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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