Augusta Military Academy - Recall Yearbook (Fort Defiance, VA)

 - Class of 1970

Page 1 of 312

 

Augusta Military Academy - Recall Yearbook (Fort Defiance, VA) online collection, 1970 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1970 Edition, Augusta Military Academy - Recall Yearbook (Fort Defiance, VA) online collectionPage 7, 1970 Edition, Augusta Military Academy - Recall Yearbook (Fort Defiance, VA) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1970 Edition, Augusta Military Academy - Recall Yearbook (Fort Defiance, VA) online collectionPage 11, 1970 Edition, Augusta Military Academy - Recall Yearbook (Fort Defiance, VA) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1970 Edition, Augusta Military Academy - Recall Yearbook (Fort Defiance, VA) online collectionPage 15, 1970 Edition, Augusta Military Academy - Recall Yearbook (Fort Defiance, VA) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1970 Edition, Augusta Military Academy - Recall Yearbook (Fort Defiance, VA) online collectionPage 9, 1970 Edition, Augusta Military Academy - Recall Yearbook (Fort Defiance, VA) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1970 Edition, Augusta Military Academy - Recall Yearbook (Fort Defiance, VA) online collectionPage 13, 1970 Edition, Augusta Military Academy - Recall Yearbook (Fort Defiance, VA) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1970 Edition, Augusta Military Academy - Recall Yearbook (Fort Defiance, VA) online collectionPage 17, 1970 Edition, Augusta Military Academy - Recall Yearbook (Fort Defiance, VA) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 312 of the 1970 volume:

ti A Recall Augusta Military Academy Fort Defiance, Virginia 24437 Volume 70 Title Page — 1 2 — Contents Contents Theme 2 Cadet Life 8 Curriculum 50 Military 74 Clubs 96 Sports 120 Individuals 154 Commercial 236 Index 280 e 2 DEPTH OF DEPRESSION flashes on Bob Winstead’s face as famous Benny performs a tonsorial masterpiece. DOOMED BANGS! George Rowland’s hair must go, but throughout the epoch, his smile will remain wide. DEFIANCE and rebellion interfere with Chicago's peace and tranquility. Note the crowd’s patriotism and jeers. UNIFORM PRECISION reaches a peak during battle for honors on a hot, dusty Parents’ Day demonstration. i a et é Burn, baby, burn! What’s the harm in going mainline? Long hair, bell bottoms, wide belts, and WHAM! From the permissive society, we are thrust into the disciplined world called Augusta. It’s a shock to realize that on the outside, patriotism is shoved into obscurity, and to discover that those shouts for PEACE are contradicted by a lack of peace among men. It hits. At Augusta there is a revolution. It’s to create, and it’s AMA’s new image, but it is AMA’s Revolution Theme — 3 Pal oF ° ae es t ard eer aN Pia ee we gp Be: cl ils TEN eg MAYHEM, orderly disorder, reigns after Parents’ Day, a football win, a turned-on dance, and a big parade. Exuberant cadets sing and dance for joy. QUIET, and then crunching on autumn’s leaves shatters the bleak soli- tude of the woods surrounding Au- gusta. The search was on for perfect Christmas trees which the companies used to beautify barracks’ stoops. HEAVY ROCK is the message during a well attended festival. The scene’s slightly different in Fort Defiance at AMA‘s dances, but the music is very similar. CRACKED CELLS burst with new found determination. Steve Wat- kins’ personal revolution transforms him from the sidelines to the action of the Honor Roll. Immersed in thought, Steve pours out the new knowledge. Hip cadets turn-on in novel environment Reality, man! Well, what is more real than crunching footsteps on ice crystals with winds whipping around ‘A’ Company? Expand your mind. We blew ours in Col. Koogler’s class, with physics and its myriad formulae, and with Big Ed and his reverse approach to the study of communism. It’s wild, discovering that there is power in building-up, in wanting to stand-out, in participating, and in being involved in the action at AMA. Theme — 5 HAPPY PUP. Don Malnati beams with joy when the last man passes him with his formal portrait card. Active on the yearbook, Pup also managed to have an average nearing the perfect mark, attained at semester’s end. ess 4.5 12s HARD HIT Ray Smith rips into the powerful Greenbrier line during the JV battle. Ray’s short gain didn’t help pull the Baby Streaks from a 16-0 deficit, and the Mountaineers maintained the lead, throughout the game. ee §24.5 2.688 SSF Cf} 6 — Theme — , learning, ciating our heritage, B a multitude in a new decade. marches on Washington ho solution, marches around the Bowl form the muscles, the character, he desire to help quell the onslaught ical rebellion. sition Comes once more. idets will disperse. s will march to defend our heritage POINTS about the ROTC are discov- ered by Marge Westmoreland and George Dunaway from an ebullient Major Paul Quattrociocchi during the Military Ball. It was a salute to AMA's 50 years of ROTC. HISTORY is made as Col. William Gardner, Superintendent-emeritus, and Col. Malcolm H. Livick, Superinten- dent, watch the corps on parade in honor of retiring Col. Gardner. PEACE MARCHERS clutter the Loop during the Democratic National Con- vention in 1968. The scene was repeated again in 19%9 when the disorganized group made the scene for more action. Theme — 7 PEACEFUL MOMENTS allow Mike Wickun and Dean Lake to wonder about the future and to get to know one another. NONCONFORMING, yet still conforming are these faceless Hippies who come on strong. HONORED members of the court at Pin-Up time are Ellen McLean with Jack Meyer and Linda Neiss with Jorge Revirosa during Sunday afternoon’s Pin-Up Queen parade. AND THERE IS NO HASSLE during rifle inspection when Warren Tochterman is all spit and polish. George McCoach waits anxiously closeby. Transposition from civilian to CADET 8 — Cadet Life | i LIFE paces year ‘Hair’ makes it point. And suddenly, so does the feeling each of us gets as we watch Col. Livick begin the daily ‘Pledge of Allegiance’. It’s strong leaving home and being thrust in with 417 other souls, Day by day, we plummet more to reality as transition, the inner revolution, makes life more Mmeaningful, more productive, more rewarding. Cadet Life — 9 JUMBLED THOUGHTS stab Bruce Quigley apprehensive moments pending the first formation. MISFITTED, but correct, Ira Koonan steps into a perfect fit. Tradition was broken with new low cut shoes. TIGHT SQUEEZE. Jorge Rovirosa suggests to Al Zayas that he'll have a perfect fit when the hair goes. — Cadet Life Record returnees vow involved year Reversing the trend of enrollments in mili- tary schools, AMA experienced the impact of a record number of returning old cadets. Push- ing figures to over the 400 mark were 252 old men joined by 166 new cadets, for a total of 418. Late arrivals increased the tally. Determined Larry Thiel, sporting the new rank of Cadet Colonel, another first at AMA, ram-rodded his officers into a demand for complete participation. Early meetings meant that the officers were prepared for the influx of the new cadets during orientation. New furniture in the library, new paint jobs, and new faculty faces helped put impact in the year’s opening. After a dearth of home football games, the opener was welcomed. bi BARKING BULLDOG Larry Thiel calls his troops to atten- tion for the first time. His knees were weak. REBEL YELL is bellowed by Joe Gallehugh at the water-logged GMS opening home football game. Cadet Life — 11 12 — Cadet Life Changes occur; traditions still prevail Loathed by some, loved by others was a change of shoe gear. Sanctioned for the first time was the use of low cut shoes for town leave and parades, with the use of high tops geared for wear during the week day activities. Never had Augusta had rank above a captain for the officers of the corps, but cadets began sprouting the rank of major and colonel. A minor change was Lee Hall’s switch to officer in charge of Band Company. His rank swelled from captain to the brass of a cadet major. Col. John C. McCue’s illness gave Col. Charles Savedge yet another chore. His face was found in the Headmaster’s Office as the year began, hassling with class changes. Hanover Shoe company helped along the shoe purchases with a representative sent at the school’s opening to help fit shoes right on the grounds. Stepping off with the new shoes were the guidon bearers, streaming brand new banners for a stand-out effect. Reveille formation put the year into clear focus. It was a tradition which had not disap- | peared from the scene. Short hair, lectures from the Superintendent, and the opening | buffet supper proved that underneath, it was still AMA all the way. However, the greatest difference seemed to be in the spirit of the corps. Larry Thiel’s bell-ringing let the corps see sunrises! FLOWING LOCKS can’t stop Capt. Tim Mannasmith from outfitting Vernon Wells. Teachers and cadets size up each other during the orientation period. OLD TRADITION of sheets, posters, and signs continues with messages for the Greenbrier lads. Unfortunately, the Mountaineers ignored them 16-0. BOOM! And hundreds jump, just as usual, when the can- non goes off for the beginning of the National Anthem. Lewis Kennett gets a bang from the reaction. LIMEY.. . . Covered with lime from lining the field, Bermu- da’s Steve Bunce is just a bit unhappy with the weather for the first opening home game. a : é .f ee Cadet Life — 13 Death overshadows October’s tempo Jam-packed October tickled cadets with a combination picnic, cook-out, and informal dance. Death’s shadow darkened the mood of the month when Mrs. Chas. S. Roller, Jr., widow of AMA‘s late principal, died. Capt. John Bradford was rushed to the hospital for two aorta operations. Lt. David Lane joined the faculty as Capt. Bradford’s replacement. After a month’s illness, Col. J. C. McCue, Jr., AMA's headmaster, died in mid-October, Ca- dets and faculty reeled under the double blow. BEAMING Will Eastment receives his rank at the second annual commissioning ceremonies from Mrs. Wilfred Webb. Mrs. Webb’s culinary treats entice many. ELATED Jim Johnson discovers a mutual admiration for Shakespeare and a member of the ‘Twelfth Night’ cast. 14 — Cadet Life JED in the minds of AMA's ‘family’ is the participation @ funerals of Mrs. Roller and Col, McCue. THERN COMFORT is apparent. Chuck Minor exhibits @ technique at the first informal of the school year. : Cadet Life — 15 ‘ JAM ON THE THIRD STOOP. Unseen Carl Briga ignites Ron Holvey and Turner Ramey with his accordian playing. Barracks rocked from the sounds. EVER POPULAR Burt Glick manages to evoke Bill Klunk’s and Sandy Furr’s opinion about the formal’s band. Reaction eee | ee was definitely positive. si ee ‘ i ( 3 : i 4 “4 re! 16 — Cadet Life : From mid-October on, the corps dived into flow! ngs social the scheduled activities. Dull spot of the i month came with a highly contested loss to y the rivals from the hill, Staunton Military. ndar sur rises Preparations went full speed ahead for the : e Military Ball, Parents’ Weekend, commission- ing parade, and the Halloween party for the ‘F Troop’ men. Sam Wysong’s ‘Flag from God’ painting dominated the decorations for the Ball. Glee spread throughout the corps with a smashing win by the ]V-Streaks over the SMA JV’s. Swivel-hipped Chuck Minor and sneaky Ray Smith brought home the bacon with a 26-8 victory. Tons of food were dispersed by Major Tony Peduto with the invasion of 658 guests for the activity-packed Parents’ Weekend. Teacher visi- tation and a Roller Rifle exhibition drill was the mere beginning of the long weekend. Tf cadets, parents a YOUNG SCHEMER Ben Howard showers Mary Jenkins with souvenirs from the Military Ball, which combined a salute to the ROTC with the fruits of the season. ee q THE EYES prove that Mike Stone is satisfied Mlanglane as his date at the cook-out. Stuart d through with 56 dates for AMA. Cadet Life — 17 Heralding another first at Augusta was the commissioning certificate which each officer received as his sponsor pinned on his rank of office. Blue and white ribbons and ‘mums’ added color to the parade ceremonies. Lessons in history at a dance? That was fur- nished by Daniel Webster and Marc Duggin who provided intermission entertainment at the Military Ball. A huge crowd packed the floor and rocked to ‘The Echoes of Soul’. Pumpkins, cider, apples, and spooks pro- vided the traditional party for the Lower School, but a fortune teller was the big hit. Hectic month ends; Halloween foments final activity flurry GREAT EXPECTATIONS. Parents eagerly await a visit to the Headmaster for a report on their sons. Many surprises were in store during the big weekend. FREAK-OUT. ‘F-Troopers’ Halloween night bash proves a howling success as the fortune teller reads Bob Ahearn’s future. Mrs. Livick is the hippy. ee 4. “ by ng Gey va PENT-UP ENTHUSIASM blasts forth from the Lower School men while they wait for the future to be told and for their stomachs to be filled. WOE WEEK and the RECALL staff has another name for portrait time! Rob Predale assists Major Paul Quattrocioc- chi during the trying week of posing. Cadet Life — 19 AMA corps preserves November traditions Sounds of silence eminated from all of AMA's grounds as the corps formed for its sol- emn observance of Veterans’ Day. Addressing the corps was the SAI, Major Paul Quattrocioc- chi, who pin-pointed the sacredness of the day with his meaningful speech. Raucous laughter changed the mood when the corps began to leave on busses for the annual Harrisonburg Veterans’ Day parade. Boxed suppers, courtesy of Major Peduto, were another innovation. The corps picnicked out- doors after having lead the patriotic parade. Yet another mood was apparent when the boys made for the Madison campus after the supper break. ‘X’ movies prevented corps par- ticipation in the down town flick department. Victory! Reversing the ignoble defeat last year at the hands of Fishburne, the Blue Streaks pounded the FMS lads into the ground with a 41-0 revenge. The scene was Thanksgiving at AMA, and the next night echoed with happy gurgles as the corps partook of the typical feast. NO SOUR NOTES come from Phil Meyers when he sounds ‘Taps’ in observance of AMA‘s heros of this century, GRAY LINES form to honor the war dead of Augusta dur- ing two World Wars and two undeclared conflicts. ———— DISTINCTIVE FOOTWORK is displayed by Al Pressly at the Stuart Hall November formal. ‘Disciples of Sounds’ made it a dynamite occasion for all. GIVE IT THE BOOT! Bill Maher’s relentless drive helps AMA net a 6-0 win over MMA. Team determination kept at a peak all season long. Cadet Life — 21 BLACK CHUCKS must be in Mike Sisak’s Christmas gift. The club, started by Charlie Smith, goes on. Jeff Wenzel looks as if he wants a pair to prove that he’s a son. FIELD TRIP to Western State Hospital evokes questions from Rob Predale and Tom Walker. Lt. William Lobb pro- vides the background info. 22 — Cadet Life PICTURE POST CARD results when snows transform the Ft. Defiance scene into the spirit of the season. CROWDS OF CADETS yell and spur the cagers onto a win over Madison College in the season's opener at home. Glistening Christmas trees mushroomed all over barracks when companies united and waged a battle to see which could have the best one. Red, silver, and snow on a cedar gave ‘E’ company the award for the finest dis- play for the yuletide season. Generosity was the word to describe the corps’ support of the Lynchburg Orphanage. Each year, AMA’s corps provides the money for a lavish Christmas meal, and the collection of $600 scored a record for generosity. Col. Herbert Lucus hired a U-Haul-It and carried the vast quantities of food to Lynchburg. Finally snows arrived to add to the feeling of the month and to make the boys keep a score of the days left until Christmas vacation. Illuminated boughs evoke benevolence Cadet Life — 23 Restlessness mars decade’s debut Homesickness, a taste of student unrest, and Virginia’s coldest weather in 30 years thrust themselves on AMA. Returning from a lengthy vacation, with howling winds and tempera- tures below zero plus snow, cadets turned thoughts to home. Impending exams loomed in the thoughts of many. Bright spot on the horizon was the team work by the hardwood men. Scaring SMA for three quarters, a final score of 92-96 hurt, but a searing victory over Hargrave kept throats sore and spirits of the corps up. Thoughts of Winter Carnival also helped. TAUT (TAUGHT) LESSONS! AMA’s aggressive faculty smash the JV’s by 86-36. Lt. Bill Lobb, Ira Koonan, Lt. Bob Gorgrant Lt. Ralph Sassaman, and Ron Slagle battle. RACING TO STUDY HALL, four cadets race to beat the final fall-in. Afternoon study halls were frequent for the unusual night basketball games. snow was usual. NEW. WRINKLES in the gray matter expand Buster Furrt’s mind. Studying for exams was easier after Buster's reading rate doubled and his level shot up four years. UT OF FOCUS for many were the blizzard like days. Winds of 30 to 40 mph plus -5° made the icy hours feel actually like 42 below zero. Unforgettable! Cadet Life — 25 4 COMPETITION from ‘Kitty’ Lobach, modeling Stuart Hall © STAR SHOWS the impressiveness of Gen. Burba’s visit for fashions during the Talent Show of the Winter Festival, an inspection and speech. Chuck Minor carries the Gen- throws Ellen McLean into fits of laughter and glee. eral’s flag in cold breezes at the airport. i QUEEN FOR A NIGHT. Sally Perry, Bob Echols’ date at the ©BARBERSHOPPED TRIO consists of Rob Bender, Greg Gir Winter Festival informal, blushes as she receives the crown ard, and Bill Broere during the Hills-men performance at from Cotillion Club president, Ray Marcantoni. the informal dance. They just never stopped. 26 — Cadet Life 'SMA IS STUNNED and so is everyone as Roy Stauffer whips down court and bullseyes two more points. 113-105 for the Blue Streaks thrust AMA into 1 in the league. Winter blues evaporate with SMA smash Happiness started with the corps and Stuart Hall entering into the Winter Festival with enthusiasm. Leading off the session was a tal- ent filled night of performances by cadets and girls from the Hall. Lack of snow was no deterrent for the infor- mal and AMA’s first Snow Queen. The dancing Was gymnastic and lively. NEW. PICKER is Larry Desseyn, at AMA less a couple of weeks, but already a part of the Doomsday Refreshment Committee and later declared 1 in the Talent Show. Signs all over barracks proved that the great encounter with SMA was coming. Nerves were on edge. Coach Jim Hogg had just returned from an appendectomy. Seldom had SMA been beaten on the Hilltoppers’ home court. Shock followed stun as the Blue Streaks led by 31 points at one point. Sweat poured off of all at the great 113-105 ending. Cadet Life — 27 28 — Cadet Life Almost forgotten had been the pleasure of outdoor recreation, and March became the month of transformation from the indoors to the wide open spaces. Fencing blades were discarded with glee, and lacrosse sticks began to sound against skulls. The front field began to show the strain of the cleated turmoil. Despite the beckoning warmth outside, re- search work in the library became common- place with college conscious cadets pouring out theme materials. Juniors were introduced to CEEB’s after a fall bout with the PSAT’s. Warm rays of sun welcomed cadets to lounge on the new blades of grass and to sim- ply contemplate the future. Strangely enough, it was the beginning of sad glances, as seniors tried to see into the crystal ball, to speculate on what life without AMA would be like in the fall. All outlooks were gray. And for the first time in four years. The Old Stone Church was devoid of AMA cadets on Easter morning. Unlike previous years, spring break was scheduled to catch a late Easter. ee Winter splits; late spring vacation nears PDEBT PAID. Larry Thiel bows to Ray Marcantoni. Ray’s Thine was won when his ‘E’ boys smashed ‘A’ in in- Mtra-mural basketball. NWARM-UP. Lee Hall slashes savagely on the tennis courts Fin preparation for the season. Lee’s peak moment came ‘when he won over SMA. PUCKER POWER. Rollo Gutierrez discovers the mysteries of a dandelion on a warm Sunday afternoon. He didn’t have to count. He was a Hall success. Cadet Life — 29 PAINT-UP CREW takes a break as a headless cadet, Al Pressly, and Jorge Saenz head for the PX and a coke. 30 — Cadet Life Noted alumnus earns Ad Astra; Clean-up polishes GI invasion Hibernation finished, spring vacation but a memory, the corps plunged into the last lap which drew them into a vortex, spinning ever closer to June week and Finals. Events started popping with a regional con- vention of the Kiwanis Club which was held for the first time at AMA. The cause for the added interest was the fact that Dr. Morton O. Alper, AMA ‘39’, was Governor of the Fifth Capital District. Speaker at the banquet, Dr. Alper repeated in a special assembly the next morning. Dr. Alper discussed the flight from reality which so many youths are trying today. Following an ovation from the corps, Col. Malcolm Livick overwhelmed Dr. Alper when he was pre- sented an Ad Astra Per Aspera gold pin. Splashing paint, whitewash, and_ shellac, cadets entered into the spirit of AMA Improve- ment Day with verve. It was another first; a new tradition had begun. The emphasis again was that the corps should and could create by mass action and by full participation. No one could detect the nervousness of ev- ery member of the corps as the day of AGI, a new designation for Government Inspection, dawned. Class room visitation, personal in- spection, and room visits were followed by a parade in honor of Col. Douglas C. France, Jr., SAI at Virginia Military Institute, and other officers of the inspecting team. The corps earned another ‘Honor Military School’ rating for Augusta. Band and Roller Rifle men journeyed to Charlottesville for the annual Dogwood Festi- val Parade. Running off with first place honors, the Band also won a cash award of $100. Roller Rifles returned, winless, for another first. ‘HIPPIES WANT SOMETHING for nothing’ emphasizes Dr. Alper in his stirring address to a responsive corps. | UP TIGHT, but untied, a perfectly polished shoe awaits inspection. The scene was reflected often. Cadet Life — 31 S| Play escapes cuts; corps plans battle Raw language issued forth from the stage during the presentation of ‘Stalag 17’, and the many ad-libs intrigued both the cast and the corps. Capt. James McDonald directed the second AMA production. Early drill, mid-afternoon drill, and late drill occupied free time of platoons as zealous company commanders prepared their troops for the battle for first place. Lee Hall led ‘D’ company to the winning circle, while Bob Cro- zier’s second platoon ‘E’ ran off with medals in platoon battle. SHEER TERROR shows on Jim Buffey’s face during the cli- max of ‘Stalag 17’. Sadistic guard, Rollo Gutierrez, was the cause of the terror. SPRING PASTORAL finds Brian McCabe and Mike Minnuni lolling in the fields around school. It was just laziness, not a science project. AFTER COMPETITION and a new winner of the company cup, the corps marches with new assurance in review. s date the time of year. Cadet Life — 33 — Cadet Life Seniors feast, splash, romp at picnic; | Mrs. Dekle, and gallons of soft drinks. Soft-] Scenic Staunton dam furnished the backdrop for the annual senior picnic, where 103 raven- ous cadets and their guests watched in amaze- ment as Ray Marcantoni devoured a four pound chuck roast. Remaining seniors con- tented themselves with a mere pound of meat, potatoes, brownies made by Mrs. Livick and ball games, treks in the woods, and forays up onto the dam gave outlets for the ener- gy-packed future graduates. Again parents descended on Fort Defiance in droves, and after a buffet were treated to a display of military might by branches of the (] Armed Forces. Company competition and pla- ©) Ytoon battles for honors kept the pace moving. © Nancy Nalbandian reigned as AMA’s 25th Pin-Up Queen at the annual spring dance. A mite Yparade on Sunday in her honor wrapped up Mhe action. It ended too soon. SHY NO LONGER, Larry Thiel opens up, expands, and turns on for the first time at the Pin-Up Queen dance. His dancing reminded many of his spinouts on the field. LADY AND A SHIEK. Lee Hall turns on the African charm for Mrs. Jean Thiel during Pin-Up festivities, and proves that he can stand on his own 64's with ease. WEAPON FASCINATION. Scott Frantz examines a full scale model of the 30 caliber machine gun. Weapon displays were furnished by the Army, Navy, and Marine Corps. DOWN TO THE WATER. Ray Marcantoni causes panic from Jorge Rovirosa. Horse play was a frequent happening during the senior picnic at Staunton dam. ee Cadet Life — 35 Corps remembers past, heritage Jam-packed May offered two opportunities to the cadets to salute the past. First came thay impressive ceremonies in the Old Stone Cem@y etery. An address by the Headmaster, triple taps, and an honor guard paid homage ta AMA's founder, and his two sons. Added fof the first time, was a tribute to the late Mrsj Chas. S. Roller, Jr. Resulting from VMI's shortened year, AMA cadets were chosen to participate in the an nual Memorial Day ceremonies held at Lexing ton, where 38 cadets placed flowers at the foot of the Stonewall Jackson statue. Frantic preparations were going on, mean while, for the shortened Finals program, which began with the Final Ball. Ceilings, walls, mu rals, and plaques were still on the floor as the figure members attempted to practice move ments. As May raced to an end, Finals began. ote. CALIFORNIA’S REPRESENTATIVE, Doug Driscoll, places Space, with emphasis on man on flowers before Stonewall Jackson’s statue. For the first gination of the decorators. time, AMA cadets were active in the Lexington services. FINISHING TOUCHES are applied by worker on the Final Ball, Bob Ahearn. Man in the moon, piqued the ima CHRONIZATION results when Joe Wenzel practice with the other members of the d. Three volleys were perfect. RAFTER RATS and floor men tense for the dramatic mo- ment when the ceiling leaves the floor and stays, hope- PERFECT SYN fully, up tight until the end of graduation ceremonies. and Jeff Wenzel © honor guard and firing squa Cadet Life — 37 Zenith approaches, activity condenses Faculty never thought that it could be done. Old timers were ‘darned sure’ that it couldn't, and old cadets were perplexed about their feelings for a new schedule. Never had Augusta had a Finals of only two nights, with graduation on Sunday. Only once had a Final Ball been held as the initial event. Always there had been three days after ex- aminations for teachers to grade papers, give re-exams, and to have averages figured. It just couldn’t come off to everyone’s satisfaction. Girls and parents by the carload began to arrive on Friday. Anxious officers watched to see if their sponsors would arrive for the Spon- sors’ Parade. Teachers raced frantically from classroom to Headmaster’s office to check final averages, and humid weather kept the Final Ball officers on tenderhoofs about the paper in the gymnasium. And then it all began. DECLAIMER, Blaine Clarke presents a Biblical story in a special assembly on Saturday night of Finals. PAINTED INDIAN. Pup Malnati didn’t stand a chance, and the whole decorating committee hog tied him until he was a real Indian. It didn’t stop Pup from working later. TROOPING THE LINE. Would you believe another first? Lee Hall escorts Mrs. M. H. Livick down the line of ‘D’ at Sponsors’ Parade. Sponsors had never done this before. Cadet Life — 39 Cloudy skies did not signal showers as first call sounded for Sponsors’ Parade. Instead, a lusty sun peaked through, and cadets and their sponsors trooped the line, starting another new tradition for the Academy. Lines of girls in white and boys in white ducks formed outside the doors of Memorial Gymnasium for the cannon blast and the be- ginning of the Final Ball. And promptly at 9:30 everything started. ‘Lawrence and the Arabians’ provided the beat for the figure and the Ball. Each girl in the figure wore a yellow orchid and was presented with a cowboy. Promptly at midnight faithful Major Tony Peduto held open the doors to his domain for a midnight supper for the thousand or so who were at the Final Ball. Sandwiches, coffee, pickles, olives, and carrot sticks poured on the energy for the next hour and a half. Caps flew into the air at the end of Gradu- ates Parade which was held on Saturday. Some cadets were beginning to doubt their own joy; many had tears as caps came off, and parents “t scrambled for a souvenir of the last parade. ‘ LEGS SOUND, recovered from all injuries, Sam Hendrix S O mM be l Sse Nn iO rs N Cd ie fi N da e loosens up during the height of the Final Ball. 40 — Cadet Life JOYOUS NOW, seniors let loose with their caps and the Graduates Parade is over. One step more remains. Cadet Life — 41 UNDER THE ARCH, Bill Dulaney receives his reward from Donna Higginbotham at the end of the Final Ball figure. It’s a 23 year old tradition at Augusta, and it’s even prac- ticed on the night before the major event of the year. BIG ATHLETE, Jorge Rovirosa, accepts the Oppleman Tro- phy from Col. Glenn Koogler. Jorge was captain of the fencers, the team which was selected by the coaches as the best of the year. Jorge didn’t get to keep the cup. Declaimers, debaters, and then awards were compacted into one tremendous assembly on the second night of Finals. Major Robert Hart’s men, prepped for weeks, impressed cadets and parents with their finess. Ralph Hamilton and Dave Saslaw earned medals for their declama- tions, and Pete Chekemain was top debater. Transition for the literary presentations to an awards assembly was an easy event. Bill d’- Orsay won the top prize in science, Pup Mal- nati in French, and Bob Ettinger earned a medal as best student in the Lower School. Tears of joy and shock came to John West with his award of ‘Most Improved Cadet’. Two awards held until graduation were the Gen. Roller Loyalty Trophy and award and Col. Liv- ick’s presentation of the silver saber. Saturday passed with the RECALL staff frantic . . . no yearbooks, yet. Competitive, energetic men earn 42 — Cadet Life DRAMA ON STAGE. Just as graduation ends, the RECALL arrives, and Col. Savedge presents the editor, Larry Reed, with the Loyalty Trophy and the yearbook at the same time. The corps cheered wildly. deserved award Lea) i} ! ov = — i ® xa ise) O FROWNING BACK THE TEARS, Col. Malcolm Livick ad- dresses ‘his’ boys for the last time. Tears are apparent on the faces of many, and as he finishes, they. erupt. REWARD, REWARD. Col. Livick gently bestows his affection on Mrs. Robert Reed, Larry’s mother, following the impressive Sponsors’ Parade. He enjoys this parade best. w we es : } THE KID AT WORK. Capt. ‘Peace’, Jeff Wenzel, really puts out on the stage decorations. Later came the steel rims and the new revolution. It was for the birds! FINAL BEAT. Band members emerge from the shadows and begin the beat for the march back to school after the Bac- calaureate service. One hour remains. 44 — Cadet Life Nostalgia erupts; Blacktop floods Dawn came early on the final day, a Sunday. Rooms were emptied, cars packed. Then came the trek up the hill to the services at the Old Stone Presbyterian Church. All the while, yearbook staff men were on edge. No news was forthcoming about the book. Just as Larry Reed was in the middle of his valedictorian address, the RECALL arrived. Pandemonium broke out when the corps found that they wouldn’t go home RE- CALL-less. Flooding the blacktop were seniors, and ju- niors, and even fifth graders. The year was unusual, hassles and disappointments, ner- vousness and irritations were gone. And so was the year. Cadet Life — 45 Students flocked to summer schools every- where, making up subjects and taking ad- vanced work. AMA’s summer session recorded the second largest number of boarders in its history with 43 boys from fifth grade on up to graduating seniors. Weekends were particularly interesting for the boarders with trips to Grand Caverns and the battlefield at New Market. Picnics on school grounds and in the area gave everyone a break. Teachers kept right on working towards Masters degrees. Attending summer session at Madison were Lt. John Kupcinski, Lt. Hans Wachtmeister, and Lt. William Lobb. Col. Sav- edge taught in journalism shortcourses at Catholic University, Lake Junaluska, N.C., and Ball State University. New vistas expand in hectic summer PEERING INTO THE PAST, Dave Stump, Frank Badalson, Marc Silverberg, Charlie Livick, and Jim Ailstock place themselves back in the scene at the. VMI New Market engagement. ALERT AND ACTIVE even in summer heat, Steve Schwartz answers Lt. Wachtmeister’s involved science questions. STUFFING goes on and on for ravenous Bob Mitchell Summer was no exception for El Gordo and the pounds rounded him out. Cadet Life — 47 FENCE SITTERS Ralph King and Chris Blanchard wait for the picnic food after having visited the Civil War exhibits in the New Market battlefield. JOURNALISTS RELAX. Mike Sisak, Steve Robertson, and | Pup Malnati don’t find Lake Junaluska too hard to take — not with 146 girls to 55 boys. Workshops can be fun! TERRE DES HOMMES, or Man and his World, delights Bill” Delong and Frank Primrose. Summer school students found ‘Expo’ even better than it was in ‘67. ' : ‘ Yearbook workshops, new friends, Canada, make summer zing Montreal, Niagara, Africa, and Europe — summer found AMA men all over the globe. Van Rametta, Bill d’Orsay, and Joe Sabino spread over Europe. Karl Haleamau enlivened the Hawaiian scene, and Jeff Wenzel became a part of the involved set and checked condi- tions among Indians out West. Cadet Life — 49 ACCURACY AND EFFICIENCY do come out of the chaos which John Porcher, Pete Copper, DeWitt Campbell, and Berry Foster seem to be amidst in chemistry lab sessions. NEGATIVE finds free souls within the crowded establishment. FROM THE WEST comes the cowboy ballad. Joe Gallehugh, Bob Echols, Don Gable, Jeff Jackard, Dean Lake, and Rollo Gutierrez help Van Rametta give a performance in U.S. history class. WATER IS DENSE, and Scott Frantz checks the exact relationship during early experiments in lab. =| pe wanmeas “yy, ay Expanding mind through CURRICULUM, 50 — Curriculum cadets discover world ‘Don’t give me an answer unless you can back it with fact!’ Oppression, never. Suppression, hardly. The belligerent students at Augusta realize that to win against those bizarre elements in society fighting to tear down its very foundations, they must know. More student participation, more involvement, more depth studies; all are needed for the academic revolution. Curriculum — 51 METRIC SYSTEM fails to daunt Tim Cooper. Specific gravity OUCH! Big Three on staff, Larry Thiel, Jeff Wenzel, and Ray experiments, density comparisons, and Tim begins to delve Marcantoni unite to probe qualitative and its many facets, further into chemistry and its mysteries. Big Ray had it pay off with an A on the final. 52 — Curriculum Formulae, organics hasten mental trot New texts, new lab manuals and a changing approach to chemistry pushed grades upward. Problem work still reigned supreme, but this year the demand was for a complete note- book, with daily notes a main prerequisite. Limestone contaminates the water, and so a new distiller was purchased to supplement the use of the deminizer. A most fascinating new acquisition was the strobe light which stopped drops of water, made fans go backward, and pinpointed motion and waves. Continuing to highlight the spring semester was the concentration on analysis. Building up to solutions with 10 unknowns, lab students finished off the year with beginning studies of atomic energy and radiation materials. Indivi- dual studies on element families pushed stu- dents into library research. DEEP IN THOUGHT, Cam Bell attempts to bring order to his thinking and to problem working at the beginning of the course in chemistry. Those problems can be brain teasers, but pay off when mastered. LIVE WIRES! Chuck Knapp expands his mind and Slinky’ s wires for action-reaction results. Introductory physics fol- lows introductory chemistry for ninth grade students. SPARKS BOLT INTO LIGHTNING in electrostatic experi- ments performed by physics men, John Porcher and Jim Worley. Carelessness gives each a huge charge. HEADLESS WONDER, Mark Cardwell, utilizes the Biology 500 system and the new experimental approach to inform the class of organic structures and transformations. CAGED, but helping Bruce Cooke and Jim Atchison study nutrition, are hamsters in the biology lab. Reserved for eighth graders, life science still attracts ninth grade men. , On i Ne ” hep a 4 OW Glucose Programmed biology revolutionizes study Programmed studies intrigued first period biology students. Five paperback texts, which included ‘DNA — The Key to Life’, ‘Introduc- tion to Chemistry for Biology Students’, and ‘Genes and Populations’, placed emphasis on self study and learning. | Testing the efficacy of several approaches, the department featured the EMI program and BSCS green biology in one section, and then the study of BSCS green alone in another. These three different sections were joined by a new, but traditional section of modern biology. ge Se 4 fe sn i — 4 jie —' 4 as a With Lt. Hans Wachmeister, teaching the traditional approach, and Capt. Tim Manna- smith holding forth on the EMI and BSCS com- bos, cadets were able to pick sections and new directions in the science program. Biology 500 played a role in each of the courses. Harmonic motion studies utilized springs, weights and t-bars to clear up the fogginess about the subject. Physics students later delved into radiation experiments. Several stu- dents continued in-depth-study programs with papers on atomic energy today. ea at ’ “4 @, i ' ¢ i A 4 Curriculum — 55 56 — Curriculum clarify mathematics Harbrace’s new series of texts, a new course in ninth grade general mathematics, and over- head projectors joined forces with new stu- dents and new teachers to keep the depart- ment ahead on CEEB results. Returning students found the new ap- proaches difficult at first, but with overhead projector use and board work demands, stu- dents sailed into the new system gradually. New faculty officers helped the steady transi- tion and students claimed, ‘We like them, be- cause they get the point across’. Col. Paul Hoover continued to demand the best from his students. This included class note- books, projects in dimensions, and the think process. Results were apparent in the scores of his students on CEEB’s and on the PSAT scores for the eleventh graders. The mathematics department was hearty this year. LET IT SLIDE! Sleep overcomes AMA’s mathematical whiz, the usually active Ron Guilliams. Calculus research papers can exhaust the ebullient cadets of AMA. New sequential texts LMR BLL LLL LLL LL LLL LIAL LIGHT SHOW. Rob Predale projects his newly acquired algebraic skills. Clarification of functions and commutative laws beams from the new overhead SOAKING IT UP, Mike Wickun relishes his ability to grasp postulates and to spew them right back when the rapid fire questions come to him in geometry class. PALAVERING HELP from Steve Martin, Bud Sweeney di- gests and puts on paper perfect parabolas. Steve Martin astounds with A’s in two math courses. | | NO sae ——, —__ 14 ae Historians go West with cowboy gusto When Latin Americans started throwing las- sos, students from Germany began singing ‘Home on the Range’, and the library was popu- lated by buffalo hunters, railroad builders, and ; | Russell fans, everyone knew that the US. his- : 4a” tory students were doing in depth work. ; : Putting in an appearance as guest lecturer, | ‘ Major Ed Hart convinced the U.S. history classes that he was a card-carrying Communist. | With such earlier topics as ‘Benedict Arnold : saved the American Revolution’, and ‘The 4 South had every right (legally) to secede’, the fg ; note was on THINK power. ‘ Shocked into today’s problems, the corps fe 4 welcomed the three teenagers from ‘Teen Challenge’ who lectured on drug use and abuse from their own standpoint. They had been former addicts and spoke candidly. ea eR DS 7; - , F ‘ K ? + | t ia | er ion LAZO THE DOGIE! Raul Gutierrez illustrates the cowboy’s techniques with the lasso. Raul’s accent perplexed some, : but the performance was real Montana style. : : TRANSFIXED, students from several history classes meet with Bob and Dave, members of the ‘Teen Challenge’ team. Evoking questions was John, leader of the trio. SCRATCHING FOR EXPLANATIONS, Andy Lee leads a ses- sion in government class and is stumped for an instant é answer. Stage front was frequent in history classes. PIONEER HARMONY just doesn’t come forth from Larry Reed, Pete Chekemain, Jeff Wenzel, and strummers Doug McMullen and Glenn Campbell. Clapping assists. t 4 Curriculum — 59 Reverse approaches steam-up rivalries, breed brisk debates Cadets were frequently stunned, and often puzzled in history classes by the reverse ap= proaches which the teachers were using. Dé bates were heated on every topic from drugs to Viet Nam, to the draft, and even to required hospitalization. Movies ranged from life in the Middle East to resources of Nevada, and from ‘A Trip to Where’ to C. M. Russell. COMIC BOOK KNOWLEDGE. Capt. Mannasmith uses ev- ery device to capture interest in economic class. Bob Mitchell and John Piazza are stirred up, ready to answer HANDOUTS. Wayne Trotter and Harry Rubens accept pamphlets from an attendant at Western State Hospital on a field trip, jointly sponsored by Lt. Lobb and Maj. Dekle. opty 60 — Curriculum Field trips to Western State Hospital and to Richmond later in the year — the year in which Virginia inaugurated its first real Republican governor in history — took students out into the world to see today’s problems and the government in action. Class raps spilled over into barracks where the words became heated. History stimulated all. ON THE SPOT lecturer is Lt. William Lobb. Sam Hendrix, Rob Predale, and Tommy Walker question Lt. Lobb about patients and their treatment at Western State. ATTENTION! Marc Vereen itches to answer a question, probably to evoke another dissent from the class. The scene was a frequent one in his government section. ON THE JOB advocate is Steve Trent, who becomes violent in his demand for vocational schools instead of higher education for all of the country’s masses. Curriculum — 61 English men foster self-expressionism Living theatre, speeches, oral reports, and vocabulary building received more emphasis than ever from the English department. A trip to Bridgewater College to see Twelfth Night’ aroused genuine enthusiasm and interest from the juniors and seniors. The real bag of the faculty seemed to be the emphasis on oral expression. Deane’s Castle reverberated with basso booms and baritone utterances when cadets were called on for formal and im- promptu speeches, seemingly on a daily basis. Vocabulary strengthening was evident and took hold with the use of an animated filmstrip, which is also used in business firms that insist upon increased word knowledge. Interest at AMA also soared. Student interest in modern American writers soon encouraged a curriculum shift. CLASS CLOWN, Col. Wilfred Webb, puns on and keeps his post graduate English students alert during vocabulary building sessions. Bruce Winstead, Buster Furr, Roy Stauffer, and Fred Vasconi chortle in unison. INSTANT LOVE — but it really is the Fool in ‘Twelfth Night’ discussing the motivation with Jorge Rovirosa who discovered that Shakespeare can be fun. 62 — Curriculum Ps OO se SOUTHERN FRIED accent breaks up the eighth graders when Frank Geddie gives an informal account of his Christmas holidays. A tape is needed to appreciate Frank. VIRGINIA GENTLEMAN Chuck Minor impresses during a formal presentation in Col. Webb’s senior English section. Research reports and vocabulary made the oral scene. Diversified dialects elevate languages Three new language men _ completely changed the complexion of the department. New texts, new approaches, and new enthu- siasm startled cadets who had seen the lan- guage presentation of the previous year. Tightening requirements, but offering two nights a week of extra help, the language fa- culty rapidly proved that in addition to requir- ing work, they did have heart. instead of merely memorizing vocabulary, French students had to listen and then to dis- cern the meaning. Beginning French men caught on to the approach well and even ex- panded into studies of French literature and French culture. German students used the same system. Spanish students found that the §- a emphasis was a bit different, and that the lan- yy 4 guage lab was used more often. ‘ oo Soe my ANSWERING WITH EASE, John Fields smiles when he is questioned by Major Cornelis Hart. Rob Predale listens in — ss 4 a OY on the conversation which is heard by the entire lab class. S ; ) 7 £ ey ‘ . KILMER RAPS and delights Col. Rapp with his correct re- ’ : sponse in Spanish class. Informal night sessions were proof 4 ; ’ ° that Col. Rapp demanded improvement. fahd aes, va — OPEN DOOR to modern techniques in learning French cap- tures the attention of Blaine Clarke, Brad Kesner, Greg Gir- ard, and Frank Badalson. PICKING THE OPPORTUNITY to combine the season with learning techniques, Maj. Case Hart sings in French for Charles Knapp, Mark Raab, Ray Smith, and Joe Fries. whe = Curriculum — 65 66 — Curriculum S Energetic SAI incites cadets to follow ‘There will be calisthenics today’ groans and grunts were uttered by many cadets with this announcement. When it was followed la- ter by ‘We will take a few runs around the Bowl’, despair changed rapidly when leading the pack was the senior Army instructor, Major Paul Quattrociocchi, Jr. Emphasis definitely was on physical development of the corps. Harassed with lesson plans were the men of MOVE AROUND USE GEST URES REMOVE Us TALK Fe “ TUDENT TEACHER is John Fields who brings to life his topic when the ‘faculty for a day’ informs about the most e ffective methods of class presentation. Military 4. Required was research of material, selection and ordering of training films, choice of charts and training aids, and presentation in class of the topic. Gruesome reality appeared in MT 1 when vivid aids turned first aid into colors (green on cadet faces) when the cadets saw ean and a of faces shot away, arms blown off, working model of a chest wound. STONEWALL SISAK shows Jim Worley and Ray Smith just how the Southern troops turned Bull Run (First Manassas) into a victory. History and ROTC combine aids. COMMUNICATION BREAKDOWN. Jim Clark tries field equipment during Parents’ Day display and discovers that it just is not operating. Neither were the rockets. IN UNISON, GROAN! PT occupies Bob Gooch, Ross Mitchell, and hordes of MT 2 and 3 students during a sunny autumn afternoon session of fun and games. Curriculum — 67 68 — Curriculum Energetic behavior, diligence in class, mark younger cadets Three new Lower School teachers and a con tinuation of team teaching for the sixth and seventh grade kept the energy laden men stu dious and in constant action. Tightened subject matter added grooves t0 the grey matter, but grades were not good enough except for a handful of younger meh to make the desired Honor Roll. Stress on science was apparent to cadets i the sixth grade, with both sections finding that Lt. Grace took them way beyond the genera requirements of the course. Movies lightened the task of seventh grad@ men to place themselves back in_ history Spring field trips aided the task also. esis SCAR-FACE and moon man Bob Ettinger reveals his depth of knowledge about the two U.S. space walks. Fifth grade work revealed that he was an Honor Roll man. LIBRARY WORK puts the bind on Steve Phillips. Cross in- dexing makes the task easier for another of the sixth grad- ers who made good use of the library. ROCK HOUND Dave Thomas displays a specimen of he- matite to his fellow sixth grade science cohorts. Black light experiments failed to reveal any positive reaction. Curriculum — 69 70 — Curriculum Library acquires contemporary materials Two spanking new sets of encyclopedia greeted returning cadets. Creating greater ex- citement was the Merit Student set. Other aquisitions shoved the total volumes to over the 6,000 level, comfortably above the stan- dards set for 418 students. Mrs. Joyce Mc- Donald’s arrangements helped the researchers. Pouring into the coffers were fines for late returns, and everyone benefitted with over 47 periodicals appearing on the shelves. With the expanded pamphlet file and the purchase of more social studies film strips, the emphasis on contemporary problems and ideas gave cadets ample material for thorough study. PENNING note cards, John Brill delves into a topic of cur- rent interest, Black history. New encyclopedia and pam- phlets help in keeping his report up to date. RELAXED RESEARCH. Hayes Dickinson commits a minor crime (foot on a shelf), but supplements class work with background material. The shelves are bulging. REMEDIAL READING occupies Dan Caldarelli, Frequent reading tests and the use of the flashometer helped Dan’s reading rate jump spectacularly. Curriculum — 71 Advisers assist as bafflement strikes ‘Where shall | go to college?’ ‘What do | do about my major?’ ‘How do | answer this in essay form?’ On hand were faculty advisers when 99 seniors found the task of selecting colleges, majors, and even dormitories a bit too much to fathom. CEEB arrangements, ACT provisions, and regular school testing via the PSAT’s, Merit Scholarship Exams, and_indivi- dual tests required by some colleges were all handled through Major Ed Hart’s office of guidance services. Receiving more attention were the undergra- duates who realized earlier than their counter- parts in years past that plans for colleges in- cluded thorough academic plans. Several ca- dets arranged to have their academic load plot- ted for three years in advance. When panic struck, advisers were available. CONCERNED HELPER. “Big Ed” Hart computes averages and suggests colleges for Jerry Collincini and John Johnson, both post graduate students. 72 — Curriculum ee Woe abi ia POPPA’S PRIDE. Col. David Rapp takes time out to guide his own son, Danny. Honor Roll man and basketball man, Dan kept up the family tradition of expertise. QUICK CRITIQUE comes from Major Robert Hart, Col. W. B. Webb, and Bob Crozier. Advising sometimes comes on informal levels, even at Shakespearean productions. Curriculum — 73 BENEFICIAL BOTH WAYS. Not only are cadets gaining stature from Sgt. Josephson’s skilled inspection, but also from the guidance they are receiving from an expert. MILITANT, but unregimented and disorganized, mobs create havoc in the city of Chicago. THREE DIMENSIONAL FREEDOM frames every cadet with tradition, history, and the military sense of duty and obligation. Even callous spectators sense the pride in flag and in country during the splendor of parades at AMA. STERN FACED STAND-OUT is Ray Marcantoni, awaiting the big moment of personal inspection. ‘ = ‘ f Respect increases for MILITARY despite 74 — Military + ey criticism, abuse Radicals shout ‘Down with the 150 year old ROTC’, a cry heard on college campuses throughout the great United States. But at Augusta, even as blisters sting and backs ache, respect in self and in military builds, as we watch our SAI, who insists on 4 physical training, running his guts out with us. It takes time, but the smoul- dering revolution of respect grows and grows. Military — 75 LAWRENCE TRENT THIEL RALPH E. MARCANTONI, III Cadet Colonel Cadet Major Batallion Commander Executive Officer Staff five coerce corps to syncopate Elevated to the rank of cadet colonel, for the first time in history, Larry Thiel wore the unu- sual rank with determination. Another promo- tion found Ray Marcantoni, the executive officer, sporting the rank of cadet major. Larry’s fantastic shouts and Ray’s quiet manner seemed to be the concoction which the revo- lutionary corps of 1969-70 needed. Adjutant Bob Crozier, Training Officer Jeff Wenzel, and Supply Officer Steve Trent rounded out the Big Five of the Staff. Each knew the demands of his job. Each cooperated in order to make Col. Livick entone the magic words at Finals which would mean that the corps would go down as an outstanding one. By semester break, all rolled on well. READY FOR PINNING. A brassless staff awaits the mo- ment of ceremony when Larry Thiel, Ray Marcantoni, Paul Ritchey, Steve Trent, and Jeff Wenzel gain rank. DRESSED OUT FOR PARADE, Major Adjutant Bob Cro- zier and Band Major Lee Hall prepare for the presentation of the colors. No sign of nervousness appears. 76 — Military ROBERT DEAN CROZIER JEFFREY GRAVES WENZEL STEPHEN GRIMSLEY TRENT Cadet Major Cadet Captain Cadet Captain Battalion Adjutant Battalion Training Officer Battalion Supply Officer Military — 77 Assistants, colors balance staff duties Assistant aides enhanced the ease of the many chores which an increased corps needed. Penalty sheets claimed Lew Kennett as a slave. Weekly training schedules, test handouts, and special orders received care from Jimmy John- son and his assistants, Harold Campbell, Mike Sisak (operations nco), and a non-staff man, Andy Becker, the typist. Hordes of cadets praised or cussed the pouch carrier, Joe Goldberg, mail officer. Rick Ellett, shoved underground, oiled weapons, repaired weapons, and issued Gl. Mess Hall men, Randy Johnson, and Turner Ramey, Jim Epperson, infirmary nco, and Gary Understein, nco quartermaster, rounded out the expanded staff positions. Flag men braved winds during parades and helped with the armory during the week. LIGHT WINDS make the job easy for twins Brent and Brian Lethaby, Jorge and Francisco Saenz, and the one of a kind, Ronnie Guilliams, color men of the year. STUDIOUS LOVER, Mike Sisak energizes with Vikki Wright at the Military Ball. Mike Allsbrook seems to be with it and oblivious of the camera. JAMES A. JOHNSON HAROLD W. CAMPBELL M. STEVEN SISAK LEWIS C. KENNETT Lieutenant Master Sergeant Master Sergeant Sergeant Major Assistant S-3 Assistant S-3 Operation’s NCO Commandants’ Office 78 — Military RICHARD H. ELLETT Master Sergeant Ordinance Officer TURNER A. RAMEY Master Sergeant Mess Officer D. A. RANDAL JOHNSON Sergeant First Class Mess NCO JOSEPH E. GOLDBERG Sergeant First Class Postal NCO BRENT E. LETHABY Staff Sergeant Color Guard FRANCISCO J. SAENZ Staff Sergeant Color Guard RONALD L. GUILLIAMS Staff Sergeant Color Guard BRIAN C. LETHABY Staff Sergeant Color Guard JORGE S. SAENZ Staff Sergeant Color Guard Second Platoon: Band — FRONT ROW: Bob _ Echols SECOND: Don Massie, Jay Ent, Rowland Hill, Dave Taubman. THIRD: Jeff Jackard, John Hipkins, Bruce Karcher, Anthony Royal, Mike Hayes, Jim Blauch, Willian Farley, Charlie Hillsman. BACK ROW: Cam Bell, Dean Lake Sam Wysong, Doug Driscoll, Herb Maher, John Goyne, anc Barry Granofsky. LEE MEBANE HALL Major Commanding Officer ROBERT P. ECHOLS §@ Captain Executive Officer - 80 — Military JOHN A. PIAZZA Lieutenant First Platoon CHARLES E. HILLSMAN Lieutenant Second Platoon JEFFREY R. JACKARD First Sergeant Band Company Band changes rank format, introduces other innovations Band discipline changed greatly with a line officer receiving the task of commanding the company. Lee Hall earned the rank of major to go along with the task of improving marching, morale, and esprit de corps. Music notes were guided by old man of the organization, Bob Echols. Recruiting men from the corps, the drummer force came up to former size. Backing up the Roller-Rifle men, the Band journeyed to Richmond, Harrisonburg, Staun- ton, Waynesboro, Charlottesville, and Alexand- ria for competitive parades. Trophies and prizes overloaded the display cases. Phil Myers received accolades from the en- tire corps for his spine tingling taps and for his helping with the calls when the P.A. system broke down in December. Hot combos generated heat at sporting events and kept the corps yelling for victory even when victory seemed impossible. First Platoon: Band — FRONT ROW: Lee Hall, Joe Gallehugh, John Piazza. SECOND: Wayne Heulitt, Paul Thomson, Mike Wickun. THIRD: Al Clarke, Dave Holland, Rick Legard, Brad Kesner. FOURTH: Don Gable, Mark Hillsman, Jeff Dryer, Al Samuels, Bob Eick, Van Rametta. BACK ROW: Greg Marsteller, Tim Heath, Phil Myers, Randy Armstrong, and Sam Hendrix. Squirmers firm up, sparkle at parades Screams on grounds usually signified that Lower School men were somewhere nearby. By far the most active crew in the corps, the rest of the cadets were aghast when the ‘F Troop’ men came up with a win at parade af- ter parade. The squirming stopped for the Sunday afternoon parade, definitely. Pampered with Halloween parties, a Christ- mas fling, a Valentine’s bash, and a spring dance, the ‘monsters’ earned every one If for no more than the support of every sport and every game during the year. AMA’s pixies discovered that they just couldn’t get by with much; not with Gary Ni- cholson, Joe Berman, and Bob Mallett on the job, living, eating, and sleeping right with their active charges. Fun was not stifled, though. YOUNG GROOVER. Charlie Livick digs the sounds and his date during the Opening Formal. Charlie follows in his brother’s footsteps with his enthusiasm for AMA. First Platoon: ‘F’ — FRONT ROW: John Walker, John Norris, Joe Berman. SECOND: Bob Mallett, Hayes Dickinson, Jeff Shepherd. THIRD: Jim Dawson, Charlie White, Barty Burgwyn, Dave Hemphill, Joe Heartley. FOURTH: Bill Mowrar, Bob Ettinger, Bob Westman, Steve McAdams, Dalton Williford. FIFTH: Lance Logan, Trip Taylor, Mike Wilkins, Mike Maes, Jeff Fowler, Chris Moyers, Tom Hash. BACK ROW: Tom Price, Mal Livick, Ben Howard, Buddy Oakey, and Spence Griffin. nad rT : eat 2 a - ww) ae ‘ oe ? 26 . a SS. = ” im . g . ie ’ 4 al 5 = t ’ 4 = G _ ) ate = se — a 7 a =, oi x re f} ‘ii + , ae ® ae ie a - a ee 3 © he = : ‘ = ‘ 2 ¥ . — . i Se ‘ Y eay) a 5 7 = © °F X ‘ ‘eS es . st Nae = = e : = ; se : = , ROBERT A. MALLETT First Sergeant ‘F’ Company JOSEPH D. BERMAN Lieutenant First Platoon K. GARY NICHOLSON Captain Commanding Officer Second Platoon: ‘F’ — FRONT ROW: Mike Minunni, Gary Nicholson, Bill Dulaney. SECOND: Jim Prieto, Mike Kavanaugh, Dean Beers, Charlie Livick, Lee Ramsey, Frank Primrose. THIRD: Val Vintilla, Roger Mullis, Ben Oldham, Dave Coat’s, Girard Hart, Dave Stump. FOURTH: Dave Thomas, Ermin Erambert, Kurt Pankopf, Chris Jensen, John Hash, Jim Jenkins. FIFTH: Keith Williams, Phil Vaiden, Mike Murphy. SIXTH: Chris Vetick, Mike Carr, Tony Bowers, Grant Garrett, John Adams, John Martin. SEVENTH: Steve Phillips, Eric Morgenstern, John Hawkins, Joe Papariello, Tony Willis. EIGHTH: Duane Hugel, Randy Ewing, Steve Schwartz, Carlos Cuervo. BACK ROW: Dave Hussey, and Jack Johnston. Military — 83 PAUL D. RITCHEY Lieutenant First Platoon DOUGLAS W. PENNOCK Lieutenant Second Platoon 84 — Military ‘F’ men earn novel decorating honors Wreaths on doors and a company Christmas tree which was surrounded by greenery earned the men of ‘E’ the points and the honors for the best decorated area. Rank structure stayed in a plastic condition with office changes keeping the Comman- dant’s office constantly writing new orders. Athletes made ‘E’ an outstanding company with the combination of stars in sports and ribbons for Honor Roll status. | | Burt Doug Second Platoon: ‘E’ — FRONT ROW: Dave Zook, Glick, Keith Lobach, Doug Fetter. SECOND: McMulln, Doug Pennock, Doug Haycox, Jim Baron, Joe Paulsen, Douglas littrell. THIRD: Bill Parkins, Lewis Shapiro, Mike Kenyon, Mark Raab, Herman Jenkins, Reed SNAPPY CADET in the corps, in sports, and in classes, Jerry Collincini withholds a smile, but Brad Robinson can't resist a smile even when heading for church. eerenecenenenstetin, Nettles, Brian McCabe, Randy Frey, Marc Silverberg, Mark Lasky, Conrad Poluito, Bob Perkins, J. C. Wright. BACK ROW: Blaine Clarke, Rog Rodriguez, Larry Haning, and Diego Suarez. First Platoon: ‘E’ — FRONT ROW: Al Caviness, George Snapp, Vernon Wells, Jeff Peck, David Rock, Kurt Benson, Harris, Robert Delgado, Tom Barnes, Keith May, Peter Jerry Collincini, Larry Wallace. BACK ROW: John O’Brien, Russell, Tom Del Valle. SECOND: Bruce Cooke, Donald John West, and Kevin Kint Dixon, Manuel Herdade, Bruce Paul. THIRD: Raymond GEORGE ROBIN HARRIS Captain Commanding Officer TURKEY TURNS ON and Juanita Fulghum ignores Chuck in the fascination of watching Doug McMullan do his thing at the last formal of 1969. Military — 85 86 — Military KARL K. HALEAMAU Lieutenant First Platoon GEORGE E. McCOACH,, Jr. Lieutenant Second Platoon a STAM First Platoon: ‘D' — FRONT ROW: Karl Haleamau, Hank Mullins, Harmon Groves, Glenn Hunter, Albert Collins, Mike Reilly, Jeff Van Horn. SECOND: Warren Tochterman, Rick Francis, Rob Predale, Marc Lambert, Scott Frantz. ‘D’ tries to repeat win as best company Eager to win under any circumstance, ‘D’ company’s men ran through three captains. Ending with an acting captain, Tom Cooper, a sophomore, the boys gave him the same loy- alty which the others had also earned. Honor Roll men were common among ‘D’ personnel. And so was the Privilege List popu- lated with a score from the company. Athletes Second Platoon: ‘D’ — FRONT ROW: Scott Travers, Murray Mitchell. SECOND: Yogi Hale, John Brill, Mark Cardwell, John Ghiorsi, Bob Missman. THIRD: Jim Hash, Harry Baldwin, Harry Rubens, John Juenemann, Gil Gilger, FOURTH: Ed Lentz, Dave Welsh, Jim Brown, Andy Becker, Steve Watkins, Ray Smith, Tim Cooper. BACK: Joe Ireland, Gary Cripps, Roy Stauffer, Bill Klunk, Tom Hennessy, and George McCoach. THIRD: Will Eastment, Steve Martin, Steve Morisey, Chuck Minor, James Worley, Charles Oldfield, Randy Harris on, Pup Malnati. BACK ROW: Jim Goate, Ron Holvey, Scott Curry, Mike Ellen, and Tommy Walker. made their mark for the gang, and RECALL was almost run solely by ranking men of the com- pany. Honor guard for two funerals, the company earned the title as runner-up for the first se- mester. Just a few parades separated them from the big trophy for the year. THOMAS FLEET COOPER, Jr. Acting Captain Commanding Officer INFORMAL MASS finds an informal first sergeant, Pup Malnati, assisting Father Cosby and acting as reader. Even classrooms are used for worship when needed. Military — 87 First Platoon: ‘C’ — FRONT ROW: AI Pressly, Sandy Henderson, Tim Hann, Roberto Gomez. SECOND: Ralph Hamilton, John Clanahan, Mark Jefferies, John Fields. THIRD: Mike Stone, Stan Rasbeary, Terry Laney, Jamie Pico-Seda, Ken Bickings, Larry Wilson. BACK ROW: Vince Briga, Duke Shipp, Jim Clark, Bruce Crum, Tom McLean, Mark Kalkhof, John Paul, Cesar Prieto, Bruce Quigley, Tim Emmett, and Bill Webb. Second Platoon: ‘C’ — FRONT ROW: Bob Ahearn, Pete Niccoll, Ross Mitchell. SECOND: Terry Smith, Marc Vereen, Brown Carr, Jack Paulsen, Bill Broere, Bob Gooch, Frank Badalson, Doug Easter. TH RD: Larry Longenette, Mike Kidd, Mike Mariner, Dave Rackley, Joe Fries, John McGraw. FOURTH: Greg Girard, Steve Traylor, Steve Mitzell, Ken Indart, Dave Saslaw, Rick Jones. BACK ROW: Dean Walker, George Rowland, Steve Gruhn, and Paul Jacobs. 88 — Military ROBERTO MANUEL GOMEZ Captain Commanding Officer FREDERICK S. HENDERSON Lieutenant First Platoon WRITTEN PROOF of why Bob Gooch is on the Honor Roll is about to be cemented on a final examination in English. Bob’s memory work was just about perfect. Informal ‘C’ Company delights its members Voices united, practically breaking window panes. The racket came from energetic Ro- berto Gomez's men of ‘C.’ None of his men could complain about lack of attention, be- cause he was always on the go, checking to see is everything was going as it should. Boasting a number of athletes, during ath- letic events, the company turned out in full force to support its men. Strangely enough, the company also had its supply of top students. Reviewers at parades also complimented the unbelievable straight lines. It was a company which seemed to be strong in every direction. Gentle leadership seemed to be the answer. SEEING IS BELIEVING and the camera captures the long, gray, and just about perfect lines of ‘C’ Company at the end of a Sunday afternoon parade in the fall. Military — 89 CLEAN-UP DAY occupies Namer Austin in his self-appointed job as painter of the iron-work around the company area. It was a day of creativity and activity. BIG EATERS, big men, and big friends, Ron Ginns and Bob Mitchell proudly display their rank as lieutenants of big Baker company. They are almost like brothers. Carefree ‘B’ men work in unity towards cup Slow starters, Ron Melcher’s men discovered the value in unity. Helping greatly was a spec- tacular Christmas party which crystallized the group into a whole. Ratings began to zoom the company from the lower echelon up to the place where it was contending for the cup. Jovial Ron Ginns and Bob Mitchell helped with their puns, humor, and pranks which made their men want to follow them. ‘B’ also boasted one of the best areas at inspection. Egg heads populated ‘B’, too, with lan Mc- RONALD PAUL MELCHER Knight and Larry Malnati heading the list of Captain brains who consistently made Honor Roll. Commanding Officer 90 — Military rie) Second Platoon: ‘B’ — FRONT ROW: Ron Ginns, Ray Bradley, Grif Lohman, Kevin Rothenberg. SECOND: Larry Malnati, Don Perez, Bill Tolbert, Raul Gutierrez, Bob Hartkopf, Dave Austin, Brad Myers. THIRD: John Gray, Ira Koonan, Jim Piersall, Bill Hummer, Lars Steib, Wayne Trotter. BACK ROW: Steve Null, Eric Furtwangler, Jeff Petersen, Manuel Ayau, Eric Vamos, Rob Bender, Jay Nolan, Baxter Hayes, Mike Lagosky, Al Zayas. First Platoon: ‘B’ — FRONT ROW: Mark Femrite, Ron Melcher, Bob Mitchell. SECOND: Bob Winstead, David Wyckoff, Dennis Dixon, Dan Caldarelli, Robert Mena, Fred Lapish. THIRD: Randy Hollingsworth, Andy Lee, Tom Gregory, Mike Allsbrook, Mike Pugh. FOURTH: Duane Roberts, lan McKnight, Bob Jacobs, Roger Dyer, Louis Beasley, Ed Dixon, Tom McKibbin. BACK ROW: Wayne McGowan, Steve Bunce, Jim Runions, Paul Kime. RONALD GINNS Lieutenant Second Platoon Military — 91 92 — Military Frigid company post makes ‘A’ men cool, hot in performance Comfortable in the spring and fall, ‘A’ men don the long johns for the winter winds. Their freezing position in formations did not stop them from displaying some of the hottest mo- rale of all the companies. Song fests nightly before Christmas vacation found Jorge Roviro- sa, the leader of ‘A’ and AMA’s big cougar hunter, right in the midst of all the howlers. Yearbook men populated ‘A’ with potential valedictorian Bill d’Orsay heading the list. Other interesting numbers were the nine men of the varsity football team, the captain of the mighty fencers, and one of the best of the day students, Danny Rapp. Nail biting characterized the crew. Varying from first to second place, the strain was there. WIND-UP. Stride Coleman assists a determined Jorge Ro- virosa in his preparations to look the best when he leads his troop s down the streets of Harrisonburg. First Platoon: ‘A’ — FRONT ROW: Bud Sweeney, Jorge Rovirosa. SECOND: Bruce Reyngoudt, Wayne Bowers, Chip Coeyman. THIRD: Marty Ross, Sergio Astorga, Dean Lohman, Bill d’Orsay, John Porcher, David McCulloch, FOURTH: Webb Fisher, Richard Whitaker, Warren Vaiden, Scott Rosensteen, Wade Kilmer, Sam Hughes. FIFTH: Guy Smith, Buster Furr, David Hodges, Jeff Greatorex, Gerry Erambert, Carlos Castro. BACK ROW: Wayne Silverman, Fred Vasconi, Dale Tewksbury, Steve Pearson, Howard Peterson, and Jose Gutierrez. RICHARD P. MASCHAK Lieutenant Second Platoon Second Platoon: ‘A’ — FRONT ROW: Rick Maschak, Stride Coleman. SECOND: Robert Angelucci, Berry Foster, Al Harvell, Brad Robinson. THIRD: Gary McGinness, Bruce Winstead, Jeff Gessling, Jim DeLong, Al Stanko, George Dunaway. FOURTH: Al Moorefield, Jim Fields, John John- son, Mark Whiteman, Lester Johnson, Jimmy Atchison. BACK ROW: Mike Perdue, Cliff Stern, Mark Coolahan, Terry Abrams, Charles Knapp, and Danny Rapp. JORGE P. ROVIROSA Captain Commanding Officer YELLS and screams from George Dunaway and Ken Indart fail to help the Blue Streaks on their first appearance on home soil. But the corps didn’t stop cheering. Military — 93 Cadets reflect military daily Competition and the urge to be just a little bit better seemed impossible to implant on 141 new cadets, but with the big move into a company area, it became a daily way of life. That urge to make the company the best be- gan at the top with pep talks from the com- pany captain. Spirit filtered down; the squad leaders made it the rhythm of the day, the week, the year. Rank was held over everyone’s head as the big incentive. Even new cadets realized that a bit of ‘spaghetti’ could adorn the collar if he put out just a bit more. Strangely enough some new cadets wore rank while old cadets had none. But it was always in the recesses of the mind — be the best. REFLECTIONS OF MOVEMENT — Ralph Hamilton’s mirror shades capture the panorama of companies moving into the stands just as a football game is about to start. JUDGMENT DAY! Gary MclIness proves that he’s had mili- tary on the mind with his showing, spotless, sharp, and even anxious for the inspector to give him the nod. 2 WHAT NOW? It was Gil Gilger’s thoughts as he arrived late, but he rapidly found out about reveille, retreat, recall, and reverence for the flag and for duty. Military — 95 BIG DEAL kills monotony. Al Samuels, Harold Campbell, and Larry Kalusin relieve the stress of ‘Stalag 17’. This was one of the quieter moments of the stage production at Augusta. LATENT MATERIAL. Crowds occupy Grant Park with no leader, no organization, but lots of vocalizing. POWERFUL FINALE impresses onlookers as John Henderson and Jorge Rovirosa put the Roller Rifles through the last moments of a drill during Parents’ Day. SLOPE LONER. Turner Ramey, recovered from a broken leg, takes to the snow and takes it easy in his comeback appearance on skis. Skiers had little chance in ‘70, because of the powerful winds which swept hills bare. Creativity, involvement, mark cadets’ 96 — Clubs bala CLUB activities Silent majorities, monochrome masses, sit on the sidelines, alienated from productivity. Total involvement found us with a real ‘Bayonet’, the result of hours of study and sacrifice of free time. Building anew, Roller Rifles earned more first places, and an awakened Cotillion Club group instigated a heady Winter Carnival, which oftered participation of all in a Talent Show and a groovin’ sock-hop. RECALL men had their own revolution. oY =) Clubs — 97 email - a tema ue ee ee Ped CST ES A Endlessly drilling Roller Rifles excel in shows Everyone had a chance to try out for mem- bership on Roller Rifles in the fall. Unlike former years, old cadets were selected by on-the-spot maneuvers. Throughout the year members who displayed less than required drive and desire to excel were given their walking papers and shipped. Tough lessons were learned in participating in the Tobacco Bowl Festival in Richmond. Marching home with no trophies, Larry Thiel whipped the men into shape for a show on Thanksgiving weekend and then earned groans from his men with nightly practices. By Christ- mas parade time, the beret wearers began to pick up trophies for expertise. PLAYFUL LEADERS cavort in the snow. Larry Thiel, Bob Crozier, Ray Marcantoni, and Jorge Rovirosa relieve tensions with some genuine snowballs — all aimed at Jorge. CHUBBY SIDE of the big circle carries off the tricky manipulation of rifles and salutes. Ron Ginns and Bob Mitchell do their thing with the Color Guard’s support. Roller Rifles: FRONT ROW: Ron Melcher, Commander Larry Thiel, Executive Officer Ray Marcantoni, First Sergeant Jorge Rovirosa, Guidon Wayne Bowers, Assistant Executive Officer Bob Crozier. SECOND: Bob Mitchell, Ronnie Ginns, Steve Trent, Gary Nicholson, Karl Haleamau. THIRD: Joe Goldberg, Brown Carr, Doug Pennock, Sandy Hende rson, Rick Maschak, Tim Cooper. FOURTH: Lewis Kennett, John Fields, Mark Femrite, Bob Mallett, George McCoach. BACK ROW: Stride Coleman, Griff Lohman, George Harris, Jim Johnson, Ray Bradley, Dean Lohman, and Bob Gomez. (Mrs. M. H. Livick, Honorary Vice-Commander, Jeff Wenzel, Turner Ramey, Color Guard — honorary members, not pictured.) ROLLING POWER. Parents gape at the precision of the Roller Riflemen at Thanksgiving. Note the straight lines and the look of complete concentration. Clubs — 99 AROMATIC? Jeff Wenzel can’t decide just what the odor is, but Mike Sisak and Bill d’Orsay recognize it as the burn- ing of charcoaled steak in Goshen Pass. WHERE ARE THE CHUCKS? Bill d’Orsay wonders if he’s failed when he spots hippy moccasins, not what he had expected after hours of photography. OTA accepts two AMA graduates Ordeal by ordeal, two AMA seniors passed from selection board to superintendent to the Outstanding Teenager of America executive board. Tapped for inclusion were Jeff Wenzel, “ editor of the yearbook and an Honor Roll and i Honor Committee member, and Bill d’Orsay. -Y Internationalist, Bill first hailed from Wyom- ing, then Norway, and later South Africa. a Valedictorian, photographer for the yearbook and newspaper Bill was also a sergeant. WILL IT WORK? Quizzical looks mark Jeff Wenzel’s face as he watches Mike Sisak and Pup Malnati prepare layouts. 100 — Clubs RETIRED BALL CARRIER fires up under Coach Ralph Sassa- man’s sideline pep talk. Larry Thiel intently grabs up the knowledge, but the Streaks played out. MORE PROBLEMS FOR ME? Larry Thiel ponders over Lee Hall’s score of problems with his renowned Band. Fewer inspections helped morale and the Band popped back. Faculty elect Hall to Ad Astra Society Nervous tremors permeated the corps. Slowly Col. Malcolm Livick read off the list of cadets whom the faculty had selected as the ten outstanding men of the corps. Gasps and sobs followed as the top ten men brought forward their mother or father to pin on the coveted gold pin of membership. Lone junior selected in June, 1969 was Lee Hall, who joined Larry Thiel as a cadet member of Ad Astra. Faculty members are Col. Livick, Col. S. S. Wales, Col. W. L. Gardner, Col. J. D. Kramer, Col. G. W. Koogler, Col. P. V. Hoover, Col. E. W. Parkins, and Col. C. E. Savedge. PAY OFF goes to Lee Hall, sponsored by Mrs. Malcolm Liv- ick. The SAI trophy went to Hall as commander of the out- standing company of the entire year. Clubs — 101 102 — Clubs Dates pose problems for social action Women! Alert SMA cadets drew first on the talent array at Stuart Hall and from then on, it was touch and go for attendance at dances. Boost in numbers at the opening informal re- sulted from all freshmen and new students from Fairfax and Stuart Hall’s having been in- vited to the cook-out dance. Second dance bulged with girls from back home, but the Winter Festival caught the ca- dets in short supply. It just might have been bashfulness that separated the boys from the girls at the Talent Show. No lack of dates appeared at Pin-Up Queen time, which also coincided with Parents’ Day. It was a roaring success story. NO LACROSSE TODAY, and Ray Marcantoni, president of the Cotillion Club, puzzles over just how a stapler works as he helps decorate for the Pin-Up Dance. CREATING A HANG-UP. Honor Roll man Mike Sisak turns his talents to pattern creations for a different effect for Pin-Up. Note the lack of sleep on that lad. -_! Cotillion Club — FRONT ROW: Vice President Jeff Wenzel, President Ray Marcantoni, Secretary Chuck Minor. BACK ROW: Mike Sisak, Bob Mitchell, Sam Wysong, Ron Melcher, Jimmy Johnson. MATCHMAKER, MATCHMAKER! And that’s what slim Jeff Wenzel is for David Rackley. Peggy Tripplett of Fairfax Hall soon discovers the fun of dating AMA man Dave. Clubs — 103 ew os onedaneree ot wa on fr Renate eee Oe i ‘ sone Revolutionized mass baffles Catholics Arguments pro and con raged when the cadets attending St. Francis were faced with the new mass in very modern English. Some liked it very much, but others were ready to wage a demonstration for the old mass form. This was not the problem for AMA’‘s Episco- palian, Jewish, and Protestant students. Mr. Sachs watched over AMA's Jewish cadets, mak- ing arrangements for high holy days and for special services. Pastor of the Old Stone Pres- byterian Church, the Rev. James Kennedy was a frequent visitor on campus. Vespers continued its lightened role. Cadet support of the Lynchburg Orphanage Christ- mas fund (with over $600 collected) insured that Col. Herbert Lucus would be able to take many turkeys and trimmings over to the Home during the Christmas break. 104 — Clubs 7 i PRIESTS ARE HUMAN, and the discovery amazes Danny Caldarelli and Lee Hall. Father Lavelle’s weekly visits in the fall helped AMA’s 125 Catholic students. NOT CANDY that John West is reaching for, because he’s giving to the Lynchburg fund. Jorge Rovirosa helps accept money from Bill Dulaney and Paul Ritchey. VESPERS COMMITTEE members Gary Nicholson and Bob Crozier joke with adviser Col. Herbert Lucus prior to the monthly meeting held on Sunday evenings. PARTICIPATION in the mass helps make Van Rametta and Randy Armstrong feel a real part of the community Cadets also serve as ushers, altar boys, and readers. SING OUT LOUD. John Ghiorsi, Mark Kalkhof, Chuck Oldfield, and Bruce Cooke raise slightly unharmonious voices in worship on a bright Sunday morning in church. Clubs — 105 ‘Bayonet’ revamps, uses fresh format Energetic ‘Bayonet’ men spurred their fresh, new adviser into action. Using a journalism text, Lt. Adamson flew all over the campus, inspired and filled with energy and desire to give the cadets a real newspaper. First to go were the black lines which separated the columns. Next came a switch to offset printing. Then came a jump into fresh typography, with sans serif type for body copy, giving the paper a new look. Probably the greatest i mpetus came with the decision to enter the paper in three national rating services, CSPA, NSPA, and old SIPA. Truly revolutionary was the newspaper delegation to Columbia in the spring, as well as a trip down to Georgia, the new home base of SIPA. STAFF LINEUP lacks only numbers! Curt Selby, Bill Adomeit, Jim Clark, Jim Fields, and Jim Blauch form a real nucleus of hard workers for the newspaper. 106 — Clubs EXCHANGE PHOTOGRAPHERS. Working for both the newspaper and the yearbook doesn’t phase Larry Malnati and Walter Hipkins. It just meant far more work and fun. ADAM'S SON, Joe Gallehugh, editor of the ‘Bayonet’, cracks up at Lt. Eric Adamson’s joke. Chuck Knapp, Al Samuels, and Frank Badalson happily solve’ hangups. SPORTY CREW, The duo of Alfredo Zayas and Randy Johnson pilots the athletic coverage of the newspaper. Randy’s column kept him asking Al for figures and advice. Clubs — 107 RECALL men sneak work at odd hours Would you believe they work every day? Even Col. Livick said in a speech, ‘I don’t see how the staff works at suc h a pace all year long, day after day, night after night’. ‘We're going to have our own style,’ stated Jeff Wenzel, emphatically. Together with Pup Malnati and Mike Sisak, the three developed a 50 pica — free style layout system. Frightened by the praise which the 1969 edition had received, the staff found that it MISS DEE TROPHIE . . and that’s exactly what Jeff Wenzel did at SIPA when he dated Sheryl Carpenter. RECALL, meanwhile, won two trophies for excellence had to work far too often without the advice of the adviser, Col. Chas. E. Savedge, who was busy playing the role of headmaster. Fortunately, all staff members had attended either summer workships or conventions. The knowledge was there; it simply took blood, sweat, and raw language to pull it together. Special praise had to go to the photographers who took, developed, and printed every picture in the book, except for formal portraits. UNDERSTUDIES Steve Pearson and Little Pup (Larry) Malniti learn how to operate the enlarger. Larry uses the stools to good advantage for focusing. UTTER MISERY is apparent on Mike Sisak’s face as he attempts to make everything fit in the scheme of 50 pica depths. At the last moment, inspiration comes. MR. WIZARD of the darkroom checks 120 negatives with his side-kick, Larry Malnati. Ron Ginns used his new Bronica, his strobe, and developed and printed daily. WHERE WILL | PUT IT? Country Whitaker wonders about space for the FJA Americana award. Randy Johnson, sports editor, helps while Ray Smith and John Porcher argue. we Clubs — 109 Tepes estes ster ws tect ct ie : Sf are HOT TYPE spews forth when Kevin Kint and Bruce Winstead press on in order to make deadlines. An electric typewriter just seems to make too many errors, however. ROUND TABLE MEN debate, dispute, and decide on which pictures will be best. Jim Johnson, Jeff Wenzel, Pup Malnati, and Junior Minor almost come to blows. : 110 — Clubs DARKROOM TEAM. Bill d’Orsay feels it’s the fault of the lens, but Ron Melcher is positive that Bill just didn’t focus the Talent Show directors pic well. MADISON AVENUE, move over. Harry Campbell and Wayne Bowers check a style book for last minute trends in the advertising field. They stay on top of the trade. Decade of accolades acuates RECALLers ‘Give me the Roget's’, yelled Chuck Minor on uncountable occasions. ‘Reprint that pic and get the focus better, the contrast less in- tense’, pleaded Jeff Wenzel. ‘I just can’t make it work’, moaned Mike Sisak. Growing pains for the 1970 RECALL resulted from the ratings of the ‘69 edition — All Ameri- can from NSPA, Medalist from Columbia, A+ from NSYA, Americana from FJA, trophy for best private school book and trophy for top yearbook from SIPA. Words shaded in meaning as the staff strove to cover the year fully and to add to the depth of coverage. Busy with printing pictures, Ron Ginns dove into developing and printing solutions and came up with some of his own chemicals. Every now and then the staff saw AMA‘s Jack Benny, Col. Savedge, who spoke at a dozen seminars and conventions and taught at Catho- lic University and Ball State University in the summer. Articles by him appeared in each of the journalism monthlies. NEVER SATISFIED — that’s how it sounds to the editor, Jeff Wenzel, and the assistant editor, Chuck Junior Minor, when Col. Savedge ‘advises’. Clubs — 111 112 — Clubs BIG AS LIFE and just as jolly, Talent Show MC and director, Bob Mitchell, announces the next ‘astonishing’ act, and it truly was — girls from Stuart Hall on the bill. Talent Show shocks Two types of girls knocked the audience out of their seats during the Winter Festival Talent Show. Seeing Stuart Hall girls participate brought on yells and cheers, and then when AMA’s own ‘girls’, Keith Lobach, Ron Melcher, Al Pressly, Bruce Reyngoudt, Scott Frantz, and five more pranced down the aisle in drag, the audience went into a genuine uproar. TEEN TALENT. Dave Saslaw brings on cheers when he latches onto ‘Tiptoe Through the Tulips’ in a perfect imita tion of Tiny Tim. He was an audience favorite. boy, girl audience Combos, singers, dancers, vocal groups, an¢ genial Bob Mitchell enthralled a standing roon only audience of faculty, cadets, Stuart Hal students, and guests. Brain work and _ bacl work was performed by Bob Mitchell, Larn Thiel, Al Samuels, Doug McMullan, and Mike Kavanaugh. It was a total cadet show withou faculty censorship or help. TRUMPET MAN Myers excites the audience at the Winter Festival talent show with his ‘Lonely Bull’. Phil then de- lighted with his combo participation. SOMETHING HOT in the Mess Hall, scene of the WF hop is the Hills-men combo, Rob Bender, Doug McMullan, Greg Girard, Butch Clarke, Phil Myers, and Tim Heath. REFRESHMENT BAND. Members of the Doomsday Refresh- ment Committee grab their trophy. Bob Missman, Jim Hash, John Goyne, and Larry Desseyn check the prize. Cadet combos rock, spotlighting talent Doug McMullan was going crazy, trying to find a practice room for Charlie and the Hills-men. Charlie needed amps, and _ Phil Myers merely wanted to grab a trophy in the talent show during Winter Festival weekend. ‘Groovin’, and that was the reaction to the group at the WF informal dance. Drums were John Goyne’s bag, too, and he had his men, the Doomsday Refreshment Committee, up for their part in the show. Cadet judges awarded them a first place. Hap- piest man of the group was Jim Hash. 114 — Clubs ; ¢ hs, Vv Oo Honor Committee links code with action “LIGHT JOB takes the Honor Committee into searches for the bulb thief. Jeff Wenzel, President Ray Marcantoni, and Larry Thiel find themselves in odd places. HIP, THROUGH AND THROUGH is Honor Committee man Jorge Rovirosa. He and Lee Hall argue, but agree on the way to use pink light bulbs to catch culprits. jor Edwin Hart, adviser for the AFFABLE at the moment, Ma ts them Honor Committee, listens to the members and le decide for themselves penalty or expulsion. When Col. Malcolm Livick solemnly read off the names of the Honor Committee members, old cadets immediately noticed that it was an abbreviated group. That was the object. Active men of the group put into action the words of the Honor Code. Investigations were more rapid, trials quicker and more thorough, and surprisingly, there were fewer throughout the entire school year. Continuing as adviser was ‘Big Ed’ Hart, whose legal background helped the group. 116 — Clubs y 3 P 2 FIERY INTERLUDE. Rex Rumbley and Charlie Pascale cau- tiously destroy anything which the Nazis can use against them as prisoners of war in AMA’s amateur production. Forgotten lines jab polished composure Weeks of preparation, hours of p ractice, and days of sacrifice of sleeping and even eating almost ended in disaster when nervous stars slipped over lines in the AMA production of ‘Stalag 17’. Alert thinking by Charlie Pascale and Harry Campbell saved the situation and occasionally baffled other cast members. Sets, stage hands, and stars were directed by Capt. James McDonald. Roars from the corps and visitors verbally proved that the play was a success in Fort Defiance. The uncensored lines pleased segments of the audience. hie SHUFFLING SHARK Harry Campbell wiles away hours of boredom in prison camp. Action interrupts this brief period of quiet in the stage play, ‘Stalag 17’. v 118 — Clubs Reeling from the success story of the West- ern Final Ball, the Final Ball officers of ’70 de- cided to walk right into space — off the earth and onto the moon. Innovating a space theme, Ray Marcantoni and his officers decided on a reproduction of the postage stamp for the central theme. Called in to create a gigantic enlarged version was Sam Wysong, who had already sparked interest in the Winter Festival with his colorful posters. The most perplexing problem centered LAST MINUTE FIX brings panic to Bob Ahearn and Jeff Wenzel, working against the early deadline of the abbre- viated Finals program at Augusta. Final Ball organizers walk in creped space around what to give the figure men’s dates. Sainples of moon rock was the suggestion, but NASA failed to cooperate with the scheme. Rose covered arches seemed a bit of an anomaly too, but it was decided to have some- thing earthly about the Final Ball anyway. Gone was the midnight supper, a tradition for 69 years. Light refreshments echoed the short- ened finals and the nature of the theme — space, today. WHERE ARE THE CHAPS AND SPURS? Members of th Western Final Ball figure prepare for the grand march. Thal covered wagon contrasts with the long white dresses. Final Ball Officers — KNEELING: Ron Melcher, President Ray Marcantoni, Jimmy Johnson. STANDING: Vice Presi- dent Jeff Wenzel, Secretary Chuck Minor. WHAT A REWARD. Judeen Hagerty assures Ray Marcon- toni that everything about the evening was just perfect. The smack under the arches is an AMA tradition. Clubs — 119 MINOR SWEEP. Chuck Minor (15) strains for extra yardage in the great J)V-SMA encounter. Charlie Delgado (12) aids in stopping Chuck. ACTION OF A DIFFERENT SORT finds this ‘group’ in a wasted scene. BREAKING from the start, Bob Missman and Conrad Poluito propel themselves from the blocks. Joint effort failed to give AMA a victorious season, however, with no wins the result. UNUSUAL FORM finds Lee Hall and his ‘All-American’ glasses in a mid-air under-leg smash. Victory against his SMA brother brought satisfaction. People in motion, SPORTS links goals 120 — Sports ‘Why warm the bench when you can be out breaking windows for the cause?’ Do school sports have a relationship to the rest of your life? Learning to win and lose now prepares us for the future. Win or lose, recognized or not, the spirit at Augusta is fight on that field, on those courts, on the floor. Competitive life forces men into the sports fracas. a ] r Sports — 121 New cadets spark Streaks to first wins in two years Rebounding from a disastrous season, AMA‘s Blue Streaks smashed over paydirt land and won two of its eight games, a 200 per cent improvement over the last semester's effort. Bogged down from a saturated battleground, the Streaks ripped into GMS for AMA‘s first score in a year. Water logged Greenbrier won, however, by a 19-8 decision. Primed for a heads-up encounter with SMA, the Streaks shocked the Hilltoppers with a score in the first two minutes of play. Negated by penalty, the score reversed with an SMA drive. Three fumbles by SMA and three inter- ceptions by AMA, topped by Bruce Reyn- goudt’s endzone pluck, failed to put the Streaks on the board. 23-6 was the result. Brighter days came. First, Don Fitzgerald booted a record 47 yard field goal. Scaring Hargrave, the Streaks came within three of a tie by an 11-14 deficit. Cannons boomed and horns honked with AMA’s first victory in two years. Washington and Lee’s Baby Generals felt the wrath of a bloodthirsty team. Leaving the field at half-time, the taste of victory was strong. Roar- ing back, the W L men made the Streaks tighten up. Stopping a last minute assault, the Streaks won 17-14. PAT FOR THE STREAKS! Don Fitzgerald (63) splits the uprights, as Keith Lobach (64) holds. Victory over FMS was sweet after a Thanksgiving defeat one year earlier. GRIM DETERMINATION propels Wayne Trotter (12) over- land as Dan Beckwith (74) hangs on. A six yard gain failed to end with a needed TD as Massanutten won 14-0. VARSITY FOOTBALL SQUAD: FRONT ROW: Dan Caldarel- li, Wayne Trotter, Bruce Reyngoudt, Ray Marcantoni (all captains). SECOND ROW: Andy Lee, Bill Broere, Dale Tewksbury, Fred Vasconi, Terry Abrams, Buster Furr, Marty Story, David Hodges, Carl Briga, Jeff Petersen. THIRD ROW: Mark Jeffries, Terry Laney, Mike Lagosky, Robin Bender, Tim Cooper, Wayne Silverman, Randy Johnson, Don Fitzgerald. FOURTH ROW: Paul Thompson, Tom Hennessey, Coach Sassaman. BACK ROW: Terry Smith, Ron Holvey, Keith Lobach, Randy Frey, Winky Hill, Bill Klunk, Jim Goate, Jerry Collincini, Jim Delong. ANTICIPATION, FASCINATION, ELATION are shown by Coach Bill Lobb, Wayne Trotter, and Head Coach Ralph Sassaman in scoring moments of the GMS encounter. Gl aids are utilized now. CONTORTIONIST Danny Caldarelli (11) sights an opening and sweeps for 15 yards against Washington and Lee’s Frosh. It was AMA’s first victory in 2 years, 17-14. Sports — 123 Grid eleven cooks Turkey day winner Two bruising losses followed the W L win. First came a journey to Pennsylvania for a bout with Coach Sassaman’s college frosh. Ship- pensburg rolled over AMA by 25-6. League champions, FUMA, turned its huskies loose and racked up a 42-0 win against the Blue Streaks. Searing from a defeat exactly one year earlier at the hands of FMS, win-hungry AMA fielded a psyched-up team. Ron Holvey’s four official TD’s helped bolster the Blue Streak score to a ‘ feast day victory of 41-0 on home grounds. “VARSITY FOOTBALL | SCOREBOAKD Team Played OPP Greenbrier Military School 19 _ Massanutten Academy 14 Staunton Military Academy 23 Hargrave Military Academy 44 Washington Lee Freshmen 14 Shippensburg College Frosh 25 _ Fork Union Military Academy _ 42 Fishburne Military School 0 FOUR TEETH AND THROUGH THE LIP. Ron Holvey rec- eives Mrs. Mollie Canevet’s attention. Catching a punt in the MMA game, Ron was smacked in the chin. chin. FELLED QUARTERBACK. AMA‘s defensive action shows ferocity as Jim Delong (70), Jerry Collincini (81), Bruce Reyngoudt (61), and Mike Lagosky (80) smear Greenbrier. quarterback. CONFIDENT Wayne Trotter (12) sets down his team prior to taking the snap from Terry Abrams. The flow was per- fectly executed, and AMA gained a first against GMS. Sports — 125 STRONG ARMED Dave Austin (33) belts SMA’s Charlie Delgado (12) as he streaks for the goal. AMA’s 26-8 win was only the second win over SMA’s JV’s in 33 years. Baby Streaks blast; Hilltoppers topple Generally, one win does not make a winning season. But a win over SMA in any year does. Showing only one win and five losses, the JV’s turned on for the Hilltopper experience. Agile Chuck Miner, rapid Ray Smith, and bulldozing David Austin combined for a 300 total yards gained against the SMA eleven. Overconfident, the Wachtmeister men stum- bled for three, then recovered to wage a close one with the men from Blue Ridge School. Determined Joe Gallehugh repeated a Ray Smith sweep and scored 6 for Augusta. A PAT was filed and the Mountain men walked off with a 7-6 decision. 126 — Sports JV FOOTBALL SCOREBOARD AMA Team Played OPP. 0 Woodberry Forest School 16 26 Stauton Military Academy 8 14 Fork Union Military Academy 45 8 Massanutten Academy 34 0 Greenbrier Military School 16 6 Blue Ridge School 7 EXCRUCIATING PAIN contorts Gary Granger’s counte- nance in the opening moments of the Greenbrier game. A severe back injury sidelined Granger for the rest of the sea- son. Rick Jones, Lt. Eric Adamson, and Lt. Wachmeister aid. bit JV FOOTBALL SQUAD: FRONT ROW: Jim Baron, Jack Paulsen, Wayne McGowan, Bob Perkins. SECOND ROW: Grif Lohman, Dave Austin, George McCoach, Al Clarke, Conrad Poluito. THIRD ROW: Ed Dixon, Rick Legard, Tom Barnes, Doug Easter, mgr., Manuel Herdade, Joe Gallehugh. FOURTH ROW: Ray Smith, John Johnson, Barty Burgwyn, Burt Glick, Coach Hans Wachtmeister. FIFTH ROW: Lt. Eric Adamson, Heath Rock, Ira Koonan, Randy Armstrong, Bruce Cooke. BACK ROW: Doug McMullen, Brent Lethaby, Herman Jenkins, Chuck Minor, Marc Lambert, Gary Nicholson, Jeff Peck, Rick Jones. MAJOR GAIN for little Chuck Minor! Big number (15), Minor gallops through the SMA defensive hole. 23 yards jet by before Minor turned the run into a TD for Augusta. Sports — 127 EVASIVE BALL stuns Hargrave’s goalie when Francisco Saenz launches his shot for a point. Hargrave spoils AMA’s record with a 1-1 tie. Lee Hall’s saves helped keep it a tie. GETTING AHEAD! Dennis Dixon (3) maneuvers the balls towards Ron S lagle who finishes with a kick to Francisco Saenz in the lopsided MMA game. Bob Ahearn (19) helped in the 7-0 victory. 128 — Sports VARSITY SOCCER MEN: FRONT ROW: Ross Mitchell, Van Taylor, Turner Ramey, Lee Hall, Jorge Saenz, Rick Maschak, Karl Haleamau. SECOND ROW: Harry ‘Back’ Baldwin, Bud Sweeney, Dennis Dixon, Jim Brown, Bill Farley, Rick Whitaker, Cliff Stern. TH RD ROW: John Juenemann, Ronald Slagle, Francisco Saenz, Alberto D. Sotomayor, Brad Myers, Christopher Ellis, Jimmy Dawson. BACK ROW: Blaine Clarke, Ron Melcher, and Sam Hendrix. Footmen accomplish near perfect tally Blue booters, sparked by the Saenz twins, kicked over five opponents, tied one, and stumbled only once. Improving over the 1968 record, the soccer- men headed by Albemarle 5-4. Jorge and Fran- cisco Saenz totaled 4 of the 5 AMA goals. Fate put AMA in the win column when an Eastern Mennonite man booted the ball into his own net giving Augusta its 1-0 upset over EMHS. Humiliation was the word for the Mas- sanutten loss to AMA by 7-0 with those Saenz men dominating the tally. Eastern Mennonite counter-kicked in the return match to down the Streaks by 4-1. Larry Thiel’s late entry helped the Streaks in that 2-0 win over Massanutten in a home game. SOCCER SCOREBOARD Team Played Albemarle High School Eastern Mennonite High Massanutten Academy Eastern Mennonite High Hargrave Military Academy Albemarle High School Massanutten Academy Ww ao oo = eon eo ces a FUNNY FACE. Larry Thiel (12) puts his all into placing the ball where it will count in the Massanutten game. Bill Far- ley hurries up to assist in AMA’s 2-0 win. Sports — 129 AROUND AND IN goes the ball with Jerry Collincini’s deft ball handling. The points helped in a narrow victory over Hargrave Military Academy by 72-69. FOULED. Baxter Hayes (40) snatches the rebound from Hargrave with Fred Lapish moving in to assist. It was the turning point towards the championship. Rais - : POLISHING THE FLOOR, Jerry Collincin (34) wipes up the dust in the first SMA-AMA encounter. Roy Stauffer (10) races for the loose ball. SMA emerged winners. REACH OUT — Ray Snapp (32), Jerry Collincini (34), and Fred Lapish (44) fight for possession of the round ball. The 96-92 loss was avenged later by the hot Streaks. Corps cheers VSML championship cagers Four wins and one loss before the Christmas break gave hopes to the cagers and corps. Down plunged spirits, but not support, when the Blue Streaks lost the initial two of the de- cade. Just angry enough, the SMA game pointed the Streaks to a turning point. Cheers and yells rang out with 12 straight wins. No one individual, but group effort placed the Streaks within grasp of number one spot in the league, a feat no AMA team had accomplished in the nine year history of the Virginia’s Military School League. That journey from Fort Defiance to Staunton (eight miles) was a long one. Staunton just doesn’t lose on its home court. Car loads of cadets traveled to support the Hogg-men. Sports — 131 PANDEMONIUM almost erupts from a group of supporters oe ats ; Cage rs 8 ld b fi rst n the final game of the tournament. With eight seconds to 30, Roy Stauffer’s two pointer wins 78-77 for AMA. in hot league play, then snare tourney Radio newscasters and photographers were on hand to record the Streaks-Hilltopper en- counter. Stunned disbelief fell over the capac- ity throng. Leading at 26 at half, AMA pumped in points; eating away the lead, however, the SMA team drove to a 105-113 finish. Cries of ‘We’re number ONE’ spread. Subsequently both MMA and HMA fell to the Streaks, giving them clear title to the championship squad in the Military league. Tourney play at FUMA gave the Streaks a bye and then a slow-down game _ against FUMA. The streaks pulled a 49-45 win and then gave all spectators heart murmurs when HMA led by one point. With eight seconds to go, Roy Stauffer eased one in, and the roar went up for the first AMA tourney win ever. 132 — Sports tia. VARSITY BASKETBALL SCOREBOARD Team Played Madison College JayVee’s Washington and Lee JV team Bridgewater College JV’s Lynchburg College JV’s Madison College JayVee’s Lynchburg College JV’s Staunton Military Academy Fishburne Military School Hargrave Military Academy. Greenbrier Military School Eastern Mennonite College JV’s Fork Union Military Academy Massanutten Military Academy Greenbrier Military School Bridgewater College JV's Fork Union Military Academy Eastern Mennonite College JV’s Staunton Military Academy Hargrave Military Academy Roanoke College JV’s Massanutten Military Academy Varsity Basketball Team: FRONT ROW: Mgrs. Scott Travers, Cesar Prieto. SECOND: Coach James Hogg, Roy Stauffer, Dan Caldarelli, Jerry Collincini, Jim Goate, Coach Sievert Josephson. BACK ROW: Baxter Hayes, Fred Lapish, Raymond Snapp, Wayne McGowan, Doug McMullan, and Dan Rapp. PLEASE DROP IN. Jim Goate (42) prays that it will be a two pointer. Fred Lapish, Ray Snapp, and Roy Stauffer flex the muscles, in the taut 95-74 decking of MMA. Sports — 133 Hopes for a perfect season soared. Seven straight wins, then the roof caved in. Three losses as the end of the season still placed the JV cagers in the winning box for the first time in four seasons, the best since 1963. Greatest triumph of the campaign came with the Baby Streaks opened with a 50-41 smash over the arch rivals of SMA. The return game JV BASKETBALL SCOREBOARD AMA Team Played Opp 50 Staunton Military Academy 41 53 Fishburne Military School 14 40 Hargrave Military Academy 38 43 Greenbrier Military School 32 §9 Fork Union Military Academy 47 55 Massanutten Military Academy 47 57 Greenbrier Military School 41 33 Fork Union Military Academy 61 58 Staunton Military Academy 61 28 Massanutten Military Academy 46 HURRIED SHOT from Ron Slagle nets two points for the almost undefeated Baby Streaks. GMS falls to AMA on home court by a 43-32 tally. Jeff Peck moves in. JV Basketball Team: FRONT ROW: Mike Reilly, Terr Abrams, Al Stanko, Tom Walker, Coach Sievert Josephson BACK ROW: Joe Goldberg, Ira Koonan, Buster Furr, Jef Peck, and Ronald Slagle. JV hardwood men explode with 7-3 record saw SMA winning in overtime, 61-58. Jeff Peck’s all over the court motions and Ron Slagle’s expert rebounding turned on the team for six more games. Fork Union, SMA, and Massanutten wiped hopes out for a perfect slate. Coach Sievert Josephson spread his time between the JV’s and the Blue Streak varsity squad. DRIVING SCORE from AI Stanko (12) pushes AMA’s score in the Fork Union home game to a 59-47 win over the Blue Devils. Check the drive on the FUMA man’s face. HOOKER Lefty Ron Slagle loops another one in for the Blue Streaks against the Colonels of Massanutten. The end result was a Streak win by 55-47 over MMA Sports — 135 VARSITY FENCING SCOREBOARD AMA Team Played : Opp 21 VMI Freshmen 7 6 13 Tri-Weapons Club, Baltimore 14 15 Mercersburg Academy 2 18 VMI Freshmen : 5 ‘ — 45 JCC of Baltimore ae JUMP AND JAB. Jumper Ron Melcher jabs professionally a Mercersburg Academy 45 against Charlie Hillsman and makes his point. Practice sessions were bloodier than the actual meets. 136 — Sports Blade boys pierce way as champions Championship fever hit the Bladesmen on the same night that the cagers were winning their title. Fencing in Baltimore in the Blue Ridge Scholastic Fencing League, the Hooverites tied the Tri-Weapons Club and emerged as co-champions. Six teams were competing for the title in the league. Bob Echols, Pup Malnati, and Ron Melcher ended their season in foil, epee, and saber on the proper side of the win column. New men on the team who performed with distinction were Ray Smith and Rick Francis. Helping with the trophy grab were Mark Femrite, Bob Echols, Jorge Rovirosa, and Ron Melcher. Medal winners were Femrite, Echols, and Charlie Hillsman. The tie with Tri- Weapons for co-championship made up for an earlier loss. FINAL LUNGE REVEALS a dismayed Ron Melcher in a standoff while fencing saber against his Tri-Weapons man in the league contest. Victory helped AMA’s tie for the top. Varsity Fencing Team: FRONT ROW: Keith Williams, Scott Frantz, Reed Nettles, Bill Ramsey, Trip Taylor, lan McKnight. SECOND: Gil Gilger, Mark Cardwell, Jeff Jackard, Cam Bell, Gregg Gillett, Brad Myers. BACK ROW: Ron Melcher, Charlie Hillsman, Sandy Henderson, Ray Smith, co-captain Bob Echols, Don Massie, Mark Femrite, Allen Pressly, Gary Understein, Don Malnati, and co-captain Jorge Rovirosa. Sports — 137 GETTING IT FIXED, Paul Kime checks Sgt. Donald Studer’s accuracy and precision in keeping the firing weapons in first class condition for the big VMI State meet. ROCK STEADY BILL Buzz Hummer aims and fires a 271 in the VMI Invitational, helping the Hawkeyes to yet another championship on the same day as two others. Bull shooters fire as State champions After gloomy days for three years, the Hawk- eyes gained a new nickname, the Bullshooters, and after firing a highly encouraging 7-4 sea- son, went on to claim the trophy. as cham- pions. The scene was the VMI State Invita- tional Rifle Meet. Hargrave, SMA, FUMA, GMS, RMA, and FMS felt the fury of the Streak firing. High scoring ace in the tourney was Bill Hummer with his 271. Perennial champ Har- grave fired 1290 and lost to the new champs, AMA whose team fired a 1301 for top place. Earlier in the season, the Tigers of HMA had set a VMSL record with 1324 against AMA’s 1222. The tourney turn-about gave real joy to the Fort Defiance Bullsmen. Against the Fork Union Blue Devils, AMA had been booked to lose, and for most of the match, it was neck and neck. Van Rametta pulled out of a firing slump and final glance at the targets showed the bulls in favor of Au- gusta by a mere 17 points. Strangely enough, the Hawkeyes’ trophy came on the same day as did two other cham- pionships — the Basketball Tourney win by the Streaks, and the fencers co-championship in Baltimore. 138 — Sports RIFLE TEAM SCOREBOARD AMA Team Played Opp 1170 Hargrave Military Academy 1259 1121 Massanutten Academy 1098 1136 Fork Union Military Academy 1220 1219 Randolph Macon Academy 1200 1219 Fishburne Military School 1144 1216 Staunton Military Academy 1260 1216 Greenbrier Military School 1124 1217 Fishburne Military School 1155 1235 Randolph Macon Academy 1193 1235 Greenbrier Military School 1155 1255 Fork Union Military Academy 1238 1222 Hargrave Military Academy 1324 1261 Massanutten Academy 1192 SLIGHTLY OFF THE CENTER, Paul Kime fires and makes points, but a perceptive, deceptive Hargrave team joins in to upset league records and totals 1324 to 1222. Rifle Team: FRONT ROW: Team captain Van Rametta, Marc Silverberg, Coach Don Studer. SECOND: Tom Del Valle, Andy Becker, Danny Jenkins, Mike Kidd. BACK ROW: Pete Russell, Jim Runions, Bill Hummer, and Paul Kime. NO PIST SUP ENUSAE MUNI TION a Snes ae Swimmers cancel all meets, end as club Peppy Coach Jim Grace suggested a drastic change in plans. ‘We’d be better off if we can- cel all of our meets, and just let the guys swim more and learn more.’ Journeying to Staunton to swim at the YMCA, the aqua-men failed to best the local men, and yet the score proved that all of the practices were paying off. Especially active were the Lower School cadets. They enjoyed the pool use. FROM OUT OF THE DEPTHS, Cliff Stern breaks water and makes quite a picture as he executes a breast stroke. 140 — Sports , wo Intra-school Swimming Club: FRONT ROW: Randy Hollingsworth, Dean Beers, Steve Schwartz, Grant Garrett, David Saslaw, Paul Thomson, Buddy Oakey. SECOND: Bob Westmen, Paul Jacobs, John Juenemann, Lars Steib, Manuel Ayau, Tom Price, Waldo Jacobs, Coach Grace. BACK ROW: Tim Maes, John Piazza, John Goyne, Jim Worley, Cliff Stern, Blaine Clarke, and Vernon Wells. BREATHING DEEPLY, Blaine Clarke backstrokes rapidly and proves that he could do well in competition. Sports — 141 ‘Big Ed’s’ guidance shapes greenhorns Big Ed Hart instituted a new plan — no sub- stitutions for an entire half. It sounded great in practice and theory, but the grueling grind and the scores in the initial games proved oth- erwise. Reversing the trend, the Blue Streaks pounded out an 8-0 win over Blue Ridge, then bowed in an overtime squeaker against Char- lotte Hall. Nicky Syropoulos, out to break an AMA record, led in scoring from the first to last game. CHARGER. Just like a bull elephant, mad Ray Marcantoni rushes into the foray, snares a pass from Charlotte Hall, and ties the score. An overtime resulted. SILENT_APPROVAL? Or it could be disapproval. ‘Big Ed’ Ha rt, a former All-American lacrosseman from Hobart, puzzles over the first half play against U.Va. Cen! i=. = fF uce Reyngoudt insures a t W L. Winning by 5-2 enerals roar back, 6-5. WITH A FLICK OF THE WRIST. Br cradle in a crucial moment agains the Streaks watched the G E, the ball eludes a Blue Ridge goalie HEADING FOR HOM a point in the 8-0 win by and gives Dougla the Streaks over the B s McMullan (27) lue Ridge School-men. Sports — 143 Varsity Lacrosse Team: FRONT ROW: Coach Ed Hart, Joe Amedeo, Ray Marcantoni, Larry Thiel, Ron Melcher, Jack White. SECOND: Doug McMullan, Tim Cooper, Winky Hill, Griff Lohman, Bill McLaughlin, Jorg Rovirosa, Al Samuels. BACK ROW: Nick Syropoulos, John Henderson, Gene O'Neal, John Douglas, Dave Kerns, Bill Baeder, John Quinn, John B. Harris, and Bruce Reyngoudt. VARSITY LACROSSE SCOREBOARD AMA Team Played OPP 3 University of Virginia ‘B’ 15 6 St. Christopher's School 12 5 Washington and Lee |V’s 6 3 Woodberry Forest School cf 8 Blue Ridge School 0 5 Charlotte Hall Military 6 6 Mercersburg Academy 5 i 4 Washington and Lee JVs 5 — 4 7 9 Woodberry Forest School 2 ‘ — 8 Charlotte Hall Military 6 2 St. Christopher's School 13 BACK LASH. Streaks’ John Douglas evades Blue Ridge’s defensive man and scores one of his two goals in AMA’s first win of the season, a bone crushing 8-0 victory. 144 — Sports (ae. pivk 2 ah, Cota as., as a Mt: Small ball men ail: out; bungle bid for _ unblemished slate; stumble to 4-7 mark BABY’S IN THE CRADLE. Nick Syropoulos deftly picks the ball out of the air and gently cradles it, again in the lopsided AMA win over the men from Blue Ridge. DUST BOWL makes it almost impossible for Larry Thiel (55) to clearly spot the goal, but he nets one for AMA in the 9-2 win for the revenge crazed Blue Streaks. tee. cee Neatly scalping Mercersburg by a one point margin, the Blue Streaks waged a_ hotly contested battle against arch-rival W L, losing by 4-5 in the final seconds of the match. Stinging from losses from W-F for a decade, the Streaks literally controlled the field and stunned the Orange-men 9-2. Heady with victory, the Streaks invaded Maryland for a lively contest against Charlotte Hall. Scraping by the Marylanders by 8-6, the Streaks ended their season with a loss to St. Christopher's. 146 — Sports Hoover hassles JV stick addicts in vain Practices from February until April, screams, pleadings, constant work-outs, and even AMA’s most colorful coach, Col. Paul V. Hoover, just couldn’t hassle the Baby Blue Streak stickmen into the win column. Severely set-back in the opener by 6-1 from St. Christopher's, the Streaks fell to Woodberry Forest on a rain-soaked field by 2-1. Not until the first encounter with Charlotte Hall did the Streaks emerge with a win, and this was followed by three consecutive defeats. Season’s finale against St. Christopher’s thrust AMA into high spirits with a 2-1 victory. George McCoach paced the scorers with 4 goals followed by Bud Sweeney with 2 in the cage. Junior Varsity Lacrosse Team: FRONT ROW: Waverly Webb, Tom Pascale, Steve Watkins, Steve Cox, Gary Nichol- son, Bob Mitchell, Mike Eller. SECOND: Glenn Campbell, Andy Lee, Bob Hartkopf, Mark Femrite, Ron Conrad, Bud Sweeney, Pup Malnati. TH RD: Marc Lambert, Mike Miller, Dean Lohman, Joe Goldberg. BACK ROW: George McCoach, Ralph Marcantoni, Gerry Havill, James Baron, Art Hoislbauer, Mitch Brown, and Paul Jacobs. SWOOSH. Not even the ball has a chance in the muddy match against Blue Ridge. Andy Lee and Steve Watkins contest possession of the ball, but Blue Ridge won, 2-6. HEADLESS GOALIE (he’d just ducked!) Steve Watkins receives a mid-tield pass from Bud Sweeney, seconds before he nets a point for AMA. St. Chris won, however. DUST AGAIN obscures the action in the AMA-Charlotte Hall game. Fighting for the mid-air ball are Joe Goldberg (12) and Jim Barron (17). AMA eked out a win by 1-0. JV LACROSSE SCOREBOARD | AMA Team Played : 7 OPP 1 St. Christopher’s School moe 1 Woodberry Forest School 1 Charlotte Hall Military 1 Woodberry Forest School 2 Blue Ridge School 0 Charlotte Hall Military 8 2 St. Christopher's School AOADONG Sports — 147 148 — Sports SWING, AND A MISS. Willie Hall almost spins with the force he put into a near hit. Spectators wince since Greenbrier leads the Streaks by a powerful 10-5. SAFETY, FIRST! Rick Maschak checks and finds that he’s in no danger in a long drive against Massanutten. It was a long afternoon with MMA winning by 13 to 1. LITTLE PITCHER, lefty Jack Meyer, screwballs one against Fishburne and helps with AMA’s lone win of the baseball season. The final score was a close one — 12 to 10. BASEBALL SCOREBOARD. Team Played Fork Union Military Academy Greenbrier Military School Fishburne Military School Massanutten Academy Massanutten Academy Staunton Military Academy Fork Union Military Academy Staunton Military Academy Hargrave Military Academy Greenbrier Military School Hargrave Military Academy 2 Fishburne Military School | S CUWANUS= AONnNOMw Baseball Team: FRONT ROW: Jack Meyer, Richard Maschak, Al Martin. SECOND: Roy Raymond, P. J. Thomson, Burt Cummings, Willie Hall. THIRD: Jeff Petersen, Bill Tate, Doug Bell, Rick Varner . BACK ROW: Coach Hans Wachtmeister, and Coach Ralph Sassaman. Apathy suppresses baseball potential Spring fever hit, but only eleven men showed up for baseball. The result was almost inevitable — one win in twelve starts. Fiery Jack Meyer buoyed up team spirit and pitched with all of his might, but his inexperi- ence as a ninth grader held back his full po- tential. Doug Bell and Burt Cummings, also left handed, rounded out the pitching staff. Determined to win one, the last one of the season was a cliff hanger with FMS ahead, then Augusta, and then FMS, but AMA won 12-10. Bill Tate earned a second place on the league squad. Sports — 149 150 — Sports Agile netters volley for three big wins Pounds poured off of chunky Lee Hall in his determined preparation for a winning tennis season. AMA's netters, however, chalked up a 3-8 record in a long season. Top men for the Streaks were Lee Hall, Van Rametta, and Chuck Hearn. Lee Hall’s greatest satisfaction came in slicing a win from his SMA brother, Jim. Lee’s wins in the FMS and Mas- sanutten contests helped with the three win- ning games for the Blue Streaks. Sought as a secret weapon, but one which was used by others, the aluminum racket failed to insure more victories for the Streaks. Loss of Rick McKenney also hurt the netters. Tennis Team: FRONT ROW: Van Rametta, Steve Morisey, Manuel Ayau, Lee Hall, Bob Gregory. BACK ROW: Manuel Herdade, Chuck Hearn, John Hamilton, Coach Tim Mannasmith, Doug Say, Barker Wardrop, Robert Jacobs, and Howard Peterson. FINAL SET. Capt. Tim Mannasmith huffs and puffs his way through a rugged match against Van Rametta, but he still manages to pull a win each time. NEAT SERVE. Lee Hall exhibits some of his prowess which keeps him in the top two or three seeds on the tennis team. And it worked against Jim Hall of SMA. a Sports — 151 152 — Sports Opponents shatter cindermen’s hopes Triple jumper, Fred Faulkenberry, miler, Bob Gooch, and determined Sam Hendrix pulled in points for the Cinder Streaks, but the final rec- ord showed Augusta on the wrong end of a 4-0 record sheet. Failing to equal AMA’s new All American, Jim Stillwagon’s records, Roger Jensen won three firsts in discus, and two in the shot put against the Military School League teams. Only veteran on the team, Cinderman Frank Roach pulled one first, two seconds, and a third in the tight, hotly contested 440. PRACTICE MILE. Sam Hendrix doesn’t let an early season broken leg in soccer keep him from pounding out the yards for the track team. Track Scoreboard AMA Team Played OPP 23% Fishburne Military School 53% 3] Greenbrier Military School’ 105 8 Staunton Military Academy 128 42 Fork U nion Military Academy 94 Track Team: FRONT .ROW: Sergio Astorga, Herman Jenkins, Brent Lethaby, Joe Gallehugh, Coach Bill Lobb. SECOND: Bob Gooch, Karl Haleamau, Brian Lethaby, Sam Hendrix, Roger Rodriguez. THIRD: Jesse Utt, Frank Roach, Fran Rametta, Marc Silverberg, Rol Harrison. BACK ROW: Karl Kiser, Randy Harrison, Bob Ahearn, Bill Farley, Conrad Poluito, Al Caviness, Elliot Stokes, and Roger Jensen. CANNON SHOT! Roger Jensen explodes with a decent 48.3 show against Fork Union. Later Rog kept AMA's hopes up with the discus, but FUMA won 94-48. BREAKING THE TAPE, Fran Rametta racks up the points for the Blue Streaks in his first place 100 yard dash. FMS pulled away the winner, however, by 532 to 23%. Sports — 153 CLOSELY KNIT GROUP, and all produce creativity — Scott Dekle and his photography, Hunt and his collections, Mrs. Dekle and her help at the Virginia School for the Deaf, and Maj. John Dekle and his many tasks. CREATIVITY of an entirely different sort finds a duo lost in the mood, blowing their minds. SPRINGTIME SPECIALIST, Tim Hann demonstrates a model for parents during spring Parents’ weekend. Participating were the Navy, NASA, and the Marines. MEMORY sweeps over Jeff Wenzel as he surveys the final parades and actions of the creative year. Conforming INDIVIDUALS emerge 154 — Individuals Does individuality mean nonconformity? Masses of youth struggle for the unique, but AMA is proof that the uniform does not restrict either cadets or faculty officers from standing out, being a real INDIVIDUAL. Many tiny cogs in the complex machine help the year go by smoothly, but the uniqueness of 1970 was the intense feeling urging all to create. Individuals — 155 Fifth graders earn tops in basketball Scrambling on the courts, unbelievable in motion, the rugged fifth graders knocked off all Lower School opposition to claim title as cager kings for 1970. Honor Roll after Honor Roll, Bob Ettinger led the entire Lower School. Approaching a solid ‘A’ average, Bob returned after Christmas vaca- tion lugging an entire set of encyclopedia in order to do just that. Leader of fifth grade activities was Lt. Bob Gorgrant. ‘It’s a much better class this year, and | am enjoying the action.’ Especially standing out has been the class response to library work. Mrs. McDonald did that. GRACE finds the Lower School men at strict attention just before the evening meal. Christian Adams and Kurt Pankopf wait for the signal to relax. Christian Adams Tony Bowers David Coats Christian Jensen Charlie Livick Roger Mullis 156 — Individuals — Fifth Grade Bob Ettinger Ben Oldham John Floyd Tommy Price John Hawkins Chris Vetick Duain Huegel Bob Willis Sixth grade racks up pigskin title Athletic prowess thrust the football crown right into the powerful sixth graders’ hands. Spence Griffin, Jeff Fowler, Trip Taylor, and Bill Mowrar combined forces in the drive to earn the title for their class. Five sixth graders graced the Privilege List. Carlos Cuervo, Grant Garrett, Lance Logan, Jaime Prieto, and Kurt Pankopf were the aca- demic stars. Sixth grade work made it impossi- ble for anyone to gain HR status. Team teaching tactics were employed by Col. Herbert Lucus and Lt. James Grace, who with Mrs. Livick, also planned social life. FAIR DAY for a Book Fair. Mrs. McDonald’s wide selection of paperbacks gives Kurt Pankopf reason to ask his parents for extra money, fortunately, on Parents’ Day. Dean Beers Carlos Cuervo Erman Erambert Randy Ewing Jeff Fowler Grant Garrett Spence Griffin Steve Hall Ben Howard Dave Howard Dave Hussey Jack Johnston Mike Kavanaugh — Lance Logan John Martyn Steve McAdams _ Eric Morgenstern Bill Mowrar John Norris Kurt Pankopf Steve Phillips Jaime Prieto Trip Taylor Dave Thomas Sixth Grade — Individuals — 157 Barty Burgwyn George Carr Hayes Dickinson Ted Hanel Gerard Hart John Hash Joe Heartley Steve Hemphill Jimmy Jenkins Mal Livick Tim Maes Chris Moyers Mike Murphy Dan Oakey Joe Papariello Frank Primrose Willie Ramsey Jack Ransone bulk of baby rifles Seventh graders never entered that stage called ‘winter doldrums’. They were far too busy forming a pre-teen version of the Roller Rifles, headed by senior Bob Crozier. Academic aces were Gerard Hart, Hayes Dickinson, Mal Livick, Tim Maes, Chris Moyers, and Freddie White. The Lt. Bill Lobb and Lt. Eric Adamson team taught the active group. Mrs. Sallie Simmons, housemother for the Lower School, called them the most active group that she had ever seen at AMA. 158 — Individuals — Seventh Grade Seventh grade forms DUNKER Dalton Williford ignores the water and bobs for the elusive apples. He’s successful and it helps make all of Halloween night neater for him. BIG BROTHER. Mike Kavanaugh looks up to, admires, imitates, and has his picture taken with big Danny Calda- relli. The picture taking interrupted the Valentine party. ST. NICK’S VISIT (in the form of Col. and Mrs. Livick) creates mounting tension among Chris Vetick, John Martyn, Mike Murphy, Carlo Cuervo, Bob Mallett, Dave Coats, Dean Beers, Christian Adams, and John Hawkins. Steve Schwartz Jeff Shepherd David Stump Phil Vaden Val Vintilla John Walker Bob Westmen Fred White Chuck Wilkins Larry Williams Dalton Williford Ken Woodyard Seventh Grade — Individuals — 159 James F. Adams Lewis Beasley Ken Bickings Charles Bing Al Caviness Julian Contreras Jimmy Dawson Eddie Dixon Doug Easter Mike Eller Chris Ellis Webb Fisher Mike Forry Eric Furtwangler Frank Geddie Yogi Hale Randy Harrison Doug Haycox Mike Hughes Sam Hughes Glenn Hunter Waldo Jac obs Rick Jones John Juenemann Mark Lasky Buddy Link Larry Malnati Jorge Mena John Miller Hank Mullins Bruce Paul Howard Peterson Cesar Prieto Kevin Rothenberg Tony Royal Dave Saslaw Marc Silverberg Guy Smith Al Sotomayor Lars Steib Van Taylor Warren Tochterman 160 — Individuals — Eighth Grade Fighth graders tackle Big Barracks life Jumping from Lower School to Upper School is not just a matter of going from the 7th to the 8th grade. It means leaving Davis Hall and the Annex, F Troop and upside-down rank, and entering life in Big Barracks. Subjects may be just a bit different, too. It’s life Science and Earth Science, World Geogra- phy and English, Lt. Kupcinski and Math 8, Health, and Phys Ed all rolled up into a neat bundle of work, work, work. SURVIVING TRANSITION and making a real name for him- self, Dave Saslaw picks up his medal for declaiming from Gol, Malcolm Livick during Honors’ Assembly. Stepping right into his brother's footprints, Larry Malnati earned Honor Roll status with a 4.091 average. Only one other eighth grade cadet found himself on the top list — Al Ca- viness. Eight won Privilege List ribbons. Entertainer of the class was Dave Saslaw, Bob Mitchell’s right hand man in the Talent Show. Waldo Jacobs gained a degree of fame with a commendation for his poster dealing with the proper use of the forests. CARBON COPY (only he wears a 6 and Pup, a 12) is Larry Malnati, darkroom assistant and number three man on the Honor Roll. He can really dance, too. Scott Travers Mark Whiteman Ken Watts Dave Wyckoff Eighth Grade — Individuals — 161 Bob Angelucci Jim Atchison Manuel Ayau Eric Bolsterle Vince Briga John Brill David Brown Rafael Cobiello Al Collins Bruce Cooke Oscar Cooke Mark Coolahan Bruce Crum Scott Curry Tom Del Valle Larry Desseyn High School hassles engulf 73 freshmen Academically, the eighth grade might be considered as first year of high school, but the ninth grade cadets realized rapidly that they were the real freshmen of the corps. Foreign language study, intro to military, and rank and position failed to frighten the major- ity of the ninth graders. George Dunaway, Dave Holland, Lewis Shapiro, and David Zook wore the Honor Roll badge, and First Sergeant Bob Mallett, the top rank. READY TO EXPLODE is Doug Fetter, on the end of the balcony during the explosive AMA-SMA game, which saw the Streaks lose 96-92. It was a heartbreaker. KEEPING UP with a sophomore, frosh Chuck Knapp listens diligently while lan McKnight contemplates just what it is that he is hearing in first year Spanish lab. 162 — Individuals — Ninth Grade PRIVILEGE LIST man Bill Farley decides on parallel reading and paperback purchases during the Book Fair. Over 100 titles gave Bill a wide selection. George Dunaway Bob Eick Tim Emmett Jim Epperson Gerald Erambert Bill Farley Doug Fetter Joe Garry Greg Gillette John Goyne John Gray Jeff Greatorex Steve Gruhn Larry Haning Tom Hash Dave Holland Randy Hollingsworth Richardo Indart Paul Jacobs Bruce Karcher Kevin Kint Ninth Grade — Individuals — 163 Chuck Knapp Ira Koonan Brad Lethaby Bob Mallett Mike Mariner Steve Martin Don Massie Gary McGinness Tom McKibbin Mike Minunni Bob Missman Murray Mitchell Steve Mitzel Allan Moorefield Brad Myers Joe Paulsen Don Perez Jim Piersall Conrod Poluito Mike Pugh Bruce Quigley Mike Reilly Brad Robinson Heath Rock Lewis Shapiro Greg Snellings Chuck Staples Diego Suarez Dave Taubman Warren Vaiden Eric Vamos Jeff Van Horn Bill Webb Dave Welsh Dave Zook Ninth Grade — Individuals — 165 INFORMALITY is the scene during night help classes. Mark Cardwell probes into science with more depth during one of the evening scenes. Bill Adomeit Randy Armstrong Dave Austin Frank Badalson Harry Baldwin Tom Barnes Greg Bartlett Kurt Benson Wayne Bowers Ray Bradley Mark Cardwell Carlos Castro John Clanahan Blaine Clarke Mike Coeyman Larry Coleman Tim Cooper Doug Driscoll Jeff Dryer Roger Dyer 166 — Individuals — Tenth Grade Jim Fields John Fields Rick Francis Jeff Gessling John Ghiorsi Gil Gilger Greg Girard Barry Granofsky Ralph Hamilton Al Harvell Jim Hash Sam Hendrix Sophs discover new leader in Cooper, tapped as captain Since Tim Cooper was the only tenth grade cadet selected first to act as a Company Cap- tain, and then to wear the rank, the other members of the class discovered that in Tim, they had a representative. Football star, Privilege List man, and a la- crosse fiend, Tim listened to problems from new cadets to new new cadets. Number one man in the school on the Honor Roll every marking period was Pup Malnati, first sergeant, RECALL assistant editor, and another lacrosse child. Right on his heels was John Paul, a new cadet. Shocking himself, Jack Paulsen hit Honor Roll and devoted time to the Lower School. SNAP UP and that’s what Larry Thiel does for a nervous Doug Driscoll during May 30th ceremonies in Lexington. Doug was selected as the representative of California. BACK, HARRY, BACK. Screams from the sidelines clarifies Harry Baldwin's position, and he backs away from the ac- tion at the goal in the EMHS soccer game just in time. pm Tenth Grade — Individuals — 167 Manuel Herdade W ayne Heulitt Charlie Hillsman Walt Hipkins Dave Hodges Lester Johnson Mark Kalkhof Lewis Kennett Mike Kidd Ed Lentz Sophomores generate scholastic contest Even with Pup Malnati out in front, the race was on among Manuel Herdade, Harry Bald- win, lan McKnight, Steve Traylor, and Rick Whitaker. Right behind these were Doug Dris- coll, Mark Cardwell, George Rowland, and Herb Maher. In fact, only did the tenth graders prevent the Honor Roll from being the sole domain of the seniors. Most interesting avocation of the group was that of Jim Hash who ordered snakes, sought information on herpetology, and had as his supreme desire the acquisition of a real, live, spitting cobra from India. 168 — Individuals — Tenth Grace Sam Linkswiler George Littrell Dean Lohman Griff Lohman Larry Longenette Herb Maher Donald Malnati Brian McCabe George McCoach Dave McCulloch lan McKnight Ross Mitchell Reed Nettles Jay Nolan Steve Null Charlie Oldfield John Paul Doug Pennock Mike Perdue Jaime Pico-Seda Rob Predale Mark Raab Stan Rasbeary Duane Roberts George Rowland Al Samuels Curt Selby Bill Shipp Ron Slagle Bruce Strange Paul Thomson Steve Traylor Larry Wallace Rick Whitaker Sam Wysong Al Zayas MOMENT OF MEANING thrusts thoughts about All Saints mass to the front for Rob Predale, Mike Reilly, Karl Haleamau, and Jeff Peck when Father Cosby distributes communion. HAPPY PUPS, but soggy ones are Bob Missman, Pup Malnati, Dave Welsh, and Scott Curry when the news hits AMA that the basketball team is in fact 1 in the VSML. Tenth Grade — Individuals — 169 ALERT, helped a bit by NH,OH, are Paul Kime, Gary BACK IN ORDER is Bob Mallett and the Junior Roller Understein, Sandy Henderson, Brent Lethaby, and Steve _ Rifles. First sergeant of ‘F’ company kept Bob busy. Studies Trent when Col. Paul Hoover activates. were also a burden. Eleventh grade men think of transcripts Speeches by college representatives, advice from Major Ed Hart, and harrassed expressions on the faces of seniors made many 11th grade men realize that the transcripts could mean the difference in acceptance or rejection. Suddenly there were volunteers for the newspaper, yearbook, and Cotillion Club. Men who had hit the sack began to hit the links, the pool, or the dirt for the big ‘A’. Bouncing onto the Honor Roll were Steve Bunce, Dan Jenkins, Paul Kime, Dan Rapp, Ray Smith, and Mike Stone. Cadets wanted longer Mike Misoreeh Ded Ravecret poder a : Andy Becker Cam Bell Joe Berman credits in yearbooks and transcripts. Seen Beinn Seana a jim Clark 170 — Individuals — Eleventh Grade Al Clarke Bill Dulaney Joe Fries Karl Haleamau Bill Hummer Wade Kilmer Chuck Clarke Rick Ellett Burt Glick Bob Hartkopf Mark Jefferies Paul Kime Gary Cripps Jay Ent Joe Goldberg Mike Hayes Dan Jenkins Andy Lee Ruy Delgado Mark Femrite Garry Granger Sandy Henderson Mike Kenyon Dick Legard Don Dixon Scott Frantz Tom Gregory Gary Hughes Brad Kesner Rick Maschak Eleventh Grade — Individuals — 171 Wayne McGowan Tom McLean Steve Morisey Phil Myers Jack Paulsen Steve Pearson x SUMMER PLANNING occupies Miss Marian Breeden, Mike Sisak, and Steve Robertson while at the journalism workshop at Lake Kanuga, N.C. Mike won a scholarship. THE IMPOSSIBLE DREAM becomes reality when Danny Rapp ballets up and eagle eyes in for two points for the Blue Streaks. AMA edged Hargrave by 72-69. 172 — Individuals — Eleventh Grade —.... Juniors make action in gallop for fame Daniel Webster Sisak, spurred on by a neck and neck race with John Paul and Pup Malnati, even made arrangements to bring a buffalo to Fort Defiance. It was all for a lecture in Ameri- can history. In his spare time, he did the lay- outs for the yearbook. Some degree of fame came to Scott Frantz in fencing, Danny Rapp in basketball, Steve Mori- sey in tennis, Jim Clark on the newspaper, Steve Pearson in darkroom work, and to Paul Kime on the red hot rifle team. Communicating with colleges even before seniors had been notified became a favorite of the eleventh grade men. It was almost a first, but they were set, prepared. TENNIS, at last. Steve Morisey exudes the feeling of release after a long, hard winter. His form may leave room for improvement, but practice did just that. Jeff Petersen Dave Rackley Danny Rapp Roger Rodriguez Scott Rosensteen Jim Runions Joe Sabino Franc Seco Mike Sisak Ray Smith Cliff Stern Mike Stone Bill Tolbert Gary Understein Ed Viales Dean Walker Willis Walker Bill Wells Mike Wickun Bob Winstead John Wright | Eleventh Grade — Individuals — 173 BANSHEE YELLS and two points for Jerry Collincini adds two more points in AMA’s astonishing victory over SMA, 113-105, in a true revenge encounter. BUDDIES are Rob Bender and Bela Lagosky just before Andre Studios immortalizes them in black and white for their senior portraits. Both are jockos, too. New cadet seniors get with the program Post graduates enrolled in increasing num- bers. Most discovered they were classified as seniors, since they lacked units which would satisfy AMA’s requirements for graduation. Close checks of their activities and achieve- ments proved that they rapidly ‘got with the program’. Nearly every one of the NCS men received rank, and only one or two failed to register on the Privilege List or the Honor Roll. 174 — Individuals — New Cadet Seniors Earning a perfect 4.0 average, Bob Perkins raised his rank and left for college shortly after the first semester. Second highest new cadet was Dennis Dixon, with Terry Abrams, Rob Bender, Jim Brown, and Jerry Collincini breath- ing right down his point average. Best new cadet senior honors went to Dale Tewksbury, an athlete, an Honor Roll cadet, and the best all-around new man. TERRY ABRAMS Cherry Hill, New Jersey PFC, Football; Honor Roll. ROBIN L. BENDER Schwenksville, Pennsylvania Pvt., Football, Honor Roll. WILLIAM M. BROERE Sparta, New Jersey PFC, Football, Honor Roll. JAMES H. BROWN Syracuse, New York Pvt., Soccer, Honor Roll, Baseball. DANIEL J. CLADARELLI Wescosville, Pennsylvania Pyt., Football, Basketball, Baseball, Privilege List. GERALD M. COLLINCINI Greensburg, Pennsylvania PFC, Football, Basketball, Honor Roll. JAMES M. DELONG Slatington, Pennsylvania PFC, Football, Privilege List. DENNIS F. DIXON Ashland, Kentucky Cpl., Soccer, Honor Roll. RANDY W. FREY Slatington, Pennsylvania Pvt., Football, Track, Privilege List. WILLIAM M. FURR Kinston, North Carolina PFC, Football, JV basketball, Honor Roll. JAMES J. GOATE Clifton Heights, Pennsylvania Pvt., Football, MSL, Basketball, Baseball, Honor Roll. H. BAXTER HAYES Charlotte, North Carolina PFC, Basketball, Honor Roll. THOMAS M. HENNESSY Havertown, Pennsylvania PFC, Football, VMSL, Honor Roll. JOHN JAY JOHNSON Newtown, Pennsylvania Pvt., JV football, Baseball, Honor Roll. WILLIAM C. KLUNK Downingtown, Pennsylvania PFC, Football, Honor Roll. New Cadet Seniors — Individuals — 175 MICHAEL F. LAGOSKY Allentown, Pennsylvania Cpl., Football, Privilege List. FRED L. LAPISH Charlotte, North Carolina Pfc., Basketball, Baseball, Honor Roll. JEFFREY D. PECK Allegany, New York Pvt., JV football, JV basketball, Lacrosse, Privilege List. ROBERT W. PERKINS College Park, Maryland Pfc., JV football, RECALL, Honor Roll. (Withdrew prior to graduation) TERENCE R. SMITH Severna Park, Maryland Pvt., Football, Lacrosse, Privilege List. RAYMOND A. SNAPP Mathias, West Virginia Pfc., Basketball, Baseball, Privilege List. ALBERT J. STANKO Allentown, Pennsylvania Pvt., JV basketball, Baseball, Honor Roll. ROY A. STAUFFER Emmaus, Pennsylvania Cpl., Basketball, Baseball, Honor Roll. 176 — Individuals — New Cadet Seniors KEITH E. LOBACH Slatington, Pennsylvania Cpl., Football, Track, Honor Roll MARTIN L. STORY Roselle Park, New Jersey Pvt., Football, Lacrosse. Life sparks with advent of new seniors Yells, cheers, cat calls, and applause greeted ‘Kitty’ Lobach as ‘she’ let everyone see the la- test in fashion. Strange wanderings on the stoops were typical of Bela Lagosky and Rob Bender. Vocalizing at informals placed Rob Bender and Bill Broere in the spotlight. Every day the Commandant’s office was on the go, checking on new cadet senior action. A tie for greatest improvement would have to go to Bill Furr and Bill Klunk. MIXING IT UP. Marty Story and Keith Lobach pour out the personality on Mary Fields and Linda Grones during the early October cook-out and informal dance. Lacrosse gained with the entry of new cadet seniors. Terry Smith, Jeff Peck, Marty Story, and Terry Abrams joined ‘Big Ed’s’ men in batting heads and sticks even while the snow was still covering the ground. Bulk of the great basketball team of ’70 was formed by new cadet seniors. Roy Stauffer, Jerry Collincini, Baxter Hayes, Ray Snapp, Fred Lapish, and Jim Goate helped with making the Blue Streak cagers the team of the year. SHIFTY PAIR. Wayne Trotter (12) and Dale Tewksbury (23) pair up, and Wayne’s pass gives the Streaks a short gain against the Mountaineers. GMS won, however, by 19-6. DALE M. TEWKSBURY Endicott, New York Pfc., Football, Track, Honor Roll. WAYNE R. TROTTER Red Bank, New Jersey Pvt., Football, VMSL, Baseball, Privi- lege List. FREDERICK J. VASCONI Endicott, New York Pfc., Football, Track, Honor Roll. DAVID MARC VEREEN Harelock, North Carolina Pvt., Honor Roll. THOMAS L. WALKER Portsmouth, Virginia Pfc., Football, JV Basketball, Track, Honor Roll. BRUCE B. WINSTEAD Columbia, Maryland Pvt., RECALL, Baseball, Honor Roll. New Cadet Seniors — Individuals — 177 VERSATILE MAN. Ray Marcantoni pads up for a rugged session of lacrosse. Mid-field and attack are Ray’s positions in the sport that he likes the best. BUDDIES STICK TOGETHER in lacrosse, in Minnesota, and even in Cleveland. Larry Thiel and Ron Melcher pose fora picture, obviously, in November . . . lacrosse happy. 4 BF ae ra 7 LAWRENCE TRENT THIEL Alexandria, Virginia Lt. Col., 5; Lacrosse, 2-5: Football. 1-4; Fencing, 1-3; Honor Commit- tee, 5; Roller Rifles, 2-5; Ad Astra, 3-5; Advisory Board, 5; Privilege List, 5, 178 — Individuals — Old Cadet Seniors — Big 3 RAPHAEL E. MARCANTONI, III Baltimore, Maryland Major, 7; Lacrosse, 4-7; Honor Committee, president, 7; Wrestling, 2-5; Cotillion Club, president, 7; Roller Rifles, 4-7; Advisory Board, 7; Privilege List, 7. A JEFFREY GRAVES WENZEL Winchester, Virginia Captain, 3; Honor Committee, 3; Outstanding Teenager of America, 3; Cotillion Club, 2, 3; Roller Rifles, 2, 3; RECALL, 2, Editor, 3; Honor Roll, 1-3; Quill and Scroll, 3. Staff seniors mold rapport among corps Eating together, working together, and think- ing together, the Big Three, Larry Thiel, Ray Marcantoni, and Jeff Wenzel, listened to the rumbles in the corps. Fortunately they had en- trée to Col. Malcolm Livick and to Capt. Charles Dillow. Head sessions on Saturday mornings pointed out ways in which unity could have a deeper meaning. No one believed that Larry Thiel or Jeff Wenzel ever slept. Larry was on the stoops, watching, listening, sometimes, shouting. Jeff was quietly honchoing the members of the RECALL staff into a state of schizophrenia. Quiet man of the trio, Ray Marcantoni added just that salving spirit to help make things go more smoothly. President of the Cotillion Club while the Winter Festival was initiated, Ray sweated out the plans for Final Ball. Jeff heads to Montana, Ray to the U. of Cin- cinnati, and Larry to police action. They will spread their own revolution. ANIMATED and no longer deadpan, Jeff Wenzel pours on the charm for Carol (Muff) Pirie at the Stuart Hall Winter Formal. RECALL is finished, obviously. FRESHLY PINNED, the big staff forms into a unit. Paul Ritchey, Steve Trent, Ray Marcantoni, Jeff Wenzel, Bob Crozier, and Larry Thiel head off the field at last. Senior captains use chain of command SPOTLIGHT is on Steve Trent as he receives the award for the Most Improved Cadet. Col. C. £. Savedge checks the disbelief on Steve’s face when he receives books. HAPPY TALK goes on between Roberto Gomez and Vicky Wright during the Military Ball. Note the latest style in slow dancing — no hands up. Upgraded to Major, Bob Crozier, an eight year man, changed in personality and tactics. Quite adequately, he became known as the ‘Enforcer’. Smiling, friendly, and working with every one of the officers, Bob meant his posi- tion of adjutant to be an important one. Another Major was Lee Hall, quick with the quip, quick with action as commander of Band. As the only new, cadet member of Ad Astra, Lee’s past performance proved his abil- Ity. Conservative Steve Trent, effusive Bob Gom- ez, cougar tamer Jorge Rovirosa, and versatile Ron Melcher rounded out the Big 6. Steve remained the great debater in the corps, swearing still by George Wallace. Happiness came to Bob Gomez when he was admitted to Norwood as a future engi- neer. Laughing, fencing, loving Jorge Rovirosa found a real home in Virginia’s valley. Surpris- ing himself, Ron Melcher made the PL, worked on RECALL, and jocked daily. FIVE O'CLOCK SHADOW hits Bob Crozier, waiting to go out on the stoops and spot any unauthorized action. The captain’s rank became major’s insignia in March. SWEET ‘SCOOTCH’, Ron Melcher, smiles demurely in the fashion show segment of Talent Show Winter Festival. Note the soft lace, and the last word in hair styles. ene POURING IT ON SMA gives great pleasure to Jorge Rovirosa, Lee Hall, and Tim Heath. But right next to Lee is brother Jim, who just happens to be from SMA. The unforgettable tally was 113-105. ROBERT D. CROZIER Laeger, West Virginia Major, 8; Adjutant, 8; Roller Rifles, 6-8; Vespers, president, 7, 8; Best Platoon, 7; Junior Roller Rifles, com- mander, 4-8. LEE MEBANE HALL Tangier, Morocco Major, 6; Commander, Band, 6; Ad Astra, 5, 6; Roller Rifles, 4-6; Best Company, 5; Tennis, 3-5; Soccer, 5, 6; Privilege List, 1-5; Wrestling, 3; Honor Committee, 6. ROBERTO M. GOMEZ Santo Domingo, D.R. Captain, 4; Roller Rifles, 2-4; Soccer, 2-4; Privilege List, 2, 3. RONALD P. MELCHER Cleveland Ohio Captain, 5; RECALL, 5; Roller Rifles, 3-5; Fencing, 1-5; JV lacrosse, 2, 3} Varsity Lacrosse, 4, 5; Soccer, 5; Cotillion Club, 5; Final Ball, 5; Swimming, 1. JORGE P. ROVIROSA Coral Gables, Florida Captain, 6; Roller Rifles, 3-6; JV lacrosse, 3-5; Varsity lacrosse, 6; Fencing, 3-6; Altar Boy, 3-6; Honor Roll, 4-6; Honor Committee, 6; Track, 1; Pin-Up Court, 5. STEPHEN GRIMSLEY TRENT Portsmouth, Virginia Captain, 7; Roller Rifles, 5, 6, 7; Color Guard, 4, 5; Privilege List, 7; Most Improved Cadet, 6; Officer in charge, Armory, 7. Captains — Old Cadet Seniors — Individuals — 181 K. GARY NICHOLSON GEORGE ROBIN HARRIS Upper Marlboro, Maryland Portsmouth, Virginia SERGIO D. ASTORGA Captain, 5; Swimming, 1; JV Managua, Nicaragua Captain, 6; Track, 1; Karate, 4; Roller lacrosse, 3-5; JV football, 4; Junior Rifles, 5, 6; Color Guard, 5; Honor Roller Rifles, 2-4; Roller Rifles, 3-5; Sgt., 2; Track, 1, 2; Swimming, 1; Roll, 3; Privilege List, 6. Privilege List, 2-4. Honor Roll, 2. LOWER SCHOOL LEADER, Gary Nicholson, receives his { brass from his mother on a cold, windy, October ' afternoon. Pass in review follows, honoring his mother. i TROUPING IN REVIEW, Robin Harris yells out the command, loud and clear, for ‘eyes right’ at the reviewing stand. Blaine Clarke, and Paul Ritchey listen to the order. Captains, racer hit 27, 28, 30 in class Slowly emerging from reticence, George ,; Harris bore down on his company when he ; © was thrust into command _ position. gps ‘ George even improved grades and ended up te --— on the Privilege List, proof of what he could do. geste String bean Gary Nicholson worked off his energies in sports from the first year at AMA. Commander of the most difficult post — ‘F oe : BS Troop’ — Gary listened to his lads’ problems : and strove for unity and achieved it. One year of preparation, number 46 in the tea as class in September, but number 30 in the | spring . . . Sergio Astorga not only raced in track events; he put on an academic surge which brought him real respect. SPANISH SPEEDSTER Sergio Astorga pulls out the stops and races to a first place finish in the 440. His training es began while snows still flew at AMA. _ 7) 182 - Individuals — Old Cadet Seniors — Captains JAMES J. BLAUCH Lebanon, Pennsylvania Sgt., 2; Fencing, 1, 2; Band, 1, 2; Privilege List, 1. PLAYFUL CHARACTER. Harry Campbell — glances surreptitiously at Charlie Pascale. Prentice Ball, Fran Rametta, and Jim Gary transmit during ‘Stalag 17’ action. d’Orsay plugs way, leads senior class Arches fell, cameras clicked, negatives be- came pictures, and Col. Webb drove calm Bill d'Orsay out of his skull; but he hung in there as 1970’s valedictorian. Saxophones and organs jumped to life when Jim Blauch began to perform. Usually quiet, Jim became animated when music was men- tioned. He can even compose rock. Ladies’ man Harry Campbell struggled with rides to Staunton, ostensibly for RECALL ads. Actor, orator, and date hound, Harry managed to keep the fourth stoop tower in a state of funny confusion. READY TO JUMP. Bill d’Orsay wills his lens to Steve Pearson and L. P. Malnati thinks it’s funny when Bill threatens to jump from the Washington monument — only if color film is used. OFFERTORY at St. Francis finds Jim Blauch and Cam Bell solemn and dignified before they present the ciborium and chalice to Father Cosby during cadet participation at mass. Richmond, Virginia BILLIE JOE d’ORSAY Valedictorian, 2. HAROLD W. CAMPBELL M Sgt., 6; Orator medal, 3; RECALL, 5; Junior Roller Rifle, 1, 2; Drama Club, 4, 5; Honor Roll, 1-5; Privilege List, 1-6; Mgr., Football, 2. Port Elizabeth, South Africa SSg., 2; Outstanding Teenager 2; RECALL, 1, 2; Superior Cadet, MT 1; Honor Roll, 1, 2; Quill and Scroll, 2; Old Cadet Seniors — Individuals — 183 ROBERT PAGE ECHOLS Norfolk, Virginia 1st Lt., 5; Band, 1-5; Fencing, 2-5; Soccer, 2; Superior Cadet, MT 3, 4; Honor Roll, 1, 3; Privilege List, 4, 5. DONALD F. FITZGERALD Maplewood, New Jersey Msg., 2; Football, 2; Track, 1; Privilege List, 2. JOHN BERRY FOSTER Winston Salem, North Carolina Ssg., 2; JV football, 1, 2; Honor Roll, 1; Privilege List, 2. DONALD L. GABLE Meadville, Pennsylvania Pfc., 2; JV lacrosse, 2; Fencing, 1, 2; Privilege List, 2. JOSEPH F. GALLEHUGH, JR. Elizabethtown, North Carolina Ssg., 2; Bayonet, 1, editor, 2; JV football, 1, 2; Track, 1; Privilege List, ‘ls CHARLES RONALD GINNS West Chester, Pennsylvania 2nd Lt., 5; RECALL, 2-5, head photographer, 4, 5; Quill Scroll, 3-5; CSPA gold medal, 4; Roller Rifles, 5; Honor Roll, 5. eS = ai SPIT AND POLISH man, Berry Foster, keeps up his name as one of the neatest men at Augusta. And it’s not for an in- spection, but merely for a school day. BORAX BEADS ONLY and no beads show around the neck for Bob Echols working in chemistry lab on qualitative analyst. Failures at first later brought success. ALERT LISTENERS are Band men Dean Lake, Jeff Jackard, and Don Gable. They are about to erupt into complete disagreement. They can be counted on for this. RECEIVING END OF THE CAMERA for once. Ron Ginns, now a lieutenant, is captured on film as his mother pins on his rank of office. Bill d’Orsay preserves it. NEWSPAPERS AND TAR HEEL evoke thought from Joe Gal- lehugh, faced with the task of revamping the ‘Bayonet’. It could be the moment he decided on new make-up. BLITZ BY FITZ. Don Fitzgerald grimaces under the strain of propelling the shot put in practice. In meets, the strain was even greater, as records fell. Publications busy creative graduates Bronica laden Ron Ginns scooted all over grounds, above ground and underground. It was all for the sake of capturing on film life in action. This, Ron did for four years, including the developing and printing of all pix in the RECALL and ‘The Bayonet’. Ron’s proudest moments came with his rank of number seven on the Honor Roll. Beaver busy Joe Gallehugh struggled with French, smashed through the line in football, and produced a brand new newspaper. His laugh belied his deeply serious vein. One of the stellar Band men, Joe was selected as the first ‘Bayonet’ member to attend CSPA. Band men Bob Echols and Don Gable were as opposite as possible. Ladies’ man, date of the Winter Festival Queen, Bob tempered books with extracurricular play. Don, quiet, sedate, and introspective, came alive when he found that he could poke fun at Jeff Jackard. Herpetologist Don Fitzgerald made himself known rapidly. Hard-to-know Berry Foster dis- played academic prowess and guts in JV foot- ball. Fitz’s greatest distinction, of course, was his being last man in the class. Old Cadet Seniors — Individuals — 185 DOUBLE TEAMED is Ron Guilliams and he seems happy about the whole matter. Nancy Perkins’ expression, however, leads to many pertinent questions. TENNIS, Ohio style, intrigues Jose Gutierrez when Tim Hann begins his rapid-fire discussion of the game, not even on the courts. Jose’s English was priceless. Senior Spanish men destroy lingo wal Just a touch of an accent, a heavy tan, and an ability to charm his peers, the faculty and WOMEN made Rollo Gutierrez the playboy of the Senior Class. He broke down the wall when he emerged as number two man among seniors. Jose Gutierrez picked up English slow- ly, but his fractured speech gave joy to quite a few of his friends. Take a slide-rule, add problems in math, physics, or chemistry and you have one very satisfied Ron Guilliams. Accepted at VMI, he is determined to make math a major part of his 186 — Individuals — Old Cadet Seniors curriculum at the Institute. Trackster Bob Gooch burned cinders in aca- demics and rose to number four in the class. Quiet at AMA, he’s a different soul when he is in Georgetown for the holidays. Just as quiet is Harmon Groves who still claims that West Virginia turkeys are best. Set- tling down, Harmon went from Privilege List to Honor Roll status in sure, slow sweeps. Clown of the class might be Tim Hann, ath- lete, mischief maker, and student. Some of his trips are plainly unprintable in a publication. TAKING OVER, Rollo Gutierrez wins Martha Reese from departed Larry Reed. Rollo’s scene is during an informal when he turned on all the charm for Stuart Hall. BUMS AWAY! Bob Gooch and Harmon Groves just look that way as they relax on a retired cannon in front of bar- racks. Later Harmon started stringing beads. Wow. ROBERT A. GOOCH McLean, Virginia Ssg., 2; Track, 1, 2; JV basketball, 1, 2; Honor Roll, 1, 2. HARMON F. GROVES Petersburg, West Virginia Sgt., 2; Privilege List, 1; Honor Roll, Zs RONALD L. GUILLIAMS Roanoke, Virginia Msg., 4; Honor Roll, 2-4; Roller Rifles, 4; Color Guard, 4. JOSE G. GUTIERREZ Granada, Nicaragua RAUL J. GUTIERREZ Key Biscayne, Florida Sgt., 2; RECALL, 1, 2; Football, 1; Honor Roll, 1, 2. TIMOTHY F. HANN Chesterland, Ohio Ssg., 4; Guidon, 3, 4; JV basketball, 1; Soccer, 2-4; JV lacrosse, 2, 3; Lacrosse, 4; Privilege List, 2. Old Cadet Seniors — Individuals — 187 HUGH TIMOTHY HEATH, III Kinston,: North Carolina SFC, 2; Band, 1, 2; JV basketball, 1; Privilege List, 1, 2. ROLAND G. HILL, III Lynchburg, Virginia Sgt., 2; Band, 1, 2; Football, 1, 2; Karate, 1; Lacrosse, 1, 2; Honor Roll, L. WILLIAM MARK HILLSMAN Amelia, Virginia Sgt., 2; Band, 1, 2; ‘Bayonet’, 2; Honor Roll, 1. JOSEPH IRELAND, JR. Upper Marlboro, Maryland Pvt., 6; Privilege List, 1, 2. JEFFERY R. JACKARD Cumberland, Maryland Ist. Sgt., 3; ‘Bayonet’, 2; Debater, 1, 2; Fencing, 1-3; Honor Roll, 1-3. W. HERMAN JENKINS, JR. Cherry Hill, New Jersey Pvt., 2; JV football, 2; Honor Roll, 2. 188 — Individuals — Old Cadet Seniors WITHOUT INSTRUMENTS, but ready to make music at all times are Winky Hill, Timmy Heath, and Mark Hillsman. Winky still wears those white socks, obviously. QUIET DISCUSSION of college plans loom in the thoughts of serious minded Joe Ireland and Herman Jenkins. Jenks wonders about his major for college — MD, DDS, or MVD. EMPHATIC about his subject on conscription, Jeff Jackard utilizes all of his knowledge gained from economics’ classes to refute costs of drafting men. Quiet men note beats from Band’s seniors Band’s second place win in Alexandria And certainly he was on furlough. brought gloom to Augusta. Noted first were Teachers’ pet was the title acquired by the large number of Band men who were spunky Jeff Jackard. Instigator and man behind graduating in June. Right in there were Winky _ the scenes, he had the firm support of Big Tim, Hill Tim Heath, Mark Hillsman, and Jeff Jack- Col. Glenn, Col. P.V., and of all of his teachers. ( ard. Academic prowess became Tim Heath's bag As quiet as Joe Ireland and Herm Jenkins as he jumped from 30th to 13th in the senior seemed to be, each was rather different. Joe class. Mischief maker Tim frequently joined fl could probably equal any AP review of a TV Jeff in making the Band barracks rock. show, and he certainly could outdo Judith Withdrawn, but gentlemanly, exacting and Crist on movies. Herm, on the other hand, was ambitious, Mark Hillsman set as his goal jour- vocal on the gridiron and on the track field. _ nalism and made the ‘Bayonet’ his scene. Old Cadet Seniors — Individuals — 189 MAULING SMA, Marc Lambert closes in for a crunching tackle in the taut Hilltopper — JV Blue Streak encounter. Marc’s defense helped in the 26-8 smashing win. EARNED REVIEW. Randy Johnson thinks back over his post graduate year at Augusta during the grand finale, the Gra- duates’ Parade on Saturday afternoon. EVENLY MATCHED are the dual twins. Frank Saenz, Brian Lethaby, Ron Guilliams, and Brent Lethaby (with Jose Saenz out of the picture) form the alert Color Guard. Twin color bearers confuse senior class Inspiration put the Lethaby twins and the Saenz twins on the Color Guard. It did lead to utter confusion. Brent and Brian were even able to substitute for one another without anyone’s being the wiser. Shooting up, Jim Johnson grew in stature, and spread himself all over the place. His sense of humor was outstanding all year, even during the directory turmoil. 190 — Individuals — Old Cadet Seniors With a sense of humor that doesn’t stop, Marc Lambert even managed to bring girls up to the third stoop! A pun man, he rapidly gained favor with Col. Wilfred Webb. Cadets acknowledged that Randy Johnson was ‘a good. all-around” guy’. Athlete, journalist, and student, he was a_ popular person, just as was fun-man Dean Lake, whose ability is just about limitless and untapped. OUTSPOKEN DEAN LAKE debates during the Lit-Awards Assembly at Finals. Dean’s bit helped earn a medal for him, and his side won the conscription question. COMPETING on who can do the most decorating for the Final Ball, Bill Dulaney and Jim Johnson also share an inter- est in the same girl from Stuart Hall. D. A. RANDALL JOHNSON South Plainfield, New Jersey SFC, 2; Mess Hall Officer, 2; ‘Bayonet’, 1, sports editor, 2; RECALL, sports, 2; Football, 1, 2; Honor Roll, 2; Quill and Scroll, 2. JAMES ALLEN JOHNSON Kennedyville, Maryland 1st Lt., 5; RECALL, index editor, 5; Cotillion Club, 3, 4, 5; Final Ball 3, 4, 5; Honor Roll, 1-3; Roller Rifles, 5; Rifle Team, 4. DEAN A: LAKE Shelbyville, Illinois Ssg., 3; Band, 3; Track, 1; Debater, 2, 3; JV football, 1; Fencing, 1-3; Honor Roll, 1, 2; RECALL, 2. MARC P. LAMBERT Alexandria, Virginia Sgt., 2; JV football, 1, 2; JV lacrosse, 1, 2; Privilege List, 1, 2. BRENT E. LETHABY Erie, Pennsylvania Ssg., 2; Color Guard, 2; Roller Rifles, 2° JV ‘football, 1, 2¢ Track; Ty 25 Privilege List, 1, 2. BRIAN C. LETHABY Erie, Pennsylvania Ssg., 2; Color Guard, 2; Roller Rifles, 2; JV football, 1; Privilege List, 1, 2. Old Cadet Seniors — Individuals — 191 GREGORY T. MARSTELLER Vienna, Virginia 1; JV lacrosse, 3. HOT LINE to beautiful dates! John McGraw, whose taste in dates was unquestioned, takes the phone from a disgusted Joe Fries, who had expected the call to have been his. WITH GUSTO Greg Marsteller adds his sounds to those of the big Band. Roller Rifles, parades, and even marches to school are better because of the sharp notes. JUNIOR’S NOT SURPRISED as he finds a pair of Black Chucks at Christmas. Tom Gregory, Lt. Eric Adamson, Steve Pearson, and Mark Femrite watch Chuck Minor. SHOWING HiM HOW. Doug McMullan shows his young- er brother just how to finesse when psychedelic music is the beat. The scene is during Parent’s Weekend. 192 — Individuals — Old Cadet Seniors Ssg., 3; Band, 1-3; Fencing, 1; Track, KEITH LELAND MAY Royal Oak, Michigan Capt., 4; Roller Rifles, 2-4; Honor Roll, 3; RECALL, 1, 3, 4; Baseball, 1. CHARLES OLVIN MINOR Richmond, Virginia Sgt., 2; RECALL, 2; Cotillion Clu secretary, 2; Quill Scroll, 2; | football, 2; JV lacrosse, 1; Hon Roll, 1, 2. ROBERT McKAY MITCHELL Erie, Pennsylvania DOUGLAS R. McMULLAN Lt., 3; Football, 2; Swimming, 2; JV JOHN JOSEPH McGRAW Laurel, Maryland lacrosse, 2; Roller Rifles, 2, 3; Camp Hill, Pennsylvania Cotillion Club, 3; Talent Show MC, 3; Privilege List, 1-3. SFC, 2; JV football, 1, 2; Lacrosse, 1, Cpl., 2; Privilege List, 1. 2; ‘Hillsmen’, 2; Privilege List, 2. Senior Bob Mitchell plans Talent Show Imitations of everyone, a cadet as jolly as St. Nick, a bundle of energy and concern. That was Bob Mitchell, one of the most popular men in the corps. He brought taste and dis- tinction to his own planned Talent Show dur- ing Winter Festival. Mean on the athletic field and a demon in making grades (when he wanted to), Chuck Minor assimilated kidding, women, and a few troubles and then made the RECALL staff laugh with him. Of course, his ambition to be a doc- tor gave him the nickname of Doc, Junior. Another popular kid was Doug McMullan who made things go with the Talent Show owe band. Popular, too, was Keith May, third member of his family to graduate from AMA, and Jeff’s best friend. When trouble struck, he gained respect by the way he emerged from it. Hippy Hipkins found a soulmate in Greg Marsteller, another Band senior. His trips with Walt made the Band grapevine daily. By a margin, Johnny McGraw had the finest looking girls all the time. He’s quiet, but. . . STEADY climber in rank, Bob Mitchell holds back the grin when his mother, Mrs. A. T. Mitchell tears into the cloth as she pins on his rank of office. SUNDAY is the day when Mr. Louis Zbinden greets Bob Crozier with Keith May waiting in the background to say hello to the former pastor of the Old Stone Church. Old Cadet Seniors — Individuals — 193 OLE COWHAND strums out the tunes of the cowboy days and has the class join in for the chorus. Van Rametta pre- sents his oral project in U.S. history class. HELPFUL BULLIT, John Porcher, fixes Randy Ewing’s tie for his formal portrait by Andre’s. John’s help made the picture taking time fly by in one less day. FAITHFUL SPECTATOR, Bill Parkins, Bill Parkins finishes as 12 year veteran One of AMA’s nicest guys graduated as a real veteran of the corps. Bill Parkins, last member of the corps to have been here when AMA had a first grade, has been just about the most loyal sportsman. And never mention VMI — he’s always for VPI. Another one of AMA’s international set, Van Rametta, who toured Europe and contem- plated college in Germany, kept the Rametta record at AMA a lively one. Kind, gentlemanly, and easy going, Van always made noise in the big Band Barracks, at proper times. 194 — Individuals — Old Cadet Seniors When John Porcher (Bullit) arrived at Augus- ta, he brought along his keen mind, his love of living just within the rules, and a drive to learn. He can go just about as far as he wants. Big orchard man from West Virginia, Turner Ramey helped direct Mess Hall activities, skied a bit, and was just about as active as anyone could be. ‘Lights are out . . . get Piazza.’ ‘Who'll run the movies?’ Yet another Band senior, AMA‘s electrician, movie projectionist, and the lad from Meadville left a real vacuum. watches the Blue Streaks down Hargrave by 6-3, much to his satisfaction. An avid sports fan, Bill’s favorite team is VPI. RARE SIGHT is the one of John Piazza with a rifle, but company competition brings him out without his tape, his 35mm film, and without his Band instrument. MIGHTY KICKER is Turner Ramey in action on the soccer field against Eastern Mennonite in the Streaks’ 1-0 win over the Harrisonburg team on home field. E. WILLIAM PARKINS, JR. Fort Defiance, Virginia Msg., 12; Peep Football, 2-5; Baseball, 10. JOHN ANTHONY PIAZZA Meadville, Pennsylvania Lt., 4; Projectionist, 3, 4; Karate, Di Fencing, 3; ‘Bayonet’, 3; Cadet Electrician, 2-4. JOHN BECKLEY PORCHER New York, New York Pvt., 3; RECALL, 2, 3; Quill Scroll, 3; Honor Roll, 2, 3. RICHARD ALLEN PRESSLY Kinston, North Carolina SFC, 6; Fencing, 3; JV lacrosse, 2; Soccer, 3-5; Roller Rifles, 5, 6; Privilege List, 3-6; Cotillion Club, 5. VAN THOMAS RAMETTA Heidelburg, Germany Msg., 2; Tennis, 1, 2; Best New Cadet, 1; Best Marksmanship, MT 1, 1; Rifle Team, 1, 2; Privilege List, 1, Di TURNER A. RAMEY, III Charles Town, West Virginia Msg., 6; Peep Football, 1; Soccer, 5, 6; Roller Rifles, 6. Si, RAGGEDY ALLEN Pressly rushes up the aisle, then leaps on stage and leads the crowd in cheers, to the delight and applause of the crowd during the Talent Show. Old Cadet Seniors — Individuals — 195 STRETCH, MAW. Paul Ritchey fails to realize that he is just a bit taller than his mother, Mrs. J. M. Ritchey. Cloudy skies were not reflected in the happy faces. OOIE, GOOEY are the marshmallows when Marty Ross stabs a duo for him and his date, Crystal McInturff, during the wild cook-out preceding the first informal. BRUCE N. REYNGOUDT Riverdale, New Jersey Ssg., 4; JV football, 1; Football, 2-4; Lacrosse, 1-4; Best Athlete, 3; Roller Rifles, 2-4; Privilege List, 4. PAUL DEAN RITCHEY Alexandria, Virginia Lt., 4; JV basketball, 2; Soccer, 2; Roller Rifles, 4; Privilege List, 3, 4. MARTIN DAVIS ROSS Butler, Pennsylvania Sgt., 2; Karate, 1; Privilege List, 1. HARRY ARTHUR RUBENS Charlotte, North Carolina Pfc., 9-11; Honor Roll, 4-7; Junior Roller Rifles, 5; Privilege List, 11. PETER L. RUSSELL Butler, New Jersey Sgt., 3; Karate, 1, 2; Honor Roll, 1-3; Track, 2; Fencing, 1, 2. FRANCISCO J. SAENZ San Jose, Costa Rica Ssg., 2; Color Guard, 2; Soccer, 1, z; Roller Rifles, 2; Privilege List, 1, 2. 196 — Individuals — Old Cadet Seniors WHERE’S MY TWIN? Frank Saenz glances around during the heighth of the Opening Formal and realizes that Jorge isn’t there. It’s a switch; they’re inseparable. BAM! With just leaps, Pete Russell proves to everyone, in- cluding Keith Lobach, that two years of karate pays off. So does study. Pete is number 7 among seniors. LIKE A FATHER and Col. Malcolm Livick realizes even at the Lower School Christmas party that Harry Rubens has been here for 11 years. Jim Jenkins enjoys the party. ATHLETIC BEAUTY astonishes himself and the crowd at the Talent Show. Brucey Reyngoudt, AMA’s athlete of the year, participates with aplomb at the festivities. Seniors go wild as cagers earn 1 title No one was happier about AMA’s ascent to glory than was Bruce Reyngoudt. Bruce really ‘came out’ in his senior plus year, earning Priv- ilege List and boundless friendships. Accepted by three colleges, karate man Pete Russell had a wide choice of campuses and fields. He’s still intrigued by biology, and he was best in the subject by far. Look alike Frank Saenz (and Jorge) ripped through all opposition in soccer. Color Guard man, student, and ideal cadet, Frank was just as popular as Jorge, and both were great. What will AMA be like without Harry? Soft-spoken, gentle veteran Harry began to gain academic status once more as a senior. Marty Ross gained his fame with a dash of humor and so did Paul Ritchey, the long man who fought off a back ailment successfully. Old Cadet Seniors — Individuals — 197 TRADE-IN. Larry Wilson, letting out sounds on the mouth organ in ‘Stalag 17’, lets off steam. He does the same in barracks on his big, booming electric organ. OYE, OYE — the sounds issue from Jorge Saenz on the soc- cer field in the midst of a frantic practice session. Jorge’s golden toe places the ball right in the net. Class of '70 wraps up year with dam picnic Pounds of steaks, gallons of cokes, and hun- Sg dreds of potatoes formed the staples for the 9 wrap-up of the year — the senior picnic at popular Staunton Dam. John West, big man of the corps, shed pounds, but not friendliness. John’s greatest gain came with his ascending to Honor Roll status. Right along with him was another late comer to the list, Steve Watkins and the usual HR man, Jim Worley. At first Steve believed that nothing would swing without Sweeney, but Ray Smith and Pup Malnati gave him the impetus to achieve and to give out with the words of wisdom. Kicking Jorge Saenz, other half of the duo, gained his letter in outstanding play on the soccer field. Al Sotomayor kept his quiet most of the time, but he made the scene in soccer, too, winning his letter, also. Melodious sounds from an organ meant that complex Larry Wilson was in the mood. A top OD, Larry kept right on pondering, thinking. | | 1] 1 | CRAZY LANGUAGE. Danielo Sotomayor struggles with English. Not even a Spanish dictionary helps. SPACED OUT in thought, Steve Watkins hauls in the knowledge from the cells to give him just the answer. LAUREL AND HARDY? Slim Jim Worley wonders about John West’s plan to pop pop corn after study hour. JORGE ARTURO SAENZ San Jose, Costa Rica Ssg., 2; Color Guard, 2; Color Guard, 2; Roller Rifles, 2; Soccer, 1, 2; Privilege List, 1, 2. A. DANIELO SOTOMAYOR Jinotepe, Nicaragua Sgt., 3; Soccer, 1-3. STEPHEN B. WATKINS Wilmington, Delaware Ssg., 3; Honor Roll, 3; Roller Rifles, 3; JV lacrosse, 2, 3; Privilege List, 3. JOHN NAYLOR WEST Chevy Chase, Maryland SFC, 8; Roller Rifles, 4-8; Football, 7; ‘Bayonet’, 6; RECALL, 5; Peep football, 1, 2; Mgr., baseball, 2; Track mgr., 8; Honor Roll, 8. LAURENCE WHITE WILSON, III Charlotte, North Carolina Sgt., 2; Privilege List, 1; ‘Stalag 17’, 1. JAMES ALFRED WORLEY Kenmore, New York Ssg., 2; Swimming, 1; Honor Roll, 1, 2s Old Cadet Seniors — Individuals — 199 Bob Ahearn Will Eastment Terry Laney Allen Martin John O’Brien Wayne Silverman Old memories linger In unfinished year Problems mushroomed for nine men of the Senior Class, and the year ended before grad- uation in June. For some it was a matter of en- tering college early. Terry Laney finished exams and immediately enrolled at Wooford College. Wayne Silverman, who had made Honor Roll grades, was accepted in a community college outside Philadelphia. Complex problems beset Bob Ahearn who had to be constantly involved in order to be happy. As co-president of the Cotillion Club, he had helped make the cook-out a real suc- cess. Ron Holvey, another HR man and a giant ‘in football, contemplated early arrival in col- lege. Four year man Will Eastment rose to the rank of captain before his withdrawal just be- fore Christmas vacation. Result of a smaller class was a different class rank. CHRISTMAS PARTY for the Lower School men gives Budi Sweeney, Ray Marcantoni, and Bob Ahearn a chance t enjoy the feast, following their decorating chores. 200 — Individuals — Seniors, not graduating WOODPILE LEARNING only occurs in the summer. Mike Burress bones up on his English work and earns that long awaited diploma as summer school ended in August. Summer-time seniors relax, play, graduate When the temperatures warmed up, three men ventured into the area, determined to take one new course, all that they lacked for graduation requirements. Graduating after three years was Conley Newton, a Band regular. Mike Burress had spent one summer school and a regular year at AMA, and Brian McCafferty, one year. But it wasn’t all study for the three. COOL PAST TIME at Staunton Dam gives everyone a chance to breathe clean air and to see clean water. A favorite picnic area, it’s the site of the senior bash in May. Wa ait Sa at r sah : ‘i 2 MICHAEL D. BURRESS BRIAN J. McCAFFERTY CONLEY A. NEWTON WAITING FOR ACTION, the crew watches a softball game Newtown, Pennsylvania Fredericksburg, Virginia in the warmth of a June day. It’s all intramural, but it Poolesville, Maryland doesn’t much matter since it’s fun for the participants. Summer School Seniors — Individuals — 201 BROTHERS in sleep are Ron Ginns and Griff Lohman on the return trip from the George Washington Birthday Parade in Alexandria. Both are sack hounds, anyway. Double, triple sets of brothers startle faculty, students You're Griff. No, your brother is Griff; you are Dean. ‘Where is Brad, no Brent — | mean Brian.’ ‘Well, who are you, Frank or Jorge Saenz?’ It was a year in which sets of brothers seemed to be the ‘in’ thing. Some brothers of teams remain. Jeff Wen- zel’s twin, Joe, graduated last year. Keith May is the third of his brothers to graduate from Augusta, Rick and Jack having gone before him. And some people merely looked like twins, chiefly Rob Predale and Mike Sisak. Two of the Livick brothers can trace their past to an uncle who graduated from AMA, a grandfather and a great-grandtather who are numbered in the alumni books. The Lohmans proclaim their father as an AMA alumnus. Most unusual twin sets were the Saenz and the Lethabys (who were joined by the third brother later), for they were on the Color Guard for added confusion for everyone. Musical brothers were Charlie and Mark Hillsman, both Band members. Mark is the senior and Charlie, the veteran of AMA. 202 — Individuals — Brothers Gerald and Erman Erambert Gary and Mike Hughes Tom and John Hash Mark and Charlie Hillsman | : FOUR FLAGS? Bill d’Orsay captures the twin Saenz and JOIN US! Brian and Brent Lethaby enjoy a visit from Brad Lethabys (sandwiched between is Ron Guilliams) just as and encourage him to enter at the semester break. And lo, they pass a flag pole in the GWBC parade. he did. Note the formal picture below. Paul and Waldo Jacobs Brian, Brad, Brent Lethaby Mal and Charlie Livick Griff and Dean Lohman Brothers — Individuals — 203 Don and Larry Malnati Joe and Jack Paulsen New cadet brothers join AMA old-timers Dynamite came in a small package when Larry Malnati joined his bigger brother, Don. Since Don had earned the nickname of ‘Pup’, Larry gained the title of ‘LP’ — Little Pup, of course. It was only two marking periods before Larry was within .065 points of his first place Honor Roll brother. And LP joined the staff on the yearbook as a darkroom worker — with the aid of a tall stool in order to reach the gigantic enlarger Eight year man Willis Walker was joined by John last year and then Tom, a graduating ca- det, joined the team for a PG year. Tom went wild in football, made the JV Basketball team, and earned Honor Roll ranking. Willis kept on being a stand-by for John Piazza. Twins Bruce and Bob Winstead discovered that one was a senior, the other a junior on entrance. Both had attended summer session in ‘68 and both became popular rapidly. Bruce joined the top ten on the Honor Roll at the third marking periods’ end. Those look-alikes, the Saenz twins, brought the most perplexity to faculty and cadets. Even on the soccer field, they looked alike. CONFUSION really resulted when Rob Predale arrived. Many thought that he was bound to be Mike Sisak’s twin. Rob joined Mike on the Honor Roll and RECALL staff. CARE PACKAGES just might make LP Malnati grow. It is the hope of the Collins family who load him down with packages on a visit to the school in winter, Se ee Rob Predale, Mike Sisak Cesar and Jaime Prieto Franciso and Jor ge Saenz Danielo and Al Sotomayor John, Willis, Tom Walker Bob and Bruce Winstead BLACK LIGHT study fascinates Jaime Prieto who uses his f kid for a study of fluorescent minerals. The interest paid off when he made the Honor Roll at semester’s end. Brothers — Individuals — 205 WARM WELCOME is Mrs. Wilfred Webb’s reward from Col. Malcolm Livick for her help at Commissioning Parade. Mrs. Webb’s return to AMA was a happy one for all. SANTA CLAUS, in the form of Col. Liv ick, and his helper, Mrs. ‘Claus’ (Mrs. Livick, really), help distribute Christmas packages at the Lower School Santa bash. EAGER SPONSORS wait for the cadets to have an intro- duction to the corps. Mrs. F. C. Johnson, Mrs. L. G. Trent, and Mrs. M. H. Livick anticipate the honor. 206 — Individuals — Faculty Col. Malcolm Livick motivates changes COLONEL MALCOLM HARRIS LIVICK Superintendent B.S., University of Virginia; M.S., Madison College ‘am appointing a new Advisory Board and in line with the thinking of today, Cadets Larry Thiel and Ray Marcantoni will serve on the board this year.’ Col. Malcolm Livick’s explo- sive decision created a furor of discussion among cadets and faculty. Not content to stand still, Col. Livick then continued proving that he was concerned about cadet reactions also. Saturday mornings found Cadets Larry Thiel and Jeff Wenzel car- rying on a dialog with him. Both of the cadets realized that it was not a censored discourse, but that any subject was fair game for those morning sessions. Down to the basketball court he would speed in September and October. By Novem- ber he was beginning to realize how much was being demanded of him, and he reluctantly stopped helping Major Jim Hogg with the coaching of the Blue Streak cagers. Right beside him at athletic events, in group assemblies, and at social events was his wife, Mrs. Linda R. Livick. Her daily visits and chats with the cadets reflected the warmth which both had for the cadets and their accomplish- ments at Augusta. With two sons now attend- ing AMA, Mrs. Livick keeps her pulse on the heartbeat of AMA. SHOCKED to find so many people on that formerly spotless gymnasium floor, Col. Livick listens to Mrs. Livick’s insis- tence that dances really are necessary, too. Faculty — Individuals — 207 All cadets flock for succor, discipline ‘May | see you? | need help.’ It was a lament heard daily, hourly by Major John Dekle and Captain Charles Dillow. Versatile Major Dekle squeezed teaching, act- ing as administrative assistant to the superinten- dent duties, and the ordering of rings into a busy, full day. Loving his family, Major Dekle often had to see them at functions at the Academy. And seldom did anyone ever see him in a rage or too pushed to sit down and talk and talk un- til problems melted. Watching over the Band, supervising the cadet store, and ordering shoes were just a few more of his duties. JUST A BRIEF RESPITE from the clamor of Scott and ' Hunt and from the continuous questions from cadets, Major and Mrs. John Dekle simply relax. 208 — Individuals — Faculty Protective about the cadets who lived up to his expectations, Captain Dillow displayed a mighty temper when he felt that the boys had let him and themselves down. But cadets knew that the newly carpeted Commandant’s office was his work and that he wanted the atmosphere to be conducive not only to discipline, but to shared confidences. Officers knew that he could be depended on to give them straight advice and to guide them as better officers. Twin sons were Capt. Dillow’s delight, and Chris, Curtis, and Mrs. Dillow arrived on time for just about every athletic event and for many of the social activities. SHARP MEN are Capt. Chas. Dillow and his assistant, Lt. Howard Sharp, on hand to check the cadets prior to the Parade in Harrisonburg on Veterans’ Day. NOW HEAR THIS, and when he does raise his voice, he means it. Major John Dekle issues suggestions on behavior while visiting Western State Hospital. MAJ. J. H. DEKLE, Jr. CAPT. CHAS. O. DILLOW Administrative Assistant Commandant to the Superintendent U.S. Army, (ret); B.S., Florida Southern, Band, Commandant of the Corps. Sociology, Cadet Store. Faculty — Individuals — 209 FAITHFUL COUPLE are Col. and Mrs. W. L. Gardner out for an afternoon parade in the fall. The orchid was a carry over from the Military Ball on Saturday. TRANSITION from the superintendency of Col. Gardner to that of Col. Livick’s was eased by the cooperation of both. Col. Livick agrees with his philosophy. Col. Gardner plans future retirement Winners in the National Modern Foreign Language Tournament were simply expected from 1946 right on up until 1963 when Col. W. Leonard Gardner was appointed as superinten- dent of the Academy for a three year period. Versatile Col. Gardner also taught geometry during this time and still managed to earn a Masters in Education, with a specialization in remedial reading. Married to the former Mabel Stott of Staun- ton, their daughters are now married to distin- guished AMA alumni. From the time that Col. Gardner was appointed to the faculty, his home became a mecca for AMA boys whose drop-in visits were welcomed by his family. Under Col. Gardner’s guidance, a language laboratory was installed in 1963. His love of French was carried on by his younger daughter who is now majoring in the language at the University of North Carolina. This man simply loves life. A hunter, a camp- er, Col. Gardner shared his love of the out- doors with his family and friends. He puts just as much enthusiasm into sports events of every type as into the outdoors. Kind, gentle, thoughtful, considerate, Col. and Mrs. Gardner look forward to a retirement filled with love and memories. 210 — Faculty — Individuals gomes spray be eel 212 — Individuals — Faculty LT. COL. CHAS. E. SAVEDGE Acting Dean of Cadets A.B., Washington and Lee University; Head, Science Department; Chairman, Advi- sory Board; Adviser, RECALL. Col. Savedge fills headmaster position ‘May | have my class changed? When are reports due for evaluation? How are the pic- tures for the yearbook to be taken? What are the colors for the Final Ball? When are you going to get to work on the catalog? Why don’t you all advertise with us?’ Daily these were a few of the questions which confronted Col. Chas. E. Savedge, who was informed that he would act as Dean of Cadets until Col. McCue could return. Unfortu- nately, Col. McCue was not able to do this, and the chore was one for the entire year. Between chemistry and American history classes, judging yearbooks, and speaking at journalism seminars and workships, Col. Sav- edge found time to help many students in a selection of colleges and to spur some cadets on to better grades and more participation. Probably best remembered by _ his history students will be the trip with the Donners across country to the Sierras. His love of the West receives a real outlet in class when ca- dets do in depth reports on the West. Famous is his dog, Tallulah, and recently ‘Doc’ became renown when he was mistaken in Chicago for Jack Benny. This even made the journalism magazine, ‘Scholastic Editor’. After 23 years at AMA, it is obvious that he loves the school. He’s ‘Doc’ to cadets and par- ents, faculty and alumni. DOC SNAPS, and Ron Ginns groans, positive that the nega- tives will be too dark or too light. Strange, but his color slides of the West are just right. STABBED! Col. Savedge smiles and cries with disbelief as Col. Livick awards him the silver saber at Finals. The award was given for outstanding service to AMA. DUMBFOUNDED is Lt. Hans Wachmeister when his class reaches an impasse during atomic energy study. His humor brought the class back to even keel quickly. SNOW FALL brings the science department out. Capt. Tim Mannasmith, Col. C. E. Savedge, and Major James Hogg try to analyze just when spring will arrive. Science men shock with multi-in terests Every member of the Science Department displayed such a wide range of interests that cadets didn’t believe it was possible. Col. Savedge was not the only member of the department with a dog. Introduced to the corps and the biology classes was the minia- ture collie, Cory, who rapidly became a mas- cot. He owned Capt. Tim Mannasmith, who earned both his Bachelors and Masters degrees from the University of Michigan. An ecologist and forest specialist, Capt. Mannasmith was also a hunter and an avid collector of guns. Biggest man on the faculty, Capt. Manna- smith moved with lightning flashes on the ten- nis courts. His tennis team couldn't believe that he could whip them time after time. Once a week he encouraged Lt. Kupcinski to make the scene with him on the rifle range. Unfortu- nately, scores were never revealed. ‘1 insist. on teaching three different ap- proaches to biology and | want a section in economics!’ Capt. Tim had both wishes grant- ed, but his moans came when study inspection for science came on Sunday nights, and he had to leave his beautiful wife in their lovely home in Harrisonburg. Basketball soared when Major James Hogg, BS, Davidson College, began to coach. Thrill of the year was the AMA romp over SMA on Staunton’s home court. This happened right after an emergency operation had placed him among those without an appendix. He almost popped his stitches from the excitement of the 113 to 105 score. Cadets could also count on seeing Mrs. Hogg at every athletic contest, and when the Major was in the hospital, she was just about the mentor during the tight Massanutten game. Some of the cagers even noticed that their uniforms had been laundered by Mrs. Hogg. Teaching introductory chemistry and_ phys- ics, Maj. Hogg brought stern, fair discipline and a tremendous sense of humor into the classroom, even during the hours when he was concerned about his son in Viet Nam. Leaving Augusta in June, Lt. Hans Wach- meister, who attended VMI and graduated from Bridgewater, rounded out the science men. Coach of JV football, active on the fac- culty hardwood men’s team, and coach of baseball, Lt. Wachmeister will enroll at the College of William and Mary in the graduate school. Happiness came to Lt. Wachmeister when he began to teach a section of biology. Using the traditional approach, he helped AMA put on the boards four entirely different types of approaches to the subject. He’s also a family man with two young children. Faculty — Individuals — 213 214 — Individuals — Faculty TAPES WHIRL with poetry renditions by Lt. David Lane. Imitating the accents and voices of the authors, Lt. Lane injected vitality and created interest. WELL, WHAT ABOUT UPDATING? Col. Wilfred Webb, Lt. David Lane, Major John Fulmer, Maj. Robert Hart, and Col. Glenn Koogler disucuss a red hot topic. i Suave Major Robert Hart, head of the En- glish Department and graduate of Wake For- est, brought in mud on many mornings. A part time farmer, post office employee, banker for cadets, and coach of debaters and declaimers, he still found time to expand his mind by reading, listening to records, and having the largest family of any teacher. That log cabin near the Fort is not Col. Wilfred Webb’s home — it was put there for his sideline love of antiques. Returning to AMA after 17 years away, Col. Webb joined right in with help at social events. He is a graduate of Washington and Lee. Athletic director, beef raiser, and great hunt- er couldn’t apply to anyone but affable Col. Glenn Koogler. Having graduated from Bridge- water, he attended Duke University. DESCRIPTIVE GESTURES add to the effectivness of Ray Snapp’s oral theme. Maj. Robert Hart adds points and listens to Ray’s plea for conservation of lumbering. QUICK REVIEW of the first act is what Maj. Robert Hart expects from John Piazza. The scene is Bridgewater College at intermission of ‘Twelfth Night’. When Jackie Gleason lost weight, Major John Fulmer decided that he could also. A gourmet and upcoming author of a cookbook, he found that the sacrifice was not too difficult. A gradu- ate of Catawba College, Maj. Fulmer has stud- ied at Columbia College. New to Augusta, Lt. David Lane was not a stranger to England, where he studied as a Ful- bright scholar. Earning honors in English at the University of Michigan, Lt. Lane taped plays, stories, and poetry renditions for creation of real student interest in his sophomore English sections. Taking over sponsorship of the news- paper. Lt. Lane accompanied five journalists to SIPA at the University of Georgia in Athens. Skiing at Bryce, living in Broadway, and a racy Mustang rounded out his diversity of out of school action. Hogs, poetry, farming absorb English men Faculty — Individuals — 215 TYPICAL is Col. J. D. Kramer’s look, his folded arms and his white jacket. Shooting questions to the class, he is expecting instant (correct) responses. HUSBAND AND WIFE team are Lt. and Mrs. John Kupcinski. Both enter into the spirit of the Halloween special and enliven the scene on the dance floor. Numbers men reveal novel personalities 216 — Individuals — Faculty Colorful Col. Paul V. Hoover, head of the Mathematics Department, can claim over 100 hours of graduate education courses. Besides his love of learning, he has kept up with cycles for years, buying two, fixing up one, trading another. As the weather breaks, he dons the helmet and leather and takes to the roads into the mountains and passes. Having graduated from Washington and Jefferson, Col. Hoover then earned a Masters in math, and followed this with a Masters of Education, with a specialty in reading. Now he is on a guidance kick and adds more hours to his unbelievable total of post graduate work. Board work kept Col. J. D. Kramer’s students from being bored in first and second year alge- bra classes. A graduate of Bridgewater College, Col. Kramer has never given up his work with his local Democrat party and he has remained active in church work. Everyone knows Lt. John Kupcinski, a gradu- ate of Hiram Scott College. It was not because he specialized in eighth and ninth grade gen- eral mathematics courses. Long before his wife became a secretary in February, he was known because of his understanding and his tales about his years in the Peace Corps. Lt. Kupcin- ski was another graduate student who helped keep the highway filled with teachers running up to Madison College classes. Graduate study made Major William Seaton really keep his nose to the grind stone. Jovial and jolly, Major Seaton daily captured atten- tion of his advanced math students with anec- dotes. Eastern Tennessee State College awarded him a degree in Mathematics. Newest faculy on the math staff was Lt. Wil- liam Hyatt, a graduate of California State Col- lege, who taught two sections of geometry, and three of algebra. He was a late helper in football, and an assistant coach in track. BABY SITTING PROBLEMS can’t stop Major and Mrs. William Seaton from having a great time at the Military Ball. That uniform shows how sharp Maj. Seaton is always. WHAT, NO SOCCER, fencing, or lacrosse? Col. Hoover, coach in each season, utilizes visual aids to illustrate a theorem in his advanced geometry sections. MATH EVALUATION and thoughts about the term for the fall occupy Col. Paul Hoover, Major William Seaton, Lt. William Hyatt, Lt. John Kupcinski, and Col. J. D. Kramer. Faculty — Individuals — 217 BIG 85 waits for the ball to come to him, not to Ron Slagle. The big man is Lt. William Lobb, historian, athlete, and member of the Lower School faculty, too. INTREPID NUCLEUS of the History Department consists of Major Edwin Hart, sitting calmly listening to Major Paul Andrews and Major John Dekle. 218 — Individuals — Faculty Historians’ colorful specialities vary Saved from the Uniform Room, liberated Major Paul G. Andrews, acting head of the ‘dusty men’, graduated from Penn State with both Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees. Instantly he discovered that the extra time gave him more opportunities for fishing, skiing, reading, and visiting. And he did all to his great glee. World history and paperback course, Latin American Asian history were his subjects. Golf balls always found the target when Major Edwin Hart, B.A. Hobart, M.A. Madison, journeyed to the golf course to compete against his golfing rival, Col. Livick. Maj. Hart added to his record the fact that he is now also on the staff of Blue Ridge College. His night classes drew on his knowledge of law and government. American government classes were scenes of constant hassle, especially when communism was the topic. Guidance director, testing authority, and lacrosse coach — he’s a big man. Busy Major John Dekle, a graduate of FSU, rounded out the three constant historians. Lt. Bill Lobb, Major John Fulmer, Capt. Tim Man- nasmith, Lt. Ralph Sassaman, and Col. Chas. E. Savedge rounded out the numbers. Coach, sportsman, government and geog- raphy man, Lt. Sassaman loves football. BOUNCER Ralph Sassaman works out in his spare time. A graduate of Shippensburg State, he plans to do his graduate work there and coach freshmen football. i DOOZY of a catch brings smiles to Curt Selby, Sam Hendrix, Bill Webb (kneeling) and Jim Blauch, Herb Kline, Major Paul Andrews, and Jeff Dryer. Faculty — Individuals — 219 Melodious Maj. Hart sings out in class 220 — Individuals — Faculty Talents popped out at Christmas time when Maj. Case Hart strummed his guitar and sang carols in every language that he knew. An alumnus of the Government College in Hol- land, Maj. Hart is also a world traveler. Col. Rapp and Maj. Hart shared another sim- ilarity; both have sons on the Honor Roll at Augusta. Third member of the trio is Lt. Eric Adamson, a ’69 graduate of the University of Virginia, whose major duties kept him with the Lower School faculty. He is cosmopolitan, and has circled the globe. Married during the Christmas vacation, he brought his lovely wife into the AMA family with frequent attendance at all events. GLOBETROTTERS! Major Case Hart, Col. David Rapp, and Lt. Eric Adamson have all been around the globe. To Tallulah, it sounds good, but means little. WINNERS AGAIN are the red hot faculty cagers, with taut playing by Col. David Rapp, Lt. Bob Gorgrant, Lt. Ralph Sassaman, and Lt. Bill Lobb. INTENSE GLANCES show how much on edge are Lt. Eric Adamson and his wife of one month during a January basketball game. Col. Gardner is concerned also. . a q . a wh Snes New, well traveled i AN Pes linguists educate AGH Gta 7 That alert, ramrod straight, Marine Corps officer, always with a glass shine, was AMA’s new Foreign Language Department head. A visit to nis home would let anyone know how he spent some of his spare time. He took an old farm house and made it into a place of warmth, beauty, and friendliness. Concerned about the poor background of so many of his students in advanced Spanish sec- tions, he voluntarily conducted two weekly night sessions for extra help. Then he surprised everyone with his agility on the basketball court. Appointed to the Advisory Board and to the Evaluation Steering Committee, Col. David Rapp is a graduate of the University of North Carolina and has a Masters from Peabody. His wife, daughter, and two sons round out his portrait of success. German, French, Spanish, Dutch, Malay, and English are Maj. Case Hart’s languages. Soran = é i; Faculty — Individuals — 221 PA | Mrs. McDonald aids lower schoolmasters ‘When does he sleep?’ This was the moot question which active lower school cadets asked about Col. Herbert Lucus, director of the Lower School Department. A graduate of Da- vidson College, Col. Lucus taught the mischie- vous sixth graders, but his time was spent largely in Davis Hall, watching, helping, listen- ing, and coaching. Smiles were nearly always on Lt. James Grace’s face, especially when someone men- tioned his alma mater, Windham College, sports cars, swimming, or motor bikes and cycles. Teaching another section of the sixth grade, Lt. Grace specialized in creating an active in- terest in science. Still, he found time to take three courses at Madison College. Fifth grade master was Lt. Robert Gorgrant, a gamecock from the University of South Caro- lina. Broken hearted when a smash-up demol- ished his white Mercedes Benz, Christmas brought him out in a sleek black model. When spring breezes first indicated that the season might finally arrive, Lt. Gorgrant was right out on the links at Ingleside. Coach of golf was not a task for him; it was a lark, and he loved it daily. Jovial Lt. William Lobb, assistant coach of football and graduate of Hiram Scott College, mastered the men in the seventh grade and squeezed in one section of the senior elective, Problems of Democracy. Life flowed into the ‘Bayonet’ when Lt. Eric Adamson added journalistic rules as a require- ment for publication. Alumnus of the Univer- sity of Virginia, he had his seventh graders keeping him busy. All of the men at AMA turned to Mrs. Joyce McDonald for help. Her two degrees from Madison just gave her more affection for ev- eryone. Especially did the Lower School faculty discover her talents in teaching. DISTINCTLY enjoying helping teach the sixth graders, Mrs. Joyce McDonald quizzes the lads on library procedures. Ben Howard has all of the answers. Faculty — Individuals — 223 Well skilled veterans instruct by example Faculty and staff, cadets and administrators agree that Major Paul R. Quattrociocchi will be counted as one of the best, if not the best of all of the SAI’s assigned to Augusta. It was not just a matter of new colors, new guidons for the companies, and new decor in the military office. It was the enthusiasm, the concern, and the example which he brought to the job which will make it tough on any one who follows him as the SAI. Mouths really popped open when he led the cadets in PT or runs around the bowl. Glances at his haircut were often. It must have been that he had a daily haircut. for it looked always just pertect, just right. Shouts could come from his throat, too. And they did — at basketball, football, and baseball games. It was his suggestion that gave AMA its first Military Ball in the fall of the year, and it was he who made all realize that ROTC at MILITARY TEAM PIC? In full force are the men of the Military Department: Maj. Paul Quattrociocchi, FSG Warren Little, SFC Don Studer, and Msg Josephson. AMA was 50 years old, and in the U.S., 150 years on the books. Deer hide when FSG Warren Little takes down his shotguns and heads for the fields. A retired Army veteran, Sgt. Little has been at AMA for two years. Small weapons, leadership, and teaching methods are a few of the topics that he specializes in when lecturing to the military sections. Green Bereted Msg Sievert Josephson is also retired, and he has impressed himself on AMA as a teacher, a coach, and a character. Needle sharp, he simply won respect by his wit, his disposition, and his total interest in AMA. From a Marine to an Army SFC, Donald Stu- der astounded the rifle team when he whipped them into winning shape. He set a goal of 1250 for his men and promised them a steak dinner. FUMA fell, and he kept his promise to them. Pride and enthusiasm are his keywords. PARADE PROOF of quality training enthralls Col. M. H. Livick as he reviews the troops. Just three drill periods a week turn the trick for precision. 2 n ti € a . wad a 4 czy SUNLIGHT filters through the new drapes and the new colors while Major Paul Quattrociocchi works at his neat as a pi n desk. Check his perpetual haircut. ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT award for Miltary 1 pleases Pup Malnati when Maj. Q presents it to him at Finals. It helped to give Pup a first sergeant rank this year. Faculty — Individuals — 225 Staff turns-on for every cadet in need ‘When does my plane leave for Morocco?’ The man with the answer was Col. E. Will Par- kins, a retired USAR man. He also kept track of cadet’s money in the bank, problems, and he never stopped working on the school books. Seldom seen Mrs. Richard Hunter acted as Col. Mal Livick’s right hand. Secretary, statisti- cian, and helper, she was just about indispens- able. Cadets rapidly found out that Mrs. Lil Hawpe was necessary to them. Daily, she re- ceived visits from seniors asking for transcripts to be sent to colleges all over the country. Grades on the books, reports, and transcripts never gave her a breather. Popular some days, Maj. Tony Peduto knew that he had a meal that didn’t satisfy when cadets had long faces. Fortunately, it did not happen often. Returnee, Mr. Max Hutton, be- came AMA’‘s real efficiency expert. TODAY HE’S POPULAR! Handing out the hamburgers for a picnic, Major Tony Peduto discovers that he has satisfied the hunger pangs of John Dudley and Willis Walker. THEY NEVER FROWN! Mrs. John Kupcinski takes messages for everyone; Mrs. Lil Hawpe is the transcript lady, and Mrs. Richard Hunter knows each cadet’s account. S - hs i 9 e i © evs ® Sie 2 ¢ IMPRESSED with the seriousness of the task, the new THINK! Ray Marcantoni and new chairman Col. Chas. E. Advisory Board men listen to Col. Livick. Lt. John Savedge encourage Larry Thiel to suggest changes which Kupcinski, Capt. Tim Mannasmith, returning secretary Maj. _ will benefit the students, faculty, and school. Larry later Robert Hart, and Col. Dave Rapp deliberate. comes up with some real proposals. THREE DIFFERENT REACTIONS are displayed by returning VISIT FROM THE SUPERINTENDENT puts a grim, members Col. Glenn Koogler and Col. Herbert Lucus and determined expression on Col. David Rapp’s face. Col. new man on the Board, Lt. Hans Wachmeister. Livick states, ‘I want your advice and suggestions’. 228 — Individuals — Faculty Cadets supplement new Advisory Board Cadets on the Advisory Board? Never had this happened in history. A complete change? It all happened with suddenness when Col. Malcolm Livick appointed a new group com- plete with student representation. When meeting with the group, Col. Livick stressed that he did not intend for it to be a mere review board for Honor Committee trials and proceedings. He insisted that he wanted constructive advice from the members whose terms would be for one year only. This left the field open and instantly the question about Sunday versus Friday night study hours arose. Topics from classroom sup- plies to change of study inspection system to new course suggestions popped up. Already planned is a course in driver’s education which will begin during the summer session. It will benefit potential tension just to have the Board pop questions. Faculty — Individuals — 229 SUMMER FUN doesn’t stop Lt. Hans Wachmeister from his studies at Madison. In fact Mrs. Wachmeister, his two children, and Lt. Kupcinski welcome it. BRIGHT SUN finds the Livick family (minus the Colonel) at New Market for a picnic. Charlie, Mrs. Livick, Mal, Taylor, Lee, and Todd rest at an overlook of history. 230 — Individuals — Faculty Fa mM r ly mM e mM be cs Valentine party, Junior Dance, sporting events, Talent Show, lectures, movies and Sun- day lunches always found the Livicks en jol N h Ze AMA masse or partly in attendance. Sponsor of the Cotillion Club, honorary Vice Commander of the Roller Rifles, Mrs. Malcolm Livick was a h OU a h O | d daily visitor to the grounds. Cadets rhapsodized over her cooking, and the officers discovered that her fruit cake had just the right taste when she and Col. Livick : entertained them just before Christmas. Basket- ball team members tore into a cake she baked for them after they had beaten SMA on their own court. A basketball fan for years, Mrs. . @ Livick reveled in AMA’s status as number one Neg el yin the league and tournament victor. j prone : ‘ New families surged to the action around Seaton Ee oe : _ Fort Defiance. Major and Mrs. Case Hart found i Sak Vere “ out that their daughter, Mickey, was just as a Sele popular at AMA as she had been when they apeiree. = lived in New Jersey. Mrs. Rapp tried to be ie: Ho Rotyg AS around, and her husband, Col. David Rapp, definitely was, especially when he was able to see his son, Dan, in action on the basketball court and a leader in the classroom. Chris, Curtis, and Mrs. Dillow were avid fans of the corps. Parades, sports, and the social life brought them from Waynesboro. The same was true of Staunton dwellers, Major and Mrs. John Dekle, and Scott and Hunt. Scott, who has become a real athlete and a photographer, used several of his shots of cadets in winning places in contests. Families adopted cadets; cadets, families. That old nickname of ‘Family School’ intensi- fies each year instead of fading away. DIGNIFIED SMILE from Mrs. Robert S. Hart and the grim looks on Maj. Hart and Col. Dave Rapp show the strain on everyone at the faculty deaths during the fall. NEW CADET and Major and Mrs. Case Hart are proud as peacocks on the first Sunday. They were even more delighted when Gerard hit Honor Roll status. Faculty — Individuals — 231 232 — Individuals — Faculty Mrs. Roller leaves legacy of traditions Golden, red, bronze, and green leaves reached towards the heavens. Muffled drums echoed through the heart of the Shenandoah Valley as the corps marched to the Old Stone Church to pay their last respects to Mrs. Janet Stephenson Roller, widow of the beloved, late General Chas. S. Roller, Jr. Together, Mrs. Roller and the General had opened their hearts and home to thousands of cadets and their parents. Coming to AMA 60 years ago, Mrs. Roller and the General were married on the 8th of September, 1909, and in 1959 celebrated their Golden Wedding anni- versary with hundreds of their friends from all over the country. Football, basketball, and baseball were hob- bies with Mrs. Roller. Every AMA coach for 60 years knew that he would be the recipient of Mrs. Roller’s compliment or barb. ‘You’ve got to drive them’ was a favorite saying with Mrs. Roller, and she would ride over to the Academy several times a day to see that the boys were being taken care of properly. Massive flower arrangements in her beautiful MIDSUMMER PASTORAL. Mrs. Chas. S. Roller, Jr. watches over her son, the late Chas. S. Roller, Il, Daunie Duncan, and the pooch ‘Pat’ just as she did all cadets. home, ‘White Hall’, came from her garden, a showplace of the area. From early spring until the killing frosts, Mrs. Roller was out in her garden, planning new color schemes and further development. Few dances during the past six decades went bare, because she always made it a point to give flowers to make the dances even more attractive. There had been times of sadness when her son was killed in an automobile accident in 1938, but there were times of joy as she watched her granddaughter, Linda Roller Liv- ick, and her husband, Col. M. Harris Livick, carry on the traditions of the past. And she delighted in her five grandchildren. She lived to see two as AMA cadets. Mrs. Roller was cut from the same cloth as the General. She had to be busy. She was — in church work, in the DAR, and at AMA. Grey skies wept on the day the General was buried, but the skies were blue and the leaves colorful as friends, alumni, family, and cadets bade Mrs. Roller farewell on 8 October 1969. GROWING FAMILY of Col. and Mrs. Livick delights the late Gen. Roller with Mal, Mrs. Roller with Lee, Mrs. Livick, and Charlie; the late Mrs. S. S. Wales, and Col. Wales. ome AVID AMA SUPPORTER, Mrs. Janet S. Roller watches a Sponsors’ Parade in June, 1968. She never lost that spark which kept her always planning for AMA‘s growth, FOUNDERS’ DAY ceremonies 1969 finds Mrs. Roller with a deep and thoughtful look. Col. Malcolm Livick, Taylor, and Mrs. Livick await the opening prayer. HAPPY AT THE RESULTS of a Fancy Dress Final Ball figure, Gen. and Mrs. Roller compliment the 1956 f igure leaders, who later became married, Rosemary and Adrian Howard. Faculty — Individuals — 233 234 — Individuals — Faculty Faculty, cadets pay tribute to teacher Numbness was the reaction when Capt. John A. Bradford was rushed to the University of Virginia hospital in early October. Daily reports seemed optimistic, but in December, Capt. Bradford began to fail. Remembered as a real scholar, a Phi Beta Kappa from Randolph Macon, Capt. Bradford was a scientist, a teacher of English, physics, mathematics, and Latin. Flowers were his passion. Mrs. Bradford, who has now returned to Danville, daily came with bouquets from his garden of beauty. EXPERIMENTATION was a joy for Capt. Bradford. Physics students always watched with rapt attention when he simplified problems. d ° ya ee RELAXED was always the atmosphere in Colonel McCue’s math classes. Stifling laughter, he joked his students into seeking superiority. YEARS AGO, about 1950, Col. McCue taught physics and did team teaching with his neighbor, Col. Savedge. Experiments were simpler then. AMA misses Headmaster, master teacher vy Close friends had noticed that Col. John Cyrus McCue, Jr. had lost some of his vim and drive. When school opened, students learned that Col. McCue was ill and would be ‘on leave’ for three months. When the news came in mid-October that Col. McCue had died, it was a shock. Quiet, yet with a sense of humor which was dry and sensitive; studious, but never over- bearing, Col. McCue made people love him by his manner, his cool disposition, and by his great love for his family. Headmaster for only 5 years, he had been a member of the faculty since his graduation from Virginia. His degrees were in math, and he taught trigonometry and algebra with an ease which tickled his scores of boys. During World War I] he became a major in the Army and was so valuable that he taught classes at Fort Leavenworth during the sum- mers until recent years. How he loved sports! He coached boxing when boxing was in style, and he watched with pride and love when his son, Joe, was valedictorian here and then captain of football at Randolph Macon. Now he is gone. BACK IN THE ’30’s when Col. McCue was returning to AMA after his graduation from U.Va., he had Andy McClung of Andre’s taking RECALL pictures. ONE OF THE LAST cadets to receive a diploma from Col. McCue was Ron Ginns who had taken two classes in mathematics from him. The diploma has meaning. . COL. J.C. MEeCUE, Jr. Headmaster B.S., M.S. The University of Virginia; Advisory Board; Mathematics. HOT DOGS AND PRETZELS and donuts — and Al Pressly, Bob Echols, and Mike Kidd are just like all Americans who know which brands are the best. NOT EVEN A USED car can come from the banged up Ford of the Chicago police. This was the result of inspired action following the sentencing of the Chicago 7. GRATITUDE is shown by patrons and by cadets. John Dudley awards Mrs. Sally Simmons a gift for her work with the Junior Roller Rifles. Col. Malcolm Livick smiles at the expression of gratitude. ALL AMERICAN — military supply gives Larry Thiel that extra glitter and glow. Youth rocks media, swaying COMMERCIAL 236 — Commercial approach Advertising is bowing to the influence of one Peter Max. Even Eastern Airlines captures the spirit of today with its ads which lure the traveler to fly. AMA cadets all, we learn to evaluate the shoddy from the worthwhile, the masterpiece from the outright fake. It happens overnight; it’s the Commercial revolution. “2 Commercial — 237 238 — Commercial PORTRAIT of beauty, Mrs. Chas. S. Roller, Jr. was pictured just before her marriage to the late General. Andre’s specializes in making old portraits as modern as today. YEARBOOK KNOWLEDGE comes from Dr. Regis Boyle. Attending the summer workshop at Cahtolic U. Pup Malnati learns the reason why Andre’s is considered tops for portraits. ‘Andre Studio Awaits Last Minute Orders | ; : ‘We need wallet sized shots for college appli- cations’. It is a cry that Andre’s receives for AMA cadets often, and it should be prevented now. Write to Mrs. Senora McClung during the summer and order wallets of your junior year portrait. No studio anywhere could be as thoughtful or as considerate in helping any staff as are the people down in Lexington, Va. The telephone number is 703-H03-2139. The one time Andre’s always helps is during frantic finals. Ask for a grad pic, too. PICTURE QUALITY is stressed when Andre’s helps with yearbook informals. Bill d’Orsay captures Chuck Minor researching his favorite authors, Chaucer and Milton. TWINS VARY and Andre’s captures the differences easily. People confust Griff and Dean Lohman, often, but Brainerd McClung spots the difference in Dean and shows it. Commercial — 239 NO BULL, It’s a buffalo. Rain soaked Mike Sisak and Bill Dulaney pose by their prize, an American Bison, donated by Mr. Bill Neff of Neff Trailer Sales. McClures inks news of buffalo sojourn American history class seemed tame until Mike (Buffalo Bill) Sisak brought a 1500 pound bison to class. Bayonet men went for the scoop and featured the story. It was no news to the staff that their copy and pictures were handled with care by McClure’s Printing of Verona, Virgin- ia. For assistance needed in printing call Mc- Clure’s representative, Miss Peggy Runnels. Neff Trailer Sales in Harrisonburg, Virginia, sells mobile homes, campers, and is even gra- cious enough to loan buffaloes. REBELS UNITE! Ross Mitchell and Allen Pressly compare the gals that come from Virginia and North Carolina. ASTOUNDED at being allowed in the front arch in sweats, Jim Dawson and Barty Burgwyn celebrate their slyness. 240 — Commercial AUSTRIA MUG SHOT! ‘I’ve been mugged in Austria and mugged in Chicago’, says Joe Garry to Marc Silverberg. KEEP IT COOL! Garry Granger playfully refreshes Joe Fries. Joe questions Garry’s sense of humor INDIAN LOVER, Larry Thiel, entertains history class with his lengthy oration on the Indian’s plight. Larry Thiel awaits the lacrosse season Larry Thiel’s strongest athletic supporter was his mother, Mrs. Jean Thiel. Following the balls closely wherever they bounced, Mrs. Thiel was always near him. Dating Fairfax and Stuart Hall girls, Ross Mitchell found it hard when deciding who to date next. His father, Mr. W. R. Mitchell, preferred a bit more studying. Garry Granger and Marc Silverberg, both ‘E’ company men, received urging for best com- pany from their fathers, Mr. R. N. Granger, Jr. and Mr. I. Silverberg. Mr. J. D. Garry was quite pleased on finding that his son had been ad- vanced to PFC and was later awarded old cadet status. Mr. J. F. Dawson was pleased with Jim’s success too. Commercial — 241 242 — Commercial “WHAT'S THE MATTER?’ asks ‘Country’ Dick Whitaker of city-slicker, Mike Sisak. Of course, Mike has the answer. Whitaker finds time for soccer, RECALL Colorful corporal Dick Whitaker amazed Dr. J. O. Whitaker when he achieved the top ten in academic standings. Dick was agile athletically, also. T. A. (Appleseed) Ramey was accepted to Monroe Business College, much to the delight of his father, Mr. Turner A. Ramey. AMA’s man at Madison College, Bill Dulaney often fre- quented Bridgewater College on his days off. Bill enlivened American History class by import- ing Mormon speakers. Mr. C. B. Dulaney is pleased at Bill ’s involvement. A lively member of the ‘Superintendent's Drill Squad’, Steve Gruhn proved to his father, Mr. G. A. Gruhn, that he could make it. Mr. L. J. Vetick is proud of Chris Vetick’s progress. STUNT MAN, Barnum Bill Dulaney points out the intricacies of Mormonism to Diego Suarez. ‘DON’T TELL ME, apple-growing is my specialty’ declares T. A. Ramey. John Gray jumps back. - —s =” F EXPERTISE in layouts is discussed by Gail Agett and Jeff Wenzel over tea at the Feed Bag in town. Bilingual standout acclimates rapidly Diego Suarez arrived at AMA already familiar with the English language and found it wasn’t hard to make friends. Many cadets were drawn near his magnetic Spanish personality, and his name soon became synonymous with hard work. Diego was active in sports, he is also a very promising fencer! He is an excellent skeet shooter and is trying to make the olympic team. Mr. D. A. Suarez gives full support. The Feed Bag was a popular place for cadets visiting Staunton, Virginia. Located on North Central Avenue, it was a convenient stopping place. DREAMING, Steve Gruhn admires Brown Carr's Roller Rifle beret in hopes of having his own someday. PIN-ON SERVICE is provided by Diego Suarez to Doug Pennock’s Spanish delight. They were best of friends from the start. SLOP JOCKEYS are Chris Vetick and John Hawkins as they make themselves fit for a shower. Whiteway is also needed. Commercial — 243 CENSORED but readable letters spew forth from Tom Barnes. Brian McCabe and Jim Baron chortle at Tom’s attempts to type. Florist fortifies, flings with flowers Cadets decorated dates with verdant floral arrangements by Plaza Florists of Staunton, Virginia. The Plaza Shopping Center was often crowded with AMA cadets seeking corsages for dates. Jimmy Adams, having attended another mili- tary school, was placed on old cadet status upon arrival at AMA. He was known for his sharpness in ranks and his mother, Mrs. J. W. Adams was shocked at his accomplishments. Tom Barnes was constantly on duty either in the guard house or on the J. V. football field. Mr. T. S. Barnes was shocked at Tom's respon- sibilities but preferred more work in the class- room. TESTING Dale Tewksbury’s hearing, Jimmy Adams speaks playfully into the jack. Tewks sees no humor in it. 244 — Commercial RAW POWER erupts as Dave Thomas puts Chris Jensen down. This was not always the result between the two. SWEET THANKS is received by Jorge Rovirosa from Linda Neiss for Plaza Florists’ oray of flowers. WISHING FOR HIS OWN lacrosse stick, Mark Cardwell admires Chris Ellis’s new stick. WHEREFORE ART THOU ROMEO is the dialect as Sam Hughes demonstrates his acting abilities to Martin Ross. Patrons once more give aid to RECALL, push book to press David Thomas quickly adjusted to military life and soon learned it could be fun. He was very active at the Halloween Bash and pleased his father, Mr. D. M. Thomas with his many achievements. Very active in his company, Sam Hughes learned what was expected of him and lived up to expectations. Sam’s concern for his company pleased Mr. T. V. Hughes and mem- bers of his unit. Usually seen on the honor roll, Mark Cardwell also took time out for sports. Fencing was his favorite and it thrilled Lt. Col. K. E. Cardwell to see his son enjoying himself so. Another vivid athlete was Chris Ellis, who took an active part with the soccer team. Chris was also interested in lacrosse and was concerned with experience for coming years. Chris shocked his parents Mr. and Mrs. J. Ellis with his athletic qualities. Commercial — 245 FAMILIAR SCENE finds the color guard falling out for parade. Steve Trent commands the Lohman brothers and G. R. Harris. Tower rooms vibrate with Trent’s gaiety After six years of working his way up through the ranks, Steve Trent returned for his seventh year at Augusta with the sparkling ‘pie plates’ of a staff captain. Steve’s job was a tedious and time consuming one for he was the Battalion Supply Officer which demanded complete con- trol of the armory and supply office. Being gung ho for the ROTC did not entirely take all his time; Mr. E. E. Grimsley noticed higher grades! DIG THE LINKS! Steve Pearson looks like he envies Mark Femrites cuff-link set that Santa Claus brought. 246 — Commercial Check out the sales Zales has your taste Christmas time came soon enough for many this year, and with the problem of ‘what will | get her?’ Do not fret, hop on down to 1349 Greenville Avenue in Staunton. That's Zales Jewelers for the ideal gift. Steve Pearson did not see much daylight this year; dark room work kept him busy, much to the delight of his dad, Mr. W. R. Pearson. Spirit for the sports teams was generated by the night raids of Cap’m Bob Crozier. The big room never looked so good as it did after a ‘Crozier job’. Diamonds were Bob’s best friend after his rise to major, and his obtaining Priviledge List put smiles on the face of Mrs. Crozier. ERECT AND STRAIGHT Bob Crozier stands awaiting his mother, who will pin on his rank of cadet major. FEELING GROOVY, Chuck Minor and Juanita Fulghum enjoy their first promises marked with a Zales ring. CATCHING UP, Rollo Gutierrez catches up after one of his long, super-active weekends. Is he studying? Gutierrez graduates a5 second in class Earning an academic furiough every six- weeks, Rollo Gutierrez spent his leaves tour- ing the campuses of many eastern colleges and universities. Want to find Rollo on a Saturday afternoon? — look at Stuart Hall. Everyone knew how popular Raul was with all girls and his father, Mr. R. F. Gutierrez agreed with Rol- lo’s liveliness. HYSTERICAL TEARS are about to flow from Martha Reese after Rollo Gutierrez lays a funny one on her. 248 — Commercial | ) ) ee IT’S ALMOST TIME. Al Stanko tells Jeff Gessling that their favorite TV show is about due. Study Hall over? WHERE IS MY HAIR? Don Perez looks in the mirror and wonders what happened to his hair. Benny got it! AVID WEIGHT LIFTER Cam Bell grunts and groans as Dean Lake watches. Cam spent the Spring building up. WRONG BRASS is on George McCoach’s shirt collar. He is a lieutenant now and a very hard working one. Eats are fantastic at the Billy Budd When parents visit their sons at Augusta, the sons know that they can look forward to a de- cent chow down. So, they ask Mon and Dad to take them to the Billy Budd Restaurant inside the Holiday Inn in Staunton, Virginia. History was no trouble for Cam Bell. Cam made his class cringe when he gave his report on the Donner Party. He almost turned green too! Band company certainly knows that Cam is alive. He is active and full of fun. Mr. J. W. Bell is looking for Cam to make his own history at AMA. George McCoach has worked for the ‘pie plate’ that he earned. Mr. G. E. McCoach wants to see more brass pop up on George's collar. Al Stanko and Don Perez have been on the Privi- lege list throughout the year much to the plea- sure of Mrs. K. Stanko and Mrs. S. C. Perez. Jimmy Adams kept a clean slate this year, one that his late father, Mr. J. W. Adams would have been very proud of. LET’S GO EAT! Mrs. T. F. Cooper, Sissy Cooper, Su Beck, and Tim Cooper head out for the Billy Budd. Commercial — 249 SPRUCING UP for a big day in school, Burt Glick gets the big brush off from easy going, always popular Keith Lobach. UTOPIA for J. C. Wright is a afternoon spent building up biceps and triceps. His satisfied grin tells the story. BE MY BOW2?, asks Paul Kime of Dave Holland. Paul grooves on a good pun once in a while but books are his thing. eo. Worthington’s sets AMA for hard wear Throughout the year Mr. Staples could be seen replacing windows and faucet washers. Worthington Hardware Company located at 26-28 W. Beverly Street in Staunton has all the parts and needs of the AMA custodian service. Both Keigh Lobach and Burt Glick arrived at school two weeks before its open- ing for football camp. It was a long two weeks but was worth every minute when Mr. P. S. Glick and Mr. Walt Lobach came to see the football spectacles. Mr. H. C. Wright was concerned with his son's appetite due to constant weight lifting. Mr. H. S. Holland was pleased with his son’s accomplishments both in company and in academics. Paul Kime stunned his father, Mr. J. M Kime, with his sharp eye on the rifle range and in the dating field. MR. FIX IT. Mr. John Staples, known around AMA as the man who fixes anything relies on Worthington Hardware for supplies. 250 — Commercial ek cee lS SITTING DUCKS? Pete Russel couldn’t stand the hot April inspection, but White Way will renew the crisp crease. ‘THEY’RE GREAT’! exclaims Bob Mitchell as Dave McCulloch and Warren Vaiden await their turn with the earphones. Stains come clean through White Way Laundry bundles leave AMA in all shapes and sizes but always return from White Way in the neat, freshly smelling package. White Way Laundry on W. Beverly Street in Staunton al- ways tries to do their best job for you and even sends a friendly representative if your whole load is not returned. Friday night is White Way night at AMA but the fruits from the White Way visit can be enjoyed throughout the entire week. Free time found Billy d’Orsay either in the dark room or out taking pictures for the RE- CALL. Billy also pleased his parents by being the top man in the Senior class. Bob Mitchell was constantly active in school, sports, and others’ feelings. Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Mitchell were avid RECALL supporters. Warren Vaiden and Dave McCulloch were amongst those who froze in ‘A’ company. Mrs. E. D. McCulloch and Mr. A. S. Vaiden were pleased with their sons’ sharpness. UGLY LITTLE THING. Steve Pearson giggles as Billy d’Orsay tries to imitate the gargoyle. Commercial — 251 Dixie Gas puts the heat on In science Sooner or later the men in the science labs turn to the bottle. Bottled gas that is! Dixie Gas and Oil Company, Verona, Va. brings bottled gas for the science labs and gasses up other parts of the school. Dixie has oil heat too! One doesn't have to be a French scholar to know that Chez Marie, located at 19 East Beverly Street in Staunton is the decent place for girls and women to buy clothes. Fresh, new styles await you at Chez Marie. Jorge Rovirosa was still the Cougar hunter in 1970. Ralph Hamilton's father’s illness called him home before completion of the year. Posters and paper lanterns were John Porcher’s thing, anything that is colorful is John’s idea of heaven. Back in New York City, Mr. F. Porcher awaits the end of the mail strike. DRESSED for social success are Cindy Reilly and Peggy Pinto who seem to be hitting it off with Mark Femrite. RIGHT AT THE HEAD of things during Sunday Parade is John Porcher, who hits the big time and acts as squad leader. GASSED? Will Eastment seems to be ready for slumber in physics class; cozy and compfy, thanks to Dixie Gas. 252 — Commercial Ad SPORTY DUO. Larry Malnati and Don Malnati, having a good time playing with a broken bat and a tennis racket. HIGH TOP MAN, Ray Marcantoni relaxes in chemistry class and puts up his feet. Ray’s shoes are from The Fort. Personal help ts found at The Fort Any old cadets knows and new cadets soon discover that Mr. and Mrs. Garber at The Fort in Ft. Defiance are there to serve cadets. The Fort has almost everything that can be thought of and is the local Post Office. When school sup- plies and food are needed, head for the Fort. Port Tobacco, Maryland has done it again! We have another Malnati on the scene and he is up to his brother on every count. Larry joined Don (Little Pup and Pup) to make an Honor Roll, RECALL and personality duo. Dr. P. L. Malnati doesn’t have to worry about Larry’s success. Don has already put his mind at ease. Commercial — 253 SPOT CHECK on the brass of Doug Easter proves that Rick Maschak is on the ball and Doug’s brass needs rubbing. Jones Taxi shuttles cadet daters, dates Miss the bus? Or do you dig being your own man? If you don’t like going to town when the buses leave, then just call up Jones Taxi and City Cab, 15 S. Augusta St. in Staunton. Jones Taxi and City Cab will be glad to take you to your appointment, date or even bring your date to you. Call them anytime. Don't ever try to tell Rick Maschak that New York isn't the greatest city in the world, because an argument will erupt. Mr. P. Maschak will back Rick up on his claim. No, you didn’t see the Easter Bunny, it’s Doug Easter, who is the small little sergeant in ‘C’ company. Mr. H. J. Easter wants Doug to be a bigger sergeant someday. Geographic back- grounds vary a great deal between Lars Steib and Jim Clark but their personalities do not. They are both running over with smiles and charm. Mrs. M. H. Steib is happy with Lars’ big barracks transition. Mrs. L. Clark enjoys reading the ‘Bayonet’ of which Jim is an assistant. BLANKET PARTY finds Tricia Saunders, Jim Johnson, Ellen Stewart and Harmon Groves rapping. Taxis brings the gals. YA’LL WRONG! Lars Steib defends himself against the stick that Jim Clark put down. Lars might get the stick off. 254 — Commercial CAROLING PALS Steve Schwartz and Mike Kavanaugh sing with all the Christmas spirit they can muster at the annual program. Kavanaugh sets fast pace In ‘F’ troop Where ever there is a sports meet, decorating or any activity where the bigger boys are, Mike Kavanaugh is there too. Mike loves to help out, especially when the Cotillion Club has a job to do on the gym. Mr. F. P. Kavanaugh supports Mike in this practice as long as he learns some- thing good. HEAD START with the razor and cream, Mike Kavanaugh prepares himself for the coming years. Phil Vaden gets a chuckle. Commercial — 255 SMILES on Cliff Stern, Tim Cooper, Glenn Hunter, and Jaime Pico-Seda show that the year is nearing an end. ADVANCE MAN Dave Austin stands tall at parade. The cross dyke is soon replaced by the officer dyke. GET IT! Bob Missman displays his talent during the talent show. The pickin’ was good and even prize winning. SLEEPY EYES are just a put-on tor Eric Morganstern. He is a real live wire and keeps ‘F’ Troop in stitches. Tim Cooper honchoes ‘D’ men as sophomore Personality counts and Tim Cooper does not lack any. Mr. T. F. Cooper has it too! Cliff Stern’s claim to fame is being from Pittsburgh. Mr. E. C. Stern can claim his son as a step to fame. Mrs. B. K. Hunter sent a shy young boy to AMA in the fall; since then Glenn Hunter has sprouted. Jaime Pico-Seda, Bob Missman, Dave Austin, and Jeff Jackard are typical cadets; full of fun. Mr. J. Irizarry, Mrs. V. H. Missman, Mr. H. V. Austin, and Mr. R. A. Jackard are typical AMA parents; they're great! Jeff Greatorex has proved to be an asset for ‘A’ company. Mr. D. P. Greatorex hopes that Jeff might some day lead a company. Mr. J. Morganstern looks for his son, Eric to grow and learn. FUN WITH BOOKS is the way Jeff Greatorex thinks. Jeff looks up words in the dictionary for the fun of it. CHESHIRE CAT? Jeff Jackard could fool anybody with his smile. Band company would be different without him. 256 — Commercial a ’ ° i HELP! Brad Kesner, Mike Pugh, and Jim Worley seem to have had a disagreement with Hank Mullins. Don’t drop him. New York Dress Shop has charming styles Stylish women in Staunton have always gone for the clothes at New York Dress Shop on New South Street. Studious Brad Kesner really puts out for the A’s. Mr. R. C. Kesner is delighted. Jim Worley and Hank Mullins shared many ex- periences together in ‘D’ company. Mr. J. A. Worley and Mr. H. G. Mullins wonder at some of the action. Kurt Benson moved to Band company and learned to make music. Ed Dixon and Mike Pugh have learned to march to it, and Mr. W. M. Benson, Mr. R. A. Dixon, and Mr. C. Pugh have to stomach the off beats. Football season was long and hard for Rob Bender and Mike Lagosky. But with the pigskin put aside, Rob and ‘Bela’ hit the books with the approval of Mr. R. W. Bender and Mr. P. La- gosky. HORN MAN Kurt Benson shows Ed Dixon the way it’s done. Kurt changed quite a bit when he moved to the band. LOOKING LOVELY as always is Mrs. W. L. Gardner in her New York Dress Shop ensemble. Col. Gardner looks pleased. WE WON MAN! Rob Bender breaks the news to Mike Lagosky that their room was picked as ‘room of the week’. 257 — Commercial ——— Customary uniforms born at Shenandoah For years AMA cadets have worn with pride their uniforms that come from Shenandoah Tai- lors in Mt. Sidney, Virginia. The people at Shen- andoah Tailors have always given the cadet the best fits possible and supplied them with long lasting, sturdy uniforms. Pants of three different types, blue jackets, blouses, and the overcoat all come from the local tailor with the metropolitan touch. Thousands of boys have become men in the Shenandoah cut. SPRING-TIME line up means that white ducks are the uni- form. Shenandoah Tailors doesn’t duck out on its fitting chore. NO CAKES are on the bowl in this weather. Snow and ice are made bearable when the body is protected by Shenan- doah. EARLY CHILLS are felt by the Color Guard in October but they rest assured that Shenandoah is sewing blouses now! Commercial — 258 ON THE VERGE of giving up, Tom Gregory smiles knowing that Hayes Dickinsen is going to whip him. Hayes seems relaxed. Hayes Dickinson hits hard for Honor Roll Junior Roller Rifle man, Hayes Dickinson looked very sharp and precisioned on the field. In the class room he was even more on the stick and managed to shoot up to Honor Roll status. Mr. W. A. Dickinson was really proud of his son’s academic climb and was backing him all the way for more. It seemed that every time Hayes was seen he had grown a little bigger and a little smarter. Mess hall food agrees with him. NO ANSWERS THERE! But Hayes Dickson certainly found the way to study and hit the Honor Roll in the lower school. Commercial — 259 TRYING ONE ON. Steve Traylor stand before his mirror SHINNER, Ed Moorefield does one of his famous and fits himself into a Roller Rifle beret; planning for glass-shines on his shoes. Ed likes the real AMA shoe the tomorrow. best. ALWAYS SPACED and thinking of the Texas high life is © TAKING NOTES and looking very satisfied with the Sunday Ed Lentz who became popular for his stories of ‘the old — afternoon music are Lance Logan, Bart Burgwyn and Jeff days’. Petersen. Patrons prevail as foundation of RECALL Mrs. H. O. Logan, Mr. E. A. Moorefield, and Want a new car? Chevrolets and Cadillacs can Mr. H. B. Traylor have all helped to put the be found at Mitchell’s Pontiac-Cadillac in Havre RECALL to the printers because of their pa- de Grace, Md. Mr. H. E. Mitchell brings his son, tronage. Their sons, Lance Logan, Ed Murry to school in a beauty! Jeff Petersen sup- Moorefield, and Steve Traylor can't wait to ported the football team the best way he knew see the results. Mr. A. W. Lentz expects the how, being their manager. Bart Burgwyn most of his son Ed, and Ed is doing alot be- cheered loudly and Mr. R. C. Petersen and Dr. fore he returns to Houston for the summer. C. P. Burgwyn were Blue Streak city. 260 — Commercial NO CADY for Murry Mitchell, Al Collins, and John Brill. They dig a sled for their winter time follies in the snow. PIN-UP QUEEN Nancy Nalbandian and’ Pete Chekemain chat with Col. and Mrs. Livick. Mrs. Livick is Palais Royale equipped. Palais Royale furs are warm, beautiful Located at 105 East Beverly St. is Staunton’s fur fortress, Palais Royale Furs. Stoles, long and short coats, and all sorts of fur accessories can be purchased at Palais for reasonable prices and with courteous attention. Let Palais ‘furify’ you. That little guy from Norfolk, Joe Berman was always smiling and saying something nice about people. We can say something nice about Mr. M. M. Berman too. Yogie Hale did his share for ‘D’ company with the support of Mrs. E. Hale. Of course what would a dance be like without the decor of Karl Haleamau. Karl must get his talent from his dad, SGM J. Haleamau. Chris Jensen, Al Zayas, and Steve Schwartz work and enjoy telling their parents, Mrs. S. Franki, Mr. F. Zayas, and Mr. D. Schwartz the results. TIME TO RELAX is not easy to find but Joe Berman and Chris Jensen find it and sit and shoot the breeze in the PX. IN TRAINING for lacrosse are Al Zayas and Karl Haleamau. They still find the time for decorating and ‘Bayonet’ work. REVERSE TEACHING? New cadet Yogie Hale shows old cadet Steve Schwartz the proper way to present arms with the rifle. Commercial — 261 Colony Optical has ‘in’ sight for AMA Cadets obtained a neo-look from Colony Opti- cal on 110 Frederick Street in Staunton, Virgin- ia. Wire rim galsses were in, and Colony Opti- cal fitted cadet needs. Between dating Stuart Hall, fencing, and holding the rank of second lieutenant, Sandy Henderson barely found time to study. Dr. J. P. Henderson, Jr. agreed with the busy schedule. Frank Primrose was constantly seen with his lacrosse stick in his hand, and on rainy days he usually had a book in his hand. Mr. F. Primrose, II] enjoyed the increased activity. Tom DelValle and Bill Adomeit stunned Mr. A. M. DelValle and Mrs. Adomeit with their many activities and accomplisments. WIRY EDITOR, Jeff Wenzel and Rob Predale discuss the merits of Colony Optical’s reborn styled glasses. HOMEWORK CITY hits Sandy Henderson as exams draw near. The strenuous study proved valuable for Sandy. GET A RUSH! Frank Primrose tries his own new. study methods with hopes of great academic success. TAKING IT EASY is Bill Adomeit in Mrs. Canevet’s holi- day rest home. Jim Epperson cheers Bill up. 262 — Commercial SOLE MAN from the south lands, Doug Pennock sits and enjoys a good book after a hard drill. WHERE ARE THE SPOONS? Scott Frantz, Curt Selby, and Don Massie sit and pick and blow out some sounds. OFF THE WALL, no on the wall goes some fresh paint. Tom Del Valle and Andy Becker fix up the rifle range. Esquire Men’s Shop, epitome of fashion It won't be long until cadets will be shedding their beloved uniforms and going in for real clothes. Esquire Men’s Shop on Central Ave. in Staunton has all the new styles and is ready to help everyone. Doug Pennock discovered early in the year that the job of lieutenant was not an easy one. Stuart Hall is not easy to handle either, but Doug fared very well in that phase of cadet life. Mr. C. E. Pennock hopes that Doug will succeed in everything. Curt Selby, Don Massie, and Scott Frantz have all tried their best to help make AMA 1970 unforgettable. Mr. C. F. Selby, Mr. H. B. Wassie, Jr., and Mrs. J. E. Neikirk have all helped to put the RECALL to press. RIGHT IN STYLE are the music and clothes of Daniel Web- ster and his partner. Esquire’s has the duds. Commercial — 263 Hogshead Drugs has bright, new locale Returning old cadets couldn't figure out where the friendly people at Hogshead Drug Store went to. Well, they moved, lock, stock, and hogshead to 15 W. Beverly St. in Staunton. From prescriptions to greeting cards, Hogshead has it, in the attractive new store with the famil- iar grand service. Robert (Romo) Gomez was very pensive about taking up the role as a company captain, but as the weeks flew by it was obvious that Romo wouldn’t trade his ‘C’ men for all hotels in Santo Domingo! Mr. M. Gomez was quite pleased with Romo’s leadership. Day boys don’t usually standout but Lew Shapirt does and Mr. E. Shapiro hopes that it will continue. After seven years, Mr. D. C. Ghiorsi thinks that his son John has become a familiar face at AMA. YOU'LL WORK for me. Romo Gomez tells Al Pressly that he is going to become ‘C’ company FSG. Make it last Al! PHANTASMAGORICAL is a word that Lew Shapiro and John Ghiorsi just can’t believe exists but the dictionary never lies. FUTURE PHARMACIST or not, Barry Foster learns about the chemicals that are professionally used by Hogshead’s experts. 264 - Commercial Hillsman duo conjure up rhythmatic sounds Band company can always look to the Hills- man brothers, Charlie and Mark, for a fun time and some real talent with their instruments. Both beat on the drums and, wow, can they both make you want to stomp your feet! Charlie has the prestige of being a lieutenant and looks as if he is on his way to bigger things. Mark, the senior of the duo, really gets in on the books and gives his fellow senior class members a race for class rank positions. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Hillsman can be very proud of their boys. PEACE OR VICTORY? Charlie Hillsman can’t decide which side he will take but gets a kick out of the confusion of the two. Mark doesn’t seem interested in anything but the camera. DRUMMER BOY Charlie Hillsman swings into his drum solo as he entertains during the half-time of a basketball game. No one can say Charlie doesn’t know his stuff. ot de Staunton Creamery milk gives vitality Every morning before anybody in barracks is awake, a big milk truck comes roraring in to deliver fresh milk, and dairy products. It’s the Staunton Creamery man that brings it. Slide rules and math books are a favorite pass time of Ron Guilliams. Ron can whip off a math problem without any hassle, and it pleases his mom, Mrs. B. M. Morrison. GAME TIME is what Ron Guilliams, Jeff Van Horn, Randy Hollingsworth, and Ron Slagle are having. Play slide rule? CLEAN NOTES will probably come from the horn that Jay Ent, Al Samuels, and Winky Hill are cleaning for a full for- mal. BURNING ENERGY and building muscles is easy for Dale Tewksbury after drinking fresh, cold Staunton Creamery milk. 266 — Commercial If anyone wants to find Doug Fetter, the best place to look for him is in the weight room. Mr. H. S. Fetter prefers Doug to expand mentally. Jeff Van Horn, Al Samuels, and Jay Ent have worked hard throughout the year. Mr. R. W. Van Horn, Mr. J. Samuels, and Mr. F. L. Ent hope that the work will continue. Randy Holling- sworth and Winky Hill have also pleased their parents. rom bell tower where Doug DING A LINGS will come t around. Ding Dong school? Fetter and John Paul are playing SOME REAL ACES, Mike Kavanaugh, Tom Price, Don Dixon and John Miller get down to business with a Penniless game. yh _. Book worms thrive - off Adam’s Book Co. 4 Knowledge is great and it is made easier when books are available. Adam’s Book Co. 6672 Water St. in Brooklyn, N. Y. supplies AMA cadets with all their school texts. The price is right, Tom Price that is. Tom made ‘F’ Troop officers take notice of him. Mr. M. Price is a right guy too. As the years g0 by, Don Dixon becomes more and more a real cadet. Mr. I. J. Dixon doesn’t need the practice. He is already a fantastic parent. Discarding his crutches, John Miller was able to get around and have some excitement. John was no handicap to Mr. T. G. Miller. Movie men, Wayne Bowers and John Piazza, kept up faithfully with projecting the weekend movies. Mr. P. J. Wooldridge and Miss V. Piazza are glad that Wayne and John are working together. MOVIE-LAND for Wayne Bowers and John Piazza is the projection room. John explains some techniques to Wayne. YOUNG EDUCATORS, Lt. Jim Grace and Lt. Bob Gorgrant plan their teaching methods using a Adam's supplied book. Commercial — 267 Bell Clothes moves to Staunton Plaza Once upon a time a guy that wanted to dress great with clothes from Bell’s had to live in Winchester, Virginia. Well, now you can give yourself a treat, and bop on out to the Staunton Plaza, where Bell’s has another fantastic store. Every bit of the store’s stock is new and excit- ing. SMALL but standing tall, Ray Bradley puts out his best for the parade in hopes that a first place will come. ‘B’ Company has a quiet little guy that is really nice. Ray Bradley has lots of friends and a good word can always be heard about Li’l Ray. Mr. R. M. Bradley sees his son’s AMA fu- ture as bright. Mike Eller made a change that pleased his company commander. Mike did all he could for his troop. LADIES MAN, Ron Ginns stands with Miss Lazarus and the WHITEHALL staff in Ch icago’s Old Town. Ron is Bell's. ees. ad ee += ad :28 . .ce6 tee eee oor ated? peel Ee) tea: + oe® ’ all 2 s:@ee Se :igeHes: e08! ee: 262 See vr — ; ‘ee BEADS ARE NICE for Jim Hash while he plays his organ, but Jim knows that fine Jewelry can be bought at Glassner Fink’s. Fink’s has a jewel of a nouveau name Jewelry is something that is bought with care and treasured by the owner. Fink's, now known as Glassner Fink’s Jewelry, 104 W. Beverly St. in Staunton, is a jewelry store that takes pride in its service and merchandise. Glassner Fink’s is ready to serve you with any jewelry need, so stop in and rap. Jim Jenkins is on the ball as far as being a first class cadet. Jim takes the time to do things well as his mother, Mrs. T. D. Jenkins has taught him. Do you dig the flicks? Well, don’t sit in barracks and think about it. Get on out to the Staunton Plaza and see a movie. REAL SHINER. Jim Jenkins does a number on his assortment of brass. Ben Howard looks on with great approval. Commercial — 269 ose r. age oe, ly an ect pete Large Leggett gives small sto re service Spring vacation was approaching and cadets discovered they had outgrown their civilian clothes. The problem was easily solved at Leg- gett Department Store, and cadets frequented 116 East Beverly Street in Staunton. Attending AMA as a post graduate Bruce Reyngoudt was seldom seen except on the ath- letic field. Bruce earned Outstanding Athlete of the year in 1968-69 and_ proved his qualifications this year. Mr. C. Reyngoudt is stunned at his son’s awards. Musically oriented Al Clarke spent his time blowing the bugle both for the band and a combo. Mrs. G. C. Barden enjoyed Al’s many talents. Tom McLean spent his time studying and shocked his father, Mr. W. McLean, with his soaring grades. en al IS THAT ALL? Chuck Knapp searches for a price tag, but Ron Melcher knows the economy of the gift from Leggett. WHAT'S IN THERE? is the question asked by Tom Clarke as he looks for his new record. Maybe someone borrowed it. IT MUST BE RAINING. Bruce Reyngoudt is caught skipping practice. He must be dreaming of lacrosse. ‘ME CLEAN UP ROOM’ for SMI is what Tom McLean says as he takes a rare break from studying. He’s tempted to read. 270 — Commercial Patrons give aid to cash conscious RECALLers Band company rocked with John Goyne’s drumming. John entered the talent show and came out a winner with the Doomsday Refresh- ment Committee. Being a ninth grader John has plans of improving AMA in his remaining years here at AMA. Mr. E. L. McGregor urges his son toward his goals. Serving on the color guard last year George Harris returned for his senior year at AMA as a company commander and a captain. George’s company’s standing showed how much he has learned in his six years at AMA. Mrs. G. H. Harris enjoyed watch- ing his son work his way through the ranks. Randy Armstrong, another band man, spent his days at AMA working for rank, and his efforts showed one stripe. Mrs. R. Armstrong was very proud of her son and his big stripe. He'll add to it in two years. SAY CHEESE. Randy Armstrong demonstrates his in-born knack for home photography. Production never ceases. I'm GOIN’ HOME brags George Harris as he collects his traveling necessities. Spring vacation is three weeks off. “ WHAT'S WRONG? inquires John Goyne as he tries to re- member whether or not he turned the television set on or not. Commercial — 271 Old cadets recall Bob Mathias well He was proud of being a West Virginian, and he was so proud of his mother and father. Grad- uating in 1967, Bob decided on going Navy, and while on leave he was the victim of an auto- mobile crash, this last January. Bob was life. He bubbled with affection for everyone. This was shown in the love that his shipmates and AMA cadets displayed on that cold, snowy day when farewells were said. FAMILIAR TO THE CORPS and to the alumni are those scenes of cadets forming up for parades. Sounds from the Band initiate the big movements. ROBERT BANKS MATHIAS II 1949-1970 Cadets wear, shine durable ‘Hanover’s’ This being the year for change, AMA discov- ered a new type of shoe, the low-cut. Cadets discovered that two pair of shoes came in handy, especially when low-cuts could be worn only on Sundays, thus giving cadets a chance to dirty their high-tops and still have a pair of shined shoes for SMI. Hanover Shoe of Hanover, Pa. met the change with enthusiasm and provided all cadets with a pair of traditional high-tops plus a pair of easy shining low-cuts. SPARKLING TRADITION is the glass shine that cadets put on their shoes. Hanover Shoe Company supplies the ‘easy to glass’ cadet shoes which now come in the familiar high and low cut. DUST COVERS the shoes of the senior class after their parade during finals. Every member of the senior class can remember the years of wear of Hanover Shoes. Commercial — 273 274 — Commercial Shippletts provides cleanliness to corps One of the biggest problems for any student boarding at school, is that of dry cleaning. Well, at AMA, the hassle is cleaned up by Shipplett’s Dry Cleaners of Mt. Sidney, Virginia. Shipplett’s is conveniently located in ‘the white shack in the back’. All one has to do is take his uniforms to A SCORE for AMA is made by Nicky Syropoulos against St. Christophers. Shippletts will be rushed, obviously. the smiling face at the window, and he is guar- anteed of the finest job in dry cleaning that money can buy. Shipplett’s also will launder shirts and store items over the summer months. If your rug has gone flat, Shipplett’s will put the life back into it. They have charge accounts! CLEAN CUT MAN with a clean uniform is Keith May. Ship- plett’s cleans all uniforms and will even clean the guidon flags. COUNTRY PICKER Marc Lambert entertains Kevan Rothen- berg and Larry Wallace with his desperate attempts to cre- ate music. Barth-Weinberg has clothes for the man with taste June was approaching, and growing cadets needed civilian clothing. Prices at Barth-Weinberg and company were cut rate, and AMA cadets too k advantage of the situation in Staunton. ” Staunton. ir Ron Slagle hopes to become an engineer, and ' he has proved his capabilities for it here at Augusta. Conifirm Ltd, engineers-construction, of Oakhurst, N. J. have an eye on Ron in hopes that his dreams will come true. Mr. G. V. Slagle 5 is confident that his son will be successful in ae - anything he chooses to do. - | Kevan Rothenberg has pleased his father, Mr. A. Rothenberg with his activity at AMA. Marc § Lambert and Larry Wallace spent their time just “ “g having fun, and they also managed to keep hen their grades in a high range. Col. J. F. Lambert and Mr. L. W. Wallace, Jr. were happy to see their sons having fun. PUMPER Mike Sisak enjoys his comfortable clothes from Barth-Weinberg as he pretends to be a cowboy. The pump works. OH NO exclaims Ron Slagle as fights for the ball realizing the clock was about to run out. Massanutten lost, of course. Commercial — 275 Walter’s Wholesale fills AMA mess hall ‘Where do they get these gastronomical goodies?’ That is the question which was asked throughout the year by AMA boys and visiting diners. Major Peduto would just simply pick up the phone and ring the Walter’s Wholesale men. Institutional food experts, they deliver the best quality to the mess hall doors. Academics, sports, and just plain fun were made easier with full tum tums. Buckeye man Brad Robinson brought life to the stoops of ‘A’ Company with a real live rub- ber snake. Many poor souls were shocked by Brad and his fugitive from a novelty shop. Mrs. C. H. Robinson was glad that the rubber reptile was at AMA and not raising her hair. SMILIN’ Brad Robinson raps with his pal Doug Fetter Newly arrived warm weather allows the T shirt conversation. FINALLY ADJUSTED Ira Koonan chats with his old cadet friends, Larry Haning and Bill Webb about days gone by. SPANISH MAIN? Well, whatever the game is Ruy Delgado and Sergio Astorga have no trouble enjoying it. YOUNG COMMANDER Tim Cooper sits in class neat and trim. A fresh and clean ‘Sanforized’ shirt perfects his neatness. Sanford puts shirts on 416 strong backs Neatness! That is one of the key words to being military. With 416 cadets, Augusta has to be sure that all its boys are the best dressed. Gray is the color scheme from top to bottom and the most durable shirts are Sanford’s ‘san- forized’. Most cadets depend on their uniforms lasting for their entire ‘hitch’, so it is great to know that the cadet may grow but the elbow won't go! Mr. S. A. Astorga is waiting eagerly for that day in June when his son will be an AMA gradu- ate. Sergio Astorga is no slacker when it comes to working for that great day. With advent of spring Bill Webb becomes a Hoover man and swings a lacrosse stick. Mr. W. W. Webb digs seeing the muscles grow. BIG MEN MEET FACE TO FACE. Baxter Hayes (40) meets Bob Parmalee of SMA. Walter’s Wholesales feeds Baxter. Commercial — 277 KEEPING IN TOUCH and always giving some ‘band aid’ is Lt. Howard Sharp, discussing promotions with Lee Hall. FRONT AND CENTER. Receiving the Best Semester Ribbon, Lee Hall wants to beam in front of Maj. Q. 278 — Commercial cia CAPTAIN’S LINE finds Lee Hall, Mrs. M. H. Livick, Nick Syropoulos, Mrs. Syropoulos, and Roger Jensen watching review. UNBELIEVABLE to Lee Hall is Adstra membership being presented by Mrs. M. H. Livick in June, 1969. Moroccan, Lee Hall, dances to new tunes Band company rose in company standings due to the efforts of Major Lee Hall. Aside from company responsibilities, Lee played var- sity soccer and tennis. He also carried the du- ties of Honor Committee. Speaking Spanish, French, and English fluently, Lee Hall had no trouble communicat- ing with the many Spanish speaking cadets at- tending AMA. Lee’s father, Mr. J. L. Hall, didn’t mind sending him thousands of miles for an education. WHAT NEXT? Lee Hall desperately tries to remember the next step of the solubility rules; Doc isn’t looking. AMAZED, Lee Hall stares in wonder at nature's beauty in Luray Caverns in Luray, Virginia. The break was accidental. Commercial — 279 HE’S AN INDEX of information. Jorge Rovirosa helps a patron and explains where to park, where to go on a Parents’ Day in spring. FACELESS AND NAMELESS is the clutter of humans without drive, but with protest on the mind. SPUNKY CREW ARE Brad Robinson, Larry Haning, Rock Sumey, Mac Mclnness, Paul Jacobs, Jay Nolan, Carlos Cuevo, and Mike Pugh as they cheer on the Blue Streaks. REFLECTION OF ACTIVITIES shows not only in a breast plate, but also in the complete index, which shows the totality of involvement. Descriptive INDEX proves stout evidence 280 — Index of involvement End up on a police blotter or with credits long in the yearbook and on the transcript? The motivation, the examples, the friendship was there q for each cadet to write his own credits, credits which form the backbone, the bulk of the index of 1970. Revolutionary was the increase of participants, the creative ones, who made the action, were the action. Index — 281 ABR to BAE Cadets innundate Index with broad ripples = ABRAMS, TERRY (Mr. Marvin), 1746 Country Club Drive, Cherry Hill, N.J. 08034; 1st year; ‘A’; Football 1; JV Basketball; PFC; BD7 17 51; 429-7252; 93, 123, 134, 175 ACADEMICS 50-69 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 303 ‘A’ COMPANY 92-93 ADAMS, JAMES C. (Mr. E.R.), 519 Ridge Top Rd., Richmond, Va. 23229; Ist year; Re Pvt.; BD5 27 58; 288-7151; 156, 159, 160 ADAMS, JAMES F. (Mrs. J.A.), 5609 Jorden Rd., Wash. D.C. 20016; lst year; ‘A’; Pvt.; BD6 15 55; OL4-1829; 83, 244 ADAMSON, LT. ERIC E., Rt. 1 Box 195A, Weyers Cave, Va. 24486; 107, 127,, 220, 222, 192 AD ASTRA 101 ADMINISTRATION 206-212 ADOMEIT, WILLIAM F. (Mrs. Martha), 10 Links’ Ra., Smithtown, N.Y. 11787: 2nd year: ‘Cr: PFC; BD10 23 54; 265-8551; 106, 166, 262 ADVISORY BOARD 228,229 ALLSBROOK, CARL M. (Mr. W.J.), 3232 Sunny Brook La., Va. Beach, Va. 23452; 2nd year; ‘B’; Pvt.; BD12 3 52; 340-6086; 70, 79, 91 ANDERSON, DONALD W. (Lc.G.W.), 2117 Cunningham Dr., Hampton, Va 23366; Ist year; ‘D’; Pvt.; 838-4312 ANGELUCCI, ROBERT F. (Mr. R.), 605 Legion Drive, Grace Md. 21078; 1st year; ‘A’; PFC; BD6 24 54; 934-2326; 92, 162 ANDREWS, MAJ. PAUL G., Ft. Defi- ance, Va. 24437; 218, 219 ARMSTRONG, RANDOLPH X. (Mr. R.A.), 2513 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, Md. 21218; 2nd year; Band; Privilege List 1; Rifle Team 1; JV Football 1; JV Lacrosse 1; PFC 1; BD11 2 52:; TU9-0031; 66, 81, 127, 271 ASTORGA, SERGIO D. (Mr. Segundo), P.O. Box 50-63, Managua, Nicaragua, Central Am.; 2nd year; ‘A’; Privilege List 1; JV Track 1; Sgt. 2; BD6 3 51; 9-84-21; (20) 92, 152, 182, 277 ATCHISON, JAMES D. (Mr. W.E.S.), 711 N. Michigan Ave., Howlell, Mich., 48843; 1st year; ‘A’; Pvt; BD 2 24 55; 265-8551; 54, 93, 162, 299 AUSTIN, DAVID M. (Mr. H.V.), 3730 Monya Dr., Richmond, Va., 23234; Ath year; ‘B’; Track 1; Baseball 1; Swim Team 2, 3; Football 4; Honor Roll; Privilege List; Roller Rifles 4; SFC 4; BD5 5 52; 275-1261; 90, 91, 126, 127, 166, 256 AYAU, MANUEL F. (Mr. M.), 6th Ave., 0-28 y. 10 Guatemala; 2nd year; ‘B’; Swimming 1, 2; Tennis 1; Soccer 1; PFC 2; BD 7 8 56; 64-0-22; 91, 140, 150, 162 ng! eee BADALSON, FRANK (Mr. F.B.), P.O. Box 84, Quantico, Va., 22134; lst year; ‘C’; PFC’ BD 9 12 54; 875-1415; 47, 64, 88, 107, 166 BAEDER, WILLIAM P. Ill (Mr. W.P.), NO COP-OUT from enthusiasm engulfs the crew as SMA pulls up (but not ahead). Vince Briga, Rog Rodriguez, Jose Gutierrez, the Sotomayors, and Eric Vamos keep the corps yelling. %; sana tk « td TRIMMING FOR NICK. Stride Coleman and Rick Maschak insure that ‘A’ company will have the first tree up in barracks. Then followed a serenade of carols and seasonal songs. 161 St., Flushing, N.Y., 11358; 143 BALDWIN, HARRY A. (Dr. R.A.), 7219 Brookcrest Pl., Annandale, Va. 22003; Ist year; ‘D’; Soccer 1; Track 1; Pvt.; BD 9 27 53; 941-4871; 87, 129, 167, 166, 303 ‘BAND’ COMPANY 80-81 BARNES, THOMAS S. (Mr. T.S.), P.M.; San Francisco, Calif. APO 96323; 3rd year; ‘E’; JV Football; Wrestling 2; Swimming 2; Track 1; Privilege List; Sgt; BD 7 31 54; 493-6512; 85, 127, 166, 244 BARON, JAMES E. (Mr. A.L.), 2502 Duxbury Pl., Alexandria, Va., 22308; 2nd year; ‘E’; Football 1; JV lacrosse 1; PFC 2; BD 3 25 53; 780-2731, 84, 127, 146, 147, 170, 244 BARTLETT, GREGORY A. (Mr. W.H.), Box 428 Centreville, Va., 22020; 1st year; Pvt.; ‘F’; BD 12 2 57; 166 BASEBALL 148-149 BASKETBALL 130-133 BAVIER, ELLIOT F. (Mrs. M.B.), 1536 Dorsett Dock Rd., Pt. Pleasant, N.J., 08742; 1st year; ‘D’; Pvt; BD 9 26 54 ‘B’ COMPANY 90-91 BEASLEY, LOUIS C. (Mr. C.W.), Cole- rain, N.C., 27924; 3rd year; ‘B’; Pvt.; BD 1 14 55; 356-4420; 91, 160 BECKER, ANDREW J. (Mr. E.B.), 1398 S. Maple Dr.; Vineland, N.J., 08360; 1st year; ‘D’; Soccer; Rifle Team; Pvt.; BD 10 30 53; 87, 170, 139, 263 BEERS, DEAN G. (Mr. G.V.), Rt. 1 Box 173, Branchville, N.J., 0782; 2nd year; ‘F’ Cpl.; Jr. Roller Rifles; BD 7 29 57; 948-4063; (19) 83, 157, 159, 140 BELL, DOUGLASS S. (Mr. J.S.), 3420 Packard Dr., Parkersburg, W. Va., 26101; 149 BELL, JAMES C. (Mr. J.W.), P.O. Box 511, Lewisburg, W. Va., 24901; 3rd year; ‘Band’; Soccer 1; Track 1; Fenc- ing 3; Rifle Team 3; Honor Roll; Privi- lege List; Military Award 2; Bayonet 2; SFC; BD 2 27 53; 645-1234; 53, 80, 170, 183, 137, 249 BENDER, ROBIN L. (Mr. R.W.), Nuffer Rd., Schwenksville, Pa., 19473; lst year; ‘B’; Football; Pvt.; BD 10 19 51; 287-7928; 91, 123, 114, 26, 174, 175; 257 BENSON, KURT A. (Mr. W.B.), 7625 Wheat Fall Ct., Rockville, Md., 20855; 2nd year; ‘E’; Pvt.; BD 10 29 53; 948-7714; 85, 166, 257 BERMAN, JOE D. (Mr. J.B.), 2000 Kenlake Pl., Norfolk, Va., 23518; 5th year; ‘E’; Honor Roll 1, 2; Privilege List 3; Roller Rifles 3; Bayonet 3; Baseball 5; Pvt.; 855-9741; 83, 170, 261 BING, CHARLES S. (Mrs. |.N.), 5113 Peake Lane, Portsmouth, Va., 23703; lst year; ‘D’; Pvt; BD 9 1 54; BAL to BRO 484-4137; 160 BLAUCH, JAMES J. (Mr. J.R.), 1101 Poplar St., Lebanon, Pa., 17042; 2nd year; ‘Band’; PFC; Fencing 1; Privilege List; BD 8 23 51; 273-0889; 80, 106, 219, 183 BOLSTERLE, ERIC R. (Mr. A.B.), 35 Arlington Ct., Burlington, Vt., 05401; lst year; ‘C’; Pvt; BD 3 30 54; 862-4823; 162 BOWERS, TONY J. (Mr. D.J.), Box 16; Forest Park Dr., Thomasvile, N.C., 27263; 1st year; ‘F’; Pvt; BD 12 14 57; 475-1856; 83, 111, 156 BOWERS, WAYNE D. (Mr. P. J. Wool- dridge), 11231 Sorrel Ridge La., Oak- ton, Va., 22124; 2nd year; ‘A’; Sgt.; Roller Rifles 2; BD 9 20 54, 385-7074; 92, 99, 166, 261 DR. REGIS BOYLE, Catholic Universi- ty, Washington, D.C.; 238 BRADFORD, CAPT. JOHN A. (de- ceased), 234 BRADLEY, RAY M. (Mr. R.M.), 421 N. High St., Morristown, Tenn., 37814; 3rd year; ‘B’; Privilege List 1; Roller Rifles 3; Sgt. 3, BD 10 19 51; 586-1438; 91, 99, 166, 268 MISS MARIAN BREEDEN, HISTO- RIAN, D.F. High School, Richmond, Vaz 172 BRIGA, VINCENT (Mr. V.B.), 3018 Columbia Dr., Endwell, N.Y., 13760; 1st year; ‘C’; Pvt.; BD 4 27 53; 123, 88, 162, 282 BRILL, JOHN E. (Mrs. D.A.), 7600 Chesire Rd., Richmond, Va., 23229; 2nd year; ‘D’; PFC; Privilege List 1; BD 5 26 55; 288-4683; 71, 87, 162, 261 BROERE, WILLIAM M. (Mr. J.W.), 471 East Shore Trail, Sparta, N.J., 07871; 1st year; ‘C’; PFC; Football; Honor Roll; BD 4 30 51; 729-7404; 123, 88, 26, 175 BROTHERS 202-205 BROWN, DAVID (Mr. R.W.), 11 Spring Cove Rd., Ashevile, N.C., 28804; 1st year; Pvt.; BD 6 10 55; 162 Index — 283 BRO to COB Index is data historian of academics to Zook BROWN, JAMES H. (Mr. U.B.), 3968 Amber Rd., Syracuse N.Y., 13215; lst year; ‘D’; PFC; Baseball 1; Soc- cer 1; BD 9 18 51; 469-1891; 129, 87, 1 5 BUFFY, JAMES K. (Dr. W.H.), Rt. 1 Box 266, Rocky Mt., Va.; 33 BUNCE, STEVEN L. (Mr. J.R.), NASA Box 7015, APO New York, N.Y., 09856; 2nd year; ‘B’; Sgt.; Honor Roll 2; Privilege List 1; BD 7 28 53; 3-1276; 91, 170 BURGWYN, BART LETT (Mr. C.P.), 442 Winterhaven Dr., Newport News, Va., 23606; 1st year; ‘F’; JV Football 1; Pvt.; BD 5 24 51; 596 0534; 127, HILARITY ROLLS over the audience as Keith Lobach rolls down the aisle during the peak moments of the Winter Festival Talent Show. Mrs. Livick is absolutely enchanted. 82, 158, 240, 260 =e CADET LIFE 8-9 CALDARELLI, DANIEL (Mr. G.C.), Wescoseville, Pa., 18090; 1st year; ‘B’; Pvt.; Football; Basketball; BD 8 14 50; 395-2269; 123, 71, 91, 104, 158, 240, 260 CAMPBELL, GLEN C. III, (Mr. G.R.), (See RECALL '69); 59, 146 CAMPBELL, WALTER D., (See RE- CALL '69); 50 284 — Index CAMPBELL, HAROLD W. (Mr. W.P.), 4705 Patterson Ave., Richmond, Va., 23226; 6th year; ‘Staff’; MSG 6; Honor Roll 1-6; Privilege List 1-6; Recall 6; Drama Club 4, 5; Jr. Roller Rifles, 2; BD 9 22 51; 359-2953; (1) 78; 96; 116; 117, 111, 183 CANEVET, MRS. 124, 293 CARDWELL, MARK S. (LTC K.E.), 8817 Cather Ave. Manassas, Va., 22110; ist year; “D’: PFC; BD 12 6 54; 361-6022; 54, 87, 166, 137, 245 CARR, GEORGE (Mr. F.C.), 4950 Edgewood Rd., College Park, Md., 00740; lst year; ‘F’; PVT.; BD 4 9 57; WV5-6161; (20), 83, 158 CARR, LAYTON B. (Mrs. A.R.), 2320 Cumberland Ave., Middlesboro, Ken., 40965; 3rd year; ‘C’; Soccer 2; Fenc- ing 2; Lacrosse 2; Privilege List 2; Cpl; BD 1 8 52; 248-3679; 88, 99, 170, 243 CASTRO, CARLOS A. (Mr. E.S.), Ser- covia PO Box 2091, San Jose, Costa Rica; 2nd year; ‘A’; Pvt.; BD 11 20 52; 25-17-80; 92, 166 CAVINESS, ALLEN D. (Mrs. M.C.), 2543 Fernwood ODr., Greensboro, N.C., 27408; 3rd year; ‘E’; Honor Roll 1-3; Privilege List 2; Jr. Roller Rifles; Track 2, 3; Pvt. 3; BD 3 13 56; 288-6800; 152, 160 ‘Cc’ COMPANY 88-89 CHEKEMAIN, PETER H., (See RE- CALL '69); 59, 261 CHURCH ORGANIZATIONS 104-105 CLANAHAN, JOHN R. (Mr. R.C.), 8709 Cromwell Dr., Springfield Va., 22151; 1st year; ‘C’; Pvt.; 461-9321; 88, 166 CLARK, C. E. (Mr. J.M.), 6445 Kens- ington Pkwy., McLean, Va., 22110; Ist year; ‘C’; Pvt.; BD 5 31 52; 171 CLARK, JAMES J. (Mrs. L.M.), 746 N. Meadow Rad., Allentown, Pa., 18102; 2nd year; ‘C’; Best Private 1; Bayonet 2; Sgt.; BD 10 1 53; 433-1076; 67, 88, 106, 114, 190, 254 CLARKE, ALVIN W. (Mrs. G.B.), 7227 Iron Bridge Rd., Richmond, Va., 23234; lst year; ‘Band’; Pvt.; BD 10 28 52; 275-7052; 127, 81, 171, 270 CLARKE, L. B. (Mrs. C.C.), 8312 Kerry Rd., Chevy Chase, Md., 20005; 5th year; ‘E’; Privilege List 1-5; Swimming 2; Football Manager 4; Jr. Roller Rifles 1; S Sgt 5; BD 8 8 53; 647-7340; (20), 39, 129, 64, 84, 166, 182, 140 COATS, D. L. (Mr. R.H.), 407 Forley Ave. S.C., 23311; 1st year; ‘F’; Pvt.; BD 4 9 57; 984-7220; 83, 156, 159 COBIELLA, RALPH L. (Mrs. R.C.), IN. ANOTHER WORLD is Burt Glick, seen through the open door to Col. Rapp’s Spanish 1 class. Posters, pictures, and later lab sessions in the afternoons make the language live. 340 Madison St., Denver, Colorado, 80206; list year; ‘B’; Pvt.; BD 12 17 53; 162 COEYMAN, MICHAEL W. (Mrs. G.C.), 23 Charles St., Rossele Park, N.J., 07204; 4th year; ‘B’; Privilege List 3; S Sgt.; BD 4 19 52; 245-5501; 92, 166 COLLINS, ALBERT B. (Mr. HEIs 9907 Marlboro Pike, Upper-Marlboro, Md., 20870; 1st year, PFC.; ‘D’; 86, 162, 261 COLEMAN, LARRY K. (Mrs. L5B:), Box 204, Amherst, Texas, 24312; 4th year; ‘A’; Baseball 3, 4; Roller Rifles 3, 4; FSG; BD 12 26 50; 246-3207; 92, 99, 166, 283 COLLINCINI, GERALD (Mr. A.C.), 407 Walnut Ave., Greensburg, Pa., 15601; 1st year; ‘E’; Football 1; Basketball 1; Pvt.; 837-1524; 123, 124, 72, 84, 85, 174, 175, 130, 131, 294 COMMANDANTS OFFICE 227 COMMERCIAL 236-279 COMPANIES 80-93 CONTRERAS, JULIAN (Mr. JG) 4380 Scuithren Ave., S.E. Washington, D.C., 20019; 3rd year, ‘A’. PFC; BD 8 3 54; 160 COOKE, BRUCE F. (Capt. E.W.), 4206 Kings Mill Lane, Annandale, Va., 22003; 2nd year; ‘E’; JV Football; Pvt.; BD 12 8 54; 162 COOKE, LEE 0. (Mrs. OL); 2125 Belvue Rd.; Waynesboro, Va., 22980; 4th year; ‘Day Boy’; Privilege List; Cpt. 4; BD 942-7370 COOLAHAN, MARK E. (Mr. JF); 3035 Chestnut Hill Dr., Ellicott City, Md. 21034; 1st year ; ‘A’; Pvt.; BD 5 30 55; 465-4866; 93, 162 COOPER, THOMAS F. (Mr. Taki): 1936 Berkeley Ave., Petersburg, Va., 23803; 4th year; ‘D’, Jr. Roller Rifles 1; Swimming 1; JV Football 1; Best Pvt. 1; Lacrosse 2-4; Football 3, 4; Honor Roll 1-4; Privilege List 1-4; Roller Rifles 2-4; 1st Lt.; BD 3 4 53; 733-5042; 52, 123, 87, 144, 99, 166, 248, 249, 256, 296, 277 COTILLION CLUB 102, 103 CRIPPS, GARY D. (Mr. Gw.), 73 8: Fairfield Dr., Dover, Del., 19901; 2nd year; ‘D’; SFC 2; JV Lacrosse 2; Privi- lege List 1, 2; BD 5 17 52; (20), 87, abr da CROZIER, ROBERT D. (Mr. J.B.C.), Box 187, laeger, W. Va., 24844; 8th year; ‘Staff’; JV Football 4; Best Indi- vidual 4; Jr. Roller Rifles (com.) 4; COE to DIC YMCA; Roller Rifles 6-8; Privilege List 7, 8; Major 8; BD 4 21 49; 938-5132; (74), 72, 76, 77, 105, 99, 98, 181, 179, 300 CRUM, BRUCE A. (Mrs. C.D.), 12218 Braxfield Ct., Rockville, Md., 20852; 1st year; ‘C’; Cpl.; Privilege List; BD 8 4 53; 946-5215; 88, 162 CUERVO, CARLOS R. (Mr. R.C.), Praga 35, Mexico; 1st year; ‘F’; Pvt.; 867-0979; 83, 157, 159, 280 CURRY, SCOTT W. (Mrs. B.C.), 815 Woodland Ave., Birmingham, Mich., 48009; 3rd year; ‘D’; Privilege List; Pvt.; BD 5 22 54; MI 6-8962; 86, 162, 169 i DAWSON, JAMES F. (Mrs. M.E.), 7611 Club Rd., Ruxton, Md., 21204; 3rd year; ‘F’; Privilege List 1; Honor Roll 1; Jr. Roller Rifles; Soccer 3; Baseball 3; SFC 3; BD 5 13 54; 328-5148; 129, 82, 160, 240 ‘D’ COMPANY 86-87 DEKLE, MAJ. JOHN H., 1014 War- wick Dr., Staunton, Va., 24401; 885-1176; 23, 154, 209, 218 DELGADO, ROY (Santagio L.D.), Bene- ficio Segovia, San Juan Del Rio Coco, Madrif, Nicaragua; 1st year, ‘E™ Soc: cer 1; Pvt.; BD 6 22 49; 85, 171, 277 DELONG, JAMES M. (Mr. J.H.), Rd. 1 Slatington, Pa., 18080; 1st year; ‘A’; Football; 767-3752; 93, 123, 124, 175 DELVALLE, THOMAS R. (Mr. A.M.), Pan American Airways, Maizuetia, Venezuela; 3rd year; ‘E’; Privilege List 1; Jr. Roller Rifles 1; Football 2; Rifle Team 2, 3; S Sgt; BD 1 29 54; 5145; (20), 85, 162, 139, 263 DEPARTMENTS 52-65 DESSEYN, LARRY M. (Cmdr. M.H.D.), 6435 Burwell St., Springfield, Va., 22150; 1st year, ‘D’; Pvt; BD 9 30 54; 114, 27, 226, 162 DICKINSON, HAYES A. (Mr. W.A.), 1410 Lake View Dr., Fayettville, N.C. 20853; 2nd year; ‘F’; Honor Roll 1; Privilege List 1, 2; Cpl.; BD 5 28 52; 484-1010; 70, 82, 158, 259 Index — 285 DIL to ETT DILLOW, CAPT. C.O., Rt. 2, Waynes- boro, Va., 22980; 942-5465; 209 DIXON, DENNIS F. (Mr. F.D.), 805 Edgewood Ave., Ashland, Ken., 41101: Ist year; ‘B'; Soccer 1; Honor Roll: PFC; BD 12 11 51; 324-2888; 128, 129, 91, 175 DIXON, DONALD L. (Mr. I.J.), 9341 First View St., Norfolk, Va., 23503; 4th year; ‘E’; Cpl.; BD 11 29 50; 85, 171, 267 DIXON, EDDIE L. (Mr. R.A.), 5510 Church Road, Bowie, Md., 20713; 5th year; ‘B’; Peep Football 2-4; Pvt.: BD 1 21 55; 262-2479; 91, 127, 113, 160, 257 d’ORSAY, BILLIE J. (Mr. C.O.), South Africa; 2nd year; ‘A’; Chemistry Award 1; Superior Cadet 1; Honor Roll 1, 2; S Sgt.; BD 3 14 52; (20), 74, 92, 100, 111, 183, 251 DOUGLAS, JOHN J. (Mr. J.), 8 Mor- gan Park, Edenton, N.C., 27932; 144, 227 DRISCOLL, DOUGLAS C. (Mr. R.W.), 15555 Charlton Rd., San Marino, Calif., 91108; 3rd year; ‘Band’: Track 1; Honor Roll 1, 2; Privilege List 2: Cpl.; BD 5 8 54; 681-5445; 27, 80, 167, 168 DRYER, JEFFERY G. (Mrs. P.D.), 68th Pl., Hyattsville, Md., 20784; 1st year, ‘B’; Pvt; BD 5 15 54; 772-0559; 91, 219, 166 = FL EASTER, DOUGLAS R. (Mr. H.J.), PO Box 264, Amelia, Va., 23083; 2nd year; ‘C’; JV Football 2; Sgt.; BD 9 2 55; 561-2623; -(16), 127, 88, 160, 254 ECHOLS, ROBERT P. (Mr. A.P.), 1614 Magnolia Ave., Norfolk, Va., 23508; 5th year; ‘Band’; Honor Roll 1, 3, 4; Privilege List 1-4; JV Soccer 2: JV Fencing 2; Fencing 3-5; Superior Cadet 4; Ist Lt. 5; BD 6 23 51: 423-4367; 51, 80, 137 ‘E’ COMPANY 84-85 47 NY. Pvt.; EICK, JESSIE R. Brookside Ave., 07039; Ist year; 992-9290; 81 (Mrs. R.E.), Livingston, ‘Band’; ELLER, MICHAEL L. (Mr. A.A.), 2901 Everygreen Ave., Baltimore, Mad., 21214; 2nd year; ‘D’; Soccer 1; Jr. Roller Rifles 1; JV Basketball; Pvt.; BD 8 25 53; HA 6-8729; 86, 160 ELLETT, RICHARD H. (Dr. R.P. Jr.), 5025 Balsam Dr., S.W. Roanoke, Va., 24081; 3rd year; ‘Staff’; Cpl. 1; SFC; M Sgt. 3; Roller Rifles 3; 774-0444; 79, 171 SPENT. Tom Hennessy is a perfect reflector of the enervating sessions in early football. Downcast, and miserable now, Tom springs on the field with drive when the whistle blows. Vivacious cadets’ credentials congest Index 8417 Main St., Eden, N.Y., 14057; 2nd year; ‘Band’; Fencing 1; PFC; BD 2 1 51; 992-4338; 81, 166 DUDLEY, JOHN F. (Mr. T. Faulkner), 1400 Greenbriar Rd., Kinston, N.C., 28501; 227, 236 DULANEY, WILLIAM C. (Mr. C.B.C.), 851 Elmwood Dr., Harrisonburg, Va., 22801; 3rd year; ‘E’; Jr. Roller Rifles 2; PFC; BD 1 8 52; 434-7905; 42, 83, 105, 171, 242, 240 DUNAWAY, GEORGE R. (Sgt Maj. G.W.), Quarters 435-a Fort Myer, Va., 22211; Ist year; ‘A’ Pvt: BD 8 19 55; 524-0655; 7, 93, 163, 289 DYER, ROGER J. (Mrs. R.E.), 4601 286 — Index ELLIS CHRISTOPHER P. (Mr. A.J.), 7122 Arrowwood Rd., Bethesda, Md., 20034; 3rd year; ‘E’; Privilege List 1, 2; Jr. Roller Rifles 2; Soccer 2; La- crosse 2; Fencing 2; Cpl.; BD 4 23 56; 365-1714; 129, 146, 160, 245 EMMETT, TIMOTHY (Mr. R.E.), 8885 Littlefield Dr., Detroit, Mich.; 3rd year; ‘C’; Peep Football 2; Pvt.; 491-2490; 88, 163 ENGLISH 62-63 ENT, JAY R. (Mr. F.E.), 6145 Broad- way St., Pitman, N.J., 08071; 2nd year; ‘Band’; Rifle Team 1; PFC; BD 2 21 52; 589-1216; 80, 170, 171, 266 EPPERSON, JAMES W. (Mr. W.C.E.), Rt. 4, Box 124, Amelia, Va., 25002; 3rd year; ‘Staff’; S Sgt 3; Privilege List 1-3; Honor Roll 2; BD 5 25 53: 561-2864; 163, 262 EPILOG 304 ERAMBERT, ERMAN L. (Mr. G.F.); 106 Ist Ave., Gelleville, W. Va.; 1st year; ‘F’; Pvt.; BD 12 25 56; 83, 157, 202 ERAMBERT, JERRY F. above), 1st year; ‘A’; 6 19 54; 202, 92, 163 (Same as Pvt.; BD ETTINGER, ROBERT D. (Dr. R:C.), 1121 Short St., New Orleans, La.; 1st year; ‘F’; Pvt.; 886-1174; 69, 82, 156 EWING RANDY E. (Mr. H.E.), Box 267, N. Main St., 16341; 1st year; ‘FY: Swimming 1; Pvt.; 589-7552; 83, 157, 194 ay eae FACULTY 208-221 FARLEY, WILLIAM H. (Mrs. P.H.), 315 Albrecht Circle S.W., Vienna, Va., 22180; 2nd year; ‘Band’; Privilege List 1; Soccer 1; Fencing 1; Track 1; Pvt.; 938-8820; (22), 129, 80, 152, 163 ‘F’ COMPANY 82-83 FEMRITE, MARK H. (Mr. H.A.), 3000 Northampton Dr., Greensboro, N.C., 27408; 2nd year; ‘B’; JV Lacrosse 1; Fencing 1, 2; Roller Rifles 2; S Sgt. 2; 292-0964; (20), 91, 146, 99, 171, 192, 137, 247; 252 FENCING 136-137 FETTER, DOUG H. (Mr. H.F.), 62 Prospect St., Spencerport, N.J., 14559; 3rd year; ‘E’; Soccer 3; Sgt.; WIPED-OUT AND OFF the list of eligible AMA. bachelors, Jorge Rovirosa enters the arch at Pin-Up Queen ceremonies with his Princess Linda Niess. It’s a steady combo. 352-4752; 84, 163, 276, 266 FIELDS, JAMES G. (Mr. C.G.), 1401 Illinois Rd., Woodbridge, Va., 22191; 1st year; ‘A’; Pvt.; 494-7504; 93, 106, 167 FIELDS, JOHN T. (Mr. J.L.), 1504 Perry Park Dr.; Kinston, N.C., 28501; 2nd year; ‘F’; White Page 1; Fencing 1; Privilege List 1; Roller Rifles 2; M Sgt,; 523-3298; 66, 64, 88, 99, 167 FINAL BALL 118-119 FISHER, WEBSTER M. (Mr. W.F.), 858 N. Greenbrier St., Arlington, Va., 22205; 3rd year; ‘A’; Jr. Roller Rifles 1; Honor Roll 2; Privilege List 2; Peep Football; Pvt.; JA 8-8133; (58), 92, 160 FOOTBALL 122-125 FOREIGN LANGUAGES 64-65 FOSTER, JOHN B. (Mrs. J.W.), 924 W. End Blvd., Winston-Salem, N.C., 27101; 2nd year; ‘A’; JV Football 1; S Set. BD 3 12 52; PA 3-6230; (20), 50, 92, 184, 264 FOWLER, JEFF L. (Mr. F.L.), 11149 Byrd Dr., Fairfax, Va., 22030; 2nd year; ‘F’; Privilege List 1; Pvt.; BD 5 24 56; 273-4881; 82, 157 FRANCIS, RODERICK J. (Mr. W.F.), Fells Creek Farm, Rt. 1, Slatington, Pa., 18080; 2nd year; ‘D’; PFC; BD 2 1 52; 262-6679; 86, 167 FRANTZ, SCOTT (Mrs. J.C.N.), Box 155, Roherstown, Pa., 17571; 2nd year; ‘D’; Fencing 1, 2; Privilege List 1; Sgt; BD 8 7 53; 394-4107; 34, 51, 88, 171, 137, 263 FREY, RANDY W. (Mr. C.F.), Box 392-A, Rt. 1, Slatington, Pa., 18080; 1st year; ‘E’; Football 1; Track 1; Pvt.. BD 3 20 51; 767-5629; 123, 84, 175 FRIES, JOSEPH H. (Mr. J.H.), 6521 Winnepeg Rd., Bethesda, Md., 20034; 1st year; ‘C’; Pvt. BD 4 5 53; 171, 65, 88, 192, 241 FULMER, MAJ. JOHN C. Box 112, Ft. Defiance, Va., 24437; 885-1176; 215 EWI to GIN FURR, WILLIAM F. (Mr. B.M.), 606 Marring St., Kinston, N.C., 28501; lst year; ‘A’; Football; JV Basketball: PFC: Ja 3-5994; 123, 62, 25, 92, 175, 133 FURTWANGLER, ERIC M. (Mr. W.A.), 26 Queen St. Charleston, S.C., 29401; 2nd year; ‘B’; Pvt.; RA 3-6926; 91, 160 EO a GABLE, DONALD L. (Mrs. M.G.), 1329 Park Row, Meadville, Pa., 16335; 2nd year; ‘Band’; JV Lacrosse 1; Fencing 1; PEG; BD 3712 52; 837-1045: 51, 81, 184 GALLEHUGH, JOSEPH F. JR. (Mr. J.F.), PO Box 577, Elizabethtown, N.C., 28337; Football 1; Track 1; Pri- vilege List 1; Bayonet 1, 2; S Sgt.; BD 8 18 52: 11,. 50; 127, 81; 152; 107, 184, 185 GARDNER, COL. W.L. 20 Orchard Rd., Staunton, Va., 24401; 886-5753; 7, 101, 210; 211, 257 GARRETT, GANT R. (Mrs. F.S.), 81 Lochmoore Blvd., Mich, 48236; 1st years; “Fe Pvt; BD 12 27 57; [VU 4-6740; 83, 157, 140 GARRY, JOSEPH J. (Mrs. J.G.), 5819 Vandegrift Ave., Rockville, Md., 20851; 1st year; ‘A’; Pvt.; BD 10 20 55; 424-9312; 163, 241 GEDDIE, FRANK J. (Mr. J.D.G.), 409 S. Main St., McColl, S.C., 29570; 3rd year; ‘A’; Jr. Roller Rifles; Pvt.; BD 5 9 56; 523-5694; 63, 160 GESSLING, JEFFERY A. (Mr. F.A.), 1675 Huntington Dr., Mansfield, Ohio; 1st year; ‘A’; Pvt. BD 11 24 52; 167, 249 GHIORSI, JOHN D. (Mr. D.C.G.), 35 Aspen Rd., W. Orange, N.J., 01052; lst year; ‘D’; Pvt.; BD 9 22 53; 731-4746; 87, 105, 167, 264 GILGER, GILL T. (Mrs. G.G.), 5446 Alta Vista Lane, Dallas, Texas, 1st year; ‘E’; Fencing; Track; Pvt.; BD 3 8 53; 137, 167 GINNS, CHARLES R. (Mr. E.S.), 55 E. Pleasant Grove Rd., W. Chester, Pa., 19380; 5th year; ‘B’; Recall 1-5; Privi- lege List 5; CSPA Gold Medal 4; Lt.; Index — 287 GIR to HAL BD 9 11 51; 399-1071; 91, 90, 99, 109, 212, 235, 189, 202, 268 GIRARD, GREGORY M. (Mr. A.E.), 3305 Custer Ct., Hampton, Va., 23366; 1st year; ‘C’; Pvt.; BD 3 3 54; 64, 88, 114, 26, 167 GLICK, BURT C. (Mr. P.S.), 7211 Park Heights Ave., Baltimore, Md., 21208; 1st year; ‘E’; JV Football; JV Lacrosse; Pvt; BD 12 22 51; 764-3280; 16, 127, 84, 171, 285, 250 GOATE, JAMES J. (Mr. J.H.), 259 Wyncliffe Ave., Clifton Hgts., Pa., 19018; 1st year; ‘D’; Football; Basket- ball; Pvt.; 123, 86, 175, 133 GODWIN, LYLE A. (Mr. R.A.), PO Box 158, Bethany Beach, Del., 19930; 1st year; ‘C’; Pvt.; BD 5 31 56 GOLDBERG, JOSEPH E. (Mr. B.F.), 2913 Chesnut Hill Rd., Ellicott City, Md., 21043; 2nd year; ‘Staff’; La- crosse 1, 2; JV Basketball 1, 2; Roller Rifles 2; Sgt. 2; 79, 146, 147, 99, 171, (132) 133 GOMEZ, ROBERT M. (Mr. Manvel De), Osbaldo Baez 7, Santo Do- mingo, Dominican Republic; 4th year; Privilege List 3, 4; Soccer 1-4; White Page 3; Best Company 3; Roller Rifles 2-4; Capt.; 2-5412; 89, 88, 99, 181, (132), 264 GOOCH, ROBERT A. (Dr. A.S.), 126 Algonquin Trail, Medford Lakes, N.J., 08055; 2nd year; ‘C’; Track 1; Bas- ketball 1; Honor Roll; Privilege List; S Sgt.; BD 6 6 52; 654-4145; 66, 88, 89, 152, 187 GORGRANT, LT. ROBERT D., AMA, Ft. Defiance, Va., 24437; 24, 221, 267 GOYNE, JOHN A. (Mr. E.L.), 7619 Rockfalls Dr., Richmond, Va., 23225; 3rd year; ‘Band’; Swimming; JV Track 1; Privilege List 2; S Sgt.; BD 7 17 52; 272-6842; (45), 80, 114, 163, 140, 271 GRACE LT. JAMES E. AMA, Ft. Defiance, Va., 24437; 140, 267 GRANGER, GARRY W. (Mr. R.M.), 510 Diane Lane, Richmond, Va., 288 — Index 23227; 4th year; ‘E’; Privilege List 1; Lacrosse 2; JV Football 3, 4; Jr. Roller Rifles 2, 3; FSG; BD 6 24 53; 127, 170, 171, 249 GRANOFSKY, BARRY A. (Mr. G.), 704 St. Dunstan Rd., Baltimore, Md., 21212; 2nd year; ‘Band’; Pvt.; BD 9 27 53; 453-8887; 80, 167 GRAY, JOHN R. Springvale Rd., Great Falls, Va., 22066; 2nd year; ‘B’; PFC; BD 6 13 54; 759-2631; 91, 163, 242 (Mr. J.R.), 629 GREATOREX, JEFFRY (Mr. 6447 Queen Anne. Terr., Church, Va., 22044; lst year; Pvt.; 543-0363; 92, 163, 256 D.P.), Falls OK: GREGORY, FRANK T. (Mr. F.G.), Avinham App. App 10J, Avinham, Rd.; 24015; 4th year; ‘B’; Lacrosse 3; Wrestling 1; Pvt; BD 4 21 51; 774-8098; 91, 171, 192, 259 GRIFFIN, SPENCER T. (Mr. B.L.), 311 Courtland Rd., Spindale, N.C., 28160; 2nd year; ‘F’; Jr. Roller Rifles 1; Sgt.; BD 8 9 55; 631-2465; 82, 157 GROVES, HARMON F. (Mr. J.C.), 35 Pine St., Petersburg, W. Va., 26847; 2nd year; ‘D’; Sgt; BD 1 1 52; 257-7371; 86, 117, 187, 254 GRUHN, STEVE C. (Mr. G.S.), 1177 Dorum Ave., State College, Pa., 16801; 2nd year; ‘C’; PFC; BD 4 3 54; 238-1996; 88, 163, 243 GUILLIAMS, RONALD L. (Mrs. B.M.), Harris St., Floyd, Va., 24153; 4th year; ‘Staff’; Privilege List; Honor Roll 4; M Segt.; Color Guard 4; 56, 79, 186, 187, 190, 203, 266 GUTIERREZ, JOSE G. (Dr. G.A.), Calle Atravesada, Granada-Nicaragua, C.A.; 2nd year; ‘A’; Pvt.; BD 8 19 51; 40-49; 29, 92, 186, 282 GUTIERREZ, RAUL J. (Mr. R.G.), 270 Cypress Dr., Key Biscayne, Fla., 33147; 2nd year; ‘B’; Football 1; Recall 1; School Play 1; Honor Roll 1, 2; S Sgt.; BD 1 23 51; 361-5676; 50, 58, 91, 117, 187, 248 GWALTNEY, WILLIAM W., (See RE- CALL '69); (32), (45) a HALE, YOGI D. (Mrs. W.J.), 5544 Janet Dr., Norfolk, Va., 23513; 1st year; ‘D’; Pvt BD 12 17 52; 855-4583; 87, 160, 261 HALEAMAU, KARL K. (Sgt Maj. J.K.), Co. A, 1st Special Forces Grp, (ABN) APO San Francisco, Calif., 96331; 2nd year; ‘D’; Privilege List 1, 2; La- crosse 1, 2; Soccer 1, 2; Track 1, 2; Roller Rifles 2; Lt.; BD 12 9 52; 129, 87, 152, 99, 170, 169, 261 HALL, LEE M. (Mr. S.J.L.), Coca Cola Plant, Dock Monopolio, Tangiers, Morocco; 6th year; ‘Band’; Roller Rifles 4-6; Privilege List 4-6; Wres- tling 3; Track 1; Tennis 3-6; Soccer 4-6; Honor Committee 6; Ad Astra 5, 6; Maj.; BD 7 3 51; 351-05; (32), 181, 278; 279, 28, 34, 39, 121, 129, 81, 80, 76, 151, 150, 104, 101, 115 HALL, STEPHEN H. (Mr. W.H.), 7700 Arlington Blvd., Falls Church, Va., HAL to HEN Index is reflector of achievement stockpile 22046; 1st year; BD 4 5 57; 157 HALL, WILLIAM F. (Mr. F.X.), 7406 Varnuw, St. Landover Hills, Md., 20784; 148, 149 HAMILTON, JOHN F. (Mr. J.F.), 5933 Quatrell Ave., Alexandria, Vai, 22312; 150 HAMILTON, RALPH E. (Mr. J.R.), Vic- yoria Courts, PO Box 5415, Nassau, Bahamas; 4th year; ‘F’; Jr. Roller Rifles 1-3; Honor Roll 1-4; Highest Average 1; Privilege List 3; White Page 2, 3; SFC; 88, 94, 167 HANEL, TED W. (Mr. T.W.), 4510 Greenbay Trail, Myrtle Beach, S.C., 28577; 1st year; ‘F; Pvt. BD SPACED OUT on the dance floor are George Dunaway and Margaret Westmoreland at the formal Military Ball. The music is far from the usual formal type, however. 11 9 55; 449-7943; 158 HANING, LAWRENCE (Mr. J.M.), 5 Hazlet Ct., Wheeling, W. Va., 26803; 3rd year; ‘C’; Pvt.; Lacrosse 2; BD 11 29 53; 232-8226; 84, 163, 280, 2L7 HANN, TIMOTHY F. (Mrs. D.G.H.), 10817 Sperry Rd., Chesterland, Ohio, 44026; 4th year; ‘C’; Soccer 1; La- crosse 1-4; S Sgt.; CL6-3227; 154, 186, 187, 236 HARRIS, GEORGE B. (Mr. G.H.), 106 River Point Crescent, Portsmouth, Va., 23707; 6th year; ‘E’; Honor Roll 1; Privilege List 4-6; Karate 4; Roller Rifles 4-5; lst Lt; BD 3 1 50; 85, 99, 183, 301, 246, 271 HARRIS, JOHN B. (Mr. J.B.), 3499 Hillsmere Rd., Baltimore, Md., 21207; 144 HARRISON, WAYLES R. Ill (Mr. W.R.), 1002 Huntsford Terr., Thomas- ville, N.C., 27360; 3rd year; ‘D'; Track; Pvt. BD 12 28 53; 476-7080; 86, 152, 160 HART, MAJ. CORNELIUS, 1304 N. Coalter St., Staunton, Va., 24408; 886-5753; 64, 220, 231 HART, MAJ. EDWIN, Box 109, Rt. 1, Fort Defiance, Va., 24437; 363-5771; 72, 142, 144, 115, 218 HART, GERALD J. (Maj. C.H.), 1304 N. Coalter St., Staunton, Va., 24408; 1st year; Day Boy; Honor Roll; Privi- lege List; PFC; BD 12 20 57; 83, 231, 158 HART, MAJ. ROBERT S., Box 12, Mt. Sidney, Va., 887-5409; 72, 214, 215, 228, 231 HARVELL, ALVIN L. (Mrs. M.S.), 719 S. View Terr., Alexandria, Va., 22314; Ath year; ‘A’; Privilege List 1-3; Base- ball 2, 3; Roller Rifles 4; Pvt.; BD 5 6 52; 549-4134; (20), 92, 167 HASH, JAMES C. (Mr. J.M.), 3450 Tyler Ct., Elicott City, Md., 21043; 5th year; ‘D’; Swimming 1; Wrestling 2-4; Roller Rifles 5; Pvt.; BD 12 6 53; 465-4173; 87; 114, 167; 269 HASH, JOHN D. (Mr. J.A.), Ft. Defiance, Va., 24437; 1st year; Day Boy; Pvt.; 158, 202 HASH, THOMAS A. (Same as above), 2nd year; Day boy; 163, 202 HAWKINS, JOHN E. (Mr. D.J.), 9101 Kirkdale Rd., Bethesda, Md., 20034, 1st year; ‘F’; Swimming 1; Pvt. 365-1324; 83, 156, 159, 243 HAWPE, MRS. BURWELL, Ft. Defi- ance, Va., 24437; 363-5594; 227 HAYCOX, DOUGLAS D. (Mrs. J.K.), 1413 Crystal Pkwy., Va., Beach, Va., 23451; 1st year; ‘E’; Golf 1; Pvt.; BD 5 8 56; 273-2068; 84, 160 HAYES, HERBERT B. (Mrs. A.W.), 1100 Granville, Charlotte, N.C. 28207; lst year; ‘B’; Basketball; PFC; BD 4 5 50; ED 4-1245; 91, 175, 130, 133, 276 HAYES, MICHAEL R. (Mr. R.E.), 870 Water St., Meadville, Pa. 16335; 2nd year; ‘Band’; PFC; Swimming BD 6 25 52; 333-6031; 80, 71 HEARTLEY, JOSEPH (Mr. E.L.), 10208 Fanger Rd., Fairfax, Va., 22030; lst year; ‘F’; Pvt.; BD 5 8 56; 273-2068; 82, 85, 158 HEATH, HUGH T. (Mr. H.), Rt. 1, Box 158, Kinston, N.C., 28501; 2nd year, ‘Band’; SFC; Privilege List 1; JA 3-9447; 81, 117, 114, 189, 188 HEMPHILL, STEVE (Mr. W.R.), 9313 Coronado Terr., Fairfax, Va., 22030; 1st year; ‘F’; Swimming; Jr. Roller Rifles; Pvt.; 591-4898; 82, 158 HENDERSON, FREDERICK S. (Dr. J.P.), 1600 Stockton Rd., Kinston, N.C., 28501; 3rd year; ‘C’; White Page 1-3; Fencing 1-3; Roller Rifles 2, 3; Lt; BD 3 1 52; 527-2304, 88, 89, 99, 170, 171, 137, 262 HENDERSON, JOHN P. (Same as above) (37), (45), 96, 143 HENDRIX, SAMUEL K. (Dr. P.C.), 655 Index — 289 HEN to IRE . ee ” i NO MISTER ED, but P.J. Thomson warms up to one of Col. and Mrs. S. S. Wales’ horses as he skips out from an early season baseball practice. Warm days made him desert. quan, N.Y., 08736; 2nd year; ‘Band’; PFC; BD 11 29 53; 223-1037; 81, 168 HILL, ROLAND G. (Mr. R.G.), 39 Greenwell St., Lynchburg, Va., 24502; 2nd year; ‘Band’; Lacrosse 1; Foot- ball 1, 2; Honor Roll 1; Privilege List; S Sgt.; 237-4571; 123, 80, 144, 189, 188, 266 HILLSMAN, CHARLES E. (Mr. W.E.), PO Box 35, Amelia, Va., 23002; 7th year; ‘Band’; Fencing 4-7; Track 1; Combo 4-7; Lt; BD 12 4 50; 561-2521; 81, 80, 169, 188, 202, 136, 137, 265 HILLSMAN, WILLIAM M. (Same as Above), 2nd year; ‘Band’; Honor Roll 1, 2; Privilege List 1, 2; MT-1 Achieve- ment 1; Bayonet 1; Sgt.; 81, 189, 202, 265 HISTORY 58-61 HODGES, DAVID A. (Mr. C.C.), 6012 Rois Rd., Richmond, Va., 23227; 1st year; ‘A’; Football’ Pvt.; BD 3 14 51; 262-1203; 123, 92, 168 HOGG, MAJ. JAMES C., 1004 Ridge- HOOVER, COL. PAUL V., Ft. Defiance, Va., 24437; 101, 216, 217, 170 HOWARD, BEN R. (Mr. E.G.), West- bard Ave., Virginia, 22202; 2nd year; ‘F’) Swimming; Jr. Roller Rifles 1; Pvt.; BD 5 8 56; 17, 82, 157 HOWARD, DAVID B. (Mr. K.W.), 1551 Dairy Rd., Charlottesville, Va., 22903; 1st year; ‘F’; Pvt.; BD 11 7 57 HUEGEL, DUAIN (Mr. E.R.), Lake Huta, Pa., 18240; 1st year; ‘F’; Pvt.; BD 5 24 57; 645-9310; 83, 156 HUGHES, SAMUEL B. (Mrs. T.R.), Rd. 2, Fairmont, W. Va., 26554; Ist year; ‘A’: Pvt.; BD 3 20 54; 313-4349; 92, 160, 171, 202, 245 HUMMER, WILLIAM C. (Mrs. N.N.), PO Box 85, Rt. 1, New Salem Ra., Swannonoa, N.C., 28778; 1st year; ‘B’; Rifle Team 1; PFC; BD 298-3208; 91, 171, 138, 139, 302 HUNTER, MRS. RICHARD, PO Box 247, Verona, Va., 885-1988; 227 HURTER, GLENN A. (Mrs. B.K.), 101 Brook Rd., Yorktown, Va.; lst year; ‘D’; Pvt.; BD 8 9 55; 898-6252; 86, 160, 256 HUSSEY, DAVID H. (Mr. W.H.), 8902 Index aids cadets with summer correspondence East Pine St., Wytheville, Va., 24382: 2nd year; ‘Band’; Fencing 1; Soccer 1; Track 1; PFC; 228-3622; 40, 129, 61, 81, 152, 219, 167 HENNESSEY, THOMAS M. (Mr. W.H.), 240 Virginia Ave., Havertown, Pa., 19083; lst year; PFC; ‘D’; Honor Roll; Privilege List; Football; All V.M.S.L.; BD ; HI 6-4770; 123, 87, 175, 286 HERDADE, MANUEL (Mr. M.H.), 40400 ‘Park La., Southfield, Mich., 48075; 5th year; ‘E’; Peep Football 2, 3; Wrestling 3; Tennis 3, 4; Football 4, 5; Privilege List 1-4; Honor Roll 2-4, PFC; BD 6 20 54; 647-3487; 127, 85, 150, 68 HEULITT, WAYNE F. (Mrs. L.G.), 1121 New Brunswick Ave., Panas- 290 — Index mint Dr., Staunton, Va., 24401; 885-1988; 213, 164, 133 HOLLAND, DAVID W. (LTC H.S.), 400 Old Point Ave., Hampton, Va., 23369; lst year; ‘Band’; Pvt.; 723-0296; 81, 163, 250 HONOR COMMITTEE 115 HOLLINGSWORTH, RANDY (Mrs. J.H.), PO Box 308, Dover NC., 28526; 3rd year; ‘B’; Jr. Roller Rifles 2; S Sgt.; BD 4 25 54; 527-4266; (75), 91, 163, 140, 266 HOLVEY, ROLAND (Mr. R.H.), 19 Fairway La., Wescosville, Pa., 18090; lst year; ‘D’; Football; Pvt.; BD 12 28 51; 395-5718; 16, 123, 124, 86, 200 Stratford St., Norfolk, Va., 23503; Ist year; ‘F’; Pvt.; (19), 83, 157 HUTTON, W O MAX M., Rt. 1, Box 30, Elkton, Va.; 226 HYATT, LT. WILLIAM P. Box 67, Mt. Sidney, Va., 216 INDART, RICARDO (Mr. K.J.), 11417 Fairfax Station Rd., Fairfax Va., 22039; 1st year; ‘C’; Pvt. BD 9 28 54; 88, 93, 163 INDEX 280-302 IRELAND, JOSEPH JR. (Mr. J.I.), Box 313, Upper Marlboro, Md., 20870; 6th year; Pvt.; ‘D’; BD ; MA 7-2047; 87, 189, 188 4 } ny fo JACKARD, JEFFERY R. (Mr. R.A.), 1905 Frederick St., Cumberland, Md., 21502; 3rd year; ‘Band’; Honor Roll 1-3; Privilege List; Fencing 1-3; FSG; 51, 81, 80, 189, 188, 137, 256 JACOBS, PAUL R. (Mr. K.F.), 2909 W. River Rd., N. Fulton, N.Y., 13069; 2nd year; ‘C’; Pvt; BD 5 6 54; 592-4422: 88, 146, 163, 203, 140 JACOBS, ROBERT W. (Mr. R.F.), 2909 W. River Rd., Fulton, N.Y., 13069; 2nd year; ‘B’; Privilege List 1; Pvt.; BD 4 14 56; 592-4422; 91, 150, 160, 203, 280, 140 FRAMED by the massive trees in the church grove, two cadets, who are ‘guarding’ weapons, listlessly lounge during the final moments of Baccalaureate services in June. yy 2 epee Wie . nt IM gi a - pots “oe JEFFERIES, MARK S. (Mrs. E.C.), 750 Dual Hgwy., Hagerstown, Md., 21795; lst year; ‘C’; Football; Cpl.; BD 1 19 53; 797-6518; 123, 88, 171 JENKINS, DANIEL E. (Mrs. M.S.), 638 N. Greenbrier St., Arlington, Va., 22205; 2nd year; ‘D’; Cpl.; Rifle Team 1; BD 5 1 52; 343-4388; 171, 139 JENKINS, JAMES S. (Mr. T.D.), Box 41, Upperville, Va., 22176; 1st year; ‘FY: Pvt.; BD 12 6 56; 592-3265; 83, 158, 197, 269 JENSEN, ROGER E. (Mr. J.H.), 27287 Sheahan Dr., Dearborn, Mich., 48127; 152, 153, 269 JENSON, CHRISTIAN M. (Mrs. N.T.), 7 Plymouth La., N.J., 08516; 1st year; JAC to KAL ‘F. Pvt: BD 1 31 59; 152-8215; 83, 157, 245, 267 JOHNSON, D. A. RANDAL (Mr. W.S.), 1 Gray Dr., S. Plainfield, N.J., 07080; 2nd year; ‘Staff’; SFC 2; Honor Roll 2; Privilege List 1, 2; Football 1, 2; White Page 1; ‘Bayonet’ 2; Recall 2; 757-5410; 123, 79, 105, 109, 107, 190, 191 JOHNSON, JAMES A. (Mr. F.C.), Box 118, Kennedyville, Md., 21645; 5th year; ‘Staff’; 1st Lt. 5; Honor Roll 1-3; Privilege List 1-3, 5; Roller Rifles 5: Rifle Team 4, 5; Recall 5; Cotillion Club 3-5; Basketball Mgr. 3; Lacrosse Mgr. 2; Jr. Roller Rifles 1; BD 6 13 55; 348-5425; 14, 78, 103, 99, 110, 119, 191, 254 JOHNSON, JOHN JAY (Mr. R-F.), 3421 W. Chester Pk., Newton Sq., Pa., 19037; 1st year; ‘A’; Football; Baseball; Privilege List; Honor Roll; 353-2360; 72, 127, 93, 175, 299 JOHNSON. LESTER W. (Mr. W.J.), Rd. 6, Oswega, N.Y., 1st year; ‘A’; Pvt.; BD 10 4 54; 343-4388; 93, 168 JOHNSTON, JACK W. (Mr. C.H.), 1409 Hickman Dr., Va. Beach, Va., 23452; 2nd year; ‘F’; Pvt. BD 2 14 57; 340-3463; (19), 83, 157 JONES, LARRY M. (Mr. L.M.), 2652 Cadwell Dr., Ellensville, N.J.; 1st year; ‘E’; Pvt.; 760-4661 JONES, RICK W. (Mr. E.E.), 6400 Spring Lake Dr., Burke, Va., 22015; 2nd year; ‘C’; JV Football 2; Pvt.; 273-3485; 127, 88, 160 JOSEPHSON, M SGT. SIEVERT 1295 Blandford St., Staunton, Va., 24401; 886-8600; 74, 224, 133, 134 JUENEMANN, JOHN L. (Mr. H.J.), 5108 River Hill Rd., Glen Echo Md., 20016; Privilege List 1; Honor Roll 1; Swimming 1, 2; Jr. Roller Rifles 1, 2; 3rd year; ‘D’; Pvt.; BD 10 2 56; OL 2-8962; 129, 87, 160, 140 pa ees KALKHOF, MARK A. (Dr. T.C.), 3749 E. Lake Rd., Erie, Pa., 16511; 2nd year; ‘C’; Sgt., BD 4 5 53; 899-7011; 88, 105, 168 Index — 291 KAR to MAL Three column splits Index into slimmed strips KARCHER, BRUCE B. (Mr. F.K.), 7122 Alderney St., Houston, Texas, 97055; Ist year; ‘Band’; Cpl.; BD 10 26 54; OV6-7904; 80, 163 KAVANAUGH, MIKE D. (Mr. F.P.), 909 Holiday Point, Va. Beach, Va., 23451; 2nd year; ‘F’; Cpl.; 428-1559; 83, 113, 157, 158, 255, 267 KENNETH, LEWIS C. (Cr. H.L.), 2420 Stanley Ave., Roanoke, Va., 24014; 3rd year; ‘Staff’; Golf Team 1, 2; Privi- lege List 1-3; Roller Rifles 2, 3; Sgt Maj.; 343-5330; (278), 13, 78, 99, 168 KENYON, MICHAEL T. (Mr. H.D.), R.F.D. 2 Box 309B, Culpepper, Va., AMUSING | MEASUREMENTS — fix = Chuck Knapp’s eyes on a pulley which his partner is arranging in introductory physics class. Bill Farley and John Fields work on wave and motion. 292 — Index 22701; Ist year; ‘E’; Pvt. BD 4 19 53; 825-8668; 84, 171, 299 KERNS, DAVID E. (Mr. A.L.), 2717 25th St., Parkersburg, W. Va., 26101 KESNER, BRADLEY C. (Dr. J.H.), Box 366 Petersburg, W. Va., 26847; 4th year; ‘Band’; Honor Roll 1-4; Privi- lege List 1-4; Best Room 2; Karate 1-3; Rifle Team 1-4; S Sgt.; BD 1 2 54; 257-6917; (45), 64, 81, 117, 171, 257 KILMER, WADE C. (Dr. J.H.), 1126 W. King St., Martinsburg, W. Va., 25401; 3rd year; ‘A’; PFC; BD 9 28 53; 276-4784; 64, 92, 171 KIME, PAUL F. (Mr. J.M.), 346 Sand Run Rd., Akron, Ohio, 44313; 2nd year; ‘B’; Rifle Team 1, 2; PFC; BD 9 18 52; 864-5713; 91, 170, 171, 138, 139, 250 KINT, KEVIN F. (Mr. F.K.), 1600 S.E. St., Arlington, Va., 22207; 1st year; ‘E’; Baseball; Pvt.; BD 9 18 55; 521-4508; 85, 110, 163 KLUNK, WILLIAM C. (Mr. E.C.), 112 Green St., Downington, Pa., 19335; lst year; ‘D’; PFC; Honor Roll; Privi- lege List; Football; 269-1917; 16, 123, 87, 175 KNAPP, CHARLES W. (Mr. C.W.), Rt. 36, Holly Hill. Keansburg, N.J., 07734; 2nd year; ‘A’; Bayonet 1, 2; Cpl.; BD 7 28 55; 65, 54, 93, 107, 162, 165, 292, 270 KOOGLER, COL. G.W., Mt. Sidney, Va., 234-5427; 43, 101, 215, 228 KOONAN, IRA M. (Mr. J.K.), 8129 Deerfield Dr., Norfolk, Va., 23518; lst year; ‘B’; JV Football; JV Basket- ball; Pvt.; BD 5 7 54; 587-4802; 10, 127, 24, 91, 165, 133, 277 ie LACROSSE 142-145 LAGOSKY, MICHAEL N. (Mr. P.L.), 312 Ridge Ave., Allentown, Pa., 18102; 1st year; ‘B’; Football; Cpl.; BD 9 11 55; 435-1601; 123, 124, 91, 174, 176, 257 LAKE, DEANE A. (Mr. D.M.), Box 191, Shelbyville, Ill. 6256; 3rd year; Privi- lege List 3; Honor Roll 3; Fencing 1-3; Track 1; RECALL 1-3; ‘Band’ BD 1 30 52; 774-2181; 8, 51, 80, 191, 249 LANEY, WORTH T. (Mrs. W.M.), 821 Mae PIl., Va. Beach, Va., 23451; 1st year; ‘C’; Football; Basketball; 428- 1826; 123, 88, 200 LAPISH, FRED L. (Mrs. M.L.), 220 MacDonald Ave., Charlotte, N.C., 28203; 1st year; ‘B’; Basketball; PFC; BD 10 6 50; 334-4112; 91, 176, 130, 131, 133 LAMBERT, MARC P. (Col. J.F.), 431 N. Armistead Ave., Alexandria, Va., 22312; 2nd year; ‘D’; Football; La- crosse 1; White Page 1; Privilege List 1; Roller Rifles 2; Sgt.; BD 7 21 52; 354-5914; 127, 86, 146, 190, 191, 275 MISS MARJORIE LAZAZUS, WHITE- HALL, Whitehall High School, White- hall, Pa. LEE, JOHN A. (Mrs. J.A.), 1809 Park- land Dr., Lynchburg, Va., 24503; 2nd year; ‘B’; Football 1, 2; JV Lacrosse 1; Gpl.; BD 9 7 55; 384-3720; 123, 59:,:(75),. 91, 146, 171 LEGARD, RICHARD T. (Mr. R.H.), 510 Scenic Dr., Narraws, Va., 24124; lst year; ‘Band’; JV Football; PFC; BD 2 6 53; 726-3189; 127, 81, 171 LENTZ, EDWIN P. (Mr. A.W.), 13627 Indian Crook Dr., Houston, Texas, 77024; lst year; ‘D’; Pvt; BD 8 12 54; 467-1412; 87, 168, 260 LETHABY, BRAD A. (Mr. R.E.), 3202 W. 12th St., Erie, Pa., 16505; 1st year; ‘C’; Pvt.; BD 9 30 55; 833-6584; 203, 165 LETHABY, BRENT E. (Same as Above) 2nd year; ‘Staff’; Track 1; JV Football 1; Color Guard 2; M Sgt.; BD 9 26 52; 127, 79, 152, 170, 190, 191, 202, 297 LETHABY, BRIAN C. (Same as Above) 2nd year; ‘Staff’; Track 1; JV Football 1, 2; Color Guard 2; M Sgt.; BD 9 26 52; 79, 152, 190, 191, 203, 297 LIBRARY 70-71 LINK, ACREE S. (Dr. A.S.), 1201 Mal- licotte La., Newport News, Va., 23606; 2nd year; ‘A’; Pvt.; BD 2 1 55; 596-1209; 160 LINKSWILLER JR. (Mrs. E.I.), 3082 Emmons Ave., Brooklyn 35, N.Y., 11235; 2nd year; ‘A’; Basketball 1; Pvt.; 649-8104; (66) LITTLE, FSG WARREN, 512 Robin Hood, Staunton, Va., 24401; 885- 2634; 224 LITTRELL, GEORGE D. (Mrs. B.D.), PO Box 141, Crestwood, Kentucky, 25701; 1st year; ‘E’; Pvt.; 241-8606, 84 LIVICK, CHARLIE (Col. M.H.L.), Ft. Defiance, Va., 24437; 1st year; Day Boy; PFC; 886-7270; 47, 83, 230, 232, 156, 203 LIVICK, MALCOLM H. (Same as above), 3rd year; Day Boy; Gp; Honor Roll 3; 82, 230, 232, 158, 203, 152 LIVICK, COL M.H., White Hall, Ft. Defiance, Va., 24437; 7, 44, 45, 101, 206, 207, 210, 212, 229, 232, 233; 161, 196, 230, 261 LIVICK, MRS. M.H. (Same as above), 18, 39, 99, 207, 206, 230, 221, 232, 233, 278, 261 LOBB, LT. WILLIAM, 45 Orchard Rd., Staunton, Va., 24401; 885-2131; 6, 152, 218, 22, 123, 29 LOHMAN, DEAN P. (Mrs. H.L.), 919 Graydon Ave., Norfolk, Va., 23507; 3rd year; ‘A’; JV Football 2; JV La- crosse 2; Privilege List 2, 3; Roller Rifles 2, 3; SFC; BD 6 28 53; 625- 3148; (20), 92, 146, 99, 203, (132) LOHMAN, GRIFFITH H. (Same as above), 3rd year; ‘B’; Fencing Le JN Football 1-3; JV Lacrosse 1; Lacrosse 2, 3; Roller Rifles 2, 3; Privilege List 1; SFC; BD 6 28 53; (20), 91, 144, 99, 202, 203, 226 LONGENETTE, LARRY T. (Mr. C.L.), 4015 72 Ave., Landover Hills, Md., NURSE’S NIGHT OUT, but Mrs. Etta Canevet awaits her patients after the arch scene. Mrs. Canevet earned her BS degree in the summer from Eastern Mennonite College. 20784; 2nd year; ‘C’; Pvt.; BD 773-5273; 88 LUCUS, COL. HERBERT W., Ft. Defi- ance, Va., 24436; 101, 228 Iie MAES, TIMOTHY I. (Mr. R.N.), 904 Yorkshire Rd., Colonial Heights, Va., 23834; 1st year; ‘F’; Pvt.; 526-0673; 82, 158, 140 MAHER, HERBERT C. (Mrs. J.M.), 524 Piney Branch Dr., Va. Beach, Va., 23451; 3rd year; ‘Band’; Soccer 2: Fencing 2; Privilege List 1, 2; S Segt.; 21, 80 MATHEMATICS 56-57 MATHIAS, R.B. II 272 MASSIE, DONALD B. (Mr. C.C.), 802 Payton Dr., Fredericksburg, Va., 22401; 1st year; ‘Band’; Fencing ile Pvt.. BD 9 3 53; 373-2705, 80, 165, 137, 283 MAY, KEITH L. (Mr. C.C.), 4511 Hill- crest Dr., Royal Oak, Mich., 48073; Ath year; ‘B’; Baseball 1; RECALL 1-4; Roller Rifles 2-4; Privilege List 2-4: Honor Roll 3; PFC; BD : 549-5495; 85, 192, 193, 260 McADAMS, STEVE P. (Mr. M.J.), 12706 Chiltown Circle, Silver Spring, Md., 20904; 3rd year; ‘F’; Pvt.; 384- 5886; 82, 157 McCABE, BRIAN R. (Mrs. A.M.), 265 Indiana Ave., Iselin, N.J., 08830; 3rd year; ‘E’; Privilege List 1, 2; JV Foot- ball 1-3; PFC; BD 10 14 54; 283- 1464; 32, 84, 244 McCOACH, GEORGE E. (Mr. G.M.), 3435 Larch Rd., Huntingdon Valley, Pa., 19006; 3rd year; ‘D’; Wrestling; JV Lacrosse 1; Roller Rifles 3; Lt.; BD 11 13 53; WI7-2209; 9, 127, 87, 146, 99, 249 McCUE, COL. J. C. (Deceased), 234, 235 McCULLOCH, DAVID (Mr. E.D.), 5238 8th Ave., Bethlehem, Pa., 18018; 3rd year; ‘A’; Privilege List 1; Pvt.; BD 1 8 54; 868-4813; 92, 151 McDONALD, MRS. J.H., Mt. Sidney, Va.; 886-8485; 223 McDOWELL, DOUGLAS (Mrs. M.A.), 3229 Medway St., Wheaton, Md., 20902; (37) McGINNESS, THOMAS F. (Mr. C.M.), 99 Dover Rd., Colonia, N.J., 07067; Ath year; ‘A’; Jr. Roller Rifles 1; Karate 2; Judo 3; Cpl.; BD 4 24 54; 382- 9879; 93, 94, 165 MALLETT, ROBERT A. (Mr. R.A.), 630 Ash St., Erwin, Tenn., 37650; 5th year; ‘A’; Privilege List 1; Jr. Roller Rifles 2-4; Track 2; Roller Rifles 5; SFC; BD 5 9 59; 743-6186; (23) 82, 8, 99, 159, 120, 105 MALNATI, DONALD H. (Dr. P.L.), Box 357, Port Tobacco, Md., 20655; 2nd year; ‘D’; FSG; Honor Roll 1, 2; Best Index — 293 MAL to MIT in French 1; RECALL 1, 2; Fencing 1, 2; JV Lacrosse 1; BD 2 20 54; 753- 6089; 6, 38, 48, 186, 146, 100, 108, 109, 204, 20, 169, 137, 225, 110, 253 MALNATI, LARRY J. (Same as above), lst year; ‘B’; RECALL; Honor Roll; PFC; BD 4 28 56; 753-6089; 91, 108, 106, 160, 183, 204, 253 MARCANTONI, RAPHAEL (Mr. R.M.), 1609 Park Dr., Baltimore, Md., 21224: 7th year; ‘Staff’; Pres. Honor Com- mittee 7; Pres. of Cotillion Club 7; Advisory Board 7; Roller Rifles 4-7; Peep Football 1-3; JV Football 4; Foot- ball 5-7; Wrestling 2-5; Lacrosse; Honor Roll 1-7; Privilege List 1-7; Major; BD ; 282-2120; 28, 34, (39), 53, 123, 79, 76, 77, 142, 144, 117, 103, 102, 119, 99, 98, 115, 229, 26, 178, 179, 200, (132), 253 MARINER, MICHAEL W. (Mr. E.E.), 914 Peachtree Rd., Woodstream Apts., Claymont, Del., 19703; 2nd year; ‘C’; Honor Roll 1; Privilege List 1, 2; Fencing 1; Cpl.; BD 3 22 55; 789-8196; 88, 165 MARTIN, STEPHEN F. (Mrs. S.M.), 2918 Woodland Rd., Rosslyn, N.Y., 15235; 2nd year; ‘F’; Privilege List 1; S Sgt.; BD 1 30 53 19-2859; 149, 200 MARSTELLER, GREGORY T. (Mr. A.B.), 2543 Rambling Rd., Vienna, Va., 22180; 3rd year; ‘Band’; Fencing 1; S Sgt.; 938-7476; (45) 81, 192 MARTIN, ERNEST A. (Mr. E.M.), 7638 Gifford St., Norfolk, Va., 23518; 3rd year; ‘Band’; RECALL 1-3; Cpl.; BD 583-2969; 57, 86, 165 MARTYN, JOHN L. (Mr. J.H.), 7244 Palmer Dr., Oxon Hill, Md., 20022: l st year; ‘F’; Pvt.; BD 7 6 58; 248- 9049; 83, 157, 159 MASCHAK, RICHARD F. (Mr. F.M.), 83-85 Woodhaven Blvd., Woodhaven, N.Y., 11421; 5th year; Jr. Roller Rifles 1; Roller Rifles 3-5; YMCA 3; Base- ball 3-5; Soccer 4, 5; Fencing 5; Honor Roll 3-5; Privilege List 1-5; ‘A’; Lt.; BD ; VI7-8089; 129, 58, 92, 148, 149, 99, 171, 203, 254 McGOWAN, WAYNE T. (Mr. M.L.), 9126 Santayanwa Dr., Fairfax, Va., 294 — Index 22030; 2nd year; ‘B’; JV Football 1, 2; JV Basketball 1, 2; Sgt; BD 2 26 53; 280-5043; 91, 133 McGRAW, JOHN J. (Mr. R.W.), 520 Rupley Rd., Camp Hill, Pa., 19011; -2nd year; ‘C’; S Sgt.; BD 5 22 51; 238-6614; 88, 192, 193 McKIBBIN, THOMAS W. (Mrs. D.C.), 317 Woodland Ave., Salem, Ohio, 44460; BD 4 25 56; 337-8921; 91, 165 McKNIGHT, IAN (Mr. B.M.), 220 Mountain Ave., Bound Brook, N.J., 08805; 1st year; ‘B’; Fencing; Honor Roll; Cpl.; BD 6 5 54; 356-3150; 91 163, 137 McLAUGHLIN, WILLIAM (Capt. W.H.), QTRS. D-21 USNAB Little Creek, Va., 23521; 144 McLEAN, THOMAS (Mr. W.S.), 1875 Virginia Rd., Winston-Salem, N.C., 27104; 2nd year; ‘C’ Honor Roll 1, 2; Privilege List 1; 722-3552; 88, 220 McMULLAN, DOUGLAS R. (Mr. R.B.), Children’s Center, Laurel, Md., 20810; 2nd year; ‘E’; Football 1; JV Football 2; Lacrosse 2; JV Basketball 1, 2; S Sgt.; BD 6 18 51; PA5-3600; (20), 127, 59, 84, 143, 144, 113, 114, 192, 133, 193 MELCHER, RONALD P. (Mr. P.M.), 2220 Schell Avenue., Cleveland, Ohio, 44109; 5th year; ‘B’; Fencing 1-5; Lacrosse 2-5; Soccer 5; Swimming; Cotillion Club 5; Roller Rifles 2-5; Capt.; 351-8643; 129, 91, 190, 143, 103, 119; 99, 111, 197,. 136; 137; 270 MENA, JORGE R., (Mr. R.M.J.), 10 Calle 7-56; 1st year; ‘B’; Pvt.; BD 3 21 56; 91 MEYER, JOHN R. (Mrs. J.E.), 1017 E. Landis Ave., Vineland, N.J., 08360; 148, 149 MILITARY 74-95 MILLER, JOHN M. (Mr. T.G.), 1839 Westlake Dr., Westlake, Ohio. 41145; DEFYING GRAVITY, Jerry Collincini leaps and seems to stay suspended in mid-air in the hotly contested MMA game. The most valuable player, Roy Stauffer (10) races for it. Ath year; ‘C’; Jr. Roller Rifles 1; Privi- lege List 1-3; Pvt; BD 4 6 55; 871- 0120; 160-267 MINOR, CHARLES O. (Dr. P.L.), 3102 Noble Ave., Richmond, Va., 23222: 2nd year; ‘D’; JV Football 2; JV La- crosse 1; RECALL 2; Cotillion Club 2; O.A.H.S.S. 1; S Sgt.; BD 2 14 52; 15, 120, 126, 127, 63, 86, 103, 119, 111, 110, 26, 192, 303, 247 MINUNNI, MICHAEL H. (Mrs. E.M.), 21 Presscott Ave., Staten Island, N.Y., 10306; 5th year; ‘F’; Jr. Roller Rifles 4, 5; Honor Roll 1, 3; Privilege List 1-4: S Set: BD 8 71 55; EL 1-4109; 32, 83, 165 MISSMAN, ROBERT L. (Mr. I.L.), 1028 King Ave., Petersburg, Va., 23803; 2nd year; ‘D’'; PFC; BD 3 12 54; 233-4749; 121, 87, 114, 169, 256 MITCHELL, MURRAY V. (Mr. H.E.), Cherry Hill Farm, Havre de Grace, Md., 21076; 2nd year; ‘D’; PFC; BD 9 11 54; 939-1666; 87, 165, 271 MITCHELL, ROBERT M. (Mr. A.T.), 3028 W. 11th St., Erie, Pa., 16505; 3rd year; ‘B’; Privilege List 1, 2; Foot- ball 2; Swimming 2; JV Lacrosse; Roller Rifles 2, 3; Lt.; BD 10 18 55; 833-6195; 46, 60, 91, 90, 146, 103, 99.112). 193, 251 MITCHELL, WILLIAM R. (Mr. R.M.), 4209 Ewell Rd., Va. Beach, Va., 23455; 3rd year; ‘C’; Soccer 2; SFC; BD - 464-5418; (20), 129, 67, 88, 89, 240 MITZEL, STEVE A. (Mr. M.M.), 758 Southern Rd., York, Pa., 17403; 2nd year; ‘C’; Pvt.; 843-6206; 88, 165 MOOREFIELD, EDWARD A. (Mr. E.A.), 4200 Maple Rd., F airfax, Va., 22030; Ist year; ‘A’; Pvt. BD 6 16 53; 591-9097; 93, 165, 260 MORGENSTERN, ERIC W. (Mrs. J.B.), 181 Melrosa Dr., Danville, Va., 24541; 2nd year; ‘F’; PFC; BD 6 20 57; 792-5624; 83, 157, 156 MORISEY, STEPHEN C. (Mrs. J.M.), 309 Fayetteville St., Clinton, N.C., HAWAII delights the late Mrs Chas. S. Roller, Jr. when she made the flight to the Islands in November, 1968. Her vivacity captivated all of the people on the two weeks’ tour. 28326; 2nd year; ‘D’; White Page; Tennis 1; Privilege List 1; Basketball 1; JV Football 2; Cpl.; BD 2 6 53; 542- 3828; 86, 150, 173 MOWRAR, WILLIAM L. (Mr. B.M.), Rt. 2, Ships Pt. Yorktown, Va., 23490; 1st year; ‘F’; Pvt.; 898-6379; 82, 158 MOYERS, CHRISTOPHER (Mr. G.E.), 1107 Riverside Dr., Newport News, Va., 23362; 82, 158 MULLINS, HENRY G. (Mr. H.G.), 1107 Riverside Dr., Newport News, Va., 23362; 1st year; ‘D’; Pvt.; BD 3 27 56; 596-2497; 86, 160, 257 MULLIS, ROGER B. (Mr. J.C.), 126 Fraser La., Staunton, Va., 24401; 1st year; ‘D'; PFC; 880-7057; 83, 156 MURPHY, MICHAEL M. (Mr. P.M.), 8013 Baywood Dr., Norfolk, Va., 23518; 1st year; ‘F’; Pvt.; 587-4323; 83, 159, 158 White Hall appears in inclusive MYERS, BRAD A. (Mr. T.M.), 1205 Wakeford Circle, Baltimore, Md., 21212: ist year; “B’; PFC; BD 9 19 54; 377-9349; 21, (23), 129, 91, 165, 137 MYERS, PHILLIP P. (Mr. G.W.), 2032 Va. Ave., McClean, Va., 22101; 1st year; ‘Band’; PFC; BD 7 13 51; KE 8-5494; 81, 114, 211 = NETTLES, REED (Mr. F.H.), 217 Mon- tlieu Ave., High Point, N.C., 27262; 1st year; ‘E’; Track 1; Fencing 1; Cpl.; BD 10 10 54; 882-1456; 84, 137 NEW CADET SENIORS 174-177 NICCOLL, PETER G. (Mrs. I.N.), 185 Oak Tree Rd., Tappan, N.Y., 10983; 3rd year; ‘C’; Privilege List 3; Honor Roll 3; M Sgt.; 359-0346; 88, 89, 200 NICHOLSON, GARY K. (Mr. K.W.), 14315 Rectory La., Upper Marlboro, Md., 20870; 5th year; ‘F’; Honor Roll 4; Privilege List 2-5; Jr. Roller Rifles MIT to PAP 2-5; Football 4, 5; Lacrosse 3-5; Roller Rifles 3-5; Capt.; 627-3502; 127, (60), 83, 146, 105, 99, 183 NOLAN, JAY J. (Mr. H.E.), 1 Elowro Dr., Newport News, Va., 23602; 2nd year; ‘B’; Cpl.; BD 12 8 53; 91, 280 NORRIS, JOHN A. (Mr. J.A.), 212 W. Avandal Rd., Greensboro, N.C., 27404; 2nd year; ‘F’; Jr. Roller Rifles 1; Sgt.; BD 1 1 54; 292-1280; 62, 157 NULL, STEVE A. (Mr. G.E.), 127 N. Manheim St.; York, Pa., 14702; 2nd year; ‘B’; PFC; BD 9 20 54; 755- 1596; 91 =, O4= OAKEY, DANIEL G. (Mrs. C.M.), 2913 Wycliffe Rd., Roanoke, Va., 24014; 2nd year; ‘F’; PFC; 343-5305; 82, 158, 140 O’BRIEN, JOHN J. (Mr. J.J.), 462 Conn. Ave., Trenton, N.J., 18620; 1st year; ‘Es Pvt; BD 3 19 50; JV 7-6485; 85, 200 OLD CADET SENIORS 178-201 Index listings OLDFIELD, CHARLES B. (Mrs. B.C.), 5316 Rolfe Ave., Norfolk, Va., 23508; 1st year; ‘D’; Pvt.; 423-7233; 86, 105 OLDHAM, BEN B. (Mr. W.D.), Taiwan, Bubat, 1st year; ‘F’; Pvt.; 89-3246; 83, 156 O’NEAL, EDWARD E. (See RECALL 69); 144 ORENSTEIN, BRUCE W. (See RECALL '69); (32), (45) == (p= PAINTER, DR. W.C., Ft. Defiance, Va., 24437; 886-0683 PANKOPF, KURT M. (Mr. J.L.), 5257 Wilkins Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.; 15217; 1st year; ‘F’; Pvt.; 683-2452; 83, 157 PAPARIELLO, JOSEPH (Mrs. C.P.), 261 Suydam St., New Brunswick, N.J., 08901; 3rd year; ‘F’; Pvt.; 846- 3393; (19), (22), 83, 158 Index — 295 PAR to QUA PARKINS, EDWARD W. (Col. E.W.), Little Cedars, Box 105, Ft. Defiance, Va., 24437; Peep Football; Baseball 8-10; ‘Day Boy’; 886-5370; 84, 194, 195 PARKINS, COL. E.W. (Same as Above); 101, 226 PAUL, BRUCE S. (Mr. S.P.), 108 Chesterfield Rd., Lynchburg, Va., 24501; 1st year; ‘E’; Track; Pvt.; BD 8 17 56; 239-2520; 85, 160 PAUL, JOHN H. (Mr. J.P.), 42 Day Circle, Milford, Ohio, 45150; 1st year; ‘C’; Honor Roll; Cpl.; BD 7 2 52; ‘I'M COOL’ is what Tim Cooper seems to be thinking as he notices the cameraman focusing in on him and Sue Beck at the Opening Formal in October. Sue is cool, definitely. 831-0012; 88, 266 PAULSEN, JOHN M. (Mr. M.L.), 1411 Club Dr., Lynchburg, Va., 24503; 1st year; ‘C’; Track; Honor Roll; PFC; BD 6 6 52; 847-8461; 127, 84, 165, 204 PEARSON, STEVE L. (Mr. W.R.), 9 Dell Ct., Wallingford, Conn., 06492; 3rd year; ‘A’; Cpl.; RECALL; BD 10 11 53; 265-0869; 92, 108, 183, 192, 246, 281 PECK, JEFFERY D. (Mr. W.R.), Klice Crossroad, Alleghany, N.Y., 14706; lst year; ‘E’; Football; Lacrosse; 372-6721; 127, 85, 169, 176, 133 PEDUTO, MAJ. C. J., 401 Benson St., Staunton, Va., 24401; 886-7735; 227 PENNOCK, DOUGLAS W. (Mr. C.E.), Box 3587, G.P.O. San Juan, Puerto Rico; 4th year; ‘E’; Privilege List 2-5; Fencing 4; Roller Rifles 2-4; Lt.; BD 6 8 53; 785-8080; (74), 84, 99, 243, 263 PERDUE, MIKE D. (Mr. B.S.), Rt 7, Box 524B, Roanoke, Va., 24017; 1st year; ‘A’; PFC; BD 2 20 53; 774- 8830; 93 PEREZ, DONALD (Mrs. S.P.), 10709 Maybrook P., Kensington, Md., 20902; Ist year; ‘B’; Fencing 1; Pvt.; BD 12 13 55; 933-0395; 91, 165, 249 PETERSON, JEFFERY L. (Mr. R.C.), 628 Washington St., Cumberland, Md., 21502; 2nd year; ‘B’; Baseball 1, 2; Football Mgr. 1, 2; PFC; BD 7 29 53; PA4-7741; 123, 91, 113, 260 PHILLIPS, STEVE A. (Mr. W.A.), Staunton, Va., 24401; 2nd year; ‘Day Boy’; Pvt. 886-9260; 69, 83, 157 PIAZZA, JOHN A. (Mr. L.P.), 1256 E. Broadway St., Long Beach, Calif., 16335; 4th year; ‘Band’; Karate 1; Debate 1; Bayonet 1-3; Fencing 1-4; M Sgt.; BD 6 4 56; 437-3887; 60, 81, 215, 195, 140, 267 PICO-SEDA, J. (Mr. J.P.), Box 504 Haricao, Puerto Rico; 2nd year; ‘C’; S Sgt.; 88, 256 PIERSALL, JAMES A. (Mr. J.A.), 108 W. Kiek Ave., Roanoke, Va., 24001; Pvt.; 1st year; ‘B’; BD 10 26 54; 342-2429; 91, 165 POLUITO, CONRAD D. (Mr. C.P.), 1316 Club Rd. Waynesboro, Va., 22980; 4th year; ‘Day Boy’; Set.; Priv- ilege List; Track; BD 9 10 53; 942-8849; 121, 127, 84, 165 PORCHER, JOHN B. (Mr. F.D.), 875 W. End Ave., New York, N.U., 10025; 3rd year; ‘A’; Privilege List 1-3; Honor Roll 2, 3; RECALL 2, 3; Pvt.; BD 5 22 52; 864-0802; 50, 55, 92, 109, 194, 195, 252 PREDALE, ROBERT A. (Mr. M.P.), 104 Caborne Ave., Bay Head, N.J.; 1st year; ‘D’; Pvt.; 19, 22, 64, 61, 56, 86, 169, 204, 262 PRESSLY, RICHARD A. (Mr. J.E.), 208 E. Highland Ave., Kinston, N.C., 28501; 6th year; ‘C’; Fencing 6; La- crosse 3; Soccer 2-4; Privilege List 4-6; Honor Roll 1; Tennis 2, 3; Jr. Roller Rifles 1-3; Roller Rifles 4-6; FSG 6; BD 11 3 52; 523-2639; 21, 30, 195, 137, 236, 240, 254 PRICE, MELVIN T. (Mrs. M.A.), 47 Clay Rd., Hampton, Va., 23369; Ist year; ‘F’; Pvt.; BD 8 11 56; 244- 35217 82, 156, 140, 267 PRIETO, CESAR R. (Mr. C.I.), 743 Strat- ford Dr., State College, Pa., 16801; 2nd year; ‘C’; Privilege List 1; Swim- ming 1; Basketball Mgr. 2; Sgt.; 237-7954; 88, 160, 204, 133 PRIETO, JAMES A. (Same as Above), 2nd year; ‘F’; Swimming 1; Sgt.; BD 7 21 56; 83, 157, 204, 285 PRIMROSE, FRANK (Mr. P.W.), 4659 Montgomery Rd., Ellicott City, Md., 21136; 2nd year; ‘F’; Honor Roll 1; Privilege List 1, 2; Cpl.; BD 8 18 56; 48, 83, 157, 204, 285 PUGH, MICHAEL (Mr. C.P.), 201 W. View St., Bridgewater, Va., 22812; Ist year; ‘B’; Pvt.; 828-6172; 91, 165, 280, 257 = QUATTROCIOCCHI, MAJ. PAUL, 1708 North St., Staunton, Va., 24401; 885- 3 50: 7,. 19, 225. 224. 278 y | i tt fi = a a — SS SS QUI to ROS Foreign blood brews in Index melting pot QUIGLEY, BRUCE A. (Mr. B.A.), 504 Pleasant Dr., Greensboro, N.C., 27410; 1st year; ‘C’; PFC; BD 5 26 53; 292-0698; 10, 88, 165 fo es RAAB, MARK D. (Dr. D.B.), 149 Schoolhouse Rd., Lancaster, Pa., 17603; 1st year; ‘E’; PFC; BD 7 26 53; 393-3092; 65, 84 RAAP, COL. DAVID E., Rd. 1 Wey- ers Cave, Va., 24486; 65, 73, 220, 291. 228, 229, 231 RAAP, DAVID E. (Same as Above), 1st year; ‘Day Boy’; Pvt.; 73, 93, 173, 172, 133 TWO MISSING? The Lethaby twins sandwich Frank Sanez between them during mass at St. Francis, So where is Jorge and the third Lethaby cadet during the worship service? RACKLEY, DAVID A. (Mrs. F.W.), Mineral, Va., 23117; 1st year; ‘Band’; Football; Pvt.; 872-285; 88, 103, 173 RASBEARY, STAN L. (Mr. R.E.), 121 Tidemill La., Hampton, Va., 23369; 1st year; ‘C’; Pvt.; BD 6 10 53; 838- 8602; 88 REED, ROBERT L. (See RECALL '69), (32), (45), (226), 43, 44, 59 REILLY, MICHAEL G. (Mr. D.W.), 206 W. Masonic View Ave., 2230; 1st year; ‘D’: Basketball; Lacrosse; Privilege List; PFC; BD 12 28 54; 548-8451; 86, 168, 165, 134 REYNGOUDT, BRUCE N. (Mr. N.R.), 69 Cottage Pl., Riverdale, N.J., 07457; 4th year; ‘A’; JV Football 1; Football 2-4; Lacrosse 2-4; Best Ath- lete 3; Privilege List 2; Roller Rifles 2-4; S Sgt.; BD 1 21 51; 835-1973; 123, 124, 92, 144, 143, 197, 196, 270 139-140 RIFLE TEAM RAMMETA, FRANCIS T. (LTC. T.P.), 361 Hope Mont Circle, Hampton, Va., 23369; 152, 153 RAMETTA, VAN T. (Mrs. T.P.), OIG HQ USAREUR, APO New York, Ni Yves 09403; 2nd year; ‘Band’; Honor Roll 1; Privilege List 1; Best New Cadet 1; MT-1 Award 1; Tennis 1; Rifle Team (Capt.) 2; M Sgt.; BD 9 14 52; 51, 81, 150, 105, 194, 195, 139 RAMEY, TURNER A. (Mrs. T.R.), Walnut Hill Orchard, Charlestown, W. Va., 25414; 6th year; ‘Staff’; Peep Football 1; Soccer 4-6; Roller Rifles 6; JV Basketball Mgr. 2; M Sgt.; 725- 7110; 129, (60), 79, 97, 195, 139 RAMSEY, WILLIE L. (Mr. E.G.), 513 Martinville, Va., 24412; 2nd year; ‘F’; Jr. Roller Rifles 2; Fencing 1, 2; Sgt.; BD 2 17 56; 632-4052; 16, 83, 158, 137 ROACN, FRANK W. (Mr. H.K.), 150 High St., Warrenton, Va., 22186; 152 ROBERTS, DUANE E. (Mrs. H.C.), 2406 Burke Ave., Alexandria, Va., 22301; 1st year; ‘B’; Pvt.; BD 6 9 53; KI8-7903; 91 ROBINSON, BRADFORD K. (Mrs. S.R.), 1041 Malcom Rd., Toledo, Ohio; 43015; 3rd year; ‘A’; Soccer 1; Lacrosse 1-3; Jr. Roller Rifles 1; Swim- ming 2; PFC; BD 12 13 53; (20), 84, 92, 162, 165, 276 ROCK, DAVIE M. (Mr. J.R.), Skipwith Rd., Richmond, Va., 23226; 5th year; ‘E’; Jr. Roller Rifles 1; JV Football 2-5; Pvt.; AT8-1357; 127, 58, 85, 165 RODRIGUEZ, RODGER M. (Mr. R.R.), Panama Rep., Panama, Paseo Cin- cuenta Inario 43; 4th year; ‘E’; JV Track 1; Privilege List; S Sgt.; BD 11 14 53; 24-75-19; 84, 152, 173, 282 ROLLER, MRS. (Deceased), 232, 233, 282 ROLLER RIFLES 98-99 ROSENSTEEN, SCOTT B. (Mrs. M.R.), 2053 Summit Ave., Baltimore, Md., 21207; 1st year; ‘A’; JV Lacrosse; PFC; BD 12 15 53; 944-2436; 92, 173 ROSENZWEIG, STUART (Mr. A.R.), 7415 Katydale Rd., Baltimore, Md., 21207; 1st year; ‘E’; Pvt.; BD 4 14 54; 486-3610 ROSS, MARTIN D. (Mr. G.M.), 525 E. Brady St., Butler, Pa., 16001; 2nd Index — 297 ROT to SHI Picture parade marches through Index pages year; ‘A’; Sgt.; BD 9 21 51; 283- 4533; 92, 196, 245 ROTHENBERG, KEVIN J. (Mr. A.R.), 4149 Country Club Circle, Virginia Beach, Va., 23455; 1st year; ‘B’; Pvt.; 464-4886; 97, 160, 275 ROVIROSA, JORGE P. (Mr. F.A.), 1545 S.W. 40th Ave., Miami, Florida, 33134; 6th year; ‘A’; Privilege List 1-5; Honor Roll 4-6; Fencing 3-6; Capt. of Fencing 5, 6; Lacrosse 5, 6; JV Lacrosse 4; Roller Rifles 3-6; Honor Committee 6; Capt,; BD 7 26 52; 448-3391; 19, 35, 43, 62, (74), 92, 96, 144, 105, 99, 98, 115, 181, 137, 244, 280, 287 ROWLAND, GEORGE A. (Dr. G.R.), 101 State St., Millville, Pa., 17846; lst year; ‘C’; Pvt.; 458-6061; 2, 88 RUBENS, HARRY A. (Mr. H.R.), 1665 Sterling Rd., Charlotte, N.C., 28209; llth year; ‘D’; Privilege List; Honor Roll; Highest Average in Junior School; Jr. Roller Rifles; Pvt.; BD 3 22 52; 375-3593; 60, 97, 197, 196 RUNIONS, JAMES F. (Mr. P.E.), 1580 St. Charles St., Lakewood, Ohio, 44107; 3rd year; ‘B’; Pvt.; 226-1306; 91, 173, 139 RUSSELL, PETER J. (Mr. H.G.), 169 Brush Hill Rd., Smoke Rise, N.J., 07405; 3rd year; ‘E’; Biology Medal 2; Track 2; Fencing 2; Karate 2; Rifle Team 2, 3; Roller Rifles 2; Honor Roll 1, 2; Privilege List 1, 2; S Sgt.; BD 2 30 51; 838-5247; 85, 197, 196, 139,251 SGr es SABINO, JOSEPH R. (LTC A.J.), HQ EUCOM (J-4) (JPO), APO, New York, N.Y., 09128; 1st year; ‘E’; Pvt.; 730- 483; 173 SAENZ, FRANCISCO J. (Mr. F.S.), San Jose, Costa Rica, Box 886, Calle 3F, Avenida F; 2nd year; ‘Staff’; Soc- cer 1, 2; Track 1, 2; Color Guard 2; M Sgt.; BD 8 30 50; 128, 129, 196, 79, 180, 197 SAENZ, JORGE A. (Same as Above), 298 — Index 2nd year; ‘Staff’; Soccer 1, 2; Track 1 2; Color Guard 2; M Sgt.; BD 8 30 50; 30, 129, 79, 198, 199, 204, 297 SAMUELS, ALAN B. (Mr. J.S.), 146 King St., Strasburg, Va., 22657; 3rd year; ‘Band’; Bayonet 3; PFC; BD 6 26 53; 465-3511; 81, 96, 144, 107, 113, 266 SASLAW, DAVID B. (Mr. G.S.), 2201 Lackswanna_ St., Adelphi, = Md., 20732; 3rd year; ‘C’; Privilege List 1-3; Honor Roll 2; Peep Football 1; Te nnis 1; White Page 2; Swimming 1; Talent Show 2, 3; Pvt.; BD 12 19 56; 439-9534; 88, 112, 161, 160, 140 SASSAMAN, LT. RALPH B., AMA 24437; 24, 101, 123, 149, 221, 219 SAVEDGE, COL. CHAS. E., Box 7, Ft. Defiance, Va. 24437; 43, 101, 111, 212, 213, 229 SCHWARTZ, STEVE M. (Mr. D.B.), 80 Sandbury Dr., Heniretto, N.Y., 14454: 2nd year; ‘F’; Soccer 1; Pvt.; BD 10 20 56; 334-2355; (19), 47, 83, 159, 140, 261, 255 SCIENCE 52-55 SECO, FRANCISCO R. (Mrs. F.R.), Ave. 22, Calle 5-7; 520, San Jose, Costa Rica; 1st year; ‘D’; Pvt.; 173 SELBY, CURT M. (Mr. C.F.), 122 7th St., Brunswick, Md., 21716; 3rd year; ‘C’; Honor Roll 1, 2; Privilege List 1, 2; Pvt.; BD 12 7 54; 834-9255; 106, 219, 263 SHAPIRO, LEWIS (Mr. E.S.), 1408 Hollins Rd., Waynesboro, Va., 22980; Sth year; ‘Day Boy’; Honor Roll 1-5; Cpl.; 942-6671; 84, 165, 264 SHARP, LT. HOWARD D. 1623 Pack- ard St., Staunton, Va., 24401; 209, 226. 273 SEATON, MAJ. WILLIAM J. Rt. 1, Box 97, Bridgewater, Va.; 828-3376; 216, 217 SHEPHERD, JEFFERY N. (Mr. M.W.), John Hopkins Rd., Gambrills, Md., 21054; 2nd year; ‘F’; Pvt; BD 2 18 55; 721-2578; 82, 159 SHIPP, WILLIAM C. (Mr. W.H.), 215 Castlewood Rd., Portsmouth, Va., 23702; Ist year; ‘C’; Pvt.; 397-6464. 88 THE MAGIC TOUCH which brought Col. Livick and his family back to life. It’s the moment of truth when Roy Stauffer shoves AMA ahead 78-77 over HMA in the VMSL tourney. SIMMONS, MRS. SALLY AMA, 24437; 886-7569; 236, 300 SILVERBERG, MARC (Mr. I.S.), 125 E. Tyler Crescent, Portsmouth, Va., 23707; 4th year; ‘E’; Track; Jr. Roller Rifles; Rifle Team; Privilege List 1, 4; Cpl.; BD 12 12 52; 399-8834; 47, 84, 152, 160, 139, 241 SILVERMAN, WAYNE E. (Mr. A.B.), 2207 Princeton Ave., Philadelphia, Pa., 19199; 1st year; ‘A’; Football; Pvt.; BD 5 5 52; DE3-6922; 123, 92, 200 SISAK, MICHAEL S. (Mr. M.S.), 95 Lincoln Ave., Versailles, Pa., 15132; 2nd year; ‘Staff’; Honor Roll 1, 2; Karate 1; RECALL 1, 2; Most Stu- dious Cadet 1; Best in German 1; Academic Achievement Award MT-1 1; Cottillion Club 1, 2; Quill and Scroll 2: 0.A.H.S.S. 2; M Sgt.; BD 7 5 53; 824-4858; 22, 38, 67, 78, 79, 100, BLACK MAGIC keeps Ray Smith from perfect coordination during PT on the front field. Mike Kenyon, John Johnson, and Jim but check Vernon Atchison are in unison, Wells, also. 119, 103, 102, 109, 108, 172, 173, 275, 240, 242 SLAGLE, RONALD V.B. (Mr. G.B.), Dales Yacht Basin, Pt. Pleasant, N.J., 07755; lst year; ‘E’; Soccer 1; Bas- ketball 1; PFC; BD 5 7 54; 129, 24, 218, 134, 135, 266, 275 SMITH, GUY H. (Mr. F.W.), 14 Chey- enne Rd., E. Hartford, Conn., 06118; lst year; ‘A’; P; BD 3 28 56; 568- 3471; 92, 160 SMITH, RAY E. (Mr. J. G. Gerachis), 3065 M St., N.W. Washington, D.C., 20007; 1st year; ‘D’; RECALL; JV Football; Fencing; Honor Roll; Cpl.; BD 9 8 52; FE3-1670; 6, 127, 67, 65, 87, 109, 173, 137, 299 SMITH, TERENCE R. (Mr. D.F.), 105-A Askewton Rono, Severna Park, Md., 26116; lst year; ‘C’; Lacrosse; Football; PFC; C47-1837; 128, 88, 176 SNAPP, RAYMOND A. (Mr. A.S.), Lost River, W. Va., 26812; lst year; ‘E’: Basketball 1; Baseball 1; BD 5 24 50; 841-6466; 85, 176, 131, SIM to STA 133 SNELLINGS, CRAIG D. (Mr. S.), 3414 Jay Ct., Ellicott City, Md., 21043; 3rd year; ‘C'; PFC; BD 11 13 53; 465- 1694; 165 SOCCER 128-129 SOTOMAYOR, ALBERTO D. (Dr. A.S.), Jinotepe, Carazo, Nicaragua, C.A.; 3rd year; ‘E’; Soccer 1-3; Rifle Team 1; Sgt; BD 2 11 51; 129, 199, 205, 282 SOTOMAYOR, JOSE (Mr. P.E.), (Same as Above); lst year; ‘A’; Pvt.; BD 9 14 56; 165, 205, 282 SPORTS 120-153 STANKO, ALBERT J. (Mr. A.S.), 922 N. 4th St., Allentown, Pa., 18102; 1st year; ‘A’; Basketball; Baseball; Pvt.; BD 9 12 52; 435-7649; (16), 24, 93, 176, 134, 135, 249 STAUFFER, ROY A. (Mr. P.E.), 304 S. 5th St., Emmaus, Pa., 18049; Ist year; ‘D’; Cpl.; Basketball; Baseball; STE to VAD BD 4 4 51; 965-5626; 62, 87, 27, 176, 131, 133, 294, 298 STEIB, LARS J. (Mrs. M.H.), 174 W. Oakridge Park, Metairie, La., 70005; Sth year; ‘B’; Pvt.; BD 6 25 56; 834- 8029; 91, 160, 140, 254 STERN, E. C. (Mr. E.C.), 520 Locust St., Pittsburgh, Pa., 15218; 1st year; ‘A’; Soccer; P; BD 6 3 56; 242-0721; 129, 93, 173, 140, 256 STONE, JAMES M. (Mr. J.E.), 17 Egges La., Baltimore, Md., 21228; lst year; ‘C’; Pvt; BD 2 6 53; 747-4797; 17, 88, 173 STORY, MARTIN L. (Mrs. A.S.), 139 Sherman Ave., Roselle Park, N.J., 07204; lst year; ‘E’; Football; La- crosse; Pvt.; CH1-0860; 123, 176, 177 STUDER, SFC DONALD 128 College Circle, Staunton, Va., 24401; 886- 3150; 224, 138 STUMP, DAVID R. (Mrs. C.S.), 109 June Dr., Camp Hill, Pa., 17011, 1st year; ‘F’; Pvt.; 737-8196; 47, 83, 159 SUAREZ, DIEGO J. (Mrs. D.S.), Mim- osa 108 Mab. Sta. Maria Rio, Puerto Rico; 1st year; ‘E’; Pvt.; BD 8 7 54; 766-5856; 84, 165, 242 SUMMER SCHOOL 46-49 SWIMMING 141 SYROPOULOS, NICHOLAS (Mr. Tom), 411 S. Highland Ave., Baltimore, Md., 21200; 144, 278, 274 TF ess TABLE OF CONTENTS 2 TALENT SHOW 112-113 TALLAULAH 208 220 TATE, WILLIAM H. (Mr. G.W.), 2027 Princeton Ave., Charlotte, N.C., 28207; 149 TAUBMAN, DAVID R. (Mrs. E.T.), 3524 Barton Oaks Rd., Pikesville, Md., 21218; 2nd year; ‘Band’; Cpl.; BD 6 16 54; 486-7997; 80, 165 TAYLOR VAN D. (Mrs. T.), 2114 Zov- ersland Arden, Wilmington, Del., 19803; 2nd year; ‘C’; Soccer 1, 2; Jr. 300 — Index Roller Rifles 1; Pvt.; 475-7263; 129, 160 TAYLOR, WILLIAM R., III (Mr. W.R.), 2706 Tillbrook PI., Greensboro, N.C., 27408; 82 TEWKSBURY, DALE M. (Mr. M.T.), R.D. 2, Box 417, Eudicott, N.Y., 13760; 1st year; ‘A’; Track; Football; PFC; ST5-1577; 123, 92, 177, 244, 266 THIEL, LAWRENCE T. (Mrs. M.J.), 511 N. Pelham St., Alexandria, Va., 22304; 5th year; ‘Staff’; JV Football 1; JV Fencing 1; JV Track 1; Soccer 2-5; Football 2-5; Fencing 2-5; La- crosse 2-5; Roller Rifles (Commander) 5; Ad Astra Per Aspera 4, 5; Honor Committee 5; Advisory Board 5; Privi- lege List 2, 5; Col.; 370-3137; 11, 28, 35, 53, 128: 76, 77, 144, 101; 99, 98, 115, 229, (226), 241, 165, 178, 179, 137 THOMAS, DAVID W. (Mr. D.M.), 1630 E. Ducahoe St., Petersburg, Va., 23803; Ist year; ‘F’; Pvt.; 733-8505; 69, 83, 157, 245 THOMSON, PAUL J. (Mrs. G.T.), Gernston Hall, White Post, Va., 4th year; ‘Band’; Peep Football; Wrest- ling 1; Privilege List 1, 2; Baseball 1-4; Football 4; Sgt.; BD 5 4 54; 837- 1780; 123, 81, 149, 113, 140, 298 TOCHTERMAN, WARREN D. (Mr. F.B.), 2100 Bristol Pike, Corwell Heights, Pa., 19020; Jr. Roller Rifles 2; ‘Bayonet’ 3; Declaiming 2, 3; Pvt.; BD 1 27 57; ME9-0500; 9, 86, 160 TOLBERT, WILLIAM C. (Mrs. M.T.), 1556 Bluemont Ave., Roanoke, Va., 24015; 2nd year; ‘B’; Fencing Privi- lege List 1; Roller Rifles PFC; 345- 8928; 91, 173 TRAVERS, GREGORY S. (Mrs. C.A.), 6337 Silias Burke St., Burke, Va., 22015; 3rd year; ‘D’; JV Soccer 1; Privilege List 1; Honor Roll 1, 2; Bay- onet 3; Pvt.; BD 9 25 53; 451-6261; 87, 133 TRAYLOR, STEVEN M. (Mr. H.B.K.), 5313 Academy Road, Va., Beach, Va., 23462; Ist year; ‘C’; Pvt; BD 10 1 54; 497-5408, 88, 161, 260 TRENT, STEPHEN G. (Mrs. E.E.G.), 4533 Wake Forest Road, Portsmouth, Va., 23703; 7th year; ‘Staff’; Roller Rifles 4-7; Privilege List 6, 7; Capt.; Most Improved cadet 6; BD 2 13 51; 484-6215; (20), 61, 77, 99, 179, 240 TROTTER, WAYNE R. (Mr. R.D.), 316 River Road, Red Bank, No, OF 701; lst year; ‘B’; Football; BD 4 4 50; 747-2653; 122, 123, 125, 60, 91, 177 = Ss UNDERSTEIN, GARY A. (Mr. J.), CONFRONTATION. Mrs. Sallie Simmons, housemother for Davis Hall cadets, informs Bob Crozier that her men have contributed over $100 for the Lynchburg Orphanage fund. 9206 Bardon Road, Bethesda, Md., 20014; 2nd year; ‘Staff’; Fencing 1, 2; SFC; BD ; 530-3511; 170, 173). 137 UTT, JESSY S. (Mr. M.J.), Rt. 1, Box 188, Powahatan, Va., 23139; 152 cag Vie VADEN, PHILLIP E. (Mr. H.C.), 728 Elliffe Rd., Newport News, Virginia 23361; 1st year; ‘F’; Pvt.; BD 5 4 57; VAI to WHI Index explodes in bold face, dictionary guides 595-3258; 159, 255 VAIDEN, WALTER W. (Mr. A.S.), Rt. 1, Indian Trail, N.C., 28079; 1st year; ‘A’: Pvt.; BD 1 31 53; 882-1664; 83, 92, 165, 251 VAMOS, ERIC V. (Mrs. M.V.), 408 State St., Johnstown, Pa., 15905; 2nd year; ‘B; BD 4 4 54; 255-4870; 91, 165, 282 VAN HORN, JEFFREY L. (Mr. R.W.), 2400 Walnut St., Harrisburg, Pa., 17103; 86; 165, 266 VASCONI, FREDRICK J. (Mr. F.J.), 721 Dickson St., Endicott, N.Y., 13760; 123, 62, 92, 177 VARNER, FREDRICK R. (Mr. F.H.), 318 Woodland Ave., Parkersburg, W. Virginia, 26101 VEREEN, DAVID M. (Mrs. J.H.), 1001 Tatum Dr., New Burn, N.C., 28532; 1st year; ‘C’; Pvt.; BD 6 8 52; 637- 4975; 61, 88, 177 VETICK, CHRIS L. (Mr. L.V.), 4350 Old Columbia Rd., Ellicott City, Md., 21043; lst year; ‘F’; Swimming 1; Pvt.; BD 4-5 57; 465-6779; 83, 156, 195, 243 VIALES, EDWIN L. (Mr. E.M.), Calle 28, 81 Sur, San Jose, Costa Rica; 1st year; ‘E’; Pvt.; BD 3 28 52; 173 VINTILA, VALEAN J. (Mr. V.V.), P.O. Box 986, Waynesboro, Va., 22908; 1st year; Day Boy; PFC; 943-3351; 83; 169 a WW WACHMEISTER, LT. HANS, 622 Al- legheny Ave., Staunton, Va., 24401; “sn, . 885-3150; 127, 213, 228, 149, 230 WALES, COL. S.S., Ft. Defiance, Va. 24437; 886-4652; 101, 232, 266 WALKER, DEAN B. (Mrs. R.W.), 156 E. Hampshire St., Piedmont, W.Va., 26750; 5th year; ‘C’; Privilege list 2, 3; Pvt. 1-4, Cpl. 5; 355-5021; 88, 173 WALKER, JOHN L. (Mr. L.W.), 2821 Bayvouw Blvd., Portsmouth, Va.; 23707; 2nd year; ‘F’; Sgt. 2; BD 6 3 56; 397-1317; (19), 82, 159, 205 WALKER, THOMAS L. (SAME AS ABOVE), lst year; ‘D’; Football 1; Baseball 1; Pvt.; BD 9 21 50; 22, 61, 86, 177, 205, (132), 134 WALKER, WILLIS H. (SAME AS ABOVE), 8th year, ‘C’; Swimming 4; Roller Rifle 8; Sgt. 8; BD 8 18 49; (39), 227, 173, 205 WALLACE, LAWRENCE W. (Mrs. L.W.), 17 E. Leicester St., Winchester, Va., 22601; 1st year; ‘E’; Football 1; Privilege List 1; PFC; BD 5 24 53; 662-3593; 85, 275 WATKINS, STEPHEN B. (Mr. Bass), 805 Westover Road, Wilmington, Delaware, 19807; 3rd year; ‘D’; Privi- lege List; Roller Rifles 3; Lacrosse 2, 3; BD 8 21 51; 658-5343; 5, 87, 146, 147, 199 WATTS, KENNETH G. (Mr. K.), 126 Calvert Ave.; Edison, N.J., 08817; 1st year; BD 2 1 56; 549-0850; 161 WEBB, COL. WILFRED W. Ft. Defi- ance, Va., 24437; 886-6854; 62, 72, 206, 215 WEBB, WILLIAM W. (Mr. W.W.), 6000 ge Es we ibe Q ; 35th Ave., Hyattsville, Md., 20782; 3rd year; ‘C’; Honor Roll 1; Jr. Roller Rifles 1; J.V. Lacrosse 2; Cpl. 3; 277- 0255; 88, 146, 219, 165, 277 WELLS, VERNON W. (Mrs. V.W.), 120 School Rd., Wilmington, Del., 19803; lst year; ‘E’; Swimming; Golf; 655- 0147; 13, 85, 173, 140, 229 WELSH, DAVID G. (Mrs. D.W.), 233 Shenandoah Ave., Winchester, Va., 22601; 2nd year; ‘D’; PFC; BD 9 19 54; 87, 169, 165 WENZEL, JEFFERY G. (Mrs. A.G.), 209 E. Whitlock Ave., Winchester, Va., 22601; 3rd year; ‘Staff’; Roller Rifles 2, 3; History Medal 2; Assoc. of U.S. Army medal 2; Honor Commit- tee 3; Cotillion Club (Pres.) 3; Editor of Recall 3; Honor Roll 1-3; 0.A.H.S.S. 2; Capt.; 662-3798; 22, 36, 44, 53, 59, 77, 100, 119, 118, 108, 115, 111, 110, 155, 179, 242, 262 WEST, JOHN N. (Mrs. M.S.), 3415 Glennmore Dr., Chevy Chase, Md., 20015; 8th year; ‘C’; Roller Rifles 4-8; Football 7; Baseball 2; Track 8; Lacrosse 8; Bayonet 6; Recall 5; Peep Football 1-3; Lt; BD 6 26 50; 652-3518; 85, 105, 199 WESTMEN, ROBERT T. (Mr. R.T.), Briar Apts, Fayetville, N.C., 21502; lst year; ‘F’; Pvt.; 82, 159, 140 WHITAKER, RICHARD O. (Dr. J.O.), 374 Wesley Ct., Chapel Hill, N.C., 37514; lst year; ‘A’; Soccer; Recall; ONE WORLD is. what seems to be surrounding George Harris. Early spring brings out people and thoughts of spring vacation and graduation. George actually watches lacrosse sessions. As oy Cpl.; BD 4 6 54; 942-1326; 129, 92, 109, 303, 242 WHITE, CHARLES F. (Mr. C.F.), 854 Montgomery Rd., S.C., 29407; 1st year; ‘F’; Pvt.; BD 1 15 56; 795- 302 — Index PREVIEWING A FILM STRIP, Buzz Hummer, top man on the rifle squad, flicks through a filmstrip in U.S history. It, of course, concerns weapons used in the West. 4426; 93, 161 WHITEMAN, MARK H. (Mr. B.A.), 300 Dumbarton Rd., Richmond, Va., 23229; 1st year; ‘A’; Pvt.; 267-5098; 82, 159 WICKUN, MICHAEL D. (Mr. J.W.), 40 Falmough St., Milford, Conn., 06460; Ist year; Band; Pvt.; BD 7 21 53; 874-1198; 8, 57, 81, 173 WILKINS, CHALS M. (Mr. C.W.), 23 Byers Ave., Portsmouth, Va., 23702; Ist year; ‘F’; Pvt; BD 6 16 55; 488-6703; 82, 159 WILLIAMS, LARRY K. (Mr. L.W.), 1411 Bridgton Rd., Winston-Salem, N.C., 27107; 1st year; ‘F’; Pvt.; 784- 0613; 85, 159, 137 WILLIFORD, DALTON T. (Mr. W.B.), 5005 Vick St., Portsmouth, Va., 23701; 1st year; ‘F’; Pvt.; BD 4 18 55; 488-2098; 82, 159, 158 WILLIS, ROBERT E. (Mr. J.T.), 814 Williams Rd., New Bern, N.C., 28560; Ist year; ‘F’; Pvt.; BD 10 20 57; 637-2362; 83, 150 WILSON, LAWRENCE W. (Mr. L.W.), 2634 Park Rd., Charlotte, N.C., 28209; 2nd year; ‘C’; SFC; BD 9 20 51; 372-4579; (20), 88, 117, 198, 199 WINSTEAD, BRUCE B. (Mrs. M.S.), 5425 Falriver Row Ct., Columbia, Md., 23221; 1st year; ‘A’; Baseball; Pvt.; WHI to ZOO BD 5 20 50; 730-6549; 62, 93, 110, 177, 205 WINSTEAD, ROBERT L. (Same as Above); 1st year; ‘B’; Baseball; Pvt.; BD 5 20 50; 730-6549; 2, 91, 173, 205 WOODYARD, KENNETH M. (Mrs. J.D.), 434 N. Armisted St., Alexandria, Va., 22312 WORLEY, JAMES A. (Mr. J.W.), 84 W. Hazeltine, Kermors, N.Y., 14217; 2nd year; ‘D’; Privilege List 1; Honor Roll 1, 2; Swimming; Sgt.; BD 6 18 52; 875-7298; 67, 55, 86, 199, 257 WRIGHT, JOHN C. (Mr. H.C.), Star Rt. 1, Box 3A Newcastle, Va., 24127; 4th year; ‘E’; Privilege List 2; Sgt; BD 8 4 50; 864-2131; 84, 173, 250 WYCKOFF, DAVID T. (Mr. W.W.), 59 Fairfield Rd., W. Hartford, Conn., 06107; 2nd year; ‘B’; Football; La- crosse; Pvt.; BD 3 16 54; 91, 161 WYSONG, SAMUEL W. (Rev. S.W.), 512 Compton Ave., Laurel, Md., 28810; 2nd year; ‘Band’; PFC; BD 6 17 53; 725-1041; 80, 103 ity ea ZAYAS, ALFREDO S. (Mr. F.Z.), 140 Cape Florida Dr., Key Biscayne, Fla., 33149; 1st year; ‘B’; Lacrosse; BD 11 9 53; 361-5356; 11, 91, 107, (132), 261 Index ignites, bellows cloud of activity ZOOK, DAVID H. (Mrs. D.H.), Rt. 2, W. Liberty, Ohio, 43357; 1st year; ‘E’; Honor Roll; Pvt.; 465-2781; 84, 165 RECALLers recall fatiguing format, accolade assisters It was a year of frantic work, with a deep and genuine roar of appreciation due to PG man, Ron Ginns, whose four years as RECALL photog- rapher can’t fully be realized, yet. Whenever it was needed for Jeff or Mike to work harder, it was Major Paul Quattrociocchi who gladly helped the staff. Never once did he fail to encourage and to give cadets time off from military. What would the RECALL do without Mrs. Senora McClung and Brainerd McClung of Andre’s in Lexington. They’re great, sheer great. The staff gaped with awe at Frank Doyle of American Yearbook Co. who actually helped the staff secure pictures from outside sources and who suggested changes for the better. Many days found Lt. John Kupcinski driving his ‘bug’ to town for ads. He was a real aid. When it looked as if the RECALL would have no negative pix, Mayor Richard Daley of Chi- cago helped and it was appreciated. To Capt. Dillow, to Maj. Dekle, and to ‘Doc’ for snacks, fried apples, and turkey, what can we say except an expanded ‘thanks’. oe The 1970 RECALL was printed by American Year- book Company, Cambridge, Maryland. Representa- tive was Mr. Frank Doyle. The first 48 pages are printed in black ink on Contempore Blue paper. The remaining pages are 100 Ib. Velva white, printed in Tempo 293 ink, The endsheets are red Contempore, with gold numerals. The introduction and dividers _ use 12 point Optima type. Headlines throughout the book are 24 point type, except on dividers which use — 30 point Optima with the section name in all caps, _ 30 point Palatino. All captions in the book are - point. Body copy is 10 point Optima. Advertising and Index pages, however, use 10 point News Gothic with bold for body copy. Portrait photographers were Andre Studio men of Lexington, Virginia. The RECALL is a member of the Columbia Scholastic Press Association, Future Journalists of America, Na- tional Scholastic Press Association, National School Yearbook Association, Quill Scroll, and Southern _ Interscholastic Press Association. BIRTHDAY AND FOOD please Country Whitaker, Harry Baldwin, Mike Sisak, and Chuck Minor, who just happened to be a Valentine’s Day gift. Food did expand Chuck, Acknowledgments — 303 obviously. TY ‘ ie PhKe, . ow ot psf Turmoil ceases, REVOLUTION persists It has been a peculiar year, one of turmoil within ourselves, while there was turmoil in the world outside. Patriotism, genuine friendship, devotion to duty became qualities which made the departure in June harder to take. But always there will be those away from AMA who carry on the revolution, who will give others the insight of what our heritage means. It’s going to be tough, because it has to be a continuing revolution. 304 — Epilog ae ee dei ikea pee Fre Se st a Pete ifs, FONE Mtliowenéese:s Edt Rs - sal Hie. é Se Riese ot ot Bae ge : ety AR fe Sie NEN hs alee ie I


Suggestions in the Augusta Military Academy - Recall Yearbook (Fort Defiance, VA) collection:

Augusta Military Academy - Recall Yearbook (Fort Defiance, VA) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 1

1967

Augusta Military Academy - Recall Yearbook (Fort Defiance, VA) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 1

1968

Augusta Military Academy - Recall Yearbook (Fort Defiance, VA) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

1969

Augusta Military Academy - Recall Yearbook (Fort Defiance, VA) online collection, 1971 Edition, Page 1

1971

Augusta Military Academy - Recall Yearbook (Fort Defiance, VA) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 1

1973

Augusta Military Academy - Recall Yearbook (Fort Defiance, VA) online collection, 1974 Edition, Page 1

1974


Searching for more yearbooks in Virginia?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online Virginia yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.