Page 35 - 1964
P. 35
BARCLAY NELSON DORMAN
4818 Fort Sumner Drive, Washington 16, D.C.
FORM VI: Letter in Football, Letter in Basketball, Letter in Spring Track,
House Council, Rod and Gun Club.
Barclay Dorman, suspected of telling Mr.
Meserve that he was going to Owen’s house
and then actually going to the Tete a Tete,
is a new boy who has made a place for him
self quickly. Bare has been a valuable asset
on both the football and basketball squads.
Elected to House Council after being here
only three weeks, Barclay has worked closely
with another member to dominate its pro
ceedings. Barclay is particularly known for
his filibuster on Christmas trees. An excel
lent football player and lover of Washing
ton night dubs, Bare is a man of varied
activities.
EDOUARD WALLACE DUFRESNE, JR .
421 Dexter Street, Central Falls, R.I.
FORM III: Judicial Board, French Club, Proscenium Club.
FORM IV: Class Vice-President, French Club, Proscenium Club, U.N.
Club.
FORM V: Class President, Snack Bar Business Manager, S.A.C. Treasurer,
Dance Committee Vice-President, French Club Program Chairman, Alli
ance Representative, U.N. Club, Proscenium Club, Quaker, Delphian.
FORM VI: Class President, S.A.C. President, Proscenium Club President,
U.N. Club President, Snack Bar President, Jolly Poets’ Club Vice-Presi
dent, Mosaic Business Coordinator, Delphian Business Manager, Quaker,
Dance Committee President, Rotary International, Homecoming Com
mittee, French Club, 745 Club, Rhode Island Youth Council, World Af
fairs Council.
If anyone ever conducts a careful investi
gation of the school emblem, they’ll find
that the profile under the wide-brimmed hat
belongs not to Moses Brown but to Dewey.
As head of the Syndicate, Tiny controls all
the action in the entire school; and the
Candy Man's quick smile and easy going
manner have made him popular among the
students and the faculty (? ). Honest Ed is
a fair and determined leader, even if he
uses the gavel freely. Between meetings,
Dewey somehow managed to maintain a
very respectable average. He says that he
enjoyed math when he had time to attend,
but that history was his favorite. As Moses
Brown’s answer to Hugh Hefner, he cer
tainly deserves to go down in the record
book ( M osaic) as the greatest of the im
mortals (Class of ’6 4 ). Agreeable?
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