Sharon Stern Gerstman (Class of 1972)

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The above quote is from Sharon Stern Gerstman (Class of 1972). Read the full memory below:

I remember fondly the coffee house at the rock in the late 60s-early 70s. I had this routine of going to the Rock after dinner, studying for about 2 hours, then going for coffee and a sweet for half an hour. The conversation, as well as the coffee and sugar, propelled me for another hour or so of studying.

I don’t know if it’s true, but a story going around was that the students had instantly named the library the Rock, and the administration didn’t like it. So the students started calling it the John and the administration said “the Rock was just fine.”

Gina Grubbs Funk (Class of 1988 AM)

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The above quote is from Gina Grubbs Funk (Class of 1988 AM). Read the full memory below:

As a graduate student entering the Creative Writing program in 1986, I felt so out of place at first. It was hard being a “southern girl” in the world of Brown and Providence. My first point of reference was the library, and I spent many happy days there in study, research and writing. Later, I got my “sea legs” and felt a part of everything at Brown and Providence at large, but the library was always a dear refuge. Happy Birthday, Rock! Gina Funk, A.M. Creative Writing, 1988 P.S. I worked for a period at the Hay!

Jonathan J. Silbermann (Class of 1970)

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The above quote is from Jonathan J. Silbermann (Class of 1970). Read the full memory below:

Having my Senior thesis carrell on, I think, the fourth floor of the Rock overlooking downtown Providence was special—a quiet place to take an afternoon nap!

Eric Lund (Class of 1970)

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

As a freshman in 1966 I used to bury myself in the listening rooms of the Rock and do my homework there while exposing myself to an endless supply of classical music. Vinyl records in those days – listening rooms not headphones. I saw on a recent visit to the campus that this space no longer exists. Still a fond memory.

Michael Fontaine (Class of 2003 phD)

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The above quote is from Michael Fontaine (Class of 2003 phD). Read the full memory below:

I was sitting at a computer terminal in the Rock when the first plane hit the Twin Towers on 9/11. A message popped up on Yahoo’s home screen announcing the tower had been hit. Nobody around me seem to have heard, but when I walked out to the lobby a circulation librarian had already set up a TV and a few people were gathering to watch that day’s events unfold.

I spent many—too many, surely—hours in the Rock during my time at Brown, but I’ll never forget those few vivid minutes of 13 years ago.

Philip J. Davis (Prof. Emer. Applied Mathematics)

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The above quote is from Philip J. Davis (Prof. Emer. Applied Mathematics). Read the full memory below:

I arrived on the Brown Faculty fifty years ago just as the splendid new Rock opened. I feel bereft unless I’m near a library with at least two million books. I rarely need to go to Interlibrary Loan.

Joseph Haletky (Class of 1968)

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The above quote is from Joseph Haletky (Class of 1968). Read the full memory below:

The Rock opened during my freshman year. I had a financial aid job with the library (helping to process books given to the library). We started out at the John Hay, but moved to the Rock when it opened later that year. I remember helping to move the Acquisitions department across the street through a tunnel on one of the basement levels. Level C (the deepest basement) was where we had our storage stacks.

Louise Sandberg (Staff)

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The above quote is from Louise Sandberg (Staff). Read the full memory below:

I worked at the Rockefeller Library during my senior year at Brandeis University (1969-70). I had just married a man who was pursuing advanced degrees at Brown and work study got me a job at the library. I don’t really remember what I did, but I do remember it as a wonderful library. I would follow with 3 years at the archives in the John Hay Library.