Bucknell University - L Agenda Yearbook (Lewisburg, PA)

 - Class of 1969

Page 1 of 270

 

Bucknell University - L Agenda Yearbook (Lewisburg, PA) online collection, 1969 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1969 Edition, Bucknell University - L Agenda Yearbook (Lewisburg, PA) online collectionPage 7, 1969 Edition, Bucknell University - L Agenda Yearbook (Lewisburg, PA) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1969 Edition, Bucknell University - L Agenda Yearbook (Lewisburg, PA) online collectionPage 11, 1969 Edition, Bucknell University - L Agenda Yearbook (Lewisburg, PA) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1969 Edition, Bucknell University - L Agenda Yearbook (Lewisburg, PA) online collectionPage 15, 1969 Edition, Bucknell University - L Agenda Yearbook (Lewisburg, PA) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1969 Edition, Bucknell University - L Agenda Yearbook (Lewisburg, PA) online collectionPage 9, 1969 Edition, Bucknell University - L Agenda Yearbook (Lewisburg, PA) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1969 Edition, Bucknell University - L Agenda Yearbook (Lewisburg, PA) online collectionPage 13, 1969 Edition, Bucknell University - L Agenda Yearbook (Lewisburg, PA) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1969 Edition, Bucknell University - L Agenda Yearbook (Lewisburg, PA) online collectionPage 17, 1969 Edition, Bucknell University - L Agenda Yearbook (Lewisburg, PA) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 270 of the 1969 volume:

W-' . J, . , 4 --if-::v,:-H '-1' vfg- ---if--zwsff : -r.-fin:-.:::::.zJ -:Y -W '- W ' - 2 q.: Y -mia ' -jj In ggnx - - -:zz-ga:-.:.za: f1f.:'raag.s:-aaar ' 7w' ,?- -T ffsig -' T fi TT f -1111 -ii 41221 --I 'rf T f':1T P?E2Z 45'- 7 -4.1 5 Z 4 P .A P4 E Lf: Q.. L5 ca D no 2 3 ua .4 w E CD 5 E 'D p.: E M LJ 'D cn 42 Q 5 CD if -J Lu E Z D+ H if CD Z Lu Lu E E E ALM Dr. Iohn D. Kirkland, Ir 2. if it v. .Jw ., Q -'WF 2- fv' DEDICATION . . . I think it's alto- gether appropriate that this yearbook has been dedicated to Professor Kirk- land, because he has dedicated so much to you, the studentsg has dedi- cated such a great deal of his energy towards building a community from which we all can benefitg has dedi- cated his presence at Bucknell to con- cerned participation and involvement with policies and issues of the Uni- versity. . . . . . Unlike any other man I know, he has a kind of insatiable curiosity about what things mean, about what life means, about what being an his- torian means. He has dedicated his life to investigating these meanings, and although it would have been pos- S-2 .valjh ,J sible for him to have carried out his investigations without paying a great deal of attention to students, he has instead made the decision that his curiosity cannot truly be indulged, his investigations cannot truly be successful if done in isolation from the human community. Thus, al- though he lives in a world more populated by ideas than most of us do, he still manages to have a real sensitive presence with other people. His ideas are not detached from hu- man reality, but rather are firmly grounded in itg and the human reality that concerns him most is the reality ofthe Bucknell community . . . A Colleague K 5-W... 4 3 1 V n 1 5 . . . The more closely you scrutinize the stu- dents, even though superficially they seem to be pretty much the same, you find out that they're really not the same . . . they aren't stereotypes. If I were asked to characterize Bucknell students and I were to use language with great care, I oou1dn't do it-there's actually too much diversity The more superficially you look at the stu- dents, the more they seem to be the same. I some- times think that the stereotyping is not so much the result of the students as it is the result of the way that We look at them. The more uniquely you look at them, the more you ind that there is something individual in them to bring out . . . 'J V 7 'TX iz 4'?'1. fzivf ,sfiffgjj riiiiiirw, fiflilil J rlwlbiliss ,fwfr r X. tl lt, ful- fly X1 -I LQ-lx! - 'X 'Q -df? X-3, P ml 1,ff'f'fX 'X A .' Hi u1: 2'W!'i-If 7'-lifmgxyl Xfsidxfllxw as ln -msgid lf .fa X. if ,Xxx I ,iffy SSW X EDITOR'S NOTE: In an effort to re-create the tone and atmosphere which have characterized the past year at Bucknell University, the edi- tors have used excerpts from informal tape-recorded interviews within the literary portions of the 1969 L'Agendu. Our appreciation goes to those members of the administration, faculty, and student body who so will- ingly cooperated in this project. 9 X ' F 455' 4 0 vias' :Is so! NN vga , at-' Q E, .gt 41 :ffm ,N-nw 5,1 K i wig I 4 if - ,,. 'viii' f- 1 gg -4- ,ir f Qflfkf' gh u-n?!' 'QW' 5'7 t . , . I 1 2 ry, . aj r N ,, J, -xx , F -1 ' ,V Y 1 ,. N hw ' . ml , 'Nw M H . .f lg T? M , Aw Zh V5 0 -. 1' x I R A A, f 2,115 J is -Q' W v K' ' f'- ' ' -1 11 ' ' mei . S' fx' in ,iw qi 'QIQ ' 1 I, .ln f H 4 5,24 1 ..: f - 'JT I ' ,Aa 4'-,1 I I 5 4 sy' Aj.. PM ' ,v'iix . 7 N v s 5' ll, 3: N V A'-.111 Trasqxtt as 1' ' -Us 4'- rg J: aa 'JT '31 . A' D QE A '- . gffi rfuwi 'D A, f 1 6.40, jffffih., , .,s-NT Q4 -1' - 5:1 ffm? 'F' 'W' hr 'O ww eff f . f:-JM .ff-T, 2 3 41 'i-ff 9' X 5 ?: f. V gg 3 L 'ffijg If . .I - 'inn '- IL w. Y +5 6 3'l.'-Fifa . 6 ,Lug- if, A ff A191 Qkwl' 4 , w,if5,g'o - Qf-em . 43 'Q lrgxl Ho'-,Aj 'nf In M- A' -rm! ' 75 4, 1 M. x 90' A. A 'fx nr 1 A. 31 ' 1 J .x T xv 11 I f 'L K' ': 1 ' fl! 1. N . .W Rf, ,, 1 --:if 9 gps- x NW' v x gg, .2 , . lv . ' ' I L,'-P' ' V gf. K in ', f.5 , - ' : : 2 1 ' ' Fx f 3, Kb . -I obj: N I r ,fx f-.I -3, l ,4,w.w ,M D --N4 . ' '.,' 'X-N VA- -F, H '. V J-. .kr :nf get X L.. 1, 'JNL' .Q :wi A in V' r-g,::.-:f,::Qjq-- ,,- -A: t- t W n T 1 l Sk in 3 fai n- '- 5- ik to V 5-nw' v 'NSA - y - .x 1 -A A , - 1 'G-.1 X 'Q 'Q . I Y, .f , 'As - H ' Q . ' , - 'V 594.14 ft , -, f. Q ir vw as tb I 14 1 1 'rf ,Y :Lain 3 IN NJA. N N S 5 T. I 17 1 'LESB- .minn- 4 I 4, I 1 1-- 4.1 A Y 4 Q' ff: Th X 'X 7 :nn- 1' Irv: . in My ,, 'Y m J. M emy Q.' ' Y livin, .,. . mfwrh, 9. -Q I' Q ,a 6,-.f-'U' - Kiwi J if L., ? te wp j7Q'FI',-ff: iff K? ,f I '-E Lia. ,,I3y,g3 V Wing. nj .fm f, 1 x qwii-1. I I HN- 4' 'F Q 1' -A .l 'gi' In :fx F1 1 ,f E , 5-h-,:.N YK 'L I X, 4' J' ., . 'L ' 4 ,.-.P 1. .f in , I I A A 3 6, 1 I L. ' ' PON. 'Y NVQ, .1 I BOWL 2 1 ' fi ' I 5 'Lux- f , x WSW? 4, ,, :f - , ti. .Af 1' Mn , U Hx., I -sh. 1 P, --Hr , '-ml v 4 0.6.0 Q 'EW an qw x , EM, - sy .1 - .:.,,y W , .45 .-k ,M Q ., A .,. A 1- I:-ll: 1,IVu.,.1v-' 3i 'YIb'4fSFf25 S 55 :Is 4 ow, .2555 JM W' 23 ,Lyn q, - ' Y' I v A 52 1 sq I 'W' Dr. and Mrs. Charles H. Watts and two of their children, Charles and Caroline. ,,,-,,- - Daughter Katharine not pictured. H tif tn-,. 5-1 BCD Y'-LLI3' PRESIDENT . . Several years ago, I took my courage in my hands and tried to say what I thought the college students of the mid-1960's were like. I said that they had grown up more rapidly than earlier generations-that they had come to an almost premature maturity. I said that they rarely sought to escape from involvement with their changing world, but instead were impatient to participate in righting its wrongs. Finally, I said that they had a strong respect for each man's separate, individual worth, and wished to live in a society governed by a rule of law and reason, not by a rule of man. Today, I have deep concern about certain, extreme aspects of student behavior, but I also have a deep belief in the common sense, the decency, and the lawfulness of the vast majority of our students. Their commitment to their education is real, their questions are tough but balanced, and they are honest with themselves. We have had, and will have, our campus troubles, but we have a strong tradition of cooperative action among students, faculty, and administrative people which, I am confident, will carry us through whatever turmoil tomorrow may bring . . . Dr. Charles H. Watts, II , 1 -. t Tb 37-24 ' aw mtv-he , I . . - Eoeruous, F10 :......saY,,, ,, ' ' .ri-J 4 , l 1 STU LE .lr 'l :VIH-5 3, -,,,.n s...,,, - 1 .. r1.,,,lg.' . i :lil fr E H-V, ego. .,' . '11 pw mes mam sm tcor.a-vw:-sau. EH Bl ' 0,1 hal'- CUC' A VICE PRESIDENTS . . . Somehow, we have to convince our constituency that a place like Bucknell does not represent just one point of view-that the purpose of a university is to pro- vide an opportunity for young people to explore different ideas and to have leeway to make some mistakes-that a place like Bucknell should have the kind of academic freedom that per- mits people to make mistakes and take off on ideas which perhaps are not the conventional ones. Our job is not to be concerned if people don't under- stand this policy as much as it is to concern ourselves with forwarding it... 1. F. Zeller, III l or s ,- W' X Fiiiiiiiil V '-i1 26 VICE PRESIDENTS-TOP TO BOTTOM: Ronald I. Pedrick, Iohn F. Zeller, III, Mark C. Ebersole. DEAN OF MEN-john P. Dunlop. ASSISTANT DEANS OF WOMEN-Suzanne K. Hermann, Brenda E. Gor- don, Ruth A. Morey. PW- Q- DEAN OF WOMEN-Mary lane Stevenson. ll , , i 'Q -Y , .- - t. .221 ' ' , N, J, A K' A , . w .i 'why ,. H I A :WI 'W 1 I: L 1 A Q pig-r-. un' ul ' ' v I , , ASSISTANT DEANS OF MEN-Raymond O. Eddy, Gerald I. Gladkowski. 27 3 7' A ' 'H2F'li1l i w., , 1 . r A DEAN OF STUDENT AFFAIRS-Iohn C. Hayward. Zgszsu ':::,,-- PUBLIC RELATIONS-B. Tufts, T. Eisley B. Shimer, D. Wohlheiter. ALUMNI RELATIONS-M. Woodward, D. Hayes. ee'- TREASURY-R. Shimer, D. Young, F. Har- ley. 28 REGISTRAR-F. Pyle. ADMISSIONS-G. Ripple, I. Davis, R. Skelton, F. ASSISTANT DEAN OF ARTS Walling. AND SCIENCES-H. Sigman. DIRECTOR OF COUNSELING SERVICES-D. Wilder. I 'lx l f ..v-, 'X I ,A . PURCHASING AGENT-C. Geiser. 29 ' . .I A I' A whh., . 5 , - J' G H ' ' V ww ' 'F V, .I . A ASSISTANT OF PLANNING AND DEVEL- OPMENT-R. Allen, R. Pedrick, I. Shott. MANAGER OF UNIVERSITY STORES-W Elze. PHYSICAL PLANT-B. Riley, W. Geiger, I. B 11. PLACEMENT DIRECTOR-R. Irwin. B ..? CHAPLAIN-D. BuCk6y. FOOD SERVICE-M. Pluemacher. C.A.-I. Hammerlee. LIBRARY STAFF-G. Ienks, C. Chang, M. Stoneburg, G. Miles, Z. Horn H. Rivoire, N. Blum, M. Scheie, A. Hedenberg, M. Phillips. 30 K . 571 .,,, r Q H..-1 1' Qgnlr' . 'I V - my -1 . ,f L , V. ' '., ' '1- Siilff 7 1' .JI-yrs .V ' f 5 an 4 .. zq, V 3 7 fhfe, L ..,,'4., K E ' I s -LV,-.Af , ...Y 131,55 . - in ,Q-.k'f1l',-1,,?,7u,f.f , , f. 1 I ,Q ...Y 'L Iv'-gri., 'L 1 Ji fi. cs. '.i-.sn-2' fx- ', -A 5 1 ' 1' F' P . l 1 5 ,, , 6-41 .af 1 . ' 9 .1 ,. . 11 ', HNF ,1- i 1 ' ' 24 : 6 F, J. ' '- 1 A' 'FW' 1' A ' T ff ,pl- 9 N if f - ', ,.A ,11 A .A 1 .1 . ,ZS . V v 'f I ' 1 ws - . . , . -5- v. .A IVA.. I ' Ni. 4 Ulf N lr.:-1 F . sr 1- M ' , N ' ' 4 .. A. 1- -Lf' r,v:xx , N 9,51 Q , .g ' ,' ' ,, f' rx ' 1 x. ' 1 ' ' V 1 -5,1 v 'I' -'fs .,1 1 -..! . ., v ' ' A -QQ' -X' .. ' ,l - . 1 f' gn 1 Pu -' 1 T :keg , . , , 1., - , , V. D . -QQ., , 4 gf, -1. , W-X.-18' x Q41, ,ax-X ,. 1 ' ' ,ix ,F , V . ..',-wgkfx '1 - ' x Q1 .1 ' - . X Q A. Q- ff , H ,5- . w lg, 4513? QF' Q '..4' h Z' ' 11 ',14' ' W cgi: a 'V 'T' , ' 1 xx' is 1, W, .- L . . - , .n - , . 11 ' X I 1 QU , sy ,g 3- ' - ' .K , v. 1 1 3 .fX' ' P w, , . . ,, Q ., . . . - , . w .H ' 15, A - gl Q V f 1 x U: Q ' - ,.- 'N-.ya I x lib N 'I . ' ' 1 I 1 . t -. 5' N'x 1 ' 'J . 4 I N .,,' 1 1'-1 x :rf . 1 - , , : . Q' 'V X I- A.. , '.1e.W . ,- K-., .1 . 1 - . E5 aj 1 .4 ' . X' f 'V fi, -rx, , . ' .' Q 3 , . I , ., ' - ,Q 1 5' .A-as M4 sv f . 'linux ,Fun - .V - ,wJ N 4 3. W1 , 1 ,. .. 1 A' AQ h ,-H x .H '-ff V A x .4 ' ' . f- xx .!',.-Af v V . 1'., 1. -45 1 - - 1 54 MM. .- Q J 4- . ,1 ' l, , , -1- . ll' N, ..- . w .. A, H- ' ' ' .1 'S ' -'L A X 'X ' J' , V, ,v.- I -- A . .I 1 - V- . 1 - A, s ' ,. ' ...' .1 .1 pu- A - 4 1, . . is , .M -cw f .f H da- -,,.' 1 1, 41 .., .,. , V W. , x 1 P3 ..Q:vr ' ' ' 1x BQ ' tax -1.1-. ' 'f' lr' V 1 '- .div Q. 5 1' A 11 11'- ' A ,Q JT 1- . . 'ww 1, .VA .-1 'Q- L 1, V 4 ry Ayeq- ,.,,,.1 . V, . 1' ,U i . f J -, .-A ,,. 1,.,g,... n VM, 1 -K. s . '. I MQ ix' D A . ..+.fc-41 Q, -' -1- -'SL . 59,7 l A' 1. A.. X 'A - K, ' YM' N-' x, 'AA 1 1a,,4c1,,.,l .10 --NW v' ACCOUNTING . . . I think it's excellent to have business and accounting departments in a school such as Bucknell, a school that has a 'liberal arts atmospheref since it pro- duces the type of person that is needed in the profession-a broadly based person with much more experience than just the profes- sional. Although the accounting and finance that we teach is obviously not that much dif- ferent from that taught at a conventional business trade school, the demand for our graduates is much greater than it would be for graduates of many business schools per I1 y se... C. T. Ressler ACCOUNTING FACULTY-C. Ressler. O. Mahon, F. Price. Pictured on preceding page is R. Headley, Dean of the College of Business Administration. +W- 1' w i' 'milf-1 M. 2 -I f -35 Q7-i ff' I l iECONOMICS . .. The World is an exciting place in these times and education should be as exciting as the issues we live with. In some respects, we have been lax in dealing with many of today's issues, though we in the Economics Department are moving more in this direction. When we discuss issues that are relevant, students join in the dis- cussiong when we talk about theories and con- cepts which sometimes have less relevance-when we stray from the world of reality into the world of remote abstractions, the students are not as anxious to participate. It is through our awareness of this kind of response that we might be able to bring about the vitality that We should have in education . . W. H. Cooper BUSINESS . .. We in the field of management have a problem because this rural, rather isolated environment often does not serve the needs of the upperclassmen who are majoring in business. I think there are definitely some hazards in being remote from an industrial, commercial base-re- mote from the basic problems that management faces increasingly in urban and suburban areas. This hurts our discipline . . . S. L. Miller BUSINESS FACULTY-V. Murti, S. Miller, chairman: N. Shiffler. ECONOMICS FACULTY-G. Simpson, W. Cooper, chair- man: V. Sweeney. .'..:.::.1,4.'..,F,5!:.,, ..,1-.?yW-17,11-Q! V , qty, v LL .f,.s.5.ifSw gr I if! s 4 E' 5 X15 in 1 -x X .qix vsaiil.-1 1 ' F OMICROM DELTA EPSILON IECONOM- ICSI-ROW 1: S. Hirschberg. L. Klock, president: H. Peck, I. Salzer. ROW 2: L. Ginsburg, M. Kowalski, P. Nezi. ROW 3: R. Klein. 34 DELTA MU DELTA IBUSINESS ADMINIS- TRATIONI-M. Looker, L. Wood, president: R. Parker, B. Hess, S. Miller, I. Salzer. muff' Q C. A. CABINET-ROW 1: D. Marinak, I. Sandel, I. Gerrity, M. Harris. ROW 2: I. Hammerlee, advisor: C. Masters, C. Endriss, M. Hill, presidentg K. Fichter, I. McFadden, B. Cole, S. Schrader, I. Kempson. i qi J if-R 'af CONCERN THROUGH ACTION . . . Our purpose is that people not be grouped, but that they come together for a purpose, either for a purpose of understanding, or for a purpose of carrying out a project. We are not here to form groups-we're not even a card-carry- ing membership organization. . . . We are trying to create open minds .... . . . The attitude a lot of people have about Colloquy is that it is the time a lot of weirdos come to the campus to create problems on this serene setting. They get very annoyed that we try to break through the traditional serenity and gracious living of Bucknellg they resent this, and we had a lot of trouble just trying to get the people whom we're most trying to influence to even listen . . . The C.A. is trying to break through the barriers which are here . . . we want to make people recognize their own value system and what really matters to them. 35 HEAD RESIDENTS-ROW 1: Mathieson S. Snyder. ROW 2: M. Link, Wilson, E Duck, K. Fichter, A. Taylor, Karam, N Heim ROW 3 K S eare Davis M . : . p , K. , Hamilton, M. Link, M. Crowson, C. Gear- hart, B. Brooks, chairman: D. Schwille, D Palazzi, L. Ueoker. WOMEN'S FRESHMAN COUNSELLORS- ROW 1: R. Torres, D. Riall, S. Bowen, M Mayor, chairman. ROW 2: C. Clarke, C Flindell, M. Kille, C. Sheppard, T. Mante, G Ries. ROW 3: M. Felmeth, L. Finkill, I Parker, C. Henry, B. Smith, M. Bower. MEN'S FRESHMAN COUNSELORS-ROW 1: M. Hill, M Harris, G. Gladkowski, T. Walthers, E. Farver, V. Swope head counselorg T. Onka. ROW 2: L. Moraytis, B. Spagna P. Kerstetter, D. Yurdin, I. Winakur, B. Montgomery, F King, S. Huddy, R. Martuza. MENS UPPERCLASS COUNSELORS-ROW 1 K Marchanese L Smollen head resldent ROW 2 R Loftus head reszdent L Gal11a G Beals D Vassar I Carson ROW 3 D Marmak I Soller W Shaffer T Abeel L Mxlls G Sparks D Ol1ver R Rohrs R Kock heud coun selor I Ibanez .1 . 5. v. .. .7v. ' '- A 1 '1' v . .Q . .L 4 3- L- .-lll.j.d?jlq. 1 MH M ,N U . 4 ,lw4l,,:- .4 1 1 , . , . : . . 5 . , . , . , . . : . , . , . , . , . 1 ' ! ' Y ' 1 ' 9 - , . . CAP AND DAGGER . . . On opening night, there's always a kind of tension and excitement that brings people together in a very unique fashion-it's the ex- citement of working toegther for the same creative process-of working for the sheer enjoyment of the production . . . And then, on closing night, there-'s a kind of nostalgia that sweeps over everyone, and the 4... ',l , sense of great accomplishment. Whether the show was 1' an artistic success, appreciated by everyone who saw it, or whether it was just an average dramatic produc- tion-whether the audience liked it or not, it's still a very rewarding experience . . . , .4 w ' was ' . Pam wr- ' Q .,-I . 1-,v CAP AND DAGGER-LEFT GROUP-Row 11 c. Gallup, D. wesmeaf, D. Baum. Row Z: G. Everett, E. Iones, D. Barnes, A. Yonker, L. Campbell, A. Ford, I. McCarthy, H. Powers. ROW 3: P. VanBrunt, B. Evans, R. Gardner, M. Lipschutz, R. Klein, B. Lucke. RIGHT GROUP-ROW 1: I. Shaw, C. Ertz-Berger, K. Kennedy, B. Schoeneck, T. Lewis, C. Arnao, P. McGowan. ROW 2: I. Kasten, S. Handforth, S. White. ROW 3: R. Schmen- ner, president. 38 .-,--1 w N. ., --1 1, L.. ., ,J 7 Jn :wx I Y M V iz, Wm yr 33 'J' - n., 1.1 I - ' V -M' M , ' 1- ' -vs-n. 'I x ' 11.4. 5 '?,x-A . . ...N W -' 'V 'vX ' xl gg-if A I xi H ? WVBU . . . What's it like to broadcast? Well, it's wild! You don't quite realize what you're going to say until you say it. You see, it just comes outg so you don't worry about whether you should have said it or not. You really don't think about who's listening or anythingg you just talk. At first you dog you think, 'They're all going to hear me out theref And then you start saying, 'Well, so whatl' . . . It's easier to talk to people when you don't see them. . . . What you do, you start playing off what you want to hear. Later, you think about it con- stantly: before you go to bed, while you're study- ing, in the shower, everyplaceg even standing in the lunch line, you're trying to think of what you're going to play. It becomes an all night job. ,fat , 7 v r 6. Q , 1. ,,. , fq 1 v f 1-. A I ! T if , '-1,117 'ls .v 3. ' x U. , ' Q 'x 5 1 ' +1 ,Zur ., .iq N 4' l' . 3 I - 4 Ax, , Q' AQ' E, 5 ' ' in gh S ! ' f . A 1 V 7 'F' , . ' i '- '2 -1 ,. VI ! 1 X ,. - I Y . , 135357 1' N4 , G f ,f , 0 I y f 1' A w 1 ,iz 1. f w v 1 n -Y .5 J ' ' 5 ' ' ff f J lf... 3? . J I-.firm yn' .I .WA I in W'-,,, Ajfg ' In , . film II II :,,V,v. 3 I 4 ,A ' Mun- ' ' I - . 5, X . 1 Ilia: fm AZNE, A I9 AM A 'fx JJ: f ' J' u '1f1.,, . IH HY. II. --,.Yfv-. S H 74: Q., PM wr 1n-WHT: -' . ul- . IIQ . X., ' -,lm 1 m ' I '-. ww FM V. M1131 H EU' I I-. 4 .mi- 4 . H 1 Y F ' ,J . w A . '4 I , . .': , PPI1 LQ M ...1 fF:i'i Fit' , I, I -- 1 fy I , W -- Q A ff 1' f lr ,A I.. L. . If, -I w ar A Q.. - A . r n 1a..u , A 4 39- n 3 -nv -.,-, ,Q , ,JJ 'KI1 .. :I , , I .' Ipjfgt A, - ,A II .A-Cf If II LI' MI II Axf4.LI ,Iz 4, . A ,4-. - I I -gap-gI 151 J-?'II.D', gy 'f'tvI ' F! Qhfy' . WT! ' ,-' 'alma -04 5,9 5 ' 3 I f Jn W' I .fgf A !.I wg ., lg M... ,W A N E. QA-I 5,4 ,Ii 4' L, Iv , fi fs' ' ' Qfim, f lv -11455 ' A 1 IIAWEIIAEI L x I1 Ivey! I, I I FII! I dv HQ-,J 'fr' 4' 4512. - -1 ,,x Wx I 3.. ,II , 'X X X 'A x, N I -X2 I M C, 1 -1 v A I 1 II I - 1 f QTQ-UWM - ' I N fQ'lQ.LN.I1,sN N71 W f'.,vf-.--A- , i7df,ii?'5 N 1 1 ph .II.,,AI A5 , 5113 Af A i1r':eHi.1':' Q '2fZ .iT',i. y zjffff? ' 542, Lil .N wig' 'fl1 ?f5,LQ 11.5-'f1.' 3. V A if iii.: -E ' A -' ' ,ii Wi.-,f, J II , ' ',ln'w'7', -1 ' r Milf' A H , f VI, cl 1633 f .Q I.i':gj,j.l' . I ,I ., ,. ,IX 1.. ' A :fe-ll .1 J s 5 .-...- A 'V 'L . -:N - - 4' '- 1' 2 '-7 W X 1.4,-,-4 A' M 4 A I H I , .I- I If'- ' X .. fu? A .. 9 A IVV xml ,Af Af- ff ' ,-3' V 'I 41' 5,3 II II I. I' ig Ii? W- .Af .1 -: A- As ffl, 5. 14- .1-Di ' mm,3IgQ:z ,MSG-Q,,U :Af 'Q' ,AA I 3, III I::- 2' I I. II Q A I Ai WIIBI -1 -I A ., rag- -' ' 'HLA fa, , .MQ - 4 ,pg urn ' 1.2, Ig: IIIAI I u..,.,I . , A 1, , - 'A ' T, A ?LT'A A Q1 AAVWTIW' ' A - l' ' I ' 1 'iTr'1.1.. f , fn :AA ' 'i M AC- , 'Vg Y . ' ,, 4-. A. ru .-. v . -1 I ' ' Y , -II 1 um GEEK. , 1 Pip .,A, Aff 3 A Aw -- wg Q. A- I f, I , ITV fl ,W rw v AI In 1 , A AI A A M 41 -A 171' Q! Q . 'N X Q r U w 1- Jlunv QA- f ww A ,..gI 1 ' 1 'E A I , , , 5 L w.. , A M. 'I -'W-,gf N ..'f I I II.,..l, . II I x V ,H ' I '-- -- , QQ' A . A f5Ivf,- - 'F f A 5 f I' aj .W,-Em e VI, I ,ff ,MII 4 'A 'Lx A 'XA 7 , MIAA, ,--., I ,N II I I I A 4 A A A , N I, A I A ,. if a'I1' r .: fAI.3g' -' 'ii' T' 1'-315, in H I 'QAXI ' Lb' ' T 7. III, .T II III wg '3.79,AL.. 'M jg. I Q I.f' ,CIA 1 aff '1 gr 'jgL,J,mIIi.l ff I-I' ,.v,'xI. , Y. 'if' f W'A'1U'1- ?7??W'-7 J X1 zzwfx- 'uf my A fm 1' ,V '57, A , I ., I, ,Ng if II I .U 1 ., L .- - 1 - H ' -' - ' . - ax - ' - ' ' v , 1 w x 1' ' A ,1 .3-I,fAA:,A ,I I I r 'A gmmp- 1 7Q'2::m, I ,, W' ,, 4 .gr-'ff-y: ,r 4, 1 , 1 ,' , 1. -- ' -fn:-'f.::. T- , A K, , Af: new ' A : 0 ,av,5.5.,i1Tp,'f73PE4A...v,qAI- 1 n 1fLA...AA..I-V nm 1. ,Aw -I 1 W 'ff az i.. :Y AA, A u...42v'2 rf 'L'-H . r. A':1-Q?:,15,5 '1'4':s1- 1 Q I' ' 1 ' 4iI1'1,Q IF , ,.. A , , ,l ,, If '- ' . I II A 1'J 1- . wr- A - , 11-1I,,I I, A A -- - ' H ,M - -, --,f- 1 uw ' 4' , .Y '. I - nr v A ' .I , , L nl-fm-,A-,Av.A,1J.':'w-g,j,,.n,f'1ff I ' ' , I' ' '- ' W J - A. fs.: UT - - v 2 1Wuw. , .,I. I - Q .-.NVQ .nl II .51 ' .' . 'Q 1-' a 'J r Jw. fV V - V ' .':f' 'A -I 'S V - L V1 A 1 NP . V V VV V .V MV . VLVV, I V, V . V , .1 V ' PJ V 'V .NTI-.VI 'V .. Kp V VH ' vfuxgg QVV3, ,V . - A' 1,4 ', A wciu V .. -V'v'- ' Q3 ' V '- f ' .m ' 1 E W' , V A, V3 ,-, .M J X, , X - -VAV .EVj:f-VV. -Q -f ' gm Q v 'V K. ' V fs 'W H, V ' V. ' in Q 7 .' . P- ' ' Q' QE QL 1f f'f ' .VVVVV U A VVVVV V V , ,, , f A .V .V F3 V c'VxV V. ff , , V V wh V Vs . .- VV--V----V--V VM-M -'-4 Y'-QV V . .QV--r. V -VV, L' V , , -V V-I mn - - fx. V .V ... 51+ 'A ' V f-V ' I . VV ,, -VV-V V V ---V--4-- - ' ...V4 J - -VV-'A--H V - H, 'Erma A-'W ' 'ZH V VV V- ,.,,,V-V-V . V V V V +,V ,E -..Y V VVVV- - f' ' V -V - J A ' -,il-'li 'V 'VV . VEV 47 YV , A -' V -VV'-V-Vg- V ,j-:Z A' ' -' Y QV V ---H -f K ' ,Egg V -V V V:-, . if.-:::T'.' f'4 ' -A-f-- 4 ln. -..M V ,Y ,'N'T'-FTTZ, . zVV.V', V V7 ' '-1ii ' -- ' Hg 751' V V-V V .V VV fN X., Q V .. V pf-1mj i fT 7f 'f.f.L,QffLgV 'L VVV41 'Ai Y -TT V 1- ' .VW NT 'M' 111 B FH V -li H' Lf w'3 A.: 'J'-V I 'J V L' ' V 1.l-..13-Afr.L.n ,V..VyV-43,5-Ai-Y-' ., V VVUV .V V V -V 1 .V VV ..VVV-,- 1' V1V...V,-:, 'VV-, V L 'V ..VVuVV'g5g:Hi'.' 'VV'VVV- 'f,fVVg ..1.V1:I:'-- '- - - 5:V.'-V ' ' U VV , - . , Q-,W -rvwjiug ,l- f,EV '5V Jn q.,Qf.'V, fff',Tf 5VQ?VV:- V'fVVV-VVVV V'V'. -,V V' A' 9-xp'- . !V7-- Q.V ' . H . V---- ' W V '. V Lif ' ' '92 W IJUQ 1V1'VV 5 ,u .iff 'haf fu -H .-H'--f-' b ' EV-'L ! V 1.33: .':.,,jVV'. 'V- V V V V V V V,VVV V5 , -.1 .Q ', r' 'V V-:VV- - Vj: ' V, V V- V- . f V V VV -V -- , fHiTl35'i:Q!L2E? 5 .-ye ' ' 113 V V. ' V, V 2' ' L V . rg, - 'VSf,Lf 'f..'4Z. , MV-2..V.,M-V,gt',-,-'.V VV Va VVV VVV V ,I : .V,.VV+.,...,mfV ' V V ' x V l' . V, V VV V ---- V Vi V .. V V .A.. ,,V., V --V ,. V . .- .ur V , :f.VVVVjZ':f.Av1-u,f.V..-1 -VV ,,,-'V -af V A , VV V 2 5 VV VN -V4f1 ' V .VV ,- V in V, ug V, VV rf',V' ,V . BV nf- 1 . VV g -11 - V ,,,, ' . P , V- -.V , . Vf-. V 'V , ,'.,,.V X V Vwfw r Q-.. L VX' ' ,a N- QV if .. .' -,V , . A VV V-..---V..,..,,V V ' - - ' Vp ' 1 V V .,. .. , - N- -...,-iii V, X X V.f,.. '-'vt --is '-- 'x - ei, .gp M ' V M, . V .. -' --V ....,'-W...-af V VV WV . V V45 VV- -: 5 ,. -XVV V V V V V VV VV ' ,..frjfTl,Lq,..'- V ' ' V ...VV PV V , V '-.VV . KQV V 'fxV -f , 3 . V - - V Vi if ,Q g 5 VV V V1 WV Q. . L . VVV 5 V ' T' VV M,-. ',V V,' ' uf.. VV? 5 V '-'V .... - . - V 'V ' if ff .-V,VVVV-VVVVVV VV VV -V . ,. .E Q., VV V VVV. VV V V V V V 4 V... V - V V V f -4+ if-.V,.V-f'.f1--VVVVV -. V , ' ' 1 ,.,V K' - V ' ,. .-.,, , ,V ui - V V ,VVVVVL V V , any - Vw , , ' V '1f: N . V.,,,-V V V - - ' V 'N'--'Q X A - . -V V .V .. V -. , - ' ' ' V'.4s.Q.1,V ir l'l...,'-.v-su.-- ' VV- '- V V V ' . f -.. . ' ' -V ' -:V f ' - Q' V'. V Y . V A ' . ' W . V - g V-!'7 !m-6U':,. .L ' . . 'V' -'LL ' ' Y ' - ' V ' ' .:Nr'--Lua. ' 5 ' ' ' ,f N .' gxguik-,ff-V ,A VLf7. T V. f.Vg1V,.J-791 : ',- ' - ' -.IMVFV-VV VV 34. VV, ' 3 V V V -V, 1, -4 ' V - --ww . f' .yu V '- f: -' ,. . , , . V , V V VV V , VV NV? VV V, VV, .V VVVV VV.4g.NV,VV-VVVVVVVVVVVVV.V V V VV, , I V VV .VVVV V . V ' L., ' n VV M 3 VV , V V ,V M 4 V V M5 V:rVVeV.5fV,. .V x I Vf' r V ' Tiff? ...'V'5+t. 'V EV 'TL' - Vw- .V VV .g . ..,AV.. V . V .V V1.1 VVV . 6521.332 'TEFJVVVVV-' 'Q ' F 5 X ' . VV V VV VV 1V 17 -V V5.3 1 . . arg.: . 1 rn Q. I mfz. Q. .- l m' Mya Hu. . W .f f lr . ww' - -. EAW w .. . . 1-v fi'- +,, K U3 Ir Ip'-'f AQ: -1: .'f:Jf. 135' .by -ff .J. 11 r.f,- f . - n, 46 AQ ROW 1: R. Iones, T. Pawlina, S. Zarlinski, L. Gallia, F. Arentowicz, S. Havrilak, captain: B. Ludwig, A. Hartung, I. Graham, G. Beals, C. Steinhart, B. Rech, B. Bair. ROW Z: P Louthis, A. Retter, E. Iamieson, I. O'Reil1y, G. Kuhn, R. Horting, B. Fick, D. Helfrich, R. Cerretani, P. Aron, P. Brown, B. Iohnson R. Killoran, R. Wasilewski. ROW 3: G. Smith, D. Vassar, D Giacomelli, T. Morton, L. Maier, C. Mansfield, E. Pilner, G Handy, I. Phillips, R. Caputo, D. Marinak, D. Deitrich, T. Rad- cliffe, S. Rohrer, R. Ruger, B. Nazar. ROW 4: I. Fisher, T Gasperini, K. Donahue, Doviak, 1. Rudolph, G. I. Bush, P. Marranca, Depew, T. Onischenko, son, F. Belichick, C. Malatesta, I. Herring, P. F. Martino, R. Marsilio, T. Lucadamo, G Luccarelli, A. Dixon, I. Pezak, D. Spahn K. Eysenbach, I. Linetty. ROW 5: G H. Biggs, trainer, B. Yeomans, S. Iamie- Huntress, head couchp G. Stennett, P Gilewicz, B. Rohrbaugh. 47 FOOTBALL . .. We won the Davidson game: we had everybody healthy, so we won that one . . . The Penn game? It was the play- ers' fault-there were too many individual breakdowns Harvard game? That was one I expected to lose-but not that badly Then we came to Temple and the guys were all psyched up. They came through with a great defensive and a great offensive effort and they really did a good job. So then we were all psyched up for the MAC's. We had a good chance, we were playing a cake team-Gettysburg. And that game was just a Bucknell team the worst I've ever seen play. The whole team just played like they didn't belong on the fieldg we were playing was terrible like high school kids-it After that, we beat Maine. We were a real up-and-down team-we could lose and then we'd come right back and win. What I couldn't understand was why we couldn't keep on winning-why we couldn't keep a momentum going. I guess the problem with our whole season was that we couldn't co- ordinate. One game the offense would be going terrific and the defense would be let- ting down, and the next game it would be the other way around. We had trouble coordinating it so that both would be really good at the same time. When we did, we wong when we didn't well, there was Gettysburg .... . . . As far as the offense goes, the biggest frustration is when you're on the sidelines and you see the other team moving the ball on your defense and you can't do anything about it-you're just watching and hoping that something will happen-a fumble or a pass interception will come up where the de- fense will get the ball for you so you can go in and try to score . . . . . . Being on defense is a big responsibil- ity since you know that your team might not win unless you can stop the other team from scoring. When you're playing against a guy who is as good as, if not better, than you, you have to be able to 'think him through'- you have to say to yourself that you're tougher than he is. No matter how big he is, you have to tell yourself that you can really kill him. If you can hit him so hard in the first couple plays of the game that not only is it hurting him, but it's hurting you, then you've got him, 'cause then you've got him guessing-worried-wondering what you're going to do. And once you have him hesitat- ing, you've got him-you can pass him right up and make a tackle . . . 48 V' 49 SOCCER . . . The major reason for the great change and improvement in Bucknell's soc- cer team is Coach Reynolds. He instills something in you that really makes you want to win there's something about the way he coaches that gives you a pride in yourself and in your team, and makes you feel that if you don't do your very best, you're really letting him down. For instance, he's always telling us that when you're going for the ball, you can't even think about having an oppo- nent on the field, and if an opponent does get in your way, you have to just go right through him-your only objective is to go for that ball, no matter what .. . In order to play a game that way, you've got to be tre- mendously keyed up. Coach Reynolds is a master at this-he gets us so keyed up that come game time, there's not a player out there who wouldn't just die for the team's victory . . . A ,,,,.f'. , S ROW 1: B. Smith, trczinerg R. Burgess, G. Mars, B. Kline, A. Kurz, captain: B. Schlegel, I. Apgar, D. Moore, M. Torrence, manager. ROW Z: B. Nold, G. Stevick, I. Mitchell, I. Brown, D. Gibb, B. Reed. ROW 3: I. Kempson, A. Gingert, L. Ryysylainen, D. Rath, T. Howson, G. Kret, C. Torell. ROW 4: R. Baxter, C. Reynolds, coach, D. Manley, assistant couch. 51 X , l W w r 1 F - W r A P . . . I suppose it would be easy and possible to go through four years at Bucknell without asking a serious question. Yet, I honestly think that the most stereotyped 'sem-gem' will on some occasion or another ask a question about what it means to be doing what she's doing, or about what it means to be aliveg the most stereotyped 'frat-rat' will do the same thing. It's not a sterile atmosphere . . . 'x ir J v 4 1 . If E 5- - J ' il s 5 T ' , N as 'YM 1' Z? 'ta' Ga E A I 'fa 1' f 's y- .53 5 I EA I . ! J 1- l .- tm' .aww 'Mm ' . ' s VA 0.t . .N . e -, ' W if QQ, 'P V L .v 4 s' 'X '-' v x K 'H e 1: N '97 elf! - f M wx fx . ad 'f 55 7 -.KH . 5 - ' Lx, x' GX xg by ' 'v-if-3 GE E.. il! YZ.-1 s 'xxx . ' s I . 1 ke, iv! .' f F . go, s Q - ,Q -:fx Y fx 'Q fm' :A F95 3 gl Q .. 'Q I y .ff v 2 fy :XX .n' Ax. D, :gli ' -A. -ni 1 N 1-A .1 Q 1:5 k 'l IEQ TSE f-.an-1 i Sumlnhsu fl ru mqq Llwl. I UIXI IJ HERE A T19 IVF ,fl - V----7 37. , Vi ' D wa :fa fx f V If lg .ia-vt f'T':-.X . 1' ' .1-' ,-., A' Y lv 3 t .burn , A -9 ,, dp ,FM- X jf-Qf'ff ff 4 if' gm? , -if' ' ,. . , ,N - 1 . ... , , .-AJ..--.., N X A55-,wx Z6 '- Qf Q , h'4'5f-,- V , A . 1 ,rl-qsx . l .5 H 3 , -Q65 , .X 7. Q. :argl 1 - lf 44 ' ,J?f'f'y!q5!' f X A -gif N-4 Ee' Q .fN,,,v'j,:,' xx, X.. V- -5 L A Q .lnl-3 '-x. V - W Nz' S X F fig, ' f ,,,.. I . Egg: ' T5 'tif' wsvf- f ' -- -5 .1 ,a.g4f'5 x 1' ,-ii . . A Q M 3 ,. M, R.- X v, ,pf Xlxshlfis 2-X ,s . ,ra I, af' ' 402x175 4 . 455' X , fv 0 0 ' tix QW NX Qtfx lm: ' X 0 ' J.. Gm nf G 'I , VN in nr I lliii 1 I ln: t'? 1 li ' Ill -M H45 IIE! 'w - ',-, A 'L ,X N .Of .:--N 'I -L X AfL5lS,w , 4 N 92-fl' , 1771 3 . 4,2759 p 4' SR' 5 W5 ar,5,XjF5 ,O -f, . - f . 4 -. -'52, - . - . ' n 'ff ' 'x ., Q33 41' Q l x . .7 'su f , 4 yn. lx -L .D ,g . N . . Q K1 M X 3. 4 sf ' g l Q. ffl , 1 . YAY s- N.. -Q ' 'f iff ,7 . T X X . WQK 'Y lifh , A , -f 'Yi ' ' 'Q'-. - H . ' ' 1' 'H-Q-.9 31,-55.1 ,f'.-:ugq-,, - .. , A 1. -t 5 '4 'vi Q' 1, .-'dl g U 'ft Qx ' ' T, ' 1 .. X 0'-'F Y-pr . . , -. , 1 ':' ,S 'ua V- '. N. ,L A A., ' Si ffifwlg-,Y V ., ' . . - 1 M '1 fi,1gf.,affE4+1i- - . e' 411- l-s5f'54'n.24?1 1:1 i.-f-.1.J,ff2-1,2 ff la' A .7 'x ' 4- '.., 9' 'f'iffl,p Q Jai fff- ,e-1Tf ffffx--2.0 7 r.1 WF- - -' 'F N144 .,', ' ' .f X . ' 'X 45' .- . , ' .. 3 Z - W' ' Q.,-f'-'f--l.-CT-'K-'xf?5'.3!W . , 'X' 1 W' ' 1 ' Q ' WF1 4 5- -ff f. ' 1 ,fl-'- ' U. L--4 TNQ:-.9 ,. ' . Y f ' fu ,' H xi? ' I, ' 1 icy , ,. .A Q' , nfl, .J3 '- ,iii .,1f.i-' 4, i?g:E!'lifFx,.'-f ,'i:Q -, LQ' gy - 6 ' ,' ' . I , x 1 ' ' ff Qj V. j 1' 'i'-1 ',-' 3755522 'li ffl- 'fb' EA- r ' U- if ' '. ' 1 521, .. . . 1 1 fi X F? 4 :gf Y ,. HQf.'.157i?r 'g Q '3 ff5T'5.- Tkibifrf- 5l'f5.f? iff- f 2.1-I 5451 JF f' if A-.. JL V fd. N . '. .- ' gg, 'f:'.l1 i, '16:42f F1?'f-11,-,714-fgiay-Mis-' N fri . in HQ- 1 ' P if Q. ,zwfga-L.:.5,'r,. fizw'-.y'Q5l5PhPff.45 -' '. ,-' A , ' i Wg, I I, ' ' . 'WQT1 iv f5g,i,,f ,efQ L',5fc:'j,af.-f,zsi 9'T,'p11? NJ h 21-.b if ' 4, Af ,J f c '- - a mi Q P ' Qin ' ' 'QQ ,ui ? 1 1'.fi,c ,lib 579-E'Tfgi-'w'3i-'1':fT+ ,, L, -' -'xv ' V , 'U V2 4' f N iv WL' 6- .cw .- . -K aff.: 'fa-Q'-Q:.'a.M.,4ff x ' fi. ' , f . '- . . 5549- 1, g ,s 14 , xl V Q fn, 0 .wx X vi' 3, ,- Rx. '24 17.-Qsfirlqq-r-.V -f,f.1-gf? ' ' 'vgu V 5 N .. '-' '. ,A .., X, vim , . V : NH - ' - '7snJ'vxu,. fy' rg 4. H -gl lx-2 H 5 4 -N ,aff 1. V 4 s ', A-2, , s A, if , ,Q 1' I:-1.7. wg, 'I . '- px, 3 'T-' 'Q Qpwf, .V v. - qs 3 -, 'ix QM - 4,44 ' A - -X M .., - . , x x :fe f M X- ,-, , ' ,.. , . ,f,. f f ,w M ,Ig A l , .,. u . g - ' gf ,eg ik vfx It iv-' 5 EFT- ac- 'L-A ig' lat, ,,- A TI X -F' . f-. r , ' TV- ' '---7'-rf ,- we . in I, ,'..., '-' 3' ' 'fi' W Ng., v, A Q.. W .. .fs PAQ . ..-- 1. ,s W' H , ,, n ,A , . VAAU V .uf fx r , .' H . ,L I. . W '.aRI'-:gg ig '- . ' , N 4' 'g gf ',5?g, KF'-4 xi., xg W, -'F . -, .'4.:?j. gfgl 53,5 f Q I' 'ff' . y 4 1 , ' . ' -1 ' 1' '- -- 1- . 1 . f,,- . , 1 - , Q . x l , . M ., 3 As.'xf ' Wfbk. . :N ,. iziffif, UY3':g.:' f:g.eA:5-ff -VT' -Tj, ?l1 ZQX 3 fig 'lf NA :-. :xi ,.' X my 1 ' ' X 1 rv r 1 V: Q 1 -Y gli-zu .9 H 45' Y. KE., b :buf ,r ur: ,iq '4 Y-Q 1 , - xv km -1-'g X 'yif 'N' 'fi' N1 X , . 'f I ' 'f A 1, 01 -1.1 . N 'Cy QM? V245 Q. .' 'Shir' fa.: -6- -cl I4 Y ,Ziff N Kev PP 1 -1' fvrf' ' ns 1 1 -' Af... ' ' A' ' ' rw Q , xg - 1. ai - . A '5 - -. .. -. .,,-' .f ,--,. .-' .,, Ze-rr , ,,, 5 I '-F1 x I ' 5 9'-I ' 'J 's W'-A Wh - 4f+ '3 'N-'fL ' W 54 v 3 - U ' 'w 1 -K, . - A -V . -- '-2'-. i 1- 1'.:'w ', , , W I 1 lg V , - ' A Q .wx Ck. Qfifl- .5 ,- Mio, Q 1 -,:'ZV3,Qv 6 ,-ful' Dx. 5 -- . X - , f ,.'- - f- u. . 4.5 f xx.-no-.. -Lvfggz-' . e-- 1.31, ee V , V KL, st' 1- . 1 3, -- T-X -, ' v' .rm.f'.'lq:w.rLl,,--, ,VIN .-3. ,,, -.iz . - X -1 F, f .f' ' Q -'l1'4v'Ir' '31 . Q !f .- Q- Q N . . 5. 15. V-L Q' - QA'-'1-' - 0- 1 . Ui , X ' . w Jdkx wk ' , ' 'E --1 vb' A jg .ff 4,ggf. - Q- !': - - 'R ggi if TNQ' X Q :vi v - 'M V! '.-.L - 1+'..iE-. A' 1' W -A L ' ' W s .1 l'! Ixlv - A nv- 1 Q,-' ' '11 -X .3 V Y' 1 - V-AQ., Y J I 'N' 2.' Juv' I , K- ! . A ' Sv 'xx' .6 'NE' . - , 4. 1 'Inj . - Q, 'gnffg T - ' x XM 1' 2, 51 4, 1. . - -. , 4- . , - . KL J - . ly, . I k - . . - ' 1 w l iff -. 'W 1,4 .1 2' ' if ,-VL + 1 'L ' - H 'X - - 'R . A . . . 1 ' , 7 N. Hi, :V - ,lr ' - ,wa -v Ufn- R . ff . .ff f - . ' 4. fx. g.. -qs. - A a A' . . ,. - 7 Q' 6 ' J .Q 1- v.-'n ' ' 4? '. V rl, gg- '- 4 n' 'ixlgfr-.,l N - 'Qt -Q13 -152' K. , X. g fu i - 1 L- . K ,K ,4 'gr Vu '.-AN - x , K - T ' ., . ' --7 ' 4,1 ff e ,, F. --- , 4 ' f 1' ' ' ' A gg- ' ,Jf' , . A. ' -+5 ' P T 0' F' Zz ,qt 111 is . . 4 Ifxh 1 3 1 , 4543, jf, -.fv 7' :V ' gl A nf' . N e. I Q W Y A l f A , - 'E 7'f-1.:'T.--Vn,- -- YQ., rw 1 ,1 t I i tt . M. - A ' Q -.. ' '-- . 1 ' 1- firm.-1.-2-ff 1+ x wp - in-. 1 'Q 5 ' P ff ' .- 'Q 'N f6'2lf.,f- ' f. I A' -X l i : N.. ' an f fr. . . 4-W-1-rf-bv.. - f.-'M xy . , -- , -N , . '1 , ' . i .. ,qw 1.5.7 ,lj f- , N' ' , .1 . E -ff .1 . -X -.. 3 . -an ff. . 2-f--1' ij! 1. 'ii' 'Ai I ' ', -. ' f ' -fi ,1.Q'ik.A,f -f.x'l - VN 1 ' x, K . A 3 . U, x 4 .An xv'--In Ax J- I-Mg g- E 42 by 1 xx . f . ff'- ' 1- A Q' . ? -. my .. -'W - v .',.v9f!':.-'fi .. N' v.Z.' . X. .- . .f,, 5 . ' A. Q N1 Q' f f, ' -feng','.1,,,7if.-i'ff2'3f:.',,', -gt W, gf wi '-'x 1 , . ,,-I ,L ' --x, iv. ,N ' Q V ,V A . :I - . al, 4 - Y V V - , K iii: , TQ , -'L 4 fi WVU! 4' N-Q Q ,. U A T- F :'1z:'?'i,,l.1l1f Zigi . . 'I ' ,. L .la..k' ' f.. ff! ,f 1 V- f' N. 'xg' V X. ' 'I .1 J ,4 . ... I4 x ' ' + , V Q. G X . ' - A '- .: .. .- 1, f I Jlfwfl' . f 1: l'?'l - 1. 1 f',W Iii- 1 A, ,1 E. f ' F, 1 ., S If ' . ff v-,um ' '- x -A.. A-. f -f . y . ,Ak , f-.1 g -X - N. . A- 4 ,lb v ,N R ' if . .A , - , J 1 . K ' , . A N ,., q 5 vs- . Y 1. ,, , , h ,L - V . Q Q.. ' 9. , ,gf w , s I ' . ' Y - Y v - A V I ' N ' N - ' ' ' ' sll - 1 Vx ' Y ' t 5 A f ' K .Tig ! ,, L 'H' ax 'EA' 3 X . 'NE 3 1- xi 'J N' - V1 . i V A 5 X 5 ., was-?-EF 'W- Q m '2-ff-A 4- x 1 , S x, , -J F'9' n -,..g-- ii V mug' Us 4 bg MJ -ff ' .b ' E ' ,, 2 ' 'Q 5 , Q ,uf pf X: '4 wg ,' - . , I M 215' 9-. ',. R' qu L - .Il - , V.,-Li, J .w ff TT -1' ' 'wi a w 1' X-5 If - , Ltr' -1,'f .,A' 4--Q, M' 13 Q X Q kiwi, 5 W xg, , wiki Mu ' s Y ' .Q 1 K si I , J g Y Q 1' li' gt fi? A 1 r , - ' Uv 1- J my f nw J, 'Q 9 ' ,ya -L 1- 4 IF' j A M ' if: A A I .,,,.,'- f A. u if - - ' ik- '- It t 4 -'PG ,Q . 0 1 I. ,ff V ik is 1 fi:--1. Q figprq' 62 q'r,JM.-siiik 63 .-Y Q' 'ff 'f-'V ' 1-., 4. 1, .-- 5 - , ..,.- .. '- Qglllw- 1.1 A., '- Q ..,,.. . -j'A-.fjs L...- 41: fu -in .. 95 If ' rf 4 ,. 5. ....- ,,, --rw - N ..' .Y -3.-AL. ,M , 1. wr' - 1-1 - 1 - ...::-.ei ,-w, .,,,..x . ., L... .. - 5 . -A . ..-.. n..5.' -. --'-- 11' . , ,.., . f . .wg-5 -' .-L., .Agp- 1. MK- .. U V ,, F.. ., ,. L , A ifxfflf, Z5 56 NAV ND KILL THE D 51. - ff,-,-:.?,, F. .xl I :Y 1 .fury N, 'P TV T . 'Y frW'f?FEn1-- :-5 FP J V' .N-1:lv 5 ' BH? ' l vu, :H- V ',,, V' ' wc U -,A -,,, r WY- , fn, 3 w n I 1 . V ,I 1 1 ' 3 1 4. T' eh F' r' 4. Lv.- nr 1 HH H N H J H H H ,. u, ,gx my ,H 1!Np:,w1N! , -LWIEIQ,-4:1xyx,gQ31514 P H A 2 -L In as win W1 w5,,'Q' , .wwlh H, ,IM ,mu Huw-1 W- W V ,u .1 M mf uw, my ww ly, v Y U W N .ni - W4 i u .. 11w1mw'.wlyIW M 'I um! 7' A. 1.- M' .M x wlfjh U A M 3-.4-Llm, . - P - ': ' Fl. : 'hAIl5! ul. -.4 , AM 5 ' 11, V 4 1 A - 11 -1 1 ' 1 1 1 1 My 'ff' H ' 1 ' 11 1 ' - 1 . 1111 -,11 1,1 1 1 .E 1 W ' M' ' 1' W1 M 1 ' Q,w Mg : f A-51 :1ff11'-. 'g,g1 1'11 1 W 1u11 , 1 1 1 1 M- 1 1 ' ,111 'V , 1 ' 'Q 11' ' 11' ' ' 11 11 ' 1 ' 11 1 11 -11 ' -- M 11 11111 11 n 11 1 . 1 1 1' ' 11n111 ', 1 1' 1 mm 1-mm, www1 111 1,11 ',1' 11l'111 ' 11 111,,1 1 111 1.1 111 11 11' 11 M11 1 1 111 1' 1 1 1 11 w,,. 1 . 1. 111 1mM1 W1JNNwMw,, 1 , wWW1WmA1wQwWww,MwMWMMNHwWwU11N1!wm N 1 1 1 1! 1 9m.p -11w.mW m1W1 - 1 1 - .' , -111 11 1 1 11 11 1, 1 1 1 1 1 1. 11 1 11 , 1 11 1 WF' E1 X 1 1 ' - -' 1 1 1 - -I1 -in J wg-'U ghumr l ,- vz, ., ,, W. .. T, , W rj w : '4 w u, mu qu . 'nr - e Rosms il-HALL EASTSWEST WINGS KRESS HALL TRAX HALL I v 1lQ fl?i:?' ' 'Qi' P 'J, ' ' L' 4. xi., 'Af. , X . ,f:T....-1 1415 .l'ugl':,. ' V 4. .1,.Y. A GG, x ' - t , E 7-F' X. 71 al-F' -,w,,N.,. N, 4 I FL 'W ' - 13554 'z gs Q wx N P QAQQF' . . fi. ' CHEMICAL ENGINEERING FACULTY-H. Sims, I. Pom- ersheim, R. Slonaker, chair- man: G. Minard, W. Snyder. A 91 - X-. Avw 1 .- .xxx OJ' -v uf ls., 'Ll-a lf' CIVIL ENGINEERING FACULTY-C. Kindig R. Brungraber, chairman: R. Claus, D. Wag- ner, I. Kim. Pictured on preceding page is H. Eckberg, Dean of the College of Engineering. 1 AK' ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING FACULTY-ROW 1: R. Walker, chairman. ROW 2: W. Knoll, I. Rogers, H. Webb. ROW 3: R. Young. 75 ENGINEERING .. Engineering today isn't at all what most people think it is. We've always had this basic problem of being mis- understood for many reasons. For one thing, engineering education is so much different now from what it was fifteen or twenty years ago And then, of course, there are still people who think that we fix automobiles and make television sets and stuff like that down in our engineering labs .,.. . .. To a layman, a chemist and a physi- cist are probably somewhat alike, although they're really as different as black and white -both in what they do and in the way they think about themselves. I doubt very much that people in physics and chemistry con- sider themselves as natural scientists first, and then as physicists and chemists. This may be the reason why we in engineering are probably the only four departments at Bucknell that have a really formal unity: we think of ourselves first as engineers, and then as electrical engineers, mechanical engi- neers, etc .... Ralph C. Walker F l , WIS' I ly 4 v ga! A ' 'f4'f T P 1 n-H525 K nh, J 1. g , . . 41 - '41 1 ffm , 1 A -5, 4' . I ,Z ig, 'mr 4 '25 o.,.v4 V, J ,,,k- -I AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS-ROW 1 R Steyn K Frantze B FlCk I Reid ROW 3 C Bozenhard R Hentz T Pawhna R Clapham L Moraytls president ROW 2 Lynch S Rapley R Ryan D Brewer R Liptak I Brokaw H B Phillips W Douglas B English E Zulver H Spiegel I Kltch ,.....,....1s AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF CHEMICAL ENGINEERS-ROW 1: CY Kunzru, I. Duque, I. Pommersheim, A. George, G. Minard, H. C. Goldman, B. Emmitt, presidentg D. McKinnon. ROW 2: P. Sims. ROW 3: R. Slonaker, D. Laputka, P. Warmath, W. Snyder, Brown, R. Spinelli, D. Collander, K. Duraiswamy, D. Ercin, D. B. Hoffman, T. Moore, W. Guy, S. Levins, D. Turtle, C. Kalb. 77 .L Y AMERICAN SOCIETY OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS-ROW Hardin, I. Hotchkiss. G. Bomberger, K. Stubenrauch, I. Zaiser, 1: W. Rischan, R. Aung-Din, L. Campbell, R. Eicher, W. Smith, advisor: I- Williams. R- Aiken, E- Farver, B- Boesch, president: S. Reed, M. Kaiser, R. Krouse. ROW 2: D. Blanding, R. Oliver, P. R. Hilles. iw If 'mil' ms ,L-MI . 1' ? ' I is-C ,, INSTITUTE OF ELECTRICAL AND ELECTRONIC ENGINEERS 1. Kovski. Row 3. W. Hodgkiss, W. Rave, F. Gruscavage, D. -ROW 1: K. Monsell, G. Banko, chairmang R. Mullett. ROW 2: Koppenhaver, G- Schevey- ROW 41 R- Gmdon- W. Hinsch, D. Wood, E. Iohnson, R. Wilkes, B. Turner, I. Home, 78 .,J ,A .1.- , J ex - ff- Q Q ' Ti ,n ' F 4 t . -- U is N. K Y 4 I 4 '- 2 f . 1 ' , A I -55 1 ,L -,-W,- ' ,E e A MM ig' ' Q' ' e C 'JJ -. 1 Lr i i, Q ' - ' J. 5, ' . ,A , Y sn Vi 'Z F 1 1 , ' M if 1 gr 'T I ' . . , -11 - . ' K , Q , - fx, -V1 - 4 Exim A J-4 .,, -A ax S G ff s if ' Y 1.2 ' J , e j ,L.-ff' 1 will . 53 t V ' 'iw f 4-V. i A Y V i ,sv E, A Y ee '- S301 'Q 1 M 3 1 r M . 1+ A ATN J Ji !, 31 S 'A T' v. yr., - 1 163.1 , -7 v dxx lqyf-' 'gg fm' , 3.3 VX:--I-' S !': 5 E I Y P E- , '- 4 e 6 L ' A , f . ry f -11 .A+- Y. Xsp- ,. V 1 I IUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS- G. Panitz, president: L. Devi ney, secretary-treasurer. FRESHMAN CLASS OFFI- CERS-D. Abdelnour, vice presidentg R. Nachshin, pres- ident: P. DiNata1e, secretary- treasurer. SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFI CERS-P. Webber, secretary treasurer: C. Eby, president. N0 SNlOKlNG V, 5 I. STUDENT-FACULTY CONGRESS-ROW 1: F. Giarnbrone, recording sec- retary: P. Kerstetter, treasurer: S. Hamilton, corresponding secretary: I Soller, president, R. Rohrs, vice president, T. Abeel, publicity. ROW 2 R. Raisig, B. Nachsin, G. Panitz, A. Taylor, I. Hayward, K. Speare, M Stevenson. ROW 3: R. Rasmussen, M. Hill, K. Sprague, R. Resnikoff, B Feir, B. Frisch, L. Baker, I. Dunlop, A. Edwards. 80 STUDENT-FACULTY CONGRESS . . . I believe that administrators are willing to make the kinds of changes involving rules and regulations and curriculum that students would like to see, but that before they go on to make these changes, they want to be sure that the majority of the students want them. I think it's very important that students get together-that the opinion that comes from a student congress can be viewed by adminis- trators as an opinion of the majority-since it is only then that real change-real progress -can take place. It follows that student gov- ernment cannot effectively operate until the students get behind it. The main problem at Bucknell is that there is interest in making change, but it is often only a back-room bull session type interest, and it is difficult to rally enough people to support an issue openly. The constitutional changes that the present SFC is considering will, I think, go a long way to- wards improving the role that student govern- ment can play on campus, since by taking away the smaller issues that have constantly bogged down the SFC, the students will have more opportunity to play an active role in voicing both their dissent and their praise for Bucknell. . . james Soller - + .,, - '-S-A f- f-. fl MEN'S IUDICIAL BOARD-T Abeel. C. Steinhart, D. Landes. R. WOMEN'S JUDICIAL BOARD-D. Palazzi, president: 1. Gerrity Nachshin, W. Landsburg, L. Moraytis, president. D. Schwille, T. Mante, C. Sheppard, L. Batchelder, G. Walton, R Torres, D. Karam, G. Gearhart. 82 Q1-is ii - ' MEN'S COORDINATING COUNCIL-ROW 1: A. Edwards, M. Brody, D. Dickson. ROW 2: E. Woehling, D. Lacey, I. Dunlop, B. Ogden, D. Abdelnour. SENATE-ROW 1: M. Felmeth, L. Evelyn, I. Ruff, S. Greenhalgh, M. Link, K. Speare, president: A. Taylor, B. Brooks, M. Steven- son, advisorg D. Palazzi. ROW 2: B. Craw, H. Wilson, C. Murphy, M. Crowson, C. Clarke, I. Lewis. INDIGO-ROW 1: F. Murray, A. Taylor president, D. Karam, S. Hermann, advisor ROW 2: B. Iltis, C. Meyer, D. Baum, B. Bat- zer, C. Flindell. MEN'S I N D E P E N D E N T COUNCIL-S. Huddy, I. Kempson, B. Ogden, K. Sprague, president. or i Q.-Y ' 1' , . ' A - N. - - INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL-ROW 1: H. Grover, G. Hatfield, B. Eberhardt, R. Raisig, president: I. Richards, P. Gargiulo, G. Sparks, I. Saxton. ROW 2: B. Smith, B. Ernmitt, K. Stubenrauch, L. Dresdale, C. Steinhart, T. Howson, M. Motooka. . . . You run into a lot of problems when you try to organize something like the IFC, Panhellenic Council, or one of the independent organizations, for the simple reason that you have to organize such a large group of people who have such diversified ideas, diversified in- terests, diversified concepts of what the organizations should ties do and shouldn't be. These organizational difficul- not, however, necessarily imply that the effec- tiveness of the groups will be in any way hampered. For the most part, the difficulties have been met head- on, programs have been planned and carried out, and student response has been truly indicative of the or- ganizations' success. . . .. V ,,:.na., . . , V -v , -- , ' V' v ff ' ' 4 . 5. .. S PANHELLENIC COUNCIL-ROW 1: M. Moir, C. Boyer, L. Finkill, H. Wilson, K. Hamm. ROW 2: L. Deviney, S. Patton, V. Winchester, A. Brown, M. Murrah, I. Mestier, B. Craw, I. Anton- sen, I. Lewis, president: D. Schwille. 85 ALPHA CHI OMEGA Lois Peoples Mary Rinehimer Kathy Barr Nancy Port Karen Kreller Sue Schreck Elaine Golden Mimi House Marsha Hamilton Iay Giardina Peggy Kamuf Sally Mather Mary Iohnson Fran Giambrone Linda Mount Paula Feldman Lisa Stratton Ann Marie Conway Debbie Iuran Monica Smith Ierrie Will lean Williams Sue Loughlin Barb Craw Linda Hutchinson Ieannie Brockmeyer Sue Stumpf Pat Brock Lydia Reichner Iudy Hoover Wendy Bone Mary Sue Beyer Lynn Evelyn Liz Stevens Cheri Montgomery Polly Eckel . Nancy Worrall Debbie Palazzi Sue Schrader Rita Torres Linda Heffner Carol Murphy Sharon Handforth Donna Goodyear Heather Wilson Bunny Pergrin l-I Q-ir' ' 1 Wqb' 'l!ll...g,. , V V . - 'fr Q -'-4-QF., P 33 'fa X :W M 5-ff .-...-:.-...-.- .7 Lad! L1lXt llCW'l' xH 'D Bison KQPEAL Q5 fd ff 0 U NZAPPCD Mail. ALPHA PHI 1. Ieanine Brady 2. lean Horky 3. Betsy Bohnert 4. Pat F auber 5. Kathy Davis G. Iackie Lewis 7. Barbara Schoeneck 8. Pat Kaufhold 9. Kathy Davis 10. Bonnie Burns 11. Ann Yonker 12. Kathy Messenger 13. Laurie Altman 14. Sharon Douton 15. Debbie Kantor 16. Nancy Coppedge N' titl- 17. Robyn Oltmanns 18. Ruth McKuen 19. Linda Downey 20. Lynn Finckle 21. Linda Snyder 22. lean Kaniper 23. Christy Snyder 24. Carol Kessler 25. Anne Swoope 26. Sue Brown 27. Sue Lakes 28. Nancy Dunham 29. Valerie Winchester 30. Mary Ellen Caccetta 31. Karen Beatty 1 I Y ilifgki . 'A Q 'Ara FJ' We ff my mctn gp --gps Q gf ik .ll M na. 35 -W HJ 31 .Io 15 as 7 no A g in A, mn:-. - DELTA DELTA DELTA Lois Rank Ioan Kinsley Sue Barry Pat Logic Dale Smith Barb I. Smith Karen Ham Martha Link Iudy Nave Gayle Troutman . lane Weaver . Kathy Pfeiffer . Flo Kuhl Dana Brewer Sue Tillman Sue Donovan Alice Trooskin . Ioanne McNamee 88 Ioan Gerrity . Karen Van Es Carolyn Familetti Ellen Baker Barb Wagner Kathy McConnell lane Chidester Dukie Bruckner Gail Grunewald Pat Yaged Sue Unger Nadeen Van Tuyle Paf Keen Carol Good Debbie Klop Chris Redman Iane Voss ii '. 'rv . '3- 6 1 W n J v 1 .fl .Q ,V Q ,I J D. I 92: '. bu, . :W 'i q 2 Q 'KLM F, . -J ,XII lf: 'Nw' . mg- A FPDS X J' ' 1 I 'WIA w 1 ,N , - , ,4 -S. ., .N , Vx. If -F' ' . ,' ' . Q 5 Th? 5 ' 'ST -' Q .Tig YV J V V lr xulz Q ' . A4 M F55 Fi! 'A I A ,IIA I 7 Q' ,ag I, 1, ig? I ' 1 , ig: 'rf v 4 Eb xxx ff' 'I I ij. l V A d 1 Ju -Q5 I EX ' in me 'nf P 1 .1 gl A Q ' V ' M ,f 1. 1 X fffQif 'A ,4-wh ' 1 v- -rrx lwlf ' 4-. R sl gang: A A A ,f .l , 1 it I , .Q X ll Jig' L 5? :iv 24' Q' - wMMmh 1463 Ezra?-r:9 5 mia r. .ck X' A ' u 1' 'mi ' 'trag- s z ' ,4, :-.,, .' N ,x f A at 'J - . M 2' Ia ' .-3,3-32gg.'51:Q6gifi?g:?!.ffgwg.j 1. 4 .' .w..1-:amz . . . .. .. ...-g1....z:3,g,: -x. .g2, 1 1 .-.-.-.:..:y,,,.m,,Lg',f' A:- .x..... r u :W 4 I 'nl 1 vw, 223 I ,m,.v S M L . I N A :QE-a5v','?i , 1-..i: ' ..l. ' ij.,-A AJ, 'J .-Jig' gut. 'mivai li 4'l. !.'Lir 'Q'f'f,':7 f 'z' 'et .' 257 I-5' -T'F1xQ2!'17s if 1 N. 5 -I Hiffffw ' 'I , f ' .f5,'3.L1.f .1, L1 v ' f if 'n A-. 5 4 ff, ' 15 '?2f' ' l ' A-s. 'fA ,g.f 1 g, 'S 1 S-,116 .51 f ' -1 .f f ? - - vm V ,lv I , . vig ,LJ If lf' ' , . 1 W I 1 KAPPA DELTA Sally Richards Carol Sheppard Linda Deviney Linda Gibson Ianice Stultz Ioan Slovitt Ginny Duffin Betty Io Stone Peggy Iames Doreen Bolger Bonnie Spring julie Korver Darlene Torockio Diana Moore Charlene Gullette Sue Hood Gayle Garrabrandt Sally McAfee Bev Dodd Nancy Ross Debbie Kurtz Diane Summers Sarah Ellery Donna Palmer Marti Biernbaum Diane Wild Tina Mante Ronnie Hilles Iayne Troutman Karen Fichter Dotty Ashman Betsy Speicher Anne Leonard Cyndy Grofic Holly Henderson KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Brynn Church Liz Shelley Bee Anglin Lynn Ragsdale Carol Boyer Carol Bonnar Paula Webber Drue Sheesley Sandy Patton Liz Gately Kathy Hannon Iane Stout Shelley Satuloff Susan Greenhalgh Kathy Reppa Ellen Sturm Kathy Unverzagt Donna Rubinoff Merry Chesley Gale Brewer Iudy Gleason 91 Sue Snyder Connie Phillips Linda Strangmann Tina Bauman Chris Desmond Barby Wingate Ianet Bailey Linda Girvin Lyn Matthieson Lynne Pittenturf Laurie Hughes Linda Goubeaux Vicki Matusoff Ianice Hutcheson Claudia Greenlee Cathie Clarke Faith Hood Susan Riggs Sally Ross 41. Heidi Blair r . . raw- '. . r,,..,.s . . ESX -:--f-- vw ' if fwfr 42 PI BETA PHI 1. Sue Pfann 2. Gaye Walton 3. Iudy Menapace 4. Susan Leavy 5. Anne Vander Linden 6. Puttie Smith 7. Barb Sardella 8. Sweet Young Thing 9. Snidely Whiplash 10. Lynn Duryea 11. Ioanne Parker 12. Sandy Usowski 13. Judy Mestier 14. Laurie Crane 15. Nancy Muller 16. Liz Shaffro 17. Barb Bailey 18.IOHI'1i Dornseif 19. Leslie Kayfetz 20. Sally Bobst 21. Barb Brooks . Nancy Straehl Cherie Martin Sue Barney Margie Gough . Beth Lewis . Meg Boutwell Nancy Morawe Kay Bock Kathy Reynolds Katy Latven Linda Green Chris Packard Gay Grootemat . Betsy Hurd Sue Smith Molly Murrah Chris Ambler Sue Langer Susan Crumpacker Linda Uecker Nancy Berk 92 .,. n 1 x -:Rm IHL flrll' T05 'vw 115' . J. 1 1 :WGA ' If ,ga .V if nf'--v' I I., . ., I F Q? efw. IJ, 1.1 ,y .... -.. xr. U . rv X mi ' D ,gn w w n A , M- 'S ' 4- ,fv f?.' 5,3 f J , ,413 Y, w 1 , m 4: 152- .FL qffs , f fe, -41 ., -x. 1-up xgx .,j-iv E t P-ff '45, ' 1 , , MW' MM-XM: - ,L -' .- , .-. .xv an X A 3-zf-1--1552 H ' ?'L-ff -+3 ff' ' ' ',',jj31Q?Q'V. .1- Q -Qu vqfil if-7 - f f.5GUr4.' -W. ' ., .An fy, ' ,S-ww Asikggw' 'Aw' - Y ' U HD . V Y ,... ., Lib? -u Y, - F., ,,, , Q: 2. I- YJ? ,F QEV1, gf- 1 A12-- ' jx K s iii ' 5525? ' 1 J E ,.q1-,W '-ny ri V 'A ri S ' il'-'r dai 'M ,ff-' I G if :fm 9 la..-L H 1-,,. u,w +. . :V fr fs! L 41 .3554 :km TT hx. - r a . Q- I. w -, 4' 4 mf M.. ,lu I -7112 Y 1' 'i A- 1. qz ' 11 ' -CGC. -'fl l f,fgf'v' inf' xi if?-?.1a. ?.T-553' . ','g':1:'i?f . I 11 ' Y Y K u 1 f 3' 'I 1 qu. DELTA UPSILON 1. W. Cathcart 2. D. Behm 3. W. Isaacs 4. C. Torrell 5.1. Briuin 6. T. Walthers 7. W. Ienkins 8. C. Meyer 9. E. Reiss 10. Gordon's Suppressed desire 11. R. Gordon 12. B. Mortimer 13. P. Reigner 14. S. Huston 15. M. Link 16. I. Ball 17. G. Smith 18. I. Hass 19. V. Swope Z0. S. Doolittle 21. L. Ryysylainen 22. R. Porta 23. S. Beer 24. W. Roberts 25. A. Football R. Resnikoff . I. McKee L. Dresdale R. Rohrs P. Lawes I. Willers T. Stier G. Olsen M. Huffman K. McCaughey M. Ridgway W. Webster H. Scott T. Abeel M. Dembert C. Green M. Packard H. Worstall M. Link I. Smith S. Parr R. Waltemyer W. Frisch A. Higgens 0 , 4 , 1 , D I, P 1 1 o I Io 11 u I M '49 V. U .5 ,- u L J ,o 1,7 ,WN KAPPA DELTA RHO M. Sussman R. Festino Calef .I. Sandel Brinen G. Frey Simpson T. Terry I Sharon P. Reisman Avery D. Albinson Deihl R. Heald . Kohler W. Malowka . Brown W. Winkler Baurnbusch T. Spitzer . McC1enathau . M. Yatzko Wallick B. English Coleman B. Berthoff . Ballard D. Simpkins . Sachs H. Emrich . Wilkinson B. Nadler Loeser M. Gebhart Lentz A. Panfil Hagan .I. Silvius Dilzell . D. Harris . Stubenrauch . T. Bracken Halkowich R. Adams . Aung-Din S. Reed . Gargiulo W. Masler Fagan H. Mose Fisher L. Sholl . Freeman D. Heath J. TZ1fi?J1.fE'illi 'PI'ii'133l52Pg1:4wf.2g.1 MJ . ., 95 f 1jr-1 f' 9 'giqp Q E ga fy, .. , time KAPPA SIGMA 1. B. Sampson 26. L. Winters 2. Bentley 27. T. Hewitt 3. W. Livengood 28. R. Parker 4. R. Schnure 29. I. Houseman 5. G. Rugh 30. W. Connellee 6. T. Davis 31. R. Smith 7. C. Dietrich 32. L. Cobb 8.1. Bowers 33.1. Fedor 9. C. Parry 34. A. Anderson 10. R. Pfeiffer 35.1. Slagel 11. W. Mack 35.1. Tiscornia 12. M. Hardy 37. D. Hunt 13.1. Williams 38. S. Young 14. F. White 39. D. Lacy 15. K. Trimmer 40. T. Bentley 16. T. Moore 41. W. Whitney 17. G. Powell 42. C. Cunningham 18.1. Davis 43. M. Staughton 19.1. Smith 44. R. Reed 20. T. Bosler 45. T. Thomas 21. S. Grunow 46. P. De Bisschop 22. W. Gibson 47. R. Horting 23. G. Raven 48. A. Schnure 24. R. Boyer 49. R. Cheek 25. P. Letang LAMBDA CHI ALPHA L. B. johnson B. Simons G. Krouse B. Biello G. Dennis W. Baber M. Cutler W. Stewart D. Martin 1. Euler T. Ioldersma D. Gibb R. M. Nixon R. Harrison I. Drumm I. Kolaya D. Rierner I. Carroll T. Hicks P. Porterfielcl D. Reynolds F. Boettke D. Croner 97 D. D. Eisenhower K. Fitchett F. Wagner A. Greiss S. Xanthopoulos I. Lennon R. Seltzer Baber . Mitzi G. Harrison N. Shiffler R. Starr M. Dominy C. Nuttal . W. Iohnson 39. R. Lacey 40.1. Guffey 41. S. Wachtel 42. I. Baker 43. G. Frank 44. F. Gerlitz 45. A. johnson 46. G. Panitz CREEP1 -r A 1 w . Y vi I , .. ,N 1' 41' V' .,q.3:g:i w- 0 I KIT. ww, -'- 'Q ' ' , . 1: v- 1 V nf' 4 K . A VN , In -na, ' .- ' ,W . P Y EW? 1. ,' I L'1'T l mRf 722, ffyf f 1 L mi W 1 f , If ' ' W -' 1'rf'I flN1yf'fYfrw,fy-Q,.:H M, ,gf Y If N ' VJ? v Y I, i i:liiI.ElL.:-Q vi Y 4 Ep -if WWUIQQWWfi-jgLWITvflVff., , if? .. ' ww MH:-m4i'm . f , 1 A W gm A W ' 'i A ' , f f 1' my mv 1 in Qv-,W-ji- I K- J. 'TX ITE- : QC-'12 Rx., M R , ' - --:4'f rf '5LFl' M ' wx-,mm-k, V I - W Wim' W' v 3 .7 M, ,.,f:f-Y, , ,L H-s..-. . ' R A? A 251. I M Imp PHI KAPPA PSI 1. P. Iackson 2. W. Neff 3. R. Salsbury 4. H. Crepki 5. N. Morris 6. R. Nicholl 7. A. Fimiano B. W. Morris 9. C. Smith 10. H. Brown 11. W. Bower 12. M. Davis 13. I. Weightman 14. I. Nagle 15. H. Grovner 16. G. Mars 17. I. Morris 18. K. Steyers 19. R. Wagner 20. W. Morrow 21. M. Cooley R. Nold R. Eberhardt R. Weber R. Grey D. Fedeli G. Hatfield G. Proch S. Stoner I. Matfus . W. Peterson C. Neilly D. Greiner R. Spagna R. Baxter T. Watts .I. Fisher . D. Henry . I. Nansteel . S. Ostrom . C. Lesher 99 PHI LAMBDA THETA . . Fahnstock . . Yepserx . . Hamburg . . Fratoni . I. Terpek 6. W. Tritle 7. S. Rivers 8. R. Eisenberg 9. T. Olin 10. M. Gazdo . Meloni . Nielsen . Levens . Sawyer . Churm .W. Gardiner 17. C. Staufenberg 18. W. Counterman 19. I. Hoffman 20. R. Walker 1 ' f il 'MQ x 'Ht ,ge ' x mf . x .J Y -4 , ' x .. ' 5' A -' S ,, I! W . L W .Y rl 1 '4 l oo 'E iii 1- . vi. ' We wen fm In In SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON 1. Bill DeBevoise 2. Paul Nezi 3. Mark Broady 4. Bob Smith M ' 5. Phil Carpenter fn? ' 6. Al Schiller G7 7. Carl Smith 8. Dana Bryan 9. Toby Goodyear 0 10. Ward Anderson 101 Dave Cooper Maury Simon Barry Brown Mike McClelland Pat Sullivan . Rick Lynch . Al Spangenberg . Tom Lewis Rich Humphrey . Iim Hendrickson I ,,q, 79 1 Iv rv ' an Tl' u,,,avuua1' Nl I nun ll SIGMA ALPHA MU 1. S. Dubin 2. R. Krimstook 3. G.T. Thompson 4. D. McMahon 5. Bull I. Horowitz 6. B. Fox 7. B. Levi B. I. Wagner 9. H. Berger 10. S. Stanalonus 11. R. Patanovic 12. M. Rosenberg 13. M. Sigman 14. I. Hodgetts 15. D. Betzendahl 16. D. Margolis 17. C. Ruberg 18. K. Onsdorf 19. R. Cohen 20. S. Lutzer 21. M. Monn B. Bennett P. Atkins L. Baker P. Schur S. Weindorf L. Moonves R. Robbins S. Scheir D. Gordon C. Cattel A. Merin S. Gutman I. Brown A. Ferber B. Scheiffer D. Cohen S. Cherney B. Merkur D. Parker D. Iackobwitz R. Kullman 102 51' lu gli-fi: I 1 ei if M SIGMA CHI Assistant Garbage Boy Assistant Garbag Russ Raisig Steve Rohrer Iohn Rudolph Randy Ruger Iack Herbert Ioe Cost Ioe Pezak Dave Helfrich Iohn Stuempfig Gene Luccarelli Iohn Findeisen Greg Doviak Pete Aron Bill Emmitt Rich Caputo Ed Iamieson Bob Kendelhardt Rich Ament Shammy Pete Curtis Doug Marinak Ted Manning Rick Cerretani 26. Lou Gallia Rob David 103 Birdie Gordy Feldman Russ Killoran Mike Smith Eddie Smith Kurt Eysenbach Ron Marsilio Barry Muller Roger Arrowsmith Bill Bonkoski Ioe Phillips Tom Montgomery Fish Mike Sudzina Sam Havrilak Bill Ludwig Dick Oliver Iohn Mathias . Jeff Bush . Frank Arentowicz .Tarras Onischenko .Bob Christian George Beals lim Eley Rick Smith Mike Wilson 1 W. M. TAU KAPPA EPSILON D. Eisenhower L. MCE1ravy III M. Locker I. Kasten Shaffer Torrence G. Bomberger G. Orgovan G. Kurtz D. Wade G. Lane I. Hosler R. Wood R. Dotterer P. Leslie C. Eby R. Elser I. Hutchinson L. Klock fPope1 R. Costlow I. Levee C. W. Moss A. Single H. Peck C. Dennis 26. T. Strekal 27. I. Hart 28. K. Monsell 29.1. Willson R. Davis B. Serra C. Chandler D. Crawford B. Boesch H. Kitch I. Press D. Moore I. Saxton S. Brice L. Partridge G. Kret H. Howe . er r fl 52:11. fl ngffllfin ,rm E. Ernest D. Parker .M. Motooka 48.1. Wilson . B. Rischan . Bob Hilles H ,U . - H 4' ., . , gm,-n: l-1 : .. ,.!u.,-tu,.,w.A3L yi I ,K Q x- if .,: if-. .ng , . . , . i , Ve L,-.r .315 -.UT gi. 1 'gt L THETA CHI 1. Pete Muller 2. Bob Schmit 3. lim Varga 4. Harler Neby 5. Don Bird 6. Iohn Buck 7. George Brode 8. Mike Brennan 9. Dennis Kalberer 10. Bill Latner 11. Bob Kline 12. Art Grosvenor 13. Larry Peck 14. Bob Klokus 15. Dave Brown 16. Dave Engle 17. Kid 18. Bob Mullit Scott Nichols 20. Kid Chris Davis 22. Iohn Speilman 23. Bob Doten Io Detwiller Gary Sparks Larry Carlson Ioe Williams Bob Grass Bo Fox Pete Dorsey lim Reese Dan Lupfer Doug Iaves Zosha Paul Collander We .FW rs if 43453 li ' ll 'fl W-new nd THETA DELTA CHI 1. S. Reed 2. W. Indruk 3. K. Schwartz 4. R. Finklestein 5. N. Panas 6. G. Detlef 7. L. Furlan 8. K. Unger 9. R. Kanagaki 10. C. Kalb 11. S. Clopper 12. A. Hernandez 13. S. Gaines 14. R. Sigurdsen 15. R. O'Laskey 16. P. Donnecker 17. P. Curlett 18. R. Wilkes . W. Ollis .I. McGinnes . D. Papier . W. Fetzer . R. Vastola .I. Leonardo .D. Hesser .I. Evans . R. Krouse . I. Walker C. Krouse H. Kendall E. Marston A. Kehew S. Hirschberg P. Martin R. Drogy 107 BUCKNELLIAN The purpose of the editorials in The Bucknellian is not to mirror what the students think, but rather to bring out into the open the ideas and opinions of the editorial board-which is not composed of the editors, but rather of interested stu- dents-and to provoke thought on the part of the students. We're not saying that what We're publishing is the unanimous opinion of the entire board, but rather that it's the opin- ion of a majority who would either like to see a change made, or commend the changes that have been made. Our intention is to provoke action by the student body, even if it is only in the form of letters written back to the editors We often take stands on important campus issues which are contrary to those expressed by many of the students merely to test the students' reaction. A very good way of finding out whether people are really reading the Bucknellian is to measure their response to the editorials themselves N iv EDITORIAL BOARD-ROW 1: R. Koch, L. Baker ROW Z B. Nash, L. Heffner, I. Hoover, H. Matthias B Shaffer ROW 3: 1. Horky, S. Douton, N. Weeks, N Grominger I Vollaro, K. Wernick. 108 EDITORS-ROW 1: B, Nash, R. Koch, L. Baker, I. Hoover, R. Karr, B. Tufts. ROW 2: S. Simpson, N. Grominger, K. Wernick. View L. Baker, editor-in-chief. CIRCULATION-ROW 1: I. Howe, L. Comee, B. Neubauer, P. Kontul, I. Fedor. ROW 2: S. Lauden- bach, S. Schier. 109 1 5 I I S 4 1 W 1 f , x I V : 5 4 BUCKNELL ENGINEER-ROW 1 T Man ning, B. Eicher, M. Matter, R B1111ngs edl tor. ROW 2: I. Register, R. Aung D1n W Guy. ROW 3: B. Hinch, K. OConnor T Zavasky, B. Muller, B. Emmitt. ' jwii -FTGTTMT -mmf am, ' M ' Fri- .W 1 U 11. H 'W!1'yg'.w1,H...51'm . -4-1 'V ' , ff-h W.. ' q W... mg, U H, 3! .-F-1+ .H . ..,-, X .531 dl . A-5- I RUN YF' up AY!-I I' 1 X 6 , N E... STUDENT FORUM-S. Gray, I. Sidebottom M '1 .fx .4 is-, 111 x I , M . 4, UNIVERSITY Cl-IORALE 112 vv 4.-1. .. V .., :gg- tgfljn :H-1, 1-.. - .,.,,. ,.a. . ur- JD-Q 'ff-,Likr CONTEMPORARY DANCE GROUP-ROW 1: L. Bunt. ROW 2: T. Saunders, president: S. White, I. Fritchman, D. Buraczeski, L. Elze. SKI CLUB-ROW 1: T. Bentley, P. DeBis- schop. ROW 2: I. Williams, presidentg K. Engle, B. Reed. ROW 1: G. Hall, D. Keon, E. Pilner, I. Davenport, B. Baun, I. Stevick, S. Levings. ROW 2:' I. Taylor, D. Riemer, I. Mitchell, I. Reese, T. Good- year, I. Apgar. 32. 9 l Q ,Q --fe 1 I . r ,sf V 14-i' qi-'Pl 114 un- 'UTD li. HOCKEY . .. The thing you've got to work on the most in order to play hockey really well is your skating-you could be the best stick-handler in the world, but if you can't move with the puck, you're not going to get anywhere when it comes to scoring and winning a game .... . .. Our biggest problem right now is that Bucknell doesn't have the facilities for hockey as yet. This is a problem for two reasons-first of all, it means that every day for practice, We have to go fifteen miles to an outdoor rink. Secondly, it means that every single game we play has to be on the road. But despite these problems, our hockey team has come a long way. We've still got a long way to go, but I really think that we have the potential for success . . . Y. , .fp , : sA':.1 1912 115 2 i. WRESTLING . . . In order to be a good wrestler, you have to have physical stamina and you have to have the proper mental attitude-you have to have confi- dence in yourself-you have to know that you can go out and win And then you need speed, of course, and guts, drive, and desire-plus a little bit of ability. Ability in any sport is only part of it, the rest is men- tal. For instance, I know that I only have average abil- ity as far as wrestling goes, but I think that I have enough drive to make me more capable than my op- ponent. Often the physical aspects just aren't as impor- tant as your mental attitude and desire to win. When you know that you're a winner, there's nobody who can beat you you know you're going to win-you know that there's a way you're going to get out when you're underneath .... . .. The hard part about developing a good strong self-confidence in wrestling is that it's such an individ- ual sport. If you make a mistake, it's your mistake, and nobody else can take the blame-nobody else can do anything to counteract or correct your bad move. If you get pinned, it's you who got pinned-the team didn't lose, you lost. . . . But despite this aspect of indi- viduality, there is definitely a team spirit. You know that you're out there to do the best-not only for your- self, but for the whole team .y.:Klf1HLz tyGKlNE1,L p JGK 'Eu ROW 1: N. Shiffler, K. Marchenese, S. Czesak, S. Coleman, W. Molawka, D. Wright. ROW 2: T. Smith, coochg I. Thompson, P. Sullivan, B. Montgomery, P. Sullivan, B. Yeomans, couch. 116 L-9 . .J-.. .. --'r '2' +L .gafnifl I' l 18 BASKETBALL . . . The most important thing in basketball is to work as a team. No indi- vidual can win a game-it has to be a team effort. Good shooting oan't overcome bad de- fense, and likewise, good defense won't win the game if you don't score any points. So, before the game, you oan't just think that you're going to the best job possible, but rather that your team is going to play at its best, your team is going to work as a cohe- sive unit, your team is going to win the game . .. Another important thing is to know your opponent as well as you possibly can- you have to have a good idea of what kind of game to expect, and you have to know your own team's strengths and weaknesses. All the pre-game psyching in the world won't mean a thing if you're not really pre- pared for the kind of game your opponent is going to play, or if you're not able to adapt your team's playing style if the need arises -1123-F ' ' .L- ,-5j ,-, ' .- 1 ,-i,- 31w'1n -s- . H 'I-vi J if -' L-L--S' - , J-I 55.57, f Haig, - , ,wg Vi- dbg:-iriiaui' ' 'F--V 6' 2:6655-' -w sf, :au -,Ig --ri Q'-. . I.'i LP' 'A ,:,,,g:T, ' '- ,?Qif,,-,fa ,L - 1 .i Hf-- - - '- '- , . ,..:.',- - X - - YR Dal,--..--5 -- -4 r --M' ' g' 'f' ' 5 '4-1 ' -Efvrwh-.Amdg ' f.- W , W. . ,Q I . , , -7. . , Qu 47 W -?Q w ui ,. ,. . .. ,-. .,,- 'fn fi' 1 1... . v. y' .ri 1 1M'::.-fTf.' W 3 K VL- . . . . .4 qi, . HEL, .wide .h.,,. 453,41-6, ROW 1: E. Fai-ver, C. Greenwood. ROW 2: D. Smith, coach: V. Cegles, I. Carson, I. Wherry, B Bonkoski, B. McKernan, T. Marble T. Schneider, C. Riley, I. Soller, D Wagner, T. Thompson, couch. 119 , A Fix. 'LQ .sq 3 42..:gQlQjI, R. Q., , H . . -'K l , ,......-f . iv-JA, .fini 121 SWIMMING ... A swimmer has to have amazing dedication to his sport. You really have to be determined to improve-you have to select a goal and then make up your mind that you're not going to quit until you've achieved it. Often it's only this dedication that gives you the energy and drive to go on or maybe it's just that 'when the going gets tough, the tough get going.' In general, and at Bucknell in particular, competition in swimming is becoming a lot rougher-a lot more people are going out for the sport, guys seem to have more individual ability, the coaching is a lot more intense, and therets even research being done . . . But maybe the most important thing is that you have to have a good coach I really don't ia. .z ., .....1..5. think you can make it on your own . . . i A ig 4, .gxlfiiilillg it x I',v.-C5112 i brasil.. 5 f it rim -Ef.-. ww- l I :ln-I llfillfigifjl KJ 3.-e' 1 .pf 1-, ' vi i ,f ull, . :Q WL, 24+ V' 1-TI . if 'Jil ROW 1: A. Butkow, C. Buffington, C. Petzold, M. Sinkinson, co-captain: D. Landes, co- captaing D. Schmeikse, R. Showmaker, W. MacCreadie, nsst. couch. ROW 2: R. Jenkins, diving coachg B. Cathcart, P. Matthews, G. Olden, I. Wilkinson, D. Eister, T. Walthers, H. Russell, head couch. ROW 3: S. Hirschburg, manager, G. Kurtz, C. Lasher, I. Krohmer, M. Huffman, D. Hunt, D. Traver, D. Hesser, manager. 122 ,- V ...N '1,4.. A -.M,, 6 X Z 2 J .md 123 -.mx W 9' . ' , T W ' gil l: xiawvy ' 'Q . .v .A W -,gg 5. ,. ,, L' .pf w -gunna ,Ark , J. . . '.Q,w 5 I I I I I I I I I I I I I 'II I I - I I Q N r ' E5 454 :WN .3549 5:29 W K J D4 cu 5 CD E D5 n.. Q cn SPRIN X NGX SPRING I SPR X NG I SPR X NGX SPRING I NGX SPR I SPR X NG I SPR X RING SP X NGX SPRINGX SPRING RI SP X NG I SPR X NG I SPR k . J 4 v ! 1 V 1. I , . 'Q Q 1 . .1 1 3 ' - r 'J 1 ' A W 5 xv- i.,,.. .g Q Y m Q . - ,ZF ', ' 's. ' J ' ' . f g 3 ' . , , --4..-.,.l. . , , x ' ,. lg .D wa . v' I I A V ..,,,, 1 mu-M YQ Vf-sfmlluukl. LWLM L , 5' 'f '771H.-'IQ . ' . ,, ,-V. L ' 'H - 5'7 1. ' V L91 il-n r ss' 'C':f!-- 7'1 wen.. ' -. ia - -X zu-Aw H A V , V4.4 ik - V 4-nf.u1.,,,,,,,,A ' . 1 . - --Hn-, 1, Q' ' 1- ss , ' P ff g QZil,f.x,,.. . . S F- 'J , . .Y -.N Mwz. v- 'syn A, , adm-'1J,. b , I ' 'K .mn fr df- ,B 'Lv 1. f., , ,1f,-,j,,'s -,J , . I 1 fm 2 A . .. Most Bucknell students seem to me to have already made up their minds about what life is all about-they already know who they are, what they are, and Where they're going. They don't seem to approach their courses-or the entire col- lege experience-with the idea that they might learn something which would change their lives. They've made all their decisions, but on a high school level, an immature level. I would think they'd do well to ask the questions again and try to solve them at a more mature level . . . 127 - 'di' . -Q --'+-V -...F f.Q--2aL1'?i- . -4: .rw , tif:-15.--., -.. -.!1S3z',, 'J , ' 11-In ' - ' 2-1'iff'1i1k+f- - f'!f'-11-.'s-.. ' GLF! , 1'2- A5-tjz, 'wE '1'1JF2y.g3.,, 4 u...,-Y .3 W- .- a ..,-' 5Q,,f--LL ,ivy-2-'. --wal'-, -:.g.-rf-V, , -.,rZff' 'IQ-f.'.9-LSE?-Lrg' 1 ' L -'WFW . ' ' '.f,...2?m W-., -1125 4151915 : 'I-I. gV.:EfvfV, .LY 1 A fp 28 5 -4 ,axes-M , Y'b..f,' ---s..' K . 'Q - Hifi? -'vi 'Lvizpz ' ' ' .. T !k 1 :,?..1f..4 ISU 3 V, ., :gg .., . - -fm, md. V . , N.. lt ,-. ,., . fi . ., ,. -gr,.,p vi ' -., li13 L, 1 if ? V W .gg QL , ,.5,,-..- 5311 uw- - X Q - x ax. J, A - .v , A., -, -I 1 ' 'vnjiif 1 'N Q 'L'iI4' 1a,lf 'nfs 'N' , N, -I-L' ?w,. . 1 gh saw. JA 2 'Wh 'W VL-' . .- ln e an I x sr nf 6 .fa W uNY a tg v 4 P1 P I. ' v , I , - , ' .U O ' I A e 'ffsv wa ,',k U Perl - I - . .. ., W J D, K. A I s K Q .V ' XF -P ' 1 'Q I l 2, 1 f ' j W Y' 1 V ' in uk 1 'Y ' 0' Us tin if 'J ' ' l' b 'I 'Wa I 4 4 I H ' f .M md! I S 7 U , 5 5, gl ,Hx . .14 1. -W -wg xx5m'L.iJ. r, I A Q ,d 'II , ff' if ,,, Y V A 5- wk ' 5 'I - tq..Y.'1a-o-fvesfvefa-.Q-efeg --gag ' , 3 Y ,w.' L -,M-, f. - . i i ' g.f: Pf1 fil,d,+:Q f '? ' , .. .E-M my V 7 1 M 4 dfv- . ,x . gf YJ. ' 5 , ,, , --c' 1 I . . W 1 'Y 1 ,q,,, nf - ' A V --1 Lff Jag. f - '.-.geifw 'I y , ,YS g n ig , Q 4 :8 5 , ?, ifjif ,, 1. 1 S mx-X ww hr' , Mi as ....-nr use .un-v In 1-B ..- ..-. .- l lipvhi ---1. .,,-.ps .ms .uv .p an mm.-5 'G' 9, L s .SM WN V1 UWM! 715 u--11 '1 2: 6' fl .- , Q. --'12 1 -' ' ' W ' 'A' ff' 1 f L? -' ,L , +L.. - ' 'VH' 2 1 ., f - A w.. New 'iran ' f-1 ' - - 'V' ' f ' - - .5 1 ' - ' - ,flh'lQ,' , , P I -5 f Q . A'Lf:'.4 ' K+ sxf , Vg .' -15,133 X -4 , 1 ,V -V .4 :.1..7- -5 .--.rw-'f 1:3 'A f. I H , -W ' , av' ' L! 5, V -I 54. -1 Agn, -H ,4f .-13. U41 ' ' , - 5 . I -- 1 -. 1 ,, ,- lm 1--I.-U,-,. . V .. A V17 .wiw I U. .N ,, Q .. ,. . W , ,1 Q, ' ' if- ,I 5-1'g4fiJ,f Ev! Hg 'g - wg' 'yu 5, we :I 'Xfh X .,u 1 w ,..,. - y 1 ,M ,, , 1 ' 2 ff 2' 4 ' ' . . - I , . O , .51 V .. ' :- :-.i.,,N,', -V. . Q ,K ' , V A .Q-.. 'Q-. x , Aj ' -, af ',,g ' ' 1 'V' 4 I - 3, zu A Q .Q . F . L ., Y 'l n ' '23-W-LL.: ' ,- 5-3.7 ' ' ' 2 up ' ' ' ' Il ' X- - . , L . . .. ..,, - ' f. ' .V 'I ' . 'l.J'x- 's Y' 1 np., .. .i . 7.4 4 Y .:..Y3-4 .. .2 y . - -AJ - ff! M 'H l5 , ' H - . ' Y, Q ' A U 4. f.. ' ' ' ,,' ' 'J . ' .5 .X M L ' . .:, V. V, 3' wh n , J r I . w '- f ' . . I , W . f, ' ri' ' 'x - -, -' -' .xi A N I r. , K X ' Q V Q U 1 . ' 1' .gl ' ' q. fi. .- I J. ,ug -- .mf Ld ' Q A 15-lf' - A . 5 I 5 I I ff h' ' 'xiii' . V . .,1, if-451 F ' 4 . ' ' . ' :'. -L T L 1- N . A 1 1. -- X. x . Y V' if 136 UT Y T' TH: qu: 137 C2 13 'H-Av ,. ..- V sf 121 f P' J -- vp, - .ag 31- :l',pkLv ff5e,' o' V- ' --:1 . ,Au , ,- 'C 'A V. 4 is ff qw- 14 .73 'N . - ... ww ,, .- I' ' ' W.. -N - . - E., , , . ...v -, ' 9- nm 1 9 , Hn. A ,. ww 'lu- 142 lb w 4 f-I .. uw uw N ., . 5 I . I, I ':- :ian ' N35 . , ,- 1 'im- , il I 7 ,.... .3 l, L 1 I , x K I 4 1 qi f' :J 'fr ' . u,,,4 K6 Quiz-lv: .- A rf.W..l Ang tr. 3 Gwsgilis ii. n ' FLA . 1 Q . J f Megs! X .M :J-Q ' X - 1?-E1-143 2 ff r .... 4 if A' -v,, Q F' f Q P J' V4 '1 1 i W I ve ,I -ll -4, mv- ,, N-svn. ,-wv . -fn V, xl -,,,- -N1 . 'I ,. . M 'N A 'j :,: 5' . 1 V. , L , 1 'Q-,CQ 52. -., 4-51 8 lfv v.-W , 2.1. 1 'Z,f'?-'fl--13. :xrkg 4 X 1 . if . , A Q V I -T,, ',. :Z X X -' -xg fi: ,' hy.--V :.' 1 '-.IJ -.Ax I I . , '-.'f.1'. :- ,ffi'?Z-f'- 'YI-I , 5 ,,'m.l' Q, I 1 ' U ' ,f W' 5. jf 1 ff. 'K 1..' . f V... , L- ff ,'.fs- 1'-I . , A. ,Y - an V' -, 4-ran-nf..-v 1 + A , 1' 5. V-s frl '-'- Q - U . '1- ' 1,-,JA.,'4.. i 'S I. L. .' ' lm, fx' .LV 4 ,, '.' .-w k' if - M., ,. tl ff-J 144 wmv-- ARTS AND SCIENCEIARTS AND SCIENCEIARTS AND SC ENCEXARTS AND SCIENCEXARTS AND SC ENCEIARTS AND SCIEN Q A . A -D Q. I ' .A fx 5 Q' ' ' J fx QI fy' , ' ' s 1' . , 'A 7 :J KL! 'HI g , P3 5 KE A .. A f ff 1431! N: 1 i fe .- A 5 1 I . A f 2 :i V A A ' if A N - NY ,-. -- --rx A-- -- ., .... , W r r A ,Y . A A , ,- ew- ,.. , W I. M' V W V W Air 3 S . . I b I V: H v -M f ' A v, 5 w M 1 W ' - . . 1 A :Q X, 5-M451 ,n A K' V I In I i - W 3 o 3 . 'A 1. L i ,WA V, D., , , E - V 1.4. , A , , Z x Z Y -, DD A iq 45 , . ug wg ,fl f-W W- X V: -,y ' ' I i 5- ' 5 'P j sv, , f Y ' 4, 11, lv 'Q f A W Q jgg, -. Efigf' ,A-. i , ' A lwglfif V' U: ,5,f'fi.v QQ . ii i' 2 , 'D - ART . .. The only way you can find out about art is by studying the proc- ess of making it. You're not dealing with ideas as ends in themselves or for their own sake-you have to un- derstand that ideas are important only in so far as they can be made to function. In a sense, what we do here is totally practicalg the making of art is an anti-theoretical process-it's a constructive process, and everything that we do is directed towards that end. Of course, something is learned in this process-something which I'd have to call a new frame of reference -a new horizon-a new way of see- ing the world . . . N. R. Anderson Pictured on preceding page is L. Pacala, Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. . I BIOLOGY The role of our B1ology De partment the role of SCIBDCE IS to equ1p Bucknell1ans w1th an 1dea of what It means to be a sclentlst and what It means to cr1t1 CIZB the world around you through the eyes of a sc1ent1st The way you do th1s IS cer ta1nly not to s1t down w1th a person and say Learn th1s learn that th1s 1S true that IS true because that IS completely oppos1te to the way the SCIEDIIST approaches the world It would be a fantastlcally great th1ng 1f all of the students at Bucknell re gardless of the1r degree of soph1st1cat1on never saw the 1ns1de of a lecture hall as far as the1r sclence educatlon went never once saw a cookbook laboratory where they had to look at somethlng that was prepared by somebody else or do an expemment that was be1ng done for the umpteen m1ll1onth t1me In essence what I really mean IS that the ldeal blology educatlon ought to be a se mester or a year rn a sc1ent1f1c laboratory where a real problem IS bemg tackled some thlng where there IS an unknown element somethlng Where someones cur1os1ty could really be f1red up Dr M L Rosenzwelg 147 BIOLOGY FACULTY R Ellls F Llttle M Rosenzwelg I Harclerode ChUlIITIGI'l H Magalhaes T Rochow Pearson CI-IEMISTRY FACULTY-ROW 1: B. Willeford. N. Livengood, H. Heine, G. Rubottom. ROW 2: P. Mente, H. Veening, L. Kieft, chairman: M. Smith, C. Root. 4 CHEMISTRY . . The freshman course is enough to convince some people that they're not going to study chemistry any further . . . then . . . yes . . . there is some weeding out. I think organic chem is a hard course . . . it almost has to be hard because it more or less tells the students what things are going to be like for the rest of the time . . . I don't think they're trying to discourage students. 'P-chem's cake, P-chem IS CAKEX That was what was on the board up there a week or so Viago. I think it was a couple of days before the hour exam. Wasn't it Iohn? It wasn't a couple of days after . . CLASSICS . . I think the role of the classics department is kind of paradoxical, since there are two basic angles: to give a liberal education, and also to provide a kind of professional introduction to the most im- portant aspects of the classics. As a result, we teach two different kinds of courses: courses in translation which are designed to make available certain concepts of the Greek and Roman cultures that have affected the CLASSICS FACULTY-I. Heath, H. Miller, chairman. history of Western civilization and have many points of relevance to our contempo- rary societyg and courses which are more professionally oriented, and which are taught in a rather rigorous way. Thus, I think that in a way, the classics department serves as a good illustration of the basic paradox of modern education-of the professional ver- sus the liberalg of the scholarly versus the general. . . Dr I M Heath Y my .I ,. .,.-,ir-. EDUCATION FACULTY-G. Bernheim, C. Pepperman, I. Pack- ard, W. Sauvain, W. Vandever, W. Heiner, H. McKeegan, G. Natkin, W. Moore, chairmang W. Goodwin, R. Romoser, C. Cobes. 14 ,Hi 1 I . EDUCATION . . . Eighty-five per cent of the children in any classroom would learn in spite of a teacher-a person hardly needs any training to work with these children. But the remaining fifteen per cent need some kind of extra help, and it's this group that demands real competence. We spend most of our time being concerned with that fifteen per cent, and we try to make our people feel guilty if they aren't adequate for all of their students. Thus, there's a quality of realism in our student teacher training which many in- stitutions lack. We've tried to set up situa- tions where they have opportunities to exper- iment, to try to find ways of handling prob- lems, not just to follow somebody else's blueprint. . . Dr. W. H. I-Ieiner ENGLISH . . . In a general sense, what I really want to happen to my students is that they think and feel for themselves-that they deepen themselves . . . enlarge themselves. When you're teaching thirty-five stu- dents in one course, you have to remind yourself that they're not a class, but that they're thirty-five indi- viduals-you try to project to them individually, to talk to them almost as if there were just one of them. You must try a kind of conjuring of intimacy or you turn into a teaching machine and then you might as well 'program' it or put it on television. Some kind of intimate Contact is really necessary, or what I want to happen in education simply isn't going to happen.. . . Dr. I. S. Wheatcroft ENGLISH FACULTY-ROW 1: D. Owens, I. Wheatcroft. ROW 2: R. Gross, W. Hooker, acting chairman: I. Tilton, L. Casimir. ENGLISH FACULTY R Mueller M Carens F Merritt FRENCH . . . I really think that it's important for liberal arts students to have experience in studying and working with a foreign language. Such experience gives insight into a foreign culture and into the way foreign people see the world and thus enables the students to see that some things which they have taken for granted and assumed to be universal are really partic- ular to our own culture-it enables them to broaden their some- what limited perspective and to appreciate to a greater degree the relevance of language and literature to their own lives ' l l Dr. A. W. Grundstrom lr' FRENCH FACULTY-M. Foy, G. Cook, D Walmer, I. Gale, A. Grundstrom. all . if I :F :gi-'P K I ',,,,... Z I, 151 GEOLOGY AND GEOGRAPHY FACULTY-I. Allen E. Cotter, D. Marchand, R. Nickelsen, chairman: R Peterec. eff GEOLOGY One course in geology is enough to last you for the rest of your life- never again will you speed along Route 80 without noticing 'stream erosion' and 'rock strata' where before you saw only rivers and mountains. You also find, however, that geology has given you a broader basis upon which to develop your own general knowl- edge or particular field of study. No matter what they major in, liberal arts students seem to concentrate on the study of civiliza- tion's progress, and the feeling which geol- ogy provides of a continuum from the earth's formation through all of recorded history until the present day is more than just a novel idea . . . you can't help but have a better comprehension of man's progress and development on earth when you have an un- derstanding of the progress and development of the earth itself . . . A student 152 GERMAN FACULTY-M. Brown, C. Brandt, j. Tonks, G. Folkers, director. lla , tellin U, ,J V W - in H-: -if ,girls ' ,lm LITERATURE mtl fir? .M Ei'i7t5l .-.Ffa l GERMAN . .. The only way a language major can become truly at ease in a language, is to live it-to spend time in a country where it's spoken. Living abroad gives you the chance to try to understand part of what's going on in today's world-it makes you realize that lan- guage is the barrier that it is most necessary to break down that communication mustbe conquered if we're going to have any sort of productive international relationships. .. The opportunity that I had to spend my junior year abroad proved to be an immeasurable addition to my education as a German major. Not only did I get practice with the spoken language and a feeling of being part of the culture, but I acquired a definite insight into the way the German people think. The German mind is a very intricate mechanism-the German people don't think at all as Ameri- cans do, and as a result, one can't really understand them until he's had an opportunity to become immersed in the German culture-to become immersed in German thought . . . A student 153 HISTORY FACULTY-M. Cushman, R. Drin- non, chairman: I. Kirkland, R. Strauss. f as --. - Ill ,,1l'9 I-IISTORY . . . Those students who are encouraged to stay on the textbook level of things have no real touch with some of the most crucial questions concerning our past, have barely any touch with reality, and do not understand the present in any kind of real, immediate sense. That some students remain curious, that they survive this proo- ess of 'textbook progranimingf strikes me as an extraordinary tribute to the human capac- ity to endure and to perservere. That so many of the young are indeed raising ques- tions that are only rarely seen in textbooks indicates that the programming itself has not been totally effective . . . . . When I first suggested to my classes that they should, indeed, interrupt my lec- tures, should, in fact, raise questions, the dis- belief was very nearly touchable. I think fewer now disbelieve this invitation: there's a greater willingness to object, to ask 'VVhy?', and even, on occasion, to say 'No!' . . . Dr. R. Drinnon L ,Www 1 , IAPANESE FACULTY-K. Eguchi, D. Lu, chairman: W. Spalding 154 MATHEMATICS . . . lt's almost impossi- ble to explain to a person what mathematics is. Until you've experienced it or learned some of it, the explanations are almost mean- inglessf' Certainly, in all the social sciences, one can discuss the subject matter: even in many of the pure sciences, one can explain to a layman what sort of thing one is working on. This is not possible in mathematics any- more. The mathematician is in a private world -he uses a private language, and he can speak about mathematics only to other mem- bers of this world. Even if mathematics and mathematicians with it were cut off entirely from the rest of the physical world, there would still be enough problems floating around within the subject to carry on almost indefinitely . . . MUSIC . . . A silent music department is a dead one. A class in which you do not play music is like a day without sunshine or per- haps a meal without wine. I can't teach ap- preciation. I hope the music itself will do the work . . . A lot of people just think music is something to brush your teeth by, but to really listen to music, it takes as much energy and attention as, for example, reading a psychology textbook. As many times as I study a piece of mu- sic, each time I listen to it again, there's something newg there's something that I A didn't hear beforeg there's something that is different and interesting. . . . . . We used to refer to classical music as long-hair music, but We can't anymore be- cause the rock musicians are the long-haired ones . . . Dr. T. E. Warner MUSIC FACULTY-H. Kleinfelter, R. Beckman, T. Warner, chairman: I. Hill, R. Goss, A. Summer, W. McRae, D. Tuhy, A. Flock, Z. Ienks, G. Boeringer. 156 X PHILOSOPHY . . . If you want to study a settled subject matter, if you want to study something you can nail down once and for all, don't study philosophy! It has no real boundaries: it's open-ended and free-free to speculate, free to challenge common assumpl tions, free to commit the outrage of thinking with no practical end in view. Philosophy is man-centered . . . humanistic. If the Buck- nell student is sold on advance on objectiv- ity, then he probably ought to look some- where else other than the Philosophy Depart- ment. Most people talk about objectsg phi- losophers talk about subjects . . . about decisions and choices . . . about values . . . about Words. . . . . . When philosophy becomes a depart- ment in an institution, it is to make sure that man doesn't get forgotten. . . . Dr. I. Fell 157 PHILOSOPHY FACULTY-P. War ren, chuirmung R. Norton, D. Mar- tin, I. Fell, M. Santulli. PHYSICS FACULTY-R. Artman, chairmang V. Drozin, D. Savickas, R. Schwensfeir, Ir., C. Stickney, O. Anderson, E. Stahl, Ir. PHYSICS . . . With the modern world that we're living in-the Space Age-a person should be able to un- derstand a little bit-not the intricate details-but at least enough to under- stand what's going on. The engineers are the ones that are producingg they're taking our elementary discov- eries, and broadening them out, and creating this mechanical world in which We live. If a student doesn't have access to engineering courses, at least from physics courses he can visualize some of the concepts that go into the creation and maintenance of our increasingly complex world. If you didn't have physics, you'd have none of this basic understanding-it would be like going to college and not taking English, or majoring in mathematics and not taking calculus I ' u E. A. Stahl, Jr. l i i N 158 YL POLITICAL SCIENCE FACULTY-C. Longley, I. Peeler, Loder, D. Sturm, I. Gathings, chairman. I 'N 1 .41 -Q Y 159 H , , POLITICAL SCIENCE . . . For the past several decades, there have been differences of opinion within the field of political sci- ence as to its true nature and function. A small group desires that political science stu- dents and teachers become active partici- pants in all forms of political life. Other groups take the view that it is the job of the political science teachers merely to instruct, to inform, and to educate the student about the broad, general life of politics which he will iind when he leaves college. Personally, I take the viewpoint that it is our job, primarily, to give a background to students and not to influence them as to the type of political activity in which they could or should engage . . . Dr. I. A. Gathings PSYCHOLOGY FACULTY-D. Hartley, I. Keen, S. Moot, N. Rohrman, R. Teevan, chairman, W. Smith, R. Wagner, D. Milne. 'FFT ' - ' 1 -,- t, ' f it - .N , .11 - , ,. 1 , , In PSYCHOLOGY . . . I think psychology as a discipline and as a profession has a kind of pivotal role to play in modern life. It is, on one hand, a science, and has certain ground- ing in natural science and technology which makes it a real presence and reality in con- temporary society. Yet, on the other hand, it is explicitly concerned with non-scientific issues-human issues-and so it bridges a kind of gap that already exists in our culture between the human-oriented way of thinking and the scientific-oriented way of thinking. Any psychology department that doesn't bridge this gap is really not fulfilhng its po- tential. We at Bucknell try to bridge the gap by not only giving the student a good grounding in what psychology means in a scientific sense, but also by trying to facili- tate the personal growth of those students who are in our presence-by facilitating the development of human consciousness and conscience. . . Dr. 1. E. Keen Ku N I .J il. qs .. ,. I - . F- isis: L RELIGION . . It seems to me that there are two basic reasons for including the study of religion in an undergraduate curriculum. One is the obvious reason that religious be- liefs are a fundamental part of culture, and that in order to understand man and to un- derstand some of the basic forces which mold and motivate a culture, we must study the religion of that culture. But much more important is that the religious question is a question which man asks as a part of his hu- man existence. This being the case, it seems to me that every person's education ought to include some exposure to this kind of ques- tion and to the ways in which man has tried to answer it. . . Dr. W. H. Becker RUSSIAN FACULTY-R. Beard, I. Rinkus. RELIGION FACULTY-D. Sturm, I. Gardner, G. Cooke, chairman, W. Becker, D. Buckey, G. Wood. I. RUSSIAN . . . Part of the Russian Depart- ment's program is the acknowledgement of the inseparability of language and culture- the fact that certain concepts are necessary to understand Russian language, literature, and civilization . . . Language acts as a sort of filter through which we view the world. Since we organize things differently than do speakers of the Russian language, we very frequently understand things quite differ- ently. It is part of our program to point out these differences in understanding and to help the student reconcile them to his own perspective. . J' Dr. R. E. Beard 161 ROTC FACULTY-ROW 1: Lt. Col. H. Underwood, Mrs. B. I-Iafer, Sgt Maj. B. Ford. ROW 2: Lt. Col. G Auger, M. Sgt. T. Walker. ROW Maj. R. Rasmussen. ROW 4: Capt N. Bacheldor, Staff Sgt. E. Harp Staff Sgt. B. Norkett. ROW 5: Capt, G. Griffith. was .146-f..t5t. A ROTC . . . I think one of the things youll find in Military Science, or ROTC, is that the subjects are many and varied. It's quite different from other courses of instruction where you have an expert in a particular field. We, in the military, tackle many subjects . . . . . . I've heard talk for quite some time that each section has its own personality, but I've never realized how true it was. I have three sections now and I would say that each one is definitely different. For instance, the second section of mine seems much more moti- vated than any of the other two sections and actually gets quite a bit more accomplished . . . I do feel that at times the students are more motivated in other areas than ROTC, but they seem to get the job done when they're under pressure. If there's no pressure, no re- quirement, well . . . then they tend to sluff off as much as any other student. . . . Captain N. W. Bacheldor 16 I-'A Q.,- SOCIOLOGY FACULTY W Mor r1l1 B Dyke R Sherwood 163 SOCIOLOGY Soc 1007 I thlnk IIS a course everybody should take Studylng Soc 1S l1ke studylng your se I dont thlnk you can under stand y o u r s e lf completely untll youve had th1s course Its the only course Ive had that ever made me feel hke I really wanted to talk to somebody about It You come back from a math class and you just put away your notebook and thats lt You come back from a Soc class and you feel hke theres somethmg the g1rl across the hall should know Soc does one thlng fo you t makes you really thmk 1t makes you reallze that thlngs lust arent as slmple as you once lmagmed It never dawned on me before that some bunch of nomads or some tr1be 1n AfI1CH mlght have some real rele Vance to what s gomg on rlght here 1n Lewlsburg Pennsylvama The amazlng thlng about the Socrology Department IS the capabll 1ty of the professors Ive had just about all of them and I 1ust can t be have how they hold my attent1on how they really get me exclted about the courses They themselves are al ways very casual they make you feel hke there s no effort to 1t at all But the tests? Imposslble' A Student WU ca - . . . . . - 1 1 ,, 'V . ll l I I I I t I ' ' - , . A I lf. . . - - . ly ' ' ' s ' v ll XII?-'I I t -- ' ' r , 1 , , , nw l,'sf - It lv... V f tt, .I X N I 1 f , . 1 I , . . , . t K I I I . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . , , . . . ' M I I I ' , . . . . ., st - - -. . . . V,-' . . . . , . , I y 1 ' . . , I, -- - I: X 'mu Hi t O . ,fi ,, Q ' V 31 -.' . , J 7 ' . , . . - , - ' t n , . , . . ...tw M, ,Yu ,,, ', , SPANISH FACULTY-I. 1 Chew, M. Edgerton, B. Gonzalez. 164 SPANISH . . Very often students have a serious question in their minds about the value of foreign language studyg they wonder what will be left when they finish their for- eign language requirement, and when, after a few years time, they have forgotten most of the language itself and are no longer in a position to use it. It seems to me that there is a very real and permanent value to a foreign language experience as part of an under- graduate curriculum, since the experience of any one foreign language and the culture for which it is a vehicle is generalizable. That is to say, once the student has realized by ex- perience that speakers of other languages do 'think' differently about a good many things, he's apt to generalize from this one experi- ence to all other people who speak languages different from his own. This is particularly important in this day and age because-it's trite, but it's true-we do live in a world in which we are all constantly in touch with people who have different backgrounds and who speak a different language . . . Dr. M. F. Edgerton, Ir. MEN'S PHYSICAL EDUCATION FACULTY -H. Peters, D. Smith, W. Yeomans, T. Thompson, C. Reynolds, S. Blume, E. Biggs, C. Huntress, R. Russell, R. Latour, chair- mung F. Belichek. WOMEN'S PHYSICAL EDUCATION FAC- ULTY-M. Peck, M. Bryan, chairman, N. Elze, A. Burgner. ALPHA CHI SIGMA ICHEMISTRYJ-ROW 1: L. Baker. ROW 2: P. Kresan, R. Fields, P. Reisrnan, R. Simons, I. Dengler, A. Pribula, president, D. Moore, G. Diegnan, I. Press, C. Kalb, M. VanDerveer, G. Blosick. if 166 AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY-ROW 1: N Graver, T. Poeth, B. Shanks, president, G. Diegnan P. Kaufhold, A. Pribula, G. Blosick, D. Moore, B Rising. ROW 2: I. Peyman, I. Press, I. Drumm, I Moorman, C .Buffington. ALPHA LAMBDA DELTA IFRESHMAN w 0 M E N 1- Row 1: A. Hebel, 1. Will, 1. Zeek, S. Schreck. ROW 2: S. Ross, S. Good, R. Colio, S. Hood. ROW 3: R. Palmatier, E. Iackson, B. Gladen, A. Danilowicz, L. Rogerson, D. Bolger. ROW 4: I. Gerrity, presidentg D. Summers, G. Garrabrandt, G. Grunewald, B. Cole, H. Matthias, B. Spring. DELTA PHI ALPHA IGERMANI-P. Iohn son presldentg C. Krouse, B. Hinsch. KAPPA DELTA PI IEDUCATIONJ-ROW 1 A. Niemi, C. Gearhart, K. Davis, A. Reese president, I. Dix, P. Sonntag, S. Crampton, L. Lawrence, P. Smith, I. Riemer, I. Millard, L. LaMorte. ROW 2: V. Kinney, C. Crum, D Palmer, I. Stanton. MORTAR BOARD IWOM- EN'S LEADERSHIP1-ROW 1: F. Mahoney, I. I., K Speare. ROW 2: C. Wright A. York, C. Gearhart, B. Bat- zer, M. Crowson, K. Fichter, S. Crampton, president. K- M-A 1 -1 , . , 4 1 8 MU PHI EPSILON IMUSICI-C. Bartholomew, K Sheetz, K. Barr, C. Stoehr, president: P. Reynolds, M Hicks, C. Ogrinz, Sigfried. OMICRON DELTA KAPPA IMEN'S LEADERSHIPI-ROW 1: Ham- merlee, P. Durfee, M. Hill, P. Kerstetter. ROW 2: B. Martuza, E. Farver, C. Steinhart. ROW 3: I. Gathings, R. Billings, D. Ohl. ROW 4: L. Moraytis, I. Soller, B. Emmitt. ROW 5: L. Wood, R. Koch, S. Havrilak, G. Beals, president. l 1 PHI ALPHA THETA IHISTORYJ ROW 1 H Kendall. ROW 2 F Mahoney president N Coppedge ROW 3: C. Gearhart M Russo N Iohnson M Crowson D. Mathie- HO' fl PHI SIGMA TAU IPHILOSOPHYI-I. Fell advisorg P. Durfee, A. York, R. Abrams, M Maxwell, D. Ackermann, presidentg M. San- tulli, advisor. PI DELTA PHI IFRENCHI ROW 1 L. Lawrence, V. Wxnchester I Chubb T Saunders president. ROW 2 R Greenberg C Harr1son I Stultz, C. Masters. PHI ETA SIGMA IFRESHMAN MENI R Mertz N Panhorst G Hardy R Levlne M Sussman B Mortlmer A Hxggms I Shovlm L Moonves D Bucher B Merkur T Lewxs T Parker OC PHI SIGMA IBIOLOGYI ROW 1 I Stanton S T1Ilman L Uecker M Gflfflth N Ross I SIOVIIT ROW 2 K Baud M Harms D Oblon B Werner L Heffner I Varga H Magalhaes ROW 3 L Galha B Bouchard I Wmakur G Beals presldent I Parhment S Havrrlak L Dowrue K Krause S Depner M Lxpstem T Spltzer R Kan agak1 ? 15-414.4 PI SIGMA ALPHA IPOLITI- PAL SCIENCEI-N. Leidy M. Staughton I. Chubb. PSI CHI IPSYCHOLOGYI-ROW 1: S. Zins- master, L. Girvin, S. Tredennick, K. Kreller D. Lupfer, P. Terrill, president: R. Mergen L. Brautman, H. Hobson, C. Lark, ROW 2 P. Nacci, L. Potter, R. Rader, C. Sheppard, I Werner, M. Hutchinson, S. Crampton, S Ienkins, D. Hammell, B. Schaeffer, I. Faier, I. Lewis, D. Riall, K. Bock, E. Rounsaville S. Barlow, B. Speicher. ROW 3: I. Brown D. Polzella, N. Rohrman, advisor: K. Kopf. -..,,.-.Wim Q X . ,EL , l - I Y , . ---'--f- ,I ,I X 2 fl' - ' I , 45' IF? :- I , 51: I . 1 . ' - 4 . L If-.fall ' ,Y ,. ' A -I? '1 A -'.- vr' ,,.. ... I f fe- V X g N. JA ...,- rd Z-' Y-- . M ' lx I I 1 -Q., , , -paw is , , i-,354 fg.s,, . . N 1 TP. Q- 4 -' ' .- A ' ,L-f -:LJ M ., , Qfii' V. , S4 --L.-.:..ME5-E 1 . . . ' W - .. -13 ' ' ' ' 1- ,Q S . , , ' ' ' ' --e f -e .... I , 1 Rvf. - I .. , 4 p-.51-HQ? ,I Q' it . 1 E'.,v.vi:fJf?'?'bl'- ' V. , -. Lg x . ' Cf' 5 ' 'hVf,,, A,.r.j-I 131 W ' , . 3 fa 5' .-.i.....1. SIGMA PI SIGMA IPHYSICSI-ROW 1: O. ROTC HONOR GUARD- -S -1' -lg. - ' -H s bI. f I . 1-mrs.-1 .l Vl ..x -'-:gin-V Al, , H F:.,'1,t I ' v , R . l s Anderson A Greiss, K. Kircher, K. Wasilik. ROW 1: I. Mourman, H. ROW 2 I McSkimmin, V. Drozin, N. Polan, Kitch. ROW 2: M. Gebhardt, E Stahl E Miller, D. Savickas. ROW 3: I. B. Winkler. ROW 3: I. Sil- Hutchmson P. Iohansson, presidentg I. vius, I. Lynch. ROW 4: H. Wells M Torrence. Wilkinson, B. Rave. ROW 5: T. Booth, L. Becker. ROW 6: D. Laputka, G. Bright. ROW 7: B. Evans, R. Baumbusch. 172 THETA ALPHA PHI IDRAMATICSI-ROW 1: C Arnao. ROW 2: A. Yonker, P. Harris, P. McGowan R. Simons, L. Campbell, S. Riggs. ROW 3: M. Crow- son, K. Kennedy, C. Lucke, D. Hesser, P. VanBrunt, M. Lipschutz. ROW 4: R. Klein, president: D. Baum, D. Bernheisel, E. Iones, R. Schmenner. PI MU EPSILON IMATHEMATICSI-ROW 1: S. Gardner, B. Cloyd, V. McDonough, M. Mautino, C. Familetti, D. Crawford, M. Tor- rence, W. Heller, P. Matthews, G. Gargiulo. ROW 2: S. Ehrenfeld, L. Faltings, C. Del- linger, G. Nettleton, D. Torockio, B. Iltis, L. Finkill, S. Ricciardi, C. Beers, E. Neely. ROW 3: I. Press, R. Grubbs, L. Moraytis, B. Mund, T. Onka, N. Polan, S. Clopper, presi- dent: I. McSkimin, W. Emmitt, B. Muller. ROW 4: K. Unger, I. Schwenk, D. johnson, I. Bohnert, D. Ackermann, A. Iones, S. Rid- dell. M ,. , QF 5.-' 1 DELTA PI ISPANISHJ-L. Cornee. Wllson, president, T. Saunders, N. Berk. 173 Lil!! OUTER RIPPLE-ROW 1: P. Daisey, G. Maynard, I. Richardson, T. Tyson. ROW 2: I. Rini, C. Wright, C. Gallup, I. Miller, F. Murray, D. Weinberger, E. Pitts, chairman, P. Feldman, S. Konove, H. Levine, E. Cohen, T. Athans, E. Heine. e r . , . QMS, 3. Xi NEWMAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION, EXECUTIVE BOARD-S. Clopper, Father B. Petrina, chaploing C. Kalb, president: A. Larson, S. Brown, C. Desmond, I. Gerrity, I. Kris, I. Andres. 174 v F 7' 'f DEBATE SOCIETY-R. Claus, P. Durfee, president: I. Sidebottom. L'AGENDA . .. As everything nears completion, you get sort of excited about the whole thing-it's all one big creative effort aimed at almost telling a story. It takes a while to get everybody so that they're working toward the same end and the same story, but after a while, things seem to start going-people all start thinking along the same lines, and everything really begins to fit together. It's always really wild right before a deadline-everything is coming at the last minute, and everything's got to be put together-nm body knows what's happening and nobody's got the time to try to figure out what's going on. But somehow, all the excitement of getting it done makes it almost worth the panic, the havoc, and the sleepless nights EDITORS-IN-CHIEF-A. Morrison, G. Maynard. l 1 BUSINESS MANAGER-H. Scott 17 A SECTION EDITORS-ROW 1: R. Robbins. ROW 2: B. Bachorik, N. Livengood. P. james, L. Faltings. We ll 'N SECTION EDITORS-B. Werner, I. Ekman. ASSISTANT EDITORS-D. Harfmann, B. Sackrm .-:VL A29 6 .x ' I Y, .V U I I V .. . 45.5 mpg ORCHESTRA 'I -41, x N A Q n. 'x 7 way, R. Mertz, A. Danilewicz, S. Gaines. ROW 2: W Brown, S. Boyer, B. Cooper, S. Iucha, I. Ainsworth C. Watko, I. Willers, I. Slowiak. f l 95, 'L lar' RIFLE CLUB-ROW 1: R. Dunn, president: M. Ridg- 1 T. Bentley, I. Tubbs, SSG Norkett, advisor: V. Engle, S. Ould, L. Becker, V. Kiernan, I. Dickerson, 5' '1'- ...av-L-.. 4:8 .1 ' 4. 3, . , - V T .LV . I , ' 1 T it if eff'-f ' bf 4' SYNCHRONETTES-ROW 1: C. Champney, I. LeBars, P. Barton, C. Pfeiffer, B. Faust, N. Brown, T. Lippenberger, M. Foley, I. Howe, B. Cole, S. Crumpacker, B. Brooks, M. Murrah, K. Muse, president. ROW 2: L. Koontz, K. Eble, L. Butcher, N. Worrall, S. Carswell, L. Ballinger, T. Bauman, M. Wanner, B. Wagner, G. Sholten, L. Stratton, I. Zang, R. Hilles, C. Dennis. 179 ii SKY DIVERS-ROW 1: A. Morrison, M. Toback. ROW 2: W. Brown, S. Boyer. ROW 3: R. Stevens, B. Wood. ROW 4: L. Dutton, R. Walker. ROW 5: D. Gruen, D. Nourse. ROW 1: V. Engel, president: I. Frederick. ROW 2: I. Chesarek. ROW 3: L. Mills, D. Hunt. ROW 4: F. Clausen, G. Dennis. SKY DIVERS . . . The fun in sky diving comes when you're making long, delayed parachute jumps. The feeling as you go into the free fall is just tremendous. You start feeling that feeling of freedom in the air--independence. You're all alone: no one else is up there. You're away from all your problems on the groundg everything's be- hind you, you're not even thinking about it .... We're doing our own thing up thereg we're realiz- ing the freedom We have . . . You go back to real- ity, you pull your parachute, it opens, you de- scend: you sort of think back to those ten or fifteen or thirty or sixty seconds, or however long it was that you enjoyed up there by yourself . . . People are standing around . . . 'Oh boy, what a great sport, look at that guy up there coming in with a parachute' But they don't know really what we had up there, and you can't explain it to them. . . ,L . V , , , ,, , , , my , OUTING GLUB-Row 1: v. Momanus, D X Dilatush, D. McKenna, P. Craumer. ROW 2 S. jenkins, I. Love, S. McCombe, M. Pick ands, R. Ieffers, D. Fellows, G. Michael, D Brown. f 'T 4 , SAILING CLUB-P. Schwartz, E. Marston, L. Butcher, S. Barlow, I. Iackson, R. Sholl, L. Deviney, I. Sidebottom, I. Hickman, C. Uhlinger, B. Speicher, B. Duncan, D. Wise- man, D. McRae, B. Fields, presidentg I. Dickerson, M. Hegeman, S. Rubenfeld, B. Dorsch, G. Daves, I. Gervin, D. Blanding, E. Hyde, S. Schrader, C. Ellison, P. Brown, R. Stevens. 181 TENNIS TEAM-ROW 1: H. Peters, coach: G. Panitz C. Miller, M. Poses, M. Cooley, D. Gordon, captain ROW 2: W. Neff, S. Ross, D. Rath, P. Lawes. 182. 'l If mlm TENNIS . .. What gets exciting about the match I don't really know I just kind of love that sport-that's all. A lot depends on how you're playing that day and who you're playing against. You get very nervous about having to play in competition, like before a big match. Naturally, you're nervous-you're excited about the prospects of winning and maybe pulling an upset. I get too nervous and worry too much and think too muchg everybody gets queasy stomachs. But then you get out there and get introduced and you walk out on the court and hit a couple of balls and sometimes you feel better. . .. And then sometimes, you know, you have off days. You know it's like a do-or-die effort . . . you try what you have and you do everything you can and sometimes it's not good enough . . . . . . Coach Hank Peters . . . A great guy- a tremendous athlete-a very good teaching pro who's developed some fine kids. He's tremendously . . . uh . . . what's the word for it? This tremendous vocabulary is what he has. He just comes out with these amaz- ing sayings at times. . . . Like when you miss a crucial shot or you're down match point and you have this easy set-up-and you miss it. And then from about nine million courts away, you hear this 'OH, my aching back . . . you missed it! Holy Kimonal' . . . l 1 l l I V 5'?.. . Ff' 1 'K ,F Y. .1 A: . Hmm .. 1-x M -'i .M u 1 f J,-'Wigg.:z,. 63:3 'S 3' . ,. , . 1. R., , J, , sn: - , vf f wnmax c V T' '5 f'.pE -A1454 .1 I., .. f 'www ., -.-. , V G 'N Ewfiy HR , .AQ . ,..,. ' f... -. V . 7516.3 A , , -Q2 Kelli. '31 , R 2 4 .X 1 .... 1. .- wwf 1 if .if if 'M 1 .- AV! I yr. js ,-ge Q-'A in 'D .. K . .W A. !'if'4' ,, .- lf -wmv- Q i GOLF TEAM-ROW 1: R. Gray, R. Kotz, captaing R. Cheek. ROW 2: I. Petura, K. Solar G. Benson, A. Edwards, B. Tufts, Coach. 4 N .pw lm it ' GOLF . . . There's a considerable amount of team spirit even though golf is primarily an individual sport and there's no team work as such involved in playing a golf match. . . . A prediction? . . . Hopefully, some sort of enthusiasm towards watching golf matches can be built up here at Bucknell. Golf does have a definite appeal as a spectator sport at the college level: it's been proven nationally. The boys on the Bucknell golf team play much better than average golf and I think the student body would be surprised at the cali- bre of the play and would certainly be inter- ested in the matches. After all, the golf course is not that far from campus. We've always had a limited number of spectators-and usually they're girls . . . .ti LACROSSE . . . There's a certain kind of closeness you get with the other members of the team that really lives on even during the off season. We all know what we're trying to do-we're trying to bring a winning season to Bucknell. We're out there knocking each other's blocks off during the week, but we know it's only for our own benefit, in hopes that We can defeat a team on Saturday after- noon. If we're ready and we go out there and play a good game, and the fans are behind us, then to go into the locker room with a victory is just one of the greatest feelings in the world.. . . . . . The most exciting aspect of the game is . . . well, I don't know . . . I guess the most exciting thing is when your team scores. I d0n't know anything more exciting than, for instance, when they have the ball down in our end and the defense does up for a nice quick drive on their goal and we score quickly. I guess just the thrill of seeing everybody work together and seeing the whole team work as a unit is . . . well, it's thrilling to me and I think the fans like it, too. Scoring a quick goal is just great .... 1 so ROW 1: I. Eckman, G. Giffin, I. Morris, E Farver, cupluing A. Kehew, B. Mund, T Thomas. ROW 2: F. Smith, K. McCaughey M Lewis, I. McKee, R. Waltemyer. ROW 3 I. Richards, R. Marcille, P. Nichols, B Griffith. P. Brown. ROW 4: I. Reese, S Iamieson, coachg W. Ienkins, I. Gazley, R Tollefsen, F. Brown, L. Winters, A. Kurz, H Brown. is fi Q .gegqs BASEBALL TEAM-ROW 1: W. Stewart, I. Brown, I. Carson, R. Frick, captain, W We-Iaj, I. Garbark. ROW 2: 1. Brittin, R. Ruger, B. Schlegel, B. Iohnson, V. Cegles, D Vassar. ROW 3: T. Thompson, coach, V. Swope, W. Webster, D. Kayser, S. Abbot F. Arentowicz, W. Bower, H. Wooden, manager. 188 s, . - .' 1:--e ,5- , 5 4: - .0 -f.,M3.,3 .,, wmv? ' ,1 -' - UT?-L'..?s' 1 , r . .Jn . '-' . ..- J. ,MH --,v-,mv-L: ' - .,.....-S.-.' '. '14 1-Q5 Q.. , r , . 1-'M QQ: in L , ,i,a,- ,- ,,,x.. .., 1 , H At- ...- ,- :.:A-sf .-.4 Y... ,,, X. .1 ' .I 4,5 , ,-nJ ., , f- . . I. , i 'liar-.-1 ' '. . 1.. i X ' -e :., BASEBALL . . . Many people don't have any idea that in order to win a baseball game, you must be aggres- sive. The whole idea is the frame of mind of the play- ers. The pitcher has got to be especially aggressiveg he always has to have the idea that he's going to strike this guy out-he's going to have that guy hit the ball where he wants it to be hit-he's not going to allow base hits-not going to allow runs . . . The hitter has to have the right frame of mind, too. He's got to go up with the idea in mind that he's going to hit the ball-he's going to get a base hit-he's going to score a run It all comes down to desireg unless you have the desire-un- less you can be aggressive-you just oan't score and you just oan't win . . . . .4 N- -s Y - T x f . 1 if li 4 J f.fg.t5' T if -' i ., N tw i-.317 - , j V ., v .K Q .lf ---..v I . 'y . .sh , . ..,.., . ? ,, fy ' ' ' ' Y 1' - Flin '.A.,.jj 1 'H' j' f lim. v,.. ,,, '-'V ' ', V. ,.'.'f - ' ' . ' i X , is1.1,g,'?v,, 1 8 -Kill 'i,: - l,kf':v2,k Q l,x.f,'ir '35 i F61 1- . ,-' I 'it I . . 0 fp N., '- - - ,-. , 1: .-.QA - I-V -I-I ., 1, XL sa.-A i s l ' H ' . , J' 'iran 5- 'Q 7:35 3 , -4 1 951 xv! Jn, y 189 TRACK . . . The three most important things for being suc- cessful in track are self-confidence, the desire to win which is common to all sports, and discipline-self-discipline-be- cause it's such an individual sport and so much depends on you personally .... Mentally, you've got to have strict self- confidence-you have to think positively, because in an event such as pole-vaulting or high-jumping, if you don't think pos- itively, you're just beating yourself before you even begin. Physically, you've got to have your own special set of exercises to do-and you've got to have enough self-disci- pline to stick to them until you know that you're really pre- pared for your event. . . . One of the best things-and at the same time, maybe one of the worst-about track is that it's such a personal, in- dividual sport. It's a strange feeling to be out there running, knowing that you-not your teammates-will either win or lose the event. Nothing's quite as frustrating as to be simply doing your absolute best-going your absolute fastest-and then suddenly to see someone passing you. You know that you can't possibly go any faster, and yet you know that your team and your coach are depending on you, and so you give it even more than you've got. Maybe that's when you get the most satisfaction-when that extra effort-that effort that you thought was impossible-makes you the one that breaks the tape .... W l wi.. D H 3-1 .- The - ab ,M I i:.-.M ' Lf -D A 41521. . 1... TRACK TEAM-ROW 1: R. Simons, I. Cost, G. Frey, I Scott, S. Turner, I. Eley, W. Walters, E. Davis, D. Link- horn, D. Sholl, D. Wood. ROW 2: C. Reynolds, couchg G Metzger, B. Oberst, S. Rohrer, G. Garbutt, P. Gilewicz, R Costlow, R. Mackie, D. Ebersole, W. Molawka, E. Hoffman cc1ptc1ingA. Pribula, mfmoger. 191 , W w ma Q ' C ., 4., gr, -4. ,, A V Y ,g,- kggidf' ,, -PA-7'.:, Ff , Q 1- ,W ...pc -'i'wf...' M - , L f-:-w+2-L - -. - 1, . , ' 'il 'Jr I yes? It q R' J , Vg, una. 'V- .X . Q Y-jgliffrw, M 5 -'i'LR-Qu. bl any qv .355 '.' 1 -s .7? 'E,1f -Zflffc-...--E ' -vc.-x-0 :-v+4x?'5 ' 'I' ' 'M'-1T: T ' . K M H '4 W- .L T 'f.,,Nw. '.. K Q ,M f - f r- , . - - . 2 ,..f,p.,'., , gn Q Y - Y A C xx - 1 1- , K ,fx f ' U -Q , . A -J , .. .M .. IA VI' V , ' b 1 . l .YTLL I f ' -- , Wy ..,l 1.G.3'f4:?J,,,.- T-:',ft'gjg1-'EAS :+G in ' f- 3f '1Ul':ig:aaf' -n Hg-ff-. ' JI 1-2, H ,5 ,.r-q5fs-- L4v.-f4Q.f - -Y ,-Nuys, L -Qi:-.fffri , iq' 'v W' -'-Lrisl-f'-rw . ,ft - Q n r- me-:L-if at .vdf , grqqgnfiqzsk-iN,::, 4- ' UA: 'f .e'? E4., 3n- .i24gEL'gi,'J ',. .igk 41' '.ff5'! 9 3ff'5- , U , ' . :F-7 lgg.-7,.f.-1 33.1 1 , M' Lf 'H ,Br 35 -51: fqf5?1 T , mum? i.: J-A. ..y. , rd., , ,.- .,L,,A,Q, .. 4. . .U , ,Q , , ., 1 - ' T ' -' Fm-1 'W HH- . '+-HT ' 'TNI .1 1 'T--.aw L-.npf a ---1 J 1 , 1 4- -' ag- f5'fi2+g-+3 he ,-5: +V: -1 . 'wx ' -Y , .. K- , , : - sv-. .M-f' v-H-f:-:'.f+' : M Q P j w r., 7 Q ,. .cm 1,A,,'.:,-fzg-H ,,',,..1':.4Q-1rfH.,'1-'17-' 52 JH-11 ig-'f A' H1 W ' . ,: n-L' .- -IL .V N' M.-, H sv: ,Lg.'11'A.Sfl-117' W - ,ai '1'f, ' 3' gf' ,. W1 - -T.': -'F' -'I .,..:,'.:f,'-701' .-1 ' ful ,, ' my H522 L ' ' VT' HY' A aw' ,,. Y ' r 5. 1 --.-A 5 V Livigrsfnrf- W ,, .'gj1n,fQ . Y -:1,,,L -'- A., f.-. -'-WW?-47635, ' ggi.,-. 'Rfr , Afh-iq-ff.. H 3.14. ' 'El k J,'g:.iL,f . , , , ,. - ,.+,,,, :.- ,QL ,-- H X L ,, v I v LL-?'Z?-:-1435, H' V 'gm .jf , ,AA J -, ' 4 ' ' 3-.-A-, ':?fi .f-1 -.. ' -5'a'T -V fiilglir ,, . ,M ' vr1f1ui 5.- . 4' g. 1: .,g-3-rj ,' ,.Yf Q, -g 1, --4-. . 1. F L ,MAX f.-43--N 1 V, . V- -,... -- M. '. , , w E3E'?5-Emi 3.1 Q ,z.., 'J'?f2H14'J..1'l f.'4P?r2f5gL1.i' I'f,.L'1,Qi.a4i-N. lb Kia? SENIORS X SENIORS I SENIORS I SENIORS X SENIORS I SENIORS f SENIORS I SENIORS I SENIORS X SENIORS X SENIORS I SENIORS CHRISTINE AMBLER Allentown, Pa. B.S.-Mathematics THOMAS A. ANDRIUNE Irwin, Pa. B.A.-History FRANK ARENTOWIGZ, JR. Dover, NJ. B.S.-Mathematics DAVID B. ARMSTRONG Kent, Conn. B.A.-Art WILLIAM S. ARMSTRONG Springfield, Va. B.A.-English BETH A. Leawood , Kan. B.A.-Pol KENT W. AVERY C nn Clinton, B.S.-Ge WILLIAM Irwin, Pa. B.S.-Ch , In .1 I. X .NX ffr . if CHESTER R. BABST Pittsburgh, Pa. B.A.-History BARBARA BACHIJRIK West Hempstead, N.Y. B.S.-Elementary Education KATHLEEN L. BAIRIJ Gettysburg, Pa. B.S.-Biology an l ,,,.,--f his' '3 3 - . A-gl 194 N. JAMES BARLETTA Jamaica Plain, Mass. B.S.-Civil Engineering SALLY BARLOW Stratford, Conn. B.A.-Psychology SUSAN BARNEY Montvale, NJ. B.A.-History RICHARD P. BARRETT Lewisburg, Pa. B.A.-History NANCY BATH Berwick, Pa. B.S.-Secondary Education gf BARBARA W. BATZER Summit, NJ. B.A.-Religion GEORGE W. BEALS Sea Isle City, NJ. B.S.-Biology ANNE MARIE BEAUJARD Yonkers, N.Y. B.S.-Chemistry AVERY S. BEER WILLIAM F. BENUER THOMAS H- BENTLEY, III Fairport, N.Y. Morristown, NJ. Hartford, WISC. B.A.-Geology B.S.-Business Administration B.S.-Business Admil1iSIrGti0r1 KATHERINE R. BELL DAVID L. BENNETT BONNIE E. BERK Sea Cliff, N.Y. Towson, Md. Hazlehurst, Ga. Bachelor of Music B.A.-English B.A.-English l l 195 CHARLES M. BERK Merrick, N.Y. B.S.-Business Administration NANCY ELLEN BERK Teaneck, NJ. B.A.-Spanish CAROL 1. BERLIN Teaneck, NJ. B.A.-Political Science LEE B. BERMAN Hillsdale, NJ. B.S.-Biology JAMES BERNARD Lewisburg, Pa. B.S.-Business Administration Q15 ANNA G. BERNHEISEL Silver Spring, Md. B.S.-Business Administration DAVID R. BERNHEISEL Hummelstown, Pa. B.S.-Mathematics WILLIAM B. BERTHDLF Morristown, NJ. B.S.-Electrical Engineering CHRISTINE K. BESHDRE Meadowbrook, Pa. B.S.-Elementary Education BARBARA K. BIGELUW WILLIAM C. BUAK JUNE K. BUCK BARBARA 1. BUNE Wayne, Pa. Bethlehem, Pa. Hggvergville, Pa, IEFSGY SHOTS, P2 B.A.-Psycholoy B.A.-Economics B,A,-Russian, Psychology I33--EIBHIGDIGFY EIIUCHIIOFI RONALD P. BILLINGS SARAH L. BOBST WIIIIIIM W- BUESCII CHRIS BUURN Avondale, Pa. Glens Falls, N.Y. Bethesda. MII- New I'IHf'ff0fd N Y B.S.-Chemical Engineering B.S.-Mathematics I3-5--IVIECIIGHICBI EFIEIHESVIUB 3-A--IEIIBIISII GREGORY J. BLUSICK ANTHONY I. BUCCHINU ROBERT K- BUHLEN ROBERT II- BUUCHIIRII Selingsgrove, Pa. Yalesville, Conn. FHIFIISIII, Conn- Pittsford, N-Y B,S,...-Chemistry B,A,-p01itical Science B.S.-Business Administration B.S.-Biology . L-' ' A' ily, f r. , I' QI j ' A, N Isis. V' :I I I ' . I. I 196 MARGARET H. BOUTWELL Cheshire, Conn. B.A.-History WARD A. BOWER Mechanicsburg, Pa. B.A.-Economics THOMAS A. BRACKEN Corry, Pa. B.A.-Political Science JEANINE M. BRADY Longmeadow, Mass. B.A.-English LEE R. BRAUTMAN Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S.-Biology MICHAEL S. BRENNAN Matanoras, Pa. B.A.-Economics DAYNA I. BREWER Waynesburg, Pa. B.S.-Civil Engineering GALE BREWER Flourtown, Pa. B.A.-Psychology STEPHEN R. BRIDE Amityville, N.Y. B.S.-Electrical Engineering 197 EDWARD M. BRIDGE Slingerlands, N.Y. B.S.-Mathematics GEORGE M. BRODE Newcomerstown, Ohio B.S.-Civil Engineering BARBARA I. BROOKS Danville, Pa. B.S.-Elementary Education DENNIS F. BROWN Furlong, Pa. B.S.-Biology HOLLIS R. BROWN, IR. Baltimore, Md. B.S.-Civil Engineering f 4-ng, PAUL W. BROWN Wayne, NJ. B.S.-Chemical Engineering RICHARD W. BROWNFIELD, IR Lewisburg, Pa. B.A.-Economics DANA D. BRYAN Barrington, R.l. B.A.-Psychology CHARLES BUFFINGTON Wheeling, W.Va. B.S.-Chemistry NANCY L. BURCAW Aidan, Pa. B.S.-Elementary Education -ww REBECCA C. BURGEE Lewisburg, Pa. B.S.-Elementary Education ROSS W. BURGESS Morrisville, Pa. B.A.-English ALAN L. BUTKOW Rockville, Md. B.A.-Political Science DAVID C. CALDWELL Port Chester, N.Y. B.S.-Business Administrati LAURIE E. CAMPBELL New London, N.H. B.A.-English LAWRENCE B. CARLSON Williamstown, Mass. B.A.-English PHILIP H. CARPENTER Pearl River, N.Y. B.S.-Mechanical Engineering JAMES E. CARR Homer, N.Y. B.S.-Business Administration JAMES F. CARSON New Kensington, Pa. on B.S.-Mechanical Engineering DOUGLAS D. CHAMBERLIN Needham, Mass. B.A.-English ROBERT C. CHEEK, JR. Pittsburgh, Pa. B.A.-Economics JOHN L. CHESAREK Washington, D.C. B.A.-Philosophy MEREDITH A. CHESLEY Madison, Conn. B.S.-Secondary Education JANE E. CHIDESTER Newton Square, Pa. B.S.-Elementary Education l 198 JUDITH A. CHUBB Williamsport, Pa. B.A.-French KENNETH W. CHURM Coopersburg, Pa. B.S.-Electrical Engineering ROBERT H. CLAPHAM Lafayette Hill, Pa. B.S.-Civil Engineering FREDERIC K. CLAUSEN Cherry Hill, NJ. B.S.-Business Administration SAMUEL E. CLOPPER, JR. Catonsville, Md. B.S.-Mathematics BARBARA O. CLOYO Bethlehem, Pa. B.S.-Chemistry LANCE N. COHEN Mount Carmel, Pa. B.A.-English RICHARD F. COHEN Passaic, NJ. B.A.-Sociology LYNN A. COMEE Huntington Station, N.Y. B.A.-Spanish MYLES L. COOLEY Longmeadow, Mass. B.A.-Psychology NANCY B. COPPEOGE Cleveland Heights, Ohio B.A.-History WAYNE S. COUNTERMAN Wilkes-Barre, Pa. B.S.-Chemical Engineering MARILYN J. COX Saginaw, Mich. B.A.-Sociology SUSAN A. COX Haddonfield, NJ. B.A.-English Fr SALLY 1. CRAMPTON Westfield, N.J. B.A.-Psychology BARBARA I. CRAW Brockport, N.Y. B.S.-Mathematics SUSAN J. CRAWFORD Pittsburgh, Pa. B,A.-History ag --. ' ' wg r 2 l y of -e L....l Y -.., F, .2 'za K .EH 1 . ,4,w af -A., v rea, af- 5 5 A 2 Y. v4 ,, ' .12 3 ini, ' I Y , .L 1 i N, r 199 . 'TID CATHRYN R. CRUM Lewisburg, Pa. B.S.-Elementary Education JAMES R. CRUM Carlisle, Pa. B.S.-Secondary Education THOMAS F. CRUM Lewisburg, Pa. B.S.-Mathematics CRAIG R. CUNNINGHAM Devon, Pa. B.A.-History PETER S. CURTIS Danvers, Mass. B.S.-Biology BRYSUN F. DATT Gibsonia, Pa. B.S.-Electrical Engineering B.A.-English WILLIAM I. DAUBE, IR. DAVID C. DEARDORFF Freeport, New York State College, Pa. B.S.-Business Administration B.S.-Civil Engineerin l 200 CRAIG H. DEERY Carthage, N.Y. B.A.-Economics THOMAS A. DENTUN Syracuse, N.Y. B.A.-Political Science GLENN A. DIEGNAN Ramsey, NJ. B.S.-Chemistry CHARLES H. DIETRICH, IR. Danville, Pa. B.A.-Economics JOHN P. DILZELL Surrey, England B.S.-Chemical Engineering VIRGINIA! DIX Mrlton Pa BA English MATTHEW DIJMINY Shelter Island N Y B S Crvll Engrneerlng SUZANNE C DONOVAN Lockport N Y BA History PETER E DURSI IR Warwrck Rl BS Blo gy SUSAN B DUSCHER Westfreld Nl BA Biology Art ROBERT A DOTEN Dover Mass BA Englrsh WILLIAM L DOUGLAS Chambersburg Pa BS ClvllEngrneerrng CAROLYN A DRAYER RUNN-U F URUGY Western Springs lll SYOSSEI NY BA rt BS Geology LAWRENCE E DRESDALE ELAINE M DUCK Spring Valley NY Westwood NJ BA Psychology BA EUEIISVI NANCY E DUNHAM Atherton Calif BS Secondary Education RICHARD! DUNN Ill Annandale Va BS ClvrlEngmeerrng ai 201 . . , . . I , . I , .. . I ,- . l . .- ' . .- ' lo . .- , . . l , . . I , . 1 ' ' Y ' I ..-'A ' ' .,-' , ..-A --- --- . . . - - 1 , . . , . , . . 1 ' - . .' '- - l lr ll l F X N ' fra' ll 1 -L ' I l' . - H I 4:,.,m -U l - X , ' ' ' , ' ' ,. I , I , ll . Q I -Y f r,f'3','- in-' I: 'rug l, : Y. .pl . , J ' 2 LYNN DURYEA Montauk, N.Y. B.A.-History SUSAN EBERENZ Jersey Shore, Pa. B.S.-Mathematics ROBERT W. EBERHARDT, JR. Upper Montclair, N.J. B.A.-Economics JOHN G. ECKMANN Virginia, Minn. B.S.-Biology ALLEN B. EDWARDS, JR, Saegertown, Pa. B.A.-Economics ROBERT W. EICHER Bethesda, Md. B.S.-Mechanical Engineering FRED C. ELDRIDGE HAROLD E. EMRICH, JR. BURTON ENGLISH, JR. Pittsburgh, Pa. River Edge, N.J. Berkeley Springs, W. Va. B.A.-Political Science B.S.-Business Administration B.S.-Civil Engineering SARAH A. ELLERY DAVID C. ENGEL LYNN E. EVELYN Put-in-Bay, Ohio Great Neck, N.Y. Pleasantville, N.Y. B.S.-Business Administration B.A.-English B.A.-English WILLIAM C. EMMITT, JR. VICTOR V. ENGEL GLENN S. EVERETT Florham Park, N.J. Albuquerque, N.M. South Portland, Me. B.S.-Chemical Engineering B.A.-History B.A.-English CHARLES E. FARVER Middletown, N.J. B.S.-Mechanical Engineering JILL S. FASSLER Flushing, N.Y. B.A.-Political Science PATRICIA A. FAUBER New Providence, N.J. B.S.-Elementary Education I 3 I , 4 . X 'L I 'ff' . . .g wi' 5- .7 i 5 ' Fri tif If E 20 DAVID M FEDELI Sterlrng Mass B S Business Admlmstratlon ROBERT E FEIR New Rochelle N Y BA Polltlcal Sclence ANDREW H FERBER Hempstead NY BA History WILLIAM C FETZER Ramsey NI BS Mathematics KAREN G FICHTER Lakewood Ohlo BA Re lglon ALICE D FLAHERTY Manhasset NY BA Mathematrcs JAMES K FLEMING Milton Pa BS Bro ogy MARY LOU FOLEY Lmcoln Mass BS Mathematlcs JOHN N FRANCE Monongahela Pa BA Chemistry GERALD A FRANK RrverVale NJ B A Polrtlcal Science KENNETH L FRANTZ Lewlsburg Pa BS ClvllEngmeerlng CAROL A FRISCH Mrlan Italy BA Psychology IUOY L FRISCH Hewlett NY BA Psychology DAVID C FUESS Trieste Italy BA History MARGARET L FULMER Milton Pa BA Psychology RICHARD A FUNKE LOUIS .I GALLIA Ill Reading Pa Old Forge Pa BS Electr1calEnglneerlng BA B10 ogy RICHARD A GAINES JOHN R GARBARK McLean Va Meadvllle Pa BS Physlcs BS Business Admmlstratlon 203 ,,- .,- r .L ' ..- - ..-'- ..-' '- ' - ..-'i' ..-lf' ..- ..- ..- ' 777777 7 7 77777 7 7 7 7-7 I A? 7.7.77 7 :N W . W llL1'?,TKNT.r. n I ll ' , gfl 'V - -5' 5 QI I X eu l . ' 1 ll -K. syys 5 'Al I -I F gm I .fir law. L 'A .ki K 4 I R Q 11 :V ' V Q K ' I- I I3 A I I' I H '? 1 . ' rl X I Filji... -.- I 1' I' W I1 I A li . I I! l it ,N I I E V V :IN Illx I l - y HOWARD J. GARDNER, JR. Garden City, N.Y. B.A.-English SYLVIA A. GARDNER Pittsburgh, Pa. B.S.-Chemistry JAMES H. GARRABRANDT Neptune, N.J. B.A.-English ELIZABETH A. CATELY Bogota, N.J. B.A.-English MICHAEL F. CAZDO Fairfax, Va. B.A.-Economics JOHN D. CAZLEY Rochester, N.Y. B.A.-Political Science CAROLE F. GEARHART Kingsport, Tenn. B.A.-History JOHN H. GENIESSE Morrisville, Pa. JANETTE C. GERVIN West Orange, NJ. B.A.-Physics FRANCES J. GIAMBRONE Rochester, N.Y. B.A.-Political Science GARY L. GIFFIN Pittsburgh, Pa. B.s.-Business Administration B-S.-Mechanical Engineering gg . , n in rl ' u url, LAWRENCE L. CINSBURG Brookiyn, N.Y. B.A.-Economics LINDA A. GIRVIN Lancaster, Pa. B.A.-Psychology CONSTANCE E. GLOCK Yorktown Heights, N.Y. B.A.-Japanese CHARLES E. GOLDMANN III Yonkers, N.Y. B.S.-Chemical Engineering DONNA D. GOODYEAR Westport, Conn. B.A.-Psychology DAVID N. GORDON Mount Vernon, N.Y. B.A.-Political Science 204 LINDA L. GDUBEAUX Greenville, Ohio . . B.S.-Secondary Education RDBERTA C. GRAF Larchmont, N.Y. B.S.-Mathematics JEFFREY H. GRAHAM Darien, Conn. B.A.-Economics NANCY J. GRAVER Lehighton, Pa. B.S.-Chemistry ROBERT G. GRAY Harrisburg, Pa. B.S.-Accounting RDNNIE A. GREENBERG Old Saybrook, Conn. B.A.-French CRAIG M. GREENWDDD Wayne, Pa. B.S.-Business Administration ANTHONY T. GREGG Montclair, N.J. B.S.-Chemical Engineering MICHAEL H. GREGG St. Michaels, Md. B.S.-Mechanical Engineering I I I I I . .E 205 JANE E. GRIGGER Oreland, Pa. B.S.-Geology CYNTHIA S. GRIGGS Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A.-Religion ARTHUR E. GRUSVENDR Hillsdale, N.J. B.S.-Chemistry STEVEN P. GRUNDW Old Greenwich, Conn. B.S.-Civil Engineering WAYNE M. GUY Pittsburgh, Pa. B.S.-Chemical Engineering JANET E. HAAS Lakewood, Ohio B.A.-English KAREN B. HAM Southampton, N.Y. B.A.-French ROBERT A. HAMBURG Glenside, Pa. B.S.-Biology MARSHA L. HAMILTON Mount Vernon, Ohio B.A.-Psychology ANDREW P. HAMMES Endicott, N.Y. B.S.-Business Administration JOHN S. HANNAN Manhasset, N.Y. B.S.-Psychology KATHLEEN E. HANNON Los Angeles, Calif. B.S.-Elementary Education JUDITH A. HANSON Orchard Park, N.Y. B.S.-Mathematics MICHAEL E. HARDY Dayton, Ohio B.S.-Chemistry FABIA HARRIS Bethesda, Md. B.A.-History JAMES D. HARRIS Bel Air, Md. B.A.-Economics MARGARET HARRIS Silver Spring, Md. B.A.-English CONSTANCE I. HARRISON Towson, Md. B.A.-French RICHARD W. HARTMAN Philadelphia, Pa. B.A.-English '-.-uh, L ' till ni li it . I in li fi I ii ll.. ARTHUR J. HARTUNG Binghamton, N.Y. B.S.-Biology JAY I. HASS New York City, N.Y. B.S.-Business Administration GUY C. HATFIELD Devon, Conn. B.S.-Biology SAMUEL C. HAVRILAK Monessen, Pa. B.S.-Biology ROBERT B. HEALD BARRIE T. HEATH West Hartford, Conn. Barrington, Ill. B.S.-Business Administration B.S.-Business Administration NANCY J. HEATH Barrington, Ill. B.A.-History l ' I Iv 206 NANOY HEIM Valley Stream, N.Y. B.S.-Secondary Education ROGER K. HEINEMANN Lambertville, NJ. B.A.-English PHILIP W. HEISLEY Lemoyne, Pa. B.A.-Economics WILLIAM C. HELLER Westwood, NJ. B.S.-Mathematics RICHARD C. HENTZ Hamden, Conn. B.S.-Civil Engineer IAMES E. HERBERT Athol, Mass. B.A.-English HELEN E. HESS Moorestown, NJ. B.S.-Business Administration IOHN B. HESS, IR. Mystic, Conn. ing B.A.-Economics WILLIAM W. HESS Bronxville, N.Y. B.S.-Business Administration DAVID E. HESSER North Brunswick, NJ. B.S.-Geology WILLIAM H. HINSGH West Milford, NJ. B.S.-Eco., Elec. Eng. SHELDON M. HIRSCHBERG Westfield, NJ. B.A.-Economics JEFFREY A. HIRSHBERG Westwood, NJ. B.A.-Economics BARRY E. HOFFMAN Northcumberland, Pa. B.S.-Chemical Engineering CARL A. HOHENTHAL Manchester, Conn. B.S.-Business Administrati ' ni 207 I -il - 3--....7,.,,t!1 l.,,:- I- j rg.. 'H.:1.'T i:g'7,f,4 llI.rv'T'i'iL1i,L'.. 4- . 1: ,'- ' .4 ,,1iI:- y !g:,l'-' . .lla . fr . . ' .i..:: '.1' - 3 1. I . - 0 GILBERT A. HDLMES Mount Vernon, N.Y. B.A.-Chemistry JUDITH A. HDDVER Wilmington, Del. B.A.-English JEAN B. HORKY JONATHAN E. HDTTENSTEIN Brookville, Pa. Millersburg, Pa. B.A.-English B.A.-Chemistry CRAIG HDRNBERGER JEFFREY E. HDUSEMAN Mount Carmel, Pa. Chatham, N.J. B.A.-History B.A.-Economics JEFFREY R. HDTCHKISS JDHN C. HOUTZ Glenshaw, Pa. Liberty Corner, N.J. B.S.-Mechanical Engineering B.S.-Mathematics TERRENCE P. HUBKA Plainfield, N.J. B.S.-Geology BARBARA K. HUBLER Lewisburg, Pa. B.A.-Latin RICHARD A. HUMPHREY Darien, Conn. B.A.-English ELIZABETH A. HURD Montreal, Canada B.A.-Psychology JANICE C. HUTCHESDN Bound Brook, N.J. B.A.-Mathematics l 208 MARILYN HUTCHINSUN Cazenovia, N.Y. B.A.-Psychology HENRY M. INGHAM Wayne, Pa. B.S.-Business Administra MARGARET A. JAMES Cranbury, N.J. B.S.-Elementary Education DENNIS EDWARD JEFFRIES Princeton, N.J. B.A.-English SHARON R. JENKINS Warminster, Pa. B.A.-Psychology PETER V. JDHANSSON Ossining, N.Y, B.S.-Physics ERIC L. JOHNSON Coudersport, Pa. B.S.-Electrical Engineering NANCY A. JOHNSON Ambler, Pa. B.A.-History ROGER A. JONES Lexington, Mass. B.S.-Business Administration RAYMOND KABAKJIAN Lansdowne, Pa, B.A.-Economics MARSHALL J. KAISER Sunbury, Pa. B.S.-Mechanical Engineering DENNIS R. KALBERER Lincoln, R.l. B.A.-History PEGGY R. KAMUF Ridgewood, N.J. B.A.-French DONNA L. HARAM Sea Girt, N.J. B.A.-Chemistry JOHN L. KASTEN, JR. JEFFREY A. KEITER Baltimore, Md. Campbelltown, Pa. B.A.-Psychology B-A--REHEJOD ALAN E. KEHEW HOWARD J. KENDALL Marg, Pa, Coshocton, Ohio B.S.-Geology B.A.-History inf -5 20 DAVID R. KENDELHARDT Seaford, N.Y. B.S.-Chemical Engineering WILLIAM R. KERSHNER, IR. Oreland, Pa. B.S.-Mechanical Engineering PHILIP P. KERSTETTER Wilmington, Del. B.A.-Religion VIRGINIA E. KINNEY Bridgewater, Conn. B.S.-Education RICHARD A. KLEIN Cleveland, Ohio B.S.-Economics LAWRENCE S. KLOCK Darien, Conn. B.S.-Economics RICHARD E. KOCH Glen Ridge, NJ. B.S.-Civil Engineering PHILIP A. KONTUL Duquesne, Pa. B.A.-English LINDA L. KOONTZ Pittsburgh, Pa. B.S.-Biology .IOHN J. KOVSKI Columbus, Ohio B.S.-Electrical Engineering MICHAEL A. KOWALSKI Rochester, N.Y. B.S.-Economics IANET V. KRATINA Morris Plains, NJ. B.S.-Mathematics ' - Q X - GLENN M. KROUSE Floral Park, N.Y. B.S.-Business Administration ROBERT A. KROUSE Pottstown, Pa. B.S.-Mechanical Engineering FLORENCE W. KUHL Pennington, NJ. B.S.-Education ,vi , .,-, ROBERT B. KULLMAN West Orange, NJ. B.S.-Business Administra IANICE E. KULP Haddonfield, NJ. B.S.-Education ARTHUR A. KURZ Mountainside, N.I. B.S.-Business any ' . Lz'aVs7.riL 1 -. Y XX Qiiii' to X' WQWUNGE ' 210 yr-I K NQNYI. . ' ejfg if, Q-Lsmsl. 'A vi - y , ,I ff' ,ix V .1 RONALD K LAOEY Munhall Pa BS Chem hem SUSAN E LAKES Pleasantvrlle NY BA Mathematics LISA L LAMORTE East Norwalk Conn BS Eclucatlon DAVID V LANDES KAY LATVEN GEORGE W LEOPOLD IR Arlington Va Wantagh NY BS Mathematlcs BS Business Admlnrstratlon PHILIP S LAWES IAOOUELINE N LEWIS Rumson NJ Southrngton Conn BA Economics BA Psychology LINDAI LAWRENCE THOMAS E LEWIS Rochester NY Broomall Pa BA Englrsh BA Sociology MITCHEL E LAWSON CHARLES M LEE JEFFREY M LEIPHART IEFFREY C LIND Salt Lake Clty Utah Harrisburg Pa Hackettstown NJ York Pa Warren Pa BA Economics CAROL R LARK Shamokln Pa BA Psychology BS Bro gy BA History BS Psychology BA Economlcs SUSAN A LEAVY PATRICIAL LEE JOHN F LEONAROO MARTHA M LINK Oceanside NY Walton Conn Huntington NY Branford Conn BS Education BS Educatlon BA Economics BS Education Mathematics '.,.. 211 ..-, .Eng. ,,-1 L' ..- U ' ..- f ..--ISI' ..-- ML' in Ir- FN :I M xl r. II ml, I I l I I 'yn I , I-,I I Iff I 5:3 2 F' Iv l ' I ' I L I gm-P as jrIIfzwI,ff Q5 I I I l L l y y I L I Ir IL,, as Hal ' I I ll I l uw: I Q A I II I 'il lE'7E A A A I - I F I. I 9 I I A V I MARY M. LINK Branford, Conn. B.S.-Elementary Education STEPHEN B. LIPSON Devon, Pa. B.S.-Business Administration NANCY E. LIVENGOOD Ossining, N.Y. B.A.-English ROSS C. LOESER Scotch Plains, NJ. B.S.-Chemical Engineering GARY W. LONG Verona, NJ. B.A.-English WILLIAM G. LONG, IR. Madeira Beach, Fla. B.S.-Biology MICHAEL E. LOOKER Annapolis, Md. B.S.-Accounting LYNDA K. LOVE Camp Hill, Pa. B.A.-Religion NOREEN N. LUIIE Pittsburgh, Pa. B.S.-Elementary Education CHARLES R. LUCKE Stratford, Conn. B.A.-Psychology BEVERLY S. LUGRIN Freeport, N.Y. B.A.-English DANIEL I. LUPFER Metuchen, NJ. B.A.-Psychology JOHN F. MAHONEY Westfield, N.J. B.S.-Mathematics DAVID I. MALES Fair Lawn, NJ. B.S.-Accounting ANDREW H. MANN, IR. HOWARD A. MANNING III Levittown, Pa. Auburn, Mass. B.A.-Mathematics B.S.-Civil Engineering 212 THOMAS E. MAXSIJN Godfrey, III. B.S.-Biology MARILYN MAXWELL New Hyde Park, N.Y. B.A.-Philosophy THOMAS C. McBRO0M McLean, Va. B.S.-Civil Engineering Math KEVIN H. McCAUGHEY Lutherville, Md. B.S.-Civil Engineering VIVIAN K. McDONOUCH Glen Cove, N.Y. B.S.-Mathematics ANNE R. McGEE Milton, Pa. B.S.-Mathematics JOSEPH M. MCGINNES, JR. Reading, Pa. B.S.-Civil Engineering JOHN B. McGLINCY Paulsboro, N.J. B.S.-Mathematics ,. MARGARET P. McGDWAN Philadelphia, Pa. B.A.-Psychology ROBERT C. McGDWAN, JR. Baltimore, Md. B.S.-Business Administration JAMES W. McKEE Timonium, Md. B.S.-Civil Engineering J -. 1 if 'r rtlfr- ,TT 4 7f7i ': -32 3 lx li' H ,gh C .fl l I .. ' 4 Ui f , ll, 214 DAVID E. McKINNON Pittsburgh, Pa. B.S.-Chemical Engineering RICHARD J. MGMICKEN Milwaukee, Wis. B.S.-Business Administration SUSAN McMURRAY Memphis, Tenn. B.S.-Secondary Education JAMES R. McSKIMIN CoIt's Neck, N.J. B.S.-Physics CHARLES L. MELDY, JR. Hamburg, N.Y. B.S.-Chemistry BETSY J. MESTERN Rye, N.Y. B.Mus.-Music Education KAREN M. MEYER Setauket, N.Y. B.S.-Biology JANE E. MILLARD Towson, Md. B.S.-Elementary Education CDNSTANCE D. MILLER Schenectady, N.Y. B.A.-Mathematics H. CLAY MILLER, Ill Terrace Park, Ohio B.S.-Secondary Education l rl CHRIS MOLINERO Jeannette, Pa. B.S.-Elementary Education MARK G. MONN Danville, Pa. B.S.-Civil Engineering DANIEL B. MOORE Hasbrouck Heights, NJ. B.A.-Chemistry DIANA L. MOORE Upper Montclair, NJ. B.A.-English IOHN T. MOORE Berwyn, Pa. B.S.-Chemical Engineering NANCY L. MORAWE Baltimore, Md. B.A.-Economics lv' IW Q . I -will W fv-.- .. 215 PETER NAGCI Norwalk, Conn, B.A.-Psychology PAUL F. NEZI Washington Township, NJ. B.A.-Economics AILI M. NIEMI Stamford, Conn. B.S.-Secondary Education WILLIAM A. NIXUN III New York, N.Y. B.S.-Biology DAVID I. OBLUN Wilkes-Barre, Pa. B.A.-Chemistry DEBORAH L PALAZZI Johnston Rl BA Sociology DONNAJ PALMER Laurel Md BA Bro ogy ALLEN O PANFIL Loudonvllle NY BA Physics JANET D PANKOW Middletown NJ BA English JOANNE PARKER New York N Y BA English KEITH II PARKER Fort Lauderdale Fla BA Psychology RICHARD L PARKER Teaneck NJ B S Business Admmlstratron JOEL W PARLIMENT Netcong NJ BS Bro ogy SANDRAJ PATTON Springfield Pa BA Mathematics HENRY B PEOK JR Towson Md BA Economrcs l STANLEY L PECK GUY W PETERSON Rochester NY Syracuse NY BA Psychology BS Business Admlnlstratlon LOIS A PEOPLES Bloomsburg Pa B S Elementary Education CHARLES B PETZOLD Ill Princeton NJ l l l l 217 JOHN A PEYMAN Upper Saddle River NJ BS Chemistry ROSS D PFEIFFER Unlon NJ BA PolltlcalSclence SUSAN JILL PFIFER Summit NJ BA English BRUCE R PHILLIPS Paramus NJ BS ClvrlEngrneerlng CHARLES P PLANZ New Milford Conn ..-'-1' '- ' .4 - ..- In ..- I . .- ' . .- ' , .- ' B.A.-English B.S.-Mathematics l ' ' l l an , ls LINDA A. POTTER Tonawanda, N.Y. B.A.-Psychology CAROL A. PODESTA PETER E. POULSEN Babylfm, N.Y. West Caldwell, NJ. B-A--COSHUSYTY B.S.-Business Administration THOMAS P. PUETH GEORGE W. POWELL, IR. Milton, Pa. Haddonfield, NJ. B.S.-Chemistry B.A.-History KATHLEEN E. M. POHL JEFFREY B. PRESS Sellersville, Pa. Rochester, N.Y. B.S.-Secondary Education B.S.-Chemistry NED W. PULAN ALAN 1. PRIBULA Shamokin, Pa. Irvington, NJ. B.S.-Physics B.S.-Chemistry GRETCHEN R. PRITSKY Yardley, Pa. B.A.-Japanese GAIL PUDERBAUGH Nlanlius, N.Y. B.S.-Mathematics BARBARA C. PUFF Woodbury, NJ. B.S.-Secondary Education RUSSELL H. RAISIG Pittsburgh, Pa. B.S.-Business Administration RICHARD S. RANCK, JR. STEPHEN K. RAPLEY KIRSTEN E. RASMUSSEN Milton, Pa. Silver Springs, lVld. Feasterville, Pa. B.S.-Biology B.S.-Chemical Engineering B.A.-Spanish T N5 'if , J . H A in - A, li, i A-dig it . ,a1, . :AQ I i i ii ,, , ni i L'- i ,i n 2.18 l SAMUEL E. REED Emmaus, Pa. JAMES M. REESE Norwalk, Conn. B.S.-Electrical Engineering BS.-Business Administration STUART E. REED Canandaigua, N.Y. LEONARD S. REIGH Silver Spring, Md. B.S.-lVl.S.-Mech. Engineering B.A.-Math., B.S.-Mech. Eng. ANNE L. REESE Hershey, Pa. B.S.-Elementary Education JOHN H. REID Alexandria, Va. B.S.-Civil Engineering PETER W. REISMAN SARAH A. REYNOLDS Larchmont, N.Y. York, Pa. B.A.-Chemistry B.S.-Secondary Education JEFFREY B. RETTIG BETTY J. RHODA Morris Plains, N.J. Easton, Pa. B.A.-Sociology, Anthropology B.S.-Elementary Education PHYLLIS REYNOLDS Abington, Pa. B.A.-Political Science SALLY S. RICHARDS Wallingford, Pa. B.A.-Nlathematics STEPHEN W. RIDDELL Williamsport, Pa. B.S.-Mathematics JOHN F. RIEFLER III Worcester, Mass. B.S.-Biology CHRISTINE A. RIEGLE Millersburg, Pa. B.S.-Elementary Education 1-' ' i V M ii J ir- ! . Fx A N It - -1- - , i . .V , .. ' df T y , l I 'P TN ' :Li 1 5 .. w .3 .-,- , A :-fi-L-2-if: M9 Wg' Q-7, N.-A Yi-9 219 IUDITH P. RIEMER Fair Lawn, NJ. B.S.-Elementary Education BRANDT A. RISING Glen Head, N.Y. B.S.-Chemistry RICHARD C. ROHRS Staten Island, N.Y. B.A.-History SANDRA R. ROSE Monmouth Junction, N.J. B.A.-English LAWRENCE S. ROSE Lewisburg, Pa. B.A.-Political Science SAMUEL P. ROSS Lawrence, N.Y. B.A.-History ELLEN M. ROUNSAVILLE Flemington, NJ. B.A.-Psychology PHILIP C. ROY Rumson, NJ. B.A.-English CHARLES S. RUBERG Pennsauken, NJ. B.A.-Chem., B.S.-Chem. Eng. l 220 GLENN E. RUGH, JR. Phoenixville, Fa. B.A.-Economics MICHELE A. RUSSO Closter, NJ. B.A.-History IANE M. SALSBURG Stillwater, Pa. B.S.-Business Administration JOHN R. SALZER Wayne, Pa. B.S.-Business Administration BENARD A. SAMPSON Pittsburgh, Pa. B.S.-Business Administration BARBARA SARDELLA Ventnor, NJ. B.S.-Chemistry TAYNA SAUNDERS Philadelphia, Pa. B.A.-French, Spanish GREGORY 1. SAUTER Baltimore, Md. B.S.-Business Administration CHARLES K. SAWYER Madison, NJ. B.A.-Chem., B.S.-Chem. Eng SUSAN L. SCHEER Wilmington, Del. B.S.-Secondary Education CHRISTOPHER SCHELL Mountain Lakes, NJ. B.S.-Mathematics GUY W. SCHLESINGER Edison, NJ. B.A.-Economics DAVID C. SCHMEISKE Binghamton, N.Y. B.A.-Chemistry PETER A. SCHNEIDER Malverne, N.Y. B.S.-Business Administration THOMAS O. SCHNEIDER Rockville, Md. B.A.-Political Science ROBERT B. SCHNURE Bridgeville, Pa. B.A.-History BARBARA L. SCHOENECK DeWitt, N.Y. B.A.-English SUE E. SCHRADER Indianapolis, Ind. B.S.-Biology KENNETH H. SCHWARTZ North Plainfield, NJ. B.A.-English JUDITH C. SCHWENK HENRY B. SCOTT Berwyn, Pa. Pittsford, N.Y. B.S.-Mathematics B.A.-Economics DIANE S. SCHWILLE MELINDA A. SCOTT Ho-Ho-Kus, NJ. Hampton Bays, N.Y. B.A.-Political Science B.A.-Chemistry al 4 .-- V XIX' ,,, . . ag, . 'Q .ti'i'.. -- rf- 1 , 221 1, I ' I l Q IQ., I I 1'f X4 rl :I : l,, BROOKS R. SHEIFER Morristown, NJ. B.S.-Business Administration BONNIE G. SEOOR ELIZABETH F. SHELLEY Yardley, Pa. Lancaster, Pa. B.A.-Economics B.S.-Elementary Education WILLIAM O. SHAFFER ROBERT B. SHOEMAKER, JR. Williamsport, Pa. Bryn Mawr, Pa. B.A.-Psychology B.A.-Political Science A- LEE SHANE, ll ROBERT R. SHOLL Lewisburg, PH- Cleveland Heights, Ohio B.S.-Business Administration B,S,-Biology WILLIAM H. SHANKS DALE F. SHUGHART, JR. College Park, Md. Carlisle' Pa, B-3--Ch9miStfy B.A.-Economics IOAN I. SICHTERMAN Pleasantville, N.Y. B.A.-English W. JEFFREY SIOEBOTTOM Villanova, Pa. B.A.-Political Science RONALD P. SIEG Duncannon, Pa. B.S.-Electrical Engineering EVAN B. SIEGEL Flushing, N.Y. B.S.-Physics ROBERT M. SIGURDSEN Rochester, N.Y. B.S.-Business Administration ROBERT G. SIMONS Wayne, N.l. B.S.-Chemistry ARTHUR W. SINGLE Massapequa, N.Y. B.S.-Mechanical Engineering MICHAEL F. SINKINSON Nashville, Tenn. B.A.-Japanese JEFFREY L. SLAGEL York, Pa. B.S.-Mathematics I I 1 I I I 222 lj l . MILTON H. SLEETER Perkasie, Pa. B.Mus.-Music Education IOAN E. SLOVITT Seaford, N.Y. B.S.-Biology FREDERICK C. SMITH Glen Rock, NJ. B.S.-Business Administration LINDA M. SMITH Pittsford, N.Y. B.S.-Chemistry PATRICIA 1. SMITH Fort Washington, Pa. B.A.-English RICHARD C. SMITH Philadelphia, Pa. B.S.-Business Administration ROBERT A. SMITH West Concord, Mass. B.A.-Economics SUZANNE B. SMITH Webster, N.Y. B.A.-History CHRISTINA B. SNYDER Oxford, Ohio B.A.-Political Science LINDA S. SNYDER Milton, Pa. B.S.-Secondary Education l . , SUSAN B. SNYDER Sharon, Pa. B.S.-Elementary Education JAMES E. SOLLER Youngstown, Ohio B.A.-English PATRICIA I. SONNTAG Rahway, NJ. B.S.-Elementary Education KATHERINE H. SPEARE Thornwood, N.Y. B.A.-English 223 HAROLD I. SPIEGEL Plainfield, NJ. B.S.-Civil Engineering SUSAN D. SPINELLI Upper Montclair, NJ. B.A.-English LARRY K. SOUIRE Orleans, Mass. B.S.-Business Administration JANE A. STANTDN Havertown, Pa. B.S.-Secondary Education MICHAEL D. STAUGHTON Wayne, Pa. B.A.-Political Science ll I E5 rf nl . , ,.. - 1. . -A: -, L., ,,,. 1 . gist ROBERT E. STEEN TERRY L. STIMELING CHARLES I. STRICKLAND MICHAEL R. SUUZINA Plainsboro, N..l. Millmont, Pa. Huntsville, Ala. Metuchen, NJ. B.A.-Political Science B.S.-Chemical Engineering B,A,-Economics B,A,-Psychology CORKLIN R. STEINHART OLGA M. STRAL WILLIAM M. STRUNK Il IOHN I. SULLIVAN Eggertsville, N.Y. F0l'eSt Hills, N.Y. Bethlehem, Pa, Lock Haven, Pa, B.S.-Secondary Education B.A.-Chemistry B.A.-Biology B.S.-Biology IOHANNES I. STEYN LINDA P. STRANGMANN KENNETH R. STUBENRAUCH THOMAS C. SUNDBERG Parow, South Africa Baltimore, Md. Wyckoff, NJ. Martinsville, NJ. B.S.-Civil Engineering B.A.-English B.S.-Mechanical Engineering B.S.-Biology S, 224 VAUGHN L. SWOPE Greencastle, Fa. B.S.-Business Administration ALICE R. TAYLOR McLeansville, N.C. B.A.-Psychology LARRY I. TAYLOR Madison, Conn. B.A.-Economics GERALD A. TERPAK West Yarmouth, Mass. B.S.-Electrical Engineering PATRICIA A. TERRILL Chapel Hill, N.C. B.A.-Psychology l l PETER P. TERRY IDHN R. THOMPSON, IR. Brockport, N.Y. Harrisburg, Pa. B.A.-Political Science B.A.-Chemistry ALLYSDN G. THOMAS RUTH A. TIGHE Murray Hill, N..l. Lancaster, Pa. B.A.-History B.A.-History THDMAS G. TDDD Wilmington, Del. B.S.-Business Administration DARLENE M. TDRDCKIU Elizabeth, Pa. B.S.-Mathematics MARK H. TORRENGE Villanova, Pa. B.S.-Physics EILEEN I. TRACY North Scituate, R.l. B.S.-Elementary Education MARTHA L. TRAUB New York City, N.Y. B.S.-Secondary Education 225 CURTIS TREDENNIGK Bryn Mawr, Pa. JAMES R. VARGA Upper Montclair, NJ. B.S.-Business Administration B.S.-Biology WILBER B. TRITLE Ardmore, Pa. B.S.-Civil Engineering GAYLE B. TRDUTMAN Shamokin, Pa. B.S.-Secondary Education DAVID P. TURTLE Bala-Cynwyd, Pa. B.S.-Chemical Engineering LINDA L. UECKER Cheltenham, Pa. B.S.-Biology l I SHIRLEY A. VEENEMA Glen Rock, NJ. B.A.-History RDBERT P. VIDINGHOFF Malvern, Pa. B.S.-Biology THDMAS F. WAGHS Milwaukee, Wisc. B.S.-Business Administration IDHN M. WAGNER Danville, Pa. B.A.-Economics JAY D. WALDNER JANE R. WEAVER Glen Ridge, N.J. Madison, Wisc. B.S.-Business Administration B.A.-English WAYNE R. WALTERS PAUL R. WEBER, JR. Kingston, Pa. Miami Shores, Fla. B.A.-History B.S.-Biology KATHRYN B. WASILIK WADE J. WEBSTER Falls Church, Va. Timonium, Md. B.S.-Mathematics B.S.-Business Administration WILLIAM P. WELAJ Bound Brook, N.J. B.A.-Economics DANIEL L. WELLER Bernardsville, N.J. B.S.-Electrical Engineering JDNATHAN F. WELLS Rochester, N.Y. B.S.-Physics BARBARA R. WERNER Cheltenham, Pa. B.S.-Biology DIANA L. WESTNEAT Hamden, Conn. B.A.-English DENNIS E. WHITNEY Susquehanna, Pa. WARREN R. WHITNEY Rocky River, Ohio B.A.-Economics JAY R. WIGGINS Severna Park, Md. B.S.-Biology JDSEPH L. WILLIAMS III Greenwich, Conn. B.A.-Math., Mech. Eng. B.S.-Mechanical Engineering I-IIA ,wh 'f' .1 ' ' ff, . ' :SQ II X vin: X. 'Tv W I .f ' :- . V e L23 me Z Z.rf.af 4.23-L . , 3: T ffjgvi .5.1LzfT.iJ,e . f Li.-'5-.-'4. It ni 'ii i. I n .n I 2 I-in in I . ri'-A' 'WL .Q i 'A vqi X Vs-? 226 I . I I I if J MARGARET A. WILSON Massapequa Park, N.Y. B.A.-Spanish WALLACE WILLIAM WILSON Orchard Park, N.Y. B.S.-Mathematics IERALD WINAKUR Baltimore, Md. B.S.-Biology LAURENCE H. WINTERS Williamsport, Pa. B.A.-Political Science FRANCIS M. WITKOSKI Camp Hill, Pa. B.S.-Mathematics 227 LAWRENCE E. WOOD Philadelphia, Pa. B.S.-Business Administration HARVEY M. WOODING Hamden, Conn. B.A.-Economics CAROL A. WRIGHT Kansas City, Kansas B.A.-History JOHN S. XANTHOPOULOS Pleasantville, N.Y. B.S.-Business Administration ANN T. YONKER Charlottesville, Va. B.A.-History ANN V. YORK Landisville, Pa. B.A.-Philosophy DONALD I. YURDIN Stratford, Conn. B.S.-Mathematics STEPHEN P. ZARLINSKI Kulpmont, Pa. B.S.-Secondary Education LORRAINE P. ZELINSKI Wilkes-Barre, Pa. B.S,-Elementary Education ELLIOT ZULVER Baltimore, Md. B.S.-Civil Engineering in ni.i in I , , I ii l RICHARD M. ABRAMS-Chorale: Men's Coordinating Council, Treasurer: Dorm Council, President, Vice-President: Student Faculty Congress: Young Republicans: Karate Club: Chess Club: Bridge Club: Folksinging Club: Delta Mu Delta, Vice- President: Phi Sigma Tau, Treasurer. DAVID LEMLEY ACKERMANN-WVBU: Phi Eta Sigma: Pi Mu Epsilon: Phi Sigma Tau: Phi Beta Kappa. IEAN ELIZABETH ACTON-I.'Agendc1. RICHARD WAKEFIELD AIKEN-WVBU: Cap and Dagger. CHRISTINE AMBLER-Pi Beta Phi: Cho- rale: Cap and Dagger: Tennis: Tennis Club: Intramural Badminton. THOMAS ALLEN ANDRIONE-Kappa Delta Rho. FRANK ARENTOWICZ, IR.-Sigma Chi: Football: Baseball, Captain: Phi Mu Epsilon. DAVID BARRY ARMSTRONG-Soccer. WILLIAM S. ARMSTRONG-Phi Kappa Psi, Vice-President: R.O.T.C. Ranger Com- pany Commander. KENT WINTI-IROP AVERY-Kappa Delta Rho, Treasurer. WILLIAM RUSSELL BABER-Lambda Chi Alpha. CHESTER ROWLAND BABST-Phi Gamma Delta: Swimming: History Club. BARBARA ANN BACI-IORIK-Kappa Delta: L'Agenda. KATHLEEN LYNN BAIRD-Newman Club: Equal Opportunities Committee: Phi Sigma. IAMES CAMERON BAKER, IR.-Lambda Chi Alpha, President: Swimming. GARY BRUCE BANKO-Sigma Phi Epsilon: I.E.E.E. BRUCE ALLEN BARKER-Kappa Sigma: Sailing Club. NICOLA BARLETTA SALLY BARLOW-Band: Bucknellicn: Sail- ing Club: Christian Association: Psi Chi. SUSAN MARIE BARNEY-Pi Beta Phi: Bucltnellian. BARBARA WHITE BATZER-Challenge: WRA: Indigo: Cap and Dagger: Mortar Board. GEORGE WAYNE BEALS-Sigma Chi, Vice- President: Men's Iudicial Board: Track: Counselor: Fellowship of Christian Ath- letes: Sailing Club: Basketball: Football: Omicron Delta Kappa, President: Phi Sigma, President. ANNE MARIE BEAUIARD-Newman Club: Christian Association. AVERY SCOVILLE BEER-Delta Upsiloril Tristram: Soccer. KATHERINE RUTH BELL-Chorale. DAVID LOWELL BENNETT--Kappa Sigma. THOMAS I-I. BENTLEY III-Kappa Sigma: Ski Club, Vice-President: Rifle Club, Secre- tary: Flying Club: Ritle Team: Intramural Tennis and Bowling. BONNIE EICKHOFF BERK-Pi Beta Phi: Bucknellion. CHARLES MARTIN BERK-Sigma Alpha Mu, vice-President: john Marshall Law Club: Interfraternity Council: Economics Club: Intramural Wrestling, Softball, and Soccer. NANCY ELLEN BERK-Pi Beta Phi: Span- ish Club: Sigma Delta Pi, Vice-President. CAROL IOAN BERLIN-Alpha Chi Omega: Christian Association: Cap and Dagger. LEE BENNETT BERMAN-Phi Sigma. ANNA-CHRISTINA BERNHEISEL-WVBU. DAVID ROBERT BERNHEISEL-WVBU: Cap and Dagger: Theta Alpha Phi. WILLIAM B. BERTHOLF-Kappa Delta Rho: I.E.E.E.: Phi Eta Sigma: Tau Beta Pi: Pi Mu Epsilon. CHRISTINE KAY BESHORE-Phi Mu. BARBARA KAY BIGELOW-Christian As- sociation: House Council: Hockey. RONALD PAROL BILLINGS-Phi Gamma Delta: Bucknell Engineer: A.I.CH.E.: Bas- ketball: Track: Tau Beta Pi: Phi Beta Kappa. NICHOLAS CARL BLIGA, IR.-Sigma Alpha Epsilon. GREGORY IOHN BLOSICK-Band: New- man Club. WILLIAM CRAWFORD BOAK-Phi Kappa Psi. SARAH LANDON BOBST-Pi Beta Phi, Treasurer: Sailing Club: Ski Club: Christian Association. ANTHONY IOHN BOCCHINO-Sigma Phi Epsilon, Recorder: Band: Concert Band: Senior Gift Committee. IUNE KATHRYN BOCK-Pi Beta Phi: Psi Chi. WILLIAM WALTON BOESCH-Tau Kappa Epsilon, Treasurer: A.S.M.E., President. ROBERT KEMP BOHLEN-Phi Gamma Delta, Recording Secretary. BARBARA IOYCE BONE-Chapel Choir: New Dorm House Council: Christian Asso- ciation. CHRISTOPHER LEE BOORN-Chorale. ROBERT ARTHUR BOUCHARD-Band: Phi Sigma. MARGARET H. BOUTWELL-Pi Beta Phi. WARD ALAN BOWER-Phi Kappa Psi: Iohn Marshall Law Club: Baseball. THOMAS ALAN BRACKEN-Kappa Delta Rho: Interfraternity Council: Iohn Marshall Law Club. IEANINE MARIE BRADY-Alpha Phi: Band: Challenge: Christian Association: Cap and Dagger. LEE RICHARD BRAUTMAN-Intramural Tennis: Phi Sigma: Psi Chi. MICHAEL SCHABBEHAR BRENNAN- Theta Chi: Chorale. DAYNA IANE BREWER-Delta Delta Delta, President: A.S.C.E., Secretary. GALE BREWER-Kappa Kappa Gamma: Iunior Counselor. STEVE R. BRICE-Tau Kappa Epsilon: Christian Association: Sailing Club: I.E.E.E. EDWARD HATFIELD BRIDGE-Tau Kappa Epsilon. GEORGE MONROE BRODE-Theta Chi. BARBARA IEAN BROOKS-Pi Beta Phi: House Council: Head Resident: judicial Board: Headstart: Susquehanna Valley Symphony Orchestra: Synchronettes. DENNIS FULTON BROWN-Outing Club: Chorale. HOLLIS ROBERT BROVVN, IR.-Phi Kappa Psi: A.S.C.E.: Lacrosse: Intramural Soccer. PAUL WARREN BROWN-A.I.Ch.E.: La- crosse: Intramural Soccer. RICHARD W. BROWNFIELD, IR.-Sigma Phi Epsilon. DANA CHACE BRYAN-Sigma Alpha Ep- silon: Intramural Tennis: Softball. CHARLES BUFFINGTON-Outing Club: Christian Association: American Chemical Association: Swimming. NANCY LAURACE BURCAW-Phi Mu: House Council: Christian Association: Cho- rale: Debate Society. 228 REBECCA COOKE BURGEE-Delta Delta Delta. ROSS WALDRON BURGESS-Delta Upsi- lon: Track: Soccer. ALAN LEE BUTKOW-Swimming. DAVID CLAYTON CALDWELL-Delta Mu Delta, Treasurer: Intramural Soccer, Bowl- ing. LAURIE ELLEN CAMPBELL-Cap and Dag- ger: Theta Alpha Phi. LAWRENCE BRUCE CARLSON-Theta Chi, Vice President. PHILIP H. CARPENTER-Sigma Alpha Ep- silon. IAMES EDWARD CARR-Band. IAMES FREDERICK CARLSON-Sigma Chi: FMA: FCA: Interfraternity Council: Basketball: Baseball. DOUGLAS DOCKSTADER CHAMBERLIN -Sigma Phi Epsilon: Band: Basketball Manager: Intramural Soccer. ROBERT CHASE CHEEK, IR.-Kappa Sigma: Golf, Co-captain: Sigma Delta Pi: Omicron Delta Epsilon: Phi Eta Sigma. IOHN LAYMON CHESAREK-Sky Diving Club. MEREDITH ANNE CHESLEY-Kappa Kappa Gamma: L'Agendc1, Intergroup Sports, Basketball, Badminton, Softball. IANE ELIZABETH CHIDESTER-Delta Delta Delta: Cheerleader: I.V.C.F. IUDITH ANNE CHUBB-Chorale: Pi Delta Phi: Pi Sigma Alpha: Phi Beta Kappa: Young Republicans. KENNETH WILLIAM CHURM-Phi Lambda Theta: Band. ROBERT HACKER CLAPHAM-Sigma Phi Epsilon: A.S.C.E. FREDERIC KING CLAUSEN-Sky Diving Club. SAMUEL EDGAR CLOPPER, IR.-Theta Delta Chi, President: Newman Club', Presi- dent: Pennsylvania Newman Province Chairman: Pi Mu Epsilon, President. BARBARA DOROTHY CLOYD-Delta Zeta: Sky Diving Club: Synchronettes: Pi Mu Ep- silon: Alpha Lambda Delta. LANCE NEVIN COHEN-Hillel, President: Debating Club: Golf. RICHARD FRED COHEN-Sigma Alpha Mu. LYNN ALLYSON COMEE-Delta Zeta: WVBU: Buclmellian: Christian Association Colloquy: Sky Diving Club: Sigma Delta Pi. MYLES LEE COOLEY-Phi Kappa Psi, So- cial Chairman: Tennis. NANCY BURT COPPEDGE-Alpha Phi: Chapel Choir: Christian Association. WAYNE S. COUNTERMAN-Phi Lambda Theta. MARILYN IEAN COX-Kappa Delta: Hunt Dorm Secretary: L'Agendo. SUSAN ANN COX-House Council Repre- sentative: Iudicial Assistant Committee: President's Council: Indigo: Christian Asso- ciation. SALLY IEAN CRAMPTON-Mortar Board: Iunior Counselor: Psi Chi: Kappa Delta Pi. BARBARA IEANNE CRAW-Alpha Chi Omega: WRA, Group Coordinator: Resi- dence Council: New Dorm, Vice-President: Senate. SUSAN IEAN CRAWFORD-Kappa Delta: Senate: Iudicial Board: Freshman Camp Counselor: House Council: House of Repre- sentatives: Sailing Club: Young Republi- cans: Field Hockey. MARGARET A. CROWSON-Iunior Coun- selor: Head Resident: Mortar Board: Under- class Privilege Chairman: Senate: Cap and Dagger: Phi Alpha Theta. CATHRYN RADER CRUM-Delta Delta Delta: Cheerleading. IAMES ROBERT CRUM-Sigma Phi Epsi- lon. THOMAS FULTON CRUM-Phi Gamma Delta: Football: Phi Eta Sigma. CRAIG RICHARD CUNNINGHAM-Kappa Sigma, Social Chairman: Intramurals: Buck- nellion, Ad Manager: Phi Alpha Theta. PETER STEWART CURTIS-Kappa Sigma: Track. BRYSON FORREST DATT--I.E.E.E. WILLIAM IOHN DAUBE, IR. ROBERT DAVID-Sigma Chi: Interfrater- nity Council: Swimming. KATHRYN LOUISE DAVIS-Alpha Phi, President, Rush Chairman: Head Resident: House Council Representative: Cap and Dagger: P.S.E.A.: Kappa Delta Pi, Secretary. RANDALL MERRITT DAVIS-Tau Kappa Epsilon: Christian Association. ROBERT EVAN DAVIS, IR.-Christian As- sociation: Track. DAVID CURTIS DEARDORFF-Sigma Phi Epsilon, Vice President: Senior Class Vice- President: Men's Iudicial Board: Freshman Counselor: Band. CRAIG H. DEERY-Sigma Alpha Epsilon. LAURENCE IVOR DENFIELD, IR. THOMAS ANDREW DENTON-Young Re- publicans, Vice-President: Christian Asso- ciation: Stretch, Firesides Committee: Stu- dent Forum: Outing Club: WVBU. GLENN ALAN DIEGNAN-Chorale: Cap and Dagger: Christian Association: A.C.S.: Phi Eta Sigma: Alpha Chi Sigma. CHARLES HAROLD DIETRICH, IR.-Kappa Sigma. IOHN PARK DILZELL-Kappa Delta Rho. VIRGINIA IILL DIX-Buclmellian: Christian Association: German Conversation Hour: International Club: Kappa Delta Pi: Alpha Lambda Delta. I L7 ,I ww' limi? Q-ibiza!-1 1' ,gf MATTHEW DOMINY-Lambda Chi Alpha: Band: Sailing Club: Chapel Choir. SUZANNE C A R O L DONOVAN-Delta Delta Delta: Ski Club: Newman Club. PETER EDWARD D'ORSI, IR.-Theta Chi: Freshman Soccer. SUSAN BELLE DOSCHER-Delta Zeta. ROBERT ALAN DOTEN-Theta Chi. WILLIAM LEE DOUGLAS-Chorale: Phi Beta Kappa: Tau Beta Pi. LAWRENCE EDWARD DRESDALE-Delta Upsilon: International Club: Interfraternity Council: L'Agenda. RONALD F R E D E R I C K DROGY-Theta Delta Chi: Lacrosse. ELAINE MARIE DUCK-L'Agendo: Chris- tian Association: Head Resident: W.R.A. NANCY E L I Z A B E T H DUNHAM--Alpha Phi: Christian Association. RICHARD IAMES DUNN, III-Chorale: Rifle Club: Ritle Team: Tau Beta Pi. LYNN DURYEA-Pi Beta Phi, Social Chair- man: Bucl-cnellion: L'Agenda: Christian As- sociation: Residence Council. SUSAN EBERENZ ROBERT W. EBERHARDT, IR.-Phi Kappa Psi, Pledge Trainer: Men's Iudicial Board: Interfraternity Council, Treasurer. IOHN GRIFFITH ECKMANN-Phi Gamma Delta: Ski Club: F.C.A.: Lacrosse. ALLEN BRAXTON EDWARDS, IR.-Men's Coordinating Council: Dorm Council: Golf. ROBERT WARD EICHER-Bucknell Engi- neer: A.S.M.E. FRED CLIFFORD ELDRIDGE-Senior Cadet Club: Dorm Council. SARAH ANN ELLERY-Kappa Delta: L'Agenda. WILLIAM C. EMMITT, IR.-Sigma Chi, President, I.F.C. Representative: A.I.Ch.E., President: Intramural Soccer: Bucknell En- gineer, Assistant Editor, Business Manager: Phi Beta Kappa: Tau Beta Pi: Omicron Delta Kappa: Pi Mu Epsilon. HAROLD EDWARD EMRICH, IR.-Kappa Delta Rho: Volleyball 8: Tennis Intramurals. DAVID ENGEL-Theta Chi. VICTOR VON BOROSINI ENGEL-Kappa Sigma: Sky Diving Club: Rifle Team: Inter- fraternity Council: Track: President Sopho- more Class. BURTON C. ENGLISH, IR.-Kappa Delta Rho, Vice-President, S o c i a 1 Chairman: A.S.C.E. LYNN ELIZABETH EVELYN-Alpha Chi Omega: Iunior Counselor: Senate, Public Relations Chairman: Convocation Commit- tee: Chapel Choir: Chorale: House Council: Hunt Hall Social Chairman. GLENN S. EVERETT-Cap 8r Dagger: Cho- rale: Intramural Tennis: Theta Alpha Phi. CHARLES EDWIN FARVER-Phi Gamma Delta: Lacrosse, Captain: Basketball, Co- Captain: Freshman Counselor: F.C.A.: Omi- cron Delta Kappa. IILL SUSAN FASSLER-Independent Coun- cil: House Council: Christian Association, International Colloquy: john Marshall Law Club: Senate Communication Committee. PATRICIA ANNE FAUBER-Alpha Phi: Chorale. DAVID MICHAEL FEDELI-Phi Kappa Psi: Soccer and Baseball Intramurals. ROBERT E. FEIR-Iunior Class President: Bucknelliun, Associate Editor: Student-Fac- ulty Congress, Chairman of Admissions Committee, Chairman of Constitution Com- 229 mittee: WVBU: President's Committee on the Campus Community: Ad Hoc Study Group, Chairman. ANDREW H. FERBER-Sigma Alpha Mu, Social Chairman: Iohn Marshall Law Club. WILLIAM CHARLES FETZER-Theta Delta Chi. KAREN GRACE FIGHTER-Kappa Delta, Second Vice-President : Chapel Choir: House Council, President: President's Coun- cil: junior Counselor: Head Resident: Mor- tar Board, Treasurer: Christian Association. ALICE DE NYSE FLAHERTY-Delta Delta Delta: Tristram. IAMES KENNETH FLEMING-Phi Lambda Theta. MARY LOU FOLEY-Synchronettes: Chapel Choir: Chorale: Oddfellow Orphanage Vol- unteer. IOHN NAYLOR FRANCE-L'Agendu, Sports Editor. GERALD ANTHONY FRANK-Lambda Chi Alpha, President: Interiraternity Council: Intramural Track. KENNETH L. FRANTZ-A.S.C.E. CAROL A. FRISCI-I-Indigo: Iunior Counse- lor: House Council, President: Psi Chi. IUDY LYNN FRISCH-Christian Associa- tion: Interfaith Committee: Hillel. DAVID CUSHING FUESS-Freshman Soc- cer: L'Agendu: Buclmelliun: Tristram: Chal- lenge. MARGARET LOUISE FULMER RICHARD ANTON FUNKE RICHARD ANDREW GAINES, IR.-Phi Lambda Theta: ROTC Drill Team. LOUIS I. GALLIA, III-Sigma Chi: Football: Phi Sigma. IOHN RICHARD GARBARK-Tau Kappa Epsilon: Newman Club: Baseball. HOWARD 1. GARDNER, IR.-Kappa sigma: Track. SYLVIA ALICE GARDNER-Cap and Dag- ger: A.C.S.: Pi Mu Epsilon. IAMES HOWARD GARRABRANDT-Ba5- ketball. ELIZABETH ANNE GATELY-Kappa Kappa Gamma. MICHAEL FRANCIS GAZDO, IR.--Phi Lambda Theta. IOHN DAVID GAZLEY-Phi Gamma Delta: Lacrosse Club: Lacrosse. CAROLE FRANCES GEARHART--Iuniol' Counselor: Head Resident: Senate Repre- sentative: Iudicial Board: House Council: Mortar Board: Residence Council: Cap and Dagger: International Club: Alpha Lambda Delta: Phi Alpha Theta: Kappa Delta Pi. IOHN HEVNER GENIESSE-Theta Delta Chi: Intramural Sports: Bucl-znellion. IANETTE C O R N I S H GERVIN-Inte1'na- tional Relations Club: Sailing Club: Outing Club: Challenge Committee: Alpha Lambda Delta. FRANCES IEAN GIAMBRONE-Alpha Chi Omega, Treasurer, Second Vice-President: President's Council: Student-Faculty Con- gress, Recording Secretary: Newman Club: Synchronettes. GARY LEE GIFFIN--Phi Gamma Delta: Fel- lowship of Christian Athletes: Lacrosse: Football Manager. L A W R E N C E LEO GINSBURG-Sigma Alpha Mu: Iohn Marshall Law Club: Tennis. LINDA ANN GIRVIN-Kappa Kappa Gamma: Psi Chi. CONSTANCE EDWINA GLOCK-Interna- tional Club. CHARLES E. GOLDMANN III-Kappa Delta Rho: Tau Beta Pi: A.I.Ch.E. DONNA DARE GOODYEAR-Alpha Chi Omega, Chaplain: Psi Chi: Selinsgrove vol- unteer. DAVID NEIL GORDON-Sigma Alpha Mu: Tennis, Captain. LINDA LOUISE GOUBEAUX-Kappa Kappa Gamma, President: Tristum, Literary Editor. ROBERTA CATHERINE GRAF-Delta Zeta: Outing Club. IEFFREY HOWE GRAHAM-Phi Gamma Delta: Football. NANCY IOAN GRAVER-Christian Associ- ation: Cap and Dagger: House Council: American Chemical Society. ROBERT CLARK GRAY-Phi Kappa Psi: Delta Mu Delta: Golf, Co-Captain. RONNIE ANN GREENBERG-Hillel, Secre- tary: Christian Association: Band: Orches- tra: Pi Delta Phi, Vice-President. CRAIG MEARS GREENWOOD-Basketball. ANTHONY TOD GREGG-Outing Club: Big Brother Program: Golf: Intramural Sports: Flying Club. MICHAEL HAND GREGG. IANE E L I Z A B E T H GRIGGER-Band, Marching, Concert: Theatre work. CYNTHIA SCOVILLE GRIGGS-Christian Association: Evangelical Home work: EOC Committee. ARTHUR EDMOND GROSVENOR, IR.- Theta Chi. STEVEN PAUL GRUNOW-Kappa Sigma. WAYNE MARK GUY-A.I.Ch.E-3 Bucknell Engineer: Soccer: Intramural Cross Coun- try, Soccer. IANET ELIZABETH HAAS-Iudicial Board: Indigo: Iunior Counselor. KAREN BAXTER HAM-Delta Delta Delta: Tennis Club: House Council: L'Agendc1: In- terclass Sports: Intramural Sports. ROBERT ALLEN HAMBURG-Phi Lambda Theta, President: Chorale: WVBU. MARSHA LYNN HAMILTON-Alpha Chi Omega: Cheerleader: Head Resident. ANDREW PETER HAMMES. IOHN STUART HANNAN-Basketball: Psi Chi. KATHLEEN E M I L Y HANNON-Kappa Kappa Gamma: Bucknellion: House Council Representative: Ski Club. IUDITH ANN HANSON-Christian Associa- tion: Laurelton volunteer: L'Agendo. MICHAEL EUGENE HARDY-Kappa sigma. FABIA HARRIS-Bucl-znellicln, Editor: Mor- tar Board: Phi Alpha Theta, President: Con- vocation Public Relations Committee: Stu- dents for Democratic Society: Pi Delta Epsi- lon. IAMES DICK HARRIS--WVBU: Ski Club. MARGARET S. HARRIS-Cap and Dagger: Theta Alpha Phi: President's Council: Resi- dent's Council. CONSTANCE I. HARRISON-Chapel Choir: Pi Delta Phi: Kappa Delta Pi. EDWIN DUDLEY HARTMAN. RICHARD W. HARTMANN-L'Agenclc1. ARTHUR IOHN HARTUNG-Phi Kappa Psi. IAY IRA HASS-Delta Upsilon: Swimming. GUY CURTIS HATFIELD-Phi Kappa Psi? Christian Association: Wrestling. SAMUEL CHARLES HAVRILAK-Sigma Chi: Football: Omicron Delta Kappa. ROBERT BRUCE HEALD-Kappa Delta Rho: Christian Association: Debate Society: Fra- ternity Manager Association. BARRIE THORNTON HEATH-Phi Kappa Psi. NANCY IOAN HEATH NANCY IANE HEIM-Head Resident: Indigo: Freshman Class Secretary: Sopho- more Class Secretary: House Council Rep- resentative: Independent Council Treasurer: Tennis. ROGER KURT I-IEINEMANN-Theta Chi. PHILIP WILDER HEISLEY. WILLIAM CHARLES HELLER-Tau Kappa Epsilon: Cap and Dagger: Phi Eta Sigma: Pi Mu Epsilon: Intramural Softball. RICHARD CARLTON HENTZ-Chorale: In- tramural Sports: Soccer: Track. IAMES EDWARD HERBERT-Sigma Phi Epsilon: Tristom: Young Republicans: Men's Co-ordinating Council. H E L E N ELIZABETH HESS-Intervarsity Christian Fellowship, Treasurer: A.C.M.: Delta Mu Delta. IOHN BORDEN HESS, IR. WILLIAM WAYNE HESS-Tau Kappa Epsi- lon: Interfraternity Council: Christian Asso- ciation: Honor Guard: Rangers. DAVID EDMOND I-IESSER-Theta Delta Chi: Cap and Dagger: Theta Alpha Phi: Swimming: Lacrosse. WILLIAM HELMUT HINSCH-Christian Association: C h o r al e : I.E.E.E.: A.C.M.: Bucknell Engineer: Delta Phi Alpha: Omi- cron Delta Epsilon: International Club. SHELDON MARK HIRSCI-IBERG-Theta Delta Chi: Young Republicans: Iohn Mar- shall Law Club: Swimming: Track. IE F F R E Y ALAN HIRSHBERG-Sigma Alpha Mu: Interfraternity Council: Debate Society: Dorm Counselor. BARRY EUGENE HOFFMAN-A.I.Ch.E.: ROTC. CARL ALFRED HOHENTHAL-Phi Gamma Delta: Basketball. GILBERT ANTHONY H O L M E S -P h i Lambda Theta: Student Faculty Congress: Senior Class President: Convocation 1968, Program Committee. IUDITH A N N E HOOVER-Alpha Chi Omega, President: Residence Council: Cho- rale: Buclfnollinn:Brigc1doon. IEAN BAIRD HORKY-Alpha Phi, Vice- President: Sailing Club: Challenge, Public- ity Chairman: Bucknellion, Editorial Board and Features Editor: Alpha Lambda Delta. CRAIG HORNBERGER-Flying Club. IEFFREY R O B E R T HOTCHKISS-Sigma Alpha Epsilon: Interfraternity Council, Vice- President: Men's Coordinating Council: A.S.M.E.: Tau Beta Pi. IONATHAN EDWARD HOTTENSTEIN- Theta Chi: A.C.S. IEFFREY EARL HOUSEMAN-Kappa Sigma. IOHN CHARLES HOUTZ-Baseball: Phi Eta Sigma: Kappa Delta Pi. TERRENCE PAUL I-IUBKA-Football. BARBARA KAY HUBLER-Alpha Phii Challenge Conference, Chairman: Intramu- ral, Volleyball, Basketball, Softball. R I C H A R D ALAN HUMPHREY-Sigma Alpha Epsilon. 230 ELIZABETH ANNE HURD-Pi Beta Phi: Residence Council, Secretary. IANICE C A R O L I-IUTCHESON-Kappa Kappa Gamma: Ski Club. MARILYN HUTCHINSON-Christian Asso- ciation: L'Agenda: Psi Chi. HENRY MARTIN INGHAM-L'Agendo: In- tramural Karate. MARGARET ANN IAMES-Kappa Delta: L'Agenda, Greek Editor: Christian Associa- tion: Ski Club. DENNIS EDWARD IEFFRIES-Theta Chi. SHARON RAE JENKINS-indigo: outing Club: Debate Society: Student Forum: Chal- lenge Conference: Karate Club: Psi Chi: Mu Phi Epsilon. PETER VERNER IOHANSSON-Phi Lambda Theta: Student Physics Society. ERIC LEE IOHNSON-Outing Club. NANCY ANNE IOHNSON-Alpha Chi Omega: Cap and Dagger: Christian Associa- tion: Theta Alpha Phi. ROGER ALLEN IONES-Phi Gamma Delta: Fellowship of Christian Athletes: Football: Wrestling. RAYMOND KABAKIIAN-Phi G a rn m a Delta. MARSHALL IOHN KAISER-A.S.M.E.: Rifle Club: WVBU. DENNIS ROBERT KALBERER-Theta Chi: Sailing Club. PEGGY ROBERTS KAMUF-Alpha Chi Omega: Head Resident. DONNA LEE KARAM-Alpha Chi Omega: A.C.S., Secretary: Head Resident: Iudicial Board: Indigo: Newman Club, Secretary: Modern Dance Club: L'Agendo. :oHN LUTHER KASTEN-Tau Kappa Epsi- lon: Christian Association: Cap and Dagger: Honor Guard. ALAN EVERETT KEHEW-Theta Delta Chi: Ski Club: Lacrosse. IEFFREY ALAN KEITER. HOWARD I O A C H I M KENDALL-Theta Delta Chi, Vice-President: Phi Alpha Theta. DAVID ROGER KENDELHARDT-Sigma Chi: Wrestling. WILLIAM R. KERSHNER-Sigma Phi Epsi- lon: Chapel Choir. PHILIP PAUL KERSTETTER-Sigma Phi Epsilon: Student Faculty Congress, Treas- urer: Interfraternity Council: Men's Coordi- nating Council, Chairman: Christian Asso- ciation: Chorale, Student Conductor: Intra- murals, Soccer: Omicron Delta Kappa. VIRGINIA EDITH KINNEY-Delta Zeta: WBVU: Freshman Camp Counselor: Theta Alpha Phi, President. LAWRENCE S. KLOCK-Tau Kappa Epsi- lon: Interfraternity Council: Omicron Delta Epsilon: Pi Mu Epsilon. RICHARD ERICSON KOCH-Tau Kappa Epsilon: Debate Society, Treasurer: Buck- nellion, Associate Editor: Head Counselor: A.S.C.E. PHILIP ANDREW KONTUL-Kappa Sigma: Ski Club: Newman Club: Bucl-znellicm, Busi- ness Manager, Advertising Manager. LINDA LOUISE KOONTZ-Delta Zeta, President: Synchronettes. IOI-IN IEFFREY KOVSKI-Intramurals, Soc- cer, Softball, Track. MICHAEL KOWALSKI-Theta Chi. IANET V E R O N I C A KRATINA-Kappa Delta, Vice-President and Secretary: New- man Club: L'Agendo: House Council. GLENN MILES KROUSE-Lambda Chi Alpha: Baseball. ROBERT ALLEN KROUSE-Theta Delta Chi: A.S.M.E., Publicity Chairman. FLORENCE WOODS KUHL-Delta Delta Delta, Treasurer: Residence Council: House Council. ROBERT KULLMAN-Sigma Alpha Mu, President, Rush Chairman: Iohn Marshall Law Club: Intramurals, Tennis. IANICE ELAINE KULP-Chapel Choir: Christian Association. ARTHUR ADOLPH KURZ-Delta Upsilon: ROTC: Soccer, Captain: Lacrosse. RONALD KEITH LACEY-Lambda Chi Alpha: A.1.c.M.E. SUSAN LAKES-Alpha Phi: Cap and Dag- ger. LISA LOUISE LAMORTE-Phi Mu: House Council: Newman Club: Ski Club: Kappa Delta Pi. DAVID VINTON LANDES-Phi Gamma Delta: Men's Iudicial Board: Swimming, Co- Captain. CAROL RUTH LARK-Alpha Lambda Delta: Psi Chi. KAY LATVEN-Pi Beta Phi, Social Chair- man: AWS Social Committee: Christian As- sociation. PHILIP STRIDE LAWES-Delta Upsiloni Tennis. LINDA IOYCE LAWRENCE-Delta Zeta? Kappa Delta Pi: Pi Delta Phi: Christian As- sociation. MITCHEL E. LAWSON-Freshman Coun- selor. SUSAN ANN LEAVY-Pi Beta Phi: House Council, Social Chairman. CHARLES MICHAEL LEE-Sigma Phi Epsi- lon: Chorale: Band: Iazz Band: Student Fac- ulty Congress. PATRICIA LOUISE LEE-Alpha Phi, Vice- President: Christian Association: Bucknel- licm: House Council. IEFFREY M A H L O N LEIPHART-Kappa Sigma: Psi Chi. IOHN F R E D E RIC K LEONARDO-Theta Delta Chi, Secretary: Christian Association: Sophomore Class Treasurer: Buclmelliun: Newman Club, Vice-President, Treasurer: Student Faculty Congress, Student Action Committee. GEORGE WILLIAM LEOPOLD, IR.-Tau Kappa Epsilon: Wrestling. IACQUELINE NANCY LEWIS-Alpha Phi: Chorale: Chapel Choir: Residence Council: Senate: Student Faculty Congress: Panhel- lenic Council, Secretary, President: Senate Nominating Committee: Headstart Volun- teer: Christian Association: Laurelton Vol- unteer: Psi Chi. THOMAS ELI LEWIS-Sigma Alpha Epsi- lon. IEFFREY C. LIND-Sigma Phi Epsilon: Golf: Intramurals. MARTHA MARY LINK-Delta Delta Delta: Associated Women Students: Iunior Coun- selor: Head Resident: Hockey. MARY MARTHA LINK-junior Counselor: Head Resident: House Council, Treasurer, Social Chairman: Senior Class Secretary- Treasurer: Hockey. ROBERT EDWARD LIPOVSKY-Theta Chi. STEPHEN BECKHAM LIPSON-L'Agendu, Assistant Sports Editor. NANCY ELIZABETH LIVENGOOD-L'Agen- do: Ski Club. R O S S CHRISTOPHER LOESER-Kappa Delta Rho, Vice President: A.I.C.E., Treas- urer. GARY WAYNE LONG-WVBU. w1LL1AM GROVES LONG, JR.-Biology Lab Assistant. MICHAEL EDWARD LOOKER-Tau Kappa Epsilon: WVBU: Delta Mu Delta. LYNDA KAY LOVE-Phi Mu: Christian As- sociation: L'Agenda. NOREEN NAVAZIO LUCE-Chorale. CHARLES ROBERT LUCKE-Cap Sz Dag- ger: Theta Alpha Phi, Intramural golf. WILLIAM RICHARD LUDWIC-Sigma Chi: Football. BEVERLY SUE LUGRIN-Chorale: L'Agendu: House Council. DANIEL IAMES LUPFER-Theta Chi: Psi Chi. IOHN FRANCIS MAHONEY-RESIST9 Stu- dent Forum: Challenge: C.T.A.: Bucknell Young Democrats, President: Bucknell for Peace in Vietnam, President: Students for a Democratic Society, President. DAVID IRA MALES-Delta Mu Delta: Dorm Council: Intramurals. ANDREW H. MANN, IR.-Christian Asso- ciation. HOWARD A. MANNING-Sigma Chi: A.S.C.E.: Bucknell Engineer. MICI-IELE HELEN MANSUY-Kappa Kappa Gamma: Challenge Committee: Tristram, Circulation Manager. RICHARD W I L L I A M MARCILLE-Phi Gamma Delta: Lacrosse. SARA FRANCES MARCY IAMES EDWARD MARSDEN-Dorm Coun- cil: Intramural Soccer: Orchestra. ROBERT LAWRENCE MARTUZA-Theta Chi: Phi Sigma: Omicron Delta Kappa: Pi Mu Epsilon: Debate Society. WILLIAM F. MASLER, III-Kappa Delta Rho: Phi Beta Kappa: Swimming. 231 CAROLE LEIGH MASTERS-Majorettes, Captain: Pi Delta Phi: Christian Associa- tion, Chairman Volunteer Services: Laurel- ton Volunteer. IOHN HENRY MATHIAS-Sigma Chi. DEBORAH MATHIESON-Phi Mu, Vice- President: Chorale, Concert Manager: Head Resident: Phi Alpha Theta: Christian Asso- ciation. STEPHEN WAYNE MATSON-Sigma Phi Epsilon. M A R C I A GABRIELLE MATTER-Kappa Kappa Gamma: Bucknell Engineer, Assist- ant Editor: A.I.C.E.: Intramural Basketball. VICKI GAIL MATUSOFF-Kappa Kappa Gamma, Secretary: Tristram: L'Agenda: P.S.E.A.: N.E.A. THOMAS EDWARD MAXSON. MARILYN MAXWELL-Band. THOMAS C U L L E N MCBROOM-Kappa Sigma: Ski Club. KEVIN H. MCCAUGHEY-Delta Upsilon: Soccer: Lacrosse. VIVIAN K A R E N McDONOUGH-Delta Zeta, Corresponding Secretary: Pi Mu Epsi- lon, Secretary: A.C.M.: Christian Associa- tion. ANNE MCGEE-Newman Club: Young Re- publicans: Christian Association: Interna- tional Club. IOSEPH M. MCGINNES-Theta Delta Chi. IOHN BARRY MCGLINCY-Tennis. MARGARET PENN MCGOWAN-Chapel Choir: Cap and Dagger. ROBERT C. MCGOWAN, IR. IAMES WILLIAM McKEE-Delta Upsilon: A.S.C.E.: Lacrosse, Co-captain. DAVID EDMUND McKINNON-Sigma Phi Epsilon: A.I.C.E.: Senior Cadet Club. RICHARD JOHN MCMICKEN-Sigma Alpha Mu. SUSAN MCMURRAY-Phi Mu: Student Chapel Committee: Christian Association. IAMES ROBB MCSKIMINN-Sigma Phi Epsi- lon: Chapel Choir, Manager: Sigma Pi Sigma: Pi Mu Epsilon, Treasurer. CHARLES L A M B I E MELOY, IR.-Phi Gamma Delta. ' BETSY IANE MESTERN-Band: M.E.N.C. KAREN MARGARET MEYER-Tristram: Selinsgrove Volunteer: House Council: Bas- ketball, Intercollegiate and Intramural: Vol- leyball. IANE ELIZABETH MILLARD-Indigo, Stu- dent-Faculty Committee: Kappa Delta Pi. CONSTANCE DIANNE MILLER-Sailing Club: Christian Association. H. CLAY MILLER III-Sigma Phi Epsilon: Freshman Swimming: Tennis. WILLIAM B E R R E T T MILLER-Kappa Sigma, Caterer. WILLIAM I-IOAG MILLER-Chorale: Out- ing Club. LAWRENCE ARTHUR MILLS-Kappa Sigma: Psi Chi: Phi Eta Sigma. MARTHA E L I Z A B E T H MOIR-Kappa Delta: Panhellenic Council, Vice-President, Treasurer: L'Agenclc1. CHRIS MOLINERO-Newman Club: Chris- tian Association. MARK G. MONN-Sigma Alpha Mu: A.S.C.E. DANIEL BAILEY MOORE-Tau Kappa Ep- silon: Chorale: Alpha Chi Sigma: Christian Association. DIANA LINDSAY MOORE-Kappa Delta: Tristram: L'Agendc1: Leiser House Social Chairman: Christian Association: Hockey. JOHN TERENCE Moons-Kappa Sigma: A.I.Ch.E. NANCY LEE MORAWE-Pi Beta Phi. LOUIS JOHN MORAYTIS-Men's Judicial Board, Chairman: A.S.C.E., President: Coun- selor: Active Independent Men, Treasurer: Intramural Sports: Tau Beta Pi, Recording Secretary: Pi Mu Epsilon. MILTON MASAO MOTOOKA-Tau Kappa Epsilon, President, Pledge Trainer: John Marshall Law Club. DAVID EDWARD MOYER. ROBERT N. MULLETT-Theta Chi: I.E.E.E.: Intramural Soccer. BRIAN ROBERT MUND-Dorm Council: Fellowship of Christian Athletes: Pi Mu Ep- silon: Lacrosse: Intramural Sports. CAROL FRANCES MURPHY-Alpha Chi Omega: W.R.A., President: Senate: Hockey: Intergroup and Interclass Swimming. MOLLY MURRAH-Pi Beta Phi: Synchro- nettes: Panhellenic Council: Bowling: Soft- ball: Swimming. KATHERINE READ MUSE-Phi Mu: Syn- chronettes, President: Hockey, Team Co- Captain: Judicial Board: W.R.A.: Phi Alpha Theta. PETER NACCI-Sigma Alpha Epsilon: Psi Chi: Ski Club. PAUL FRANCIS NEZI-Sigma Alpha Epsi- lon, Rush Chairman, I.F.C. Representative: Student Union Committee: SAE Reorganiz- ing Committee: Intramural Sports: Baseball. AILI MARIE NIEMI-Kappa Delta Pi: Resi- dence Council: Tennis Club. WILLIAM ALEXANDER NIXON III DAVID JOHN OBLON-Alpha Chi Sigma' Phi Sigma: Student Athletic Director. DAVID A. O'CONNOR-Sigma Alpha Epsi- lon. KEVIN O'CONNOR-A.I.Ch.E.: Basket- ball: Intramural Basketball, Volleyball, Track, Baseball. CORDELIA ELAINE OGRINZ-Mu Phi Ep- silon: Orchestra: Chorale: Orff Schulwerk: Methodist Church Choir: Susquehanna Val- ley Orchestra. THOMAS AVERY OLIN-Phi Lambda Theta: Band: Orchestra: Chapel Choir: Brass Choir: Jazz Band: Intramural Soccer. KIM ROBERT ONSDORFF-Sigma Alpha Mu: Christian Association: Basketball: ln- tramural Basketball, Volleyball, and Tennis. ROBERT GERARD ORSI-Kappa Sigma: Delta Mu Delta. WILSON SCOTT OSTROM-Phi Kappa Psi: Intramural Sports. ARLINE ANN OTT-Band: Chapel Choir: A.C.M. CHRISTINE LOUISE PACKARD-Pi Beta Phi. 1 DEBORAH LEE PALAZZI-Alpha Chi Omega: A.W.S. Senate: Women's Judicial Board, Chairman: S-FC Academic Advisory Committee: Christian Association. DONNA JEAN PALMER-Kappa Delta: In- tramural and intergroup Sports. ALLEN CARL PANFIL-Kappa Delta Rho, Social Chairman, IFC Representative: Clio- rale: American Institute of Physics. JANET D. PANKOW-L'AgenclU. JOANNE PARKER-Pi Beta Phi, Scholar- ship Chairman: Junior Counselor. KEITH QUARRIER PARKER-Phi Lambda Theta. RICHARD PARKER-Sigma Alpha Mu. Treasurer: Delta Mu Delta. JOEL W. PARLIMENT-Phi Sigma: Chris- tian Association. SANDRA JEAN PATTON-Kappa Kappa Gamma: Panhellenic Council: Residence Council: L'Agenda. ALBERT THOMAS PAWLINA-Sigma Chi. HENRY B. PECK, JR.-Tau Kappa Epsilon: Phi Eta Sigma: Omicron Delta Epsilon. STANLEY LARUE PECK-Theta Chi: Cho- rale: Ski Club: Sailing Club. LOIS ANNE PEOPLES-Alpha Chi Omega: A.W.S. Treasurer: WRA Social Chairman: Junior Counselor: House Council, President. GUY WALTER PETERSON-Sigma Alpha Mu. CHARLES B. PETZOLD III-Sigma Phi Ep- silon: Swimming. JOHN A. PEYMAN--Baseball. ROSS D. PFEIFFER-Kappa Sigma: Rifle Team: Intramural Sports. SUSAN JILL PFIFER-L'Agendo: Bucknel- lian. BRUCE R. PHILLIPS-A.S.C.E., Treasurer: Christian Association. CHARLES PHILLIP PLANZ-Kappa Sigma. CAROL ANN PODESTA-Phi Mu. THOMAS PHILIP POETH-American Chemical Society KATHLEEN ELLEN MARY POHL--Indigo: Christian Association. NED W. POLAN-Sigma Pi Sigma: Pi Mu Epsilon: Phi Eta Sigma: Society of Physics Students: Christian Association. LINDA ANN POTTER-Christian Associa- tion, Equal Opportunities Committee. PETER EDVARD POULSEN-WVBU, Sta- tion Manager, Sales Manager: Chapel Usher: Band: Concert Band. GEORGE W. POWELL, JR.-Kappa Sigma. JEFFREY BRUCE PRESS-Tau Kappa Epsilon: A.C.S., President: Alpha Chi Sigma, Vice-President 8: Treasurer: Phi Eta Sigma: Pi Mu Epsilon: Christian Associa- tion: Chemistry Lab Assistant. ALAN JOSEPH PRIBULA-American Chem- ical Society: Alpha Chi Sigma: Track: Foot- ball Manager. GRETCHEN RAMER PRITSKY-Christian Association: Choir: International Club. GAIL PUDERBAUGH-Christian Associa- tion: A.C.M.: House Council: L'Agendn. BARBARA CLARK PUFF-Delta Delta Delta. RUDDEL HAGY RAISIG-Sigma Chi: Inter- iraternity Council, President: Men's Judicial Board: University Traffic Committee: ROTC Battalian C o m m an d e r: Omicron Delta Kappa: Delta Mu Delta: Football. RICHARD STERNER RANCK, JR. STEPHEN KARL RAPLEYAA.S.C.E.: Chris- tian Association. KIRSTEN ELNA RASMUSSEN-House President: Christian Association. WILLIAM JULIUS RECI-I-Sigma Chi: Foot- ball. SAMUEL EDGAR REED-Theta Delta Chi: I.E.E.E. STUART EUGENE REED-Kappa Delta Rho. ANN LOUISE REESE-Christian Associa- tion: Kappa Delta Pi: House Council: Inter- national Club. 232 JAMES MACKINTOSI-I REESE-Theta Chi: Ice Hockey: Lacrosse. LEONARD SIDNEY REICH-Theta Chi, Pi Mu Epsilon. JOHN HAGER REID-Sigma Chi: Tau Beta Phi. PETER WALMS LEY REISMAN-Kappa Delta Rho: Track. JEFFREY B. RETTIG-Phi Kappa Psi: Ski Club: Cap 8: Dagger: Soccer: Volleyball. PHYLLIS REYNOLDS-Chorale: Outing Club SARAH REYNOLDS-Chorale. BETTY JEAN RHODA-Ski Club. SALLY SNYDER RICHARDS-Kappa Delta. President, Treasurer: House Council: Young Republicans: Synchronettes: Band: Outing Club. STEPHEN WAYNE RIDDELL. JOHN F. RIEFLER III-Rifle Club: Dorm Council: Phi Lambda Theta Fellowship. CHRISTINE ANN RIEGLE-Phi Mu, Social Chairman, Social Service Chairman. JUDITH P H Y L L I S RIEMER-Challenge: Christian Association: International Club: Student Action Committee: Hillel. BRANT A. RISING-Theta Chi: ACS. RICHARD C. ROHRS-Delta Upsilon: Stu- dent-Faculty Congress, Vice-President: Up- perclass Counselor: Baseball. LAWRENCE S. ROSE. SANDRA RUTH ROSE-Christian Associa- tion: L'Agendo: Cap and Dagger produc- tions. SAMUEL PHILIP ROSS-Sigma Alpha Mu: John Marshall Law Club: Tennis. ELLEN MARIE ROUNSAVILLE-Psi Chi: Laurelton Volunteer. PHILIP C. ROY. CHARLES SIMON RUBERG-Sigma Alpha Mu. GLENN EVANS RUGH, JR.-Kappa Sigma. MICHELE ANN RUSSO-Alpha Chi Omega: Bucl-tnellion: Challenge. Phi Alpha Theta, Secretary. JANE MAUREEN SALSBURG. JOHN R. SLAZER-Delta Mu Delta. BENARD A. SAMPSON-Kappa Sigma: Ski Club. BARBARA SARDELLA--Pi Beta Phi: Amer- ican Chemical Society: Newman. TANYA ROMELLE SAUNDERS-Chapel Choir: Modern Dance Club: Chorale: Delta Phi: Sigma Delta Phi. GREGORY JOHN SAUTER-Phi Gamma Delta: Soccer. CHARLES KIRK SAWYER-Phi Lambda Theta, Vice-President: WVBU, Station Man- ager: Bucknell Engineer, Editor: A.I.C.H.E.: Honor Guard, Commander. SUSAN L. SCHEER-Delta Delta Delta: Alpha Lambda Delta: Kappa Delta Pi. CHRIS SCHELL-Challenge: Student Fo- rum: Opinion, Editor. GUY WILLIAM SCHLESINGER-Phi Kappa Psi. DAVID CRAIG SCI-IMEISKE-Phi Gamma Delta: Swimming. PETER A R N O L D SCHNEIDER-Sigma Alpha Mu, President, Pledgemaster: Inter- fraternity Council: Constitution Revision Committee: Intramural Softball, Track, Bowling, Soccer. THOMAS O. SCHNEIDER-John Marshall Law Club, President: Basketball. ROBERT BUNNELL SCHNURE, IR.-Kappa Sigma. BARBARA SCHOENECK-Alpha Phi: Cap 8: Dagger: Theta Alpha Phi. SUE ELLEN SCHRADER-Alpha Chi Omega: Christian Association, Executive Cabinet: Sailing Club: Ski Club: House Council. KENNETH HOWARD SCHWARTZ-Theta Delta Chi: Tristram, Business Manager. IUDITH CAROL SCHWENK-Christian As- sociation: L'Agendo, WRA Representative: A.C.M.: Pi Mu Epsilon. DIANE SUE SCHWILLE-Phi Mu: Panhel- lenic Council: Head Resident: Iudicial Board: Washington Semester. HENRY B. SCOTT-Delta Upsilon: L'Agenda, Business Manager. BONNIE GAYE SECOR. WILLIAM O. SHAFFER-Tau Kappa Epsi- lon: Freshman Counselor: Upperclass Coun- selor: Bucl-znellicn, Editorial Board: Student Chapel Committee: Christian Association, Psi Chi: Student Faculty Council. A. LEE SHANE-Delta Upsilon: Freshman Class President: Men's Coordinating Coun- cil: Iudicial Board: Golf: Ski Club. WILLIAM HOWARD SHANKS-American Chemical Society: Phi Eta Sigma: Alpha Chi Sigma. BROOKS ROBERT SHEIFER-Sigma Alpha Epsilon. ELIZABETH FARRAND SHELLEY-Kappa Kappa Gamma: L'Agendo. ROBERT SHOEMAKER-Phi Gamma Delta: Swimming. ROBERT R. SHOLL-F.C.A.: Christian As- sociation: Track: Cross-country: Sailing Club. DALE FRANKLIN SHUGHART, IR.-Phi Kappa Psi. IOAN IRENE SICHTERMAN-House of Representatives: Challenge: Tristram, Edi- tor. il. ' :Z . . ' ,ai I W. IEFFREY SIDEBOTTOM-Dorm Council, Treasurer: Fr e shm an Camp Counselor: Young Republicans, President: Student Fo- rum, Chairman: Outer Ripple: Debate Soci- ety: Christian Association: Orchestra: In- tramural Track: Sailing Club. RONALD P. SIEG-Cap and Dagger: Soc- cer: I.E.E.E. EVAN BENNETT SIEGEL ROBERT MORROW SIGURDSEN-Theta Delta Chi, House Manager. ROBERT GEORGE SIMONS-Lambda Chi Alpha, Vice-President: Cap and Dagger: Track, Captain: Theta Alpha Phi: Pi Mu Ep- silon: Alpha Chi Sigma, Secretary. ARTHUR WILLIAM SINGLE II-Tau Kappa Epsilon, Chaplain: Christian Association, Treasurer: Freshman Camp, Chairman: R.O.T.C. Drill Team: Bucknell Folklore S0- ciety: A.S.M.E. MICHAEL F. SINKINSON-Phi Gamma Delta, Vice-President: Swimming, Co-Cap- tain. IEFFREY LYNN SLAGEL-Kappa Sigma. MILTON HOWARD SLEETER-Band, Stu- dent Conductor: Chorale, Student Conduc- tor: Chapel Choir: Orchestra. IOAN ELLEN SLOVITT-Kappa Delta. FREDERICK CARL SMITH-Phi Gamma Delta: Interfraternity Council: Christian As- sociation: Lacrosse: Tennis. LINDA M. SMITH. PATRICIA IO SMITH-Alpha Chi Omega: Upward Bound: Intramural Basketball, Vol- leyball: English Honorary: Kappa Delta Pi. RICHARD CREIGHTON SMITH-Kappa Sigma, Treasurer. ROBERT ALVAH SMITH-Fellowship of Christian Athletes: Student Trainer: Intra- murals. SUZANNE BETH SMITH-Pi Beta Phi. CHRISTINA BLAIR SNYDER-Alpha Phi, Vice-President: O r c h e s t r a : Methodist Church Choir. LINDA SUE SNYDER-Alpha Phi. SUSAN BYERS SNYDER-Kappa Kappa Gamma: Panhellenic Council: Iunior Coun- selor: Head Resident: Challenge. IAMES E. SOLLER-Student-Faculty Con- gress, Treasurer, President: Dorm Council: Counselor: Christian Association: Omicron Delta Kappa: Tennis: Baseball: Basketball. PATRICIA 'IOAN SONNTAG-Phi Mu: Newman Club: Kappa Delta Pi. KATHERINE HALSEY SPEARE-Phi Mu: Senate, President: Iunior Counselor: Head Resident: WRA: Student-Faculty Congress: Panhellenic Council: Chapel Choir: Chorale: Alpha Lambda Delta: Mu Phi Epsilon: Mor- tar Board. HAROLD I. SPIEGEL-Delta Upsilon, Dorm Council: A.S.C.E.: Sailing Club. SUSAN DORIS SPINELLI-Delta Delta Delta: House Council: Bucknellicn. LARRY KINGSBURY SQUIRE-Phi Kappa Psi, Treasurer. IANE ANN s'rAN'roN-Alpha Lambda Delta: Phi Sigma: Kappa Delta Pi. MICHAEL D E F O R E S T STAUGHTON- Kappa Sigma: Baseball: Freshman Football. ROBERT EDWARD STEEN-Kappa Delta Rho: Chapel Choir: Football, Manager. CORKLIN RAY STEINHART-Phi Gamma Delta, President: judicial Board: Interfrater- nity Council: Football: Omicron Delta Kappa, Treasurer. 233 IOI-IANNES I. STEYN. TERRY LEE STIMELING-Sigma Phi Epsi- lon: Intramurals: A.I.C.E. OLGA MAE STRAL-Phi Mu, President: WVBU: President's Council: Choir, Secre- tary: Dorm President: Outing Club, Secre- tary. LINDA PORTNER STRANGMANN-Kappa Kappa Gamma: Tristram. CHARLES I. STRICKLAND. WILLIAM MILTON STRUNK II-Christian Association: Chapel Usher. KENNETH R U S S E L L STUBENRAUCH- Kappa Delta Rho, President: Interfraternity Council: Intramurals: A.S.M.E.: Ski Club. MICHAEL ROBERT SUDZINA-Sigma Chi. IOHN IAY SULLIVAN. THOMAS C L A R K E SUNDBERG-Kappa Sigma: Swimming. VAUGHN LEE SWOPE-Delta Upsilon: Freshman C o u n s e l o r : Chorale:' Chapel Choir: Soccer: Intramurals: Baseball. ALICE REID TAYLOR-Dorm Council: House of Representatives: Iunior Counselor: Head Resident: Independent Council, Secre- tary: Indigo, Chairman: Senate: Student- Faculty Congress: Christian Association. LARRY IOSEPH TAYLOR-Sigma Alpha Epsilon: Soccer: Hockey. GERALD A. TERPAK-Ski Diving Club. PATRICIA ANN TERRILL-Psi Chi, Presi- dent. PETER PROZELLER TERRY-Tau Kappa Epsilon: Chorale: Intramurals. ALLYSON GWEN THOMAS. IOHN R. THOMPSON, IR.-Phi Kappa Psi: Fellowship of Christian Athletes: Wrestling. RUTH HOOVER TIGHE-Hockey. THOMAS G. TODD. DARLENE MARIE TOROCKIO-Kappa Delta. MARK HASKELL TORRENCE-Tau Kappa Epsilon: junior Class Secretary-Treasurer: Orchestra, Manager: Christian Association: Soccer, Manager: Pi Mu Epsilon: Sigma Pi Sigma. EILEEN IOAN TRACY-Challenge. MARTHA LESLIE TRAUB-Alpha Chi Omega: Band. CURTIS TREDENNICK-Theta Chi. WILBER B. TRITLE-Phi Lambda Theta: Band: A.S.C.E. GAYLE BODEN TROUTMAN-Delta Delta Delta. DAVID PHILIP TURTLE-A.I.Ch.E.: Young Republicans. LINDA LOUISE UECKER-Pi Beta Phi, President: Panhellenic Council: L'Agendo, Editor: Head Resident. IAMES ROBERT VARGA-Theta Chi, Vice- President: Intramurals: Phi Sigma. SHIRLEY ANN VEENEMA-Delta Delta Delta: Ski Club: House Council. ROBERT PAUL VIDINGHOFF-Theta Chi. THOMAS F R E D E R I C K WACHS-Phi Kappa Psi. IOHN MCLEOD WAGNER-Phi Gamma Delta. IAY DUDLEY WALDNER, IR.-Sigma Phi Epsilon. WAYNE REESE WALTERS-Phi Gamma Delta: Interfraternity Council: Public Rela- tions: Varsity Track. KATHRYN B. WASILIK-Delta Zeta: Chris- tian Association: Sigma Pi Sigma. IANE REBECCA WEAVER-Delta Delta Delta: Ski Club: Cheerleading. PAUL ROCKET WEBER-Phi Kappa Psi: Newman Club: Ski Club: Dorm Council: Resident Hall Counselor: Pre-Med Society: Intramurals: Phi Sigma. WADE IOHN WEBSTER-Delta Upsiloni Varsity Baseball: Intramurals: A.C.M. WILLIAM PATRICK WELAI-Sigma Alpha Mu: Iohn Marshall Law Club: Varsity Base- ball. DANIEL L. WELLER-A.C.M.: I.E.E.E.: Tau Beta Pi. IONATHAN FREDA WE L L S -B a I1 di I.V.C.F.: Christian Association: American Institute of Physics: Society of Physics Stu- dents: Sigma Pi Sigma, President. BARBARA RUTH WERNER-Christian As- sociation: Brigadoon: University Chorale: L'Agendu, Editor: Phi Sigma. DIANA LORRAINE WESTNEAT-Cap and Dagger: House Council. DENNIS EUGENE WHITNEY-Sigma Phi Epsilon, President: Pi Mu Epsilon. WARREN RALPH WHITNEY-Kappa Sigma. IAY ROSS WIGGINS-Cap and Dagger: Chapel Committee. IOSEPI-I LLOYD WILLIAMS, III-Kappa Sigma, President: Ski Club: Sky Diving Club: A.S.M.E. IOSEPH P. WILLIAMS, IR.-Theta Chi: WVBU: Interfraternity Council: Cross Country: Track. MARY LYNDA WILLIAMS-I.V.C.F.: Proj- ect Head Start: Student Faculty Congress: Cap and Dagger: Presbyterian College Fel- lowship: International Club: AWS Repre- sentative. MARGARET ANN WILSON-Head Resi- dent: Chorale: Sigma Delta Pi. WALLACE WILLIAM WILSON-Phi Gamma Delta: A.C.M.: Baseball. IERALD WINAKUR-Freshman Residence Hall Counselor: Hillel. LAURENCE HOWARD WINTERS-Kappa Sigma: Republican Club: Flying Club: Var- sity Lacrosse: Varsity Wrestling. FRANCIS MICHAEL WITKOSKI-Intramw ral, Soccer: Track: Cross Country: Chess Club. 234 LAWRENCE EDWARD WOOD-Phi Kappa Psi, President: Freshman Hall Counselor: Interfraternity Council: ROTC: Intramurals: Delta Mu Delta, President. HARVEY MERRIMAN WOODINC- Chorale: Ski Club: Varsity Basketball Man- ager: Varsity Baseball Manager. CAROL ANN WRIGHT-Alpha Chi Omega: Outer Ripple: Synchronettes: Mortar Board: Phi Alpha Theta. IOHN STEVEN XANTHOPOULOS- Lambda Chi Alpha. ANN TROWBRIDGE YONKER-Alpha Phi: Cap and Dagger: Buclmellian: Senate En- forcement Committee: Theta Alpha Phi. ANN VIRGINIA YORK-Challenge: Com- mittee for the Free University: Fireside Committee: Band: Mortar Board: Phi Sigma Tau: Alpha Lambda Delta. CATHERINE E. YOUNG-Delta Zeta. DONALD IRA YURDIN-Kappa Sigma: Resident Hall Counselor: Theta Alpha Phi. STEPHEN P. ZARLINSKI-Varsity Football. LORRAINE PAULA ZELINSKI-University Chorale: I.V.C.F.: Tennis Club. ELLIOT ZULVER-Kap p a Delta Rho: A.S.C.E.: Intramurals. ,. 'uv' , , 41. Q ,, W . , A , I , W 4 H115- NT-1 . ,vu -. .X It :H -View if ,, . ,-,fa A' ' Ac' , ',,. . - M 'f 4 E - ' 5 ' n.-, NN -fa.-.'1S. I 11-WL , W2 ,,. -w f A 1, M A Ep 5 p H I I ERT TISING! ADV ER SING! ADV ADVERTI I TISING ER NG! ADV ISINGXADVERTISI VERT AD ! TISING! ADVERTISING ER ISING! ADV DVERT A The BUCKNELL UNIVERSITY RING THE BUCKNELL UNIVER5 TY RING A BUCKNELL RING will be one of your most cherished possessions Something you will wear with pride all your life. Men's W0men's For complete details write to the BUCKNELL UNIVERSITY BGCDKSTCJRE Carnegie Building Lewisburg, Pa. 17837 236 6 .sv 1 BERTONVS A 7 HAIR . v a FAsHloNs Q CALL FOR APPOINTMENTS 47 N. 3rd St. Phone 524-5711 Lewisburg, Pa. LEWISBURG TRUST and SAFE DEPOSIT COMPANY Complete Banking and Trust Services Member of F. D. LIC. Corner Third and Market Streets LEWISB unc, PA. Dependable Service Since 1923 BELER 523-1188 Lewisburg PETROLEUM Mobil PRODUCTS OIL HEAT INSTALLATION 24-hr. Emergency Service Edwin D. Mensch Agency Lewisburg, Pennsylvania Real Estate Insurance 'A' F orzy-one Years of Service BECHTEIJS DAIRY and RESTAURANT LEWISBURG, PA. Lewisburg Auto Supply, Inc. Pontiac - Tempest G T O G M Parts -ACCESSORIES- Route 1 5-Lewisburg Phone: 523-1266 237 t 'o , . oollanv serving the wonderful Lewisburg-Buffalo Valley Area since 191 I 22-28 North Third Street Dial 524-2231 Lewisburg, Penna. COMPLIMENTS OF FOSS JEWELERS Orange Blossom 84 Keepsake Diamonds Watch Repairing and Engraving 429 Market St. 524-9886 THE SPOT DRIVE-IN Tasty F oodi' Snacks to Steaks Compliments of LAWSON,S SHOE STORE Take Out Orders Featuring Open Till 1:00 A.M. College Fashions Rt. 15-5 Minutes North of Campus 223 Market St. LEWISBURC, PA COLE'S HARDWARE -PHONE 523-1284 - HARDWARE 0 PAINT mum survues -etecmcm. surrues - nrcnsnwns auutomo a. Ptumamc surrues 230 MARKET ST. Q LEWISBURG, PA. LEWISBURG INN LEWISBURC, PA. Luncheon 12:00 to 2:00 Dinner 5:30 to 8:00 Sunday Dinner 12:00 to 2:30 Only Closed Mondays 101 Market Street Telephone 524-9227 Overnight Guests Accommodated Air Conditioned - Rooms with Bath LEVINSON'S Men's and Boy's Clothing 408 Market St. Lewisburg, Pa. Botany SOO Clothing Gant Shirts Farah Pants REED'S DRY CLEANERS 8a LAUNDRY, INC. 6th and St. Louis Streets Reliable Dry Cleaning, Laundry and Repair Service 238 THE LEWISBURGER ATTENTION ALUMNI HOTEL MOTEL Helen G. Lyons Gift Shop A TRADITION AT BUCKNELL 335 Marketstreet LEWISBURG, PA. BERT D. HENRY AGENCY Realtor-Insurer 246 N. Derr Drive Lewisburg, Penna. Office-523-9353-Residence Compliments of WOLF,S JEWELRY Watches by BULOVA, WYLER, ACCUTRON DIAMONDS Watch and jewelry Repair 336 Market Street Lewisburg, Pa Phone 524-9244 The Lewisburg National Bank For Complete Printing Services The Bank Withthe Parking Lot and Drive-in Window o C I t B k'n H5 Se?J?CiffZ,,71'2Laif I - 'WW 115 Years , '!:azgfgff2ffAw25P? sein ,. U, 'Y lmlllyvlylx LH ' 151, 2 QV Smartly Tailored Fashions and Accessories - THE - - - - ' Y .- C d - Al Qfnlnmal lgrmtmg Qnmae 'mglf oe umm 101 NORTH THIRD STREET LEWISHURG, PENNSYLVANIA Phone 523-0702 'Me .Jenna LEWISBURC, PA. 1882 87th ANNIVERSARY 1969 FOCHT PRINTING CO. Commercial Printing GRENOBI.E'S UNIVERSITY .IEWELER LEWISBURG, PENNA. The Finest Jewelry That Money Can Buy 229 Market Street LEWISBURG Watches 524-0420 Diamonds and Silverware Arthur Miller Brown Focht '28 524-8713 Owner 8: Manager Ass't Manager J 'FTD MARTIN'S FLOWERS . . .atradition 518 Market St. Serving Bucknellians Since 1884 REA and DERICK, INC. DRUGS AND COSMETICS 326 MARKET ST. LEWISBURG, PA COMPLIMENTS OF FOODTOWN MARKET 225 MARKET ST. LEWISBURG, PA. COMPLIMENTS OF Hninn Glnuntg Elnurnal 3016 H5 TRADE 77 AND 4 QXYXA '90 00 FTIARK ' x'-V' ' -0 is 400fFT-LEWISBURG? COMPLETE PLUMBING HEATING AIR CONDITIONING SERVICES .7A2 mdfgafetg CSZOPIQQ 412 Market St. Lewisburg, Penmz. Millinery, Jewelry, Gifts and Antiques Established 1906 240 KEN WILLIAMSON WILLIAMSPORT, PA. COCA-COLA CANDY CUPBOARD Confection and Supplies COMPLIMENTS OF MONTGOMERY WARD SUNBURY, PENNSYLVANIA Sunbury Plaza - No. Fourth St. - 286-7151 BOB HESS and SON MEAT and FROZEN FOOD WINFIELD, PA. Compliments of Campbell Brothers Paper Company 82 N. Eighth St. Sunbury, Pa MILTON MANUFACTURING CO. MILTON, PA. COMPLIMENTS OF WILLIAMSPORT PAPER COMPANY Compliments of Williamsport Mirror 8rGIass Co. 317 Railway St. Williamsport, Penna. Compliments of BEST FURNITURE Institutional Carpet GOLDEN ARROW MOTEL and RESTAURANT 30 Units For Reservations Call 743-1611 Selinsgrove, Pa. R.R. 2 .I E . ....' ... ...rs 1355- A :'IBeav9rfQsvn-e..- - fffeIf:1il.0f1s.C0-'ltisaf J-xLgg:,.. . . u ul., 4 M.. Where Customers Send Their Friends MIDDLEBURG RD. qI:f:1 PENNSYLVANIA Phone: 717 - 837-1744 717 - 837-6581 Compliments of PAR KNIT MILLS, INC. Mmnburgypat STROEHMANN BROS. co. Bakers of SUNBEAM BREAD Abbotts Doiries home of w ww DE LU-XE ICE CREAM STANSFIELD - HULSE 5 East Main Street P. O. Box 230 Mechanicsburg, Pa. 17055 Phone: C7173 766-7621 INSURANCE REAL ESTATE srnusnnu nuts: snnsrmn uuLsz Assacmrss mc mconronnrsu 242 BURPEE SEED AND NURSERY F0fFIneF00dS CATALOG FREE Everything for the Garden The Burpee Seed and Nursery Catalog with 148 pages, over 600 photos, 206 in natural color, is Amer- ica's most widely used garden book. In it is the finest selection of tlower and vegetable seeds, including the many exclusive Hybrids sold only by Burpee. Also roses, evergreens, flowering shrubs and trees, fruit trees, berries, grapes, nuts, house plants, garden aids. Write for your free copy now. And ask for Burpee's Fall Bulb and Nursery Catalog which will be mailed this summer to give you ample time to order Holland Bulbs and other fall planting needs. W. Atlee Burpee Co. Hunting Park Ave. at 18th St., Philadelphia, Pa. 19132 Burpee Seeds Grow At Popular Prices THE LYCOMING HOTEL AND MOTOR LODGE Central Air Conditioning - T.V. 210 Hotel Rooms 50 Motor Lodge Rooms Williamsport, Pa. Phone 326-5181 THE LYCOMING MOTEL East Third Street Williamsport, Pa. 46 Rooms - Guest Controlled Heat and Air Conditioning Phone 326-1501 John T. N icolosi Vice President and General Manager EDWARD VANTINE STUDIOS, INC. Originators of Fraternity Composite Service - Since 1937 - IT'S COMPOSITE TIME, THINK OF VANTINE CENTRAL BUILDERS SUPPLY COMPANY Transit Mixed Concrete 84 Concrete Block Lewisburg 524-9147 New Columbia 568-6712 Sunbury 286-6461 Compliments of J. C. EHRLICH COMPANY, INC. 21 North 2nd St. Sunbury, Pa. Phone: 286-1291 Exterminating Pest Control Janitorial Supplies 43 COMPLIMENTS OF E' K' JOHNSON RITTER BROS INC ASSOCIATES, INC. ' General Contractors Contract Builders Hardware P. O. Box 1577 1511 N. Cameron Street 42 First St. HARRISBURG, PA. 17105 Hackensack, NJ. Y IIILII IDIXII IIIXWI RI IIIIHX I IGIIIIIII EKITSIRIC IIUX AMERICAN HOME FOODS Established I9I0 CHEF BOY-AR-DEE PLANT SIIIIIIIINI Mumpa, GUIISTIIIIGTIUII COMPANY GENERAL CONTRACTOR FORTY FORT wluuas-BARRE, PA. 244 Merif Laundry 8m Drycleaning Co Mary MacIntosh Services Serving Schools in Pennsylvania and Florida H 81 C SALES 81 MFG. C0. Food Service Equipment Route 11 Bloomsburg, Pa. 1-717-784-2755 245 WILLIAM W. DAVIS painfing . . . ecorafing fwfcouering . . . iqnofeclfiue Q6LfI:lfLg6 WILKES-BARRE, PENNSYLVANIA Congratulations MIDDLECREEK PAVING INC. PAVING CONTRACTORS RESURFACING BLACK TOP DRIVES PARKING LOTS ROADWAYS ASPHALT MATERIALS WINFIELD TELEPHONE KLEWISBURGJ 523-1193 ELIZABETHVILLE 362-8596 MILROY CNAGINEY PLANTD REEDSVILLE 667-2015 246 JACK WILKINSON 1 18 NORTH ALLEGHENY STREET BELLEFONTE, PENNSYLVANIA PHONE 814 - 355-2622 I N T ERIO RS COMMERCIAL, INSTITUTIONAL, RESIDENTIAL CARPETING, FURNITURE AND DRAPERIES 247 HAROLD E. PRAY INVESTIVIENT SECURITIES 234 Market St. Lewisburg. Pa. WE OFFER: 9 Tax-Free Municipal Authority Bonds 0 Mutual Funds 9 Over-the-Counter Securities 9 New York Stock Exchange Ticker Service OFFICE HOURS 9 A. M. to 5 P. M. Daily TELEPHONE 9 A. M. to 12 Noon Sat. 523-7561 COMPLIMENTS OF Kappa Sigma I9 69 Bucknell Ulniuersiig ALPHA PHI CHAPTER Cogniaj Ciwf MOTEL - RESTAURANT Visit Our New Cocktail Lounge BANQUET FACILITIES U.S. Rt. 15-WML South of Lewisburg Motel-523-1106 Restaurant-524-0653 BROZMAN'S I 'of Lewisburg Correct Fashions For the Fashion-minded Young Women . . . You are invited to 18 65 1969 visit Brozman's for all your fashion needs. THE UNION NATIONAL BANK OF LEW ISBURG Weber L. Gerhart, Jr. '19 President Williamsport Store: Mrs' Edna M. Sheary 349 Pine Street Cashier 2 DELTA ZETA 4 of -Q f . Lambda Ch1 Q Alpha Compliments of Demosthenean Chapter DELTA UPSILON PENNSYLVANIA u KAPPA N . XN W! f Sigma W Q ff-1, 533 Epsilon In W Compliments of KAPPA DELTA RHO sf W2 'SM fy 'ff 2 4' ' -A .1 me ,tg ' l.1' D 1g?y X A 3 ,P .'. Q NF' f. sg gn ', ' Le Roy Roofing Company 4l+ a D ry s fi H b P Reish Brothers, Inc. GE APPLIANCES RCA 434 Market Street Lewxsburg, Pennsylvama Phone 523-1196 Ugafa mafia Qlflaifon Ugaigs 2 fx' 'ff mrs: R J 249 QUALITY COLOR EDDI G , A the , wif, . fav' -:'f2iti,':if'4 P' SL I A, V -A ' l '4- 1 I , W I L? I I I I I I Leave your wedding worries to us. I . I -' yyy D Relax and enjoy your wedding with it I iii KOCHER'S Experienced Wedding Specialists KUCHER V - PHOTO SERVICE , T . . , . - -x s 'W7' , , if ' K ssrss 'MC-.ff 505 Cemetery Street Williams ort, Pa. P Phone 717-323-I I67 COLOR PH OTOGRAPHY - ADVERTISING BRO CHURES AERIALS - INDUSTRIAL - ALL TYPES COMME OFFICIAL L'AGENDA PHOTOGRAPHE 250 RCIAL R Best Wishes to the Class of ,69 From BEST WISHES Tau Chapter TO THE of CLASS OF 1969 Qi .wz.l 354w- 1 ,aaa Kappa Delia DELTA DELTA DELTA ALPHA CHI OMEGA Congratulates The Class of 1969 - . . . f Compliments of DELTA CHAPTER PHI GAMMA DELTA Say It With Flowers STElN'S FLOWER SHOP FLOWERS FOR EVERY OCCASION 220 Market St. 524-9933 Compliments of Gamma Eta Chapter Eh A ll Gigi i ,' M . iii,-:' Compliments of PHI MU SORORITY Compliments of BLUE Q 419 Market St. Lewisburg Jack McMickle Proprietor Compliments of SIGMA CHI nan S2 Q COMPLIMENTS V or me O DELTA ZETA gh SORORITY I I X' ,mx BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF 1969 ag fu vhs -KHPPH' t ZPMM- L 45 W F 01 J za. .34 , I sie Compliments of THE BUSINESS STAFF OF THE 1969 UAGENDA Compliments of BASTIAN TIRE SALES INC. Rte. 11 84 15 Shamokin Dam, Pa. Phone 743-1571 YOUR DEALER X B.EGoodrich f 2 EDITORS-IN-CHIEF ASSISTANT EDITORS PHOTOGRAPHERS ACTIVITIES EDITOR Staff FACULTY EDITORS Staff GREEK EDITOR Staff LITERARY EDITOR Staff L'AGENDA STAFF Glen Maynard Ann Morrison Dick Hartmann Beverly Sackrin Bill Bennett Andy Dicker Eric Iones Ron Karr Mark Mallett Paul Wainwright Barbara Werner Betsy Bullivant Tammy Campbell Pam Craumer Sally Henderson Leslie Kayfetz lim Rini Karen Seddon Sue Uber Barbara Bachorik Nancy Livengood Anne Beaujard Iune Conger Betty Lynn Fluck Ioanne Kollar Nina Limperos Diana Moore Cindy Pawulich Donna Richards Mary Sheriff Nancy Wedler Peggy Iames Merry Chesley Alice Fleming Gayle Garrabrandt Laurie Hughes Alison Kinny Monica Lewis Vicki Matusoff Connie Phillips Lynn Ragsdale Mindy Scott Liz Shelley Betsy Speicher Bonnie Spring Linda Faltings Doreen Bolger Betsy Bullivant SENIOR EDITOR Staff SPORTS EDITOR Stuff BUSINESS MANAGER Assistant Iune Conger Dorothy Fries Sally Henderson Karen Krause Susan Martell lane Murphy Ingrid Ottoson Mary Sheriff Diane Summers Susan Veerling Ian Ekman Marilyn Cox Polly Eckel Iudy Hanson Carol Henry Liz Hyde Lynda Love Iane Millard Wendy Palmeter Nancy Ross Linda Taylor Richie Robbins lack France Hank Scott Charlie Pollack Peggy Brzeskiewicz Lynn Handenshield Kit Hooker Nancy Koelsch Beth MacFarlane Diane Moore Kathy Ward Veda Ward Iock Willers ADVISOR Brad Tufts PUBLISHER Wm. I. Keller Inc. Buffalo, New York KELLER CONSULTANT Dave Tan DESIGNER Roy Tigen PROFESSIONAL PHOTOGRAPHERS Herb Comess Ioe Crilley Burr Lewis SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER Kocher Photo Service Williamsport, Pennsylvania INDEX Admissions-29 Advertisements-235-252 Alpha Alpha Chi Omega-86 Phi-87 Alumni-28 American Chemical Society-166 American American American Art-146 Arts and Sciences-145 Assistant Deans-29 Assistants-Planning and Development-29 Association of Computer Machinery-110 Astronomy-155 Band-42-43 Baseball-188-189 Basketball-118-121 Biology-1475 Phi Sigma-170 Bucknell Engineer-110 Bucknellian-108-109 Business Administration-313 Delta Mu Delta-34 Candids: Fall-4-Z3 Spring-126-144 Winter-52-72 Cap and Dagger-38-395 Theta Alpha Phi-173 Challenge-174 Chapel Choir-111 Chaplain-30 Cheerleaders-44 Chemical Engineering--74 Chemistry-1485 Alpha Chi Sigma-166 Chorale-112 Civil Engineering-74 Classics-149 Concern Through Action-30, 35 Counseling-29 Dance Club-113 Deans-27 Debate Society-175 Delta Delta Delta-88 Delta Upsilon-94 Delta Zeta-89 Economics-33: Omicron Delta Epsilon Education-1495 Kappa Delta Pi-168 Electrical Engineering-75 Engineering-735 Tau Beta Pi-76 English-150 Food Service-30 Football-44-49 French-1515 Pi Delta Phi-171 Freshmen Class Officers-79 Geography-152 Geology-152 German-1535 Delta Phi Alpha-167 Golf-184-185 History-1549 Phi Alpha Theta-169 Hockey-114-115 Independent Councils-84 Institute of Electrical and Electronics E Inter-Fraternity Council-85 International Club-35 Iunior Kappa Kappa Kappa Kappa Class Officers-79 Delta-90 Delta Rho-95 Kappa Gamma-91 Sigma-96 Lacrosse-186-187 Institute of Chemical Engineers-77 Society of Civil Engineers-77 Society of Mechanical Engineers-78 -34 ngineers-78 4 L'Agenda-176-177 Lambda Chi Alpha--97 Library Staff-30 Mathematics-1555 Pi Mu Epsilon-171 Mechanical Engineering-76 Men's Coordinating Council-83 Men's Freshmen Council-37 Men's judicial Board-83 Men's Upperclass Council-37 Mortar Board-168 Music-1565 Mu Phi Epsilon-168 Omicron Delta Kappa-169 Orchestra-178 Outer Ripple-175 Outing Club-181 Panhellenic Council-85 Phi Beta Kappa-169 Phi Gamma Delta-98 Pi Kappa Psi-99 Phi Lambda Theta-100 Phi Mu-93 Philosophy-1573 Phi Sigma Tau-170 Physical Education: Men-165 Women-165 Physical Plant-30 Physics-1583 Sigma Pi Sigma-173 Pi Beta Phi-92 Placement-30 Political Science-1595 Pi Sigma Alpha-171 Psychology-1603 Psi Chi-172 President Charles H. Watts-24-25 Public Relations-28 Purchasing-29 Registrar-28 Religion-161 R.O.T.C.-162 R.O.T.C. Honor Guard-172 Russian-161 Sailing Club-180 Senate-82 Seniors-193-227 Senior Activities-228-234 Sigma Alpha Epsilon-101 Sigma Alpha Mu-102 Sigma Chi-103 Sigma Phi Epsilon-104 Ski Club-113 Sky Divers-180 Soccer-50-51 Sociology-163 Sophomore Class Officers-79 Spanish-1649 Sigma Delta Pi-172 Student Faculty Congress-B0-B1 Student Forum-111, 174 Swimming-122-123 Synchronettes-179 Tau Kappa Epsilon-105 Tennis-182-183 Theta Chi-106 Theta Delta Chi-107 Track-190-192 Treasury-28 Tristram-41 University Store-29 Vice Presidents-26 Women's Freshmen Counselors-36 Women's Iudicial Board-82 Wrestling-116-117 WVBU-40 4 . .e . . if ' 7 4 ' .,-z- ' - In '. ' ' - - .f .' h, 1 sf , ,uf '04 . ' -4:,2.iTf-,, 1 , . . wt, N, V .n 1' -I Q ' ' . ' af ' -1 Y. ', 1 .. ' J 1--.1 1 . QQ' My -if ,Q -1 I ,Mgr -7 u- 1 if ' - u-' A- , , '- p - . 1, I, H N1 l -A. . Q, 11 E, . ,dx-sffrffjgv , 1-,ss-v V I , ' .Lg ' h 14, - ' .M 2 ' ' . n 'Q Q, 331 a J hi nv. P. -, . Y v J? Q' KJ . ' '73 U- K A A jjf K E ,J rw ,an '13, - , - 1 -,. ' I1-v-'-qgwl 5 'fagj -, 1' H 'rJ 'f. Vu, U ' ra? 1 f. -4 . ' f k 'tv-'-' . . , 4 ... , ., f , A, ...H .U ., .MQ 4.9 .5 .- ., 5 t- ' A If v Q M41':ur' . 'fir s' w sq. JK ' N M593 'FII Wig' . ,li 9' ' 'H 9 t :L - we ' -'T ' 1 . ,, f s ,, fr ,N I its--V '1C?' o W4 , .gi ' .Axw A The 1969 L'Agendu published by the students of Bucknell University has been produced in a quantity of 2300 copies. This edition has been printed by Wm. I. Keller Inc. of Buffalo, New York, and bound by Riverside Book Bindery of Rochester, New York. The covers were by the Durand Manufacturing Co. of Chicago, Illinois. The official photographer was Kocher Photo Service of Williamsport, Pa., with available-light photography augmented by Herbert Comess, Chicago, Illinois, and Ioseph Crilley, New Hope, Pa. The work of Mr. Comess and Mr. Crilley was processed by Hoffman Labs of New York City. The paper used is 80 lb. Velva Dull produced by Consolidated Papers, Inc. and printed in char- coal black ink. The melior type face used was designed by Hermann Zapf and produced by the Kemphel Foundry, Zurich, Switzerland. L--ef. The 1969 I..'Agenda published by the students of Bucknell University has been produced in a quantity of 2300 copies. This edition has been printed by Wm. I. Keller Inc. of Buffalo, New York, and bound by Riverside Book Bindery of Rochester, New York. The covers were by the Durand Manufacturing Co. of Chicago, Illinois. The official photographer was Kocher Photo Service of Williamsport, Pa., with available-light photography augmented by Herbert Comess, Chicago, Illinois, and Ioseph Crilley, New Hope, Pa. The work of Mr. Comess and Mr. Crilley was processed by Hoffman Labs of New York City. The paper used is 80 lb. Velva Dull produced by Consolidated Papers, Inc. and printed in char- coal black ink. The melior type face used was designed by Hermann Zapf and produced by the Kernphel Foundry, Zurich, Switzerland. r This book printed by VELVATONE, a special process of litho- 256 graphic printing. Sole producers: Wm. J. Keller Inc., Buffalo, N. Y. L Na other priming frm is authorized to use the Velvatone method. li ?.J w i w w w w 'u w w w i 1 3 w N v W NN W A R 4 X 1 Y Y Y , , , w N 4 5 , , Y , Y Y Y Y Wx ,z X , , Y yw lx I . I , X 1 A wj ' , , , W 1 W! W M X x Y 1 I Y Nl Y N Wm , , w Y Y 4 Nl' 1,


Suggestions in the Bucknell University - L Agenda Yearbook (Lewisburg, PA) collection:

Bucknell University - L Agenda Yearbook (Lewisburg, PA) online collection, 1960 Edition, Page 1

1960

Bucknell University - L Agenda Yearbook (Lewisburg, PA) online collection, 1961 Edition, Page 1

1961

Bucknell University - L Agenda Yearbook (Lewisburg, PA) online collection, 1962 Edition, Page 1

1962

Bucknell University - L Agenda Yearbook (Lewisburg, PA) online collection, 1963 Edition, Page 1

1963

Bucknell University - L Agenda Yearbook (Lewisburg, PA) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

1965

Bucknell University - L Agenda Yearbook (Lewisburg, PA) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 1

1970


Searching for more yearbooks in Pennsylvania?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online Pennsylvania 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.