Clarkson University - Clarksonian Yearbook (Potsdam, NY)
- Class of 1972
Page 1 of 289
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 289 of the 1972 volume:
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Charles W. Eaton Director 1896-1897 It was in September of 1894 that the people of Pots- dam first began to hear talk of a new school to be built in Potsdam. The tragic death of Thomas S. Clark- son in August of that year spurred his three sisters, Elizabeth, Frederica, and Lavinia to put into realistic and living form the cherished ideas of their brother: to build a school to aid young men and women who show a desire to aid themselves. An institute of tech- nology was contemplated as a living memorial to their brother. Plans for the building were submitted by Ar- chitect Edgar A. Josselyn of New York and in June, 1895, ground was broken and the building began to take shape. Charles W. Eaton, a professor at Pratt In- stitute in Brooklyn was given the position of Director of the Thomas S. Clarkson Memorial School of Tech- nology. His duties were to take charge of the erection of the school building, and to provide for the equip- ment and organization of the school until it was fully opened. On March 19, 1896, the board of Regents granted a charter for the school and on September 2, the doors opened for 5 young men in the prep class, 8 men in the freshman class and 4 women in domestic science. 2 There were six courses of instruction: electrical engi- neering, domestic science, and four types of mechanics arts and manual training. Only the E.E. course led to a four year degree. November 30, 1896, Thomas S. Clarkson's birthday, was chosen as an appropriate time for the formal opening and dedication of the school. Pictured is J. R. Weston's after a fire in 1890. The entire structure was later tom down and the build- ings as we know them today were built. The old Currier-Freeman building to the far right is presently the Dew Drop. The fire pictured took place in 1896 on the East side of Market Street. These buildings were later tom down and replaced by the Arlington Inn. 3 Burton Cruikshank Director 1897-1901 In 1897, Burton Cruikshank succeeded Charles Ea- ton as director of the school. Tuition was $80 a year for engineering this year. The day began for all officers and students in the assembly hall on the third floor of the school building. All were expected to attend daily chapel here at 8:45 a.m. The curriculum was beginning to expand as Mechanical Engineering was included this year. In June of 1898, Clarkson awarded the first three certificates for its two-year course in Home Economics, and added a four-year course in Civil Engineering. That fall Clarkson's football team was organized to represent “the tech by George Stebbins, captain the two following years. At the commencement of June 22, 1900, Clarkson awarded its first four Bachelor of Science degrees, one in Mechanical Engineering and three in Electrical Engi- neering. Two months earlier, the trustees adopted the original school seal (the steam engine) and the Clark- son Athletic Association was founded by the students in October of that year. 4 The original Clarkson School Seal as adopted by the Board of Trustees in April, 1900. Above is the Mechanical Engineering lab in Old Main. The Physical Lab The Chemical Lab The Testing Materials Lab William S. Aldrich Director 1901-1911 The second prize of a song contest during Clark- son's decenial celebration later became the school's Alma Mater. In June of 1901, Clarkson awarded its first BS de- gree in Civil Engineering. William S. Aldrich became the new school Director in August. That fall's enroll- ment was up to 70 students: 64 in Engineering, and 6 in Home Science. The school was growing. Tuition was soon raised from $80 to $100 a year, and in No- vember of 1903, Omicron Pi Omicron, Clarkson's first Social Fraternity was organized and moved into 53 Elm Street. Clarkson students will remember 1904 as the year New York State passed its first speed limit law: 20 mph in open country, 15 mph in villages, and 10 mph in built-up areas. Clarkson's first degree in Chemical Engineering was awarded in the Spring of that year. The organization of Delta Sigma Fraternity and the Clarkson Tech Alumni Association were also part of the highlights of that year. 1906 marked 10 years of Clarkson's existence. The school's decennial celebration took place at the Charter Day exercises of March 19 in the lavishly decorated third floor of the school building. In October, Clarkson began preparing plans for a new gymnasium. Its esti- mated cost was $10,000. In a November celebration, in what was then frequently referred to as Chapel Hall, the Clarkson Banner was unfurled, and in the follow- ing decennial song contest, the second prize song con- stituted part of today's Alma Mater. Miss Lavinia Clarkson soon announced that she would pledge $5,000 for the new gymnasium if the balance was raised by the school. The site was chosen on a lot fac- ing Pierrepont Avenue. The close of the school year in 1907 brought an end to the courses in Home Econom- ics, with no more co-eds until 1964. Celestial fires burn on thy hearth, Clarkson Tech, Dear Clarkson, Thy fame is spreading o'er the earth, Clarkson Tech, Dear Clarkson. Thy banner, green and gold afar, Like some late risen shining star. Is borne in triumph's golden car, Clarkson Tech, Dear Clarkson. Thy words of wisdom in our hearts, Clarkson Tech, Dear Clarkson, Engender love for peaceful arts, Clarkson Tech, Dear Clarkson. Alumni from rich seed once sown. Sing thy sweet praise in joyous tone, And by their deeds thy worth is known, Clarkson Tech, Dear Clarkson. The spirit that pervades thy hall, Clarkson Tech, Dear Clarkson, To noble living moves us all, Clarkson Tech, Dear Clarkson. With honor, duty as they call. No fear be thine what'er befall. Thy teachings men of power enthrall, Clarkson Tech, Dear Clarkson. 6 Pictured are the interior and exterior of the Qark- son Gymnasium. The idea of a gym was first con- ceived in October of 1906, and construction was completed in the spring of 1912, at a cost of $20,000, one fourth of which was donated by Miss Lavinia Clarkson. With the completion of the new Alumni Gym on the hill, the downtown gym was converted into the Harriet Call Burnap Library in the spring of 1956. 7 John Pascal Brooks Director 1911-1913 President 1913-1928, 1932-1933 At the commencement exercise in June 1911, John R. Brooks was announced as the new Director of the school, as Director Aldrich was retiring after ten years of dedicated service. In the spring of 1912, the gymna- sium was completed at a cost of $20,000 and physical education became required of students in the fall. The curriculum required 18 credit hours each term with three semesters of French or German and shops in woodworking, forging, machine work and surveying. All degrees up to this time were designated as a B.S. from the State University of the State of New York. On September 25, 1913, the school charter was amended changing the name from School to College, and authorizing the college to grant its own degrees. Mr. Brooks' title was also changed from that of Director to President. In March, the Trustees adapted a new school seal which is used up to this day. In 1916, Clarkson awarded its first Master of Science degree. With the advent of World War I, students as well as alumni were joining the armed forces. Clarkson promptly responded to the call for vocational training for enlisted men, setting up two month courses for auto mechanics, electricians, carpenters, blacksmiths, machinists and gas engineers. Each contingent num- bered up to 200. The soldiers were fed at the Arling- ton Hotel and used the college gymnasium and two floors of the Arlington for barracks. In 1919, construc- tion of the Normal School, (which would later become Clarkson's Snell Hall,) was completed, and the first is- sue of the Integrator was printed though it was not named until early in 1920 after a name contest. In the fall of 1919, the school's enrollment totaled 148 and tuition was increased from $100 to $150. Be- hind the main building, a new structure was completed which served as a foundry. In October, Lambda Iota Fraternity was founded, and on December 2, the Clarkson Tech Alumni Association was incorporated. In addition to the tank and cane rush, tugs of war were held across the Racquette. Some bouts lasted up to 54 minutes. In the fall a skating rink was built by some of the Clarkson men. The January 1921 In- tegrator reported, There is contemplation of a hockey team at Tech. Nineteen-twenty-one was the scene of much excitement about buying the entire Clarkson es- tate and moving the entire campus up on the hill and selling the town buildings to the State Normal. At one point it was even considered to move Old Main up on the hill. At the 1922 Alumni dinner, a new athletic field was proposed and was later brought into actuality when Miss Annie Clarkson donated the land West of Hol- croft for this purpose. In 1923, Joe E. Bushey was heard from in the pages of The Integrator. He appeared to be an astute, illiterate, rambling wreck from Canada in the class of 1926. In the fall, the students petitioned the Trustees for a week off to work on grading the new athletic field. It was granted, and in a week's work they moved 3300 8 cubic yards of soil, but the field would not be com- pleted for four more years. In 1924 the department of Business Administration and a course in General Science was initiated and the Clarksonian, the college yearbook, made its first ap- pearance. The fall of this year included another week of work on the athletic field. Four-thousand cubic yards of soil was moved while grading and installing drainage ditches under the supervision of the Civil En- gineers. Everyone was involved or else! The spring of 1925 saw the formation of the Cum Laude Society with the hope of eventually securing a national honorary like Tau Beta Pi, and another week in the fall was set aside for work on the athletic field. The Football schedule showed games with Alfred, Col- gate, Vermont, Buffalo, Hobart, RPI, Rochester, and St. Lawrence. It was a big day indeed when Clarkson's slide rule eleven met the tea sippers of St. Lawrence. Dreams of building the new Clarkson on the hill were made possible when in June of 1927, Miss Annie Clarkson donated to the college the entire Clarkson es- tate of 600 acres. In addition, a gift of $40,000 was re- ceived from Mr. and Mrs. Bertrand H. Snell to com- plete the athletic field and build the grandstand and dressing rooms. The athletic field was finished and dedicated as Snell Field at a game in which Clarkson beat RPI by a score of 7-0. In 1928, Clarkson granted its first degree in Business Administration, and it was that year that the Green Griffon, Clarkson's humor magazine, was born. It con- tinued to be published until 1937. EMINENT ALUMNI Scattered throughout the remainder of this section are pictures of Clarkson graduates who made their way to the top in their field. They were selected at random from a list of hundreds of eligibles and represent visual proof of Clarkson's success in edu- cating those who have a desire to aid themselves. ■H. HARRY K. COLLINS Class of '26 Real Estate and Property Manager of Parker, Towle Thompson Co. of Pasadena, California (re- tired) BERT1L A. LYBECK Class of '25, B.Sc., C.E. Presently President of B.A. Ly- beck, Inc. of New York City. This is a plan of the proposed athletic field as it appeared in the 1926-27 Clarksonian. The idea of an athletic field was first proposed in 1922 and it became feasible when Miss Annie Clarkson later donated the land west of Holcroft for this purpose. For the next four years Clarkson students donated one week of their academic year to manually grade and install drainage on the field. To the far right, a main ditch is being dug into which fourteen lateral pipes dump from either side. Below, boulders from surrounding stone walls are being used to fill low portions of the field. 9 L ----S. I1 Joseph Eugene Rowe President 1928-1932 In the fall of 1928, Joseph E. Rowe became the new president of Clarkson, as Dr. Brooks became president emeritus. In March, two Clarkson hockey players were chosen for the All-American team: Freddy Dion and Buzz Williams and the Phalanx society was formed. Tuition was now up to $250 a year. Term grades of the time were reported in letters H, C, P, D, F (take re- exam) and FF. In April of 1930, the Integrator gave the results of a poll on prohibition: Favoring present pro- hibition 13, strict enforcement 52, modification of present laws 133, repeal 63. The June graduating class included Charles Clarridge a student who later joined the Clarkson Civil Engineering faculty and is still an active member of the staff. The Chemistry department was installed in the fall of that year. It is at this time that tentative plans for the Clarkson hill campus were revealed. At the end of 1931, work had begun on a permanent uncovered hockey rink on the site of the present arena. In June of 1932, the former President Brooks re- turned as acting President of Clarkson as President Rowe left. Among the graduates of the 1933 Com- mencement was Frederick A. Ramsdell who became registrar in 1934 and is presently director of Place- ment. Pictured below are the store fronts on the West of Market Street as they existed in the late twenties. The picture on the right is Market Street looking South towards the river. bn: 10 EMINENT ALUMNI EDMUND H. FALLON Class of '31, B.5.M.E. Presently Chief Administrative Officer of Agway, Inc. of Syracuse, New York and member of Clark- son Board of Trustees. GERRIT D. FREMOUW Class of '31, B.S.C.E., M.S. Presently Director, Facilities Engi- neering and Construction Agency, Department of Health, Education and Welfare, Washington, D.C. ROBERT N. WAGNER Class of '31, B.S.E.E. Presently Vice President, Engi- neering, Aluminum Company of America, Pittsburg, Pennsylvania. RICHARD N. PARKS Class of '32, B.S.M.E. Presently Senior Vice President of Shulton, Inc., and President of Jacqueline Cochran, Inc. of New York City. WALTER E. VROMAN Class of '32, A.B. Civil Engineer Presently Vice President and Gen- eral Manager of Big Rock Stone and Material Company of Little Rock, Arkansas. CHARLES E. CLARRIDGE Class of 1930 Presently a professor of Civil En- gineering at Clarkson College. FREDERICK A. RAMSDELL Class of 1933 Presently Director of Placement at Clarkson College. 11 John Shelby Thomas President 1934-1940 The Arlington Inn as it appeared in the early 1930's. An exterior face lifting had been com- pleted earlier, in which the familiar Potsdam Sand- stone front replaced an older style wood and brick facade. Pictured to the right are king Pinky Ryan and queen Virginia Melius of the 1934 Ice Carnival. At the end of 1933, Dr. John S. Thomas replaced President Brooks as the new President of the college. Romance entered the 1934 Ice Carnival when that year's king, Philip J. Pinky Ryan, later married the Ice Carnival Queen, Virginia Melius. A 1935 graduate, Pinky returned to Clarkson in 1946 and is still on the Phys. Ed. staff. Clarkson's enrollment was con- tinuously falling from a high in 1931 of 420 to 346 in 1934 due to the great depression. In 1936, the trustees were ready to build on the hill as soon as $350,000 had been raised. Woodstock was already being reconditioned for a dormitory. It was also this year that a unit of the Reserve Officers Train- ing Corps was established at Clarkson and was offered as an elective. The 1937 Ice Carnival King was William Fiesinger a student who graduated in June and re- turned to Clarkson in 1960 and is presently Director of Development and Alumni Affairs. The school's colors were proclaimed as green and gold as chosen by the Clarkson sisters because of their brother's fondness of the goldenrod. The hockey rink was enclosed in the summer of 1938, but artificial ice was not installed un- til 1952. The college was presently housed in five buildings: the Main Building; the Administration Building, a house just west of Main which also housed the library on the second and third floors; the gymnasium, which is presently the library; Southerland Hall in back of Main, which housed the Chemical Engineering lab and the maintenance woodworking shop (presently the Chem Annex); and Recitation Hall, a wooden structure east of Main which contained class rooms, offices and a large Civil Engineering Drafting room. The 1937-38 hockey team justly claimed the U.S. Championship with a record of 13-1-1. 12 EMINENT ALUMNI JOSEPH L. FRAIOLI Qass of '35, B.S. in C.E. Presently Consulting Engineer and partner of Fraioli-BIum-Yesselman in New York, N.Y., White Plains, N.Y., Norfolk, Virginia, and Hart- ford, Connecticut. STEPHEN J. TOMPKINS Qass of '37, B.S.M.E. Presently President of Automotive Group, North American Rockwell corporation of Detroit, Michigan. ROBERT L. HOUSTON Qass of '34, B.Sc. in E.E. Presently President of the Canada Japan Trade Council in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. H. CURTIS REED Class of '38, B.A. Presently President of the West Coast Life Insurance Company in San Francisco, California. WILLIAM M. WALTERS Qass of '35, B.S. in C.E. Presently President of the Taylor Instrument Process Control Divi- sion, Sybron Corporation of Rochester, New York. Woodstock as it appeared in the 1920's. In 1936, it was reconditioned as a dormitory and furnished with the help of a $1000 gift from Mrs. Emilie Clarkson Moore. 13 John Alexander Ross President 1940—1947 In June, 1940, John A. Ross, Jr. became the new President of Clarkson. The four tennis courts were built on Snell Field, and Holcroft and Woodstock were opened as dorms with the students doing all the work. The 1941 graduating class contained Donald F. McIntyre who is now Vice President and Treasurer of Clarkson. Tuition was up to $323, the Theta Chapter of Tau Beta Pi was established, and the bronze sculp- ture in front of Old Main was donated by the Presi- dent of the New York Air Brake Co. With growing in- volvement in World War II, Clarkson became involved in the Army Specialized Training Program, accepting contingents of students from June 1941 to the Spring of 1944. The graduating class of 1945 included J. Ron- ald Frazer who is presently Professor of Industrial Management. It was soon announced that the Teachers College was planning to move to a site on Pierrepont Ave. Clarkson was happy to buy their present building and started a campaign to raise $1.1 million to reno- vate and expand what was to become Snell Hall. In October of 1946, the Malone branch opened for Clark- son Freshmen. This seven building site, formerly a state school for the Deaf, was acquired to satisfy the college's need to accommodate the big influx of students expanded by the veterans coming under the G.I. Bill of Rights. Clarkson used the branch until 1951 when freshmen once again came to the Potsdam Campus. The 1947 school enrollment was up to 1,578, one third being in Malone. This was the year of Clarkson's first 2-day heavy snow holiday, the next one not occurring until March 4-5, 1947. Above: The Malone branch opened in 1946 to ac- commodate freshmen since the school's enrollment climbed at this time due to the influx of veterans under the G.I. Bill of Rights. Right: The bronze sculpture located in front of Old Main was donated in 1941 by the President of the New York Air Brake Company. Far right: The Ice Carnival of 1943 took on a theme which reflected the world situation at that time. 14 EMINENT ALUMNI WALTER C. ROSE Class of '41, B.A. Presently Owner and President of the Rose Ready Mix Concrete, Rose Stone Corp and Nat C. Rose Son Construction Corporation of Binghamton, New York. KARL W. GALLIGER Class of '41, B.S.M.E. Presently President of the New York Air Brake Company, A Unit of General Signal Corporation of Watertown, New York. GORDON W. BABCOCK Class of '46, B.S.M.E. Presently Vice President of the Harden Furniture Company of McConnellsville, New York. GEORGE M. CONKLIN Class of '47, B.M.E., M.S. Presently President of M M Mars Company of Hack- ettstown. New Jersey. JAMES R. FLANAGAN Class of '47, B.M.E., M.S.M.E. Presently Director of Propulsion Engineering, Bell Aerospace Com- pany of Buffalo, New York. ROBERT E. CLAUSON Qass of '47, B.M.E. Presently President of Fairco, Inc. of Fairfield, Connecticut. DONALD F. McINTYRE Qass of '41 Presently Vice President and Treasurer of Clarkson College. J. RONALD FRAZER Qass of '45 Presently Professor of I.M. Depart- ments at Clarkson College. 15 Jess Harrison Davis President 1948—1951 Jess Harrison Davis became the new acting President upon the retirement of President Ross in June of 1947. The following year, WNTC began regular radio broad- casts and Peyton Hall was ready for use. Primarily the Chemical Engineering building, it also housed the CE and ME testing labs and the library. Tuition was up to $500 a year. In 1949, Damon Hall was completed and construction of the new gym began on the hill. Soon the term Golden Knights was adopted for the Clark- son athletic teams. Construction of Peyton Hall in the Spring of 1948. The building was ready for occupancy in the fall of that year when it became the temporary home for the C.E. and M.E. testing labs and the Library. Construction of Damon Hall was completed and occupied early in 1950. 16 EMINENT ALUMNI HOWARD E. LECHLER Qass of '48, B.C.E., M.C.E. Presently President of Gves Cor- poration of Syracuse, New York. JOHN R. LINK Class of '51, B.S.M.E., M.B.A. Presently President of Hydreco, A Unit of General Signal Corpo- ration of Kalamazoo, Michigan. Above: A WNTC DJ operating the station's newly acquired equipment. Pictured below is the hockey arena as it appeared in 1951, and an artist's con- ception of the Alumni Gym which was in the pro- cess of being constructed on the hill. 17 William Gardiner VanNote President 1952-1962 In November of 1951, William Gardiner Van Note became Clarkson's ninth President. Tuition was $550 a year. In 1952, intercollegiate football was suspended, and artificial ice and additional seating was added to the hockey arena. Lewis House was completed and dedicated in 1953, and construction of the Hamlin- Powers dorm complex was started. The grading system was changed to A B C D F. In 1954, Industrial Dis- tribution was added to the curriculum and Clarkson gained partial use of Snell Hall, as all of the Teachers College moved to the new campus except for the mu- sic department. In 1956, Bill Harrison was named col- lege Hockey-Coach-of-the-Year with a team record of 21-0. The old gym was converted to the Harriet Call Burnap Library, the Alumni Memorial Gymnasium was completed and dedicated, and the first part of the hill dormitory was completed, later called Cubley-Rey- nolds. The first issue of the Knight also appeared this year. In 1958, Clarkson gained full occupancy of Snell Hall and the Ross-Brooks dormitory was completed. In 1959, the graduating class presented to the college the familiar Golden Knight suit of armor on display in Lewis House. Pictured above is the corner of Main Street and Pierrepont Ave., looking towards Old Main. The three houses from left to right housed the Business Office and Library, a private boarding house, and the President's Office which were torn down in the summer of '52 to make room for Lewis House. Pictured to the right is the old gym being rennovated in the fall of '55 to become the Harriet Call Burnap Library, the main lobby of Snell Hall and Snell Aud. in 1958 before it was remodeled. 18 EMINENT ALUMNI EDWIN F. HAWXHURST Class of '52, B.B.A. Presently Managing Partner of the Arthur Young Company of Cincinnati, Ohio. MARTIN A. WELT Class of '54, B.Ch.E., M.S.Ch.E., S.M. in Nuci. E., Ph.D. in Physics. Presently President and Chairman of the Board of Radiation Tech- nology, Inc. of Rockaway, New Jersey. RICHARD C. DORF Class of '55, B.S.E.E., M.S.E.E., Ph.D. Presently Vice President for Educational Services and Profes- sor of Electrical Engineering at Ohio University in Athens, Ohio. JOHN M. EIKENBERG Class of '59, B.S.I.D. Presently Group Vice President of Consumer Product for Revere Copper Brass, Inc. of Clinton, Illinois. 19 William Louis Whitson President 1963—1966 In January of 1962, Lowell Herron was named acting President upon President Van Note's resignation. In October the engineering-science building was com- pleted and dedicated as Robert Livingston Clarkson Hall. In September 1963, William L. Whitson was in- augurated President of Clarkson. J. R. Westons was donated to Clarkson upon retirement of the owner. In 1964, the School of Business Administration became the School of Management and Clarkson returned to co-education with the enrollment of 10 undergraduate women. The hill campus was continually growing, with Moore House completed and the Dorm 5 com- plex under construction in 1965. An artist's conception of the Engineering Science Building (Clarkson Hall), which was under con- struction from 1960 to October of 1962 when it was dedicated. 20 Moore House, under construction in 1965, was the third dorm complex on Garkson's expanding hill campus. The house pictured below was torn down in 1960 to make way for the construction of Qark- son Hall. It was a condemned school house called Old No. 8 which was used by Clarkson to house Physics labs and classrooms. 21 John W. Graham, Jr. President 1966—present In 1966, John W. Graham, Jr. was appointed the eleventh President of Clarkson. That year Holcroft was remodeled for a women's dormitory and Woodstock Village was completed. In February, President Graham announced that all future building construction for Clarkson would be on the hill, the first being the new Science Center. In 1968, Woodstock Lodge was dedi- cated in October as the student social center on the hill. Dorm 6 was nearing completion, and ground was broken for the new Science Center. The following year, the school calendar was revised so that first se- mester finals were over before Christmas. In 1971, the Maintenance Building was put in oper- ation and the Hockey Arena was renovated with a new floor and refrigeration, enlarged rink and seating capa- city, improved lighting and installation of a heating system. The Science Center was completed, providing quarters for all work in chemistry, mathematics and physics and with classrooms to accomodate practically all freshman and sophomore work. Tuition was $2400 a year. An artist's conception of Woodstock Village which was completed in 1966. 22 EMINENT ALUMNI JOSEPH KRUGER II Qass of '67, B.Sc., M.E. Presently Director and Chairman of the Executive and Finance Committee of Kruger Pulp and Paper Limited of Quebec, Canada. The dorm 6 complex was nearing completion in 1968 when the ground was broken for Clarkson's most ambitious project, a $5.5. million dollar science center. Now at the end of the 1971-72 school year, all construction projects are completed but there is already talk of a new athletic complex or library on the hill, and it will only be a matter of time before the entire campus will be situated on the hill. 23 The compiling of this section required the assistance of various people. We are therefore deeply indebted to Mrs. Dee Little of the Potsdam Museum for providing us with her timely collection of photographs of early Clarkson and Potsdam; to Mrs. Rosanna Rosse for granting us full use of all Clarkson artifacts in the ref- erence room of the Clarkson Library; and finally to Dr. Donald Stillman who gratefully granted us use of the manuscripts of his new book, Clarkson at 75: Portrait of the College, which provided an invaluable source of information. For a more detailed history of the growth of Clarkson College, we suggest that you con- sult Dr. Stillman's book which will be on sale soon. anniversary 24 CLARKSON IAN 1972 25 BOARD OF EDITORS NIKKI CANNON EDITOR-IN-CHIEF JOHN BECKER BUSINESS MANAGER GENE DEC ASSISTANT EDITOR PAT FLANAGAN ASSISTANT EDITOR PAULA HUREWITZ SENIOR EDITOR DAN WEIDMAN PHOTO EDITOR JERRY SAGLIOCCA GREEK EDITOR 26 TABLE OF CONTENTS HISTORY SPRING FACULTY AND ADMINISTRATION FALL SPORTS WINTER ORGANIZATIONS FRATERNITIES SENIORS 27 1 32 48 104 140 152 170 194 224 PERSPECTIVES 274 Four Clarkson faculty ... Dr. Ed Misiaszek, Dean of Engineering—recalling the Clarkson of twenty years ago, contrasted with the institution of today. Dr. Fred Ullman, Clarkson educated, looks back at his years at Tech. Dr. Ken Saczalski, Mechanical Engineer, raps about the new projects courses. Dr. Nora Beiswenger, Humanities, looks at the “engineering mystique.” To these individuals, whom we feel have contributed most to the student environment at Clarkson, we dedicate this 1971-72 Clarksonian. The following are excerpts from conversations, edited for clarity. The editors Dr. Eleanor Beiswenger The thing that is most crucial in the future of education is to have the learning process a co- operative one. I can see where in the technical courses you’ve got large masses of information that can only be disseminated by lecture—I don’t know how you can get around it. Although maybe there are ways of doing it, if you’re talking about the human being and his relationship to the world, which includes all the values he has and all his goals, then I don’t think you can do this on a lecturer, passive audience kind of basis. There has to be some involvement on the stu- dent’s part, so this semester I’m trying something in my elective course, which is on the 20’s and 30’s and that is to have each of the students make at least one class presentation. Making it as much of a seminar as I can on any aspect of the 20’s and 30’s that really interests the student, so he’ll go digging around into whatever it is that he chooses to do and then he’ll share it with us. Some of the kids are going into the music of the 20’s and 30’s and some of the kids into eco- nomics and some kids, who are interested in history are doing an in-depth thing on the financial crises of the 20’s or political isolationism. We have currently such an anti-historical bias that we don’t want to learn anything from the past and actually the root of so many problems that we are faced with today start in the 20’s. You know, the whole materialistic preoccupation, credit and consumerism, salesmanship, advertising, and all these things really developed on a mass scale in the 20’s in that big prosperity boom, and here we are stuck with all this. How do you break out of it? I think we’ve got to have a little realism in this situation, too, but I do think that we can’t lose our ideals, either. You’ve got to have some kind of goal that contains hope, otherwise we’re going to continue falling into the little cog-in-wheel and we’re just going to refuse to take any share of responsibility for putting society back on the track, if it ever was on the track. I don’t know, it’s got all the promise there, but somehow it seems to me we’ve lost sight of the human goals that will benefit the majority of people. In the technological field there is a subtle kind of propaganda which students are exposed to (this is what I hear), which is prejudicial to social sciences and particularly to the humanities. They’re kind of like I don’t know what they’re doing over there” or those weird characters” or “here’s where the action is, within the engineering fields. This is my third year here, and I find that this year I have been hearing less of this. As I have met younger people coming into Clark- son in those fields, there is much more communication between us, you know, we weirdies and these people, you know, who have been instructed in the hard sciences and so forth. So maybe this thing is changing in terms of what students are being fed. I don’t know what proportion of now young or older faculty exists in engineering fields, but maybe if it gradually reaches the point that it’s half and half, then that will be one thing that probably will disappear. But there’s another thing and this is something that I really can’t put my finger on either, but it’s the kind of thing that comes down from Graham and others in the administration—not every- body. There are advantages and disadvantages to this observation I’ve made about Clarkson and the way Clarkson operates. It seems to me to operate much more like a business corpo- ration than a typical college or university that I know about. In other words, the books have to be balanced—we don’t consider deficit spending regardless of what’s going to happen. I don’t know how many students don’t come or tuition goes up and you kind of price yourself right out of the market for a certain segment of potential students, or you have to cut costs so drastically, which means you lop off a certain number of faculty which jeopardizes programs. I don’t just mean in our area, but they’re considering this austerity program if the trend continues as it has.” 28 Dr. Frederick Ullman I think a large portion of the administration is strictly money oriented. This decision is made „ on the basis of dollars and cents. It has, to a limited extent, be run this way, because you can’t run the place on a deficit. It won’t work, it will go out of business. However, very often, there appears to be no consideration given to educational values, at all. The place doesn’t seem to have an educational philosophy, and, if it does, nobody seems to know what it is. So we might as well not have one. It’s more or less up to the individual teachers to make up their own. If you look to see what the rewards are, they’re for research grants and papers, and for giving talks and seminars. Nobody gives any prizes for advising the Integrator. Nobody gives any prize for being a good teacher. Nobody gives any prize for taking a student who can just barely make it through and helping him so that he can graduate. It’s irrelevant to the institution. They simply count the number of people who graduate, they count the number of people coming in, they figure out how many dollars it costs for each professor. The cutback this year was $120,000, and that’s about eight professors, because our enroll- ment has decreased so much—dollars and cents. Necessary, but it would seem that along the way, if things weren’t so tight, somebody could have taken the luxury of trying to say, ‘‘Well, what’s our purpose? Why do we hire professors here? Why are we encouraging them to spend their free time publishing, becoming foremost engineers, a foremost scientist, a foremost chem- ist, mathematician, and secondarily a reasonably good teacher?” I don’t believe very many people, if any, maybe a few one-tenth of one percent of the total teacher population can do both well, at the same time. Because it is like any other creative art, if you try to do something differ- ent with your teaching instead of just following textbooks, you put energy into it, and there is just so much energy in one person. If you create in one area, then you will just crank out in the other area, and that is what I see happening. More and more emphasis on just cranking out papers, and less creativity in the classroom, and that’s what’s supposed to turn students on. Now, if you can turn the students on to thinking this is a good place, then you’ve got it made as far as the future is concerned. Cause you just take your students, turn them around, and tell them to sell Clarkson, and they’ll do it. Other schools do it. . . Clarkson used to, when I was a junior or senior, have people in the admissions office give the students and his parents a map and say, There’s the campus, take a tour.” And if they had no other business, they would take a tour with them. And somebody asked them, Why don’t you have students do it?” And at that time they said, “Oh, we didn’t think they’d want to.” And for a while there were all volunteers. They set up a program where people would volunteer, special on Saturday mornings to come down and give tours—for nothing. Well, I understand now that people who give tours are paid for it. Well, something got lost in the translation. It’s great for the people getting the money, but it doesn’t say anything about how the people feel about the in- stitution. And I think the only way out is for a private college to rely on the St. Lawrence approach—you make the students on campus happy—you don’t make things easy—you just make them happy. You give them an educational experience that they value, while they are there. Then they will be happy and they will go out and sell their friends who are behind them in high school. They’ll tell their guidance counsellor, and their high school teachers about how great the institution is, and that word will get passed down and it is much more effective than all of the catalogs in the world. The college doesn’t seem to have any conception of why people select the institution. Well, they realize that you can buy students with enough money—that’s obvious. However, they don’t have a lot of money. But, a lot of other things affect students—physical appearances affect stu- dents. Why do students want to go to other schools—well it looks like a college . . . I’ve been here since 1960—Clarkson has become an entity. You can begin to form a picture of the institution—the people who run the place haven’t changed much. It’s largely the same kind of kids. They don’t like the food, they don’t like the walk, they don’t like the cold weather, they don’t like the dorms, they don’t like the tests. They are griping about virtually the same things the kids did in 1960. You have a whole faculty, a whole student body entrenched in the old tradi- tions—“We hate Tech.” 29 Dean Edward T. Misiaszek “What I see, not only for Clarkson, but frankly what I see for engineering education and all education in general is that there is definitely going to be more and more flexibility, less and less rigidity, required courses; the students are going to be required less and less to conform, if I can use that term, to sets of rules, regulations, requirements. I think it may even end up pretty close to being over the next 10, 15 years. Pretty close to being the student who very much decides; what is his educational objective—how does he want to go about achieving it? That means that if he wants to take 20% of his courses in engineering and the remainder of his courses in humanities, I think that is going to be permissible. If a student, on the other hand, wants to reverse that and take 80% of his courses in engineering and science, and 20% in hu- manities, I think that’s going to be permissible. I think there’s going to be less and less structure to our whole educational system. That’s the point I guess I’m trying to make. Having graduated from Clarkson myself some 20 years ago in engineering and knowing what engineering was like at that time, here, I can easily illustrate this. When I came through school here 20 years ago, I didn’t have one single choice of an elective—not one single thing; humani- ties, social sciences, engineering courses—I had a prescribed engineering curriculum, and that’s what I was expected to take and that was it. Another thing. When I came through school here, I can say that this was obviously not the case. About 25% of the courses that a student takes in engineering today at Clarkson are elective courses of one type of other. Already I think it’s going to get even greater than that. When I came through school here 20 years ago, we required 156 hours for graduation. We are now down to 124 hours—32 hours less. You can see that the requirements for the degree are even less—and I would say that the main reason for that is because the professions themselves have recognized the fact that, “look, let’s give up trying to turn out the completely finished prod- uct at the end of four years.” Any student today who thinks he’s going to college for four years in any profession including engineering and is going to obtain a degree, and from there on in can forget about education is 100% wrong. Your education today will never stop. Technology, society, the world we live in, are all moving so fast that in order for you to keep up, in order for you to be abreast of whatever your eventual interests are going to be—be they politics, commu- nity activities, professional engineering; you’re going to have to get some sort of continuing educational training. I don’t see how you can avoid it. As a typical example, the half-life of the engineering knowledge that you are getting today is about 5 to 6 years. That is another way of saying that half of what you learn today is going to be of little or no value to you 5 to 6 years from now. Therefore, you can see that in a very short time your technical background, your humanities, social science, political science background, etc. is going to be completely outdated. So again, if you’re interested in being somebody in contrib- uting to society in any fashion whatsoever, you’re going to have to continue your education. The idea of a fellow going to school any longer for four years of college education or even four years of college education, plus 4 to 6 years of medical school or dentistry or law or Ph.D. program in engineering or science, and doesn’t go to school any more is just out the window. You’re going to have to continue your education in some form or fashion. There are going to be many opportunities to do that. I think TV is going to play a big part, and I think you’re going to find more educational courses offered with people like you and I who desire to keep abreast—so that we ll be able to sit in our own living rooms on Saturday morning from 10:00 to 11:30 and take an advanced course in computers, systems, mathematics, political science, Ca- nadian-American relations, world history, or whatever you want to call it. I think that the opportu- nity is definitely going to be there for you and me. I think, also, that you’re going to find that more and more companies are definitely going to do one of two things; they’re either going to provide you with an opportunity for outside education, or their own in-house continual educa- tion. These are the big things that I see, without any question. To summarize, definitely more flexibility, definitely less conformity—conformity with regard to the fact that you must have x number of hours in this area and y number of hours in that area and so on. There is definitely going to be less and less of that, and more and more of the re- sponsibility for your education is going to fall back on your shoulders. So, when you get done at the end of 4 years, you’ll look back and say; “Look, I’ve invested x number of dollars—was I smart in making that investment or not?” from the viewpoint of “Did I get out of this investment what I wanted to get out of it?” I definitely think that’s coming.” Dr. Kenneth Saczalski I have my own personal ideas of what education should be doing, where we should be going, what educations should be doing, what I think the students would like, what they need. But it is such an individual thing that I feel almost every instructor you talk to that is interested in his teaching and in his students has something to contribute in his own individual way. If we were to sit and listen to each person that is interested in students and education and has been, let’s say, successful with in some way or other with education, student interest, student feedback and so on. From each one of these people I feel I could pick up a few pointers and mold it into what my concepts of good education are, and how I can improve on my educational endeavors. My own personal feelings are that there should be more student involvement. The way we’re presently going at these projects courses starting freshman year take a little more time on the part of all people involved, students and faculty, but I think they’re more worth- while than just one standard type of lecture course. I think education from my point of view is a two-sided coin—one side is a sound fundamental background in engineering principles and analytical techniques; The other side of the coin is that we have to get students involved in ex- perimenting and trying and experiencing realistic relevant type problems where they can see ap- plications or the need of more background. Of the project type courses that I worked with, the very large majority were integrated upperclassmen and freshmen. They were multidiscipli- nary—there were EE, Chem E, ME, and CE; they were very well received by all the people. I could see there were a few exceptions who felt they’d rather have a standard type lecture course but out of 25 or 26 on one project there was only one who felt he didn’t like working with that number of people. He rather work alone, but you’re going to find this difference; it’s going to be awful difficult to say any one approach to education is going to work for any one group of students. I think you almost have to play it by ear. When you get a group of students in you have to pose some problems to them, to let them experience involvement in a group structure. You have to give them some background, let them work alone. Sometimes you have to let them ex- press their ideas to a group. These are all experiences that I think they should have, but any one might not work for all of them. It’s going to change from class to class. You have to really take the class that you’ve got and try to motivate them, try to find out their weaknesses and their strong points. I don’t think I could sit down and write an outline saying I think we should defini- tely have brainstorming this week and we should definitely have paper reviewing in the library on the following week. You have to just take each project as it comes along. Again I go back to this two-phased philosophy that side by side the analytical background is an important part of it—but I think along the same lines you have to allow the student the option or the opportunity to explore and to experience other areas and to branch off if need be at cer- tain phases of the game for the sake of interest on his part or just because he wants to look into certain areas. The newer trend towards more electives in the senior year is going in this direc- tion. I’d like to see more of it, but again, it’s more difficult to work in a program of this nature. There are probably certain faculty who would rather work under a lecture type approach of so many units of material, so many quizzes, and their certain fundamentals and that’s it. But in true life when you walk out the door of this place, there just isn’t anything that organized. The prob- lems come at you, and you’re on your own. If we could develop the abilities of that individual to feel confident that he could look forward with some enthusiasm to any problem that would come up because he felt that he had not only the analytical background, but he had been exposed to this freedom to explore on his own and to develop his own areas of competency. How to recog- nize the problem—how to recognize what’s important about it, where to find the answers even though he didn’t know what they were. In the long run he’d be able, with all his background, to come up with the best judgement as to the best approach. If you could do that with everyone, you’d have a fantastic program going because these people would take off like skyrockets, whether they go into industry or the academia for the ad- vanced degrees. No matter what they went into, they’d find that these fundamentals, these prin- ciples would be so valid—and so, education versus training—I’d say you need a flexible pro- gram.” Cycles are once again making the scene. Many say that in Potsdam it’s hard to tell when winter ends and spring be- gins. The heavy winter coats may have disappeared but the walk down to class is still treacherous. The ca- lendar may read May first, but the sidewalks are still covered with six inches of ice. However, if the student looks around he sees signs of better things to come. The ice on the Ra- quette is breaking up . . . The maintenance men are cleaning the windows. Summer sports are becoming feasible. 34 Organizations are having picnics. Each year the senior members of the mechanical engineering honorary, Pi Tau Sigma, awards the “Purple Shaft” to the professor that they feel has shafted them the most in their four years at Clarkson. After a long dis- cussion of the Pros and Cons of the Clarkson faculty, the members awarded the 1971 Purple Shaft jointly to Professor Richard Wirtz and Myron G. Mochel. Professor Richard A. Wirtz being awarded the Purple Shaft by Ken Traugot, ’71 President of Pi Tau Sigma. 35 The award is displayed in the Old Main foyer. TOM RUSH AND CHRIS SMITHERS Tom Rush Rush, the main attraction of the con- cert, performed in a combo of four. They started with folk songs and ended with some fantastic blues and electric blues rock. An unknown from Boston, Smithers, was Rush’s follow-up. He performed folk songs on an acoustic guitar. i 36 Chris Smithers LUCY KOMISAR and CLINTON T. DUFFY Lucy speaking at luncheon in Lewis House. Lucy Komisar, vice president of the National Organization for Women and author of the cover story, The New Feminism” in the Saturday Review, spoke at Clarkson and Potsdam State on Tuesday March 16. A graduate of Queens College, she is currently writing a book on the ideol- ogy of the women’s movement, called “Notes of a Liberated Woman.” As a free lance writer she has written two magazine cover stories, “The Ar- rogance of Power” in New York Magazine, and “Violence and the Masculine Mystique” in the Washing- ton Monthly, in addition to the Satur- day Review story. Lucy’s topic, “The New Feminism, concerned what the women’s liber- ation groups want and what they are doing to get it. “The feminist move- ment,” she said, “will be more signifi- cant than any social upheaval that has occurred in the history of civ- ilization. It will alter the basic relation- ships between men and women in our society.” Clinton T. Duffy Clinton T. Duffy, warden of San Quentin for 12 years, spoke at Clarkson on February 9, 1971. Born and raised in the “prison town” of San Quentin, with all but a very few of his adult years spent in prison work, he talked of the experiences of over 32 years of handling adult offenders, both male and female, who have been condemned to death. Warden Duffy was appointed delegate to the Third United Na- tions Congress on the Treatment of the Offender in Stockholm, Sweden in 1965. He is the author of The San Quentin Story”, “88 Men and 2 Women”, and “Sex and Crime.” A motion pic- ture, Duffy of San Quentin” is based on his life. Credited with being the founder of modern penology, Warden Duffy says: “I took over this prison on the heels of one of the bloodiest riots in the history of penology. During the twelve years that I was warden I believed that my primary responsibility was to help men rehabilitate themselves so that they could re- turn to society as constructive members rather than destructive criminals.” He has personally witnessed over 150 executions and has legal- ly officiated at the executions of 88 men and two women. Prior to his appointment as warden, he participated in 60 legal hang- ings. When questioned on the capital punishment issue, he had this to say: “I personally believe that the death penalty should be abolished. We have ample facilities to keep offenders away from society for the rest of their lives, if warranted. I will do any- thing I can to see that capital punishment is abolished.” 37 THE PEOPLE’S STRIKE FOR POLITICAL ACTIVITY Last Year’s strike was an effort to en- courage students to return to their hometown and campaign for a politi- cal candidate of their choice. 38 39 UNDERGRADUATE PROJECTS A freshman design engineering class under the direction of Dr. Edward Kear and senior project leader Tom Potter has been attacking the problem of guiding the blind on the ski slopes. The idea for the project was first put before the group after Dr. Kear had corresponded with officials at Hay- stack Ski School in southern Vermont, where Director Bruce Cavett and his instructors had been working with blind skiers for some time. The students had ideas for a system of complete freedom for the blind skier. It was felt that an audible tone or beeper system placed along a sla- lom course featuring different tones for the left and right side of the course might be one solution. Through telephone conversations, it was learned that the blind skiers at Haystack had abilities which ranged from novice to expert and that ice or changes in terrain did not bother the skier to a great degree. The instruc- tors’ biggest problem was keeping the skiers on the trail. Tom Potter visited the ski school and after observing the blind skiers was very impressed with their interest and ability. Following talks with the skiers and instructors, he and an instructor stood on the hill and made beeping sounds in an attempt to guide the skiers down the course. The idea seemed to have merit. Upon his return to Clarkson, Potter began working with four freshmen, George Foster, Paul Giacomo, Bill Rafferty and Ken Treiling. The five designed the beepers using flashlight batteries and speakers mounted in beverage cans. Tom and Ken returned to Haystack a few weeks later with six beepers. The devices were attached to bamboo slalom poles and it was determined that the best arrangement would be in such a way as to present a corridor to the blind skiers who would then ski between the sound walls of different tones. The poles were placed appro- ximately 100 feet apart and the first skier to negotiate the course was quite pleased with the results and felt that such a system could be per- fected. Ken Solinsky thinks it is ridiculous to have a car which takes up to about 50 square feet of ground space, to trans- port a person who occupies about three square feet when walking. Ken thought of a possible answer, al- though by no means perfected at this time. The project was to develop pow- ered roller skated and he felt that this type of transportation could drasti- cally improve traffic problems in and around large cities. A two cycle engine like those used on chain saws is used as a power source. The power is transmitted from the engine, which is strapped to the person’s back, to the rear wheels of one of the skates by a flexible shaft. Mounted under the heel of the roller skates are two spiral miter gears which transfer the power from the flexible shaft to the rear axle on which two 2-inch rubber wheels are fixed. A shutter release, much like ones used on cameras, is used for the throttle. 40 At first glance, a laboratory in Old Main would give little indication of the hours spent by a group of Clarkson engineering freshmen on an improved artificial leg for the above-the-knee am- putee. That is, until one sees the ex- perimental model. The group, under the direction of Dr. Kenneth J. Sac- zalski, has been organized in structure much the same as an industrial task force. Five upper classmen have adopted the roles of supervisors and a graduate student has been designated consulting engineer. All six are in charge of 20 freshmen from various engineering disciplines working as novice engineers within the task force. The students, who have been as- signed to five groups, hold frequent and informal idea sessions often last- ing several hours. One group was concerned with the power and energy processing of electrical potential in muscle signals. The second group was working on the refinement and optimization of muscle signals for use in control of the artificial limb. Anoth- er group was developing a sensory feedback device to operate between the artificial leg and the amputee. The fourth and fifth groups looked into the problems of design of the power de- vice and drive mechanism for knee ro- tation, and the structural design of the leg system and knee safety lock. From a bio-engineering point of view, one purpose of the project was to du- plicate, as nearly as possible, the con- trol aspects of a normal leg by using voluntarily generated bio-electric muscle signals as a control source. ENGINEERING DAY A day for high school students to visit Clarkson and talk with engineering students to better understand what an engineer is. The picture shows a senior electrical engineering major talking with high school students in the electrical lab. 41 FREEBEE Stan Rowin, a senior at Clarkson calls it “an Experiment in Humanity.” Stan worked many hours preparing the “happening” for the park in front of Snell Hall. The get-together featured a rock group, “Trash,” and a folk-country group, “The Parishville Pickers”, as well as sports events. Food and beve- rages were donated by Potsdam mer- chants. Stan, with other students known col- lectively as Stereo Enterprises, worked with the Village of Potsdam officials and the Clarkson Cultural Committee on the project. Finally, after two cancelations be- cause of rain, the freebee came off a great success. 42 MOVING-UP DAY A tradition since 1929, Moving-Up Day ceremonies symbolize the end of the academic year and the advancement of each class to the next under- graduate level. It is primarily designed to recognize publicly the scholastic and extracurricular achievements of many of the College’s 2,650 men and women. The highlight of Moving-Up Day was the tapping of students for member- ship in Phalanx, the senior honorary society. The seven students tapped for Pha- lanx were four juniors and three sen- iors, which included two coeds only the second and third females ever tapped for Phalanx. Those tapped for membership in- clude: Barbara M. Baum, a senior chemical engineering major; J. Thomas Carissimi, a junior social sci- ence major; Paula Hurewitz, a junior mathematics and humanities major; Frank Johnson, a senior chemical en- gineering major; Richard A. Koch, a junior accounting major; Richard K. Smith, a junior industrial distribution major; and Rhys A. Sterling, a senior chemical engineering major. Awards were then presented to out- standing undergraduates for scholas- tic, athletic, and extracurricular ac- complishments. The award recipients are as follows: Alpha Kappa Psi Award to Curtis R. Darling; The New York State Society of Certified Public Accountants Award to Linda M. Kin- ney; The Andrew S. Ormsby Law Scholar to Roger A. Wahl; The Stu- dent Achievement Award of the Wall Street Journal to Mark Crotty; The Chi Epsilon Awards to James L. Wood and James M. Robert; The Eta Kappa Nu Award to Gary M. Jablonski; The William A. Dart Award to Kenneth A. Bloom; The A. Raymond Powers Award to Louis N. Hannett; The Me- chanical Engineering Staff Award to John S. Fuoto; The Pi Tau Sigma Award to Robert C. Potter; The Weiss Memorial Award to Marc D. Donahue; The Ross Awards to William L. Bell, James R. Smith and Dale G. Lakomy; The Omega Chi Epsilon Scholarship Award to Marc D. Donahue; The Pab- lo Guttman Memorial Award to Philip V. Schillaci; The American Institute of Chemical Engineers Scholarship Award to Glenn T. Bodman III; The Gamma Sigma Epsilon Award to Wil- liam S. Brownell; The R. W. King Awards to William Carr and Mark Ax- ford; The Dr. Carl Michel Prize to Carl Knobloch; The Gibbons Phalanx Award to Paula Hurewitz; The Army ROTC Scholarships to Paul Stenberg and Gary Van Schaick; The Resi- dence Halls Scholarship Award to James DeFranco; The Perkins Family Memorial Award to James DeFranco; The Robert C. Gledura Memorial Award to Nora Todd; The Delucia Award to Paula Hurewitz; The Clark- son Faculty-Staff Scholarships to Richard A. Koch, John C. Suplicki and Peter J. Hind. 43 SENIOR WEEK Finals were over and for most seniors—college was over. What a time to celebrate!! And celebrate they did. The week started slow with a golf tournament, car rally and a picnic. Then it ended up fast and furious with a train trip to Montreal for a dinner and ball. Then a quick return for rehearsal and graduation. 44 45 GRADUATION 1971 Nearly 700 students received degrees at the College’s 78th commencement on Sunday, May 23, 1971. Approxima- tely 560 Bachelor of Science degrees, 125 Master of Science and 12 Doctor of Philosophy degrees. George J. Wrobel became the 10,000th graduate of Clarkson. Dr. John W. Graham, Jr. paused during the conferring of degrees to an- nounce the milestone and presented Wrobel a gift from the College. In making the announcement, John Gra- ham noted that at its first com- mencement, in the 1900, Clarkson conferred four degrees. In 1959 the College conferred its 5,000th degree. Dr. Paul F. Chenea, General Motors vice president in charge of research laboratories, addressed the graduates on the subject, “Engineering, Sci- ence, and Management as Tools for Environmental Control. Dr. Chenea will receive the honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree. President Graham also presented honorary degrees to the following: Dr. George B. Kistiakowsky, Abbott and James Lawrence Professor of Chem- istry at Harvard University, Doctor of Science; David S. Lewis, Jr., chairman of the board and chief executive offi- cer of General Dynamics, Doctor of Science (Business Administration); Charles S. Munson, honorary chair- man of the board of Air Reduction Company, Inc., Doctor of Science (Business Administration); and William H. Wendel, president of the Carborun- dum Company, Doctor of Science (Business Administration). The Clarkson Awards were presented to Sidney C. Soderholm and Wayne F. Bialas members of the graduating class who were selected by the facul- ty as having shown the best com- bination of scholarship and promise of outstanding professional achieve- ment. 46 William P. Harrison, associate profes- sor of Civil engineering at Clarkson College of Technology, was presented the Distinguished Teaching Award. The Distinguished Teaching Award, presented annually, was established by Clarkson in recognition of the im- portance of superior teaching. Profes- sor Harrison was chosen by a faculty committee on the basis of nomi- nations by the Clarkson alumni. The award includes a citation and a cash prize of $1,000. A member of the Clarkson faculty since 1948, Professor Harrison is a graduate of Dartmouth College and Clarkson and received his M.S.C.E. degree from Purdue University. From 1948 to 1958 he coached the Clarkson hockey team. During the ten year span his teams compiled an im- pressive record of 128 wins, 47 losses and 6 ties. 47 tot ■ SCHOOL OF ARTS AND SCIENCES MILTON KERKER A.B., M.A., Ph.D. Columbia University Professor of Chemistry Dean of the School of Arts and Science CHEMISTRY LOUIS MEITES B.A. Middlebury College M.A., Ph.D. Harvard University Professor of Chemistry Chairman of the Department of Chemistry EGON MATIJEVIC Ch.E., D.Chem., Dr. Habil. University of Zagreb Professor of Chemistry Director of the Institute of Colloid and Surface Science 50 RICHARD E. PARTCH A.B. Pomona College Ph.D. University of Rochester Associate Professor of Chemistry Executive Officer of the Department of Chemistry WALTER PARTENHEIMER B.S. Wisconsin State University Ph.D. University of Iowa Assistant Professor of Chemistry DONALD ROSENTHAL B.A. Princeton University M.A., Ph.D. Columbia University Professor of Chemistry STEPHEN BRUNAUER A.B. Columbia University M.S. George Washington University Ph.D. John Hopkins University Clarkson Professor of Chemistry 51 FRANK D. POPP B.S. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Ph.D. University of Kansas Professor of Chemistry GEORGE LETT JONES, JR. B.S., M.S. University of Virginia M.Mus. Syracuse University Ph.D. University of Virginia Associate Professor of Chemistry FRANK C. GOODRICH B.A. Williams College Ph.D. Columbia University Professor of Chemistry PETR ZUMAN R.N. Dir. Charles University at'Prague Professor of Chemistry 52 HANS H. G. JELLINEK D.I.C. Imperial College, London Ph.D. London Ph.D., Sc.D. Cambridge Professor of Chemistry JOSIP KRATOHVIL Dipl. Chem., D. Chem. University of Zagreb Professor of Chemistry ROBERT A. CLARK B.S. Massachusetts Institute of Technology Ph.D. University of Maryland Assistant Professor of Chemistry LAURI VASKA B.S. University of Gottingen Ph.D. University of Texas Professor of Chemistry 53 RAYMOND RICH ANDREWS B.A., M S. University of Connecticut Assistant Professor of Chemistry L. GUY DONARUMA B.S. St. Lawrence University Ph.D. Carnegie-Mellon University Professor of Chemistry Associate Dean of the Graduate School Associate Director of the Division of Research HUMANITIES DAVID S. SANDERS B.A., M.A., Ph.D. University of California at Los Angeles Professor of English Chairman of the Department of Humanities ROBERT JOHN McGILL B.S. State University of New York at Potsdam M.A. St. Lawrence University Associate Professor of Speech 54 JOEL W. RAY B.S. North Carolina State University M.A. Ph.D. University of North Carolina Assistant Professor of English HARRY W. PAIGE A.B. Union College M.A., Ph.D. State University of New York at Albany Professor of English RICHARD E. HUTCHESON TRUDE F. LEAR B.A. College of William and Mary B.A. University of Munich M.A., Ph.D. Harvard University Instructor of German Associate Professor of Philosophy 55 ELEANOR H. BEISWENGER B.A., M.A., Ph.D. University of Michigan Assistant Professor of English WALTER WEDZICHA B.A. University of Miami M.A. University of Pittsburgh Assistant Professor of Russian and German DAVID E. BERNDT A.B. University of Rochester M.A. Cornell University Instructor of English 56 BRADFORD BROWNE BROUGHTON B.A. Allegheny College M.A., Ph.D. University of Pennsylvania Professor of English KAYE P. STONEKING B.A. David Lipscomb College M.A. University of Illinois Instructor of Comparative Literature RONALD B. EIN A.B. Columbia University M.A. University of Michigan Instructor of English 57 DALMA H. BRUNAUER Ph.D. University of Budapest Associate Professor of English DONALD PURCELL A.B. Swarthmore College M.S. McGill University Assistant Professor of English I MATHEMATICS GUSTAVE RABSON A.B. Cornell University M.A., Ph.D. University of Michigan Associate Professor of Mathematics Chairman of the Executive Committee, Department of Mathematics RICHARD GERALD BRADSHAW B.S. St. Lawrence University M.S. Columbia University Assistant Professor of Mathematics Executive Officer of the Department of Mathematics 58 VICTOR LOVASS-NAGY B.S., Ph D. University of Technical Sciences, Budapest Professor of Mathematics ABDUL J. JERRI B.S. University of Baghdad M.S. Illinois Institute of Technology Ph.D. Oregon State University Associate Professor of Mathematics LAWRENCE CRONE B.A., Ph.D. Catholic University Assistant Professor of Mathematics 59 FREDERICK D. ULLMAN B.S. Clarkson College of Technology M.A. Duke University Instructor in Mathematics JOHN SELDEN B.A. University of Miami M.S. Tulane University Ph.D. University of Georgia Associate Professor of Mathematics WILLIAM BREWSTER ROBINSON B.S. Loyola University M.S., Ph.D. Tulane University Assistant Professor of Mathematics ALAN C. NEWELL Trinity College, Dublin M.S., Ph.D. Massachusetts Institute of Technology Professor of Mathematics 60 MARK J. ABLOWITZ B.S. in Mechanical and Aerospace Sciences University of Rochester Ph.D. Massachusetts Institute of Technology Assistant Professor of Mathematics RICHARD J. MILLER B.A. Hamilton College M.A. Syracuse University M.A. University of Washington Assistant Professor of Mathematics PETER G. JESSUP B.S. Kenyon College M.A. Lehigh University Assistant Professor of Mathematics DANIEL J. FLEMING A.B., M.A. Clark University Ph.D. Lehigh University Assistant Professor of Mathematics 61 DIETRICH H. VOELKER B.S., M.A. Karlsruhe Institute Ph.D. University of Freiburg Professor of Mathematics JAMES M. LOWERRE B.S. U.S. Military Academy M.S. University of Buffalo Ph.D. State University of New York at Buffalo Associate Professor of Mathematics WILLIAM THICKSTUN B.S., M.A., Ph.D. University of Maryland Associate Professor of Mathematics DALE W. KREISLER B.S. Mansfield State College M.S. Clarkson College of Technology Instructor in Mathematics 62 WINFIELD WETHERBEE B.S. Wheaton College M.S. Clarkson College of Technology Instructor in Mathematics HARVEY SEGUR B.S. Michigan State University Ph.D. University of California, Berkeley Assistant Professor of Mathematics JOSEPH HARTHA B.E.S. John Hopkins University Ph.D. Northwestern University Assistant Professor of Mathematics 63 PHYSICS ELMER EBERT ANDERSON A.B. Occidental College M.S. University of Illinois Ph.D. University of Maryland Professor of Physics Chairman of the Department of Physics MARTIN C. MARTIN B.Sc. St. Francis Xavier University M.Sc. University of Western Ontario Ph.D. University of Alberta Associate Professor of Physics FRANK LESLIE MOORE. JR. B.S. Union College M.S. Lafayette College M.A., Ph.D. Princeton University Professor of Physics 64 HERMAN WEN-CEUN CHEW B.S., S.M., Ph.D. University of Chicago Associate Professor of Physics FRED A. OTTER, JR. B.S. Lehigh University M.A. Temple University Ph.D. University of Illinois Professor of Physics HERBERT F. HELBIG B.A. Yale University M.S., Ph.D. University of Connecticut Associate Professor of Physics AARON ROTSSTEIN B.Sc., M.Sc., Ph.D. McGill University Assistant Professor of Physics 65 SYDNEY GEORGE DAVISON B.S., M.Sc., Ph.D. Manchester University, England Professor of Physics RAYMOND A. SERWAY B.A. Utica College of Syracuse University M.S. University of Colorado Ph.D. Illinois Institute of Technology Associate Professor of Physics PETER J. McNULTY B.S. Fordham University Ph.D. State University of New York at Buffalo Associate Professor of Physics 66 DAVID J. KAUP B.S., M.S. University of Oklahoma Ph.D. University of Maryland Assistant Professor of Physics JOHN COLEMAN LOVE B.S., Ph.D. Ohio State University Assistant Professor of Physics SIGURDS ARAJS B.S., Ph.D., Iowa State University of Science and Technology Professor of Physics 67 MARVIN LOUIS EDWARDS B.S., M.A., Ph.D., Columbia University Professor of History Chairman of the Department of Social Sciences CHARLES FRANCIS O'BRIEN A.B. St. Michael’s College M.A. University of Wyoming Ph.D. Brown University Associate Professor of History MARTIN KESSLER B.A. Barrington College B.D. Union Theological Seminary M.A., Ph.D. Brandeis University Associate Professor of History JOHN R. TABORI B.S. Columbia University Instructor of Political Science 68 VICTOR PHILIP PEASE B.S. University of San Francisco M.A., Ph.D. University of Arizona Associate Professor of Social Sciences LARAINE MASTERS GLIDDEN A.B. Mount Holyoke College M.A., Ph D. University of Illinois Assistant Professor of Psychology EUGENE M. FODOR B.A., Ph.D. Cornell University Assistant Professor of Psychology WILLIAM M. ARMSTRONG A.B. Bradley University M.A. Louisiana State University Ph.D. Stanford University Professor of History 69 WILLIAM B. GLIDDEN B.A. Bowdoin College M.A., Ph D. University of Illinois Assistant Professor of History and Government RICHARD O. FLECHTNER A.B. Dartmouth College M.A. University of Kansas Instructor of Sociology MONTE A. CALVERT A.B. Occidental College M.A. University of Delaware Ph D. University of Pittsburg Associate Professor of History PAUL LENCHNER B.A. Franklin and Marshall College M.A. Cornell University Instructor of Political Science 70 A THE SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING HERMAN L. SHULMAN B.Ch.E. City College of New York M.S., Ph.D. University of Pennsylvania Professor of Chemical Engineering Vice President and Dean of the School of Engineering EDWARD T. MISIASEK B.C.E., M.C.E. Clarkson College of Technology Ph.D. University of Illinois P.E. New York Associate Professor of Civil Engineering Associate Dean of the School of Engineering DAVID O. COONEY JOSEPH L. KATZ B E. Yale University B.S., Ph.D. University of Chicago M S., Ph.D. University of Wisconsin Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering 72 t JOSEPH ESTRIN B.S. Drexel University M.S., Ph D. Columbia University Professor of Chemical Engineering Chairman of the Department of Chemical Engineering JOHN H. BEAMER B.S. California Institute of Technology M S., Ph D. Stanford University Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering THOMAS J. WARD B.Ch.E. Clarkson College of Technology M.S. University of Texas Ph.D. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering EDWARD WILLIAM GRAHAM B.S. Louisiana State University Ph.D. University of California Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering 73 RICHARD J. NUNGE B.Ch.E., M.Ch.E., Ph.D. Syracuse University Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering ANDREW F. BURKE B.S., M.S. Carnegie-Mellon University M.A., Ph.D. Princeton University Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering GORDON R. YOUNGQUIST B.S. University of Minnesota M.S., Ph.D. University of Illinois Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering 74 E. JAMES DAVIS B.S. Gonzaga University Ph.D. University of Washington Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering ROBERT A. SHAW B.S. Pennsylvania State University M.S. Stanford University Ph.D. Cornell University Assistant Professor of Nuclear Engineering Executive Officer of the Department of Chemical Engineering ROBERT DAVID COLE B.Ch.E., M.Ch.E., Ph.D. Clarkson College of Technology Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering CHIEN-SHIH LU B.S. National Taiwan University M.S. University of Houston Ph.D. California Institute of Technology Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering 75 CIVIL ENGINEERING ROBERT L. LEWIS B.S. Colorado State University M.S. Cornell University Professor of Civil Engineering Chairman of the Department of Civil Engineering GORDON B. BATSON B.S.C.E., M.S. University of Maine Ph.D. Carnegie-Mellon University Associate Professor of Civil Engineering JOSEPH A. FITZPATRICK B.S.C.E. University of Notre Dame M.S. Harvard University Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering NORTON TERRY B.S. Michigan College of Mining and Technology L.S. New York Instructor in Civil Engineering 76 E. ALAN CASSELL B.S. Pennsylvania State University M.S. Massachusetts Institute of Technology Ph.D. University of North Carolina P.E. New York Associate Professor of Civil Engineering CHARLES EVANS CLARRIDGE B.S., M S. Clarkson College of Technology P.E., L.S. New York Professor of Civil Engineering IURY L. MAYTIN B.S.C.E., M.S.C.E. Washington State University Associate Professor of Civil Engineering JERRY E. STONEKING B.S. Georgia Institute of Technology M.S., Ph.D. University of Illinois Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering 77 ARTHUR LEROY STRAUB B.S.C.E. Bucknell University M.S.C.E. Rutgers—The State University of New Jersey Ph.D. Cornell University P.E. New York Professor of Civil Engineering WILLIAM W. BRADLEY B.S. University of Chicago B.S. University of Colorado Sc.D. Massachusetts Institute of Technology Associate Professor of Civil Engineering WILLIAM A. THORNTON B.C.E. Manhattan College M.S., Ph.D. Case Institute of Technology Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering CHARLES R. OTT B.S., M.S., Ph.D. University of Washington Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering 78 MARTIN R. BROWN, JR. B.C.E., M.C.E. Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn Ph.D. Rensselar Polytechnic Institute P.E. New York Associate Professor of Civil Engineering ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING KAM-CHUEN SO B.S. University of Illinois M.S. University of Michigan Ph.D. University of Illinois Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering ROBERT F. COTELLESSA M.E., M.S. Stevens Institute of Technology Ph.D. Columbia University Professor of Electrical Engineering Chairman of the Department of Electrical Engineering 79 RICHARD S. SANFORD B.E.E., M.E.E. Yale University Ph.D. Worcester Polytechnic Institute P.E. New York Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering HENRY DOMINGOS B.E.E. Clarkson College of Technology M.S.E.E. University of Southern California Ph.D. University of Washington Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering 80 M.S.A.A. HAMMAM B.Sc., Ph.D. London University Niagara Mohawk Professor of Electrical Engineering DAVID A. PERREAULT B.S.E.E., M.S.E.E., Ph.D. Purdue University Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering DAVID W. BRAY B.E.E., M.E.E. Renssalaer Polytechnic Institute Ph.D. Syracuse University Visiting Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering RANGASWAMY MUKUNDAN B.E. (Hons.), M.E. Birla Eng. College, India M.S.E.E. Purdue University Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering JOHN B. RUSSELL B.S.E.E., M.S.E.E., D.Sc. Massachusetts Institute of Technology Professor of Electrical Engineering DENNIS P. CARROLL B.S. University of Maryland M.S., Ph.D. University of Wisconsin Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering 81 DANIEL E. FARMER B.E.E. Clarkson College of Technology M S. University of Illinois Ph.D. Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn P.E. New York Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering WOLFGANG B. ELSNER B.S., M.S. Clarkson College of Technology .Instructor in Electrical Engineering CHARLES E. DUNHAM B.S. Rochester Institute of Technology M.S. Syracuse University Instructor of Electrical Engineering HERMAN J. DERBORT B.E.E., M.E.E. New York University Ph.D. University of Wisconsin Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering 82 MECHANICAL ENGINEERING GEORGE LEPPERT B.S. University of Wisconsin M.S., Ph.D. Illinois Institute of Technology Professor of Mechanical Engineering Chairman of the Department of Mechanical Engineering SUNG P. LIN M.S. University of Utah Ph.D. University of Michigan Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering EDWARD McHUGH B.S. University of Rhode Island P.E. New York Professor of Mechanical Engineering KENNETH D. WILLMERT B.S. Iowa State University M.S. Case Western Reserve University Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering 83 BRUCE DOUGLAS HUNN A.B. University of Redlands B.S., M.S. Stanford University Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering B I I IS ELLIOTT R. EISENBERG B.S., M.Aero.E. Cornell University Instructor of Mechanical Engineering Assistant Professor of Military Science KENNETH J. SACZALSKI B.S. University of Miami M.S. University of Rochester Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering RICHARD A. WIRTZ B.S. Newark College of Engineering M.S. Rutgers—The State University of New Jersey Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering 84 JOHN R. ZIMMERMAN B.E. Yale University S.T.B. Boston University M.S., Ph.D. Lehigh University Professor of Mechanical Engineering MYRON GEORGE MOCHEL B.S. Case Institute of Technology M.S. Yale University P.E. New York Professor Emeritus of Mechanical Engineering 85 CORNELIUS A. HIEBER, JR. B.M.E. The Cooper Union M.S., Ph.D. Cornell University Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering JOHN PLETCHER ROLLINS B.S. Pennsylvania State University M.M.E. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute P.E. New York Alcoa Professor of Mechanical Engineering EDWARD B. KEAR, JR. B.M.E. Clarkson College of Technology M.S. Cornell University Ph.D. Cornell University P.E. New York Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering Executive Officer of the Department of Mechanical Engineering TA-CHENG LOO B.S.M.E. National Taiwan University M.S.M.E. Syracuse University Ph.D. Syracuse University Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering GERHARD H. REUSSWIG B.S. University of Buffalo M.S., Ph.D. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering FADEL F. ERIAN B.Sc. Ein Shams University, Cairo Ph.D. Syracuse University Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering 86 87 THE SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING ROBERT HARLEY BARR B.S. (Pennsylvania Military College) M.B.A. (Drexel University) C.P.A. (Pennsylvania, New York) Assistant Professor of Accounting Executive Officer of the Department of Accounting ROBERT B. SHAW B.A. (Denison University) M.B.A. (Harvard University) Ph D. (New York University) Associate Professor of Accounting and History ARTHUR J. LINDEN B.A., M.B.A. (New York University) Assistant Professor of Accounting 88 JOHN D. ELMER B.A. (St. Lawrence University) J.D. (Syracuse University) Adjunct Professor of Accounting LAWRENCE A. GORDON B.S., M B.A. (State University of New York at Albany) Assistant Professor of Accounting I HENRY BARTON COOK, JR. B.S., M.S. (Clarkson College of Technology) Instructor of Accounting GEORGE CHARLES WILLET OBERST B. C.S. (New York University) C. P.A. (New York State) Professor Emeritus of Accounting 89 NALLAPU N. REDDY B.S. (The Michigan Technological University) M.S. (The University of Missouri at Rolla) Ph.D. (The Pennsylvania State University) Assistant Professor of Economics CLIFTON E. SENF, JR. B.A., M.A. (State University of New York at Buffalo) Assistant Professor of Economics RICHARD JACQUES B.A., M.A. (State University of New York at Albany) Instructor of Economics JOHN RICHARD TEDFORD B.S., M.S. (University of Connecticut) Ph.D. (Iowa State University) Associate Professor of Economics INDUSTRIAL MANAGEMENT WILFRED NYE SMITH, JR. B.M.E. (Clarkson College of Technology) M B A. (Syracuse University) D.B.A. (Indiana University) Professor of Industrial Management Executive Officer of the Department of Industrial Management GEORGE RISLEY B.A. (Hobart College) M B A. (Syracuse University) Associate Professor of Industrial Management 91 PETER G. BIESIOT B.A. (University of Washington) M S. (University of Nebraska) M B A. (Cornell University) D.B.A. (University of Southern California) Associate Professor of Industrial Management J. RONALD FRAZER B.M.E. (Clarkson College of Technology) M S., Ph.D. (Iowa State College) Professor of Industrial Management THOMAS F. PRAY B.S. (Clarkson College of Technology) Instructor of Industrial Management 92 GILBERT GOODGION B.S., M.B.A. (New York University) Assistant Professor of Industrial Management KENNETH R. DEAL B.S., M.B.A. (State University of New York at Buffalo) Instructor of Industrial Management DONALD E. BURLINGAME B.S. (State University of New York at Cortland) M.A., D.Sc. (Washington University) Associate Professor of Industrial Management 93 INTER-AREA PROGRAM INDUSTRIAL DISTRIBUTION LEONARD GROENEVELD B.S. University of Rhode Island M.B.A. Northeastern University Ph.D. University of Florida Professor of Marketing and Industrial Distribution Chairman of the Department of Industrial Distribution JOSEPH SCATURRO B.E.E. Pratt Institute M.S. Hofstra University Assistant Professor of Industrial Distribution RICHARD JOHN BUTLER B.S. Clarkson College of Technology Instructor of Industrial Distribution STEPHEN W. MILLER B.A. Michigan State University M.B.A. University of Detroit Assistant Professor of Industrial Distribution 94 NON-DEGREE « m MILITARY SCIENCE NICHOLAS A. LORD Colonel, United States Army, Corps of Engineers B.S. Clarkson College of Technology M.S. Ohio State Graduate, United States Army Command and General Staff College Graduate, United States Army War College Professor of Military Science Chairman of the Department of Military Science ANTHONY R. COZIER Captain, United States Army, Corps of Engineers B.S. Rutgers—The State University of New Jersey Assistant Professor of Military Science RICHARD P. KUCHNICKI Captain, United States Army, Corps of Engineers B.S. Texas A M University Assistant Professor of Military Science RICHARD L. REUBLINGER Captain, United States Army, Signal Corps B.A. Northeastern University Assistant Professor of Military Science ARLEN B. WAHLBERG Major, United States Army, Signal Corps B.A. Texas A I University Associate Professor of Military Science PHYSICAL EDUCATION JOHN J. HANTZ B.S., M.S. Ithaca College Associate Professor of Physical Education Chairman of the Department of Physical Education and Director of Athletics JEREMIAH FRANCIS YORK B.S., M.Ed. Boston College Instructor of Physical Education WILLIAM P. ABRAHAMOVICH B.S. Castleton State College M.S. Ithaca College Instructor in Physical Education 96 PHILIP JOHN RYAN B.S. Clarkson College of Technology Associate Professor of Physical Education LEONARD STANLEY CEGLARSKI B.S. Boston College M.A. Staley College Associate Professor of Physical Education JACK DORN PHILLIPS B.B.A. Clarkson College of Technology Assistant Professor of Physical Education 97 ADMINISTRATION JOHN D. CHAPPLE Director of Admissions and Financial Aid A. GEORGE DAVIS Dean of Student Affairs DONALD T. MILLS Director of Undergraduate Financial Aid WILLIAM J. LOWE Dean of Students 98 KEMP POTTLE Registrar 99 LOREN E. EDWARDS Director of College Relations 100 F. WILLIAM FIESINGER Director of Development 101 JOHN Z. OKONIEWSKI Associate Dean of Students C. MICHAEL HARRIS Director of Student Activities C. NORBERT SMALLING Associate Dean of Students (Residence Life) 102 HUBERT C. ROGERS Coordinator of Student Services 103 RICHARD M. COOK Director of Public Information It was summer. The math depart- ment had already moved to their new place of abode at the chateau on the hill and it was time to refurnish the third floor of Snell for its new occu- pants. 106 Operations were moving steadily but it was lonely and awfully quiet. Suddenly a new but familiar sound is heard. It can't be them yet! It’s hardly the end of August and besides, we haven’t finished yet. 107 It’s August 27 and the class of ’75 has arrived. One of their first ex- periences at Clarkson is the ritualistic Presidential Convocation. This is where President Graham, in a two hour oration attempts to psyche’’ the student into four years of outstanding scholastic achievement. 108 Shortly after is student registration and irresolvable class conflicts and fi- nancial clearance problems and mul- tiple section changes. What are all these letters on my class schedule? They can’t be all extended periods! 109 Can’t stop now, there’s still a half day line to sweat out at J. R. Weston’s and who knows how many pounds of books to carry back. The instructions on the order sheet say circle the course number and cost of books for each course. Let’s see, HU151—$1.90 2.85 110 Finally it’s time for a break. It’s the Big Brother Bar-be-que with plenty of sunshine, chicken, potatoe salad, soft drinks, and . . . BOOBS. ill State's Complaint. and Poco. To help start the year. . . As students settle down to routine class work, they begin to realize that some courses have more to offer than others. This year, not only is Environ- mental Engineering becoming a sepa- rate engineering discipline, it is also the only department that owns its own row boat and travel trailer complete with fold away cots. The interior of this trailer or Mobile Environmental Laboratory is equipped with every bit of apparatus necessary for both in- struction and research. With this equipment, any task from assaying the microbiological quality of water to determining the acid content of water can be performed. Early this fall this mobile lab made its shakedown run with the class of “Aspects of Stream Pollution” to the boat basin at the Robert Moses State Park near Mas- sena. 113 At the end of September, the Fresh- man Activities Fair was held in the Alumni Gym. Flere the Freshmen were able to seek first hand information from any club or organization that was present. Meanwhile there were strange go- ings on in the woods in back of dorms 5 and 6. It looked like the beginnings of a new radio tower. 114 « 115 116 Lewis House held the first of a series of Wine Coolers and ... 117 CHARTER DAY Mr. Haddad, a member of the Board of Trustees, was the main speaker at Charter Day observances marking our 75th anniversary. The title of Mr. Haddad’s talk, which was given in the court area between two wings of the Science Center, was Technology and Man” and in regard to this he said: It occurred to me that this is not a title, it’s a problem—it’s the problem. Technology is changing, man is not. Man’s institutions such as our laws and government are not changing fast. It’s quite conceivable that the ultimate nightmare is simply a projection of present society and its institutions into a future of rapidly changing technology.” The speaker noted that any tech- nology that has a potential for good (left to right) Dr. Robert McGill; Rev. Robert Langwig, Minister of Potsdam Presbyterian Church; Dr. John W. Graham Jr.; Harold A. Putman, Clark- son Trustee; Mundy I. Peale, Chairman of the College Board of Trustees. also has potential for bad. The rule seems to be”, he said, that if the possible good effects are just as great.” He said that it has always been obvious to technologists that things could be used for good or evil but that the technologist had faith that society in general and civil gov- ernment in particular would take steps to assure that only the good pre- vailed. “It is people who take things or knowledge and use them for good or evil, it is people who use technology to affect themselves and other people. The blessing and the curse of ad- vancing technology is people”, he said. 118 Mr. Haddad said that it was ‘‘just plain foolish” to be against tech- nology which is really a kind of knowl- edge, but it is certainly not foolish to be against some of the ways in which that knowledge is applied. ‘‘My belief is that our bewilderment is not over change but over change without purpose. Out sense of alien- ation is not over change but over our seemingly inability to control it. Thus our deepest need is to find values that transcend technology and a bet- ter means of controlling it.” He closed by saying that there are profoundly positive values embedded in the American soul which are in need of renewal. He cited such exam- ples as the notion of wholeness or the whole person, the old virtues of open- ness and candor and commitment, and the great spirit of enthusiasm, zest and vitality and said that we should openly declare ourselves for these qualities as positive goals. “Technology can’t give us these qualities”, he said, “what technology can do is provide the conditions in which these human qualities can flourish. My aim is to help create those conditions. My hope is that once we create those conditions we will choose these life affirming val- ues.” President Graham marked the be- ginning of the year long celebration of the 75th anniversary by citing the happy” coincidence that the birth- day of the College and the completion of the major construction and the oc- cupation of the Science Center should come at the same time. Dr. Graham pointed out that “today is not really a dedication of the building so much as it is a string cutting or formal opening of the Center. We will post- pone the formal dedication until every- thing is done and paid for, hopefully at Commencement time, 1972.” Mr. Haddad was introduced by Mun- dy I. Peale, chairman of the Board of Trustees. Mr. Peale told the gathering that the Science Center was the real- ization of a dream that has been con- tinuing for 50 years, the dream that a “greater” Clarkson College be built on the Clarkson Hill where the Clarkson family established itself about 150 years ago. He said that the half-century year old dream has started to become a reality, in the form of the Science Center which is the first educational building to be constructed on the hill. Jerrier A. Haddad, trustee, delivering the Charter Day Address. Dr. Bayard D. Clarkson, trustee, presents canoes to Clarkson Dr. Bayard D. Clarkson an associate member of the Sloan-Kettering In- stitute for Cancer Research presented 12 canoes to the College for the use of the Outing Club and the general student body. A. George Davis said that in the first weekend that the six green and six gold canoes were made available, over 200 students used the canoes for excursions in the nearby Racquette River. A canoe may be bor- rowed by a student merely by present- ing his or her I.D. card at Dean Davis’s home at 20 Bay Street in Pot- sdam. 119 120 121 122 The Annual Fire came twice this year. The first occurred early in the semester at the Adirondack Sports Center. Tense moments were involved as the hockey arena nearly went with it. 123 The dorm counselor of dorm six came up with a new idea in October. He got the school to supply the paint and brushes if the students would supply the labor to paint the dorm six basement. The results are evident. 124 In late October, Clarkson became the site of the annual meeting of the American Society of Engineering Educators (Upper New York, Ontario- Quebec region). The meeting lasted three days and terminated with Dean Edward T. Misiaszek receiving an award for outstanding instruction of Engineering students. 125 126 Lisa Sergio, a specialist and lectur- er in world affairs, spoke in Clarkson 128 on October 19 on the subject “Future Triangle of World Powers: U.S.A., U.S.S.R., China.” A pioneer in mass communication, Miss Sergio was the first woman radio com- mentator in Europe, and one of the first among women newscasters in the United States. Back at the dorms the WTSC trans- mitting tower was nearing completion. 127 The Folk Blues Jamboree I was held in the Rathskeller on Friday and Saturday, October 22 and 23. Numerous groups and artists had their chance to perform before the usual large crowd. 128 phase 1! 129 The Ugly Man Contest was held the third week in October by Alpha Phi Omega. It was believed that Kerker had the contest sewed up but the fi- nal tally revealed Gringo Pig of Beta Tau to be the winner. The painting of the Dorm 6 base- ment was completed and the WTSC tower was about to be capped. 130 Halloween was near and this was Saga’s first chance to put on a meal that might be termed extra special. It was an evening to remember. 131 Renovation of the Hockey Arena was started in summer and completed in late fall. The skating area was en- larged to 85 x 200 feet, regulation size. The lower picture shows the placing of 250 yards of concrete. The floor was poured in two layers of con- crete with a layer of insulation in be- tween to minimize frost heaving. Oth- er improvements to the 33 yr. old are- na included a new refrigeration sys- tem, expanded seating capacity, im- proved lighting for ICRN-TV broad- casts, a heating system, and a new exterior appearance. Halloween weekend events included a dance put on by Saga in the Dorm 6 basement. 132 133 Sha-na-na played at the Junior Prom concert this year. All those present can remember that this group did their best to show that ‘‘Rock still swings.” 134 To many, the construction going on in front of Clarkson Hall was a com- plete mystery. It was way until spring when the monument was finished and to many it was still a big mystery. This monument of the Bent of Tau Beta Pi was built to commemorate Clarkson’s 75th anniversary and was dedicated in April. Engineering Day was held on No- vember 13 this year. Invitations to stu- dents from 270 schools were sent and those who attended were confronted with a rather rigorous schedule of tours and speeches. The Electrical Engineering department won the prize for outstanding displays for the sec- ond year in a row. Pictured is Ben Fa- gen demonstrating a “flame speaker” which was one of the E.E. displays. 135 136 137 Just as everybody had finally fig- ured out what the CCT 75 logo was all about a new set of initials infiltrated the environment—JCSS. Come and see Jesus Christ, appearing live right on stage in the Clarkson Alumni Gym. One of the few shows presented at tech that had off-campus appeal, JCSS attracted students and police, atheists and priests, Jesus freaks and Sunday Christians, teachers and townspeople. 138 and then the snows came ... 139 GOLF Michael Silver CCT 4 St. Michael’s OPP 3 Bob Bicknell V t U. of R. 7y2 Jim Williams 1 Middlebury 6 Chris Thornton 3 Union 4 Jeff Brown 428 Syracuse 408 Tim Dempsey Rick Aab Result: 1-4-0 Glen Hermes Cary Flack Joel Handschuh TENNIS Larry Jackson CCT OPP Gary Weber 0 Hamilton 9 Gary Allen 0 Hartwick 9 Martin Scott Rich Naylon 0 Hobart 9 Dave Kibbe Result: 0-3-0 RIFLE CCT OPP 1304 Siena 1252 1315 St. Lawrence 1304 1316 Canisius 1265 1325 Niagara 1259 1336 Alfred 1322 1329 St. Bonaventure 1296 1313 Syracuse 1334 1313 Cornell 1309 1324 Siena 1287 1333 Niagara 1265 1337 St. Lawrence 1307 1331 Cornell 1336 1313 Syracuse 1316 1317 Alfred 1297 1343 Canisius 1285 1338 St. Bonaventure 1289 1st row: (left to right) Thelbert Allison, Coach; Christopher Smith; Glen E. Bassett, Team Cap- tain; John H. P. Hofeldt; Robert R. Lorenzi; Anthony J. Lang. 2nd row: (left to right) Dennis E. Kugler; Craig A. Foster; Robert C. Henty; William Advocate; Robert E. Wangerien; Donald P. Cameron III. Result: 13-3-0 The varsity rifle team recently completed an outstanding season, com- piling a 13-3 record and taking top honors in the Independent College Ath- letic Conference with a perfect 4-0 conference mark. They were second in the New York State Rifle League. Top performer for Clarkson was Larry McCune, who placed in each of the 16 matches. He was the winner of two State Rifle League trophies, one for high individual score (287) and one for high individual average (276.3). Oth- er standouts for Clarkson included: Dave Lange, Glen Bassett, Ed Swanson, and William Advocate. The team ran up a 10-1 record before dropping two close decisions, to Cornell by 5 points (1336-1331) and to Syracuse by 3 points (1316-1313). They then closed out the season with three straight triumphs. 142 BASE- BALL Bill Meier Doug Bush Tom Ozahowski Ed Kieda Gary Johnston David Myers Tom Sautter Jim Haskins Jerry Lipa John Hill Tony Caschera Hank Miller Bill Brinkman Doug Fernandez Russ Audycki Bob Newberry George Thomas Brian Wilmarth Jerry Solomon Bruce Wrolsen Mike Downey 143 The cross country team completed its dual meet competition October 19, 1971, boasting a 6-4 season record. This marks the first winning season for the Clarkson harriers since 1967, and was accomplished with a squad comprised primarily of sophomores and juniors. Clarkson’s trio of front runners was led by Nick Baker, a sophomore. Close on his heels were Leon Cox, another sophomore, and Leigh Walk- er, a junior. Junior Blaine Snook, sophomore Wesley Querns, freshmen Dick Jacobs and Bob Bennett round out the top performers for coach Jack Phillips. Clarkson coach Jack Phillips had hoped for no worse than a fourth place finish with the possibility of a third at the ICAC championship at Al- fred. He felt that the Clarkson runners had reached their peak and per- formed well against some stiff com- petition that Saturday. The key to this CCT OPP 50 Albany State 15 18 Utica 45 21 St. Lawrence 37 20 R.l.T. 42 34 St. Lawrence 21 22 U. of Rochester 36 47 Hobart 15 20 LeMoyne 41 45 Potsdam 16 22 ICAC at Alfred 37 4th of 7 Result: 6-4-0 successful season may have been the feeling that “we’ll be back next year”, says Phillips, “and we should be even stronger through experience, since the squad will not be depleted by graduation.” 144 Nick Baker Douglas Bartlett Glen E. Bassett William Bell Dave Clark Leon Cox Bob Fuller Randy Howland Dick Jacobs Russell Martling Dennis O’Dea Wesley Querns Dave Sellers Blain Snook Leigh Walker 145 SOCCER Blayne Hartman Chip Allen David J. Carlson Rick Cianciotto Larry Dodge Bill Meenan Rick Missimer Greg Andrusyszyn Terry Brown Gary Butdett James Donohue Philip Goettel Frederick Jeffery Cade Lockwood Ed Poku Bart Raccuglia Ed Robinson David Rubado Lee Whitmore Dan Hoover Joe Lomonaco Richard Milner P. Stenberg Bob Fennel AM Kassamali John Smith Verdayne Wallace Wayne Woogen Now that the snow has covered the soccer field, coach Ron Cervasio can take a long look at the 1971 soccer season with a great deal of satisfac- tion. In his second year as soccer coach, Ron guided his booters to the best won and lost record in Clarkson soccer history. This year his team, which was de- pendent largely on underclassmen, finished with an eight and four record and a four and two record in the ICAC, third place in the Conference. Leading the Golden Knights were seniors Bob Fennel and Dick Cian- ciotto. Fennel led the team in scoring with eight goals and four assists for twelve total points. He also had six goals and three assists and tied for second place in scoring in the ICAC. Cianciotto, the captain of this year’s squad played outstanding soccer get- ting three goals and three assists which was remarkable considering he played the center fullback position. 146 CCT OPP 7 R.l.T. 0 0 Colgate 2 3 LeMoyne 1 0 St. Lawrence 1 0 R.P.I. 3 1 Potsdam 0 6 Hobart 2 4 Ithaca 2 6 Syracuse 0 3 Alfred 1 2 Hamilton 3 5 U. of Rochester 4 Result: 8-4-0 On the wings, junior Joe Lomonaco and sophomore Dan Hoover turned in good seasons each scoring five goals. Lomonaco, who continually set up teammates with his fancy footwork also had six assists to give him eleven total points, second high for the team. Third in scoring was junior Ali Kassa- mali with four goals and five assists. The young halfback line of Cade Lockwood, Lee Whitmore and Gary Burdett played very well by keeping the ball in the offense zone as much as possible. Helping Ciantiotto at full- back were Chip Allen and Scott Rey- nolds. Outstanding in goal, until he was in- jured midway through the season, was freshman Blayne Hartman. Filling in ably for Hartman for the remainder of the season was George Kauffman. Looking to next season Coach Cer- vasio cannot help but be optimistic with only two starters leaving through graduation and with the strength that he found on this year’s bench. Cer- vasio believes that next year the young Clarkson team will be much stronger through experience. 147 LACROSSE CCT OPP 4 R.P.I. 3 8 Siena 10 9 St. Lawrence 10 11 Hamilton 4 15 Alfred 5 3 Ithaca 14 3 Hobart 23 8 Syracuse 13 1 Colgate 3 19 R.l.T. 3 Result: 4-7-0 Eric Bottrill Paul Bovay Eric Broadbent Bob Clark Charles Dunn Larry Gabrynowkz Phil Grady Gary Hickey John Homola Doug Kelly Jerry Kemp Stephen Kausak Dave Miller Rick O’Connor Bart Raccuglia Gary Sabine Craig Shute Rick Stevens Gene Thomas Steve Vekasy Steve Warr 148 Dick Giromini Steve Cannellos Mark Jepson Dennis Hillpot John Parker Ed Myers Bob Connelly Patrick Capone John Kitts Robert Bennett Michael Cornnell John Serino Russ Yarp John Bucco Keith Deluke CCT OPP 12 Colgate 30 3rd North Country of 4 Invitational 15 U. of Rochester 21 42 R.PJ. 6 0 R.l.T. 51 31 Plattsburg 13 9 St. Lawrence 36 0 Potsdam 51 3 Ithaca 46 15 Hobart Hartwick forfeit 27 5th of 7 I.C.A.C. WRESTLING Result:3-7 149 BASKET- BALL Greg Brostek Don Cary John Cima Lowell Dewey Bob Dranushuk Pete Ganley Roger Hall Larry Jones Steve Martin Ron Stepien Bruce Tomczak Steve Unguran Randy Wasson Joe Wurz John Yacono Although Clarkson suffered through another disappointing basket- ball season, compiling a 6-20 record, there were some bright spots: a stunning 85-70 victory over St. Lawrence late in the season when the Knights won three out of four games; and Pete Ganley, Clark- son’s ECAC Division III All-American Candidate. 150 CCT OPP 76 Potsdam 58 St. Lawrence 71 Siena 78 St. Lawrence 76 U. of Rochester 72 Alfred 83 R.l.T. 80 Loyola 90 Ottawa 92 Utica 64 R.P.I. 65 Potsdam 75 Hartwiik 62 Middlebury 97 Hobart 68 LeMoyne 85 St. Lawrence 81 Hamilton 73 Ithaca 73 St. Michael's Result: 6-20 96 90 109 96 112 70 94 73 85 96 83 107 116 82 89 72 70 78 84 89 Pete, a senior, owns seven Clarkson career records, four Clarkson sea- son records while sharing a fifth, and one Clarkson game record, sharing a second. These records include: most career points (1370); highest ca- reer average (24.91); best field goal percentage (.460); best free throw percentage (.811); most career rebounds (560); most rebounds in a sea- son (205); most consecutive field goals (27); and most points by a junior (450). 151 inter To the Clarkson student, Winter is that time of the school year that inevi- tably must fall between Fall and Spring. It is a time of bitter cold, im- passible sidewalks and roads, hockey games, an occasional fire and the Ice Carnival. 154 HEY! HOW ABOUT VME?! SORRY, RICHIE THE TUNA. BUT CLARKIST JANTS ONLY THE BEST. OMICRON PI OMICRON Antoinette ‘‘Da KID JERRY PALUMBO i CAPTAIN P001BY P TROOP OP TKE SYLVESTER PIPER . T s wr fc. mQ mm ’ ICE CARNIVAL “Born Losers” T?™-' - jf £ CAVALCADE OF ROYALTY Pionw 157 c - WINDOW PAINTINGS 158 CAFETERIA SKITS AND THE RPI GAME 159 ICE CARNIVAL RESULTS OVERALL Men Women 1st Ross III Omega Delta Phi 2ndTau Epsilon Phi Zeta Gamma Sig- ma 3rd Delta Sigma Phi Agonian Delta Upsilon KING AND QUEEN 1st Ross III Agonian 2nd Alpha Chi Rho Omega Delta Phi 3rd Tau Epsilon Phi Phi Kappa Pi CAVALCADE 1st Tau Epsilon Phi Omega Delta Phi 2nd Zeta Nu Phi Kappa Pi 3rd Ross III Alpha Delta Delta Kappa Theta WINDOW PAINTING 1st Delta Sigma Phi Omega Delta Phi 2nd Ross III Zeta Gamma Sig- ma 3rd Delta Upsilon Alpha Delta Theta Xi Zeta Nu OIL CLOTH 1st Delta Upsilon Omega Delta Phi 2nd Ross III Zeta Gamma Sig- ma 3rd Tau Epsilon Phi Phi Kappa Pi FLOAT 1st Tau Kappa Epsilon Zeta Gamma Sig- ma 2nd Delta Sigma Phi Omega Delta Phi 3rd Delta Upsilon Agonian SKATING 1st Ross III Omega Delta Phi 2nd Sigma Delta Clarkson Women 3rd Tau Delta Kappa Agonian ICE STATUE 1st Ross III 2nd Delta Upsilon 3rd Alpha Epsilon Pi ICE CARNIVAL BALL AND CONCERT CLUBS CHESS CLUB (left to right) Amos Newcombe; Jack Nowicki; Dick Martin; Gary Farrell; Vance Zemon; Russell Martling; Rob- ert Lulyk; Lawrence Crone; William Wagner; Edward Krzes; Tom Bacon; Curt Weinstein; John Brothers; Chris Ferrante; Ralph Gahtan; Mark Sois- son. PEP BAND 1. Chuck Morris 2. Rich Handzel 3. Paul Carmichael 4. Debbie Purdy 5. Art Hoffman 6. Bill Whitford 7. Joe Holzer 8. Dan Weidman 9. Warren Axtell 10. Dave Olson 11. Ken Hinman 12. Paul Wright 13. unidentified 14. Jack Nowicki 15. Howard Taylor 16. John Brothers 17. Patrick Finnerty 18. Don Rogers 19. Sue Warfield 20. Kathy Rice 21. Carmela Mazza 22. Barbara Race 23. Denise Price 24. Rosanne Marchitelli 25. Rod Smith 26. Gary Braveman 27. John Simpkins 28. Nick Germano 29. Donna Fisher 30. Warren Aja 31. Cecilia Griffen 32. Kim Wanamaker 33. Jan Whitfield 34. Geoffrey White 35. Doug Smith 36. Edward Krze 37. Bob Moon 38. Bob Blanchard 39. John Spagnuolo 40. Dave Youngs 41. Gary Murdoch 42. Peter Nadolski 43. Larry Fritz 44. Dave Dutkowsky 45. Leon Clare 46. Don Roller 47. William Cowper 48. Brandon Bock 49. Kevin Kenyon 50. Phil Van Horne 51. Tom Sauer 52. Jim Burns (left to right) unidentified; Phillip J. Villari; William Lenard; unidentified; Sigurds Arajs; Mark Francis; unidentified; unidentified identifications done by Sigurds Arajs. 172 OUTING CLUB The purposes of the Clarkson Outing Club are to promote out- door recreation, the correct use of New York State’s and the world’s possibilities for outdoor recreation, and to teach others the correct and safe way to use these facilities. Its ultimate objec- tive is to see the whole student body become members and to actively participate in its endeav- ors. The Clarkson Outing Club was organized in the fall of 1969. The trips that are run are many and varied. Some examples are hik- ing to the summits of the peaks in the Adirondack State Park, ca- noeing on the rivers and lakes of the state, camping, both winter and summer, skiing, rock climb- ing, and spelunking. We are members of the Inter-collegiate Outing Club Association and participate in its activities. We also have a close association with the St. Lawrence Outing Club and run joint trips. CYCLE CLUB 1st row: (left to right) John Shaheen; Dan Wellington: Ke- vin Whiting; Stu Preston, President; Doug MacLery, Sec- retary-Treasurer; John Banaszack; Tom O'Donnel. 2nd row: (left to right) Richard Allen; unidentified; Mark Oce- jakczyk; unidentified; Gary Landrio; Gord Watts; John Watkins; Mark Snyder; Roland Moquin; Margaret Cavell; unidentified; Paul Swinburne; unidentified; Geoff White; T. J. O’Donnell; Monte Calvert, Advisor; Al Mosher; uniden- tified. 3rd row: (left to right) Israel Garcia; unidentified; Brian Hevesy; Davia Cunero; Janie Sills; Kathy Wagner; Patti Hall; Art Nicolas; Paul Sears. INTERNATIONAL CLUB Undergraduates, graduates, and faculty members from such far away and exotic places as Taiwan, Greece and the Phillipines, comprise the membership of the International Club. This past year the Club sponsored a Chinese New Year’s Eve Dinner, complete with Oriental atmosphere. The Club also presented its Third Annual International Show featuring an Indian Magic Show and a Chi- nese Dragon Dance. 173 SAILING CLUB 1st row: (left to right) Frank Winkel; George Willis. 2nd row: (left to right) Rick Burke; Pete Winner; Nick Handres. 3rd row: (left to right) Randy Howland; Mark Diamond; Bob Lubenow; Nick Anzano; P. T. Clark. 4th row: (left to right) Orby Broberg; Dick Comins; Don Cameron. PSYCH CLUB standing: (left to right) Steve Putman; Art Vandeventer; Norm Hoy; unidentified; John Wainwright; John Suplicki; Joan Roemer; Don House; John Figueroa; Eugene Fodor; Francis Sharp; Doug Randolph; Richard Bovay. seated: (left to right) Ben Fagen; Mike Friedman. 1st row: (left to right) Ken Shields; Doug Portman; Steve Vekasy; Ken Hinman; Frank Barbehend; unidentified; unidentified; Gary Landrio. 2nd row: (left to right) Jan Boles; Kris Kristenson; Karen Smith; Carol Kolb; Sue Hall; Andrea Sutton; Gail Atkinson; John Sanford; Bill Downer; uniden- tified; Thom Marra, Co-Chairman. 3rd row: (left to right) Curt Colopy; Eric Bottrill; Joyce Wall- ace; Kathy Smith; Duane Leinhos, Missions Secretary; Nancy Eddy; Nancy Stocking, Secretary; Margaret Irish; Carolyn Barbrowitch; unidentified; unidentified. INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP Consisting of students from both Clarkson and State, Inter-Varsity’s goals are to help Christians grow in their faith and to help others to under- stand Christianity. Active programs providing Christian fellowship include Spring and Fall Conferences, workshops, and various social activities. Serious activities include listening to speakers of both clergy and facul- ty, and discussing problems facing the student. As one chapter of many in a nation- al and international organization, In- ter-Varsity has also placed many stu- dents into a wider scope of activities involving other schools and promot- ing deeper Christian training. 174 RAILROAD CLUB 1st row: (left to right) Cam Bickel; Tom Washburn; Pete McWilliams, Vice President; Jon Fick, President; John Bal- sam, Al Drummond. 2nd row: (left to right) Sanford Mace, Robert B. Shaw, Advisor; Larry S. Kaufman, Secretary- Treasurer; Tom Bolton, not pictured: Ken lllingsworth; Gor- don Cortis; Mark Waterbury. PHOTO CLUB 1st row: Al Finger. 2nd row: (left to right) Bob Oppie; Kevin Kenyon; Bruce Heider, President; Stan Mesh, Secretary; George Diehl. 3rd row: (left to right) Bob Horner, Treasurer; Gary Stan- nard, Photo Contest; Rick Byrnes, Photo Serv- ice; Larry Abrams; Howard Philipson, Vice Pres- ident; Dave May. CLARKSON RANGERS 1st row: (left to right) Pat Combes; unidentified; unidentified; Albert Drummond; John Schenne; Mike Mihalik; R. Dean Berry. 2nd row: (left to right) Jan Kolakowski; unidentified; Wayne Wei- shan; unidentified; Tim Heagle; Terry Heagle; unidentified; unidentified; Paul Dekanel. 3rd row: (left to right) Owen Dunn; Joe Holzer; Ro- ger Turcotte; Jan Polivka; Bill Throop; Bill Lash- way; Chris Titus; Lee Carvell; Calvin Sachs; Greg Phillips; David Fu; Bill Whitford; Captain Cozier. 175 1st row: (Left to Right) Doug Sinclair; Larry Kauffman. 2nd row: Ed Lasota; Ben Fagen; Bob Soltis; Dan Weidman. 3rd row: Bill Bender; Dale Lakomy; Ken Hinman; Dave Arnold. 4th row: Ron Freund; Unidentified; Rich Alter; Joe Ole- sik; Jim Michener. 5th row: Mark Kahler; Gary Norman. AMATEUR RADIO CLUB 1st row: (Left to Right) Carl Holden; David Reis- dorf; Danny Emburey; Howard Saidel. 2nd row: Kerry Bynum; Joe Sanowski; Tom Charlebois; George Albury; Robert Lafave; Jim Morehouse. VETERAN’S CLUB 1st row: (Left to Right) Jack Byers; David Coop- er; Tom Field. 2nd row: Joe Leddy; Steve Gag- nier, President. CLARKSON AUTO ASSOCIATION 176 MASS COMMUNICATIONS KNIGHT 1. Dick Owen, Managing Editor; 2. Mark Mateunas; 3. Ed Zukowski, Editor-in-chief; 4. Bob Horner, Cartoonist. 177 INTER COLLEGE RADIO NETWORK 1. George Belva 2. Chuck Rienzo 3. Matt Rines 4. Dick Owen 5. Bruce Heider 6. Gail Winne 7. Al Davis 8. Don Wormley 9. Betty Dooly 10. Bill Bremmer 11. Alan Amundsen 12. Rick Kincaid 13. Lou Bottali 14. Bob Soltis 15. Sally Duryea 16. Dean Gross 17. Roger Smith 18. Donna Gyger 19. Steve Mushynsky 20. Paul Gerstenberger 21. Bob Stevenson 22. Al Chrostowski 23. Jim Penna 24. Bill Ferguson 25. Eric Roberts 26. Larry Dunn 27. Unidentified 28. Ken Jackson 29. Rich Bell 30. Mike Borton 31. George MacLeay 32. Bob Horner 33. Greg Smith 34. Tom Mooradian 35. Doug Vogt 36. Frank Simon 37. Dave Komyathy 38. Unidentified 39. Dave Hart 40. Tom O’Dwyer For ICRN, 1971 was the year of the tool. WNTC made a studio, WTSC erected a tower, and TV laid a cable. Like the Integrator, ICRN news was placed into an honored position—The Vanishing Species List. WNTC still brings you the latest heavies from the top of the hot 40’s rock bob slop list, WTSC produced the latest in progressive rock, and TV reproduced hockey. 178 179 180 1st row: George Albury; Dan Weidman; Ron Panetta; Paula Hurewitz; Bob Oppie; Ben Fagen; Gene Dec; Jim Robert; Dan Kocunik; Nikki Cannon. 2nd row: Larry Dunn; Ron Freund; John Figueroa; Jerry Sagliocca; Pat Flanagan; Dick Cook. Nikki Cannon EDITORS Gene Dec Paula Hurewitz Dan Weidman Larry Dunn Pat Flanagan John Becker Jerry Sagliocca PHOTO STAFF George Albury Bill Barott Bill Cotter Bob Radtke Ben Fagen John Figueroa Ron Freund Larry Goetz Bob Horner Rich Karpiuk Bob Oppenhimer Ron Panetta Anne Dec STAFF Larry Dunn Paul Dwyer Bunny Finneran Dan Kocunik Laurie Maisala Pat Osterhout Ed Pietka Denny Price Jim Robert Judy Tyrell Carolyn Whitmoyer Mr. ADVISOR Richard Cook 181 HONORARES TAU BETA Pl (Left to Right) Gordon Batson, Advisor; Gene Dec; Jim Robert; Gary Cannerelli, Vice-Presi- dent; Edward Misiaszek, Advisor; Patrick Flanagan, President; Donald Snyder; David Lynn; Nikki Cannon; Robert Cottellessa, Advi- sor; Absent: Angelo Rossi; Ed Cichanowicz; Jim Morehouse. PHI ALPHA THETA (Standing Left to Right) Bill Glidden; Monte Cal- vert; Robert B. Shaw; Marvin Edwards; William Armstrong; Martin Kessler. (Sitting) Bill Brem- mer. SCABBARD AND BLADE (Left to Right) Richard Kuchnicki, Advisor; Ran- dy Zittel, Secretary; David Fagan, Vice Presi- dent; Mike Sligar, President; Kurt Umbach, Treasurer; Bill Nahumch. 1st row: (Left to Right) Tom Carissimi; Rich Smith, Secretary-Treasurer; Dick Koch, President; Paula Hurewitz. 2nd row: (Left to Right) A. George Davis; Don- ald Mills; Edward Misiaszek; William Lowe; Frederick Ramsdell. PHALANX (Left to Right) Dave Zelmon; Bob Moon; Rick Karpiuk; Ken Jackson; Dean Gross; Don Wormley; Al Davis; John Figueroa; Thurston Await; Dick Cook; Paula Hurewitz; Pat Flanagan; Gene Dec. PI DELTA EPSILON (Left to Right) Fred Ullman; Nikki Cannon; Bill Bremmer. Absent: Bob Horner 183 CHI EPSILON Chi Epsilon is the Civil Engineering honorary at Clarkson College. Its pur- pose is to recognize and promote the characteristics of the civil engineering profession deemed necessary in the development of the successful engi- neer. This is achieved at Clarkson by creating an atmosphere of mutual relationship between faculty and stu- dents. Projects undertaken this year were the coordination of the Civil En- gineering displays for Engineering Day and the publication of the first edition of the “Surveyor”, a depart- mental paper. 1st row: (left to right) Prof. William Bradley, Advisor; Jim Wood; Rich Zee; Ed Kieda; Ed Kloeber; Gary Cannerelli; Jim Robert; Larry Jackson. 2nd row: (left to right) Jim Gorzynski; Gene Dec; Adr- ian Forzani; Dan Falasco; Ken Shields; Mike Elliot; Bill Friers; Dan Kocunik. 3rd row: (left to right) Randy Ott; Don Thorp; John Woods; Doug Harwood; Ray Teeter; Dave Cole; Dick Jones; Brian Hayes; Dean Palen; Don Hall; Rick Wakeman. Clarkson’s chapter of Eta Kappa Nu, the national electrical engineering honorary society, has been cited by a national committee as the “most out- standing of the society’s 120 chapters in the United States . The citation is based on the reported activities of all Eta Kappa Nu chapters during the 1969-70 academic year. The Clarkson chapter’s activities during the year played an important part in the selection. An engineering design program, consisting of a series of professional talks aimed at fresh- man and sophomores, was held and electrical engineers from various com- panies discussed the varied aspects of their careers in the field. The chapter also prepared an elec- trical engineering laboratory manual whose purpose was to close the gap between the textbook and actual labo- ratory work. The manual was written by seniors and juniors from the under- graduate point of view. A number of events were held by the chapter including a Parents’ Weekend, Engineering Day exhibits, smokers and banquets, as well as field trips to various power plants and research facilities in New York State. 1st row: (Left to Right) Bob Moncsko; Andy Meyers. 2nd row: (Left to Right) Harry Schultz; Chuck Morris; Tom Pye; Jim Elacqua; Harry Mastin; Jim Morehouse; Peter Hart; Angelo Rossi; Gary Kling; Kevin Elliot. ETA KAPPA NU 184 PI MU EPSILON 1st row: (left to right) Wayne Swanson, Vice President; Paula Hurewitz, Presi- dent; Rich Jayne, Secretary-Treasur- er. 2nd row: (left to right) Michael Schwarz; Gary Deburgomaster; Thomas Smith; Larry Kaufman; Peter Jessup; Daniel Fleming. 3rd row: (left to right) Frederick Ullman; Thomas McGibbon; Donald House; Charles Le- vermore; Robert Carson; Bill Martin; Alan Newell; Dale Kreisler; R. Gerald Bradshaw; George Swartele. SIGMA TAU IOTA seated: (left to right) Gary Ganoung; Darryl Bernstein; David May; Bob El- liot; David Whipple, standing: (left to right) Mark Siewert; Eric Braadbent; Eric Chapman; Rick Smith; Paul Bovee; Ed Terry; Bill Carr; Don Klock. PI TAU SIGMA 1st row: (left to right) Bill Carter; Bill Cutler; Jim Wiese; Paul Swinburne; Dick Britton; Dave Lynn; Vice Presi- dent, Tom Zinsmeyer; Recording Sec- retary, John Fuoto; President, Jerry Sagliocca. 2nd row: (left to right) Ken Willmert; Advisor, Robert Hyde; Ed Chicanowitz; Patrick Flanagan; Stan Kujawski, Treasurer; Joe Wagner, Corresponding Secretary. 185 PROFESSIONALS ASM E 1. David Schaefer 2. Stanley Kujawski 3. David Lynn 4. George Cervenka 5. Paul Dwyer 6. Bill Lew 7. unidentified 8. Joe Wagner 9. Herb Helbig 10. Edward Cichanowicz 11. Kenneth Saczalski, Advisor 12. Thomas L. McGovern 13. Richard Karpiuk 14. Larry Lenthouser 15. Steven Gagnier 16. Robert Backus 17. Bill Nichols 18. unidentified 19. Patrick Flanagan 20. unidentified 21. Kathy Jaswell 22. unidentified 23. Jerry Sagliocca 1st row: (left to right) guest speaker; Charles Claridge, Advisor; Ted Sanford, President; Peter Hind, Secretary. Class of 1972 Acosta, Alex Ballard, Thomas Brown, Terry Campana, Anthony Cannerelli, Gary Chaufty, John Cole, David D'Agostino, Charles Davis, Peter Dec, Gene Dewes, Peter DiFiore, Robert DiMaggio, Jerome Fitzgerald, Bob Flowers, Dave Harwood, Douglas Hayes, Brian Herrema, Thomas Hind, Peter Hobday, Peter Holliday, Chris Hopkins, Stephen Howard, Cary Jackson, Lawrence Johnson, Donald Jones, Richard Kalina, Rich Kantak, Greg Kieda, Ed Kieta, Dennis Knowlton, Lyle Lange, David LaRocco, Nick Lent, David Marriott, Alf Meier, William Miller, Hank Moore, Brian Myers, David O’Dea, Dennis O’Dwyer, Thomas Ott, Randy Paul, Stephen Rines, Matt Robert, James Rofe, Warren Sanford, Ted Sauda, Gary Schrader, Robert Stackrow, Thomas Steck, Roger Teeter, Ray Thayer, Edwin Tuttle, Joe Washer, Robert Zee, Richard Class of 1973 Asad, Nazieh Atwater, Ralph Brown, Thomas Connor, Mike Crowe, Thomas DeGeorge, Robert Donavan, Thomas Dunn, Owen Evans, Jeff FaLasco, Daniel Furco, Joseph Griffis, Jayson Hall, Donald Kocunik, Dan McKee, Dave Monahan, Mike Mondillo, Joe Paler, Dean Pardee, Steve Pohl, Robert Polivka, Jan Raspanti, Anthony Sheldon, Lynn Smith, Hy Standard, Steven Stukey, Gary Sweenor, Al Sweredoski, Darrell Throop, Bill Wakeman, Rick Warrender, Robin Class of 1974 Beck, Stan Cima, John Goldbach, Rick Hart, David Mabarak, Simon Vollmer, Dale Whitford, William Class of 1975 Connolly, Robert Cortis, Gordon Grier, Robert Stone, Bruce 186 1st row: (left to right) Chuck Morris; Dan Weidman; Bob Moncsko; Gary Van Schaick; Nathan Oakes; Gary Norman; Ben Fagen; Lou Bottali; Glenn Hockenberger; Jim Gonzalez; David Perreault, Advisor; Herman Derbort. 2nd row (left to right) Kevin Elliott; Dennis Nawoj; Earl Welch; unidentified; Jim Henschel; Ed Dalmasso. IEEE 1. Gary Alpert 2. Lorenzo DeCillis 3. Wes Querns 4. Richard Lesley 5. Richard Chlebus 6. Bob Elliot 7. Tom Diviak 8. unidentified 9. peace 10. Darryl Bernstein 11. Dave Sellars 12. John Penamonte 13. Bill Andrew 14. Bill Best 15. unidentified 16. Mark Finklestein 17. Andy Leff 18. Tom McMonagle 19. Bill Ditzer 20. Dorn Lecce 21. John Bowe 22. Jeff Ross 23. Gary Ganoung 24. George Baldassare 25. John Wasenko 26. Dennis Lunn 27. Liz Rella 28. Tom Heffernan 29. Doug Andrews 30. Bob Wenderlich 10 SOCIETY 31. Clyde Finger 32. Don Klock 33. Joe Scaturro 34. Mark Siewert 35. Dave Eppolitte 36. Lynn Rathbunn 37. Steve Lask 38. Mike Etzel 39. Chris Durlach 40. Richard Elkins 187 AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY (left to right) Lawrence Cooley; Wayne Chudylz; Sanford Mace; Carolyn Whitmoyer; Allen Pad- wa; Richard Brezinsky; Margaret Romer; Richard Partch, Advisor. DEAN’S ADVISORY COUNCIL The Dean’s Advisory Coun- cil is comprised of the presi- dents of all the engineering honoraries and professional societies. It provides a needed communication link between faculty and students. The group, which meets every month at one of the Dean’s homes or Lewis House, dis- cusses some of the relevant problems in their respective departments, in an attempt to improve Clarkson’s school of engineering from a student’s point of view. One of the main activities of the Dean’s Advis- ory Council was the planning of Engineering Day. (left to right) Patrick Flanagan; Edward Cichanowicz; Nathan Oakes; James Morehouse; John Fuoto; Ted Sanford, (absent) Roger Gyger; Ed Kloeber; Paul Longo. 188 STUDENT GOVERNMENT CLASS OF 74 (left to right) Jeff Andes; Jeff Ross; Jody LaBarge. CCSA 1st row: (left to right) Bob Grant; Fred Seufert; Kevin Rankin; Greg Phillips; Rich Koch; Stu Preston; Rick Dwyer. 2nd row: (left to right) Bill Gordon; Sandy Warnke; Joan Matranga; Hank Roitman; Jim Wiese. 3rd row: (left to right) Tom Buchal; Bob Benson; Nick Handreas; Mark Grosby; Bruce Broadley; Bob Shick; Chuck Whitaker; Rich Boziwick; Frank Popp; Jim Cerio. CLASS OF 73 189 (left to right) Tom Hanrahan, Secretary; Mike Santarcangelo, President; Chris Smith, Vice President; Shelley Dawson, Treasurer. 1st row: (Left to Right) Joe Lomonaco; Jeff Ancles; Paula Hurewitz, Secretary; Tom Carissimi, President; Rich Smith, Vice President; John Bowen, Treasurer; Ted Jagusztyn; Mike Santarca- ngelo; Jim Bruno, 2nd row: Sam Sciacca; Bill Brown; Larry Pakenas; Marti Wilson; Gary Stearns; John Suplicki; Chip Runyan; C. Michael Harris. COLLEGE UNION BOARD The College Union Board, on the most basic level is responsible for the oper- ations of the college union. However, the real workings of the CUB encom- passes the entire campus. Its respon- sibilities include the preparation of the master calendar, Family Day, Moving- Up Day, Supervision of student budg- ets, Supervision of Woodstock Lodge and Lewis House, providing a central registration point for college facilities and functions, and coordinator of Fra- ternity affairs. 190 COLLEGE UNION EVENTS MARCH 5TH TIME ROOM CLASSES CANCELED 7 9 CUB MOVIE MPR — In addition to the traditional functions such as the Junior Prom or Senior Ball, the CUB scheduled events to suit the student’s mood and lifestyle. Sev- eral dances were held by the CUB at Lewis House and The Hill including two wine coolers. The year’s concerts included Tom Rush and Chris Smi- thers, Michael Cooney, Sha-na-na, and the road production of Jesus Christ Superstar by the American Rock Opera company. Cultural events included convocations by Russ Bur- gess, a mystic who spoke on and demonstrated E.S.P., David Halbers- tam, a former U.S. war correspondent who spoke on “Youth and the Com- ing Election”, Lucy Komesar, a wom- en’s lib advocate who spoke on “The New Feminism”, Clinton Duffy former warden from San Quentin who spoke on prison reform and the abolishment of capital punishment, Jimmy Breslin, a candidate for vice-mayor of New York City who ran with Norman Mai- ler, spoke on urban crisis and the fu- ture of the big city in America today, Nat Hentoff, an author and journalist who spoke on “The New Morality”, and Lisa Sergio, a specialist and lec- turer in world affairs who spoke on the Future Triangle of World Powers: U.S.A., U.S.S.R., China”. Special events included two Folk Blues Jam- borees at the Rathskellar, The Spring Thing, and the Big Brother Barbeque. The CUB also presented films in Snell Hall every Wednesday, Friday and Saturday evenings and donated two Foosball machines to The Hill. 191 SERVICE FRATS ALPHA KAPPA PSI 1. Fred Jeffery 2. Joan Ferguson 3. Cindy Seaman 4. Liz Rella 5. Joe Luvera 6. Rich Reichhart 7. Dennis Misiak 8. Joe Beck 9. Judy Tyrell 10. Wally Miller 11. Bob Bruneau 12. Mark Finkelstein 13. Bill Brown 14. Rich Hineline 15. Bob Conklin 16. John Cizza 17. Dale Amyot 18. Paul Sears 19. Tom Heffernan 20. Joe Leddy 21. Dave Tebo 22. Greg Pauly 23. Kevin Fuess 24. Rich Martin ALPHA PHI OMEGA 1. Dick Elkins 2. Ted Parson 3. Robert DeGeorge 4. John Suplicki 5. Tom Wise 6. Steve Chiama 7. Eric Roberts 8. Pete Pagerey 9. Frank Barbehenn 10. Dave Ward 11. George Albury 12. Gary Hosford 13. Eugene Rein 14. Jeff Evans 15. Tom Mucenski 16. Mike McDonald 17. Don Dygert 18. Joel Silverman 19. Robert Pohl 192 193 196 1. Mark Cywilko 2. Curly McCabe 3. Jim Wiese 4. Jerry Sagliocca 5. Ritchie Barden 6. Steve Abbey 7. Rooster Helbig 8. Dago D'Agostino 9. Tom Blachek 10. Bill Angell 11. Chris Lange 12. Penuna Newman 13. Walt Burns 14. Fast Frank Kelly 15. Russ Walthers 16. Gopher D’Arrigo 17. Craze Fu 18. Dave Pizzino 19. Void Carson 20. Petey Whitlock 21. Little Kid Kincaid 22. Muffdiver Stockholm 23. Stevie Paul 24. Pudgie Henschel 25. Ted Jagusztyn 26. Rebel Jenkins 27. Brad Kennedy 28. Ted Luck 29. Dobber Dobbs 30. Bob Beck 31. B. J. Cheney 32. Pat Gillon 33. B. Ffarg Graff 34. Chet Skwara 35. Keith O’Neal 36. Slim Hopkins 37. Ed Thayer 38. Zeus Zalewski 39. Peter Chamberlain 40. Ozzie Ozahowski 41. Bob McMullen 42. Officer Hill 43. L. Ffarg Graff 44. Radical Stanton 45. Earl Bentley 46. Johnny Metzer 47. S. M. Unguran 48. Denny Kugler 49. Sgt. Wells 50. John VanWie 51. Debo DiBernardo 52. Greek Lask 53. Don Ryan 54. Mike Metell 55. Officer Perreta 56. Socks Bunyan 56. E. Bruce Jozwik 58. Terry Ring 59. Uncle Dale Foley 60. John Bowen Absent: Larry “troll” Dodge 197 198 1. Robert Van Flue 2. Thomas Hanrahan 3. Alvin Carmon 4. Paul Ziegler 5. Joseph Lepley 6. Andrew Stramiello 7. Darrell Bernstein 8. Robert Schick 9. Ross Williamson 10. Dennis Bilowus 11. Lee Branch 12. William Gurecki 13. Thomas Herrick 14. Peter Ottavio 15. Albert lamiceli 16. Douglas Jones 17. Michael Sissenstein 18. Francis Schiro 19. Paul Sarosky 20. Kevin Rankin 21. William Leonard 22. George Graeber 23. Michael Etzel 24. Fred Seufert 25. Fox 26. William Robinson 27. Gary Goleski 28. Chris Brown 29. Ronald Sapieszko 30. Thomas Phelps 31. Mark Sabine 32. Thomas Tangel 33. Steve Shull 34. Greg Cornett 35. Brian Hayes 36. Richard Boziwick 37. Robert Whitbeck 38. Charles Herrick 39. Walter Robson 40. Steve Hofler 41. Thomas Lawsing 42. David Eppolito 43. George Jamesson 44. Robert Ferguson 45. Charles Whitaker 46. William Lautenberger 47. Edward Powers 48. Michael Tomaselli Absent: Edward Noble 199 1. R. Calvin 29. G. Bennet 57. W. Petterson 2. S. Horhota 30. J. Manley 58. V. Rengel 3. K. Bies 31. S. Northrup 59. D. Aldrich 4. R. Swift 32. L. Morgan Absent: 5. J. Wasenko 33. J. Hughes T. Pitoniak 6. G. Ganoung 34. D. Fuller D. Fagan 7. J. Fuoto 35. R. Vigus R.Jackson 8. D. Cunningham 36. T. Roche J. Hanna 9. R. Keyes 37. J. Porter T. Brando 10. R. Jayne 38. D. House D. Lantz 11. R. Didocha 39. D. Godard Small Dog 12. R. Erickson 40. R. Randall 13. R. Pratt 41. J. Ballantine 14. D. Dickerson 42. R. Zittel 15. M. DiPirro 43. D. Eames 16. S. Babcock 44. T. Fritschi 17. P. Reilly 45. D. Roszman 18. G. Prell 46. R. Karpiuk 19. J. Koningisor 47. H. Bird 20. S. Mesh 48. C. Rappazzo 21. M. Tersillo 49. J. Solomon 22. J. Cummings 50. R. Bartlett 23. R. Patterson 51. J. Decker 24. F. Schatz 52. J. Sano 25. R. Smith 53. J. Preush 26. S. Schneider 54. K. Kenyon 27. C. Titus 55. N. Germano 28. B. Horvath 56. D. Luciano 201 1. S. Johnson 8. M. Johnson 15. J. Saunders 22. B. Throop 29. K. Sweet 2. D. Amyot 9. J. Marko 16. J. Daloia 23. L. Compeau 30. D. Flowers 3. J. Terpak 10. S. Reynolds 17. G. Weber 24. D. Sandwick 31. J. Hofeldt 4. B. Friers 11. D. Hall 18. J. Andes 25. G. Bassett 32. B. Moncsko 5. D. Mulcahy 12. S. Merrell 19. B. Nilan 26. B. Sawyer 33. P. Towell 6. W. Rote 13. S. Walsh 20. T. Lang 27. D. Smith 34. C. Sachs 7. T. Tamayo 14. G. Kling 21. W. Dyke 28. G. Smith 202 203 204 1. Robert Jorgensen 2. David Decker 3. Howard Wolf 4. Paul Broadbent 5. Jerome Warakomski 6. David Canino 7. Don Dangremond 8. James Ketcham 9. Gerald Tubbs 10. Richard Rago 11. John Fitzgerald 12. Christopher Holliday 13. Gary Stearns 14. Richard Naylon 15. Arthur Scotton 16. Frederick Mann 17. Richard Smith 18. Jacque Brunette 19. John Nabozny 20. Lawrence Pakenas 21. Randy Ott 22. Robert Daniels 23. James Toth 24. Thomas Wood 25. John Stekla 26. Thomas Murphy 27. James Hatzfeld 28. Donald Terry 29. Alan Corser 30. Timothy Fitzgerald 31. Paul Bovee 32. Eric Broadbent 33. George Baldassare 34. Robert Storms 35. Charles Fogg 36. Phillip Villari 37. Chuck Jacobs 38. Carmen Paludi 39. Peter Bud 40. Kenneth Shea 41. Chris Smith 42. Robert Crandall 43. Peter Lebro 44. Thomas Verberg 45. Mike Santarlangelo 46. Scott Stanton 47. Mike Elliott 48. Randy Howland 49. Amasa Nellis 50. John Charno 51. Dennis Kieta 52. Huxley Absent: Ric Baxter John Ferguson Mike Walters David Kibbe Scott Anderson Ralph Atwater Chet Brostek Peter Ganley Terry Brown Thomas DiFloria Jose Fernandez Cary Flack Tom Herrema Todd Lingoski Cade Lockwood Paul Morey John Yacano 205 n M ♦ i • ' % ♦ ♦ m 206 1. T. Teej 14. P. W. Tube 27. Gregory Smith 2. L. Kroch 15. D. Zinger Absent: 3. V. M. Pire 16. W. Rags Robert George 4. J. Toke 17. B. Swan, Jr. Atilla Hasnay 5. B. Queer 18. D. Bag Gary Allen 6. J. Skinner 19. C. Trout Daniel O’Connor 7. G. Dirt ball 20. J. Virgin Neal Taylor 8. J. Homo 21.G. Fogg Mike Bojack 9. B. Freaky 22. N. Strate Donald Norbin 10. B. Techer 23. A. Head Martin Wortendyke 11. R. Nads 24. R. Kidd Roy Moore 12. P. Shark 25. W. Dude Greg Wolfenden 13. J. Votz 26. William Meeker 207 208 1. Georgie 23. J. Brown 2. L. DeMaria 24. J. Hinto 3. T. Lynch 25. D. Frame 4. J. Penamonte 26. W. Nahumck 5. M. Doucette 27. Mr. R. Cook 6. J. Becker 28. R. Ihlenburg 7. K. Kline 29. R. Leslie 8. T. Savory 30. G. Brabeman 9. R. Sonnelitter 31. C. Strawitch 10. G. Alpert 32. J. Paveglio 11. Capt. R. Reublinger 33. J. Zingale 12. T. Meade 34. R. Zipkas 13. G. Otakie 35. S. Whalen 14. R. Simonsen 36. D. Lunn 15. D. Ricci 37. J. Winter 16. W. Andrews 38. R. Pino 17. W. Greismyer 39. R. Chlebus 18. R. Johnson 40. R. Kalina 19. E. Burns 41. B. Best 20. M. Campbell 42. T. Noonan 21. D. Sellars 22. D. Farnsworth 43. R. Refici Officers President Michael Campbell V. President Will Andrews Treasurer John Becker Recording Sec. Bob Sonnelitter Corresponding Sec. Gary Alpert House Manager Bob Ihnlenburg 209 210 1. Carl Piehl 2. Donald Mason 3. Kevin Woods 4. Robert Visalli 5. Steven Tanzini 6. Paul Reilly 7. Roger Duke 8. Gary McLaughlin 9. Jeffrey Sumcizk 10. James Vitale 11. Gerald Rodman 12. Robert Schiller 13. Alger Wallace 14. Fred Bailey 15. Duncan Wright 16. Geoffrey lllian 17. Drew Horvath 18. William Biloski 19. Gregory Tincknell 20. David Waack 21. Gary Wilkinson 22. Bruce DiStefano 23. Dave Speed 24. Robert Sigond 25. Mike Woratzeck 26. William Meeker 27. Greg Smith 211 212 1. Passa 9. Kemper 17. Joe 25. Bleu 2. J. J. 10. Hilda the Troll 18. Opie 26. Oren 3. Mac 11. Floyd 19. Douglas Q. 27. The Greek 4. Stank 12. Swirley 20. Jumbo 28. Buzzard 5. Deef 13. “grip” 21. Kelly 29. Lanky 6. Weasel 14. “goon” 22. Agu 30. DUCK 7. Tony 8. T. J. 15. Brownie 16. Martin L. 23. Hick 24. MOTHER 31. Physical, Why? 213 214 1. Ken Treiling 2. Bob Hammelmann 3. John Kane 4. Bill Bartolucci 5. Jim Karol 6. Don McRae 7. Bob Conkey 8. Don Vankurin 9. Bruce Taylor 10. Mike Hurley 11. Paul Belton 12. Nick LaRocco 13. Al Rampe 14. John Pistana 15. Chet Victor 16. Carl Shield 17. Doug Stein 18. Jim Kennedy 19. John Brewer 20. David Byrnes 21. John Bonanno 22. Lyndon Kellog 23. Charles Severinghaus 24. Mark Baldwin 25. Doug Dahler 26. Nick Mazzaferro 27. Tony Rossi 28. Henry Kauffunger 29. John MacDonald 30. Bruce Jeurgens 31. Mike Paterno 32. Frank Simon 215 1. Walt Ninesling 2. William Cutler 3. Paul Rochna 4. Don Klock 5. Randy Perkins 6. Doug Andrew 7. Rick Alibrandi 8. Bob Hope 9. John Biava 10. Mark Siewart 11. Bob Saccone 12. Dick Lord 13. Mike Scanzillo 14. Jim Nodnan 15. George Aspinall 16. Greg Greenan 17. George Scharfe 18. John Mclnerney 19. Bill Haskell 20. Duard Williams 21. John Inquanti 22. Jack Fragomemi 23. Al Lafreniere 24. John Mies 25. Joel Church 26. Bob Hornaday 27. Mike Sanok Absent: Steven Yianoukos Mark Flaherty Bob Wenderlich Ed Poku Tom Mitchell Doug Shellington Peter Vanderbeck Mike Cornell Tom Eichorn 216 217 218 1. Mike Giarratano 2. John Parker 3. Paul Rawluszki 4. Mike Conner 5. Tom Daly 6. Paul Chomka 7. Rande Funkhauser 8. Rod Averill 9. Don Thomas 10. Tim Smith 11. Ron Miller 12. Bob Connelly 13. Fred Ravetto 14. Tom Ukolowicz 15. Jim Fulmer 16. Lu Hicks 17. Greg Arnold 18. Bill Boyd 19. Mike DeRosie 20. Steve Kusak 21. Jim Prendergast 22. Brian Moore 23. Rick Keller 24. Don Low 25. Ric Surino 26. Fred Walker 27. Wayne Szafranski 28. Don Clegg 29. Dave Harvey 30. Roger Gyger 31. George Weidert 32. Bruce Germinaro 33. Jerry Maston 34. Mike Stratton 35. Mike Mikus 219 220 1. Tim Dorsey 2. Jack Bullock 3. Bob Fagel 4. Dave Hendrick 5. Bob Schrader 6. Greg Feduke 7. Charlie Mosier 8. John Sommes 9. Pete Dusel 10. Terry Young 11. Jon Heagney 12. Squirrel 13. Bob Schau 14. Frank Bosco 15. Knut Hansen 16. George Burkett 17. Mike Haider 18. Tom McDonald 19. Dave French 20. Glenn Horan 21. Artie Rotunno 22. Joe Mondillo 23. Mark Dzierga Absent: Ed Robinson BT 221 222 TWIN-PRINT ALBUM SIZE ■ H WALLET SIZE Kinn j Dfu9« i nr KINNEYC55D DR 223 Richard T. Aab v Erik S. Anderson Robert Backus John Banaszak Alejandro Acosta William D. Andrew Fred G. Bailey Charles S. Bartlett William H. Advocate Richard E. Aiken Gary Arbach Thruston Await Robert Bailey Joseph A. Baisch Glen E. Bassett John R. Becker 226 Richard J. Alter, Jr. James Ballantine Thomas L. Becker RICHARD T. ABB Economics 1229 Latta Road, Rochester, N.Y. 14612 (315) 865-6592 Varsity Soccer 3; Varsity Golf 3, 4; Tau Delta Kappa 2, 3, 4 ALEJANDRO ACOSTA Civil Engineering Guayaquil, Ecuador Chi Epsilon 4; Soccer 3 WILLIAM H. ADVOCATE Chemical Engineering Arbor Hill, Pleasant Valley, N.Y. 12569 (914) 635-3851 College Union Board Cultural Committee 3, 4; Rifle Team 1, 2, 3, 4 RICHARD E. AIKEN Industrial Distribution 127 Main Street, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-6035 Industrial Distribution Society 3,4; Ice Carnival 3 RICHARD J. ALTER JR. Industrial Management 178 Main Street, Fort Plain, N.Y. 13339 (518) 994-8164 Amateur Radio Club 1, 2-Secretary; 3-President; 4- President ERIK S. ANDERSON Chemical Engineering 39 Lamed Lane, Orchard Park, N.Y. 14127 (716) 662-4174 Varsity Wrestling 3; American Institute of Chemical Engineers 3, 4 WILLIAM D. ANDREW Industrial Distribution 110 Pokonoket Road, Sudbury, Mass. 01776 (617) 443-2983 Sigma Delta 2, 3, 4; Industrial Distribution Society 3, 4 GARY ARBACH Chemistry 120 Whittier Drive, Thornwood, N.Y. 10594 (914) 769-6290 THRUSTON AWALT Electrical Engineering 398 Middlesex Road, Darien Conn. 06820 (203) 655-0419 Knight 2, 3-Managing Editor; 4-Advisory Editor; Ro- cket Society 4; Pi Delta Epsilon 2, 3, 4-Vice Presi- dent; Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engi- neers 4 SCOTT BABCOCK Industrial Management 355 Ridge Road, Scotia, N.Y. 12302 (518) 372-0807 Tau Epsilon Phi 2, 3, 4 ROBERT BACKUS Mechanical Engineering 109 Daisy Street, Syracuse, N.Y. 13204 (315) 475-0737 American Society of Mechanical Engineers 3, 4 FRED G. BAILEY Mechanical Engineering 12 Parkwood Drive, Burnt Hills, N.Y. 12027 (518) 399-3800 Theta Chi 2, 3-Treasurer, 4 ROBERT BAILEY Chemical Engineering 935 Sheely Street, Elmira, N.Y. 14905 (607) 732-9954 JOSEPH A. BAISCH Mathematics Oak Ridge Drive, Cold Springs, N.Y. 10516 (914) 265-3529 JAMES BALLANTINE Political Science 432 Chestnut Street, Oneonta, N.Y. 13820 (607) 432-1769 Soccer 2, 3, 4; Tau Epsilon Phi 2, 3-Social Chairman 4; Ice Carnival 3-Committee Chairman JOHN BANASZAK Civil Engineering P.O. Box 89, Cowlesville, N.Y. 14037 (716) 937-6518 American Society of Civfl Engineers 4; Cycle Club 2. 3, 4; Outing Club 4; Intramural Sports 2, 3 CHARLES S. BARTLETT Electrical Engineering 217 Gailmor Drive, Yonkers, N.Y. 10710 (914) 779-6325 Tau Epsilon Phi 2, 3, 4; Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 3, 4 GLEN E. BASSETT Electrical Engineering 6950 Hunter’s Branch Drive, Atlanta, Georgia 30328 (404) 252-3612 Dragon Squad 2; Alpha Epsilon Pi 3, 4; Varsity Rifle Team 2, 3, 4; Varsity Cross Country 4; Varsity Club 2, 3, 4; Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 4 JOHN R. BECKER Mathematics 25 State Street, Seneca Falls, N.Y. 13148 (315) 568-8379 Tau Delta Kappa 2, 3, 4-Treasurer; Class of ’72 1- Treasurer; 2-President; 3-Treasurer; 4-Treasurer; Clarksonian 4-Business Manager; Bridge Club 1, 2; Junior Prom 3-Committee Chairman; Golf 2 THOMAS L. BECKER Mechanical Engineering 3054 English Road, Rochester, N.Y. 14616 (716) 225-2335 American Society of Mechanical Engineers 3, 4; Freshman Orientation Board 2; Intramurals 1,2, 3, 4 227 A. Paul Bennett John A. Biava Ron Bissinger Richard Bodek Walter J. Bozek Richard G. Bradshaw William J. Biloski Dennis D. Bilowus Glenn T. Bodman III John C. Bonanno Kevin W. Brady Lee C. Branch 228 Robert Bresee John Brewer Richard P. Britton Eric Broadbent Howard R. Bird Paul Bovee Paul R. Brandyberry Paul Broadbent A. PAUL BENNETT Mathematics 8 Speer Drive, Corning, N.Y. 14830 (607) 962-0269 Junior Prom 3-Co-chairman JOHN A. BIAVA Humanities 200 Cordova Road, Santa Fe, N.M. 87501 (505) 983-2497 Inter Fraternity Council 3; Sigma Delta 2, 3, 4 WILLIAM J. BILOSKI Civil Engineering 202 Schaffer Avenue, Syracuse, N.Y. 13206 (315) 463-5021 Theta Chi 2, 3, 4 DENNIS D. BILOWUS Electrical Engineering 26 Seneca Creek Road, West Seneca, N.Y. 14224 (716) 674-2421 Alpha Chi Rho 2, 3, 4; Academic Affairs Committee 3; Integrator 4; Tennis Team 2 HOWARD R. BIRD Chemical Engineering 172 Eastgate Drive, Rochester, N.Y. 14617 (716) 544-4419 Tau Epsilon Phi 2, 3, 4; Omega Chi Epsilon 3, 4; American Institute of Chemical Engineers 4 RON BISSINGER Chemical Engineering 315 Willis Avenue, Hawthorne, N.Y. 10532 (914) 769-6165 RICHARD BODEK Chemical Engineering 214 Pierce Avenue, Endicott, N.Y. 13760 (607) 785-2740 Omega Chi Epsilon 3, 4; American Institute of Chemical Engineers 4 GLENN T. BODMAN III Chemical Engineering 535 78th Street, Niagara Falls, N.Y. 14304 (716) 283-5601 Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4 JOHN C. BONANNO Industrial Distribution 4 Carstead Drive, Slingerlands, N.Y. 12159 (518) 439-3264 Industrial Distribution Society 1; Inter Fraternity Council 3, 4; Delta Sigma Phi 2, 3, 4; Big Brother Program 2, 3; Clarkson Rangers 1,2; Ice Carnival 3- Committee Chairman PAUL BOVEE Industrial Distribution 109 West Genesee Street, Baldwinsville, N.Y. 13027 (315) 635-6041 Delta Upsilon 2, 3, 4; Varsity Lacrosse 2, 3, 4-Cap- tain; Freshman Lacrosse 1; Sigma Tau lota 3, 4- President; Varsity C 3, 4 WALTER J. BOZEK Mechanical Engineering 53 Dudley Avenue, Yorkville, N.Y. 13495 (315) 736-1875 American Society of Mechanical Engineers 3, 4 RICHARD G. BRADSHAW Industrial Distribution 7 Garden Street, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-5643 KEVIN W. BRADY Industrial Distribution 110 Cornwall Avenue, Utica, N.Y. 13502 (315) 797-1982 Varsity Lacrosse 3, 4 LEE C. BRANCH Chemical Engineering 7531 Ridge Road, Gasport, N.Y. 14067 (716) 772-2177 Class of 72 3-Vice President; 4-Vice President; American Institute of Chemical Engineers 4; Junior Prom 3-Committee Chairman; Freshman Orientation Board 4; Lacrosse 1, 2, 3; Alpha Chi Rho 2, 3, 4; Rifle Team 1 PAUL R. BRANDYBERRY Political Science 79V2 Elm Street, Apt. D, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-3079 Political Science Association 4 ROBERT BRESEE Industrial Distribution 101 Forest Lane, Salem, N.H. 03079 (603) 893-6888 JOHN BREWER Mechanical Engineering 33 Susan Lane, Cheektowaga, N.Y. 14225 (716) 832-5893 American Society of Mechanical Engineers 4; Delta Sigma Phi 2, 3, 4 RICHARD P. BRITTON Mechanical Engineering 114 Erregger Road, Syracuse, N.Y. 13224 (315) 446-4587 Pi Tau Sigma 3, 4; American Society of Mechanical Engineers 4 ERIC BROADBENT Industrial Distribution 114 Stonehedge Drive, Greenwich, Conn. 06833 (203) 531-9487 Lacrosse 2, 3, 4; Sigma Tau lota 3, 4; Delta Upsilon 2, 3, 4 PAUL BROADBENT Industrial Distribution 114 Stonehedge Drive, Greenwich, Conn. 06833 (203) 531-9487 Wrestling 2; College Union Board 4-Publications Chairman; Industrial Distribution Society 3, 4 229 Geoff Brown Felix R. Burns Michael J. Campbell Robert R. Carson, Jr. Timothy R. Bush Edward J. Carter William F. Brown Kerry W. Bynum Nikki Cannon William Carter 230 John W. Bullock Agustin Cabrer, Jr. John Thomas Carissimi Tony Caschera George Burkett Anthony J. Campana Bruce E. Caro GEOFF BROWN Social Science 158 Abbotsford Road, Hazeldean, Ontario 836-1668 Hockey 1, 2, 3, 4; Golf 3, 4; Baseball 1 TERRY BROWN Civil Engineering 6307 Jane Lane, RD 4, Clay, N.Y. 13041 (315) 699-2874 Varsity Soccer 2, 3, 4; Resident Advisor 2, 3, 4; Delta Upsilon 2, 3-Vice President; 4-Recording Secretary; Varsity C 3, 4-Treasurer; Student Faculty Senate Athletic Committee 2, 3; Freshman Basketball 1; Freshman Baseball 1; American Society of Civil En- gineers 3, 4 WILLIAM F. BROWN Accounting 22 Birch Hill Road, Florence, Mass. 01060 (413) 586-2753 Alpha Kappa Psi 3, 4-Treasurer; College Union Board 4-Movie Chairman JOHN W. BULLOCK Electrical Engineering 895 Maple Drive, Webster, N.Y. 14580 (716) 671-1312 Beta Tau 2, 3, 4-House Manager; Institute of Elec- trical and Electronics Engineers 4 GEORGE BURKETT Social Science 20 E. Van Ness, Rutherford, N.J. 07070 (201) 939-1813 Beta Tau 2, 3, 4; Clarkson Auto Association 2 FELIX R. BURNS Social Science 167 Webster Street, Malone, N.Y. 12953 (518) 483-4145 TIMOTHY R. BUSH Electrical Engineering 4A11 Woodstock Village, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-8144 Eta Kappa Nu 3, 4; Institute of Electrical and Elec- tronics Engineers 3, 4; Intervarsity Christian Fellow- ship 1, 2, 3, 4 KERRY W. BYNUM Electrical Engineering 138 Maple Street, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-3585 Fencing Club 4; Institute of Electrical and Elec- tronics Engineers 4 AGUSTIN CABRER, JR. Industrial Distribution Minerva Street, Humacao, Puerto Rico 00661 (809) 852-0019 Zeta Nu 2, 3, 4; Ice Carnival 1, 2 ANTHONY J. CAMPANA Civil Engineering 4 Clifford Street, Binghamton, N.Y. 13901 (607) 724-3681 American Society of Civil Engineers 3, 4 MICHAEL J. CAMPBELL Chemical Engineering Willis Road, Chateaugay, N.Y. 12920 (518) 497-6102 American Institute of Chemical Engineers 2, 3, 4; In- ter Fraternity Council 4; Tau Delta Kappa 2, 3, 4 GARY CANNERELLI Civil Engineering 1128 Wetmore Street, Utica, N.Y. 13501 (315) 724-7650 Tau Beta Pi 3, 4-Vice President; Chi Epsilon 3, 4- Treasurer; American Society of Civil Engineers 3, 4; Clarksonian 4; Intramurals 3, 4; Inter Varsity Chris- tian Fellowship 3, 4 NIKKI CANNON Mechanical Engineering 1499 Seneca Creek Road, West Seneca, N.Y. 14224 (716) 683-0538 Clarksonian 2, 3-Assistant Editor; 4-Editor-in-Chief; Class of 72 1-Secretary; 2-Secretary; 3-Secretary; 4- Secretary; Tau Beta Pi 3, 4-Cataloguer; Pi Tau Sigma 3, 4; American Society of Mechanical Engi- neers 3, 4; Pi Delta Epsilon 3, 4; Photo Club 1,2, 3 JOHN THOMAS CARISSIMI Social Science 39 Clinton Street, Seneca Falls, N.Y. 13148 (315) 568-8233 Class of 72 1-President; 3-President; College Union Board 1-Executive Board; 3-Executive Board; 4- President; Junior Prom 3-Chairman; Ice Carnival 3- Committee Chairman; 4-Committee Chairman; Freshman Orientation Board 3, 4; Student Senate Judiciary Committee 3; Student Senate Elections Committee 4; Phalanx 3, 4 BRUCE E. CARO Civil Engineering 151 Crary Avenue, Binghamton, N.Y. 13905 (607) 797-1824 American Society of Civil Engineers 2, 3, 4; Chi Ep- silon 3, 4 ROBERT R. CARSON, JR. Mathematics 9 Dogwood Road, Stonybrook, N.Y. 11790 (516) 751-2128 Tau Kappa Epsilon 2, 3, 4 EDWARD J. CARTER Chemical Engineering 27 Winter Street, Troy, N.Y. 12180 (518) 283-1060 American Institute of Chemical Engineers 4 WILLIAM CARTER Mechanical Engineering 32A Maple Street, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-3421 Student Senate 1, 2-Representative; 3-Vice Presi- dent; Ice Carnival 4-Chairman; Pi Tau Sigma 3, 4 TONY CASCHERA Industrial Distribution 8 Maple Avenue, Mechanicville, N.Y. 12118 (518) 664-5119 Varsity Baseball 2, 3, 4; Varsity C 2, 3, 4; Inter Frater- nity Council 4-Sports Coordinator; Tau Delta Kappa 2, 3, 4-Rush Chairman BARTON C. CASE Chemistry 183G Reids Hill Road, Morganville, N.J. 07751 Ski Club 2, 3, 4; Omicron Pi Omicron 2, 3, 4; Inter Fraternity Council 3 231 Barton C. Case John R. Cerow George G. Cervenka John M. Chaufty David M. Cole Barry Cheney Robert S. Conklin, Jr. David J. Cox Eric B. Chapman Richard Chlebus Steven A. Craver John Robert Charno Richard Cianciotto Michael William Conroy Richard M. Cukrovany 232 Robert Walter Craver J. Victor Chatigny J. Edward Cichanowicz Steven L. Corey Brian Culver JOHN R. CEROW Electrical Engineering 509 South Hamilton Street, Watertown, N.Y. 13601 (315) 788-5334 GEORGE G. CERVENKA Mechanical Engineering 16 Greenwood Avenue, East Islip, N.Y. 11730 (516) 581-3328 ERIC B. CHAPMAN Industrial Distribution 39 Victor Road, Macedon, N.Y. 14502 (315) 986-4547 Sigma Tau lota 3, 4-Secretary; Industrial Dis- tribution Society 3, 4; Integrator 1; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4 JOHN ROBERT CHARNO Industrial Management 324 Hayes Avenue, Endicott, N.Y. 13760 (607) 748-2590 Delta Upsilon 2, 3, 4; Freshman Basketball 1; Varsity Basketball 2, 3, 4 J. VICTOR CHATIGNY Industrial Distribution Box 33, Melrose, N.Y. 12121 (518) 235-0495 Zeta Nu 2, 3, 4; Inter Fraternity Council 3; Industrial Distribution Society 3, 4 JOHN M. CHAUFTY Civil Engineering East North Street, Port Leyden, N.Y. 13433 (315) 348-6407 Pep Band 1, 2; American Society of Civil Engineers 3, 4; Society of American Military Engineers 3, 4 BARRY CHENEY Civil Engineering 32 Peace Road, Dover, N.J. 07801 (201) 366-3251 Tau Kappa Epsilon 2, 3-Secretary 4; Ice Carnival 3- Co-Chairman; American Society of Civil Engineers I, 4 RICHARD CHLEBUS Industrial Distribution 906 Second Street, Solvay, N.Y. 13209 (315) 468-5066 Tau Delta Kappa 2, 3-Assistant Steward; 4-Steward RICHARD CIANCIOTTO Mechanical Engineering 252 Shorewood Drive, Webster, N.Y. 14580 (716) 671-6134 Varsity Soccer 2, 3-Co-Captain; 4-Captain; Varsity C 3, 4-President; American Society of Mechanical En- gineers 4 J. EDWARD CICHANOWICZ Mechanical Engineering 2100 New Suffolk Avenue, Mattituck, N.Y. 11952 (516) 298-4851 Engineering Dean’s Advisory Council 4; American Society of Mechanical Engineers 3, 4-President; Tau Beta Pi 3, 4-Local Corresponding Secretary; Pi Tau Sigma 3, 4; Student Senate Committee for Aca- demic Affairs 3 DAVID M. COLE Civil Engineering 118 East 7th Street, Oswego, N.Y. 13126 (315) 343-0733 Transfer Orientation Committee 4 ROBERT S. CONKLIN, JR. Industrial Management Box 183, Berne, N.Y. 12023 (518) 872-0390 Alpha Kappa Psi 3; 4-President; Alpha Phi Omega 2, 3-Vice President; Freshman Orientation Board 2, 3; Community Involvement 3, 4; Drama Club 1; Dragon Squad 2, 3 RUSSELL H. CONNOR Industrial Distribution 43 Cookie Lane, Islip Terrace, N.Y. 11752 (516) 581-9339 Delta Sigma Phi 2, 3, 4 MICHAEL WILLIAM CONROY Industrial Distribution 34 Bonheim Street, Albany, N.Y. 12204 (518) 465-7061 Auto Club 1, 2, 3, 4 STEVEN L. COREY Electrical Engineering RD 2, Box 244, Endicott, N.Y. 13760 (607) 862-3365 Freshman Baseball 1 DAVID J. COX Electrical Engineering 169 Southdown Road, Huntington, N.Y. 11743 (516) 423-0936 Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 4; Rocket Society 4 ROBERT WALTER CRAVER Civil Engineering 5951 Old Rome Oneida Road, Rome, N.Y. 13440 (315) 337-8979 STEPHEN A. CRAVER Chemical Engineering 1646 Fitzpatrick Road, Montour Falls, N.Y. 14865 (607) 594-2334 American Institute of Chemical Engineers 3, 4 RICHARD M. CUKROVANY Civil Engineering Main Street, Schaghticoke, N.Y. 12154 (518) 753-4419 American Society of Civil Engineers 3, 4 BRIAN CULVER Civil Engineering Messner Road, Savannah, N.Y. 13146 (315) 365-3173 Omicron Pi Omicron 2, 3. 4; American Society of Civil Engineers 3, 4; Soccer 1 233 William Cutler Albert Davis David J. Decker Donald R. Dickerson Mark E. Cywilko Brian T. Davis James E. Decker Dan Dickinson Nicholas Charles D’Agostino Peter Davis Paul Lewis Demers Robert J. Didocha Kim Andrew Dahlberg Eugene B. Dec Michael J. DeRosie Randall Dievendorf 234 Gerald F. Daloia Lorenzo de Cillis Peter W. Dewes Robert DiFiore WILLIAM CUTLER Mechanical Engineering 104 Rhinecliff Drive, Rochester, N.Y. 14618 (716) 271-3852 Sigma Delta 2, 3-Treasurer; 4-Vice President; Amer- ican Society of Mechanical Engineers 4; Pi Tau Sigma 3, 4; Ski Club 1, 2 MARK E. CYWILKO Industrial Management 530 Whittier Avenue, Sutacuse, N.Y. 13204 (315) 475-4248 Tau Kappa Epsilon 2, 3-Vice President; 4-President; Clarkson Rangers 1,2, 3, 4; Inter Fraternity Council 4-Vice President NICHOLAS CHARLES D AGOSTINO Civil Engineering 107 Sarles Lane, Pleasantville, N.Y. 10570 (914) 769-3233 Tau Kappa Epsilon 2, 3, 4; American Society of Civil Engineers 2, 3, 4 KIM ANDREW DAHLBERG Electrical Engineering RD 2, Bath Road, Penn Yan, N.Y. 14527 (315) 536-9773 Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 3, 4; Intramurals 2, 3, 4 GERALD F. DALOIA Electrical Engineering 25 Center Street, Auburn, N.Y. 13021 (315) 253-9618 Alpha Epsilon Pi 2, 3-Steward; 4-Scribe; Eta Kappa Nu 3, 4; Alpha Phi Omega 1,2, 3, 4; Ski Club 1; Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 3, 4 ALBERT DAVIS Electrical Engineering 61 McCormack Road, Slingerlands, N.Y. 12159 (518) 439-4298 Inter College Radio Network 1, 2, 3, 4-WTSC Chief Engineer; Pi Delta Epsilon 3, 4 BRIAN T. DAVIS Physics 2714 Brighton Place, Utica, N.Y. 13501 (315) 725-9482 Rocket Society 2, 3, 4-President; Society of Physics Students 2 PETER DAVIS Civil Engineering 4Vfe Castle Drive, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-6394 American Society of Civil Engineers 3, 4 EUGENE B. DEC Civil Engineering 44 Wilbur Avenue, Auburn, N.Y. 13021 (315) 252-4342 Tau Beta Pi 3, 4-National Corresponding Secretary; Chi Epsilon 3, 4; Pi Delta Epsilon 3, 4; Clarksonian 3, 4-Assistant Editor; American Society of Civil Engi- neers 3, 4 LORENZO DE CILLIS Industrial Distribution 97-16 Allendale Street, Jamaica, N.Y. 11435 (212) 297-2518 DAVID J. DECKER Chemical Engineering Box-P Prospect Street, Philmont, N.Y. 12565 (518) 672-6111 Delta Upsilon 2, 3, 4; Resident Advisor 2, 3, 4; Class of 72 4-President, Student Senate 2 JAMES E. DECKER Industrial Management 134 Seaview Terrace, Northport, N.Y. 11768 (516) 261-8537 Tau Epsilon Phi 2, 3, 4-Social Chairman PAUL LEWIS DEMERS Mechanical Engineering 125 Cecil Avenue, Massena, N.Y. 13662 (315) 769-3409 MICHAEL J. DEROSIE Mechanical Engineering Cutry Lane, Massena, N.Y. 13662 (315) 769-7939 Theta Xi 2, 3, 4 PETER W. DEWES Civil Engineering 7 Lorenz Place, Wayne, N.J. 07470 (201) 696-3042 American Society of Civil Engineers 3, 4; Drama Club 1, 2 DONALD R. DICKERSON Industrial Distribution 14 Knickerbocker Road, Demarest, N.J. 07627 (201) 768-4622 Tau Epsilon Phi 1, 2, 3, 4-Assistant Bursar; Rifle Team 1; Ice Carnival 3, 4 DAN DICKINSON Social Science 1314 Chenango Street, Binghamton, N.Y. 13901 (607) 723-5533 Student Senate 3; Delta Sigma Phi 3, 4; Big Brother Program 2; Student Senate Judicial Committee 3- Chairman; Integrator 2; Rocket Society 4 ROBERT J. DIDOCHA Mechanical Engineering Silver Street Road, Auburn, N.Y. 13021 (315) 253-8312 Tau Epsilon Phi 2, 3, 4-Rush Chairman RANDALL DIEVENDORF Chemical Engineering 31 Clyde Street, Fort Plain, N.Y. 13339 (518) 994-8444 Omega Chi Epsilon 3, 4-Vice President; American Institute of Chemical Engineers 2, 3, 4 ROBERT DIFIORE Civil Engineering 5495 Woodlawn Place, Utica, N.Y. 13502 (315) 733-8650 Zeta Nu 2, 3-Rush Chairman; 4-President; Inter Fra- ternity Council 3, 4 235 D. Timothy Dillon Paul Wilson Dwyer David A. Fagan Jerome DiMaggio James J. Elacqua David J. Farnsworth Richard Driscoll Henry S. Elwyn III Alan Ferguson 236 Lewis Fertig Thomas K. Field Clyde W. Finger James Fish Charles S. Dunn Brent L. Evans Robert W. Ferguson Robert J. Fitzgerald D. TIMOTHY DILLON Civil Engineering Raquette Lake, N.Y. 13436 (315) 354-4201 American Society of Civil Engineers 3, 4 JEROME DIMAGGIO Civil Engineering 19-10 Stanhope Street, Ridgewood, N.Y. 11237 (516) 386-8540 American Society of Civil Engineers 3, 4 RICHARD S. DRAKE Chemistry 121 Sunset Terrace, Orchard Park, N.Y. 14127 (716) 662-7258 American Chemical Society 4 RICHARD DRISCOLL Mechanical Engineering 5 Rorbach Lane, Geneseo, N.Y. 14454 (716) 243-3581 WNTC 3, 4-Publicity Director; Intramurals 3, 4 CHARLES S. DUNN Chemical Engineering 384 McKinley Avenue, Kenmore, N.Y. 14217 (716) 873-2327 American Institute of Chemical Engineers 1, 2, 3, 4- Treasurer; Varsity Lacrosse 2, 3, 4 PAUL WILSON DWYER Mechanical Engineering 16 Church Street, Chateaugay, N.Y. 12970 (518) 497-6169 American Society of Mechanical Engineers 4; In- tramurals 1,2, 3,4; Clarksonian 4 JAMES J. ELACQUA Electrical Engineering 22 Dubuque Street, Rensselaer, N.Y. 12144 (518) 463-7091 Eta Kappa Nu 3, 4-Corresponding Secretary; In- stitute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 3, 4; Intramurals 2, 3, 4 KEVIN ELLIOTT Electrical Engineering 1008 Grand Boulevard, Westbury, N.Y. 11590 (516) 334-6452 Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 1,2, 3, 4; Eta Kappa Nu 3, 4 HENRY S. ELWYN III Industrial Distribution 2 Myer Avenue, Harriman, N.Y. 10926 (914) 783-4731 BRENT L. EVANS Chemical Engineering 58 Drewville Road, Carmel, N.Y. 10512 (914) 628-4845 American Institute of Chemical Engineers 4; Wres- tling 1, 2, 3, 4 DAVID A. FAGAN Industrial Management 82 Main Street, Potsdam, New York 13676 Tau Epsilon Phi 2, 3, 4; Standing Committee for Stu- dent Disorders 3, 4 DAVID J. FARNSWORTH Industrial Distribution Hopkinton Road, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-4334 Tau Delta Kappa 2, 3, 4 ROBERT H. FENNEL Industrial Distribution 519 Hill Street, Mamaroneck, N.Y. 10543 (914) 698-1483 Varsity Soccer 1, 2, 3, 4; Varsity Lacrosse 1, 2, 4; Varsity “C” 3, 4-Vice President; Industrial Dis- tribution Society 3, 4; Dorm Food Committee 2; In- tegrator 4-Sports Writer ALAN FERGUSON Mechanical Engineering 9 Edgebrook Court, New City, N.Y. 10956 (914) 638-0594 ROBERT W. FERGUSON Chemical Engineering 27 Van Buren Road, Scotia, N.Y. 12302 (518) 399-3534 Alpha Chi Rho 2, 3, 4 LEWIS FERTIG Mechanical Engineering 310 Norton Avenue, Endwell, N.Y. 13760 (607) 748-7819 Potsdam Headstart Program 2; Photo Club 4 THOMAS K. FIELD Industrial Management 145 North Highland Avenue, Wellsville, N.Y. 14895 (716) 593-1896 Auto Club 3, 4 CLYDE W. FINGER Industrial Distribution 33 Reservoir Street, Bethel, Conn. 06801 (203) 743-3260 Industrial Distribution Society 3, 4 JAMES FISH Civil Engineering RD 2 Saratoga, Saratoga Springs, N.Y. 12866 (518) 584-5954 Tau Epsilon Phi 2, 3, 4 ROBERT J. FITZGERALD Civil Engineering 34 Howard Avenue, Malone, N.Y. 12953 (518) 483-5475 Transfer Orientation Committee 4 237 Timothy M. Fitzgerald Cary Flack Harold Ford Arthur S. Forkos Thomas Friers Kevin Stout Fuess Patrick Michael Flanagan Gary J. Fleury Mark S. Foster Francis R. Foy Jr. John Fuoto David Fuller David B. Goettel Philip Goettel Lalu Gokalbhai George Graff 238 Dale R. Foley Claude Francescott Stephen G. Gagnier Dennis Michael Grey TIMOTHY M. FITZGERALD Mechanical Engineering 345 Winslow Street, Watertown, N.Y. 13601 (315) 782-7068 CARY FLACK Civil Engineering 307 West Linden Street, Rome, N.Y. 13440 (315) 337-3060 Varsity Tennis 2, 3, 4; Delta Upsilon 2, 3, 4; Ameri- can Society of Civil Engineers 4; Varsity “C” 2, 3, 4 PATRICK MICHAEL FLANAGAN Mechanical Engineering 40 Dan-Troy Drive, Williamsville, N.Y. 14221 (716) 633-5887 Tau Beta Pi 3, 4-President; American Society of Me- chanical Engineers 3, 4-Vice President; Clarksonian 3, 4-Assistant Editor; Pi Tau Sigma 3, 4; Pi Delta Ep- silon 3, 4; Engineering Dean’s Advisory Council 4 GARY J. FLEURY Social Science Route 2, Massena, N.Y. 13662 (315) 764-0043 DALE R. FOLEY Mechanical Engineering Maple Street, Willsboro, N.Y. 12996 (518) 963-4525 Tau Kappa Epsilon 2, 3, 4-Social Chairman; Ice Car- nival 4-Committee Chairman HAROLD FORD Mechanical Engineering Box 28, RD 1, Harrisville, N.Y. 13648 (315) 543-2304 ARTHUR S. FORKOS Electrical Engineering 206 Scranton Avenue, Lynbrook, N.Y. 11563 (516) 593-8006 Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 2, 3, 4 MARK S. FOSTER Mechanical Engineering Stratford, N.Y. 13470 (315) 429-7284 FRANCIS R. FOY JR. Mechanical Engineering 13 Shepard Street, Malone, N.Y. 12953 (518) 483-4453 CLAUDE FRANCESCOTT Civil Engineering RD 1, Germantown, N.Y. 12526 (518) 537-6472 American Society of Civil Engineers 3, 4 THOMAS FRIERS Mechanical Engineering 21 Raymond Avenue, Glens Falls, N.Y. 12803 (518) 793-6775 American Society of Mechanical Engineers 3, 4; In- tramurals 2, 3, 4 KEVIN STOUT FUESS Industrial Distribution 405 Churchill Lane, Fayetteville, N.Y. 13066 (315) 637-8613 Alpha Kappa Psi 2, 3-Professional Speakers Chair- man 4 JOHN FUOTO Mechanical Engineering 12 Harvard Street, Massapequa, N.Y. 11758 (516) 541-9862 Tau Epsilon Phi 2, 3-Scribe 4; Pi Tau Sigma 3, 4- President; Engineering Dean’s Advisory Council 4; American Society of Mechanical Engineers 4; Big Brother Program 2, 3; Clarksonian 1; Public Order Statement Review Committee 3 DAVID FULLER Chemical Engineering 8364 Traver Road, RD 2, Gansevoort, N.Y. 12831 (518) 584-5089 Tau Epsilon Phi 2, 3, 4 STEPHEN G. GAGNIER Mechanical Engineering RFD 1, Box 349, Plattsburgh, N.Y. 12901 (518) 563-6117 American Society of Mechanical Engineers 4; Clark- son Auto Association 1, 2, 3, 4-President DAVID B. GOETTEL Chemical Engineering 49 Farrell Terrace, Rochester, N.Y. 14617 (716) 342-2747 Alpha Epsilon Pi 2, 3-Corresponding Scribe; 4- Sports Manager; Omega Chi Epsilon 3, 4; American Institute of Chemical Engineers 4 PHILIP GOETTEL Civil Engineering RD 4, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-9420 Soccer 1, 2, 3, 4; Delta Upsilon 2, 3, 4; College Union Board Publications Chairman 3; Baseball 1 LALU GOKALBHAI Chemical Engineering Avenue Central 123, Panama City, Republic of Panama 62-1335 GEORGE GRAFF Industrial Distribution 99 Kelvin Drive, Kenmore, N.Y. 14223 (716) 833-4687 Tau Kappa Epsilon 2-Athletic Chairman 3, 4 DENNIS MICHAEL GREY Social Science 4 Meadow View Apts., Route 4, Potsdam, N.Y. 13671 (315) 265-6364 239 William A. Gurecki, Jr. Peter M. Hayes Thomas E. Herrema Roger F. Gyger Thomas J. Heffernan Alan L. Hill E. Todd Hagaman Donald Hartley Robert Heitner Dennis Hill Michael J. Haider Douglas W. Harwood Herbert Helbig Peter J. Hind 240 Charles Hamilton Brian W. Hayes Thomas J. Helms John Hino WILLIAM A. GURECKI, JR. Mechanical Engineering 8206 Elmer Hill Road, Rome, N.Y. 13440 (315) 336-8742 Alpha Chi Rho 2, 3, 4-Vice President; American So- ciety of Mechanical Engineers 4; Integrator 4-Busi- ness Manager; Photo Club 2; Inter Fraternity Coun- cil 2-Treasurer; 3-President; Undergraduate Computer Teaching 3, 4 ROGER F. GYGER Chemical Engineering 547 Westfield Drive, Valley Cottage, N.Y. 10989 (914) 268-2466 American Institute of Chemical Engineers 3, 4; Omega Chi Epsilon 3, 4-President; Theta Xi 2, 3, 4; Resident Advisor 3, 4 E. TODD HAGAMAN Mechanical Engineering 1485 Trumansburg Road, Ithaca, N.Y. 14850 (607) 272-1965 American Society of Mechanical Engineers 4 MICHAEL J. HAIDER Industrial Management 2305 Appletree Drive, Hagerstown, Md. 21740 (301) 731-2098 Beta Tau 3, 4 CHARLES HAMILTON Electrical Engineering 314 West Grove Street, Dexter, N.Y. 13634 (315) 639-6275 JOHN R. HANDLEY Chemistry 12 Chestnut Hill Lane, Williamsville, N.Y. 14221 (716) 633-9199 Omicron Pi Omicron 2, 3-House Man, 4; Rifle Team 1 JOHN P. HANNA Industrial Distribution 102 Stanwood Lane, Manlius, N.Y. 13104 (315) 637-8409 Tau Epsilon Phi 2, 3, 4; Rocket Society 1; Industrial Distribution Society 2, 3 DONALD HARTLEY Civil Engineering Apt. 7B12 Woodstock Village, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-2119 American Society of Civil Engineers 3, 4 DOUGLAS W. HARWOOD Civil Engineering 816 Mildred Avenue, Utica, N.Y. 13502 (315) 732-8054 American Society of Civil Engineers 3, 4 BRIAN W. HAYES Civil Engineering 58 East Church Street, Adams, N.Y. 13605 (315) 232-6264 Alpha Chi Rho 2, 3, 4-Treasurer; Chi Epsilon 3, 4; American Society of Civil Engineers 3, 4 PETER M. HAYES Social Science 3538 Pueblo Way, Las Vegas, Nev. 89109 (702) 735-3623 Inter College Radio Network 1,2, 3, 4-News Director THOMAS J. HEFFERNAN Industrial Distribution 42 South Lake Avenue, Troy, N.Y. 12180 (518) 273-4174 Alpha Kappa Psi 3, 4; Industrial Distribution Society 2, 3, 4; Big Brother Program 2, 3, 4 ROBERT HEITNER Economics Box 636, RD 2, Newton, N.J. 07860 (201) 383-4136 Alpha Kappa Psi 3, 4; Table Tennis Club 1, 2, 3- President; 4-President; Bridge Club 1, 3, 4; Railroad Club 1; Chess Club 1 HERBERT HELBIG Mechanical Engineering 22 Vista Road, Plainview, N.Y. 11803 (516) 938-2294 Tau Kappa Epsilon 2, 3, 4-Chaplain; American So- ciety of Mechanical Engineers 4 THOMAS J. HELMS Mathematics 9 Walker Road, Long Lake, N.Y. 12847 (518) 624-3931 THOMAS E. HERREMA Civil Engineering 895 Lakeshore Boulevard, Rochester, N.Y. 14617 (716) 342-4131 Delta Upsilon 2, 3, 4; American Society of Civil Engi- neers 3, 4 ALAN L. HILL Mechanical Engineering 26V2 Grant Street, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-4198 Alpha Chi Rho 2, 3, 4-Chapter Correspondent; Pi Tau Sigma 3, 4; American Society of Mechanical Engineers 3, 4; Ski Club 1 DENNIS HILL Civil Engineering 2838 Canal Street, Big Flats, N.Y. 14814 (607) 562-8072 PETER J. HIND Civil Engineering 143 Nichols Avenue, Syracuse, N.Y. 13206 (315) 463-3476 American Society of Civil Engineers 3, 4-Secretary; Clarkson Auto Association 1, 2, 3; Intramurals 2, 3 JOHN HINO Chemical Engineering 92 Southgate Road, Buffalo, N.Y. 14215 (716) 835-7892 Tau Delta Kappa 2, 3, 4; American Institute of Chemical Engineers 4 241 Glenn J. Hockenberger Chris E. Holliday Bill Hunt John H. P. Hofeldt Gregg Holmes Paula Hurewitz David S. Hoffman Stephen Robert Hopkins Robert C. Hyde Michael C. Hoffman Lloyd P. Howell Kenneth R. Hyssong 242 Jay Hohmann Stephen T. Horhota Norman Hoy Albert J. lamiceli GLENN J. HOCKENBERGER Electrical Engineering 367 Main Street, New York Mills, N.Y. 13417 (315) 736-1608 Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 3, 4-Vice President; Student Senate Academic Stand- ards Committee 3, 4 JOHN H. P. HOFELDT Chemical Engineering 107 Crestwood Avenue, Waterbury, Conn. 06704 (203) 756-4509 DAVID S. HOFFMAN Electrical Engineering 2039 Baker Avenue, Utica, N.Y. 13501 (315) 797-1494 MICHAEL C. HOFFMAN Industrial Distribution 236 Van Renssalaer Boulevard, Albany, N.Y. 12204 (518) 434-7030 Omicron Pi Omicron 2, 3, 4 JAY HOHMANN Mechanical Engineering RFD 2, Andover, Conn. 06232 (203) 742-6747 Outing Club 2-Treasurer; 3-Treasurer; 4-President CHRIS E. HOLLIDAY Civil Engineering 224 Cedarwood Terrace, Rochester, N.Y. 14609 (716) 288-5430 Delta Upsilon 3, 4-Vice President; Soccer 1, 2, 3; Resident Advisor 2; American Society of Civil Engi- neering 3, 4; Ice Carnival 3 GREGG HOLMES Social Science 52 Bowes Street, Parry Sound, Ontario (705) 746-5685 Varsity Hockey 2, 3, 4-Captain STEPHEN ROBERT HOPKINS Civil Engineering Main Street, Lyndon Center, Vt. 05850 (802) 626-3622 Tau Kappa Epsilon 2, 3, 4 GLENN A. HORAN Industrial Management 10 Friars Close, Bedford Hills, N.Y. 10507 (914) 666-4252 Society for the Advancement of Management 1; Dragon Squad 2; Beta Tau 2, 3-Social Chairman; 4- Treasurer STEPHEN T. HORHOTA Chemistry 88 Burmon Drive, Buffalo, N.Y. 14218 (716) 826-2976 Tau Epsilon Phi 2, 3-President; 4-President; Inter Fraternity Council 3, 4; Gamma Sigma Epsilon 3, 4; Student Senate 1; Integrator 1; American Chemical Society 2, 3, 4; Freshman Orientation Board 4 GREG A. HORN Industrial Distribution 36 Leawood Drive, Tonawanda, N.Y. 14150 (716) 692-0599 Tau Delta Kappa 2, 3, 4; Inter Fraternity Council 3 ROBERT HORNER Industrial Management P.O. Box 267, Monroe, N.Y. 10950 (914) 783-9117 Inter College Radio Network 1,2,3, 4; Knight 2, 3, 4; Photo Club 3, 4-Treasurer; Pi Delta Epsilon 2, 3, 4 CARY T. HOWARD Civil Engineering 516 West Street, Carthage, N.Y. 13602 (315) 493-0472 LLOYD P. HOWELL Mechanical Engineering 535 East 14th Street, New York, N.Y. 10009 (212) 674-7026 NORMAN HOY Electrical Engineering 5097 Audrey Drive, North Syracuse, N.Y. 13212 (315) 458-2928 Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 1,2, 3, 4 BILL HUNT Electrical Engineering 530 West Mullin, Watertown, N.Y. 13601 (315) 788-7073 PAULA C. HUREWITZ Mathematics Humanities 83 Madison Avenue, Island Park, N.Y. 11558 (516) 431-3897 Phalanx 3, 4; College Union Board 2-Secretary; 3- Secretary; 4-Secretary; Clarksonian 2, 3, 4-Seniors Editor; Integrator 1-Secretary; 2-Secretary; 3-Assist- ant Feature Editor; 4-Assistant Editor; Women’s Government Council 1, 2-Treasurer; 3-Vice Presi- dent; 4-President; Pi Mu Epsilon 3, 4-President; Pi Delta Epsilon 2, 3-Secretary; 4; Junior Prom 3-Com- mittee Chairman; National Organization for Women 4; Freshman Orientation Board 4-Committee Chair- man; 4-Orientation Representative; Big Brother Pro- gram 2, 3; Dragon Squad 2 ROBERT C. HYDE Mechanical Engineering 103 Vassar, Rochester, N.Y. 14607 (716) 473-1321 Pi Tau Sigma 3, 4; American Society of Mechanical Engineers 4; Freshman Baseball 1 KENNETH R. HYSSONG Electrical Engineering 2605 Allen Jay Road, High Point, N.C. 27262 (607) 732-4735 Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 4 ALBERT J. IAMICELI Civil Engineering 54 Ellis Place, Ossining, N.Y. 10562 (914) 941-4511 Alpha Chi Rho 2, 3, 4; American Society of Civil En- gineers 3, 4; Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship 2, 3 243 Robert Joseph Ihlenburg George Jamesson II Robert Koop Johnson Geoffrey G. Illian David P. Jankowski Richard D. Jones Gary M. Jablonski Robert O. Jorgensen Kenneth Jackson Donald I. Johnson Raymond Jozwik 244 John Kalinich, Jr. Gregory John Kantak Richard W. Karpiuk Leonard Katz Lawrence E. Jackson Mark E. Johnson Richie Kalina ROBERT JOSEPH IHLENBURG Mechanical Engineering RD 1, Box 157, Elizaville, N.Y. 12523 (518) 851-2422 Tau Delta Kappa 2, 3, 4-Assistant House Manager; Soccer 1; Freshman Orientation Board 4 GEOFFREY G. ILLIAN Industrial Distribution 23 Briarwood Drive, New City, N.Y. 10956 (914) 634-4886 Theta Chi 2, 3-Pledge Marshall; 4-Pledge Marshall GARY M. JABLONSKI Electrical Engineering 500 Coventry Avenue, Utica, N.Y. 13502 (315) 735-4772 KENNETH JACKSON Electrical Engineering 65 Chapman Road, New Hartford, N.Y. 13413 (315) 737-8165 Inter College Radio Network 1,2, 3, 4; Knight 1,2, 3, 4-Production Editor; Integrator 3, 4; Pi Delta Epsilon 3, 4; Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 4 LAWRENCE E. JACKSON Civil Engineering 1A11 Woodstock Village, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-8349 Chi Epsilon 3, 4-Marshall; Varsity Tennis 2, 3, 4; Var- sity “C” 3, 4; American Society of Civil Engineers 3, 4 GEORGE JAMESSON II Mechanical Engineering 27 Deumant Terrace, Kenmore, N.Y. 14226 (716) 876-7856 Alpha Chi Rho 2, 3, 4; College Union Board 2; Resi- dent Advisor 2 DAVID P. JANKOWSKI Industrial Management 205 New York Avenue, Ogdensburg, N.Y. 13669 (315) 393-6348 RICHARD JAYNE Mathematics 1319 Linwood Avenue, Niagara Falls, N.Y. 14305 (716) 285-9416 Tau Epsilon Phi 3, 4; Pi Mu Epsilon 3-Secretary; 4- Treasurer DONALD I. JOHNSON Civil Engineering RD 2, St. Johnsville, N.Y. 13452 (315) 823-0768 MARK E. JOHNSON Mechanical Engineering Penny Place, Fishkill, N.Y. 12524 (914) 897-5948 Alpha Epsilon Pi 2, 3, 4 ROBERT KOOP JOHNSON Economics 71 Bartina Lane, Stamford, Conn. 06902 (203) 348-9126 RICHARD D. JONES Civil Engineering 35 Winterroth Street, Rochester, N.Y. 14609 (716) 654-9094 American Society of Civil Engineers 2, 3, 4 245 ROBERT O. JORGENSEN Mechanical Engineering 15 Pendleton Road, Granby, Conn. 06035 (203) 653-2724 Resident Advisor 2; Delta Upsilon 2, 3, 4; Teaching Assistant 4; Ski Team 3, 4 RAYMOND JOZWIK Electrical Engineering 15 Cromwell Road, Carle Place, N.Y. 11514 (516) 747-0446 Tau Kappa Epsilon 2, 3, 4; Clarkson Rangers 1,2, 3, 4; Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 4; Chairman of Ranger Blood Drive 2, 3 RICHIE KALINA Civil Engineering 244-48 89th Avenue, Bellerose, N.Y. 11426 (516) 347-0988 Tau Delta Kappa 2, 3, 4-Assistant Treasurer; Ameri- can Society of Civil Engineers 4 JOHN KALINICH, JR. Electrical Engineering 14 Spring Brook Road, Morristown, N.J. 07960 (201) 539-4554 Integrator 3, 4-Photo Editor; Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 3, 4 GREGORY JOHN KANTAK Civil Engineering 201 East Seneca Turnpike, Syracuse, N.Y. 13205 (315) 492-2073 American Society of Civil Engineers 1, 2, 3, 4; Stu- dent Senate 3-Regulations Committee RICHARD W. KARPLUK Mechanical Engineering 49 Windsor Road, Port Chester, N.Y. 10573 (914) 937-5323 Tau Epsilon Phi 2, 3, 4; Integrator 1-Photo Editor; 2- Managing Editor 3, 4; Pi Delta Epsilon 2, 3, 4; Ameri- can Society of Mechanical Engineers 2, 3, 4; In- stitute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 1, 2; Big Brother Program 2, 3; Clarksonian 1, 2; Photo Club 1, 2; Society for the Advancement of Manage- ment 2; Junior Varsity Soccer 1 LEONARD KATZ Electrical Engineering 5 Park Circle, Middletown, N.Y. 10940 (914) 342-0770 MICHAEL R. KELEHER Industrial Distribution 9 Brookside Avenue, Box 50, Morrisonville, N.Y. 12962 (518) 563-0705 Zeta Nu 2, 3, 4-Treasurer; Industrial Distribution So- ciety 3, 4; Inter College Radio Network 3, 4 Michael R. Keleher Michael J. Keller John Kennedy Dennis Kieta Frank Kovac Lyndon J. Kellogg Jr. Brian M. Kessler Gary W. Kling James J. Kronenwetter Francis Kelly Robert Keyes Donald Robert Klock Stanley Kujawski Hamid Khosrowshahi Edward F. Kloeber E. Curtis Kunz 246 Bradford William Kennedy Edward Douglas Kieda Richard A. Koch Stephen Kusak MICHAEL J. KELLER Industrial Management 7172 Bear Ridge Road, North Tonawanda, N.Y. 14120 (716) 692-2061 LYNDON J. KELLOGG JR. Chemical Engineering 5919 Madison Avenue, Mexico, N.Y. 13114 (315) 963-3484 Delta Sigma Phi 2, 3-Activities Director; 4-Activities Director; American Institute of Chemical Engineers 4 FRANCIS KELLY Mechanical Engineering 41 Fairview Avenue, Port Washington, N.Y. 11050 (516) 767-6652 Tau Kappa Epsilon 2, 3, 4 JERRY KEMP Social Science 543 Edison, Peterboro, Ontario (705) 745-7634 Varsity Hockey 2, 3, 4; Varsity Lacrosse 2, 3; Zeta Nu 2, 3, 4; Varsity Golf 4 BRADFORD WILLIAM KENNEDY Electrical Engineering 20 Carroll Drive, Foxboro, Mass. 02055 (617) 543-2550 Tau Kappa Epsilon 3, 4; Rifle Team 1 JOHN KENNEDY Industrial Distribution 6 Lacy Lane, Loudonville, N.Y. 12211 (518) 489-3078 Student Senate 3-Representative; 4-Representative; Alpha Kappa Psi 3, 4; College Union Board 3-Com- mittee; 4-Committee BRIAN M. KESSLER Civil Engineering 115 Chestnut Oval, Orangeburg, N.Y. 10968 (914) 359-2782 Ski Club 3, 4 ROBERT KEYES Social Science 18 Dover Drive, Endicott, N.Y. 13760 (607) 748-9155 Integrator 2, 3-Sports Editor; Tau Epsilon Phi 2, 3, 4 HAMID KHOSROWSHAHI Chemical Engineering 41 North Broadway, Irvington, N.Y. 10533 (914) 591-8383 EDWARD DOUGLAS KIEDA Civil Engineering 51 South Wayne Street, Phelps, N.Y. 14532 (315) 548-8261 Chi Epsilon 3, 4-Vice President; Varsity Baseball 2, 3, 4; Varsity “C” 3, 4; Junior Varsity Baseball 1 DENNIS KIETA Civil Engineering 7370 Ellicott Road, Orchard Park, N.Y. 14127 (716) 662-7131 Delta Upsilon 2, 3, 4; American Society of Civil Engi- neers 2, 3, 4 GARYW. KLING Electrical Engineering 185 North Richmond Avenue, Massapequa, N.Y. 11758 (516) 798-8705 Alpha Epsilon Pi 2, 3, 4; Eta Kappa Nu 3, 4 DONALD ROBERT KLOCK Industrial Distribution 1328 West Lake Road, Williamson, N.Y. 14589 (315) 589-6731 Sigma Delta 2, 3-Social Chairman; 4-Social Chair- man; Industrial Distribution Society 1, 2, 3-Program Chairman; 4-Program Chairman; Sigma Tau lota 3, 4; Railroad Club 3, 4 EDWARD F. KLOEBER Civil Engineering 134 Market Street, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-8349 Chi Epsilon 2, 3, 4-President; American Society of Civil Engineers 2, 3, 4; Veterans Club 3, 4 RICHARD A. KOCH Accounting 65 Hill Street, Tonawanda, N.Y. 14150 (716) 693-3536 Phalanx 3, 4-President; Student Senate 3-Bookstore Committee Chairman; 4-President; Alpha Kappa Psi 1, 2, 3-Treasurer; 4-Master of Ritual FRANK KOVAC Physics 47 Chestnut Street, Binghamton, N.Y. 13905 (607) 724-3493 Physics Club 1, 2, 3-Secretary; 4-President; Outing Club 1, 2, 3, 4-Equipment Chairman JAMES J. KRONENWETTER Industrial Distribution RD 4, Canton, N.Y. 13617 (315) 386-3284 Veterans Club 4; Industrial Distribution Society 3, 4 STANLEY KUJAWSKI Mechanical Engineering 177 Sound Avenue, Riverhead, N.Y. 11901 (516) 298-4811 Pi Tau Sigma 3, 4-Treasurer; American Society of Mechanical Engineers 4; Freshman Baseball 1 E. CURTIS KUNZ Mechanical Engineering R.D. 3, Ballston Spa, N.Y. 12020 (518) 885-5452 College Union Board Production Committee 2, 3, 4- Chairman STEPHEN KUSAK Mechanical Engineering 1057 East Henrietta Road, Rochester, N.Y. 14623 (716) 473-2239 Theta Xi 2, 3, 4-Vice President; Varsity Lacrosse 2, 3, 4 247 David N. Lange William H. Lautenberger David C. Lent Robert F. LaFave Roger LaFountain Daniel G. Lantz, Jr. Nick LaRocco Dorsey Lawson Michael Lawee Larry Leuthauser Bryan Lewis Alan LaFreniere Christopher M. LaRose Joseph F. Leddy Todd R. Lingoski 248 Michael A. Lang William H. Lashway Duane A. Leinhos Norman Littlejohn JOSEPH E. KUTA Civil Engineering 7 Andrews Avenue, Yorkville, N.Y. 13495 (315) 736-8044 ROBERT F. LAFAVE Industrial Management 138 Maple Street, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-7297 Veteran’s Club 4-Vice President ROGER LAFOUNTAIN Civil Engineering Route 4, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-3360 ALAN LAFRENIERE Industrial Distribution 2021 Neil Street, Schenectady, N.Y. 12306 (518) 374-4603 Sigma Delta 2, 3-Recording Secretary; 4-Recording Secretary; Industrial Distribution Society 2, 3-Treas- urer; 4-Treasurer; Ice Carnival 2-Committee; 3-Com- mittee Chairman MICHAEL A. LANG Industrial Management 6989 Omphalius, Colden, N.Y. 14033 (716) 941-3631 DAVID N. LANGE Civil Engineering 320 East Main Street, Attica, N.Y. 14011 (315) 591-0217 American Society of Civil Engineers 4; Amateur Ra- dio Club 1, 2, 3, 4 DANIEL G. LANTZ JR. Industrial Management 35 Maple Avenue, Slingerlands, N.Y. 12159 (518) 439-4579 Tau Epsilon Phi 2, 3, 4; Ski Club 2 NICK LAROCCO Civil Engineering 90 Sherman Avenue, West Islip, N.Y. 11795 (516) 669-3671 Delta Sigma Phi 2, 3, 4-Vice President; American Society of Civil Engineers 4 CHRISTOPHER M. LAROSE Industrial Distribution 56 Roosevelt Street, Massena, N.Y. 13662 (315) 769-7492 Delta Sigma Phi 2, 3, 4; Industrial Distribution So- ciety 3, 4 WILLIAM H. LASHWAY Chemical Engineering 6 Cronin Road, Glens Falls, N.Y. 12801 (518) 793-1527 Clarkson Rangers 1, 2, 3, 4-Captain; Freshman Baseball 1; Varsity Baseball 2 WILLIAM H. LAUTENBERGER Mechanical Engineering R.D. 1 Church Road, Scotia, N.Y. 12302 (518) 377-1429 Alpha Chi Rho 2, 3, 4 MICHAEL LAWEE Psychology 97 Croyden Court, Albertson, N.Y. 11507 (516) 746-0029 Delta Sigma Phi 2, 3, 4 DORSEY LAWSON Industrial Management 139 Steuben Street, Painted Post, N.Y. 14870 JOSEPH F. LEDDY Industrial Distribution 1121 New Scotland Road, Albany, N.Y. 12208 (518) 438-1220 Alpha Kappa Psi 3, 4; Auto Club 1, 2, 3, 4 DUANE A. LEINHOS Chemistry 410 East High Street, Painted Post, N.Y. 14870 (607) 936-6108 Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship 1, 2; 3-Missions Secretary; 4-Missions Secretary; Pep Band 1, 2, 3; Gamma Sigma Epsilon 3, 4; Inter-College Band 1 DAVID C. LENT Civil Engineering R.D. 2 Box 60, Norwich, N.Y. 13815 (607) 334-7455 American Society of Civil Engineers 3, 4 LARRY LEUTHAUSER Mechanical Engineering Wilcox Road, Whitesboro, N.Y. 13442 (315) 736-6350 BRYAN LEWIS Industrial Distribution 9 Pent Road, Bloomfield, Conn. 06002 (203) 232-8260 TODD R. LINGOSKI Civil Engineering 18 Tracy Street, Binghamton, N.Y. 13905 (607) 797-5589 American Society of Civil Engineers 3, 4; Big Brother Program 2, 3; Delta Upsilon 2, 3, 4; Fresh- man Basketball 1; Varsity Basketball 2, 3, 4; Varsity C” 3, 4 NORMAN LITTLEJOHN Industrial Distribution Star Route, Massena, N.Y. 13662 (315) 384-4447 249 Paul Joseph Longo Rodger T. Marentis Richard Martin Jr. Joseph V. Luvera Ralph Margerum William John Martin III William Lyczko Jr. Thom Marra Donald Gregory Mason 1 David G. Lynn Gerald A. Maston 250 Jeffrey Mathews Bill Mayer William R. McCabe Eugene McEathron Michael J. Martin Gerard Mastrella Thomas L. McGovern PAUL JOSEPH LONGO Chemical Engineering 5 Elderkin Street, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-7385 American Institute of Chemical Engineers 3, 4-Presi- dent; Engineering Dean’s Advisory Council 4 JOSEPH V. LUVERA Industrial Distribution 723 Jay Street, Utica, N.Y. 13501 (315) 735-6578 Alpha Kappa Psi 3, 4; Industrial Distribution Society 1, 2, 3, 4 WILLIAM LYCZKO JR. Mathematics 2A21 Woodstock Village, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-6233 Varsity Lacrosse 2; Theta Chi 2, 3, 4 DAVID G. LYNN Mechanical Engineering 22 Summit Avenue, White Plains, N.Y. 10606 (914) 948-2405 Tau Beta Pi 3, 4-Treasurer; Pi Tau Sigma 3, 4-Vice President; American Society of Mechanical Engi- neers 3, 4 PETER MADSEN Electrical Engineering 13 Round Lake Park Road, Monroe, N.Y. 10950 (914) 783-9430 GERALD A. MASTON Mechanical Engineering 41 Howard Street, Massena, N.Y. 13662 (315) 769-2315 Theta Xi 2, 3-Secretary 4-President; Inter-Fraternity Council 4; Institute of Electrical and Electronics En- gineers 1; American Society of Mechanical Engi- neers 4 GERARD MASTRELLA Civil Engineering 26 Maltby Street, Rochester, N.Y. 14606 (716) 436-9196 American Society of Civil Engineers 3, 4 JEFFREY MATHEWS Chemical Engineering Sunny Lane, Ballston Spa, N.Y. 12020 (518) 885-1203 American Institute of Chemical Engineers 3, 4 BILL MAYER Accounting 1222 Main Street, Olean, N.Y. 14760 (716) 372-8898 WILLIAM R. McCABE Industrial Management 61 Baker Avenue, Middleburgh, N.Y. 12122 (518) 827-5609 Tau Kappa Epsilon 2, 3, 4; Class of 72 1-Vice Presi- dent; 2-Vice President RODGER T. MARENTIS Chemical Engineering 245 Garden City Road, Franklin Square, N.Y. 11010 (914) 437-7077 RALPH MARGERUM Chemistry 60 Easton Street, Buffalo, N.Y. 14215 Gamma Sigma Epsilon 3, 4; American Chemical So- ciety 2, 3, 4; Chess Club 1 THOM MARRA Chemistry 22 Foller Avenue, Webster, N.Y. 14580 (716) 872-3238 Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship 1, 2, 3-Treasurer; 4-Co-chairman; Lacrosse 1, 2, 3, 4; American Chemical Society 3, 4 ALFRED MARRIOTT Civil Engineering 7718 North State Street, Lowville, N.Y. 13367 (315) 376-2939 MICHAEL J. MARTIN Civil Engineering 180 Market Street, Saugerties, N.Y. 12477 (914) 246-8931 RICHARD J. MARTIN JR. Industrial Distribution 15 Brian Center, Troy, N.Y. 12182 (518) 235-3027 Industrial Distribution Society 1, 2, 3, 4; Alpha Kappa Psi 3, 4 WILLIAM JOHN MARTIN III Mathematics Hill Center Road, Hill, N.H. 03243 (603) 934-2531 DONALD GREGORY MASON Industrial Distribution R-7 Box 415, Chambersburg, Pa. 17201 (717) 263-2307 Theta Chi 2, 3-Pledge Marshall 4-Vice President EUGENE McEATHRON Mechanical Engineering 704 Franklin Street, Ogdensburg, N.Y. 13669 (315) 393-0427 American Society of Mechanical Engineers 4 thomas l. mcgovern Mechanical Engineering RR 2, Box 1235, Waterford, N.Y. 12188 (518) 371-8688 American Society of Mechanical Engineers 3, 4; So- ciety of American Military Engineers 3, 4; Devel- opment Committee 4; Public Occasions Committee 4 251 John Bernard Mclnerney Alan P. McKeen William Meier, Jr. John Mennel Stanton Mesh Michael Metell Robert Carl Moncsko James Mondo Russell J. McNulty Robert McPhee John Mereau Mark Velton Merrell Brian F. Moore James Morehouse 252 William Quackenbush Meeker Steven W. Merrell Richard F. Missimer Charles G. Morris JOHN BERNARD MclNERNEY Industrial Distribution 111 Fairwood Drive, Syracuse, N Y. 13219 (315) 468-0585 Sigma Delta 2, 3-Sergeant at Arms; 4-Pledge Mas- ter; Industrial Distribution Society 2, 3, 4 ALAN P. McKEEN Chemical Engineering Pangborne Road, Hastings, N.Y. 10706 (914) 668-7377 RUSSELL J. McNULTY Electrical Engineering Box 26, Symrna, N.Y. 13464 (607) 627-6591 ROBERT McPHEE Electrical Engineering 509 William Street, Rome N.Y. 13440 (315) 337-4738 Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 2, 3, 4 WILLIAM QUACKENBUSH MEEKER Industrial Management 20 Robin Road, Rumson, N.J. 07760 (201) 892-0363 Radio Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Theta Chi 2-Vice President; 3- Vice President; 4-Secretary WILLIAM MEIER, JR. Civil Engineering 51 Meadow Road, Montrose, N.Y. 10548 (914) 737-3787 Varsity Baseball 2, 3, 4; Varsity C 3, 4; Saint Francis Parish Council 4; American Society of Civil Engi- neers 2, 3, 4 JOHN MENNEL Industrial Management RR 1, Fostair, Ohio 44830 (419) 435-2359 Soccer 1, 3, 4; Golf 4 JOHN MEREAU Accounting 614A New York Avenue, Ogdensburg, N.Y. 13669 (315) 393-4372 MARK VELTON MERRELL Mechanical Engineering RD 2, Hill Road, Verona, N.Y. 13478 (315) 363-0659 STEVEN W. MERRELL Accounting 308 Schubmehl Road, Vestal, N.Y. 13850 (607) 797-9661 Alpha Epsilon Pi 2-Ice Carnival Chairman; 3-Assist- ant Treasurer; 4-Treasurer STANTON MESH Industrial Distribution 6 Michaels Lane, Old Brookville, N.Y. 11545 (516) 671-6841 Tau Epsilon Phi 2, 3, 4; Photo Club 1, 2-Secretary; 3-Secretary; 4-Secretary MICHAEL METELL Chemical Engineering 215 Lilac Place, Massapequa Park, N.Y. 11762 (516) 799-5734 Pep Band 1,4; Tau Kappa Epsilon 2, 3, 4; Freshman Soccer 1 HENRY JOHN MILLER Civil Engineering 20 Pitt Street, Trenton, N.J. 08638 (609) 882-2654 Baseball 2, 3, 4; American Society of Civil Engineers 2, 3, 4; Varsity “C” 2, 3, 4 MARK R. MILLER Chemical Engineering 1376 Cosgrove Street, Watertown, N.Y. 13601 (315) 788-1564 RICHARD F. MISSIMER Industrial Distribution 107K Hemingway Avenue, East Haven, Conn. 06405 (203) 469-2132 Soccer 3; Industrial Distribution Society 3, 4 ROBERT CARL MONCSKO Electrical Engineering 184 Birch Lane, Scotia, N.Y. 12302 (518) 399-3280 Eta Kappa Nu 3, 4; Institute of Electrical and Elec- tronics Engineers 1, 2, 3, 4; Alpha Epsilon Pi 3, 4; Junior Prom 3-Committee Chairman; Big Brother Program 3, 4; Outing Club 2, 3; Ski Club 1,2 JAMES MONDO Chemistry 931 Armory Drive, Utica, N.Y. 13501 (315) 724-9374 BRIAN F. MOORE Civil Engineering 113 Sweet Briar Road, Tonawanda, N.Y. 14150 (716) 835-4678 Theta Xi 2, 3, 4-Pledge Master; Intramural Sports 2, 3 JAMES MOREHOUSE Electrical Engineering 5B13 Woodstock Village, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-8863 Eta Kappa Nu 3, 4-President; Tau Beta Pi 3, 4; Vet- eran’s Club 3, 4-Secretary; Student Senate 1, 2; Ad Hoc Committee on ROTC 3, 4 CHARLES G. MORRIS Electrical Engineering RD 1 Terry Road, Deansboro, N.Y. 13328 (315) 841-8835 Eta Kappa Nu (3, 4; Pep Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 3, 4 253 Allen Mosher James Nabywaniec William R. Nichols Dennis O’Dea Charles T. Mosier William M. Nahumck Gary E. Norman Thomas P. O’Dwyer Michael Mott Andrew H. Myers William Nardin Dennis R. Nawoj Terrence M. Northrup W. Gary Norton Gary Otakie Randy R. Ott 254 David A. Myers Richard E. Naylon, Jr. Nathan L. Oakes Peter D. Ottavio ALLEN MOSHER Industrial Management 223 Hillary Lane, Penfield, N.Y. 14526 (716) 586-8499 Alpha Kappa Psi 4; Cycle Club 3, 4 CHARLES T. MOSIER Industrial Distribution Henderson, N.Y. 13650 (315) 435-5589 Wrestling 1; Beta Tau 4 MICHAEL MOTT Mathematics 11 Muchmore Lane, East Hampton, N.Y. 11937 (516) 324-0857 ANDREW H. MYERS Electrical Engineering Main Street, Norfolk, N.Y. 13667 (315) 384-4325 Eta Kappa Nu 4-Bridge Correspondent; Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 3, 4 DAVID A. MYERS Civil Engineering 16 Berkeley Drive, Chelmsford, Mass. 01824 (617) 251-3548 Varsity Baseball 2, 3; American Society of Civil Engi- neers 3, 4 JAMES NABYWANIEC Industrial Distribution 7A21 Woodstock Village, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-6083 Zeta Nu 2, 3, 4 WILLIAM M. NAHUMCK Mechanical Engineering 9339 Roberts Road, Sauquoit, N.Y. 13456 (315) 737-8205 Tau Delta Kappa 2, 3, 4; Scabbard and Blade 3, 4 WILLIAM NARDIN Social Science 22 Radnor Center, Hicksville, N.Y. 11801 (516) 931-5735 Clarksonian 3; Clarkson Rifle Club 1; Integrator 2, 3; Radio Club 2, 3, 4 DENNIS R. NAWOJ Electrical Engineering 1426 Flagg Avenue, Utica, N.Y. 13502 (315) 733-9632 Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 3, 4 RICHARD E. NAYLON JR. Industrial Distribution 56 Huntington Center, Williamsville, N.Y. 14221 (716) 632-8642 Delta Upsilon 2, 3, 4-President; Resident Advisor 2, 3; Industrial Distribution Society 1, 2, 3-Vice Presi- dent; 4; Varsity Tennis 3; College Union Board 3- Committee Chairman; Alpha Kappa Psi 3; Inter- fraternity Council 4 WILLIAM R. NICHOLS Mechanical Engineering 5 Canterbury Road, New Hartford, N.Y. 13413 (315) 733-1372 American Society of Mechanical Engineers 4; Clark- son Automotive Association 2, 3, 4 GARY E. NORMAN Electrical Engineering 62 Brentwood Drive, Avon, Conn., 06001 (203) 673-3118 Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 1,2, 3, 4; Amateur Radio Club 4; Inter College Radio Net- work 1 TERRENCE M. NORTHRUP Industrial Distribution 18 Bay Street, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-7043 W. GARY NORTON Industrial Distribution 3122 Butler Avenue, Horseheads, N.Y. 14845 (607) 732-5138 Alpha Epsilon Pi 2, 3, 4 NATHAN L. OAKES Electrical Engineering 45 East Main Street, Hornell, N.Y. 14843 (607) 324-2297 Radio Club 1, 2; Rifle Club 1; Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 2, 3-Program Chairman, 4; Chairman; Auto Club 2; Inter College Radio Net- work 1, 2; Junior Prom Committee 3; Knight 3 DENNIS O’DEA Civil Engineering RD 2 Kirkwood, N.Y. 13795 (607) 775-0569 American Society of Civil Engineers 2, 3, 4-Vice President; Cross Country 4 THOMAS P. O’DWYER Civil Engineering 1022 Cold Springs Road, Liverpool, N.Y. 13088 (315) 457-5483 WNTC 1, 2, 3, 4; American Society of Civil Engi- neers 3, 4; Railroad Club 1, 2, 3, 4 GARY OTAKIE Chemical Engineering School Street, Redwood, N.Y. 13679 (315) 482-4355 Tau Delta Kappa 3, 4; Chess Club 3, 4 RANDY R. OTT Civil Engineering 35 Banks Avenue, Johnson City, N.Y. 13790 (607) 797-8184 Chi Epsilon 3, 4; Delta Upsilon 2, 3, 4; American So- ciety of Civil Engineers 3, 4; Basketball 1, 2 PETER D. OTTAVIO Mechanical Engineering 1157 McQuade Avenue, Utica, N.Y. 13501 (315) 733-9438 Alpha Chi Rho 2, 3, 4-President; Inter Fraternity Council 3, 4 255 Franklin L. Page Gregory K. Phillips Frank Prendergast Thomas W. Pye Lawrence J. Pakenas Edwin J. Pisani Jack Preston Kevin A. Rankin Stephen C. Paul Edward Plasberg James P. Preusch Charles J. Rappazzo, Jr. Michael J. Pedroza Gordon L. Pratt Kevin Proulx W. Fred Ravetto 256 Richard W. Pelotte Richard A. Pratt Douglas H. Purcell, Jr. Richard Reichhart FRANKLIN L. PAGE Chemical Engineering 88 Second Street, Deposit, N.Y. 13754 (607) 467-3105 Omega Chi Epsilon 3, 4; American Institute of Chemical Engineers 4 LAWRENCE J. PAKENAS Civil Engineering 17 Stewart Street, Amsterdam, N.Y. 12010 (518) 842-1743 College Union Board 3-Committee Chairman; Delta Upsilon 2, 3, 4; American Society of Civil Engineers 2, 3, 4 STEPHEN C. PAUL Civil Engineering 6 Academy Green, Marcellus, N.Y. 13108 (315) 673-3068 Alpha Phi Omega 1; Tau Kappa Epsilon 1, 2, 3, 4- Treasurer; InterFraternity Council 3, 4-Treasurer; Chi Epsilon 3, 4; American Society of Civil Engi- neers 4 MICHAEL J. PEDROZA Chemical Engineering 96 Ridgeway Avenue, Pittsfield, Mass. 01201 (413) 443-5336 Tau Kappa Epsilon 2, 3, 4; American Institute of Chemical Engineers 3, 4-Vice President; Big Brother 3 RICHARD W. PELOTTE Industrial Distribution 38 Kent Street, Massena, N.Y. 13662 (315) 769-7885 GREGORY K. PHILLIPS Civil Engineering Creek Road, Poughkeepsie, N.Y. 12601 (914) 471-2272 Student Senate 4-Representative; 4-Bookstore Committee Chairman; Rangers 2, 3, 4; Integrator 2, 3-Circulation Manager; 4; Society of American Mili- tary Engineers 2, 3-Vice President; 4-President EDWIN J. PISANI Electrical Engineering 347 Washington Street, Peekskill, N.Y. 10566 (914) 739-1241 Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 3, 4; Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship 2, 3, 4; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4 EDWARD PLASBERG Civil Engineering 2851 Aqueduct Road, Schenectady, N.Y. 12309 (518) 374-7508 American Society of Civil Engineers 1, 2, 3, 4, 5; Big Brother Program 2, 3; Clarkson Rangers 2, 3, 4, 5- Captain; Integrator 4, 5-Advertising Manager; Scab- bard and Blade 3, 4, 5-Captain; Society of American Military Engineers 2, 3,4, 5-President GORDON L. PRATT Industrial Distribution 9 James Street, Johnstown, N.Y. 12095 (518) 762-9231 Omicron Pi Omicron 2, 3, 4 RICHARD A. PRATT Civil Engineering 234 Main Street, Montpelier, VT. 05602 (802) 223-3910 FRANK PRENDERGAST Chemical Engineering 450 Old Country Road, Huntington Station, N.Y. 11746 (516) 423-1399 JACK PRESTON Electrical Engineering Apt. 6A12 Woodstock, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-3904 Beta Tau 2, 3, 4; Ice Carnival 3-Committee Chair- man; Radio Club 3, 4 JAMES P. PREUSCH Industrial Management Apt. 3A12 Woodstock, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-8846 Ad-Hoc Committee on ROTC 3; Tau Epsilon Phi 2, 3, 4-Treasurer; Radio Club 4 KEVIN PROULX Chemical Engineering 42 Buck, Canton, N.Y. 13617 (315) 386-3605 Omega Chi Epsilon 3, 4-Treasurer; American In- stitute of Chemical Engineers 3, 4 DOUGLAS H. PURCELL JR. Chemistry 7 Willow Street, Apt. 2, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-3129 Gamma Sigma Epsilon 4; American Chemical So- ciety 3-Vice President W. THOMAS PYE Electrical Engineering 13 Bentley Avenue, Wynantskill, N.Y. 12198 (518) 283-5743 Eta Kappa Nu 3, 4; WNTC 1, 2, 3, 4; WTSC 3-Chief Announcer; 4-Chief Announcer; Institute of Elec- trical and Electronics Engineers 2, 3, 4; Inter Col- lege Radio Network 3-TV; 3-News; 4-TV; 4-News KEVIN A. RANKIN Chemical Engineering 8725 Maple Lane Drive, Lee Center, N.Y. 13363 (315) 336-6749 Student Senate 4-Representative; 4-Elections Com- mittee Chairman; Alpha Chi Rho 2, 3, 4 CHARLES J. RAPPAZZO JR. Electrical Engineering 117 North Allen Street, Albany, N.Y. 12203 (518) 489-8198 Tau Epsilon Phi 2, 3, 4 W. FRED RAVETTO Mechanical Engineering Box 2257 R.F.D. 2, Yorktown Heights, N.Y. 10598 (914) 248-5037 Theta Xi 2-Rush Chairman; 3-Social Chairman; 4 RICHARD REICHHART Industrial Management 230 Woodcroft Drive, Rochester, N.Y. 14616 (716) 865-0318 Alpha Kappa Psi 3, 4-Corresponding Secretary 257 Richard A. Riedel Warren A. Rote i Peter Reilley David A. Reisdorf Elizabeth Rella Mathew T. Rines Terry A. Ring Ronald Charles Riordan Donald S. Rogers Thomas A. Rogers III William Rogers 258 Arthur A. Rotunno Calvin Sachs Gerard J. Sagliocca Theodore M. Sanford Robert W. Reynolds James M. Robert Hank Roitman KEVIN D. REIDY Chemical Engineering 11 Silvermaple Drive, Elnora, N Y. 12065 (518) 371-6412 American Institute of Chemical Engineers 1, 4 PETER REILLEY Electrical Engineering 2008 Salem Road, Schenectady, N.Y. 12309 (518) 377-3744 Tau Epsilon Phi 2, 3, 4; American Institute of Aero- nautics and Astronautics 1, 2-President; Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 1; Clarkson Auto Association 1 DAVID A. REISDORF Civil Engineering 51 Park Street, Malone, N.Y. 12953 (518) 483-2774 Pep Band 1; Ski Team 1-Varsity ELIZABETH RELLA Industrial Distribution Reese Road, Frankfort, N.Y. 13340 (315) 894-4949 Alpha Kappa Psi 3, 4; Junior Prom 3-Committee Chairman; Pep Band 3, 4; Student Senate 3-Library Committee; Women’s Government Council 3-Treas- urer; 4-Treasurer ROBERT W. REYNOLDS Chemistry 138 Pebble Beach Road, Lakeville, N.Y. 14480 (716) 346-5949 Gamma Sigma Epsilon 3, 4-Treasurer RICHARD A. RIEDEL Electrical Engineering 24 Lincoln Avenue, Elsmere, N.Y. 12054 (518) 439-1360 WNTC 1, 2, 3, 4; Institute of Electrical and Elec- tronics Engineers 3, 4; Inter College Choir 3; Men’s Glee Club 3; Student Senate 2 MATHEW T. RINES Civil Engineering RFD 2, Gorham, Me. 04038 (207) 854-9124 American Society of Civil Engineers 3, 4; Freshman Orientation Board 3-Orientation Representative; In- ter College Radio Network 1, 2, 3, 4-Business Man- ager; Junior Prom 3-Committee Chairman; Knight 3, 4 TERRY A. RING Chemical Engineering 11086 Lake Street, Pavilion, N.Y. 14525 (315) 265-5950 Tau Kappa Epsilon 2, 3-Hegemon; 4-Hegemon; Omega Chi Epsilon 3, 4; Tau Beta Pi 3, 4 RONALD CHARLES RIORDAN Economics RFD 1, Evans Mills, N.Y. 13637 (315) 629-4300 JAMES M. ROBERT Civil Engineering RD 1, Norfolk, N.Y. 13667 (315) 384-4378 Chi Epsilon 3, 4-Secretary; Tau Beta Pi 3, 4-Record- ing Secretary; American Society of Civil Engineers 3, 4; Clarksonian 4 WARREN A. ROFE Civil Engineering Preble Street, Preble, N.Y. 13141 (607) 749-4247 Alpha Epsilon Pi 2, 3, 4-President; Inter Fraternity Council 4; American Society of Civil Engineers 2, 3, 4 DONALD S. ROGERS Industrial Management RFD 2, Box 583A, Plattsburgh, N.Y. 12901 (518) 563-4182 THOMAS A. ROGERS III Social Sciences 110 Prospect Street, Norwood, Mass. 02062 (617) 762-1845 Varsity Hockey 2, 3; Psychology Club 3, 4 WILLIAM ROGERS Civil Engineering 122 Tremont Avenue, Kenmore, N.Y. 14217 (716) 875-4117 Omicron Pi Omicron 2, 3, 4 HANK ROITMAN Social Sciences 36 Bunnell Place, West Babylon, N.Y. 11704 (516) 669-5991 Alpha Phi Omega 1, 2; Big Brother 2, 3; Freshman Orientation Board 2, 3, 4-Committee Chairman; Stu- dent Senate 3-Committee Chairman; 3-Secretary; 4-Vice President ARTHUR A. ROTUNNO Chemistry 9 Franklin Avenue, Yonkers, N.Y. 10705 (914) 965-2881 Beta Tau 2, 3-Pledge Master; 4-President; Clarkson Ranger 1, 2; Dragon Squad 2 CALVIN SACHS Industrial Distribution 147-12 20th Avenue, Whitestone, N.Y. 11357 (212) 463-5722 Alpha Epsilon Pi 2, 3-Social Chairman; 4-House Manager; Clarkson Rangers 1, 2, 3, 4-Pledge Mas- ter; WTSC 1 GERARD J. SAGLIOCCA Mechanical Engineering 260 Pinewood Drive, Schenectady, N.Y. 12303 (518) 355-6083 Tau Kappa Epsilon 3-Social Chairman; 4; American Society of Mechanical Engineers 3, 4; American In- stitute of Aeronautics and Astronautics 1, 2, 3; Pi Tau Sigma 3, 4; Rocket Society 1, 2; Clarksonian 3, 4-Greek Editor; Student Senate 4-Public Occasions Committee THEODORE M. SANFORD Civil Engineering 17 Jackson Street, East Islip, N.Y. 11730 (516) 581-0837 American Society of Civil Engineers 3, 4-President; Sailing Club 4 RONALD STEPHEN SAPIESZKO Chemistry 312 Oakwood Street, Rome, N.Y. 13440 (315) 337-8134 AXP 2, 3, 4-Social Chairman; Gamma Sigma Epsilon 3, 4-Vice President; Student Senate Elections Com- mittee 4; Interfraternity Athletics 2, 3, 4 259 Ronald Stephen Sapieszko Robert Setren Craig Shute David Schaefer Robert L. Schrader Frederick U. Seufert George S. Scharfe Philip V. Schillaci Harry M. Schultze Carmen J. Scoppa II Kenneth S. Shea Richard Sherman 260 Mark R. Siewert William H. Skinner Michael J. Sligar Edmund Schindler Kathryn Benoit Shifman Michael J. Smith GARY R. SAUDA Civil Engineering 213 Boulder Road, Solvay, N.Y. 13209 (315) 468-3244 American Society of Civil Engineers 3, 4 DAVID SCHAEFER Mechanical Engineering 39 North Main Street, Cortland, N.Y. 13045 (607) 756-6272 American Institute of Astronautics and Aeronautics 2, 3, 4-President; American Society of Mechanical Engineers 2, 3, 4 GEORGE S. SCHARFE Industrial Distribution 83 Peninsula Drive, Babylon, N.Y. 11702 (516) 661-9048 Sigma Delta Fraternity 2, 3; Inter Fraternity Council 3-Executive Committee; 4-President; Freshman Bas- ketball 1; Ice Carnival 4 PHILIP U. SCHILLACI Chemical Engineering 490 Two Mile Creek Road, Tonawanda, N.Y. 14150 (716) 877-1812 American Institute of Chemical Engineers 2, 3-Sec- retary; 4; Lacrosse 1, 2, 3, 4; Rifle Team 1, 2 EDMUND SCHINDLER Chemical Engineering King’s Highway, Valley Cottage, N.Y. 10989 (914) 268-3639 ALLAN SCHMIDT Mechanical Engineering 10600 Swamp Road, Dunkirk, N.Y. 14048 (716) 679-7200 ROBERT L. SCHRADER Civil Engineering 2125 Walcott Avenue, Utica, N.Y. 13502 (315) 724-3285 Beta Tau 2, 3-Steward; 4-Steward; American So- ciety of Civil Engineers 3, 4 HARRY M. SCHULTZE Electrical Engineering 1894 Factory Hollow Road, Lima, N.Y. 14485 (716) 582-1035 Eta Kappa Nu 3, 4-Secretary; Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 3, 4 CARMEN J. SCOPPA II Chemical Engineering 1B23 Woodstock, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-8761 Tau Kappa Epsilon 1, 2, 3, 4; Rangers 1, 2, 3, 4; Big Brother 2, 3; Clarkson Rifle Club 1, 2 PAUL M. SEARS Industrial Management Coates Road, Holland Patent, N.Y. 13354 (315) 865-8101 Alpha Kappa Psi 2, 3, 4; College Union Board 2, 3; Inter College Co-ordinating Committee 2, 3; Wood- stock Lodge 2-Student Manager; 3-Student Man- ager; Integrator 1, 2, 3; Exchange Delegate SUCP- CUB 3 ROBERT SETREN Mechanical Engineering 31 California Avenue, Middletown, N.Y. 10940 (914) 343-5057 FREDERICK U. SEUFERT Mechanical Engineering 233 Locust Avenue, Port Chester, N.Y. 10573 (914) 937-1430 Student Senator 3, 4; Alpha Chi Rho 3, 4; Senate Publicity Committee 3, 4; Dorm Food Committee 2; American Society of Mechanical Engineers 3, 4; Big Brother 2 KENNETH S. SHEA Industrial Management 104 Braintree Road, West Springfield, Mass. 01089 (413) 733-8916 Delta Upsilon 2, 3, 4 RICHARD SHERMAN Industrial Distribution 132 South Main Street, Pittsford, N.Y. 14534 (716) 586-4661 Theta Xi 2, 3, 4 KATHRYN BENOIT SHIFMAN Accounting 1 Mott Street, Newark, N.J. 07105 (201) 589-2400 Clarkson Singers 1; Clarksonian 3; Junior Prom 3- Committee Chairman; Women’s Government 1, 2- Secretary; 3, 4; Assistant Resident Advisor 2; Resi- dent Advisor 3 CRAIG SHUTE Industrial Management Shute Road, LaFayette, N.Y. 13048 (315) 677-3022 Lacrosse 1, 2, 3, 4; Basketball 1, 2, 3 MARK R. SIEWERT Industrial Distribution 159 Farmbrook Road, Rochester, N.Y. 14625 (716) 381-4250 Integrator 2; Sigma Delta 3-Rush Committee; 4- Treasurer; Sigma Tau lota 4-Vice President; Industri- al Distribution Society 3-Program Chairman; 4-Presi- dent WILLIAM H. SKINNER Chemical Engineering 1138 Bellevue Avenue, Syracuse, N.Y. 13204 (315) 475-2872 American Institute of Chemical Engineers 3, 4; Omega Chi Epsilon 3, 4; Clarkson’s 75th Anniver- sary Committee 4 MICHAEL J. SUGAR Chemical Engineering 308 South Washington Street, Carthage, N.Y. 13619 (315) 493-0482 Tau Delta Kappa 2, 3-House Manager; 4-House Manager; Scabbard and Blade 3, 4-President MICHAEL J. SMITH Mechanical Engineering 433 Stone Street, Oneida, N.Y. 13421 (315) 363-3143 American Society of Mechanical Engineers 3, 4; In- tramural Sports 1, 2, 3, 4 261 Richard K. Smith Paul William Spillane, Jr. Rog Steck John C. Suplicki f Thomas J. Stackrow Frank Anderson Stephens Wayne Keith Swanson Donald Snyder David M. Stankavich Michael Stratton Richard P. Swift Charley Stanton Clifford M. Strawitch Paul G. Swinburne 262 Robert Sonnelitter Thomas J. Stapleton Joseph A. Synowski RICHARD K. SMITH Industrial Distribution 254 Liberty Avenue, Rochester, N.Y. 14622 (716) 467-8234 Phalanx 3-Secretary-Treasurer; 4-Secretary-Treas- urer; Delta Upsilon 1, 2, 3-Social Chairman; 4-Social Chairman; College Union Board 2, 3-Treasurer; 4-Vice-President; Dorm Government 1-Vice-Presi- dent; Basketball 1; Sigma Tau lota 4 ROBERT K. SMITH Industrial Distribution RD 4, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-5304 Industrial Distribution Society 3, 4; Alpha Kappa Psi 4 DONALD SNYDER Chemical Engineering 7814 Dixon Road, North Bay, N.Y. 13123 (315) 245-0309 Tau Beta Pi 3, 4; Omega Chi Epsilon 3, 4-Secretary; American Institute of Chemical Engineers 3, 4 ROBERT J. SOLTIS Electrical Engineering 119 Hayes Avenue, Endicott, N.Y. 13760 (607) 785-7940 Clarkson Amateur Radio Club 1,2-Vice President; 3, 4; Inter College Radio Network 2-AM Transmitter Engineer; 3, 4 ROBERT SONNELITTER Industrial Distribution 168 North Long Street, Williamsville, N.Y. 14221 (716) 634-2357 Tau Delta Kappa 2, 3, 4-Recording Secretary; Dragon Squad 2 PAUL WILLIAM SPILLANE, JR. Chemistry 5 Regina Street, Hicksville, N.Y. 11801 (516) 433-7856 American Chemical Society 3, 4; Clarkson Rifle Club 2, 3, 4 THOMAS J. STACKROW Civil Engineering Box 316, RD 3, Averill Park, N.Y. (315) 674-3285 American Society of Civil Engineers 4; Big Brother Program 2, 3 DAVID M. STANKAVICH Mathematics RD 2, Weaver Road, Altamont, N.Y. 12009 (518) 861-8355 CHARLEY STANTON Industrial Management 146 London Road, Webster, N.Y. 14580 (716) 872-4224 Tau Kappa Epsilon 2, 3, 4-House Manager THOMAS J. STAPLETON Industrial Distribution 408 Buffington Road, Syracuse, N.Y. 13224 (315) 446-4621 Student Government Calendar Committee 3, 4 ROG STECK Civil Engineering 130 Mount Vernon Road, Snyder, N.Y. 14226 (716) 839-2097 “No comment,” quoth he. FRANK ANDERSON STEPHENS Chemical Engineering 12225 West 18th Street, Golding, Colo. (303) 945-2352 MICHAEL STRATTON Chemistry 154 Lincoln Avenue, Salamanca, N.Y. 14779 (716) 945-2352 Theta Xi 2, 3, 4 CLIFFORD M. STRAWITCH Physics 6 Clare Drive, East Northport, N.Y. 11731 (516) 757-0308 Sigma Pi Sigma 3, 4-Secretary; Chess Club 1; So- ciety of Physics 1, 2-Vice President; Table Tennis 1, 2; Tau Delta Kappa 2 JEFFERY R. STUMPF Industrial Distribution 477 Hampton Boulevard, Rochester, N.Y. 14612 (716) 865-0489 Beta Tau 2, 3-Vice President; 4; ROTC Band 1, 2; Freshman Judiciary Board 1; Dragon Squad 2 JOHN C. SUPLICKI Chemical Engineering 392 Stevens Avenue, Ridgewood, N.J. 07450 (201) 445-4221 College Union Board Cultural Committee 2, 3, 4- Chairman; Alpha Phi Omega 1, 2-Secretary; 4- Treasurer; Freshman Orientation Board 2, 3, 4; Clarksonian 4 WAYNE KEITH SWANSON Mathematics 41 Nicholson Drive, Chatham, N.J. 07928 (201) 635-4977 Pi Mu Epsilon 3, 4-President RICHARD P. SWIFT Industrial Management 6A21 Woodstock Village, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-8452 PAUL G. SWINBURNE Mechanical Engineering 607 Charmouth Drive, Syracuse, N.Y. 13207 (315) 475-3910 Pi Tau Sigma 3, 4; American Society of Mechanical Engineers 3, 4; Cycle Club 1, 4 JOSEPH A. SYNOWSKI Industrial Management 7A11 Woodstock Village, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-3161 Veteran’s Club 3, 4 263 Ronald B. Terry John Tallis Ray Teeter Michael Tersillo Thomas A. Tamayo James A. Tamulonis Benjamin S. Tennyson Anthony Terrenzio Edwin S. Thayer George C. Thomas 264 William Tomkiewicz James P. Toth Joseph Tuttle Thomas Ukolowicz Steven D. Tanzini Edward B. Terry Christopher A. Titus Robert E. Vandermark, Jr. WAYNE A. SZAFRANSKI Chemistry 8254 Sheridan Drive, Williamsville, N.Y. 14221 (716) 632-9022 Theta Xi 2, 3-Steward; 4-Scholarship Chairman; Gamma Sigma Epsilon 3, 4-President JOHN TALLIS Electrical Engineering 413 Ardon Drive, Horseheads, N.Y. 14845 (607) 739-7208 THOMAS A. TAMAYO Chemistry 34 Kline Street, Amsterdam, N.Y. 12010 (518) 842-2878 Alpha Epsilon Pi 1,2, 3, 4; Camera Club 4; American Chemical Society 2, 3, 4; Inter Fraternity Council 3 JAMES A. TAMULONIS Electrical Engineering RD 4, Rome, N.Y. 13440 (315) 865-8187 Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 2, 3, 4 STEVEN D. TANZINI Industrial Distribution 2108 Watson Boulevard, Endicott, N.Y. 13760 (607) 785-3919 Theta Chi 2, 3, 4 DAVID P. TEBO Industrial Distribution 32 Prospect Street, Norwood, N.Y. 13668 (315) 353-2064 Alpha Kappa Psi 1, 2-Master of Rituals; 3-Master of Rituals 4; Industrial Distribution Society 2-Record- ing Secretary; 3-Recording Secretary RAY TEETER Civil Engineering 85 North Street, Dryden, N.Y. 13053 (607) 844-4222 Chi Epsilon 3, 4; American Society of Civil Engi- neers 3, 4 BENJAMIN S. TENNYSON Chemical Engineering Route 9, Chestertown, N.Y. 12817 (518) 494-3435 Omega Chi Epsilon 3, 4; American Institute of Chemical Engineers 4 ANTHONY TERRENZIO Electrical Engineering 910 Strong Street, Schenectady, N.Y. (315) 372-7048 EDWARD B. TERRY Industrial Distribution RFD 4, Box 43, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-6205 Sigma Tau lota 3, 4; Tau Delta Kappa 2, 3, 4; Clark- son Automotive Association 2; Veterans Club 4 RONALD B. TERRY Chemical Engineering 28 Harping Avenue MR 95, Binghamton, N.Y. 13903 (607) 723-1285 Resident Advisor 2, 3, 4 MICHAEL TERSILLO Chemical Engineering 57 Birch Court, Riverhead, N.Y. 11901 (516) 727-0287 Tau Epsilon Phi 2, 3, 4; American Institute of Chem- ical Engineering 4 EDWIN S. THAYER Civil Engineering 11107 Champion Road, Carthage, N.Y. 13619 (315) 493-3685 Tau Kappa Epsilon 2, 3, 4-Historian; Interfraternity Council 4; Alpha Phi Omega 1, 2; American Society of Civil Engineers 4 GEORGE C. THOMAS Mechanical Engineering 11 Briarcliffe Avenue, Whitesboro, N.Y. 13492 (315) 736-6244 Varsity Baseball 2, 3, 4 CHRISTOPHER A. TITUS Chemistry 18 Hendrie Lane, Greenlawn, N.Y. 11790 (516) 261-4141 Tau Epsilon Phi 1, 2, 3, 4-House Manager; Clarkson Rangers 1,2, 3, 4; American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics 2, 3 WILLIAM TOMKIEWICZ Civil Engineering 104 Lynette Drive, Rochester, N.Y. 14616 (716) 865-0387 Bridge Club 2, 3, 4; Table Tennis 2, 3 JAMES P. TOTH Industrial Distribution 1465 Kingston Avenue, North Tonawanda, N.Y. 14120 (716) 693-4548 Integrator 1, 2; Clarksonian 1, 2; Big Brother Pro- gram 2; Delta Upsilon 2, 3, 4; Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 1, 2; Industrial Dis- tribution Society 3, 4; Freshman Floor President 1 JOSEPH TUTTLE Civil Engineering 16 Evergreen Drive, Middletown, N.Y. 10940 (914) 343-3507 Alpha Epsilon Pi 2, 3, 4 THOMAS UKOLOWICZ Industrial Distribution 19 Myers Avenue, Salamanca, N.Y. 14774 (716) 945-1981 Theta Xi 1, 2, 3, 4 ROBERT E. VANDERMARK JR. Industrial Distribution 205 Syosset-Woodbury Road, Syosset, N.Y. 11791 (516) 921-7036 Industrial Distribution Society 1, 2, 3, 4 265 Robert H. Van Flue John F. Van Wie II ... Robert A. Visalli ■ Joseph R. Wagner Michael C. Walters Alger G. Wallace David M. Versace Richard A. Vigus Roger A. Wahl Eric A. Walker, Jr. Sandra L. Warnke Steve Warr 266 Richard Weeks Alan K. Weiner Earl Welch Robert A. Wenderlich Fred L. Walker, Jr. Robert J. Whitbeck ROBERT H. VAN FLUE Chemical Engineering RD 4, Waters Road, Scotia, N.Y. 12302 (518) 887-5476 Alpha Chi Rho 2, 3, 4 JOHN F. VAN WIE II Electrical Engineering 65 West Genesee Street, Baldwinsville, N.Y. 13027 (315) 635-5533 Tau Kappa Epsilon 4 DAVID M. VERSACE Mathematics 159 Riverview Parkway North, Rome, N.Y. 13440 (315) 336-7134 RICHARD A. VIGUS Chemical Engineering 37 Court Street, Deposit, N.Y. 13754 (607) 467-3274 Tau Epsilon Phi 2, 3, 4; Wrestling 1 PHILLIP J. VILLARI Industrial Distribution 94 Highland Avenue, Winchester, Mass. 01850 (617) 729-2936 Ski Team 3-Captain; 4-Captain; Delta Upsilon 2, 3, 4; College Union Board 3, 4; Industrial Distribution Society 4; Varsity “C” 3, 4 ROBERT A. VISALLI Industrial Engineering 1501 Gibson Road, Utica, N.Y. 13501 (315) 733-9340 Theta Chi 2, 3, 4-Treasurer JOSEPH R. WAGNER Mechanical Engineering RFD 1 Box 97, Lake George, N.Y. 12845 (518) 668-4834 Pi Tau Sigma 3, 4-Secretary; American Society of Mechanical Engineers 3, 4-Treasurer ROGER A. WAHL Industrial Management 22 Middlesex Drive, Fredonia, N.Y. 14036 (716) 679-0406 ERIC A. WALKER JR. Industrial Management 31 Van Orden Avenue, Suffern, N.Y. 10901 (716) 357-0424 Society for the Advancement of Management 1, 2 FRED L. WALKER JR. Industrial Distribution 195 Laurel Avenue, Rochester, N.Y. 14624 (716) 235-1194 Industrial Distribution Society 3, 4; Sigma Tau lota 3, 4-Treasurer; Theta Xi 2, 3-Assistant Treasurer; 4- Treasurer ALGER G. WALLACE Industrial Distribution 33 Homewood Avenue, Watervliet, N.Y. 12189 (315) 272-0265 Theta Chi 2, 3, 4 MICHAEL C. WALTERS Chemical Engineering 411 Nottingham Road, Syracuse, N.Y. 13210 (315) 446-5271 Omega Chi Epsilon 3, 4; Varsity C” 2, 3, 4; Varsity Basketball 2; Delta Upsilon 2, 3, 4 SANDRA L. WARNKE Civil Engineering Buerman Road, Sodus, N.Y. 14551 (315) 483-4562 Student Senate 4; Freshman Orientation Board 4; Woman’s Government 3; Student Life Committee 4; Women’s Organization 4-Co-Chairman STEVE WARR Industrial Management 511 O’Connell Road, Peterborough, Ontario (705) 745-5843 Hockey 1, 2, 3, 4; Lacrosse 1, 2, 3, 4 ROBERT P. WASHER Civil Engineering 426 West Ten Eyck Street, Watertown, N.Y. 13601 (315) 788-2126 American Society of Civil Engineers 3, 4; Big Brother Program 2; Intramural Sports 1, 2, 3, 4 RICHARD WEEKS Psychology 183 Locust Street, Valley Stream, N.Y. 11581 (516) 825-5031 Psychology Club 4 ALAN K. WEINER Industrial Distribution 1181 Webber Avenue, South Hempstead, N.Y. 11550 (516) 486-0150 Alpha Epsilon Pi 2, 3, 4; Freshman Orientation Board 3-Executive Board; Industrial Distribution So- ciety 3, 4; Big Brother Program 2, 3 EARL WELCH Electrical Engineering Route 2 Box 18, Brasher Falls, N.Y. 13613 (315) 389-4633 Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 3, 4 ROBERT A. WENDERLICH Industrial Distribution 386 Victory Highway, Painted Post, N.Y. 14810 (607) 265-9760 Sigma Delta 2, 3, 4-House Manager; Industrial Dis- tribution Society 2, 3, 4-Secretary ROBERT J. WHITBECK Industrial Distribution 214 Stafford Street, Palmyra, N.Y. 14522 (315) 597-4138 Alpha Chi Rho 2, 3, 4-Rush Chairman; Industrial Distribution Society 4 267 Carolyn Whitmoyer Greg Wolfenden David S. Youngs James R. Wiese Martin C. Wortendyke Richard Zee William J. Wilkie Duard R. Williams Marvin G. Winter Jr. Thomas Wise Jim Wright Paul O. Wright Paul Ziegler Thomas M. Zinsmeyer 268 CAROLYN WHITMOYER Chemistry RR 1, Heuvelton, N.Y. 13654 (315) 344-2436 American Chemical Society 3, 4; Gamma Sigma Ep- silon 3, 4; Pep Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Big Brother Program 2, 3; Dragon Squad 2; Junior Prom Committee 3; Women’s Government Council 2; International Club 4 JAMES R. WIESE Mechanical Engineering 14 Kilmer Avenue, Poughkeepsie, N.Y. 12661 (914) 471-1062 Varsity Soccer 1, 2; Tau Kappa Epsilon 2, 3, 4-Rush Chairman; Pi Tau Sigma 3, 4; American Society of Mechanical Engineers 4; Student Senate 3-Planning and Development Committee; 4-Comptroller Brian R. Wilmarth Howard K. Wolf Steven Yianoukos WILLIAM J. WILKIE Chemical Engineering 4302 Belmont Avenue, Liverpool, N.Y. 13088 (315) 457-7110 DUARD R. WILLIAMS Industrial Distribution 471 Shaffer Road, Newfield, N.Y. 14867 (607) 564-3454 Sigma Delta 2, 3, 4-Director; Industrial Distribution Society 3, 4 BRIAN R. WILMARTH Accounting 8 Hoffman Place, Whitesboro, N.Y. 13492 (315) 736-1377 Varsity Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Varsity Baseball 2, 3, 4 MIKE WILSON Industrial Distribution 7C25 Woodstock, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-8905 Sigma Tau lota 3, 4; College Union Board 3, 4; Woodstock Lodge 3-Assistant Manager; 4-Manager FRANK WINKEL Industrial Distribution Box 311 Mount Zoar Road, Pine City, N.Y. 14871 (716) 732-3640 Delta Sigma Phi 4-Steward; Dragon Squad 2; Sailing Club 4 MARVIN G. WINTER JR. Chemical Engineering 1031 Mill Plain Road, Fairfield, Conn. 06430 (203) 259-3898 Tau Delta Kappa 2, 3, 4; American Institute of Chemical Engineers 4; Inter College Radio Network 1, 2; Chess Club 1 THOMAS WISE Physics 42 Conmar Drive, Rochester, N.Y. 14609 (216) 671-5631 Freshman Orientation 2, 3-President; 4-Committee Chairman; WTSC 2-Disc Jockey; 3-Disc Jockey; 3- Continuity Director; Ogdensburg Hospital Volunteer 3-Chairman; Society of Physics Students 2, 3, 4; In- ter College Radio Network 3-News Editor; Alpha Phi Omega 1, 2-Sergeant at Arms; 3-Secretary; 4-Vice President HOWARD K. WOLF Mechanical Engineering 3562 West 147 Street, Cleveland, Ohio 44111 (216) 671-5631 Delta Upsilon 2, 3, 4; Resident Advisor 2, 3 GREG WOLFENDEN Industrial Management 11 Cundles Road West, Barrie, Ontario (705) 726-1582 Hockey 1, 2, 3, 4; Theta Chi 4 MARTIN C. WORTENDYKE Industrial Management 6 Radcliff Drive, Upper Nyack, N.Y. 10960 (914) 358-8129 Theta Chi 2, 3-Steward; 4-President JIM WRIGHT Industrial Management 27 Wightman Drive, Binghamton, N.Y. 13901 (607) 648-6036 Delta Sigma Phi 1, 2, 3-Activities Director; 3-Sports; 4-Sports; 4-Engineered Leader; Varsity Soccer 1, 2 PAUL O. WRIGHT Electrical Engineering RD 2 Middleville Road, Little Falls, N.Y. 13440 (315) 823-4438 Pep Band 1, 2, 3, 4 STEVEN YIANOUKOS Industrial Management 17 Waverly Street, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-4393 Freshman Baseball 1; Freshman Hockey 1; Golf 3, 4; Sigma Delta 2, 3-Vice President; 4-President; Inter Fraternity Council 4; Ice Carnival 3 DAVID S. YOUNGS Chemistry 42 Ford Avenue, Troy, N.Y. 12180 (518) 272-1060 American Chemical Society 4; Varsity Golf 4; Pep Band 4 RICHARD ZEE Civil Engineering 7 Winthrop Avenue, Liberty, N.Y. 12754 (914) 292-5334 Chi Epsilon 3, 4-Editor; American Society of Civil Engineers 4 PAUL ZIEGLER Industrial Distribution 108 Pine Ridge Drive, Newark, N.Y. 14573 (607) 331-6135 Alpha Chi Rho 2, 3, 4; Industrial Distribution Society 1, 3; American Marketing Association 4 THOMAS M. ZINSMEYER Mechanical Engineering 3 Fransis Street, Marcellus, N.Y. 13108 (315) 673-2712 Pi Tau Sigma 4-Secretary; American Society of Me- chanical Engineers 4; Clarkson Auto Association 1 RANDY C. ZITTEL Physics 194 Sycamore Street, East Aurora, N.Y. 14052 (716) 652-2265 Scabbard and Blade 3, 4; Tau Epsilon Phi 1, 2, 3, 4- Assistant House Manager Randy C. Zittel 269 RICHARD BYRNES No Comment 116 Hamilton Street Ogdensburg, N.Y. 13669 (315) 393-3865 Knight 1, 2, 3, 4; Clarksonian 3; Photo Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Photo Service 2, 3, 4; Pi Delta Epsilon 3, 4 PAUL CISTERINO Physics 324 Champlin Place Greenport, N.Y. 11944 (516) 477-1108 Inter College Radio Network 1, 2, 3, 4; Sigma Pi Sigma 3, 4; Society of Physics Students 1, 2, 3, 4 CHARLES GAUMOND Physics Circle Drive Chaumont, N.Y. 13622 (315) 649-2459 Pi Delta Epsilon 2, 3, 4; So- ciety of Physics Students 2, 3, 4; Sigma Pi Sigma 3, 4; Knight 1, 2, 3, 4 ALAN W. RAMPE Industrial Distribution 60 Eastbourne Road Rochester, N.Y. 14617 (716) 266-6272 Delta Sigma Phi 2, 3, 4 271 WARREN L. ABBOTT Chemical Engineering Kingsley Road, RD 1, Lafayette, N.Y. 13084 (315) 677-3478 THOMAS A. BALLARD Civil Engineering 200 Richey Street, Lock Haven, Penn. 17745 (717) 748-6463 SHIRLEY TREVOR BARKER Industrial Management 424 East South Street, Sturgis, Mich. 49091 651-2997 GORDON G. BENNETT Chemical Engineering Sherwood Heights, Wappingers, Falls, N.Y. 12509 JOSEPH A. BERNER Mechanical Engineering 127 Market Street, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 KENNETH STUART BIES Chemistry P.O. Box 908, Stony Brook, N.Y. 11790 (516) 751-1864 WILLIAM C. BREMMER Social Science 4126 Colonial Boulevard, Batavia, N.Y. 14020 (716) 343-3798 FRANK X. BRENNAN JR. Electrical Engineering 15 Cross Lane, Peekskill, N.Y. 10566 (914) 739-4007 CHRISTOPHER C. BROWN Civil Engineering 29 Shoreway Drive, Rochester, N.Y. 14612 (716) 392-3222 RICHARD D. BURKE Chemical Engineering 108 Parkview Drive, Painted Post, N.Y. 14870 (607) 936-6501 DAVID A. BYRNES Civil Engineering 15 Virginia Avenue, Poughkeepsie, N.Y. 12601 (914) 454-6773 JAMES E. CERIO Industrial Distribution 232 Beach Road, Solvay, N.Y. 13209 (315) 468-3237 HAROLD J. CLARK Civil Engineering 25 Pearl Street, New Hyde Park, N.Y. 11040 (516) 437-3416 DAVID M. COLE Mechanical Engineering Apt. 3, 12 Lawrence Avenue, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-6868 BENTON S. COOK JR. Civil Engineering Main Street, Redwood, N.Y. 13679 (315) 482-2043 DOUGLAS E. CRABB Industrial Distribution 111 Bishop Street, Watertown, N.Y. 13601 (315) 788-5803 JOHN L. CRONIN Industrial Management 17 Westbrook Lane, Roosevelt, N.Y. 11575 (516) 223-5184 JAMES A. CULICAN Industrial Distribution 142 Fage Avenue, N.Y. 13205 PRENTISS A. DARRINGER Industrial Distribution 16 Hamilton Street, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-7160 LAWRENCE E. DODGE Industrial Distribution Route 2, Massena, N.Y. 13662 (315) 769-5962 PATRICK D. FARRELL Industrial Distribution 35 Bowers Street, Massena, N.Y. 13662 (315) 769-3630 THEODORE H. FEDDERS Industrial Management 1673 Foxglove Road, Merrick, N.Y. 11566 (516) 489-6163 JOSE M. FERNANDEZ Civil Engineering 1607 Pumarada Street, Santurce. P.R. 00912 CRAIG A. FLANSBURG Industrial Management 111 Lafayette Road, Jamesville, N.Y. 13205 LEONARD F. FREEBERN Mechanical Engineering Mudmill Road, Brewerton, N.Y. 13029 (315) 699-3407 EDWIN H. FREIHOFER III Mechanical Engineering 147 Old Niskayuna Road, Loudonville, N.Y. 12211 (518) 785-9669 PETER K. GAN LEY Civil Engineering 305 Plymouth Drive, Syracuse, N.Y. 13206 (315) 463-1319 JOHN P. GIGLIONE Chemical Engineering 186 Sherman Street, Brentwood, N.Y. 11717 (516) 273-3167 KEVIN E. GILROY Social Science 60 Cook Street, Dannemora, N.Y. 12929 (518) 492-5973 DALE A. GOSS Civil Engineering Stamford, N.Y. 12167 (607) 652-4001 THOMAS J. GREEN Social Science 30 Hamilton Street, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 ALVIN M. HALL Social Science Old West Mountain Road, Ridgefield, Conn. 06877 (203) 438-5330 KNUT HANSEN Industrial Distribution Main Street, Beaver Falls, N.Y. 13305 (315) 277-7214 WILLIAM J. HASKELL Mechanical Engineering 115 Huntskill Road, Solvay, N.Y. 13209 (315) 468-2648 THOMAS W. HERRICK Industrial Distribution 112 Lilac Drive, Horseheads, N.Y. 14845 (607) 739-3207 PETER E. HOBDAY Civil Engineering 120 Charlotte Street, Canandaigua, N.Y. 14424 (315) 394-1187 BURKE D. IRWIN Industrial Distribution Box 251, Gilbertsville, N.Y. 13776 (607) 783-2425 WILLIAM M. JAKLITSCH Electrical Engineering 555 Kime Avenue, West Islip, N.Y. 11795 (516) 586-8009 MARK W. JOHNSON Industrial Distribution Hamilton Road, Elbridge, N.Y. 13060 (315) 689-3115 WILLIAM F. JOHNSTON Industrial Distribution 13 Shelburne Drive, Trenton, N.J. 08638 (609) 882-7962 DONALD R. KECK Industrial Management 109 West End Avenue, Binghamton, N.Y. 13905 (607) 729-3742 MARK J. KESSELRING Industrial Distribution 173 Hague Street, Rochester, N.Y. 14611 (716) 436-9071 DAVID H. KIBBE Industrial Management RFD 2, Lincolnville, Me. 04849 (207)789-2141 JAMES E. KLINK Social Science 109 Fireside Lane, Camillus, N.Y. 13031 (315) 672-3258 LYLE W. KNOWLTON Civil Engineering RFD 4 Gouverneur, N.Y. 13642 (315) 287-2078 RICHARD A. KOLLAR Civil Engineering 902 Manor Road, Apt. 102 Alexandria, Va. 22305 NICHOLAS M. KRETIS Mechanical Engineering 230 Broadway, Saranac Lake, N.Y. 12983 (315) 891-3840 RONALD B. LACOMB Economics 138 Market Street, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-3248 WAYNE D. LACOMB Industrial Management Route 2, Massena, N.Y. 13662 (315) 794-0625 ROBERT J. LARKIN Mechanical Engineering 7 Nichols Avenue, Plattsburgh, N.Y. 12901 (315) 563-5473 ALBERT J. LINDEMUTH JR. Industrial Distribution 7237 Bear Ridge Road, North Tonawanda, N.Y. 14120 (716) 693-0332 FREDERICK J. MANN Industrial Management 1226 Roselle Avenue, Niagara Falls, N.Y. 14305 (716) 282-5406 WILLIAM M. MEYLAN Chemical Engineering RD 1, Route 11 A, Tully, N.Y. 13159 (315) 696-8742 272 RONALD W. MILLER Civil Engineering RD 2, Bainbridge, N.Y. 13733 (607) 967-2062 WALLACE D. MILLER Industrial Distribution 17 Addison Street, Larchmont, N.Y. 10538 (914) 834-4160 ROY D. MOORE Industrial Management 283 Mandalay Road, Chicopee, Mass. 01020 (413) 538-8920 NEIL S. MORGAN Social Science 2078 Second Avenue, New York City, N.Y. 10029 (212) 534-3657 LAWRENCE E. MORRISON Chemical Engineering 2104 Judge Road, Basom, N.Y. 14013 (315) 948-9306 HARVEY A. MOYER Economics 4 Donald Place, Liverpool, N.Y. 13088 (315) 457-7638 FRANK J. MUSCOLINO Chemistry 38 Kenosha Street, Albany, N.Y. 12209 (518) 462-4887 RICHARD D. NEELS Industrial Management 34 Cherry Street, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-6845 DOUGLAS A. NEWMAN Mechanical Engineering 67 Main Street, Silver Creek, N.Y. 14136 (716) 934-3102 TERENCE J. NILON Industrial Management 21 West Sellers Avenue, Ridley Park, Penn. 19078 (215) 521-2692 WALTER B. NINESLING Industrial Management 35 Maple Street, Hudson Falls, N.Y. 12839 (518) 747-5984 DONALD J. NORBIN Civil Engineering 451 Coventry Avenue, Utica, N.Y. 13502 (315) 732-4383 JOHN H. PARKER Industrial Distribution 10 Bay Street, Potsdam, N.Y. 13676 (315) 265-7131 JOHN D. PETTY Social Science 317 West Sherman Avenue, Newark, N.Y. 14513 (315) 331-1798 RICHARD J. RAGO Mechanical Engineering 349 West Sherman Avenue, Newark, N.Y. 14513 (315) 331-4375 HERBERT F. ROY III Civil Engineering 45 Monroe Street, Saratoga Springs, N.Y. 12866 (518) 584-6293 ROBERT G. SAUTER Electrical Engineering Front Street, Upper Nyack, N.Y. 10960 (914) 358-3046 CARL R. SHIELD Chemical Engineering RD 2 Spencer Hill, Corning, N.Y. 14830 (607) 962-3704 LEVI SMITH Industrial Distribution 63 Elm Avenue, Hempstead, N.Y. 11550 (516) 486-1998 WILLIAM E. STAPLETON Industrial Management 140 Mona Drive, Buffalo, N.Y. 14226 (716) 837-4796 RICHARD C. SUMMERMATTER Physics 140 Scholfield Road West, Rochester, N.Y. 14617 (716) 266-3486 MICHAEL A. TUMASELLI Mechanical Engineering 100 Harter Place, Utica, N.Y. 13502 (315) 724-7617 GERALD P. TUBBS Industrial Management 163 North Avenue, Avon, N.Y. 14414 (716) 926-8618 KURT A. UMBACH Electrical Engineering 22 Princeton Drive, Dix Hills, N.Y. 11746 (516) 864-5910 JOHN J. WAINRIGHT Electrical Engineering 121 River Road, Baldwinsville, N.Y. 13027 (315) 622-2068 JOHN P. WHITTON Civil Engineering Campbell Road, Sauquoit, N.Y. 13456 (315) 737-8514 EDWARD W. WOLFF Civil Engineering Gorge Road, Boonville, N.Y. 13309 (315) 942-4154 JOHN A. YACONO Industrial Distribution 53 Evergreen Street, Cortland, N.Y. 13045 (607) 756-2975 273 PERSPECTIVES Science Center opens—finally .. . 50 minute periods, U-Z periods . . . Andromeda Strain ... Snell Renovation ... Nixon visits Peking . . . Rock at the Rath . .. Firesign Theatre .. . Oklahoma Expedition . . . Volunteer Army???? WTSC tower . . . Potsdam Annual Fire—Adirondack Garage . . . Co-ed Floor .. . Super Bowl 6—Dallas ... Washington Expedition—April 24 . . . Angela Davis . .. Howard Hughes in the News . . . Maximus Super. .. Mack Davis .. . Lady and the Tramp .. . 274 Peter Duel . . . Hirohito meets Nixon . . . Sha-Na-Na ... Bronen’s Fire Sale ... the GEEP . . . Pass-Fail ... Student Wives Clean Air Car .. . “Moby Dick” ... Joe Frazier vs. Muhammed Ali . . . Maurice Chevalier . . . N.O.W_____ Instigator... “American Pie” ... “porn coppers”???? Hexachlorophene ... “Where is Rock going?” ... King Kong (uncut)... Amtrack ... Surf’s Up . . . Rockefeller’s Hot Dog Tax . .. Bike race rained out . . . Dorm Council .. . Attica Riot . .. The Shadow ... Soft Lens . . . Flip Wilson . . . Pentagon Papers ... 275 Ugly Man Contest—Uncle Miltie and King of the Hill. . . Jesus Christ Super Star . . . Lewis’s V Period . . . Cheech and Chong . . . Amchitka . . . Hi-Fi Shop . . . Women’s Lib ... Paula and Dave .. . Champagne Punch . . . Grass in January???? Kareem Jabbar .. . 1-H . . . Folk Blues Jamboree . .. French Connection . . . Tuition up ... Hanks Hunk of Glass” . .. The Tech Commandments . . . Mixer Dance . . . Lizzy Borden . . . San Andreas Fault . . . Robin Morgan . . . Nebraska No. 1 . . . National Lampoon . . . PDP 8 SST dies ... New Clarkson Arena” . . . James Hoffa Free ... L.A.’s 33 game win streak . . . 276 James Bond Returns . . . Hall-Ball . . . I Will Fear No Evil. . . Beetle Terry . .. Phase II . .. etc . . . Hill Campus . . . All in the Family . . . Warehouse . . . East Pakistan Now Bangla Desh . . . Swamp l ll . . . Vida Blue . . . More Bombing . .. Sinatra says goodbye . . . Flea turns townie ,.. Russ Burgess—E.S.P. . . . Astro-Turf. . . “Welcome Freshman” . . . The Dungeon... C.A.A.A___ Mid-East conflict continues . . . Family Day . . . “Mel” . . . Belle de jour—Rip off . .. Dollar Devaluation .. . Clarkson—6; Boston U.—2 . . . SAGA .. . Moon Buggy... 277 Switchboard . .. “New Gods” . .. eight profs kicked . . . Berrigan Brothers . .. Steve Warr . . . CCD... Wage Price Freeze ... King Frederick of Denmark . . . “The Fortress” ... Space Shuttle . .. The New Integrator??? Quadraphonics ... Taming of the Shrew . . . Enrollment Down . . . Poco .. . Kosygin Visits Canada . .. All Nighters . . . Weston’$$$ 5 C discount . . . The Female Eunuch ... Night Gallery . .. Dead Goldfish ... Junior Prom . . . “C.E. and Environmental Engineering Dept.” Table Tennis Diplomacy ... Pirates Win Series ... Punch Card Meal Tickets ... Lily Tomlin . .. Marvel Comics ... 278 Activities Fair. . . Dorm 6 Halloween Party . . . “Try it, you’ll like it” . . . Red China in U.N.—Nationalist China Out . . . Ryan’s Daughter . .. World Trade Center... Vietnam Veterans against the War ... Edgar Winter's White Trash . . . The Rock changes name again and again and ... Pollution marches on ... Henry Kissinger .. . Apollo 15 . . . Nixon’s Peace Package—POW’S vs. PEACE Bangla Desh Concert—NYC . . . Gone With the Wind . . . Troop Withdrawal . . . Freshmen and Sophomores spared from “15” minute walk ... Dean Benson ... Grandmother. .. “Shoes for Industry” . . . New Canoes . .. 279 COLOPHON The 1972 Clarksonian was printed by Wm J Keller Inc of Buffalo, New York on fifteen and one half sig- natures of 80 lb Velva Brite paper and one and one half signatures of Anniversary Text. The eight dividers were drawn in India Ink by Anne M. Dec and washed over by Keller in 375 Green, 199 Red, 150 Orange, 361 Green, 292 Blue, 102 Yellow, 473 Tan, and 271 Purple. The text type is 10 pt Melior copy, 8 pt Melior cap- tions, with 18 pt and 30 pt Melior Semi Bold headings in the History Section. The other signatures are 10 pt Helvetica copy with 18 pt and 30 pt Helvetica head- ings. The cover was manufactured by Kingskraft, Divi- sion of Kingsport Press, Kingsport, Tennessee on Fabricoid in Brown 78369 on a wood grain. The cov- er was embossed with Gold Metalay with Gold Top Stamping on the binding. A Black Overtone Rub was applied. The spine and cover type specification was Palatino Bold. The sixteen page Hockey supplement was printed by Ryan Press of Ogdensburg New York. Contributing editors were Nikki Cannon [Editor-In- Chief], Gene Dec [Assistant Editor], Pat Flanagan [Assistant Editor], John Becker [Business Editor], Dan Weidman [Photo Editor 1st semester], Larry Dunn [Photo Editor 2nd semester], Paula Hurewitz [Senior Editor], and Jerry Sagliocca [Greek Editor]. The Keller representative was E. William Celano. First Printing: April, 1972 Press Run: 2300 copies 280 CLARKSON HOCKEY 71-72 CLARKSON HOCKEY 71-72 edited and written by NIKKI CANNON, FRANK JOHNSON, and RICHARD COOK. PHOTO CREDITS (for the entire '72 Clarksonian) GEORGE ALBURY - p88ABC, 89AD, 90AB, 91ABCD, 92BCD, 93AB. BILL BAROTT — p76ABCD, 77ABCD, 78ABCD, 137A. RICHARD BELL - p177B. RICH BYRNES - p274A. NIKKI CANNON - p35ABC, 37B, 44ABC, 45ABC, 101AB, 102BC, 156FH, 159EF, 251E, 277A, S8B, S9AB, S11A, S14CD, S16B. LAIRD CHAFFEE, THE FOCAL POINT - p26B, 27B, 42A, 108AB, 109 ABC, 110ABC, 111ABC, 112ABCD, 117AC, 122A BC, 125ACD, 129A, 132A, 133AB, 136C, 149D, 150A, 151 A, 154CDE, 181 A, 277B, 278B, 279D. CLARKSON'S PUBLIC RELATION FILES - p2A, 4A, 6A, 8A, 10A, 12A, 14A, 16A, 18A, 21 ABC, 22AB, 23C, 37B, 40AB, 41 AB, 43B, 46A, 47AB, 55C, 63C, 70C, 89B, 92A, 101C, 113ABC, 115A, 119B, 127B, 142, 144A, 146A, 148B, 173AB. RICHARD COOK - pS8A, S10ABCDEFG. BILL COTTER - p58CD, 59ABCD, 60ABCD, 61ABCD, 62ACD, 63A, 172A, 193C. LARRY DUNN - p4B, 20A, 26EF, 51AC, 54AC, 55AB, 56ABC, 57AB, 68ABCD, 69ABCD, 70ABD, 90C, 98BC, 99AB C, 100 ABC, 102 A, 103 AC, 139, 155BDEG, 156BGIJK, 158AB CEGJK, 159C, 160A, 179E, 188B, 275ACD, 276A, 277CD, 378AC. BEN FAGAN - p24A, 25A, 54D, 55D, 58A, 86D, 95ABCD, 96A, 123C, 128AD, 143ABC, 154B, 172C, 204A, 210A, 218, 221. JOHN FIGUEROA - p27A, 28, 29, 30, 31,34DE, 42BC, 58B, 71, 103B, 120, 121 AB, 137B, 173C, 174C, 176A, 180ABCD, 181B, 182BC, 183AC, 185A, 187A, 188A, 190AB, 191BC, 202, 274C, S5A, S14A. PAT FLANAGAN - p129B, 135AB. RON FREUND - p72ABC, 73ABCD, 74ABC, 75ABC, 87, 135C, 175B, 177A, 189A. LARRY GOETZ - p50ABC, 51BD, 52ABCD, 53ABCD, 54B. BRUCE HEIDER - p156ACDE, 157ABCDEFGHIJ, 160FHIJ, 161ABCDEFG. BOB HORNER - p26AD, 34B, 93C, 114ABDE, 115B, 116AB CD, 117B, 118ABC, 119A, 124ABC, 125B, 126ABCD, 127 AC, 130ABCD, 132BC, 134CD, 137C, 155ACFHIJKL, 158DFHI, 159ABD, 160CG, 173D, 177C, 179ABCDF, 180E. 191A, 193A, 227E, 275B, 276BD, 277D, 279C. FRANK JOHNSON - p36AB, 106ABC, 107AB, SI, S3AB, S4ABC, S5B, S6ABC, S7AB, SI IB, S12ABC, S13AB, S14BE, S16ACDE. RICH KARPLUK - p146B, 147AB. BOB OPPENHEIMER - p26C, 79B, 80ABCD, 81ABCD, 82ABCD, 107B, 123AB, 124D, 128BC, 131ABCD, 134AB, 136B, 138ABC, 154A, 160BDE, 175C, 176B, 184B, 186B, 189B, 192A, 229E, 233E, 235E, 237E, 239E, 241 E, 243E, 245E, 247E, 255E, 263E, 274BD, 276C, 279AB. RON PANETTA - p64ABC, 65ABCD, 66ABC, 67ABC, 94AB CD, 172B, 174B, 182A, 183B, 192B. POTSDAM MUSEUM - pi A, 2B, 3AB, 4C, 5ABC, 6B, 7ABCD, 8B, 9CD, 10BC, 11H, 12B, 13F, 14B, 151, 17DE, 18B, 20B, 21 D. BOB RADTKE - p83ABCD, 84ABCD, 85ABCD, 86ABC, 193B. JIM SPENCER - p149ABC, 150BC, 151 BC. DAN WE I DM AN - p34AC, 38ABC, 39ABC, 43A, 79C, 96BCD, 97ABCD, 98A, 114C, 115C, 136A, 144BC, 145ABC, 159L, 174 A, 175A, 176C, 178, 184A, 185BC, 187B, 189C, 196A, 198, 200, 206A, 209, 213, 214, 216, 222A, 249E, 253E. TAKEN FROM OLD YEARBOOKS - pllFG, 12C, 15GHJ, 16B, 17C, 19EFG, 23B, 57C, 62B, 63B, 75D, 79A, 89C, 148A, 270E, 271 ABC. DONATED BY EMINENT ALUMNI - p9AB, 11ABCDE, 13ABCDE, 15ABCDEF, 17AB, 19ABCD, 23A. DONATED BY RESPECTIVE FRATERNITIES - p196B, 197ABCD, 199ABCDE, 201ABC, 203AB, 204B, 205ABCD, 206B, 207ABCD, 208ABC, 210B, 211, 212ABCDE, 215ABC, 217ABCD, 220ABCD, 222BC, 223ABC. CAROL STUDIOS — All Senior Portraits on Pages 226 to 269, inclusive. Pictures are lettered alphabetically across the page. S — Supplement CCT OPP CCT OPP 11 University of Quebec 7 6 Boston University 2 4 University of Quebec 6 2 New Hampshire 3 6 Alumni 5 6 Dartmouth 4 6 Sir George Williams 1 1 University of Pennsylvania 2 North Country Tournament 12 Yale 6 9 Colgate 3 4 Colgate 3 6 Vermont 2 3 Norwich 1 3 St. Lawrence 2 4 Cornell 2 3 Providence 4 7 Vermont 1 2 Harvard 6 4 Dartmouth 3 5 RPI 3 3 St. Lawrence 4 8 Colgate 3 RPI Invitational 4 Boston College 6 8 New Brunswick 1 5 St. Lawrence 3 8 Ohio University 2 4 RPI 5 4 RPI 1 8 New Hampshire 5 5 Harvard 6 3 McMasters 2 RESULTS: 20-10-0 ‘Overtime 2 COVER PICTURE — Mason's goal at 15:20 of the second period which gave Tech a 4-0 lead over Boston University. Mason was assisted by MacKenzie and Conroy. Tech was skating two men up. The month of November had barely gotten underway when the charged-up crowds of Clark- son hockey fans poured into the Appleton Arena at St. Lawrence University to see the Golden Knights in their first two games with the Univer- sity of Quebec. Work was still in progress on the Clarkson Arena, which meant that the hockey team was forced to practice in Canton as well as open the 1971-72 season. With only a limited number of practices under their belts and most of them in the wee hours of the morning, the Golden Knights managed to outscore Quebec in a wild 11-7 game, that had its share of penalties as well as goals. In fact even the goalies were hopping all evening, making a total of 67 saves, 32 by Kevin Woods. The next evening, it was back to Canton to again take on Quebec, and this time the Clarkson skaters came out on the short end of a 6-4 score, although they outshot the visitors 47-19, which might have been a hint of things to come. The traditional Alumni game was played a week later and what a contest it turned out to be with the fired-up oldsters determined to pull out their second upset over the varsity in the last three years. Trailing by a goal with just over 30 seconds to play, goals by Steve Warr and Pete Harasym gave the varsity a 6-5 win in a game that saw such Clarkson greats as Terry Yurkiewicz, Fred Silver, Bob Van Lammers, Roger Purdie, Corby Adams, and Tom Hurley play in the now refurbished Clarkson Arena. Just one more tune-up game before the North Country Thanksgiving Hockey Festival and that was with Sir George Williams University of Montreal, a team that went on to become one of the best in Canada. Jerry Kemp's two goals powered the Golden Knights to a 6-1 win over Sir George in a contest that saw Clarkson take a total of 38 shots at the opposing net while the visitors only managed to get off 11. Jerry Kemp's exhuberance after scoring a power play goal assisted by MacKenzie and Mason at 11:41 of the second period. 3 The first game of the tournament was played in Canton and Clarkson skaters rose to the occasion by rolling over Colgate University, 9-3 with Jerry Kemp scoring the hat trick. Once again the shots on goal were impressive, 50 for Clarkson to less that 20 for Colgate. The second game of the tourney was played in Potsdam against a strong, hardskating University of Vermont sextet and we opened up a 5-0 lead before ending up on top of a 6-2 score as Kemp added two more goals. The game for the tournament championship was a different story. Up against arch-rival St. Lawrence University in a packed Appleton Arena, the Golden Knights skated to a 2-0 lead before St. Lawrence got on track and tallied three times to defeat Clarkson and gain a tie for the championship. Both Clarkson goals were scored by junior Duane LaShomb in a period of less than a minute. A stubborn University of Vermont team was again trying for an upset win over Clarkson on December first and with 26 seconds gone in the final period the Golden Knights held a slim 2-1 lead. Then the roof fell in and the Golden Knights erupted for five straight goals with a 7-1 victory. Kemp picked up another hat trick and Harasym added two goals in the win that saw Carl Piehl look impressive in the Clarkson net making 33 saves. Three days later the Golden Knights played host to a surprising Dartmouth team and managed a 4-3 victory on a goal by Harasym with just seven seconds left to go in the game. The next game was a rematch with St. Lawrence and a chance to avenge the earlier loss. The game was played at Clarkson and the Clarkson fans were screaming for revenge. It did not happen. Trailing by a goal with less than half the final period to play, Pete Harasym again came through. This time Pete scored the tying goal at the 18:17 mark and it looked like the momentum was changing. That is until St. Lawrence scored with eight seconds remaining on the clock to return to Canton with a 4-3 victory. Clarkson had 46 shots at the St. Lawrence net while allowing just 22. Larrie goalie Alan Howes stopped 19 shots in the first period alone. Steve Warr's first goal of the season at 2:45 of the third period from Harasym. After the St. Lawrence loss came a two week break for the holidays followed by Clarkson's first visit to the RPI Tourney in Troy. Skating without the services of Jerry Kemp who stayed behind, hospitalized with pneumonia, the Clarkson team overwhelmed all opposition in the tournament to emerge the champions and in the process, scored 22 goals to the opposition's 6. The first period of the first game saw Clarkson and the University of New Brunswick skate to a 1-1 tie. The second period was all Clarkson's as they exploded for seven goals. Duane LaShomb scored the “hat trick while Pete Harasym scored twice. The next night Mike Conroy got the hat trick scoring twice in the first period and once in the third to power the Golden Knights to a 8-2 win over Ohio University. Brian Mason added two goals and assisted on all three of Conroy's tallies. The RPI Field House was a sell-out for the final game which proved to be the championship with both Clarkson and RPI going into the contest with two tournament wins. After a scoreless first period, Clarkson spotted RPI a one goal lead, then went on to overpower the Engineers, 4-1. Steve Warr, Mike Conroy, and Pete Harasym were named to the All-Tournament first team while Brian Mason and Greg Holmes were selected for the second team. Both Kevin Woods and Carl Piehl were impressive in the Clarkson net. Woods allowed just four goals in the two games he was in the nets and Piehl allowed two in one game. The Clarkson domination was evidenced by their placing seven on the top-ten scoring list and by the fact that the three game save totals were 65 for Clarkson and 122 for the opposition. 5 The Golden Knights began the New Year with a frustrating 3-2 win over McMasters. Brian Mackenzie's goal at 6:02 of the sudden-death overtime period gave Clarkson a hard-earned victory as they did everything but put the puck into the net. The game looked like a 60 minute power play with Clarkson taking shot after shot at the McMasters net. When the saves were added up at the end of the game, the McMasters' goalie had kicked out a total of 57 Clarkson shots. Perhaps the greatest game of the year, undoubtedly the greatest for the fans in the Clarkson Arena was the January 7th routing of national cham- pion Boston University. The Clarkson fans were ecstatic as their team skated off the ice at the end of the second period, leading BU by a 5-0 score. They came back to gain a 6-2 victory led by great goal tending by Carl Piehl who had 33 saves. Clarkson had scored four goals in that second period, two by Brian Mason, to put the game on ice. With a great victory under their belts, it was off to New Hampshire and a game against the up and coming Wildcats that had never managed more than a tie against the Golden Knights. Again the game went into overtime, but this time Clarkson came out on the wrong end of a 3-2 score. Brian Mason's second goal of the game scored at 15:20 from Mackenzie and Conroy. Mike Conroy from Mason and Fleetham at 17:35 of the second period. 6 Next came a game that was not on the schedule at the start of the season, but because of the now famous who's gonna play freshman controversy, Dartmouth invited Clarkson to visit their campus for a game that was originally scheduled against Boston University. The Indians scored three quick goals early in the second period to take a 3-2 lead before Clarkson bounced back with three more, two by Kemp and one by Russ Audycki, to go in front by two. The two teams traded goals in the final period and Clarkson emerged on the top side of a 6-4 score. The next week it was off to Philadelphia and a game that will have Clarkson fans who witnessed the event, buzzing for quite some time. The Golden Knights outshot Penn, 45-33, but lost, 2-1. Brian Mason scored the only Clarkson goal mid-way through the final period. The winning goal was scored by Penn officially at 19:59 of the final period. To those that saw the game, it was scored after the final buzzer, and you could get those witnesses to swear on a stack of ECAC Hockey Guides that the goal came after the game was over. Players argued, Coach Ceglarski questioned, but the officials were firm in favor of the goal judge, who, by the way, said that he was late flipping on the red light because his fingers slipped. At any rate, it was a loss. Clarkson fans at New Haven were treated to one of those lets go out there and show 'em in the third period games against Yale, two nights later. It has been years since a Yale hockey team had beaten Clarkson and the Yale team was pretty determined to break the Clarkson string as they held on for dear life to a 6-4 lead over the stunned Clarkson skaters, at the end of the second period. Then it happened. At 1:55 Pete Harasym scored. At 4:00, Brian Mason scored. Russ Audycki scored seconds later and all of a sudden Clarkson had a one-goal lead. But it didn't stop there. At 4:51, Kemp scored. At 13:04, it was Mason's turn. Pete Harasym scored at 15:26. Kemp got another at 17:59, and Mason completed his third period hat trick at 19:11 and they skated off the ice, after scoring eight goals in the third period, with a 12—6 win. 7 The night of January 29 was another night of frustration for the Clarkson skaters. Norwich University, a team that had lost all but one of their games in Division Two, came to Clarkson and the question was just how many goals would Clarkson score. There was a young goalie by the name of Cantwell who had other ideas and proceeded to prove it. Not awed by the talent-laden attack of the Clarkson team, Cantwell put on a display of goal tending that impressed even the Clarkson fans, who after a few goals are scored, tend to shout such encouraging words as Sieve, Sieve , at the frustrated goalie. At one point in the Norwich game, while the Clarkson team was playing with a two- man advantage, Cantwell lost his stick and proceeded to kick away a barage of Clarkson shots with all the grace of a Parisian can-can dancer. The perform- ance was followed by a tremendous ovation from the Clarkson fans. The final score of the Norwich game was 3-1. 8 Just a few days later the team was off for Ithaca and a key ECAC contest with Cornell. The Big Red had not lost a game in Lynah Rink in five years. In fact the string of wins at home had been stretched to 63. Pete Harasym opened the scoring early in the first period and Cornell bounced back to tie the game at 1-1 with two minutes to go in the first stanza. The only goal of the second period was scored by Brian MacKenzie and Clarkson had 20 minutes of hockey to play and maintain the one goal lead. Five minutes into the final stanza, Cornell tied the score and minutes later Russ Audycki scored the winning goal and Mac- Kenzie countered with an insurance tally to rock the Cornell fans who had not seen the Big Red loose at home since they were upset by Yale, in overtime, 4-3, back in 1967. Kevin Woods sparkled in the nets, stopping 28 Cornell shots, 24 in the last two periods. 9 another save another save!!!! another save another save!!!!!! another save!!!!! believe it or 10 Jerry Kemp faked out Cutts to put in the second tally to make the score 2-0 at 14:56 of the 1 st period. Assists go to Holmes and Conroy. The joy of the Clarkson fans didn't last very long. The Golden Knights returned to the Clarkson Arena to host Providence and ended up on the short end of a 4-3 overtime score. The Providence goalie stopped 47 Clarkson shots while Providence managed to get away 20. Mike Conroy scored two goals in the loss. Harvard handed the Golden Knights their second straight loss by a 6-2 score, picking up three goals in the final period. All-American Dave Hynes proved to be the big problem for goalie Kevin Woods, scoring four of the six Harvard goals. A total of 38 Harvard shots were stopped by Woods. The RPI contest looked like it was going to be a real route as Clarkson had a 4-0 lead, early in the second period. The Engineers looked like they were just about ready to give up when Greg Bull scored on a breakaway and the complexion of the game completely changed. The Engineers re-fired their furnaces and Bull scored twice more to pull within one goal of the Golden Knights. With less than four minutes to play, Brian MacKenzie scored the insur- ance goal to give Clarkson a 5-3 win. Carl Piehl had a busy night in the Clarkson net, stopping 32 shots. The day after Valentine's Day, Clarkson traveled to Colgate to take on the team that had given them a little trouble earlier in the season. At the end of the first period the score was tied at 2-2, on goals by LaShomb and Harasym. The second and third periods saw the Golden Knights score six times while holding Colgate to a single goal, and come up with an 8-3 win. Second period tallies were scored by Audycki, Mac- Kenzie, and Conroy. Brian Mason scored twice in the final period and Jerry Kemp contributed the final goal. Steve Warr comes around to make the save. It was upset night again as the Boston College hockey team visited Potsdam with a record that was a little heavy on the loss side. The visitors scored three goals in the first period to Clarkson's one and the Clark- son fans took their between period breaks with a look of disbelief. The second period lifted their spirits somewhat as Kemp, Harasym, and Conroy scored to tie the score at 4-4. Once again, the puck just wouldn't go in the net for the Clarkson skaters and the Terriers came up with two goals in the final period, one scored on an open net, to take home a 6-4 victory. Fourty-seven shots were taken at goalie Higgins, but he managed to stop 43 of them. The BC's skaters had 24 shots on the Clarkson goal. 'He’ll never get it by me now.’ Oh!, but Brian MacKenzie did from Audycki and Harasym at 7:06 of the 1st period for the first tally of the game. 11 The season was getting in its late stages and it was time for revenge as the team took the 11 mile jaunt to St. Lawrence. Twice beaten by the Larries so far in the season, it was a must game for Clarkson if they had any hopes for a shot at the ECAC crown. The Larries started off the first period with a bang, firing 17 shots at Kevin Woods, and scoring twice. Mike Conroy scored the lone Clarkson goal of the period. Then All-American Steve Warr put on a great offensive display as he set up Brian Mason's goal which tied the score, scored the go ahead goal, then assisted on Jerry Kemp's goal to give the Golden Knights a 4-2 lead going into the final period. Russ Audycki scored Clarkson's fifth goal early in the third period and St. Lawrence was held scoreless until they managed a tally with less than two minutes to play. Final score, Clarkson 5, St. Lawrence 3. Score by Mike Conroy from Kemp and Mason at 10:46 of the 1st period to make the score 2-1. Clarkson had defeated RPI twice before dur- ing the season and had one more game with the Engineers. That game was played in the RPI Fieldhouse which was packed to capacity. Both teams played a whale of a hockey game and the Golden Knights ended up being outscored, 5-4. The four Clarkson goals, scored by Kemp, Conroy, LaShomb and Ornella kept things pretty even until the Engineers scored one of their few power play goals of the season with about three minutes left in the game. The final home game in the Clarkson Arena was one in which the offense really put it all together. New Hampshire was in town and gunning for that fourth place finish that would give them home ice in the ECAC quarter finals. The Clarkson fans already knew that it would be a sixth place finish in the standings for the Golden Knights. Warr, Conroy, and Kemp had first period goals to give their team a one goal edge going into the second period. Harasym and Audycki scored in the second stanza while the Wildcats picked up three goals to knot the game at 5-5. The final period was all Clarkson. They fired 16 shots at the New Hampshire net, doubling the opponents output and goals by Kemp, Ornella and Warr gave Clarkson an 8-5 win. 12 Duane LaShomb tied the score at 5-5 unassisted with 2:37 left in the third period. The following week it was tournament time and Clarkson traveled to Harvard for the ECAC quarter final. The winner of that game would compete with three others in Boston for the Eastern championship and the opportunity to play in the NCAA's. Kemp and Audycki matched Harvards two goals in the first period and Kevin Woods sparkled in the goal, making 15 saves. Harvard had the momentum. The second period was Harvard's. They scored once to take a 3-2 lead. The third period was Clarkson's and they peppered the Harvard goal with 15 shots. Harasym scored twice and LaShomb scored at 17:23 to tie the score at 5-5 and send the game into overtime. Bill Corkery ended Clarkson's hopes for a week in Boston, scoring from what he called an impossible angle at 4:50, to give the Crimson a 6-5 win. Russ Audycki scored on a power play at 7:01 of the 1st period to tie the score at 1-1. The assist went to Harasym. It was an up and down season with some great wins and some disappointing losses. The coaches named Steve Warr to the All-American team for the second time. Steve was the only Eastern All-American who didn't play in the ECAC tournament in Boston. He was picked to the ECAC All East weekly team eight times out of a possible ten during the season while Brian Mason was selected once. MILESTONES 1. Coach Len Ceglarski won his 250th college hockey game beating the Big Red of Cornell on their own ice 4-2, February 2, 1972. 2. Senior Jerry Kemp set a new Clarkson record by scoring his 88th career goal against Harvard March 7, 1972 to surpass the old record of 87 career goals set by Eddie Rowe during 1954-1957. 3. Steve Warr became the first Clarkson defenseman to be named twice to the All-American squad. 4. The Golden Knights made their first participa- tion in the oldest hockey tournament in the country, the RPI Invitational, a memorable one by taking all three games and the crown. 5. The 1971-1972 Clarkson Hockey team was the first Clarkson team to lose a quarter final game and not be eligible for participation in the ECAC playoffs. Clarkson had appeared in 10 consecutive playoffs, more than any other team. 13 s E N I O R S Greg Holmes Greg Wolfenden At the end of every hockey season one looks at the seniors who are playing their last game in the Clarkson Arena and immediately looks back across the past three years ringing up their accomplish- ments and qualities like one would total a grocery bill at the local food market. In each case, the list is long and five Golden Knights will be missed, not for the obvious, their hockey prowess, but as friends and young men who contributed much to the Clarkson community. Perhaps, one of the most under rated players on the ice this season was Greg Holmes. The Clarkson captain was not known for his fantastic scoring ability. When you get right down to it, he did not have the hardest shot on the team. But he was always there on defense, stopping breakaways, blocking the puck, no matter how fast the puck vyas coming, everyone knew they could count on him. Greg Wolfenden has got to have one of the greatest smiles you will ever see. The big forward has a stick-toitivness that not many can match. He was a key late in this past season, skating on a checking line that did well against the big scoring lines of New Hampshire and Harvard. One of the biggest thrills for the Wolfy fans at Clarkson was when he scored Clarkson's sixth goal against Boston University. Steve Warr is undoubtedly one of the best defensemen the Clarkson Arena has ever seen. In fact Steve is so good, he makes it look easy. He has the fine talents of a defenseman and the moves of a forward which will prove to be a great threat to any opposition. Steve has received just about every honor possible and is considered by most to be a good prospect for professional hockey. He was drafted by Buffalo in the National Hockey League and the New England Whalers in the new World Hockey Association. Regardless of which direction he takes, we wish Steve well in his hockey career. You think of Jerry Kemp and you think of goals. In his three year Clarkson career, Jerry scored 88 goals, more than any other player. Sidelined with pneumonia for six games this season, he still managed to score 27 goals in 24 games or more than one per-game. Often he was shadowed so closely by the opposing defense that one would wonder how he managed to get any shots off. Geoff Brown, the Clarkson Casenova, always gave 100% on the ice, scoring well as a center, and skating well defensively whenever a checking line was needed. He was always in the running for the Lady Bing trophy. He hit hard but wasted little time in the penalty box. We thank you all for the thrills of great hockey and the honesty and sincerity that was yours. Jerry Kemp Geoff Brown 14 ■I c LEN CEGLARSKI Len Ceglarski Clarkson College Hockey Coach 1958-1972 Boston College Hockey Coach 1972- In 361 games his charges have compiled a 254-97-10 record. Three times his teams have finished second in the nation, and following the 1965-66 season he was voted United Press International Coach-of-the-Year.” As a player at Boston College, Ceglarski was an All-American and was twice named to the All-East team. He was captain of the 1950-51 B.C. team and led the team in goals scored and total points. He was a member of the 1952 U.S. Olympic Hockey Team. In addition to developing top-ranked teams, year after year, Ceglarski coached such great hockey players as All-Americans Corby Adams, Eddie MacDonald, Terry Yurkiewicz, and most recently, Bruce Bullock and Steve Warr. 15
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