Author Archives: mbaumer

Delia Boylan (Class of 1988)

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The above quote is from Delia Boylan (Class of 1988). Read the full memory below:

I think I logged more hours at the Rock than any of my friends during my four years at Brown. I studied there…I ate there…I slept there…I flirted there. By the time I was a Senior, I felt like the guy on Fantasy Island who greets the guests as they get off of the plane, handing out drinks. I had different destinations for different purposes. If I wanted to socialize, I went to the A level in that glassed in room. If I wanted to take a nap, I curled up in one of those large, comfy chairs facing the windows on the A level. And if i wanted to study, I’d go deep into the shelves, sometimes going down to the B level to escape anyone who might possibly know me. When I wrote my senior thesis, I spent a lot of time up on the main level, going through the card catalogue (remember those?) before the dawn of the internet.

I loved Brown and the Rock will always be an integral part of that experience.

Joy Javits (Class of 1970)

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The above quote is from Joy Javits (Class of 1970). Read the full memory below:

A few days before Spring Weekend, 1968, Kenny Dawson stole my shoe and ran down the hill, through the gate and down to the Rock and straight in the front door and hid from me in a bathroom! I hardly knew him, the roommate of Scott Burns, both of Sigma Nu, who was fixing us up for a first date for Spring Weekend. We were off to a playful start. I went with him to that Spring Weekend, featuring The Supremes, Janis Joplin and Dionne Warwick as organized by the incredible Ira Magaziner.

Kenny and I loved each other for two and half years and then fool that I am, I didn’t beg him to marry me. He was a beautiful man, he became a conscientious objector who worked for years doing menial work in a mental institution, and then became a Psychiatrist for troubled teenagers. We lost Kenny a few years ago. I can still see him racing way ahead of me, into the Rock.

Of course the Rock was a place I went at least three or four times a week to study. It was comfortable and well lit and warm and conducive both to studying until closing, and to dosing on a Saturday afternoon.

Also, Rockefeller, Nelson, was a great man. A very cultured, warm-hearted, if rich as Croesus man, with a love of the visual arts. He and my father would have made a great President and Vice President!

And I send a subscription of “The Sun Magazine,” a thoughtful magazine, published here in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, my new home, to the Rock which pleases me greatly. The New Curriculum (adopted in 1969!) produces people who are smart, ethical, open minded, out of the box thinkers. I am very proud to have attended Pembroke and Brown.

 

Cathy Gersztenkorn (Class of 1972)

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The above quote is from Cathy Gersztenkorn (Class of 1972). Read the full memory below:

I remember spending too many hours, that I should have been studying, in the stacks, pulling down and enjoying books that were written in the 19th century and maybe even in the 18th century?

Eric Cohen (Class of 1979)

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The above quote is from Eric Cohen (Class of 1979). Read the full memory below:

Every afternoon after classes, I would head over to the Rock, find the same carrel in the stack upstairs, read for about 15 minutes and then fall asleep on my books. After a 20-30 minute power nap, I would splash some water on my face and be good to go until closing time. I remember the quiet and solitude of working away at my carrel, and taking breaks and socializing in the hall. I remember the sweet feeling of release walking out into the night on my way back to my dorm, feeling satisfied that I had had a productive day.

Meg Hudson (Class of 2006)

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The above quote is from Meg Hudson (Class of 2006). Read the full memory below:

I feel like, and often looked like, I moved into the Rock during my senior year but my real relationship with the Rock started my freshman year when I manage to get locked in on one particularly snowy night. I will never forget the utter ridiculousness of realizing that I had missed all the bells (though to be fair, I think in everyone’s hurry to get out during a snow storm the regular schedule, which I already knew by heart, was not strictly adhered to) and then had to decide whether to spend the night in the library or call the police to get me out. Slightly spooked and certainly confused I opted for the latter and after all the laughing trudged home to Perkins during one of the worst snow storms I saw in my time at Brown. After that I always had a great story to tell and took extra steps to make sure I was always out in plenty of time!

Thomas Lindsey (Class of 1969)

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The above quote is from Thomas Lindsey (Class of 1969). Read the full memory below:

1. Photocopiers were relatively new machines. I remember that the Rock had machines at which you gave your sheets to be copied to an attendant who put each one on the glass plate and pressed the button to start the scanning and copying. A machine could make six or ten copies a minute.

2. The social studies and humanities reserve materials reading rooms on the basement and second floors. You had to read most material in the reading room, but there was a large lounge area outside that were very popular social gathering places.

3. The bookstacks with the mechanical timer switches on them. You could be reading in the stacks and the overhead lights would suddenly turn off.

4. Finding a book in French that was published in 1683.

5. A library with more than a million volumes in it. This was more than 10 times the size of any library I had ever used prior to coming to Brown.

6. Finding the U.S. Government Documents section down in the basement center south, near the music listening rooms. One had to play LP recordings in music rooms for the music course reserve listening assignments. I was fascinated by all the information that came from the U.S. government as described in the Monthly Catalog of U.S. Government Publications. The library also subscribed to the Readex Non-depository Publications microcard sets. I am sure that I used government publications for research in writing research papers, and made use of the microcards with non-depository publications.

I did not think about becoming a librarian until several years after graduation, but I think that my experience of being inside the Rockefeller Library had some influence on it. I worked as a librarian for 37 years, and more than 20 years in government information collections.

6. I saw the movie “Bonnie and Clyde” when it first came out in the 1960s. Sometime after that, I was up in the classification AP section and found bound volumes of the New York Times. I used the New York Times index to find out when they were shot, and looked at the Times issues near that date to see what had been published about them. Libraries have gone from binding newspapers to purchasing rolls of microfilm to subscribing to online access to newspapers. We now have access to 1000s of current and discontinued newspapers, even newspapers from the 18th and 19th century.

7. The huge lobby in the front. When you left the library, you went to a counter between the doors on either side, and showed the contents of your bags and other personal stuff to an older man. This was the deterrent for book thieves, although I am sure that the library had a regular % shrinkage rate each year.

8. Finding publications of the League of Nations, 1919-1946. I used those publications to write my second semester World History research paper on the failure of the League to respond to the invasion of Ethiopia by Italy. I think about that situation and my long-discarded research paper every time I read or hear about wars or insurgencies across the globe, and how other nations and international organizations respond to them.

Samantha Kibbe (Class of 1988)

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The above quote is from Samantha Kibbe (Class of 1988). Read the full memory below:

My greatest memory of the Rock is that of carrying 40+ books back in my knapsack at a time. I not only gained knowledge but also muscles!

Julie Stein (Class of 2005)

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The above quote is from Julie Stein (Class of 2005). Read the full memory below:

In the spring of our senior year (2005), my friend Ari Lucas (Brown ’05) was able to fulfill a college-long dream of serenading fellow students in the Periodicals Rooms of The Rock with Sam Cooke’s Wonderful World. He enlisted many friends to join in the singing, and we delighted and confused many people in the Periodicals Room that evening. We filmed the whole thing, and it’s uploaded here. A truly special memory for all of us.