisciplinary depart has sponsored several productions that “ ation mi ht m U re p , and what g have happened ent , j ones says , as well as a niver illustrate the applicability of the 2 1 - - m m search to perfor ance ethod to other dren as well as adults , the presentation 84 m The Tri k Track Tale . 1 9 c s ethnic and racial grou ps I n , the this onth of is Dance M ama Dance B play , , by arbara the first expressly designed for chil ’ R M . m . B B e oian 84 A . j was ounted by ites dren , parents , and grand parents oth m and Reason . An exploration of the lives the play and the perfor ance are by ’ m - m m R m B of Ar enian A erican wo en , it grew a ona ass , George s wife and part - out of research by scholars A rlene ner in folklore gathering. A vakian and Ruth T homasian and was Trick Track Tales focuses on the “W m “ part of a performance unit on o en antics of three trickster characters m : I a a in Transition . fro black folk traditions j p the R A nanse/A nanc This spring, in the context of ites tortoise (Africa) , y the R ’ m am W B R and eason s Tales of A erica j spider ( est Indies) , and rer abbit ” “ m m . R m B 1 970 R , ( ) , . ing series two other new plays were A erica All three a ona ass Since its inception in , ites and at R read that looked areas outside the explains , use wit and cunning to sur eason has produced a total of - mm . O ne - - m . Afro A erican co unity was a vive against all odds These tales ex fifty four plays . Twenty eight of B e oian E a l es Withou t m a those are new play by j , g press y belief that track of lau ghter g p ’ ori inal lays written in Win s Ho ses Without Le s m — g r g , again was the trick that ade it possible for the context of twelve research to - m m . . m m about A r enian A ericans The other black people to survive perform ance projects . So e of the m m was an epic poe by graduate student She uses usic , pu ppets , and sto are briefly described here . R The M iracle o Wh r tellin m Claudia obitaille , f y y g in her perfor ance and is ’ ’ We e Here F - m B 75 O ral Hi stor as An I ndex to r , portraying the rench Can acco panied by john elcher , a y comm u nit in B mm m y , p Chan e The P ovidence Gar adian l New edford dru er and co oser who wrote g “ r

M . m . den B lue B . assachusetts These , and other wor original usic for the play The ticket s rg H a “ by Geo e ouston ss A m - m er et B l in P written fro an Afro A erican p to g into the play , ass adds , will be ook at race relations rovidence ’ iv e B s ect 1 920 and 1 940 . p , are described by ass as a an adage , and we ll give people a bal between

m m m m . P rovidence F esti v al O ne : am m celebration of A ericans ja in g, loon to take ho e , with another adage j im provising ways for freedom to be The idea with performances such as i n the K ey Z A ritual drama ”

. o A u true these is that people will g away laugh spectacle for the B icentennial . “ ’ in G B I f aesthetics are clearly tied to g so hard , they ll forget all that is thors were eorge ass , Cleveland ” ’ ’ ’ m . 74 F 75 culture , which I think they are , jones issing in the world The characters Kurtz , Sandra ranklin , Lor “ D ’ 77 says , then to the degree that we can antics and their foolishness hel p people etta evine , Andrea Hairston m ’ M . Ri W l . A . interest people fro other ethnic and laugh at concepts they can t address , and cardo i ey ’ ’

m et . I m anthro olo I m a e An d R eal it F racial grou ps in our ethod , we ll g a otherwise involved in p g y ive W - . One m different set of questions hat has gy , and I understand what people need act plays based on onographs gone on u p to this point in the social in the theatre experience to lift u p their by scholars in four academic disci

. lines m sciences , and to a lesser extent in the spirit p , concerning the i age of m R m ’ 1 954 . P hu anities , is a kind of approved The course of a ona Bass s own black people since lays by m m R R . B P . . ethodology that co es out of the life was changed by ites and eason George ass , j Gibson , and

. m experience of Northern Europeans An English ajor who once had Cleveland Ku rtz . ’ m F ree to Die M Now you re getting other people say drea ed of being a doctor or a linguist , A play , y ‘ in we m M ark M Name P . . g, All right , can construct eth she had never stepped on stage until , y , by j Gibson was odologies out of our own experience ? Sheryl Chapman invited her to act in a based on research by Gary Pu ckrein ’ ’ ’ That s one way of looking at George s black theatre production . A fter one 72 of Rutgers on the Rhode Island m B “m . B R i m R work And when you lay on different perfor ance , ass felt she was ade a g r ” l ck e ent in the evolutiona y m et m ma m War . fra eworks , you can g a whole bunch for perfor ing and switched her (His onograph has since been ’ R of answers . I don t know if you can jor to theatre arts . Active in ites and published as a book . ) ’ ’ one R B The B l acker The B err arrive at answer , but that s part of eason s dance trou pe , ass went on to y ’ m . m eo Ri R m the excite ent arry George , work with young p tes and eason s second ajor rit - W le et M . A . T . 1 983 fam m mm hat is particularly exciting for p , g an in , have a ual dra a for the co unity , with R R ro j ones is that the ites and eason ily , and recently to run her own p events held in parks , shopping cen m m D m ethod has proven to be universally duction co pany , Hatful of rea s , ters , churches , and schools . Included m . B De Da o N0 useful It can be used as a culture which offers storytelling perfor ances a play by George ass , y f s ecific . p tool for the exploration of is and educational consulting M 0 . ’ sues and conflicts that any grou p m ig B l ack Chil dren s Day ” “ ’ W ro - have , he says . e re seeking to p Award winning playwright Adri

m m . vide a de ocratic instru ent There enne Kennedy , in residence at B are no rules that would exclude any rown for a year , collaborated with ’ one s insights and perspectives from scholars at Brown and elsewhere on consideration . a play exploring the relationship R R Lan ston Hu hes The last ites and eason produc g g between m yth and history . tion this year represents a first for the Reflecti ons on O neness A nd m : m - R ther Cu ri ou s Thin s R co pany A venture into fa ily ori fter sixteen years , ites and O g ites - ented . W in R m amd R theatre hile other plays , eason can al ost be taken eason celebrated its tenth mm - U cluding co unity oriented , large for granted by the niversity anniversary with a revised staging of ’ m The B B B lack M as ue scale perfor ance works such as lack theatre its first play , ass s q , and B lacke the B e r m r r y , were accessible to chil has proven itself to be ore than a fad continued on page 48 ’ - - bov e. The first R ites and R eason research to performance produ cti on was George B ass s The P rovidence Garden B l u es a

m . : Whe e D ewd o s o M e c Shine m m F a series of public foru s work r r p f r y staged first at his al a ater , isk hr B i r hi in T ee a es he B ri ht H E F lean Sheets U 1 984 ; T og p g (j ranklin) , C niversity , in the fall of then ’ - m erican Landsca e 1 98 1 82 M ount Ho e l M 1 985 . Can t Soil P . . A p ( ) ( j Gibson) , p at Churchil House in arch m : al es of A m eri ca amm i n Three the atically linked plays (Phillip Hayes Dean) . T j g M ala o B lue B Letters W m en in an siti n : The - m ro c ff by George ass , o Tr o Three world pre iere p from A New E ngland Negr o by Sherley Sear ch for Whol eness ( 1 982 du ctions share the theme : How do W m Lizzie Ra m m m ? Anne illia s , and by y Explorations of the views of inori A ericans define the selves They

. t m mm P eelin s B ; Aranha y wo en pertaining to co unity , are g by A kin abatunde an ’ F indi n A P eo l e s I deol o m l g p gy fa ily , and the arger society result evening reading of three new works , ’ 1 98 1 m in E v er oodb e Ain t B B e oian R ( Three acclai ed scholars ed two plays , y G y by arbara j , Claudia obi

mm one . ; were co issioned to study the role G by L Teresa Church and taille , and six undergraduates and m Dance M ama Dance B B e The Tri ck Track Tales R m of race and class in deter ining the , , by arbara by a ona ’ ’ - B 7 . 84 A . M . W 2 ideology of urban , working class joian ilkins ass blacks . Three professional play B rer R abbit Who l e ’ wrights produced scripts from this George Bass s m usical play was 23

as t e m oon in er CS

here was a full moon last wanted to do . P night . I noticed it early , when After Antioch she joined the eace it looked like an enormous Corps and was sent to Malaysia to teach wa r w a math . It was there that her love affair fe stuck lo on velvet “ m : sky . My cats were aware of it later in the with the oon and the stars began I m M night , when the light of the oon had bought a pair of binoculars in alaysia ou t grown harsh and cold , and they were and started picking the constella We driven by a particular frenzy . A friend tions . were right on the equator in m B called e the next day to ask if the orneo , so the sweep of sky was fairly

P m . moon were full . eople are being so a azing And with no city lights , the

m . strange today , he added in so e kind stars were incredibly clear ’

Pieters s . of explanation . interest was piqued Whether or not we believe that the Knowin g that she wanted to study the m ou r m oon tugs on ani als and our heavens , she reached high and applied ’ personalities as it does on the oceans to the Massachusetts Institute of Tech ’ m m m nolo s tides , ost of us notice it fro ti e to gy Earth and planetary studies “ We . M I T time hanging silently in the sky program . was very supportive ” Man M point out the in the oon to our and encouraging, Pieters says when m M I T ’ children , we deter ine our holidays by asked why didn t hoot derisively at m ’ the oon s cycles , and we overuse it as the applicant with one undergraduate m lé P . m m . Car a ro antic sy bol ieters , how geology course under her belt I ade m m ever , is so eone who has ore prosaic the rounds of several schools in the

m . B M I T m reasons for noticing the oon She is a oston area , and was the ost ro me planetary geologist , an associate p receptive . I t was strange for , fessor s B , of geological ciences at rown though , to step out of the hinterlands and a principal investigator for N ASA of Malaysia right into M I T and the

m . m with an e phasis on lunar studies She Apollo progra , which was underway rofes B has spent a good deal of her p then . ecause I had no geology train m MI T sional in ot B . S . life noticing the oon in a very g, I g a second at and

m . particu lar way . m oved on to the graduate progra ’ ’ Pieters s office in the Lincoln Field I ve been involved in planetary studies mm ho m building is cra ed with plants , p a a ever since and h ve held the s e kin”d

m m m . tos of the oon and planets , and N ASA of excite ent for studying the oon m memorabilia . The light strea ing in ’ ’ from the windows isn t moonlight ; it s ne of the best places in the — m m pale , diffuse sunlight spring has co e world to study the oon ’ ’ i t r . P e e s s m to Providence , and it s raining and the stars is fro an m to wide , friendly face blosso s into a grin observatory located on p ’ M m frequently as she recalls how she didn t of auna Kea , one of two ountains m m Far m set out to beco e a geologist , uch less on the island of Hawaii . fro city - u a geologist who studies the extra ter lights , feet p where the air is so ’ m restrial . thin it doesn t distort the light co ing “ I m m Actually , only took one geology fro the oon and the stars , and stuck

. m O course in college , she says And that out in the iddle of the Pacific cean , was before plate tectonics was firmly the Mauna Kea observatory attracts

We m . established . were still debating the astronomers fro around the world ” theory of continental drift . Pieters Because she has been able to spend concentrated on liberal arts at Antioch several weeks during several summ ers wo rk/stu d M College , where we had a y at auna Kea , Pieters has obtained a W e o approach to education . would g broad data base on the moon . The out and have internships at different instr umentation for studying the moon M m me places . y ti e at Antioch gave the as closely as we do has been available ’ “W . e attitude that I wasn t afraid of the since the early eighties , she says me M world . It hel ped focus what it was I use a meter telescope at auna m u mineral m . m ade p of olivine , a specific oon As a body , the oon has evolved Houston , there was talk about what to m m m . W species that settles at the botto of in a different anner fro the Earth do with the lab . e left it there for a m eochem m gma m r . I t has a co pletely different g w w u a a a a cha be s ” hile so it o ld be v il ble to inter “ - m m u . ested A ystery is created by this layer ical ake p users , but then the assistant who “ W P in P . g, ieters continues j ust the fact hen ieters was working at the ran it left , and we decided to bring the ’ r iv m m . ece . that it s layered like this is ysterious Space Center in Houston , after lab here NASA funded the ove , and m MI T m ot in Ph . D . B m . That part of the oon g badly bat g her fro , she had access rown provided roo for the facility tered m early on , so the ineralogy would to lunar core tubes that had been Having the lab here allows people in

m m . m u se m u . 50 be ixed p another ystery is brought back by an Apollo ission She this part of the country to co e it , ’ — m m We how did that stuff at the bottom get devised an experi ent that used ulti and that s great . can talk about where it is? We can hypothesize that we spectral imaging to look at one of the m utual concerns and projects with

B . have sampled the lunar mantle . Very people outside of rown ’ ’ m Pieters s i early in the oon s history , there was lab is one g ant chunk of “ an ocean of magma that had a m ineral m achine . The kind of light that is cre O ne separation process as it cooled . ated through this , she says , pointing to “ m the m com kind of ineralogy floated , another one part of spectro eter , is m . We settled Geoche ists prefer to look at it parable to solar light . can look at m m another way . They like to think that lunar aterials , eteorites , or terres [ m m there were intrusions , which are called trial aterial , and do experi ents on plutons , into the early crust , and then the basic science of how to understand m u m . the pl tons beca e layered , so that g P ETE the interactions of li ht and aterial M. RS there would be a number of geochemi I Large samples differ from sm aller

m m . m cal variations a ong sa ples sa ples , and coated particles differ ’ Another geological debate took from uncoated . We re still tryin g to |place over the rays that emanated in all understand very basic things about how “

m . Was m . m directions fro Copernicus that aterials affect light So , so e of the stuff excavated by the crater and experiments we do here have direct m spread out , the aterial dispersed in all applications , and others are geared directions? O r are those rays just towards trying to understand the pro ”

m m . caused by e place ent , by lots of cess ichu rning u p of local material when the She is hoping to be able to get my moon was impacted ? hands on material from the Apollo 1 2 “ W m ell , now we have high enough ission that landed near one of the ’ telescope spectral data to know that it s rays of Copernicus so I can test the ” both! laughs Pieters . Everyone was spectral properties of the chips . Lunar ’ ’ We m I m right , so we re all happy . were able sa ples are treasures , but because a ’ m m a ’ to easure the proportions of the P ieters s door with a familiar l ogo . princi pal investigator for NASA , I ll be terial s that m ake u p the rays to see that allowed to experiment with them for m u they are ade p of stuff that was cores in eight different colors . specific projects that have been accept - m M u . M m destru c ejected fro Copernicus , plus local eas ring the way light shines on ed y experi ents are non ’ “ ’ We — m . S ectros aterial can predict it ballistical materials is Pieters s field . p tive all I ll be doing is pouring the ’ l —ih a . y other words , say six crater radii p p chips out of a vial and shining light on co y is really s ecia—lized field I t s a mix m m . out you would expect the geologic of a lot of things geology , astron the , and pouring the back in Your m 25 ma o m i m akeu p to be about percent of y , en g neering, physics , and che is hands sort of shake as your pour these terial m . m . We ejected fro Copernicus And try had a eeting of planetary things out , and you start prayin g that ’ ’ ”

et . that s what we found . I g real excited spectroscopists recently , where about you won t sneeze , she adds

. t m about this stuff, as you can see thirty of us go together to for ulate a docu ment of the strengths and needs of ecently Pieters was able to here are several theories as to the field . The scope of this field is one shed new light on what rocks

l . m . how the oon was created , p ar on Venus really look ike subset of lanet y scientists “ O ne W Pieters explains . theory O ne project that she began at hen the Soviets landed on m : 1 982 m - is that the Earth and oon N ASA has been brought to B rown Venus in , they had ulti spectral

m m P m . u b were created at the sa e ti e , that ieters designed a spectroscopy lab to ca eras They presented and p ’

. m m m m lished m they re sister planets Another is that ake easure ents on a sa ple using the i ages they retrieved , and

m . B u t the oon was an object flying through lab conditions . they were quite nice they were ’ “ W m o an e. m space that was captured by the Earth s hen we look at the oon , or really r g The reason the i ages are - m r . bi g avitational field Three is that in the another planet , we are getting a di so orange is that the at osphere on m u nsta rectio nal . early for ation of the Earth , an view The sun is lighting the Venus is really dense , and it filters out m m . ble fission process created the oon area fro one direction , and the the blue part of incident radiation She

m . fro the Earth And the last theory , spacecraft , or telescope , is looking at points to another photo , where the m - m m . m . We which is the ost popular , is that early that area fro another direction i ages of Venus are ore Earth like “ m u We re- m in the evolution of this solar syste , as needed to set p a lab that would con tried to calibrate the i ages m l m m eall ateria was ejected fro Earth as a trol the angles . The geo etry of the to see what the color of the rocks r y ” m roto lan result of i pact with a large p p a ma a r are outside of the dense atmosphere . situ tion does ke diffe ence in “ e t— M - 80 u We perhaps ars sized , it created gases what you see . , the lab I set p con knew that the rocks were basaltic m ’ m m . , g W , and vapors that hardened for in the trolled the geo etry hen I left rocks but we didn t know the ineral 27 ogy of them . I f we knew their true col ’ et m or , though , we d g infor ation about F their oxidation state . resh basalts are ’ ox dized very dark , and if they ve been y , ’ W they re red . hen we recalibrated the m i ages , we saw that the rocks were dark , without any orange . “ B u t m , if you take nor al , red , oxy lab m dized rocks into the , and heat the u p and measure them at Venus tem eratu res m p , they beco e very dark , W without any color . hat happens is they lose their color in the visible range and it moves into infrared wavelengths Early m easurements of Venus had suggested the presence of water there at some point in its evol u tion~ mino r W oceans and such . ell , now we know that these rocks might contain some of ’ that oxygen , even though it s not visi ble . A grou p of us are publishing a paper on this in a month or 50 . Publishing papers is part of a ’ m scientist s life . So is raising the oney to do the research to publish the papers . “ F - und raising is a constant headache , m Pieters adm its . And [ oney for] fed A v iew o Co erni cus to and other M oon craters. - f p ( p) erally funded science ex periments is tight . N ASA has always been tight . ’ ’ — itical 0 d m . W . cr e re all concerned It s of of ti e This new focus , on getting between research and teaching and m m re m m . m m i portance to aintain healthy Earth easure ents , is relatively new she akes a re ark that the split is m m m 75 search , and this kind of research is di A prototype of the re ote apping so ething like percent research and m et P rectly related to federal fundin g. No spectro eter has been built out at j 75 percent teaching. ieters teaches an ’ - W P . m one else pays for it . hen the federal ropulsion Laboratory in Pasadena It s u pper level course on re ote sensing m — m budget is in trouble , we all sort of won fun being right in the iddle of devel the kind of infor ation that is gath ’

o ment . m t m der . B ut when hasn t the federal budget p like this ered fro spacecraft , and his se ester been in trouble ? A fter years of doin g she is teaching a sem inar course for “ iet r m — M P . . e s u this , the anxiety softens You learn not left Houston to co e to grad ates The oon As a lanet ’

B 1 980 . m to get panicked . The situation won t rown in She was newly What is it about the oon that fas “ ” m cinates ? resolve itself, but because there are tal widowed and wanted to ake her Tough question , she ented m concerned people involved , sci a fresh start , but she also says , and turns to look at the i age of ’ entific research won t fall through the wanted to get away from a pure re Copernicus she has consulted through

m . if . cracks . search environ ent out the interview , as for guidance “ “ Pieters has a photo of the Challeng People tell me all the time that I The m oon is directly linked to the er on m m astronauts hanging her bulletin ust have been crazy to leave a place Earth , of course , no atter how you cut m ’ ; . board so eone has taped a sign on her where I could sit in the lab all day ever it Geologically , it s a very distinctive ’ W bi be m m . na eplate that suggests she ight be a day ell , there s a g difference planet . It has a starkness of physical “ ” “ Teacher in Space . I hope the space tween working at N ASA and working environment that you would find in the ’ — . m u n tragedies won t affect the data and here There is a constant flux , a contin Southwest the oon is very “ ’

. m u analysis , she says There have been ual testing that goes on when you re essed p with plants and vegetation , “ ’

m . et m postpone ents , of course , until the working with students You g stale she laughs . I probably shouldn t ad it ’

m . B u t . . launch proble s can be solved i doing research Teaching keeps the that s a reason I like it , though In ’ ’

m . m co m i portant to keep at it fluidity that you don t have in a purely ter s of a geologic body , it s less

m . . m In addition to finding oney to research ca pacity There is a freshness , plicated than others The oon is such ’ m et m m fund her research on the oon and a rejuvenation you g fro working a si ple planet , and it s relatively ’ - P . . D o . Venus and asteroids , ieters is involved with students She laughs I sound straight forward . It s pretty open The ’ - - m ? 1 m . m in so e relatively down to earth spec hopelessly corny ust If so , it s a infor ation is there for us to try to “ ’ trosco . W et et py e re beginning to g into corniness her students are bound to resolve . And as the questions we ask g — m . spectroscopy of terrestrial geology appreciate along with the constantly answers , ore are opened Every step — m m m m ’ ostly airborne spectroscopy in the replenished jar of ho e ade cookies we take , there are ore things we don t

. . We et . Southwest , where there is little vegeta that stands sentry near her office door know never quite g there ’ “ ’ B ? No! tion . Traditionally , you would take a Pieters was attracted to rown Isn t that frustrating It s not “ ’ pick and hammer and head out to a because of its strong planetary dirce frustrating! I t s incredibly exciting. im ’ — rem ote area to determ ine the m ineral tion . [Professor] j Head and I have That s what science is all about you

W m m . species . ith re ote instru ents we different approaches to this work , but just keep chipping away m can analyze a large area in a short peri they m esh . Her ti e at B rown is split to create som e suspicion about what Go od will have to say to the media about her job and her students . 1 I OI I I “ When I first started teaching at m ” “ m the acade y , she says , there was so e mm real concern that I was a co unist , ’ and it made a lot of people uneasy She s a wom an teaching Ru ssian around here . So I did several interviews with an official from public affairs sit stu dies in a redominantl ting here . O nce they even taped the p y ’ ’ B u t I m interview . sure you won t have m al e ro - A m erican school any p roblem . , ’ r blem p W . o ron g There wasn t a p , BAM m — exactly , once the tea arrived at l A cadem ’ the U . S . Nava B y the academ y . u t it didn t take us long to notice that a sweet young thing from the public affairs office had attached “ ’ herself to us like a barnacle . Y all “ he ne H nd ’ B y K at ri i s wouldn t m ind if I joined you for lunch ? ” after your interviews , would you she ’ m ’ i ’ 0 me m . I , a favor , asked j ane that this ti e sure they won t g ve asked assuring us that she wouldn t ’ m . Good when the interview for you any proble , but I d like to avoid interfere in any part of the interviews “ ’ ! I m u . . this story was being set p it , if possible not here to try to censor the inter “ ’ “

72 M . A . T . , Call the public affairs office , j ane Good teaches view , she said hastily but to provide ’ R U m m just to let them know you re com ing. I ussian studies at the nited States you with any infor ation you ight

ot 1 m M . g into a little hot water when did an Naval Acade y in Annapolis , ary need in the course of askin g questions ’ m u ts Washin ton P ost . o o interview for the g a land Her subject atter , her p I f the people you are interviewing don t ’ ’ a o I d kenness , I m et while g , and like to steer clear of , the defensive attitude of the know stats sure I could g the W m m . ilitary , and perhaps her sex , co bine answers quickly hen it was ex

’ t d n n th d m m j ane Good s an i g i e Naval Aca e y s M e ori al Hall .

29 O ne m m fl et . a m plained to her that we could g those broke , she says later of the ids A erican g to class , and every ti e I ’ ’ a m critical st ts ourselves , and that it wasn t our said that he wasn t surprised it had said so ething he thought was m ’ U . S . fla r policy to conduct interviews under the happened because he knew so eone of the , he d wave the g fu ious m eall l . m U . S . B watchful eyes of the govern ent , who went to rown and he was r y y Another student ca e in and ear —‘ ’ m libe al B . nestl me I f she scurried off to phone ho e base , r , and so was rown Around here , y talked to you re so anti ‘ ’ ’

u m . m explaining that this was only her third liberal is sed al ost as a pejorative A erican , you should leave this place . ’ ‘ ’ ’ We day on the job , and she didn t want to Liberal is anyone or anything that isn t talked about that attitude of ’ I ‘ — ’ stick around if she weren t welcome . su pportive of the m ilitary . So called America Love It or Leave It at ’ ‘W W e u . , l I m explained it wasn t a personal thing, the st dents on that I asked hat do ength , and explained y position ? just that where we came from it would you mean by liberal D o you mean is that the real danger would be for peo m m m B ? le sto m be unheard of for so eone fro the there a lot of sexual freedo at rown p to p that criticis . ? ’ “ B m m ? P m You m News ureau to sit in on an interview Acade ic freedo olitical freedo know , if I went into y class ‘

m m . For er Ru eo with a faculty e ber whatever The students down here have a p es and said , The ssians are evil p ’ ce tion B le m reason . p of rown that is as skewed as p and we should destroy the , there ’ ’ Some barnacles are harder to many people s perceptions of the Naval wouldn t be a problem with these stu — ’ ‘ . m . B u t scrape off than others She was back in Acade y that it s very conservative , dents instead , I say , I f you want to - - m , ro m t . m u inutes , breathless and wide eyed to and strictly p ili ary understand the ene y , look thro gh m deh R . W R explain that she had been told it was The Naval Acade y , by its ussian eyes hat do ussians think ” ’ - . nition ro m a . B u t be m u u ? policy for her to sit in on interviews , is p ilit ry Good of freedo , of individ al sec rity As ’ B u t u b lieves men m , what if we hadn t alerted the p that the average civilian has no officers , these and wo en will be lic —o r m i affairs office at all , taking it one idea of the depth and breadth of aca ore effective dealing w th the Soviet

m m m . U step further , conducted the interviews de ic freedo allowed at the acade y nion if they realize that the Soviets “ off-campus ? B ut the pu blic affairs The fact that we have total academic have a fundamentally different view of ’ m m officer prom ised she wouldn t say a freedom is critically i portant to the hu an nature and the world . I f we

u an thin . O ne m m t m thing, or interr pt , or y g j ust faculty . thing that akes the Naval assu e the Sovie s see hu an rights W m . m m m m provide infor ation ell , because Acade y special a ong service acad and de ocracy in the sa e way we do , both of the women we had come to in emies in the U nited States is that we it will only lead u s to a dead end in

i w . terv e . B u t were tenured professors , and have a large civilian faculty Half of the negotiating , by presenting the ; because the sweet young thing had faculty here are civilians and in the Soviet point of view , by saying incendi ‘ m - l m . told us at east three ti es that she was hu anities , two thirds are civilians ary things like , The reason we won “ ’ m m su m beco ing a hu an being this That is not an accident . There s the World War I I was because of the Soviet ”— — ’ mer we l . U leaving the Navy re ented attitude here that we should have an nion , not only do the students chal ’ l m m me I m As on g as the alu nae we were inter interaction between the ilitary and lenge , but considered anti ’ m m . viewing weren t inti idated , we would civilian worlds . A tension is created , but A erican - m . l m stea ahead full speed a a r . Good has been tea teaching her “ I see it s c eative tension The civi It really is a different world down ians here are in a position where they Russian studies class this semester with G u here , j ane ood had warned on the can challenge the officers and st dents , a fellow professor whose specialty is “ ’ ’ “

. . m . phone You ll see and that s healthy . Nazi Ger any We p lay to our roles a him Teaching here is important for bit . They call the fascist and me the ’ m m ’ t s . 1 l me m m m . and the idship en , too , in ter s of personal growth co ie He s very natti y dressed , with ’ m m r l m are asse bling for Good s last have no ilita y background whatso highly po ished shoes , and I co e in a “ R ’ m m m class of ussian studies for the ever , and I don t co e fro a ilitary bit disheveled , looking like a hippie “ ’ ”

. ma m , . . u year This isn t a typical class tradition , says Good That y be fro the sixties St dents who take this u l m 1 am Good explains as we walk briskly putting it m ildly . Good is a prod ct of c ass ight start out thinking a “ ’

. For m m bu t through the yard one thing, it s the late sixties . A Peace Corps volunteer co unist , after being in the class , m “ ’ the largest class in the hu anities sec ( My Peace Corps experience was they wou ld say I m not . They get per ’ — ’ . m I a lexed tion so it s bigger than average The so ewhat atypical t ught basketball p , and that s part of what educa m al - i all u . subject is of interest to the ids , in a civil rights activist , a t on is abo t They need to confront ’ 1 thou gh they don t always like what demonstrator against the war in Viet the fact that people are different . So

. W nam m m same. e have to say The guys in this class are a , a rg a a a a r a g ” n unde r du te t s all lib uch he e is the ch llen e

. - W m . pretty lively bunch , too g ( g) g g eral arts—colle e ittenber in the the to think thin s throu h These As evidenced when Good intro M w g p par r students do expect to challenge me a bit “ id est nothin re ed Good fo We BAM infilt rato rs. m m . duces the have the acade y ore than the average professor , and I m m B U ni “ so e visitors today fro rown I had a broad stereotype of what encourage that . I f they can articulate m u m . versity , that bastion of conservatis p this place would be like , she ad its the questions if they can defend their ” “ ’ ’ re m 5 I m : North , she says , and waits for the And I ll never forget y first year position , that what looking for - s o nse . . m . p She is heckled good naturedly here . I was the odd one out The stu the cogent argu ent m m a about her al a ater , and she heckles dents here all shared view of the in response . As she passes out class world that was different from m ine .

m , m m W evaluation for s one idship an hen I went to school , the students - - - ho ri au t m m . asks , not quite innocently enou gh , were the ones who challenged than a ilitary acade y As ? ” M s. , t . . Are you tenured yet Good y Here , the faculty does I found j ane Good goes through her

M r . ? m Have you graduated yet , j ones yself in the position of having to paces in front of her class , several

. she shoots back quickly fi r w a g , a g r a . a a “ de ne ca efully h t I thou ht nd thou hts occu to visitor I n cl ss of B m u m o . The subject of rown ca e p in defend y positi ns The first year , I perhaps sixty students , there is one m m man . class shortly after the prostitution story g , , 30 had one student who brou ht a s all wo an one black one Chicano continued on page 32

o . m U G od is addressing the class , which is the world I don t know if you noticed Soviet historian at A erican niversity , m u used to hearing orders barked pri ar or not , but there were a co ple of stu where she received her doctorate in - ih . m 1 978 . ily by ale voices , in a high pitched dents sound asleep class today These history in They are the parents of m ’ — “ R fem inine voice . She is wearing fe ale students aren t allowed to stay in their two sons Do they have ussian ”

m m m . m m civilian clothes . I t ust be fairly inti i roo s and sleep during the day Class names? she is asked . A s all s ile m —“ ’ . m . m . W dating to be such an ano aly attendance is andatory So they co e ell , yes They re Nicholas and “ ’ f l ‘ ’ . W a l m . e I ve been here for seven years to class , and often asleep I f so e Alexander call Alexander Sasha , ’ ’

m acce onstantl 1 ll o R m . now , and I ve seen a lot ore p one is c y sleeping, g after which is the ussian di inutive ’ ’ “

m em . m tance of wo en around here as officers I f so eone hasn t read the chapter I tell you , being p regnant at this ” “ ’ ’

. m . and civilians , she says This is the we re talking about , I ll send the out place was an interesting experience I m tenth year that wo en students have of the room to do it . The faculty here felt I was giving lessons in physiology

m m . m m . been co ing to the acade y And , in the entire ter I used y pregnancy to

creasin l men co m mmu . g y , the students are co nicate with the class They were ing from fam ilies where their mom s extremely solicitous and very concerned ’ 80 m worked . it doesn t strike the as for my health . About the seventh m m ‘ strange that wo en here could have onth , they kept asking, Are you sure ’ ’ A m mod ? professional careers . I a role you re not due any day They placed ’ el ? I think I m an im po rtant role m odel bets on when the baby would be bo rn

men m m . to the ore than the wo en I and suggested names . The baby was ’ m m l s— think they need to see wo en take over born the day after y ast —clas how s as com pany officers and move u p in a r m ar precisionP a w ” th t fo ilit y nd hen

m m . 1 him i portant ilitary positions brought in the day of the final , I ’ m There s no doubt that the acade y got a standing ovation . I think I was ’ is a difficult place for women to work . closer to that class than any other I ve “

m m . Many wo en here feel that our strat had . I t was really quite oving egles for success m ight be different Any woman with children knows We from other places . have to attend a the particular tensions created when We lot of functions and be seen . learn she is trying to juggle a professional “ M ” o . to choose the issues that we g to bat career y priorities are clear , says ’ “ ’ m mom . O o . I for very carefully therwise you re G od a first then a wife , 5 - ih perceived as being a perpetual trouble then a professor . There a built guilt m m m . aker , and people tune you out factor for o s , and there is nothing

m m . I n spite of, or perhaps because of, at the acade y that akes that easier m m m out her outspoken attitude , Good has been There was even a e o that ca e appointed to two critical academ y com a while back that children were not al

i rv in fifteen l . You m ittees. s se She _ g on the owed in the workplace look at

m m m o A World War I I ro a anda m . e ber ad issions b ard , and she p p g so ething like that and wonder m ’ co t adorns Good s door . served last year on the steering pos er I n other ways , Good has found the mittee for accreditation of the acad academ y to be quite supportive of her . — - hin t n P ost mm . W emy a self evaluation co ittee becom es accustomed to students being When the as g o published a am m m m I n part , I the token wo an on on ti e and prepared , which is sort of a story on the wo an who was teaching

t m m . u hese co ittees A nd at first I thought luxury . future Naval officers abo t their m ’ m ” u . aybe I should resent that or feel inse I t s tough , tho gh As a good ene y , the story was sent out over

. B u t mom u cure you take advantage of these , when I hear a sob story , I hear it the wires and picked p across the ’ e m o P ost opportunities and just do the b st da n through to the end . A nd it s difficult country . G od believes that the ’ ’

db . accentu j you can That s how the way is not to be moved by them . I think it s stressed the negative without ’

m m m . O ne u paved for others , and that s so ething especially i portant for wo en , ating the positive res lt was that battl - . e . I want to do The biggest for though , to have a policy and stick to it she was targeted by the self appointed ’

m et m . wo en around here is to g people to I f you don t , you earn the reputation watchdog, Accuracy in Acade ia ‘ “ m m m u listen to them . And I a in the position for being someone who is easily blown So e guy in Texas ca e p here m to do that . off and wanted to sit in on y classes to see Good is tough in the classroom and There is a tension here between exactly what it was I was preaching. He ’ ad m him ac doesn t allow herself to be taken the ilitary and civilian worlds , and went to the dean , who denied o f- m m vantage although so eti es the within that is where I find the question cess , explaining that we have our own m “ m ’ . M m te ptation presents itself I set dead of being a woman . y ale colleagues standards of acade ics here and didn t ’ ’ m . lines for papers , and if the paper s not here joke all the ti e that issues I bring need this guy s opinion The institution ’ ’

. u m m e . turned in , the student flunks I consider p aren t fe inist issues , but civilian really supported They didn t leave ’ m W me i m . y deadlines an order , like any other issues . It s hard to know . hen I first hang ng out on a li b m W . m order the iddie receives hen you joined the acade y , I was the only one - P ost m . leave things open ended , these stu here with a s all child Acceptin g chil he story reflected badly ,

ad . dents , like any students , will take dren around here is a gradual process Good believes , on the way

I f m . vantage . the ids want to go off for a O ne of those issues I did take a stand she feels about her students et O ne weekend , and not do the paper , they on was trying to g this place to open a part of that interview ’ a - have to underst nd that there s a con day care center . That was one issue that that was highlighted was her response ’ o o . sequence for that decision , just as there didn t g anywhere to a student who had told G od he was ’ ' “ G , m M , p 32 will be consequences once they re out in ood s husband j a es alloy is a curious how I found it ossible to

By j a m es Reinho ld

The en velo e lea e m p p , p s ries of unsolicited anuscri ts and of the broken hopes and drea m s of thou When the Academ y Awards were sands of aspiring writers . Every once in M m handed out one onday evenin g in a while , thou gh , a story will e erge M m m arch , B rown alu ni walked away fro the slush pile and see the light of — with two golden statuettes both in print . Such was the happy circu m stance ’

n D r 68 . writing categories . for Susan Athear ye Her story , ’ K rt d k 6 1 O m u Lue t e won an scar for Bloo ing Violet , was published in 1 98 5 best screen play ada pted from other the A pril issue of R edbook. (The m Ou t o A rica. sources for his screen play , f f agazine receives short stories ’ And Wil l iam Kel l ey 5 5 won for best every year and publishes no more than - Witness . fi re original screen play for , which five to seven ) After that , in ra pid - co W . W . he wrote with Earl allace succession , she acquired an agent (who ’ Ou t of Africa is Luedtke s second called her) and had a half- dozen more Absen M al R edbook screen play . His first was ce of stories published in and ’ - ice m M cCall s . re , starring Paul New an and Sally She is now busy w riting her

F . ield . Luedtke turned to writing first novel and at work on a second “ O screen plays after a successful career in nce you have a foot in the door , m ’ . W m journalis [ ]ith an ease that see s it s a whole lot easier , she said in an m D u ham to ock the efforts of others , Luedtke interview published in the r

N C He ald. mo D r . l l has flashed through the world of ( ) r Her husband , A en ’ ’ m m D r 67 70 D U tion pictures in uch the sa e way he ye , a uke niversity m M i hi an m ef did journalis , said c g aga psychiatrist , su pported her literary “ “

W m . zine . hat do you do after a career in forts fro the start I had a chance to which you share in a Pulitzer Prize at take a teaching jo b a year before I sold - m . twenty eight , and run a ajor daily anything And I should have taken it The D et oit F ee P ess m newspaper , r r r , by the because we needed the oney , but I ’ ti me you re thirty ? And what do you wanted to give myself one m ore year ? ” O . do after you win an scar Continue and he was very su pportive , she said : m writing screen plays Luedtke is putting It was a ga ble , but it paid off because ’ the finishing touches on a third screen now I m doing what I really want to ’

Schindl e s List . play , r , which is about a do German industrialist who reputedly saved m illions o f j ew s during World W ar 1 1 . Willia m Kelley began his literary life as a novelist . He was the author of Gemini and The God H u nters before he went to Hollywood in 1 968 to write m m d ra as for television . So e of his TV writin g included episodes of Gun m ” “ D ” “ s oke , j udd for the efense , Kun g ” F u W Was Wo n . A o c iat d A l n i , and How The est ss e um g Accordin to a story in the San n o inatin co ittee D Tribu ne m g mm iego , Kelley has been working on a novel about conte m porary Holly seeking suggestio n s wood . Every year all alu m ni are sent a ballot ‘ ’ O u t o f R edb o o k and asked to participate in an election for alu m ni and alu m nae trustees and ’ ‘ ’ magaz ine s slush pile for the officers of the Associated m Alu m ni . Several onths before that — m m m m Slush piles the literary equivalent of ailing, e bers of the No inating — the elephant graveyard are re po sito Com m ittee of the Associated Alum ni Do re m e m Hull urge international peace . you anager of business dev lop ent for Bell ? e m m Aerospace T xtron , concentrating on Star e ber ’ Wars research and NASA s space station . 1 Fearne e m the Edward M . y has retir d as was recentl y appointed chair an of adjunct professor of architecture town of Tonawanda (population

. e at the University of Southwest Planning Board My wif , children , and two e Louisiana and moved to Florida . His new grandchildren (two boys . girls) are w ll

. e m h . e W . 1 9t 1 602 N . dd i i , i vi and happy My wif is chair an of the town a ress s C r Ga nes ll ”

. 32605 . neighborhood watch district

Seymo u r Berkm an is busy oper ating his general insurance agency lin in

N . Y . He in Glen Cove , purchased ck in ’

m . R ic ha d W . Horsefi el d m 1 984 , I r , although an apart ent in London and will be a May but doing OK May have to m t he m t mm . physically well and en ally alert , seasonal co uter to Great Britain have a bypass soon but do plan to ake '

L . is confined to a wheelchair in a Carl M orto n notes that he still fishes reunion with the good ord s help m nursing home . He would welco e cards or and boats in Baja and still loves the desert ’

P . O . D . l i notes from classmates . ick s address is and Brown His new address is Box ss has

m 359 84 507 . 8562 2 . Holly Manor Nursing Ho e , Box , , Green Valley , Ariz i m an 07945 . l iam . R e . m N. . 1 R v . Wi 9 Go ld Rd . e Hill , Mendha , j The l S s recently , St - f h 1 . fi t e . 2 663 celebrated his twenty anniversary as Micha l , Md ’

. Nat Ll o d a i rector of St Phili p s Church in the High y D v s and her husband . mm ' m N. Y . nu W Pa. lands , Garrison , The co unity gave a Dick , of est Chester , , celebrated Dick s him em E enjoys reception in his honor and presented early retir ent with a tri p to ngland , - W . m m . oil golfing , so e travel , and fa ily doings with an portrait by the well known artist Scotland , and ales Seeing the Al umni M onthly refer to Marvel Herbert Tauss as a token of their apprecia M ary -jo Lo der Ebner traveled to Den ‘ '

M n . m h o f e Gym as old makes me feel ancient . arvel tion and affectio ark as t e guest the Oticon H aring ’ W a k R in her was brand new our fresh man year . e can t Fr n o ll g had tri ple bypass heart Instruments Co rporation through work ! ’ be that old ! surgery at San Francisco s Presbyte rian as audiologist at the Hearing and Speech

e m . m R e N . Y . Hospital in D ce ber A ong early visitors Center of ochest r , Her daughter , - e u an Me Fort Myers , and well wish rs was his neighbor , S s g , is working in the student activities ’ - o e R . M arc u s 83 . office at Brown . Mary j liv s in ochester o e m e Fran k L . F l y has been pro ot d to e being received daily general sales manager- industrial products

i . e 4 0th e . A ero u Association of Fort Myers . Fred serv d as r union Indica for q p Corporation He will have Whiske Creek News all editor of the y , was a di overall responsibility for sales of indus o f m m te on m rector the country club , chair an of the group returning to greet their class a s trial products to original equi p ent , after ”

m m . mm m m . e local Save the Lady co ittee , and fund this o entous occasion Our progra will ark t . and national accounts Prior to his m m all the m o m he raiser for a nu ber of civic charities , a ong include nostalgic ca pus events plus pr otion , had served as industrial sales

1 76 . m . e m n e 9 his any activities a tri p to N wport for brunch and a surprise a ager sinc He lives in jackson , treat on Sunday . Mich . 50th o e ine u c ott nd e - en e en A nn ou ton m i The class is celebrating its j s p h Tr s A r ws H ry H l H gh Fry , Ca p H ll “ m Pem e : m to P new reunion as a erged class of remarried in 1 980 . She writ s I oved a has a job with the Pennsylvania ‘ ’

e . ten it me . D m e R e broke and Brown graduat s Fifty Antigua years ago , and is ho now epart nt of ev nue in tax payer assis

a o t m . t he the years g we had dis inguished class ates Two years of ten were spent with tance , a telephone unit designed for the Do mem m e m e m you re ber the Pe broke class P ace Corps , working in ad inistration at tax payer who n eds infor ation on personal ? a o rie Har rea e ; n m tax m officers M rj g v s , president the local hospital , advising voluntary orga inco e , sales tax , e ployer withholding ' atherine u l l i an ' a ara izatio ns m t he t ro C S v , vice president B rb , and working with Island wo en s tax , and rent and proper y rebate p - l l m ! oh nson e ; R u t a i e U . m . e j , secr tary and h M r groups Living and working in a s all de gra I enjoy it and have a new t lephone mm e m - m an . velo in m e m 7 1 7 787 820 1 . , treasurer Special co itte chair en p g country , which beca e an ind nu ber ( ) (office) , she says m Do oth aron ; R u t da e 1 98 1 e , a i ne R o e n au m o d m an were r y B . Ivy Day h A s , p ndent nation in , has b en a vast M x s b G l ,

; ar a a i he , ; e e , m e Ivy Night B b r F s r Spring Day and enlight ning x perience full of struggles Swa pscott , Mass is in the sp cial educa

m . l I sabe l effre m . m the W s j y , ascot The ascot was a frustrations , and rich rewards have two tion depart ent of inthrop (Mas ) h rine ennett . at S . : e real live dark horse C e B was daughters in the U . Christin Andrews School System teaching children with learn — - d rn ice a a r in e Reco e W Pa. a r , , ; . ac edito chi f of the r and B Olek , in illow Grove and B rb r ing difficulties Her husband , Martin , p ’ - - - B i el o w l n B u n M ael d e atal ano 7 4 . n , e law m . e g was editor chief of the r A r ws C , in Boulder Colo My tic s in Swa pscott Her daught r .

. R e m e e m yearbook Dean Margaret Morriss was on husband , andy , and I w lco overs as Nancy Cleary , is the office anager for - . : 809 4 62 1 998 . 8: B B DO hand , but President Clarence Barbour was visitors Call us ( ) Q uinn johnson . , advertising

m . Wi iam . i n m e R unable to attend any cere onies ll H K g has co pleted thirty agency in Boston ; daught r , Betsy ooks , men Leo n e e law eff e Headliners for the were years as professor of h alth ducation at the practices with her father ; son , j r y “ ' P a ne , m ; onal d Em er , , n . m 83 t m Law y first class arshal D y University of Arizona Tucso The ain , gradua es fro Boston University

m Ted Tannewal d r. R e second class arshal ; , j , change in thirty years that I shudder at is School in june ; and son . obert , graduat s A l abo r mm e m ; — — e m m Y Law and T , Co nce ent speakers our Arizona population x plosion fro fro New ork University School in l h Wa er m im Whitco m m 1 956 R a n ; . p g , hy nist j b , one illion in to probably over three j une - - W e ie een m 1 986 m R a . Leoni O il l ri ht . onn a rator ; and B B g , poet C Gr and half illion in Most of the live y D , oodbridg , Conn has - . m e e e eh w as chairman of the Class Day comm ittee . in Phoenix and Tucson been pro oted to s nior vic presid nt [H arri e Har t was ill i ac m an Lessel bau m ineerin and m , the historian , , Syb l Bl k spent a g g advanced progra s at United ’

mm m 372 m mm t a e , m , On Co ence ent day , degrees onth last su er ouring China and j Technologi s Sikorsky Aircraft Sta ford “ be e all wvere h she . He an . T e awarded after we proceeded down the p tri p , writes , was fascinating Conn will r sponsible for directing m e . et . 1 e Hill in h avy rain It was the first rainy y exhausting keep very busy teaching research , engine ring , and anufacturing ll re fl ee e mm m 1 892 . A Co ence ent since of us and lecturing on the art of ower arranging , engin ring activities for curr nt and future ceived m c our sheepskins in the First Baptist as well as running y business , Creative Sikorsky product lines , and will dire t and W e e m n e m e . W . I . M e . R eeting House sat in our dri pping Containers She lives in arren , control d v lop e t of advanc d co posit m 35 e or e . e o e m N. Y . . , gowns and heard Secretary of State Cordell G g B M lr s , Ken ore , , is technology Prior to his pro otion he was — vice president of research and engineering . and food and a few surprises . Besides the M ar garet Conant M ichael (see El i se Brown Bear Buffet and Campus Dance on ic ael l am o u ro ou l os M h F p Friday , the class will gather for its traditional El eano M ou she ian r g , Boston , chaired a cocktail party and dinner before the Pops personnel seminar for Draper Laboratories Concert on Saturday . Sunday will begin with R I . C m . at the Sheraton Islander in Newport , a sunrise surprise followed by a la bake She is personnel relations manager for the A ll this and more are waiting for you at the - Cambridge based firm . 3oth ’

Ge i a e on N. . Hen . ae r C rr N ls , Middlesex , j , is in The second edition of ry P B r s R Edi N Re esentation Elections: Law P actice corporate operations for evlon , Inc pr , r d N. . u (5 P oce u e son , J She keeps p on Brown affairs and r r has just been published by

35th . 8e . has been busy attending reunions She Harcourt , Brace Jovanovich The book ’ ’

83 Doroth 4 8 1 980 . attended in for her sister , y ; in was first published in Henry lives in ’ ’

85 hu ck 50 ; . for her husband , C and now New York City ’

86 . Wil l iam L . e m chak her own in D , Pittsburgh , writes o o r eson ov ak m m cu m J y B g N and her husband , that his son , Bill , graduated su a recentl ' retu rned m m Dick , y fro a tri p to New laude , Phi Beta Kappa , fro Allegheny Zealand and Australia . They live in Annis College in 1 982 and is now third in his class

m . qua , Mass at the University of Michigan Business o t lai r Sa e m . D t y B g and her husband , Nat , School , ajoring in international finance ’

am es M . Dem u nd am ie M ar journeyed to Scotland for the wedding of J s son , J

. ti n m m their daughter , Jennie They live in Peace , is co pleting his sopho ore year at

D l R . I . a e m m . im , Brown as a co puter science ajor J is

oann e u nz Whi te . Dow 8c J K , Knoxville , Tenn , treasurer of Condon , a Hartford 3 mm e is president of Tennessee Artists , group of based co ercial and industrial real estat - fi rm professional and non professional artists . , and was recently elected district vice E She al so became a grandmother in 1 985 . president for New ngland of the Society of

El l en Eaton Wil son R . im and her husband , Industrial ealtors J and his wife , Alice , ’ Dick 50 m - mm , are se i retired and have built a spend their su ers sailing Narragansett ' - - m . . ho e in Fernandina Beach , Fla They re Bay on their thirty six foot Pearson ketch

m e W . dividing their ti e between ther and their They live in est Hartford , Conn “ l d H . o en Ga. m R . I . m o n ho e in Bristol , Guess which onths J h G , Lithonia , , reports ” “

! m . where that both sons are g—etting arried this year One daughter to go the youngest .

W . u n he Ed ar d . White a o w A is a financial M rg t G t r , New York City , is planner and stockbroker with doing interior design work out of New York

A t . Calvert Securities Group , in and northwest Connecticut Her house on ountr lanta . He is also a chartered property and Nantucket was shown this year in C y “

Liv in m . am m m casualty underwriter , chartered life under g agazine I still dividing y ti e e a writer , charter d financial consult nt , as well between residental and editorial design ! m an . as accredited advisor in insurance and work , she writes Since so any clients are 779 u old insurance counselors . He lives at Holly younger , it is a delight to keep p with '

0 m all m . Rd . 83 . 3 0 Hedge , Stone Mountain , Ga , class ates where we re in the sa e boat so ho R o e eith az el l with his son , Andrew , a high school p g r K H writes that he is a m more . recovering alcoholic and reestablishing y law m life and practice in Pago Pago , A erican

m D C. m Sa oa , after a stint in Anyone co ing to the South Pacific is welcome to the Great er Pago Pago and Southern Pacific Brown - 1 078 P e su ltin . a g He is a thirty year veteran of the Club by notifying Box , g Pago , information industry and was founder and American Samoa 96799 .

m ean . Ho ttl e m Pa. president of Infor ation Processing Con D M , So erset , , is owner

su ltants . 8: Co . , Inc He was a princi pal with the and senior partner of Bulow Hottle , ’ l fi rm CPA s. a so international consulting of Cresap, He is a partner , with his sons , in

c m 1 . ; Mc or ick and Paget , nc , and prior to various construction businesses a partner in m m WUSC that , a arketing executive for I BM and Keystone Piano Co pany and - e . e A M F M ; Honeyw ll Bill and his wif , Valerie , live in radio station and on the board of W m m ilton , Conn . directors of So erset Trust Co pany . He has five sons and eight grandchildren .

hard No u rie Edward . Randel l r , a vice president V , J was elected ex ecutive vice president-retail banking of He Pittsburgh National Bank in March . had tio nal board of trustees of the Leukem ia been senior vice president of the community

m 1 7 . E Society of America . As a ember of the banking division since 9 2 dward is also a

m e . board , he serves on the national ca paign , trustee of Gettysburg Coll ge He lives in

mm . foundations , and planned giving co it Pittsburgh No u rie r l w m . D . osef o o a N Y tees has also served as president of J S y , Ja aica , ’ e E : I am the Soci ty s astern Pennsylvania Chapter . writes looking forward to attending 30th m m m He lives in Strafford , Pa . our reunion at the sa e ti e that y ’

ndre 86. son , A w , graduates with the class of Also attending the graduation will be my ' ' El i abeth 84 m G e 82 daughter , z , y son , r g , ‘ - -l w Li nd m in a a G ra 82 . and y daughter , y 36 ’ I m five-man Once again there will be friends , fun practicing pediatrics with a R Dan e . an e ta m m m m . t J L z t , Jr Bir ingha , Greenland this su er He lives in ead

. e w Mich , is in charge of public affairs res arch ing ith his three daughters and his wife , for the public relations staff of General Mary , a pediatrician .

. I n 1 985 im a m an e e Motors Corporation , he was elected J T t writes , I hav b en living e- m mm o f to a thre year ter as city co issioner of in Kapalua on the island Maui , Hawaii , Birm ingham . since 1 98 1 and have been working as the

ar . Ri c m the M y L h , president and founder anager of the retail shops in Hyatt - PFS . R . of , Inc , and a well known consultant egency Hotel on Kaanapali Beach It has - n m the e specializing in fourth ge eration co puter been beautiful living here , but pac of languages , will be the conference chair of life is too slow , and now the island is being W the 1 986 National Computer Conference to ruined by overdevelopment . ith the idea

. e m be held in June in Las Vegas The confer that th re is ore to life than pretty sunsets , m “ D m D m ence the e is yna ic i ensions of days at the beach , and waiting for the tourist m : m me 1 am m Los Co puting I plications for Manage nt , season , oving back to Angeles Professionals 8: Users . Mary has spent and will go back into the music business as a m e rod ucer/son w riter fifteen years in the co put r industry and record p g , which is what I has been senior consultant to the ICS did prior to moving to Hawai i . Back to life in ’

. m 4 403 t he . Group , Inc , a product support specialist for fast lane Ji s address is Canoga

m s . an 364 . d W . 9 1 Mathe atica Product Group , Inc , a Ave . , oodland Hills , Calif

m i Datasaab m 1 . syste s eng neer for Syste s . nc ,

m . El ic ael . a i a and Infor atics , Inc She lives in Segun M h S B ss s has been p do , Calif. pointed vice president for aca W al ter Wi se m E Connecti l y , a sales associate with de ic affairs at astern R m to m Cu t . Schlott ealtors , was na ed the p sales State University He was for erly ' person o f J anuary in the fi rm s Ridgewood associate dean of faculty and interi m assis East office . He has been a real estate tant chancellor for educational services at m - professional for ore than twenty years and the University of Wisconsin Parkside . He m m Mil e is a perennial e ber of the statewide has written xtensively on sociological topics , W - D . sea co au lion ollar Sales Club alter resides in higher education , and the and is W - Sociolo : yckoff, with his wife . Sandra , and thor of the widely used textbooks , gy two daughters . A n I ntroduction and Social P robl ems . M art ha Am es B u rge ss and her hus o f band , Tony , announce the birth a son , e m 28 Beaur gard A es Burgess , on May . W e m m m 1 985 . h n ho e aking per its , she m e ture Capital and Business Develop ent writ s natural history articles , and is also e the o Tuc Confer nce held in February at Park w rking on a chapter for a new book , o . . son: A Short Histor be view Hilton in Hartford Conn He is seni r y , due to published in vice president and director of North Ameri can Investment Com pany o f Providence .

W i iam . a an e ll J N th , vice presid nt of Nathan Office Furnishings , Inc has been T HE elected president of the Albany Rota - r 1 986 87 . e y Club for He lives with his wif , B R O W N E o lizabeth . and two children , Janet and J se h D m N . Y . p , in el ar , D E D B I E

' B ow s male a cappella slngin a e . n ac e r n Ch rl s A A sb h r . conductor g oup, are oud to announce t 9 m the r r and usic director of Colora e ease of t elr new a bum m r l l , do Springs Sy phony Orchestra , ! DERI M I’ V kflNEDFW. has been elected president of the GOO-mem ’ mem e ber Conductor s Guild . He is also a b r for our co s end 2000 y y , $6 p us . p p l of Vision a lanning roject for the os a e and i to: e R p t g l ng Pikes P ak egion , and serves on the board The Brown Derbles of directors of the statewide Public Educa c/o J ame McNamara in o y . tion Coalition Charles has lived C lorado 2 1 1 KIIIarne Drlve

1 970 . Springs since Burlln ton 0 ’ g , 5401 Su san Chee v er s biographical memoir m w riter ohn e of her father , acclai ed J Che Home B e o e Dark ame ver , f r , was n d winner of CLA SSI FI ED

W . the 1 985 L . L . inshi p Book Award The - e n The award , a public affairs pr se tation of Charters B oston Gl obe e , is giv n annually to the author best~ u d ed m a e a of the j g new book having so e Enjoy total privacy and safety at sea. Ch rt r relation to New England life . She lives in luxu ry yacht in the Aegean or Adriatic. ' — - Y RA S Y C N G . 2 1 2 864 0654 . Y . N. Ossining , A A HTI

M u si c

E er rec o rd t a e CD and deo in n fo r v y , p , , vi pri t W at w n w en fast o me de e y . e e you a t h — liv r h v r h o u want b o ne ma o r co m u te . y y p , , p remote sensing and digital image processing . h il r ’ e fe ence cata o 200 a st n s I m r r l g ( p ge li i g ) Currently , princi pal investigator on the a a a e fo r eas o de n . E! PRESS U S C v il bl y r ri g M I , m g R p g m NASA Shuttle I agin adar ro ra and 1 7 5 ft A ve Su te 709B New Yo . NY Fi h i , rk me - - 3 7 also doing research which will take to 1 00 1 0 2 1 2 254 6 1 6 1 . e the spring . She was interview d in the Janu ary 1 986 issue of A rizona Highways magazine and lives in Tucson .

ed eric . l ana an r . . Fr F F g , J writes that he handicap dropping Having fun R I m B arr Del astil ho is still living in Cranston , with y wife , y C has been town R m m s D m Kay itter , and our daughters , Molly , who is anager of A herst , Mas , since ece ber m m 2 R 20 1 982 . m al ost , and ebecca , who was born in , He for erly was city anager of

e . D m NC . F bruary urha , an w orth m n err Frank C . L g is now director of M argaretta Sto ne H au s a (see J y m m - Co m Hau m an progra develop ent at Pepsi Cola A . s

N . Y . Ed i na L . Ri ssl and m . pany in Purchase , He is responsible for , h , , “w A erst Mass : developing national channel strategies and writes My daughter , Olivia , is about to turn m m all . 3 progra s for Pepsi brands Frank and his and has been enjoying y sabbatical year , ' m e 3 /z- -o ld m wife , Ki berlee , and th ir year son , fall se ester at Harvard Law School and m L w Y . a N . Nicholas , live in Chappaqua , Con spring se ester at Stanford School and l we m m . gratulatory cards , letters , and gifts are depart ent of co puter science At Har l w m . a co ed , he says vard , where I was a lecturer on , I gave a

cott R. anders 1 985 m S S , winner of the se inar on artificial intelligence and legal ’ m Associated Writing Program s award in reasoning . Last year I was pro oted to as nonfiction and author of two books , wrote sociate professor (with tenure) in the de Stone ountr e artm ent m m the text for C y , recently publish d p of co puter and infor ation sci W by Indiana University Press . ith photo ence at the University of Massachusetts ,

W m . graphs by Jeffery A . olin , the book tells A herst the story of Monroe and Lawrence Counties ennifer Hess sher in Indiana , where quarries provide the J A and her m 75 all m li estone for percent of stone build husband , Ja es , report the birth ’ H n U . S. O a ings in the Sanders is a professor of of their second son , Byron ’

m . A l E Io n A u . 2 1 . nglish at Indiana University , Bloo ington , on g Byron s older brother ,

exander 4 . , is now They live in Strafford , “ ’

Pa. . , along Philadelphia s Main Line M erry B u l l ock is a visiting guest re searcher at the Max Planck Institute for 98 1 m . 1 R W and Ashley , to Poto ac , Md In , I Psychological esearch , Munchen , est “ m m m law fi rm m beca e a e ber of the of Nixon , Ger any , where she is studying the causes ‘ ’ ’

D . Hargrave , evans and Doyle After practic and effects of the terrible two s by looking ’ fi rm s R m the ing for ten years in the ochester , at the develop ent of self and action

m . N . Y . 1 e , offices will continue to r present co petence in toddlers

m rai il ner W a . newspapers and other edia clients in the C g M , ellesley , M ss , has m W D C . ashington , offices been pro oted to vice president at Gray ai am be l l F- 1 4 m Stra to n - adver Cr g C p , an To cat radar y International , a full service intercept officer and the executive officer of tising and public relations agency in Wal 8 m 4 1 m . He o ined m 1 9 3 co Fighter Squadron , The Black Aces , tha j the co pany in ,

in m m . based at Oceana Naval Air Station in Vir g fro Kauf an Associates , Inc , Boston ,

m e . V a. ginia Beach , , spent ore than sixty days wh re he was an account executive ' off the Lebanese coast during last sum mer s Su san C roo ks N e vil l e and her hus TWA Tom R hostage crisis , assigned to the aircraft band , , report the birth of obert in - 6 L USS Nimit . . carrier z He is a sixteen year vet June His sisters are Christine , , and aura ,

m . eran and will be a squadron commanding 3 . The fa ily lives in San Francisco Al an P ec k I I I e e . . offic r in anoth r year Craig and his wife , C , Mountain View , man 1 3 . m Lee B r Patricia , have two daughters , Kristin , , Calif , arried Deborah ygg on

1 0 . D 5 . . and Stephanie , Aug in Pebble Beach , Calif ebbie and

Ed ard . itz eral d ro I u st m 1 co m w J F g has been p j returned fro China , where moted to vice president and chief financial pleted a joint- venture agreement with the a m officer , pack ging sector , at A erican Can Chinese for the supply and service of cancer '

m m . Y Eve Co pany , Greenwich , Conn . He previously therapy equi p ent New ear s in Hong h . T e held the position of vice president , business Kong is a special event light displays e m inv st ent . He , his wife , Anne , and their are worth the tri p , he says .

ee l fr d . tter I I m e Rid efield . e o thr childr n live in g , Conn A K P has been na ed Ed a d rai ol i m e w r F , Sharon , Mass was vice president , regional anager of busin ss e e mem e t he E Ba ~ m Gilbane m l cted a b r of New ngland p develop ent , in Building Co pa ’ tist H ealth Care C o rporation at the annual ny s m id- Atlantic regional office in Land em e m ee e m m Dec b r ting h ld in Ca bridge , over , Md . He will be responsible for anag Mass . He is a partner in the Boston CPA ing the marketing of all new business for the fi rm o f Y o n m . m Arthur u g and Co pany region , which extends fro Delaware

err . au sm an J y A H was recently award through South Carolina . He lives with his me f o m m . ed the John Bates Clark dal the fa ily in Poto ac , Md me E m o A rican cono ics Ass ciation . The J oseph R oback writes that he and his m e e e the m e the : Re award is ade v ry other y ar for ost wif , I ras , are parents of two girls o m law e 8 4 . significant contribution to econ ics by an b cca , , and Phyllis , Joe is practicing economist unde r the age of forty . Jerry is with the firm of Paster 8c Roback in Bra m “ . He Fla. m professor of econo ics at M IT and his denton , Class ates are urged to call ’ ’ ar aretta tone Hau sman 69 e wife , M g S , and before planning their n xt winter s vaca ! their two children live in Milton , Mass . tion , he adds .

38 . Da id . R u in N . Y . Dr v A b , Chappaqua , , he e e e e w an and e o m e . S , . n budgetary att rs had be n a s nior r sid s ith his wife Bl ca their two birth of th ir second child , Allis Hillary , in n e e . 1 9 in . fo r the e . a nalyst pan l for the last fiftee childr n Montevid o , Uruguay on Feb Philadelphia

h em b a een . McCo na h m i nd een au : I o mo n . o s e , ths Pri r to that , was ployed y M ur T g y , Colu bia C y Gr h gh writes c ntinue the Southern Fairfield (Conn ) Private In S C writes that B ob [Th u ne ll ] and I are to make large drawings and small experi e e t he t so n m m I n dust r . , y Council still thrill d ov r bir h of our Mat ental fil s , which have shown in Bosto W e McCo na h 1 8 m e i n L . a o s , K v J r , ayzata , Minn and his th w g y Thunell on July , galleries and the San Francisco Cine a

o L 1 985 . h I s n . t e wife , Margaret , have a . Dakota uke , theque In last year , have been hon

n m e u di L . O e rk v itz e e . . m who is 20 months o ld . Ke vi is a ark ting J th and P t r H D ored by the recei pt of a grant fro the Na M c K e n director for General Mills in Minneapolis . e are havi g a wonderful ti me with tional Endowment for the Arts and a small “ O er kv it z M K n e ne a t E . c ee m m the My guitar and singi g care r is in utral , our d ugh er , lizabeth F , bit of oney fro Massachusetts Coun ’

o n 2 1 984 o n . W . 1 a e m film he adds . b r Oct , , Judy s birthd y cil on the Arts and Hu anities to fund a are n n m m h m and at e i ne a i e e e e t e . C h r ( K ty) Br ss y M xw ll , e joy ing bei g b rs of world projects I aintain sanity finances with ‘ ' ‘

: anu ar o n the t he e . e o m rewardin o b m e Ph . D writes a y ( day of wid Parent s Club After a y ar at h e a g j as place ent dir ctor at the '

m o t m o nth u st redicted l ) . E , I n m full o n hat , j as I d p with lizabeth retur ed to work as a part School of the Museu of Fine Arts in Bos o n m e n I m n and 1 s o e . y husba d , Scott . had a . Clif ti activities coordi at r for a senior cent r ton spent August in Italy looking for other W ' all willin l o ined e ea . e m m e u ford . He has too g y j his sist r , in S ttle hope you ll stop to visit us fil akers and a plac to set p a second

. e m m 4 e en o u see me . m Melissa , now , in adding chaos to our lives h r in Seattle wh y co e out to ho I scour these colu ns onthly in ! f w n - m E 86 n m m 1 e a . 3 6 1 am in my fourth year o orki g part ti e x po in Va couve r this su e r . search of oth r rtists Her address is ‘ ’ - h a E i a n t m . 0 1 39 . u o n t e e e i R o m a St . e 2 at an p t w sa ellite cli ic of loc l l z b th H w tt ss arried H rte Pearl , Ca bridg , Mass o W i i m m a e a . e u n ent l health center , w rking with individ P ary St fford last April in ashington . K rk S H lbr co pleted a postdoc

and fam e D C . E a o m e in m ual adults , couples , ili s in therapy , liz beth , who f r rly served as as toral fellowshi p psychology and cri inal nt o n sistant e t he at 1 982 supervising an occasional stude , and d i g attorney general repres nting justice Florida State University in . m m ni a m mm co u ca m m n no w e Ph . D . so e co unity speaking on Al ska Public Utilities Co issio , is after r ceiving his in clinical psychol

o h W n l w 1 . m m m etc . e t e a firm m 980 tion , ti e anage ent , I would love to ass ciat d with ashi gton of ogy fro the University of Texas in — - m m m e y . e Pestin e r and A n s cho lo hear fro for er class ates speciall the Birch Horton . Bittn r , g He is now a clinical and research p y m d rso n in W Kat and her e t . e a en a n . v at e o elusive K r K h fa ily ashing on Hart , the great gist the Forensic S rvice , Fl rida State n a n o f A m . R d . E a . H in n 1 . o e t e live Gra ger , nd gr dso b rt Pe ry . who Hospi al and his wife , Patty , live in Tal ia W N sen o the o e l w Ro e an t a Iahassee . b rt P g , atchung , J a disc vered North P l , is in p riva e

n m e e to m a o n m m a id . e e ior i vest ent banker . has b en s lected practice , with an e ph sis i igration D v A P t rs , Boston , recently f r m . e e e e o e e . t he e l ad corporat finance fforts Kidder , atters Th y liv in Ch vy Chase , Md This joined architectural and engine ring ‘ - 8c . . e n e e fi rm m m 8c Mc Kee Peabody Co Inc s newly cr ated High otic was first publish d in February , but of Sy es , Maini Associates '

at e . He E e t n m e Technology Corpor e Financ Group lizab th s las a e was inadv rtentl y as vice president . T he firm is located in

1 975 . o m . , e e m a . joined Kidder P abody in itt d Ca bridge , M ss Ste v en Al an Sc h neide r and Janet Ma H o ward Shi re (see Sh aron Eisenstat rie e m in Wa n t n D C i e H ss were arried shi g o , Sh r

o n an . 2 5 . She n e o u anne a e W ea e e J is productio dir ct r of S z G rb r v r , after b ing P s chol o Toda m a a e and an e e - u y gy y g zin , he is as affiliat d with two unsucc ssful start p “ a c . eed m n e o t he Wa n t law fi rm Wil M r S Fr is ovi g with wif , s ciate in shi g on of ventures , has joined LSI Logic in Milpitas , m n 2 L n man . H h . t e , . , m er 8: . e t e au Joanne and son Benja i to ondo , , Culter Pickering is also Calif , as con roller of one of its thre ‘ E se t u -e L I m a li , i u factu rin . S ngland to p a gilt dged bond trading thor of The O l P rice R ev ol ution . g plants anufactures pp ! ' - a m e . m Wa d n a . s ecific , u an e desk for S lo on Broth rs Inc Marc has S s r , K nsas City , Kans , cation p integrated circuits (custo

n . me Z e U S . e n e T h mm m b e head of Gov r nt ro Cou artistic director of the Susa n Warden Danc ized chi ps) . e co ute fro Oakland to f r o m n 1 o n o e 983 . e rs e e E m n fo r the p Bond trading Sal on si c , has r c ived a National ndow e t Milpitas is awful , but working in Silicon

a . a o on t he the an u n aral Cr ig A J c bs is a partner in the Arts Choreograp hy Fell owshi p . Valley (albeit outskirts) is p Los fi rm m 8e De R ic a d W . Win a e e . Angeles of Pollock , Bloo h r g t , New York City . leled x perience ' ko m e m e and nd H i htin , sp cializing in otion pictur has recently been appointed senior vice J ame s Wol paw s Keats a is N g

law . e L A u e al e: A B l ind Date e m television Marri d ynn Field in p resident of artists and rep rtoire for Poly g , an Acad y Award “ 1 984 . R in the Lo s I b re o m t he cata o r o f m gust eside high hills of Gram Records in New York . will e n inee in g y docu entary ’ -m E n E e . all all wo n G o e Ang les and don t iss ast Coast wi ters sponsible for talent acquisition in short subject , a ld n agle Certificate he adds . music areas with the exception of classical from the Council o f N o ntheatrical Events a in am e San The - m fil m m R e D em . , y . 1 a e K r Kr r , Francisco writes and countr leaving CBS cords aft r last ec ber thirty inute takes

and , Da id a d n ten e m e t o that she her husband v B l wi y ars , three as a product anager for an unconv n i nal look at traditional literary ‘ “ ' 75 e e e a w m n- in- - a m R m . a , sp nt Val ntin s Day at a p rty ith Colu bia ecords , and seven as director of art for s Using a the street p ‘ a Ew el l 7 5 e e Zieff B ob ondon me and co - . E R . he re G ry St v , C , talent acquisition for pic ecords proach , Ja s his producer , Michael e a cia o Wei . We all t e m J rry G r and B bby r ports . Crowley . alked to a vari ty of people , fro ' A m Zierl er 75 Cam M u s e a e o et to t he wished that y and lit r tur sch lar to hockey fan , to g ' a d 75 ‘ e e . a L . de m an Wy ea o f ea m . film t r had be n th re M rk Al r , nnewood , h rt K ts s poe Funding for the

o nna . Li e , o m e the R D A ttl Santa M nica , Calif has been na ed a partner in was provid d by hode Island Council a in h m - m t e m fo r the m . was ppointed January to Co ission Philadelphia based law fi rm o f Hu anities Ja es lives in Cranston , on the W o m o — R I W . Status of en by Govern r olf, Block , Schorr and Solis Cohen A o Deu km i n e a . 1 984 , she m m m he Ge rge j Since has e ber of the liti gation depart ent , a m been an ttorney in the real estate depart joined the fi rm in 1 980 and serves on t he Sand ra A l pert was arried to m L os n law fi rm m e e m . 1 2 . He ent of the A geles of Pacht , recruit ent and busin ss dev lop ent Mitchell Pankin on Oct is a R now , . m m m m nn l fo r Weble tter oss Shea and Gould She is a e ber comm ittees . He is a e ber of the Pe sy sales representative t he e Co m . of Santa Monica Mountains Cons rvancy v i , h , d i i Printing Co pany , based in Chicago San an a Massac usetts an D str ct of “ m m the n n ee Advisory Co ittee , Santa Monica lumbia Bar Associations . dra is still enjoying selli g e gin ring ’ m e o f o mme e t h W n , e a id i n i n r am e T hermo fil . e Cha b r C rc National Coun D v B aldw (see Kar K r plastics for , Inc e re both cil o f ewish Wome and the a e in I V i on Ni e n a re J n Santa Monic J o h n H . F rr g and Al s joying the extensive trav li g th t our ' ’ . W no t o n s ective e . e e Bar Association c h ol s Fe rr i n g 76 announce t he birth on J an. p jobs r quire hen th y r '

Da id W . L oe m m 1 11. e 1 7 o f am es W m Pankins R e , v b s anage ent t rritory J Brooks and illia Henry . the road , the live in os lle fo r o hn L . : ee e a td . r m . ai d R Pa e , e Ferrin s . a es , , J D re Int rn tional was identical twins . The g live in St J C B r , oslyn writ s centl e a e to Par 1 985 . y x p nd d include Bolivia and Louis . The year was one of change for us It m Pam was . e e M D . , , aguay in addition to Chile and Uruguay He H aro l d K . G v r ) and his began with the news that y wife ee 76 n 39 1 9 . D Pa. , , has b n with John Deere since avid wife , Diana , of Holland , , announce the pregnant with our second child Kaitli who m . 1 was born in August In February , was izes in business litigation and cri inal de eff anin asked to assume responsibility for managing fense . J Ch is a partner at Keker 8e ” h n D a o e . Pa. the Jenkintown ( ) office of rexel Burn Brockett , and G ry C is an associate hn o n m ham Lambert in addition to handling my Kenneth S . J o s was arried to

mm D . 6 Y . m . own invest ent clientele Over the su er , Laura Helen oran on Oct in New ork we joined and became very active in a new He is vice president of Oliver 8: Rozner m m an church that has been a real blessing . And Associates , a anage ent consulting d

m fi rm Y . finally , in Septe ber , we bought a piece of executive search in New ork City n i property on which we began constructing a Daniel S . K ght writes that he has a - in 1 1 . law new house . Move day is A pril Looking very active trial practice in Portland ,

e . back , we have a great deal to be thankful for Maine , an xciting and great place to live ill m 1 985 h0 e St . in but p that the pace slows a bit in playing usic , and still single by choice W m m 1 986 . ould love to hear fro any class ates who !

nathan . l itz er m . Dr . Jo B B is in his last ake it this far north hematolo /onco lo F l a e is I I I year of a gy gy fellowshi p at L w , Providence , has been

N. Y . p di , pp d i v p d id “U state Me cal Center in Syracuse a ointe an ass stant ice resi ent at K

am 8: Co . . fi rm Though I looking forward to a career der , Peabody , Inc He joined the m m 1 0 m 98 e . of edical issionary work , I have decided in as a registered invest ent xecutive

ed . Linsto ne m to delay departure and am now in the pro Dr . Fr A is co pleting a cess of searching for a position in the U . S . as fellowship in cornea and external disease at '

l s E e . fin 1 . U CLA s u e press toward the goal , he writes J Stein y Institute He R obe rt ol bo n N Y ished m in C r , Schenectady , his residency in ophthal ology

m R . m was recently arried to Pat odriguez in June His wife , Elissa , co pleted her resi e m m m New York City . den y in der atology at the sa e ti e at

M ax ri t enden . . We C t Menlo Park , Calif , UCLA plan to open private practices in writes that he had a reasonably successful the Los Angeles area and have a couple of !

m . first season in For ula Vee racing in a car kids , he adds

icia . M c u i re Dr . a G he designed himself. P tr L is a consulta

R obe rt . Da tion/liaison R M y and his wife , Flora , psychiatrist at hode Island Ka W m 8: announce the birth of their daughter , Hospital and o en Infants Hospital in w ' h . 9 . . aS t e trina Ariel , on Oct They live in Laguna Providence Finishing training best

e m . Hills , Calif. d cision I ever ade Has anyone seen or J ennifer Sel tm an de W it and her hus heard from Ly n Eu stis ? “ A rt ram band , Brian , of Pittsburgh , are pleased to O writes that Tess Baker

m 1 5 m . announce the birth of our daughter , Mi Ora was born on March at p f chaela 29 . o Beth , on July I have accepted a She is our first child , and is a real cutie , - m position with the de Wit fam ily as a full ti me course . Patty and I have spent ost of our

m mm m . o y , and find the new challenges thor five years of arriage in Ann Arbor , Mich ,

Ph . D . oughly enjoyable and rewarding. where I have been working on a in W ennife enki n Ebel har . e J r J s , Cincinnati , bioengineering would enjoy hearing has been appointed director of financial from old friends and acquaintances who analysis and control for the Group Business m ight get the urge to write or drop by . Division of Com munity Mutual Insurance Amy Harr i so n R obi n and Frederick ' “ m R 73 an Co pany , the largest Blue Cross Blue Neal obin ( Harvard ) joyfully h in m . S e o ed e Shield plan in Ohio j the co pany nounce the birth of their first child , Micha l !

m . 1 l . 1 980 m 8 8 bs 6 . in and held several anagerial posi Ja es , born Feb , oz They live

m mm N. Y . tions in syste s and progra ing and in in Ossining , ~ co m Dr . Wi m a c il l e MD . consolidation implementation . She is l S h r ) and i ! . a L . W l d m 1 7 plet ng an MB A . at avier U niversity M tthew a have oved to 5 Lowell l i son i chol erri n hn H 8 1 W m W . 1 . o . Rd . 02 A N s F g (see J , ellesley , Mass il a is an Ferr i ng I V anesthesiologist at University Hospital in oretta Katz l er o l dbe r E D G g, Great Neck , Boston , and Matt is a New ngland corre

N . Y . S ondent The New Yo k Times. , and her husband , Joel , announce the p for r E Katz ter A rt c hoel l e birth of a daughter liza Goldberg , S r and his wife , Jayne , of “ W ' . 3 . e W . on Dec can t believe that her big estport , Conn , announce the birth of

4 2 . . 1 5 . brother , Marlon , will be on March their second child , Sally Jayne , on Nov “ - - k . G ree nber M D . D r . ar W E 3 o ld M L g ) is the ith ric , our year , they are certainly El r h ol am mm director of the Clinical ect 0 p ysi ogy keeping us busy . I enjoying i ensely Laboratory at the Dartmouth - Hitchcock my work as an account executive for AT! T l e . Medical C nter The ab allows evaluation of Information Systems . m m ff co t m abnor al heart rhyth s in a controlled set Geo rey C . S t has co pleted the

u m m Ph . D . ting , thereby speeding p the ti e required require ents for a at the School of

. E to evaluate drug therapies Greenberg , who ngineering and Applied Science , Universi

H . . t . lives in Hanover , N , took his internal y of Pennsylvania He also has two m Em ’ 4 D edicine training at ory University and and 8 ) from Penn . uring graduate a to has had fellowshi ps in general school , he was an engineering consult nt

m . Re and electrophysiology at the University of several Philadelphia co panies cently , he m m m m Pittsburgh and the University of Virginia . accepted e ploy ent as a e ber of the

u san . Harri m an ! E ee , i , h h T T i i S J “ San Franc sco researc staff at t e A ng n r ng - e . R L N . s nds word that after clerking for the Hon esearch Center Bell abs in Princeton , J '

R . e m chief u d e the U . S . 1 7 m . obert F P ckha , j g of Geoffrey s address is Kil er Dr , Trenton D 08 istrict Court for the Northern District of 638 . am 8e e ff ha i ro D an California , I now an associate at Keker J S p and his wife , ebbie , m ll 4 , s a fi rm n m 0 Brockett a litigation that special nou ce the birth of a son , Aaron Ja es , on

he the n e t m . 1 atn Since park is closed during wi t r , have various endocrine abnor alities we will split o u r ti m e between the island and in the program for developmental psy i m a cho endocrino lo Houghton , Mich s xty iles away cross the gy , within child psychiatry ,

e L . am E open wat r and ice of ake Su perior and being trained by Anke hrhardt , e m m mm - o Fri nds are ost welco e , su er and Heinz Meyer Bahlburg , and Myr n Hofer . I - W ) . e E . winter (bring your cross country skis still live in the ast Village , she writes 534 o ar a e Da i ai na d i : can be reached at Box , H ughton M g r t v s M r asks How 4 993 1 906 4 82 -92 1 0 at me 482 -0986 m m m 24 1 978 the , ( ) ho , at any of you re e ber May , , as ” ‘ i n di the park . first Throw a Water Balloon at Ed M a ar ? ’ — enne R . M ac hti er New Da u s d o B tt g , York City , y If you can celebrate with not e e the te ll Ed i— be 2 4 was elected a vic pr sident of First Bos here Saturday , May , for a a an fl ! R 20 1 ton Corpor tion , international invest grand ing SVP to Margaret at ( ) Y - m n e N . 299 9095 1 87 V ail Rd . ent ba k with h adquarters in New ork at , Parsi ppany , J in an . 1 07054 . E City , in J uary He joined First Boston Of course , ddie and and our sons he 1 98 5 m . im 4 m . in a arketing capacity Previously , J , , and Joseph , I , like visitors any ti e o R was an acc unt su pervisor at Young 8c u R o bi n B eil M ansfiel d and R o bert A . m bica . M ansfi e ld announce the birth of their first

e e attei ro 20 1 985 . P t r M is in the playwriting p child , Kristen Heather , on A pril , ad 8: gram at the Yale School of Drama . His Bob is an account executive with Brewer

e 223 D St . m m . e dr ss is wight New Haven , Conn Lord Insurance in Fra ingha They liv

065 1 1 . . in Ashland , Mass

o n R . a ia e see a . R ne an i n Mc Nu l t D r . J h P rz l ( M ry C e e H k s y writes that ’ ’ “

a e 8 1 85 MD . m m to Fr t s , ) she just oved fro Vicenza , Italy , m e Liz an ne Land m an R o en e i W m . s s zw g and iesbaden , Ger any Ger an is a r al ’ Jeffrey Rosenzweig (Hobart College 77 ) are challenge for me ; I was beginning to feel “ thrilled to announce the birth of their fluent in Italian ! Looks like ! C skiing will be - - o e . We m br wn haired , blue yed . giggly , affection our local sport iss the sunny skies and Carl 1 8 ! ate , wonderful son , Steven , on May , bicycles of Italy

Y i . chl e in e R a They live in New ork C ty Lo u i se D . S s g r and l p h ’ 0 ’ 4 . 2 au a Wa o n o e o 8 ae l e 8 1 m . L r ts and Dr J s ph F ss , G b r were arried last Aug in her ’ ’

m e . . 85 . . m m Y M D , were arri d in Cleveland on Jan other s ho e in upstate New ork Sev “ 6 and are happily growing moss together in eral Brown friends joined us later that day ! R 1 Portland , Oreg . for a celebration of the event . al ph and

W e e R . a a e o e m 1 . M rg r t T h r ck r , ochester , live in Bloo ington , nd , she writes

N . . m h r Ph . ma Y e e D . , has co plet d in phar co lo m e Pennwal t ns W gy and is e ploy d by Phar , est Long - maceu tical Division . spent 1 984 85 u dge Patrick J . h S u u ro o u l os McGann r . t e p , J , Chancery Division of perior Court of New Jersey , and is now practicing law with the central New Jersey

4 fi rm W 8e . D m Feb . son , i itrios , on , the fifth grand of Carton , Nary , itt Arvanitis ’

f M ar r n e es e . A l l e ne B ri hton . o a et o an ic ae 5 1 . hi d g h C l t M y , _ g , Mass , c l C t M l “ New o M D . s L u J o sep h F . F ss ) ( ee a ra writes that she has been producing ’ ‘ Wa o n E # I tal k ts ngland s show , People Are Talk ’ ' - anic e a l e u t Rio WB Z T V 4 . m J H z h rs still resides in de ing , for It s been fun eeting m Janeiro , where she works as a syste s ana lots of celebrities and keeping the hectic

l st m m e m m . 1 y in a s all Brazilian anag ent and pace of a edia fanatic Since left Brown , “ ’ m e fi rm Y R co put r consulting . After four I ve lived in New ork , hode Island , and “ ’

she I m still Rio . B raz il E years , says , loving , where now Boston Traveled to , urope , and ’ - m 1 1 0 e e the W . the year round high is d gr es and the est —Coast I lost any Brown friends low m L A . 60 . A m m is hooked on sa ba , the beach , addresses y purse was stolen in ” Please ' write ! the pace , and the country . Help .

rz o ce E . nder o n Med dam . u e pp J y A s A S K — r has been a ointed e m New . r gional anager working out of the ford , Mass , has been an assistant professor o ffice—o f R E m m m York B A Corporation , a San in the athe atics depart ent at Tufts - m and m 1 985 . Francisco based anufacturing , leasing , University since Septe ber n m Lau a i ian u t e o ki m tra sportation services co pany . He was r M r C l r A was arried e m e W 9 ploy d by ang Laboratories and Data to Jiro Aoki of Fukuoka , Japan , on June ,

h Ri ho i em . She e e e R E . 1 985 t e s Gen ral b for joining B A , in Fukuoka at j T ple

e nn . Gl I Le v i n is an assistant district is living and working in Japan . ’ ne t he D i nk ff B a roc k A . s e . H Ev e o attor y in Brooklyn . offic e M y and David Bay ' e in B o o n m fo r liv s r kly . rock (Haverford 7 5) have been arried “ enni f Li - - - e . m e h r h D . a . We e J r D sh co plet d e P . a year and half have be n living in ’ a s o o New Y n e e e in clinic l p ych l gy at ork U iv r low r Manhattan , and I ve begun graduat sit n e o l y in Ja uary . l l r disse rtati o n was on the studies in vocal performance at Hunter C o f de e w will m o n to e e e . e relationshi p pr ssion d p nd ncy lege Shortly , be oving to Br okly ’ o am o n m and social supp rt g en and women . as we re ex pecting a baby in May and will I e an a o t o o lan o a e the mm e then b g p s d ct ral fe llo wshi p in need more space . I p t t k su r the me o f s at at m the a e t n depart nt p ychi ry Colu bia off to be with b by , and to r ur to il - . w l be o University I d ing research o n t he school again part ti me in the fall .

sex o m o nes o n the d e a he i ne . au e New Y t effect of prenatal h r C t r M C l , ork Ci y , velo pm ent of gender role be h avi o r in wo m has returned to the East alte r fo ur years in 42 m a e n e an . . . o en , as well as clinical work with p ti ts who Chicago . I graduat d with M B A fr Rd . 06080 . a n . m . m all et Stone Pond , Toll nd , Co n after their na es Good ti e had by , em e Brad is a ch ical engine r with Howe and cetera . Future plans include adventure , e m n a m m e m . R Bainbridg aki g s ilcloth la inates , and fa e , fortune , the usual pi pe dr a s ich ’ I m o La a n m with Cun Products , a filtr tio alu s seeking to aid this quest are invited to m m . e 555 . A t . products co pany , in sales and advertising contact at University Ave , p ’ ane Lev i n er Wi l iam oo l e 83 3702 96826 808 J t g and l P , , Honolulu , Hawaii , ( ) m W m - 94 6 9796 . son of Brown econo ics professor illia As for the rest of you burns , see m 1 o e 9 . Po le , were arri d on April in Minne you in jail ’ l ichae Le v i n er 79 a i n apo is . M l g and M r o J u l ia B arl o w V ail writes : Much has am l i n m Abr Go were a ong those who stood happened since graduation 1 98 1 . I attended h u t e e m . i p for brid and groo Janet writes the University of Virg nia School of Law , e that this will be quite an eventful year for graduating in the spring of 1 984 . Th re I

W an m . m a d e met m m V . H . r ill In addition to getting rried , y husband , Tho as Vail , J . , a o l w W the business we started a year and a half g also a Virginia a graduate . e were mar

1 2 1 985 W D . . C has been acquired , and we are now a wholly ried Jan , , in ashington , ’ o n u e u ncan a l o 7 8 e chen ri c ke w ed s bsidiary of Tallgrass T chnologies D B r w , Gr t F , and ’ W e i Le v n hn of Kansas . e re now looking for a hous in J ll e so were members of the wed - th e . T om e Provid nce area ding party . and I are second year as

e di nand D . a c i m 8c D m F r M suc , Florha Park , sociates at Squires , Sanders e psey , and m N . . e 8c J , has be n na ed a vice president of Calfee , Halter Griswold , respectively , in N w Yo - W a e e e . e e . Morgan Stanley , rk based int rna Clev land r side in Shaker Heights m i m n r . m t o nal fi . A . . Wil l iam o n e invest ent ba king For erly a Dr J s , Silv r Spring , e e at he oined Md m e vic presid nt Prudential Bache , j , plans to co pl te his surgical intern Morgan Stanley in 1 985 . shi p at Walte r Reed in June and will be - . nd e McCarth o ne e C A r w y and his wife , doing a y ar tour of duty in Korea as a ! E i a e R i M cCart h e e m e e l z b th ggs y , hav a new gen ral dical officer befor returning to W e McCart h m m arrival , Sarah inifr d y , born co plete y training in general surgery . '

4 . n o Cam R W o e t . ood r . Y March She s looki g f rward to the b r M , J , New ork City , McCarth in pu s Dance . The ys live San was recently promoted to assistant vice n Fra cisco . president at Manufacturers Hanover . He is a

I . E eni . a a Wa R . Dr. l T P pp s , rwick , , lending officer handling corporate accounts e e e her o m e m D r c iv d d ctor of podiatric dicine in the North A erican ivision , based in e e at the an o e e P0 W d gr e Pennsylv ia C ll g of Manhattan . He is also enrolled in the har w ’ diat ric e 1 985 . no E . . m . M dicine in June She is ton School s xecutive M B A . Progra t he po diatric surgical resident at Cransto n General H ospital and will be opening a pri vate offi ce at South County Medical B u ilding in a a R I . N rr gansett , . . , in July

u ie . R o thho u se Y d ric k J l S , New ork City . ' m n W n o ef ol o a graduated fro Pen s harto School in Li nda Gray (see Dr . J s S w y

o at Yo n 8c R Le i . K a May and is now w rking u g ubi Dana K ay (see Dr . w s A y i w n Ne York City . Caro ly n Th ral l Larso n and Er ic Lar “ at c e fo r so n the C hy S hulz , business writer the announce arrival of their first child ’ Nashv ill e Banner h e e t e m . 1 26th , r turn d to Brown Nathan Tho as , on Oct (his father s m “ e T he ! N . H . W e ca pus in February to sp ak on TVA birthday ) in Concord , have m . e e Today Her lecture was part of a s ri s (finally) stopped oving for a while , and h ‘ ’ S t e m e t co n e 1 1 m St . ponsored by art depart n in have settl d at He lock , London “

n H . 03053 . e t the N . ju ction with its gall ry show , Buil for derry , Peo ple of the U n ited States : Fifty Years of N ina M arko v is working as editorial ' e TVA Architecture . associate for Brown s News Bur au after a o n Ei se nstat e New Y W Sh r Shir , ork City , spending a couple of years in ashington , ‘ liv 1 w 2 . the Y la D C . es is an associate with New ork City She at Observatory Ave , Prov fi rm o f Rubi n Baum Levin Constant 8c idence 02906 . ’ d i u ce M cCorm ack m . o a e 75 Fried an Her husband , H w r Sh r , Br reports that he and ’ - the law fi rm A nn ari e E . V an en el 84 is an associate with of Kaye , M H g are living in “ m ma 8c e . a e m Scholer , Fier n , Hays Handl r , also in Burlington , Vt I studying c ra ics at w Ne Y . ork City the Burlington Institute of Modern Art , and - m a n L . an on Y . A n C thry Sw s , New ork City , Ann Marie is finishing edical school a m f m ichael a l an a e Ma 1 98 5 . m o gr duat d in y with an M B . A . fro other cl ss ate ine , M K p , is ' ’ ’ Penn s W harton Sch ool and is working in pursui ng a master s degree in women s

m m L . We m brand anage ent at ever Brothers . studies welco e visitors . “ ’ i . au an : l o ef l a Chr stop h er A V gh writes I m Gre g So o way (see D r . J s So o w y on leave from m y job as a reporter for the M iami Herald to do a Gannett Fellowshi p in e Asian Studies at the University of Hawaii , Alb rt I ’ m h t e . where studying Phili ppines Just rnber . m m e e ss. return d fro a onth there spent cov ring , where

e e . o to M el law the the l ction circus Planning to g back has a practice , and Joyce is mm m m e firm . Manila this su r with y wife , the for traffic anager for an exporting m r L e e auri Mildenberger (St . Bonaventur Su san Fendri ck writes that she has We e m e 29 in o e the a wer arried Jun Buffal , been living in Philad lphia for past ye r N. Y . In the wedding party we re Dav id and a half with J am ie P u l l en and Sh aro n ' ’ ’ ’ u it P au l M c Gav i n 82 eff En e 80 m h o en 82 . I t e H rw z , , J g l , C h working as a paralegal in e e m o n mm L e 43 and sev ral other p ople with no nu bers h using u it at Co unity egal Servic s , l battling it out with landlords and utility book ! El izabeth So l oway (see Dr . J osef So o companies (we represent low- income ten Wil l iam P oo l e (see Janet Lev i nger way - m El i a eth Ha ris a aser A nn Ma ie E . V an Hen el ru ce ants) . I finally started studying A erican z b r S g , Newton r g (see B m M cCorm ack I ot e . sign language when g her and have Center , Mass , is coordinator of alu ni - ~ m ni aco distant hopes of becom ing a part ti me free education p rogra s at Northeastern U J ohn G . Y s is with the accounting

al so . m fi rm m m lance interpreter . I joined the Gilbert versity Before oving to Northeastern , she of Fern an and Gould in Sta ford , ’ m M m law . ac and Sullivan co pany at Penn s school was assistant progra coordinator at the Conn He is living with his wife , Linda , ’ “ P ina ore E - ranch/farm H . M . S . (we re doing f this year) , and Boston Center for Adult ducation , where in a three acre on the edge of ’ ’

m . I m m . 1 enjoying it tre endously would love she teaches ballroo dance She is also a Greenwich provided by Linda Mae s—father m . a e to hear fro Brown friends , especially class freelance artist and writer in appreciation of our recent success littl ” ’ n 83 me o at an chwartz in r . ! of people who left behind , and J h S is his first year at John , J , is on the way ’ / NYU . women s studies SDC buddies . My address is School of Medicine Spent last year in - 5823 3 St . 1 9 1 44 . e hen Ka D r . e i s . Morris , Philadel phia California and Alaska working in a cannery St p y (see L w A ” W Please write! and fishing. ould love to hear from other Kay 1 4 J effery Gol dm an (see M ax ine R osen Brunonians in NYC . My address is R o sie Perera is working for Mi

au m o dm an W . # I OE 1 0003 croso ft mm b G l ashington PI , New York , in Seattle as a progra er in the “ ’ - 2 1 2 260 02 77 . I m n Lau r ie Handman and Jeff Mangold ( ) productivity software group . sharing a “ ’ W e en Wal l ace - m . e m et ro er 84 were arried in August live in Arling St v is a third year student apart ent with B sy C z , who has '

Va. . ton , , and we re doing our best to avoid at the University of Chicago Law School He been out here working for the National f’ - m m . m m Yuppiedo Jef s a technical editor at works part ti e for public television station Oceanic and At osp heric Ad inistration , ’ ! “ ’ WTT W The F ru al ER I m . m : ANS , a research corporation , and the ensuring that sales of g she writes I d love to hear fro anyone m m Gou met ookbook tax li 940 98 . # 1 03 98 1 03 . assistant director of e bershi p at the r C avoid unwarranted North St , Seattle - m Ph scial . a ot A erican y Therapy Association , ability He recently had p luck supper ’ anice al a e i 82 Laurie writes . for fellow law students J C br s ‘

R o i n . He i on El i abe h ch ie er 84 b rb s says that she intends and z t S r v , who brought J h / late co ffee m . 45 . c oco to stay at Carrington Ave , Providence white wine and ice crea “ ’ m ‘ ’ 02906 . I m for now a local , but not sure Center for the Health Sciences , in Me phis '

4 1 . I m R . I . 985 ready for a hode Island license yet retired on Sept , He was a faculty ’ I ' m m still don t trust the drivers here . plan member in the department of anato y for - - m ning an escape in A pril for a two week con thirty four years , teaching edical and ‘ ’ m m . m ference on Co puters in Medicine in Chi first assign ent was as a supervisor on the dental students U pon retire ent , he was - m . a r na . Feel free to drop in . post divestiture equal access project I honored with the title of emeritus professo m m Lack m . R onal d M . o is enrolled in the now assistant staff anager in the echa of anato y ’ ’

i . n M . 64 m zed al in o l d scheider 63 A . business depart ent at the University of revenue area For those who would C v G ,

m 75 . m W m . Ph. D . Mannhei in est Ger any He has like to keep in touch , y address is St , professor of sociology and Judaic

e Czecho . #203 02 1 20 . ewish worked and trav led in Poland and Alphonsus St , Boston studies at Brown , recently published j B ets rozer R osie e e a ontinu it and han e E me n tte i slovakia for the past two sum mers . y C (see P r r C y C g : rgi g P a rns n

M . Hi rai u an a cu ank R o l i n L C l . eith America S s M r s (see Fr l g ance p K recently ( Indiana University Press , or n m - m Ke v i n M . M a is co pleting his final participated in a four week desert training The book de onstrates how the Jewish semester at Arizona State University College exercise at the Marine Air Ground Combat community has developed dynamic re

m . m of Law and will graduate in May . I have Center , Twentynine Pal s , Calif He is sta sources and networks to bind fa ily , tio ned 2 nd l st also been working as a law clerk with the with the Battalion , Marine friends , and neighbors religiously and eth

D m . i ll m fi rm T il r . n ca m e bo 8e P C . of g, Sanders Parks , , and ivision , Ca p Pendleton , Calif y to co bat societal transfor ations McGah ee 2 nd . te hen . have accepted a position as an associate with Lt S p A has that have threatened it . Marshall Sklare ,

h t m U . S . the fi rm . I 0 pe to start working as an a tor graduated fro Air Force pilot training director of the Center for Modern Jewish R h e m . U t ney shortly aft r taking the July bar exa I and has received his silver wings at eese Air Studies at Brandeis niversity , has called have really been enjoying the Phoenix area . Force Base , Texas . He is scheduled to serve book , A powerful and original analysis

m ar . A ong other activities , I have enjoyed p at Altus Air Force Base , Okla

ran kl i . u n ticipating in the events sponsored by a reju F n M M o t is an editorial as involved in the study of A merican Jewry . ’

istant i . v l s R c a d a ke 63 A . M . enated . al Brown Club of Phoenix Any and with Basic Books , a division of Har h r B P r r will be in “ ’

m 1 983 er Row. I m m 1 987 ro fro Brown , the class of , or otherwise , p finding life in New York Japan until Septe ber as visiting p l f r l w m e a esso a . o f are encouraged to contact if and when City to be quite exciting and enjoyable , of at Osaka University He is ’

d a m . I f I law fi rm their travels take them to Phoenix . My a though bit trying at ti es didn t live in counsel with the Boston of Gold mm 1 ’ m R 8c M n ll . 6599 E d . # 2 1 34 a e o dress is ast Tho as , , a co unal house in Brooklyn , don t stein ’ ’ - . l i h m 8525 1 602 994 1 062 . a o d W . an 64 A . M . Scottsdale , ( ) I hope I know what I d do Any friends who would H r Br g t , Little

me . ad N. Y . m m will be able to stay in touch with Brown and , like to get in touch with should My Neck , , has been a e ber of the ‘ ’

1 1 2 1 7 . 1 70 D St . m in the very near future , begin giving back to dress is ean , Brooklyn Vis hu anities faculty at Stevens Institute of h me m itors . . t e N 1 984 . University that gave so very uch , , with a little advance notice . are always Technology , Hoboken , J , since He

m . he writes . welco e is also subcontractor for U SJ PRS in the i o h M n K el l Parks m Per m Chr st p er u zo has been at Phila y was arried to Blo Scandinavian languages section . ’ - - - m m a El i a e h c hnec k al er 65 A . M . delphia National Bank for two and half quist of Stockhol , Sweden , in a s all cere z b t S P t has

m m . 1 4 . years . I ade it through the training pro ony in Monaco on Feb She is working been appointed director of institutional m am now m gra and an officer in the corre in the real estate invest ent field , and Per is ! “

n nt m . s o de . p banking area , he writes The in the usic and recording business They

e e . Center City ar a of Philad l phia has been reside in Malibu , Calif ’ m m m e Da id al tz m an : You y ho e during this ti e , and aft r grow v S writes won t ’ u New ! 1 Wooller s ing p in the northern Jersey suburbs , believe it appeared on Chuck y ‘ ’

m . . D I love city living Philly is a very friendly , Love Connection in ece ber Other than ’ m e m . I walkabl city with so e super restaurants that , life has been relatively dull here in ! and pubs (especially if you like to throw New York and my door is wide open ! H is Y M m 200 E 78th St . darts) . y only co plaint is a lack of Bru address is ast , New ork ' — - nonians l 1 002 1 2 1 2 737 306 1 . in the area haven t run into any , ( ) ' m m El i abe h ch ie er e en Wal of y class ates down here . If you re ever z t S r v (see St v ’ 4 4 a I m M u nzo ne l ace in the rea , the only in the pho 3 4 e RD . 23 Univ rsity of Tulsa , published an article , son , Bruce , , Box , Middletown “ The Problem of Poetic Naming in Holder 1 094 0 . ' ‘ ’ E W the A ril lin s legy Brod und ein , in p ’

M LN . o rim e ou l a il on 20 issue of (Johns Hopkins Press) He will L r D g s M t , retired ; deliver the paper at the annual convention bank president , civic leader , and educator h hil ’ t e P oso . n of International Association for Feb 6 . One of Atlanta s pioneer black e h L . tre reneu rs . p y and iterature in Seattle in May p , Mr Milton retired as president '

o ce E . nde on 85 Ph . D . 1 97 1 J y A rs (see of Citizens Trust Bank in March , leav ’

n F oi se Ph . D . J o ath an W . 85 writes that ing the bank with assets totaling $30 m illion m - after spending ten onths outside of Paris , and a reputation for having opened the ‘ ’ -docin Laborato rie m post g at the de Physique doors of the credit arket to blacks . He had m — m des Solides , and a few onths job hunting served on a nu ber of federal banking mm m m and bu ing around Providence and New co ittees , including the advisory board of am e a a m m York , I now a res arch ssociate for the Co odity Credit Corporation , which me m year or two at the depart nt of che istry , was responsible for financing the govern ’ - University of New Orleans . My new address ment s farm price support program . He was

630 1 B e . A ckel St . A t . 1 55 m m is , p , M tairie , La also a e ber of the Federal Advisory 7 ’ 0003 . Council s Social Security Board , and went to 1 0 S . Africa in 96 as a representative of the U . ’

a d . e 78 M . D . m H ro l K Ge v r Depart ent of Com merce . Nationally (see known as an educator and civic leader , Mr . ’ ee n e 79 M ark L . Gr b rg Milton founded the School of Business at e M . D . (s e A tlanta University and served as its director W ’ m 1 95 . i lma Sc h il l er 79 M . D . (see until his retire ent in 5 He also taught ’ “

i . . m R obe rt N . Le v n 80 M D co pleted a at Atlanta University and served in numer cardiology fellowship at Harbor- UCLA ous capacities in the econom ics department H Medical Center in June 1 985 and is now a at Morehouse College . e was appointed by clinical assistant professor of medicine at President Eisenhower to the W hite House E 1 955 Tufts University School of Medicine , with an Conference on ducation in , and by

. am Co m office in Chestnut Hill , Mass I working President Kennedy to the National !

m o n E m D m 1 . for Pratt Medical Group in Boston . ission cono ic evelop ent in 963 ’ - E e . R l nic . s m sth r S o k N ash 8 1 M . D ( ee Chair an of the board of trustees of How - ard University for twenty seven years , he '

o 8 M . D . see Lau a J o sep h F . F ss 5 ( r took a hard line during the student takeover Watso n and shutdown of the university in March ’ ’

a . a e 85 M . D . see 8 1 m m . i 1 968 . M l M ry C Fr t s ( ) In the idst of the tur oil , Mr ton said that the university would reopen , but only for “ students who want to go to college and not for students who want to sit in the administration building . He was also a trustee of both the Gammon Theological Sem inary and the Interdenom inational e Theological Center in Atlanta . He r ceived m honorary doctorates fro Brown , Howard University , and Morehouse College . After

m . m graduating fro Brown , Mr Milton oved to Atlanta where he was hired by Morehouse ' ’ ’ l i n . M . a o e o ton 1 0 l l A . o n o e 1 894 C r M M r , , College President J h H p to teach m m 2 . met m Providence ; March 5 She was a useu at Atlanta University . There he Her an

R . E . and office assistant at the hode Island Perry , founder of Citizens Trust Bank m m 1 923 School of Design Museu fro to Mr . Milton started working at the bank in 1 932 1 92 1 1 930 , after which she held clerical positions , and by had risen to the office of

m . E in the business world until her retire ent president . Survivors include his wife , loise , rv . su i 529 W Rd . 303 1 8 ; Phi Beta Kappa There are no known aterford , Atlanta two vors . daughters; and four grandchildren , includ ’

in R o and ean . 88 . g l D , ’ Jr ari on Ri chard s il oo k 1 0 M Ph br , Nor ’ ’

ke 2 1 A . M . . . ac 22 ; . 1 4 1 985 . a a e , , ton , Mass Aug , She was a teacher M rg r t C P r

s m 1 9 1 0 W n D C ; . 1 , 1 984 . at Ashby (Mas ) High School fro ashi gton , Jan After 1 9 1 5 m e n until when she arried . She is survived t achi g at Hood College and Greenbriar ! nu m D 6 1 7 . by her son , ana , Box , Sudbury , Mass College , she worked for AT T for a

0 1 7 76 . ber of years , retired , and returned to teach 1 960 m n ing . In , she taught che istry to stude t ’ am u el . . R o e 1 5 obitu e L em S G A g rs , whose nurs s at awrence and M orial Hospital m 1 96 1 Sti L . ary was reported in the March issue , is r in New ondon , Conn , and then fro v iv ed e n m 1 963 she by two daught rs , Cornelia Sa no , of until her retire ent in , taught

m m m m Hall m . ; , , , Colu bus , Ohio and Lucia Tierney of athe atics at Chatha Chatha Va m m e Wis. m . are Madison , , as well as a nu ber of nieces Phi Beta Kappa There no i ediat

oratio R . R o e . and nephews , including H g rs survivors ’4 7 7 N . 0762 . 9 5 Rd . D m , Orchard , e arest , J ’ W e 1 W de i ne . e m o 2 A l B t r , oodbury , ’ m he r A . M . I ene M a av en S atc her 1 8 . ; . 1 . e r g y p , Middle Conn Jan She rec ived fro En 1 940 . N . Y . ; . 2 8 . e town , Feb She was the widow of Boston Univ rsity in She taught g ’ Wil l iam S atcher 1 e s o 4 5 p 8 . Survivors include her lish at Provinc town (Mas ) High Sch ol ’ m 1 92 1 - 23 s il de ard ae e affo d 29 m fro , and then at Malden (Mas ) was in charge of the transportation section H g J g r S r , Colu Y W ’ N . . m . C . 24 . 1 96 . High School until her retire ent in 2 of the New ork orld s Fair Previous to bus , ; Feb After receiving her de

mm U . S . mm m m L I ediate survivors are not known . that he had served as deputy Co is gree fro the Colu bia School of ibrary W ’ 1 959 sloner for the Seattle orld s Fair in Sciences , she worked as librarian for the '

ohn o i W i U . S . ah h te 2 1 . L m J J s , St eonard , and as deputy coordinator of exhibits at New York Public Library for any years , a E m 1 9 7 m 5 1 959 . e m . m Md , retired anager of the Marlborough the Brussels xposition fro to nu b r of the as head librarian at the

. m m . N . . 1 969 . Blenhei Hotel in Atlantic City , J ; March Mr Miller was president of Aero Far Tottenville branch She retired in E m m W 1 9505 . D 28 1 985 . m e su rvi . , Infor ation r garding his qui p ent Co pany in the uring hile living on Staten Island , Mrs Safford W War U . S . m . vors is inco plete orld II , he served in the Navy as was active in local politics , culture , and

mm . m m m a lieutenant co ander He retired to Flo sports , and was a longti e e ber of the ’

1 97 1 . Dr . Ed a d o m as Streker 22 War . w r Th , rida in Psi U psilon Survivors include Staten Island Historical Society , ofwhich her ’

R . I 26 8 1 5 R a m o nd 29 wick , a retired pediatrician ; March three children and his wife , Martha , husband , the late y , was a presi D medic l . 32763 . . 1 973 m a r m N . O . He received his degree f o Jef Saxon Blvd , eltona dent In , she oved to Tryon , , ferso n Medical m College , Philadelphia , in where she continued her active involve ent ’ 1 924 m Wil f ed l anch al m an 28 mm vol , and co pleted his internshi p at St . r B T , Spring in civic and co unity affairs and did

N. Y . m ind ustrial u nteer m , , . Joseph Hospital and the for er Charles V . Valley a retired news an , work in the Tryon Lanier Library

. 28 . . , ; Chapin Hospital in Providence He was the writer and historian Feb In response to She is survived by three children , including

U D r . m m 8 St . school physician in Providence for any a Brown niversity questionnaire sent in Jeffrey Safford , Hill , Boze an , 1 950 . m . m : 597 1 5 . years , and aintained a private practice , Mr Tal an wrote I have written Mont m 1 4 m m 1 972 . 9 9 1 969 until retiring in Fro to , everything fro greeting card and agazine ’ k Geor e Nel so n u r D r . Stre er mm ns 30 was the i unologist for the verse to news , technical articles , and fiction g B , Ledyard ,

D m 1 92 1 . . m state Health epart ent . He was a member republished in anthologies since I Conn , a retired district anager of several

R m ; . 1 . m of the staffs of hode Island Hospital and have edited and produced books for others , national depart ent stores Feb He ade W m m o en and Infants Hospital and was a and engaged in literary activities too nu a career in erchandising , serving as district merous m m m . m m m S . . S Co . e ber of the A erican Pediatric Society . to ention He earned a degree in anager of the for er Kresge , the

m m m W T . m . Co . He is survived by seven children , including a journalis fro Colu bia , and covered the for er Grant , and the Kings D D m 1 6 1 . W 97 1 . daughter , olores, Lyall Ave , arwick Brooklyn and Manhattan borough halls for epart ent Stores , before retiring in B ookl n Standard U nion 1 02888 . 928 the r y in , and the Survivors include two sons , a daughter , and m The New Y o k Times 1 Rd . 930 . sa e beat for r until his wife , Mildred , Shewville , Ledyard ’ ' ’ ace h i n r i se 06339 . e e M . 23 25 A . 65 Gr S P s r , , He then spent the next three decades at

A . M . , Providence , a retired professor; Texaco , where he was editor of publications ’

m 1 m D r . ohn nth n 8 . Cent ral 959 . . o u rta h 30 Pom March She taught at High School , until his retire ent in Mr Tal an J A y M g , Ho w Thin s B l . e an in R ockland ount , F a ; . 1 5 . Classical High School , Bryant College , and wrote g g C y pano Beach Jan He received his R and P laces Nea b R m m at hode Island College , where she was a r y , published by the ockland degree in edicine fro the University of 1 976 m a professor of English for eighteen years until Historical Society in (his fa ily settled Minnesot in 1 934 . He was appointed to the m 1 675 1 96 . . H. 8 . N her retire ent in Mrs Preisser was Nyack in and were the first white set Mary Hitchcock Clinic in Hanover , , in R tlers R 1 938 the first hode Island high school teacher to in ockland) , and he was working on a , where he served as professor of clini be selected to the national board that draft book for the Tappantown Society com cal surgery at the Dartmouth m m emoratin 300th T m 1 95 7 m D a 1 970 . D r . ed the SAT exa inations . uring World g the anniversary of p fro until his retire ent in

War 1 1 an N . Y . 1 937 m , Y p , , she lived in New ork City , where In he was secretary of a Murtagh was a for er president of the New mm - E she was associated with the Carnegie Foun co ittee , chaired by then President ngland Otolaryngological Society and a ’ m D . R m m m m m dation s educational progra s . She was a Franklin oosevelt , which co piled a e ber of nu erous edical associations

m m . h e ber of numerous professional organi book on historic Dutch houses in the Hud and societies Phi R o Sigma . Survivors in ’ R zatio ns Wh W . 1 952 e o s ho o American . and is listed in f son iver Valley In , he was president lude two sisters , a daughter , and his wife , W m E 1 1 omen . 9 . Al 8 Phi Beta Kappa Her husband , of the A erican Association of Industrial leanor , A I A Highway , Hillsboro E . . m m A t . 240 m 99 # 33062 . bert , Jewish Ho e for the Aged , Hillside ditors Mr Tal an was the first president Beach , p , Po pano Beach 02906 im medi Ave Providence , is the only of the Historical Society of Spring Valley , a ’

i . R HistO r au rence P hil i R eid 3 1 m ate surv vor forerunner of the ockland County L p , Ply outh ,

. ical Society He is survived by two sons , a Mass . , retired veterans services agent for the ’ Charl es eo r e u r es 24 D , , , 57 7 , s ; . 2 7 . G g B g s , ayville , daughter and his wife Charlotte South town of Kingston Mas Jan He served

St . . 1 4 . 1 0977 . Conn ; Feb . He was an instructor in Main , Spring Valley with the Navy in the Asiatic Pacific area mechanical engineering at Brown after his during World War II and took part in the ' R obert il m an Trenh m l 28 War . 1 926 . m o graduation until He then beca e an G , Battle of the Phili ppines Survivors include - - - m R m , R . I . ; 27 . m in . 860 engineer with the Grisco ussell Co pa wick March He was e ployed by his sister law , Mrs Alan Morelli , Box ,

n 1 929 E m m m 02360 . y , New York City , and in went to New ngland Telephone fro the ti e of Ply outh m m m m work for A erican Loco otive Co pany , his graduation until his retire ent , at which ’

m R ohn . . W hite 1 mm 3 Se . M Cam New York City , where he held various posi ti e he was the hode Island co ercial J F M

m . m . . 1 962 . H tions until the co pany closed in e supervisor Kappa Sig a Survivors include bridge , Mass , a princi pal engineer at the me - E m 1 09 R L m was a for r secretary treasurer and a past his two daughters and his wife , l a , Central esearch aboratory , Allied Che

e m D r. W D . 7 . 2 N. . e E e 0 888 . c 2 presid nt of the Brown ngine ring Associ Pilgri , arwick ical Corporation , Morristown , J ;

. e m m ation Survivors include his daught r and his After his retire ent he oved to Concord , ’ The R v m RR . 2 en x e . Charl es R enfr B . # S e et Rd . oe eI I r . 29 , P O . wife , Dorothy , , , J , Mass Infor ation regarding his survivors is 1 W m # . . 1 984 . , . 0628 1 . , ; Box oodstock , Conn Sun City Ariz June He received his inco plete

M . Th . from Southern Baptist Theological ’ ’ ’ l ad m H u h 1 M . a o 25 E 932 D ancel ot o nl e 32 Se. 35 . D . m G ys T yl r , ast Providence , Se inary in and his fro Kala g L D y ,

R I m Ph . D 8 . h . S ; 1 S e 1 955 . C March was a high school social azoo College in He served first as , Myrtle Beach , , a retired physicist The Mem orial RCA N studies teacher and a guidance counselor at pastor of Parker Baptist at the Laboratories , Princeton , J E o n m . 1 0 . , 2 54 ast Providence High Sch ol until retiri g Church of Alaba a for twelve years , then Oct He is survived by his wife at

1 964 . mm W 29577 . is. in There are no i ediate survivors . the First Baptist Church of Madison , , Briarcliffe Acres , Myrtle Beach for ten , and finally the First Baptist Church ’ ' anci R o l and A tc h l e o i l e 27 Fla , . em er e ro wel l 34 , Al Fr s D l s M l r , Deltona , of Pasadena Calif , until his retir ent in w y C

1 0 . He 1 969 . e 9602 March was the retired director of the Survivors include his wif , Ann , garve , Portugal , retired secretary of the for i n o o n . 5 1 e m D 8: o f 8 35 . transp rtati section of the Port New Hidden Valley Cir , Sun City g insurance depart ent of Boit , alton 4 6 Yo o 1 . M r. N w Y Dec . e . 1 962 , ; , rk Auth rity , ork City In , he Church Boston After retiring _ ’ n W n and in 1 9 e a d o , 68 he ona d an a 4 8 . a n , R I ; Ston ebster , Bost D l Al P rks Cr nsto m n 4 . m D v was appo inted senior echa ical engineer . March A for er payroll clerk for a o l e - e and eam fo r e o e He helped d sign hydro el ctric st Inc Providence , tw lve years bef r w w ene a a as e as n ea o e e . as o a a g r ting pl nts w ll ucl r p r r tiring last year , Mr Parks als pl y

H 1 1 . . w facilities . e retired in 98 Mr Sawyer as wrigh t and an actor whose credits i ncluded a registered professional engi nee r in fi ve The Players in Providence and the National

mem e t he me a o E L e Wis. Du r states , a past b r of A ric n S ci Theater Group of lkhart ak , o f e n a En ne and e n in W War he m m o f t he ety M cha ic l gi ers , had b e g orld II , was a e ber e e e n o f the e a m e and a e in s cr tary and vic preside t Massa Sp ci l Service Detach nt , ct d chu setts et o f o e n E . o and Soci y Pr f ssio al ngineers sh ws produced throughout the Pacific ,

e a so n e a t he . he Survivors includ , thr e d ughters , his in Tokyo after occupation At Brown , W e 397 o n o Rd . B ro wnbro ker wif . Audrey . C c rd , eston was active in shows and Sock ’ 1 n 02 93 o e a 34 a an a d . m e in ; and a br th r , C rl , p h ysici Buskin He ade TV appearanc s an m WP B in Pro vidence . Chicago d worked for a ti e with J 1 h - o o . 95 5 e co au radi in Pr vidence In , was ’ E m an o f the y o m . . ee e e 38 Dr Fr H rs y , Sun City . thor book and l rics for j , a usical m Little Women fo r . m e m am e e o n Ariz , a for er chi f edical ex iner for co dy bas d , proposed - ten m o o a . I n 1 960 he co o the years of Kala az o County , Mich and a Br adw y , was auth r of m fo r fifteen- m e 1 0 . retired physician and surgeo n ; Sept . words and usic a inut sketch A l D W War was m e t he F om A to Z . uring orld II . he an a bulanc at the end of first act of r driver for the A merican Fi eld Service at though the m usical was not favorably re ’ tached e Ea m and e e M r . Parks s to the British Middl st Ar y vi w d , sketch was singled out fo r New Y in m . W was involved the African ca paign h en praise by ork theater critics . m n m oo The New the e m . Her o e Allies retr ated fro Tobruk . Dr a g th Br ks Atkinson of Y m k Ti e . o o m m m me a a n o s e . sey , with only a ini u of dic l tr i r Thr ugh ut his lif , Mr Parks in e m o n in a e e e m iscellaneo us obs w t g, assist d ar y surge s b ttl fi ld juggl d j i h his acting nd y n . a a e are mm operations He enrolled in medical sch ool pla writi g c reer . Th re no i e afte r t he war and graduated fro m t he Co l di ate survivo rs. n and o o m lege of Physicia s Surge ns , C lu bia ' W l n om a e o Shano s 4 8 W w 1 94 8 . e e e University , in hil his r s arch Th s Gr g ry , ar ick , terests e o n o o m te R I a a ma and o ne an focus d p li yelitis . his priva p h r cist w r of Suburb a m a o f W w practice concentrated o n obstetrics and Ph r cy ar ick : M arch 2 8 . He is sur H wa n h o v ived t wo so and w 1 60 e . e s o t e a gyn cology st ff of Brons n by ns his ife , Anna , — v W w m was an o b n co n o n A e . 02888 . Hospital in Kala azoo . gy Budl g , ar ick su ltant l ma o ate o a and to Ka a zo St H spit l , ’ m m e in m an e e f ed a e 4 8 e e held e b rshi ps y prof ssional Ol iv r Al r Sp r gu , Ch pach t ,

I . n . 1 7 . H R . a in m m . o ln e e n e at associations . Nu Sig a Nu Surviv rs ; J was strick his ho t he a o me e a 00 - m e e e m e o 320 1 , 2 a e lud a grandni ce . Ki b rly Br oks , Spr gue H st ad cr far t a had ee in t h m E . 1 e y e e o n 7 . A t 63 o n . 85 1 6 . ast Seneca , p . Tucs , Ariz h t b n fa il for g n rati s w Mr . S prague as a direct descenda nt of the ’ en am i n u i u 38 o e a e m who e e o n e o f B j B rt T t s , F rt Pierc . Spr gu fa ily w r c lo ial settl rs e and R n m a a s e . He w . e e n e ad as Fla , a r tired anag r in fina c and M ss chu tts hod Isla d a m m f th R 4 . in e o e ee e m inistrati on for I BM : Feb . Survivo rs e b r hode Island B k epers H ' e a so n e a and e s o at on . e e e a m a te e ee in lude , thr e d ughters . his wif . A s ci i arn d s r s d gr chemisiry o m t he n W 4 1 . t o f Penns l a. 1 1 L ay o e e 33 5 Johann avilla , F rt Pi rc fr U iversi y y an a in 1 950 b u t to the o m v i , returned h e ’

R o a ind oo ne Larko w i c h 4 0 ea , w e e he a a m e s l C y . st d h r labored as f r r and ' H ee e e . e b his o R . I . a . ene e y e Cranston , , a te cher at St B dict s b k ep r is surviv d br th r , n n o f n o Wi . W e e n in 1 97 4 : . e o s School , arwick , b for retiri g A th y A ppl t , w 2 3 . e a e t o March Survivors includ a d ught r . ’ h r 0 G e n eem an a nde a e eo e 39 6 e t . 5 0 sons and husband , G rg , l Fr S u rs B rtl t , Jr , a n 3 1 . H . 02905 . , ; e e e Ave , Cranston Gr y Mai e March att nd d Har ‘ ’ v ard and received bachelor s and m aster s ' ’

M . e ee m h Le ie anc i n 4 6 4 9 A . t e e t o f n a o . . . sl Fr s C rs , d gr s fro Univ rsi y Mai e Mr w et m h n e R I Feb . 2 2 . . a o as y t e e n N wport . ; Mr C rs n a Bartl t was e plo ed by Mai Tur mathematics teacher and assistant pri nci pal pike Authori ty and had also taught in t he E e e en o nt Saco ee e o an and W n of ast Provid nc S i r High School u il p Vall y , S uth Portl d , i d o ee n a an ham o w He had a s in a ne . H a retiring in 1 975 . l b ssist t High Sch ols M i e s also a H w ea e t o o oo . e as e n a e guidance direct r at the high sch l r l sta e br k r and a la dsc p architect . m m m an o o m m n o e ee o n a te a e ber of y Newp rt c u ity Surviv rs includ thr s s , a d ugh r . o E n 1 o a o n ee e e 5 3 e Rd . organizati ns , v lu t r tut r , a past and his wife , vang li . Shak r , i v president o f the Ne po rt chapter o f the C ray 04039 . m a o a o o f Re e e o A eric n Ass ci ti n tir d P rs ns , ’ and e e ea a e fo r Shafeek e e o u 50 a R e s rv d as h d class g nt his class P t r Kh ry . F ll iv r .

. a . H w 1 98 2 e o e s ; an 29 , o f a e a a . e as since Survivors includ his wife , J s M s J h art tt ck ’ i ne R u o 38 395 e o f t he Le n ne L n o n o o in p h ( ss ) . Spring St N wport princi pal o ti i c l Sch l a R e f r h w 0284 0 . F ll iv r o t e past t o years and had ju st begu n a six - m o nth sabbat ical duri ng which ’ W i iam a o o an 4 7 o he n e an n e e d en st ttd nto t he ll C rr ll D rg . Pr vi pla n d i d p n t y i the law fi rm o f Hi b a e a o o f o e e m m dence , an attorney with g ilingu l duc ti n P rtugu s i i

H an s e n . I n 1 h w 8c 26 1 985 . e e 959 e as name gins Slattery ; May . is surviv d gr t tud ts d - h t . o f o a e tea e at t e o me a by his sis er , Margaret D Cook , Pr vi sixth gr d ch r f r r D vis in . o n 65 he e am e o a R e . I 1 9 e denc Sch l F ll iv r . b c a ant n a o f s o o and in ssist pri ci p l Davi Sch l . 4 7 1 968 m o . p p Ga. ; . he beca e rinci al of Aldrich Scho l , an attorney date of death unknown W 1 984 , , 6 1 hen that school closed in he was He is survived by his brother , John ,

m . p p m Rd . t R I . 02806 . na ed rinci al of Lincoln School He was La son , Barring on , He was m s ’ ’ , , Eu en O B rien 1 9 . active in any professional civic and sport the son of g e W .

. D W War organizations uring orld II , he ’ . on aco eibo i z 62 served in the Navy in the Pacific Survivors J J b L w t , New York , , , m m m include a son a daughter and his wife City , a for er lawyer , for er chair an of

R 0 7 3 . R 34 4 D St . 2 , , 2 R m m ose unbar Fall iver ho bus Fil Corporation , and executive p Y ’ with Sabrina Coat Cor oration of New ork

Hu n e White . 50 Se . M . . , , 1 . t r Los ; A u g. 8 J Jr ’ City He is survived by twin sons 30 1 985 Lou g ; , , g e D 1 4 1 E 88th An eles May of Gehri s dis and his wif , orothy , ast St m . ease He was the assistant for arket plan New York 1 0 1 2 8 .

W . ning , estern region , for I BM Survivors m 3662 m ’ , , El eano a kman Ri ce 65 include his wife Nor a Barha r P r , San Fran - 1 L A t . M 1 1 os 90068 . . , , f m p 1 984 . Blvd Angeles cisco , Cali ; Septe ber She received

A . M . ’ her in radio and television at San E . Rid e a oo k 5 1 m , , 1 97 7 g w y C Ja estown Francisco State in , and was a freelance

I . . R . 2 Feb He recently retired after twen writer and character model . She was also a t — m co y nine years as general anager and p p . ' ainter and a oet Survivors include a son ’ , p . l l en ar km an 62 owner of Fairchild s Gift Sho Providence , , m and her brother Dr A P . E . 1 4 . 1 6 Pl NE N M . Mr Cook for erly worked for Pulver Marquette , Albuquerque , . , General Cook Inc an area distributor for 94 1 1 7 . W ar 1 1 m Electric . He was a orld W Ar y vet eran and served with the U . S. occupation forces in Japan . He leaves a son and a R I TES AND R EA SO N m 230 Co nanicus . brother , Myles , Ave , Ja es continuedf om page 22 town 02835 . r

’ h ’ e al d e i Ri ch 5 1 , , t e 605 ; G r L w s Boxboro of indeed , a wealth of poten

s ; . 3 . m m m Mas Feb For any years he was treas tial aterial re ains yet untouched , u rer g m W m B and eneral anager of est inster waiting for ass , J ones , and their col

D . D . odge , Inc , of orchester , Mass He was laborato rs m m ro fes , p E m fro acade e the then New ngland regional anager for sional R W theatre , and the ranks of stu Data esearch Association , Inc of oburn , p . . e 1 03 dents to ex lore it , , Mass Survivors include his wif Joyce U ’ R 7 1 . . 0 1 9 pp Cortland Ln , Boxboro The niversity s su ort of ites and Reason bespeaks a recognition that ’ om a to ie 5 1 - - m m Th s Ot T tz , Newtonville , the research to perfor ance ethod

Y . e . N . ; date of d ath unknown He was an and its fruits are vital to both the aca m Co m m m advertising anager with Albany Felt de ic and artistic issions of B rown . W r N. Y . D a pany , Albany , uring the Korean , Begun on a shoestring bud get of less mm . he was an assistant co unications officer R R than a year , ites and eason Information regarding survivors is inco m last year spent some in ad lete . p m inistrative , production , and overhead

’ ’ , am e Etm ek i an 58 Ph . D . p J s j , Newton , costs of which was rovided

B . . ( Mass , a retired professor of languages at by rown The principal outside Boston University ; Jan . 3 . A native of Har funding agencies are the National

. Etmek ian m the m poot , Turkey , Mr j was brought to Endow ent for Hu anities and

a e m . the U . S . at the g of three onths He the Rhode Island State Council on the

B . m e A . arned his fro Harvard College and A rts ; funds for individual productions A . M . m . his fro After are provided also by a host of other teaching for twenty years in public and pri agencies and corporations . ) , D vate schools including ana Hall and B ro mek ian , p W e . Et In addition to ass who is a ell sley High School , Mr j fesso r - m Y , taught at Q ueens College in New ork , of Afro A erican studies and

, Southern Illinois University , and the Uni Jones who is an associate p rofessor of e R R m versity of Bridgeport , wh re he was chair history , ites and eason has a anag ’ m an the e m . in m of foreign languag depart ent g director , Alan Yaffe (the progra s y m m He then joined the facult of Boston Uni fourth such staff e ber) , and the . . Etmekjian m versity Mr was a for er national services of two administrative/clerical p en of m resid t the Ar enian Student Associa m . h e ployees The u pgrading of the t e m , tion and Ar enian Church Choir as m - m anaging director post with the hiring well as a vice chair an of the Diocesan ’ Yaffe s W o f E the of predecessor , Craig atson , Council the astern Diocese of Ar m R R ’ menian m e was a ilestone in ites and eason s Church of A erica and a found r “ W e of the National Association for Armenian history . could hire professionals , ’

R Wh . Studies and esearch . He was listed in o s says Jones Craig did an excellent job W ri n - ho in Ame ca Education in 1 965 66 . Phi for us by stream lining and organizing Lil pp . , Beta Ka a Survivors include his wife our whole internal working procedure , We 1 , 35 L Rd . , 02 65 ; - lian lewellyn st Newton . ’ and in grants writing Alan has only R o ann ’ so n e e 7 8 . a ; and a daught r , x m been here three onths , but he s very

’ ’ 4 8 o nal d Ed ar d O B ri en 59 interested in hel ping us to develop D w , Atlanta ,