George Washington University - Cherry Tree Yearbook (Washington, DC)
- Class of 1969
Page 1 of 364
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 364 of the 1969 volume:
“
I fU ‘The Movement’ was a tag that dominated much of American thinking both on and off campus this year. Move- ment suggests momentum and action. Yet the threads of the action were not all political and revolutionary as one might suppose from the year’s engaging title. Difficult to portray, difficult to conceptualize, difficult to verbalize, the various movements drew all the threads and all the people into a changing mass. Ranging from Vietnam to the election, and from basketball to Greek Week, most students at GW ‘gave a damn’, if only for a diversion. Two occurences will probably stick out when one remembers 1968-69 at GW: November 5 brought the Nixon victory and the riots on ‘G’ Street; December 16 brought The Hatchet which told us to go home and get over the flu. Nationally, Vietnam dominated our thoughts. The draft calls were going down, then up. The peace talks would begin only to bog down in the diplomatic haggling over the shape of a table. Two political conventions, utterly polar in atmosphere, suggested the right-wing reaction that would prove itself at the time of the election. And for Christmas, we went to the moon, hopefully overshadowing some of the less pleasant bits of history made in 1968. On campus, construction burgeoned as the new Student Center and a classroom building moved rapidly to completion. The Colonials began with a winning streak; we hoped for a chance at the Southern Conference champion- ship. The discrimination issue moved to its solution and was replaced in Hatchet headlines by Flash, the controversy over the bookstore, the Day of Dialogue, and Jim Knicelv’s resignation from the presidency of the Student Council. Amidst all this, some of us kept on studying, talking, or just walking and thinking. We learned from the past; we participated in the present. And we contemplated the future. f f r yw b tv n wlrawl tl syssrM r ? ■? V. . v I . . M i mA . W 9 am just a student Sir, and only want to learn, But it’s hard to read by the rising smoke from the books that you like to burn, So I’d like to make a promise and I ' d like to make a vow, Thai when I ' ve got something to say, Sir, I ' m going to say it noiv. Oh, you’ve given me a number and you’ve taken off my name. To get around this campus, why you almost need a plane. And you’re supporting Chiang Kai Chek while I’m sup- porting Mao, So when I’ve got something to say, Sir, I’m going to say it now. I wish that you’d make up your mind, I wish that you’d decide. That I should live as freely as those who live outside, ’Cause we also are entitled to the rights to be endowed, And ivhen I’ve got something to say, Sir, I’m going to say it now. Oh, you’d like to be my father, you’d like to be my Dad, And give me kisses when I’m good and spank me when I’m bad, But since I left my parents, I’ve forgotten how to bow, So when I’ve got something to say, Sir, I’m going to say it now. 11 things, they might be different if I was here alone. But Fve got a friend or two who no longer live at home, And we ' ll respect our elders just as long as they allow, That when Fve got something to say, Sir, Fm going to say it now. Fve read of other countries where the students take a stand. They ' ve even helped to overthrow the leaders of the land, Now wouldn ' t go so far to say we ' re also learning how. But when I ' ve got something to say. Sir, Fm going to say it now. So keep right on a talking and tell us what to do, But if nobody listens, my apologies to you, And 1 know you were younger once, ' cause you sure are older now. And when Fve got something to say. Sir, Fm going to say it now. So, I am just a student Sir, and only want to learn, But it ' s hard to read by the rising smoke from the books that you like to burn, So Fd like to make a promise and Fd like to make a vote. That when Fve got something to say. Sir, Fm going to say it now. Tm Going To Say It Now —Phil Ochs 15 15 17 19 21 23 24 25 26 27 30 We are a predestined generation. We have bigger and more frightening tasks than our ancestors. We have not time to hate each other. — -Victor Hugo 31 Cherry Tree 1969 The yearbook of the George Washington University Table of Contents Introduction 1-32 Title Page 33 Table of Contents 34-35 Academics and Administration 36 Students 38 Faculty 42 Robert Ganz 43 H. Irving Gates 44 Howard Merriman 45 John Morgan, Jr. 46 Donald Douglas 47 Mabel McEwan 48 Joan Regnell 49 Harry Yeide 50 Clarence Mondale 51 Thomas Courtless 52 Martha Rashid 53 Alex Rode 54 William Griffith 55 President Lloyd Elliott 56 58 Administrators 62 Board of Trustees 64 Alumni 66 Day of Dialogue 72 Activities 74 Arts Festivals 76 March on Rice Hall 78 Resurrection City 79 Solidarity Day 80 Registration 82 Flash 84 Sit-in at Thurston 86 Fall Concert 88 SDS vs. HU AC (Home) 90 Eeny, Meeny, Miney, Mo , . . 92 Nov. 5, 1968 94 Strike! 97 Publications 102 Colonial Concert 104 Presidential Counter-Inaugural, 1969 Staff: Academics: Sandra Altman, co-editor; Karen Kuker, co-editor; Lesley Alter; Betty Love; Karen Oberline; Jessica Monet; A1 Nielson; Mike bchachere; Stephanie ttalkin: busan Woodruff. Activities: Jan Faul, editor; Judy Szablak. assistant. Organizations: Arthur Goldman, co-editor- Judy Nauman, co-editor Greeks : Mary Haas, editor; Joe Handy, co-editor; Pam Jordan, assistant; Iris Diamond. Sports: Margie Gorodko, co-editor; Stu firkin, co-editor; Mona Melanson. Senior Citations: Evelyn Hu wyler, editor; Karen Abrams; Robert Johnson; Hengameh Massoumi; Isa Natovitz; 34 1969 Presidential Inauguration 106 Cards and Hands 108 Student Assembly Election, 1969-1970 110 David Frye, el al 112 Inaugural Concert 114 Construction 116 Agora 120 Student Art Exhibit 122 Graduate Teaching Assistants 124 Campus Police 126 GW Psychological Clinic 128 MMBB 132 Organizations 134 Greeks 178 Rush 180 Homecoming 184 Derby Day 186 For the Scrapbook 188 Panhellenic Council 192 Inter-Fraternity Council 193 240 Sports 242 Baseball 244 Crew 246 Tennis 248 Golf 250 Rugby 254 Soccer 258 Cheerleaders 260 Basketball 264 The Tallents 268 Rifle 269 Clubs 270 Intramurals 272 Wrestling 274 Seniors 276 Senior Citations 336 Homecoming Queen and Court 338 Conclusion 346 Cherry Tree Staff 348 Patrons Gerry Perkins, Neil Portnow. Seniors: Shellie Ostroff, editor; Nancy Moss, assistant; Ellen Moses; Jera Sirisky; Tassels: Click Studio portra its. Supplement Manager: Steve Draisin. Art: Peter Mikelbank. Patrons Editor: Sandra Greenberg:. Faculty Advisor: Robert C. Willson, Business Mana- ger: Barry Berg. Conclusion and Assistant Editor: Philip Brown. Photography Editor: Marv lekow. Associate Editor: Gail Amalia Barth. Editor dn- Chief: Patricia Parsons. 3S ca«ieniics 5 supposedly the purpose of our being at GW, has been injected with the revolutionary spirit that is right now. The power structure is being re-evaluated. The students are groping for new lights. The faculty is becoming more aware of its new responsibility to the new student STUDENTS. FACULTY. ADMINISTRATION. Their inter -dependency is a university. We must act upon each new development of a revolutionary age. For without action, there can be no reality. Without reality, there can he no future. There $ no realty except in act i c n Jean Pau! art re students . . . 38 39 40 SMBV9T 41 Faculty . . . . ROBERT N. GANZ, JR. y ssociate Professor of American Literature . . . B.A. 1949, M.A. 1951, Ph.D. 1959, Harvard University . . . presently teaching American Poetry because “its so much fun — there’s something of a game about reading and writing it and catching the thread of it” . . . wants to teach student HOW to read a poem . . . feels a fascination with how a poem is put together, with the “act of the poet” . . . talks best to those with a “playfulness and mobility in their minds; who can try new things” . . . sees poetry as “sort of like skating” and encourages people to try it as a new experience . . . people should let an experience happen without forcing it . . . wants to impart desire to know, try, and do . . . thinks it’s a good sign that the students are questioning assumptions previously held, but that students are more negative than positive, inspired by what they don’t like and unclear about what they do like . . . yet “shouldn’t be afraid to be negative — it interferes with truth and honesty when you tell people they can’t be negative in being honest” . . . as a guideline in evaluating courses, teachers should think about what kind of citizens they are turning out ... in teaching one is interested in teaching truths applicable to more than one period ... in student protest, thinks the “more searching student criticism of aims of the University, the better” . . . feels we must get back to “a sense of good faith between generations in order to accomplish change, so that motives of each are not constantly suspected by the other.” 42 H. IRVING GATES F.A., M.F.A., University of Illinois . . . professor in the Fine Arts department for the past five years . . . notes “Fine Arts field is changing rapidly; natural- ly teaching methods constantly change. Expression is different. Old traditional ways do not have the validity they once had” . . . speaking for his field. Professor Gates feels that “grades are ridiculous. Students should learn only if they have the desire and motivation. The problem with American youth is, however, that they expect a higher education — it’s not a privilege” . . . his teaching method strongly resembles that of a “com- munity of scholars” . . . “To treat each student in- dividually and to try to learn from and understand his technique is my role as a teacher” . . . stresses that “college is not an end in itself. It merely sets you up for something by giving you basic theories from which you formulate your own ideas.” 44 HOWARD M. MERIMAN J rofessor of American Diplomatic History . . . A.B. 1930, A.M. 1931 Univ. of Cincinnati . . . A.M. 1932, Ph.D. 1937, Harvard Univ . . . two years on the left bank studying at the Sorbonne during the thirties: “even back then we rebelled” . . . member of virtually every committee since coming to GW 30 years ago . . . now hands down such work to younger faculty members . . . feels that a professor, as a scholar and teacher, must remain current in his field ... on sabatical during the spring, he is “catching- up” on the “scholarly articles” that have appeared related to U.S. Diplomatic History ... in teaching, emphasizes the ideas, the hows, the why to study . . . tries to present all points of view to a situation . . . strives for “great organization” in his lectures . . . “per- sonal contact” with the student is a very important thing . . . “genuinely glad” to see all students . . . faithfully keeps office hours in order to keep his “doors open as much as possible” . . . sees this and last year’s students as doing unusually well academically . . . apparent “improvement of intellect capacity” in students . . . GW as an urban university in a black city “is in the middle of a special problem” . . . feels that the individual must “independently and honestly dedicate” himself to this special problem. JOHN A. MORGAN, JR. . B. Stetson University M.A., Ph.D. Duke Uni- versity . . . chairman of the University Student Life Committee . . . member of the Senate Committee on University Objectives, Columbian College Honors Program Committee, School of Public and Interna- tional Affairs Academic Council and Admissions Committee, College of General Studies Scholarship Committee . . . considers his primary concern is going the extra mile with the student interested in learning, who is a student not a pupil , . . “I’m here because I am a student — part of my job as a student is to assist less advanced students” . . . sees the University as well on its way in departing from the last vestiges of in loco parentis concept — “This is highly desirable” . . . feels student understanding is relevant to faculty evaluation of the academic pro- gram . . . the tendency of SDS “to attack indiscrimi- nately the University, endangers the atmosphere of rationality and interested examination that should exist at a university” . . . sees this desired atmos- phere in the long-run as the only hope for successful coping with the problem of human existence . . . believes interested pursuit of knowldge is the basic purpose of the university . . . “the greatest contri- bution the University can possibly make to the com- munity is the fulfillment of its basic purpose.” 46 Pale-flaming blue eyes gazing out over a mass of scholarly beard into the depths of eternal sky pressed against his window Joyful prophet who talks to gulls on the rooftop of the house of medicine A poet of test tubes A singer of life — A, L. Nielsen n DONALD S. DOUGLAS • A Oberlin College; Ph.D. Duke University . . . associate professor in zoology ... “I see nothing in research that is antithetical to teaching. My work is a confrontation which keeps me alive intellectually. It gives me a broader knowledge in other fields as well as my own, which I hope is of some benefit to my students. Rapport between the students and myself is more a personal reacion than the result of any con scious effort on my part . . . The most fruitful surge of student activism that I have seen recently was the work for Eugene McCarthy’s cam- paign. Chicago was a frustrating experience for all of us.” 47 MABEL MC EWAN |j .A. and M.A. from GW . . . friendly, enthusiastic, ready to help . . . famous at GW for Girls’ Rifle Team ... in twelve years as coach, the team has never been lower than fourth-place nationally and has taken four first-place championships . . . feels that as the world changes, the university should change to meet society’s needs . . . “A well developed body works well mentally, too” . . - thinks student activism is okay . . . “They’re not really so different from years ago” . . . urban campus is great; students get to “see it like it is” . . . enjoys the freedom in teaching at GW . . . desires to leave her students with a great interest in continuing physical education in their later years. JOAN RODDY REGNELL ssistant Professor of Speech . . . A.B., 1954, A.M., 1960, GWU . . . faculty ad- visor of Sigma Alpha Eta, honorary Speech and Hearing Fraternity . . . pub- lic relations director for the GW Speech and Hearing Clinic . . . gives TV and radio appearances in this job for publi- cizing GW clinic . . . would like to be appointed to Student-Faculty Committee , , . supervisor of Speech Therapy majors working in the Speech and Hearing Clinic . , . tries to relate to what is going on in the University through student contact . . , her office doors are always open to all . . . feels “most students are worth the salvation” and going with them “to the bitter end” . . . each professor “must” ultimately “inspire each student to feel his individual worth” and “place in this world” . . . professors must offer more than just book-knowledge . . . “No course has to be insignificant” . . . “Students must feel they are getting what they need in their future” . . . “Giving students the time pays-off in the long-run” . . . today’s students “are more interested in shaping” the world . . . “They give much more of themselves” through “time” . . . being at an urban University in the black city “is a golden opportunity to make a contri- bution . , . GW mast set the example by action, not just words.” HARRY E. YEIDE D . A. Williams College; B.D. Union Theological Seminary; Ph.D. Harvard . . . associate professor of religion; Assistant Dean of Columbian College of Arts and Sciences . . . “as someone interested in relig- ion and the formation of attitudes in our human cul- ture,’’ he views “higher education as a means hy which these questions can he brought to the attention of the public” . . . but emphasizes “the regular Uni- versity is only one place where one can ‘do his thing’ ” . . . feels “a compulsion to share his knowledge with others” and believes “teaching is one way to do this” . . . wants to impart “the important capacity to think critically about life’s meaning” . . . sees de- veloping on campus “an increasing sense of privacy, which may deepen a one-to-one relationship but “makes it very difficult to participate in meaning- ful group life” . . . notes the “most conspicuous group activity is among the radicals” but it is “more a sequence of alliances rather than a formation of a group” , . , views this sense of privacy as “a stumbling block in terms of reconstructing the Uni- versity” . . . considers the basic need now is to find a compatible level of communication between the students and the administrators in order to affect necessary changes. 50 A CLARENCE C. MONDALE B. Macalester College, M.A. and Ph.D. University of Minnesota ... as part of Ameri- can Thought and Civilization studies, wants “to make the humanities relevant, to make the social sciences humane” . . . feels “the AT C program should not impart a narciss istic view of America, but instead it should show that we are in one boat with the rest of the world” ... is actively involved in the Hearing Committee for Student Affairs, the Advisory Board for GW Magazine, Social Indicators for H.E.W, and was the co-ordinator for Poor Peoples 5 University . . , tries to “impart to students public responsibility and intellectual challenge” and to show that thought and action are inter-dependent ... is uncertain about the direction of the new GW student . . , fears “establishment backlash to militant new left organizations 55 . calls for a mixture of liberal tradition, consisting of careful selection of what has proven true plus new concepts and ideas . . . also for explicit University “rele- vancy” to the community, more Black students, work-study for academic credit, and a citi- zens 5 university — an information center for surburbanites to comprehe nd individual rele- vancy of the city. 51 THOMAS F. COURTLESS, JR. 0- . A. Pennsylvania State University; M.A., Ph.D. University of Maryland . . . associate professor of law and sociology . . . member of research groups on the law and the mentally retarded . . . tries to show student how vastly complex the field of criminology actually is . . . feels student and teacher must challenge each other in a dialectical process ... “I am a teacher; teaching is the greatest thing there is. If I couldn’t teach it would be a pretty sad day” . . . desires to reach student through a specific academic structure as students won’t settle for just anything . . . “they are fussier and more questioning” . . . believes there are no straight answers in crimi- nology, “only complexity of psychology, sociology, and law” . . . notes that the University is increasingly aware of the importance of sociology in the urban University and that it cannot he separated from life or the community . . . sees a need for “positive reaching out to the community by the Univer- sity.” MARTHA RASHID .S. in Education at State Univ. of N.Y. ; M.A., Ph.D. from Univ. of Iowa . . . Doctor of Child Psychology in Elementary Educa- tion . . . Associate Professor in Education; Assistant Dean of Grants and Research in School of Education . . . sees the ideal stu- dent as intellectually abrasive; abrasiveness implying some degree of disequalibrium ... “I don’t like well-fed sleek cats” . . . The student should have some hard knocks in life . . . believes “a real scholar has to have certain values that are explicit in the sense that he can operate within them” . . . the individual is torn between his parents’ values and societal values, and from these conflicts he must fashion his own . . . feels that a large percentage of students want to rush into a middle class way of life; the remaining students are searching for their identity ... “I don’t think that’s wrong. Student activism, in general, has to be seen in a broader context — the student today has opted to stay in society, but demands a stronger voice.” 53 ALEX RODE Jraduate of GW in 1958, at which time he served as President of the Student Council . . . instructor in Ado- lescent Psychology, Ph.D. candidate . . . feels that stu- dent faculty relationship lacks personal rapport . . . “Teachers are too removed from youth. They are too scholarly and research-oriented, and more interested in obtaining self-gain” . . . notes that “society encourages withdrawal; professors are afraid of the intensity of their students; fear possible personal involvement with the female student” . . . regards the student today as much more “alive”, however “he is fighting for power where there is no real injustice” . . . future plans are to reorganize the Walden school, which he founded for Black, underprivileged youth. 54 WILLIAM B. GRIFFITH . A. Notre Dame; Ph.D. Yale . . . has served on GW’s Educational Policy, Student Life, and Hon- ors Program committees, and is faculty coordinator for National Fellowships . . . assistant professor in philosophy . . . feels “it is important that man learns to apply rational methods to an area of problems that don’t yield to scientific or artistic techniques” . . . believes that GW “stresses good teaching and does not overemphasize research and publication” . . . “The University has great potential to he a first rate institution and in fact is well on way to becom- ing one at this moment” . , . converses freely with students . . . dismisses drugs “as a mistaken flight from reality” . . . feels “the student’s concern is a very good thing, however thinks that their tactics are ill-advised. The student body should be aware that the University is committed to finding a rational answer to problems.” S5 University President: Lloyd Elliott M y views of the University Presidency perhaps differ from those of others ... In the eyes of some, the University President is supposed to be an international statesman, a moral leader, a very shrewd businessman, an academic statesman, the most expert fund raiser, and counselor to students, faculty, and alumni . . . the truth of the matter is that no man can be all of these . . . He must be a spokesman for the University, a serious member of the University family, and a knowledgeable academician ... he is in a good position to contribute in a modest way to the formulation of educational policies for the country ... he is also human with all the shortcomings which that suggests, and fortunately, few would have it otherwise. “The problems of campus are different today . . . Students are better informed and more sophis- ticated . . . they have more personal freedom and fewer societal restraints . . . Universities can offer some kinds of education for the student, but a university is seriously limited in many ways . . . Unfortunately we have allowed the incoming student to feel that the institution is everything good, both to the individual and to society and that miraculous things will happen to the individual once he is enrolled . . . We have never made it clear that the University has very serious limita- tions, that faculty members can help students toward greater knowledge and maturity, but also that the student’s own efforts are the real determining factors in a college education ... As a result, students are first of all disappointed in the university experience, then frustrated when they try to remedy the weaknesses, and finally belligerent because they have been mislead. The greatest need of the university today is to clarify its role, to say what it can do, what it can- not do . . . Universities are better at asking the right question than at giving the final answers . . . through its policies, programs, curricula, and research, it can examine the problems with a view toward remedy . . . Having done this, the university may then be able to function in this rapidly changing society, and those in universities may be able to help society create the other institutions which are necessary to perform a vast new list of growing functions.” 56 57 Administrators . . . honest concern for today’s student problems, in addition to extensive and ambitious plans for tomor- row’s improvements in all aspects of the University community, constitute the aims of GW’s administrators. The Deans and Vice Presidents are moved with con- cern for the students’ plea for solutions to the prob- lems confronting University and society. “To the extent we are not involved, the more turmoil there will he,” is one of the most influential factors that cannot be ignored, they acknowledge. Also, the recent influence the ‘militant new-left’ has had in profoundly awakening the average student to the problems of his surroundings, is very important to them. In response to these changing conditions, the ad- ministrators have enacted several far-reaching pro- grams. The Student Center, viewed by them as an agency to unify campus activities, will provide the greatest opportunity for individual involvement in the University. To define the essentials of the learning process, a joint statement of the Rights and Freedoms of GW students is being formulated by members of the administration, faculty, and student body. Honors programs are being expanded to meet the needs of the exceptional student. Community programs are also being planned and initiated. These programs exist — not only to entreat the community to fully utilize the facilities of GW — hut also for the Uni- versity to positively reach out and take full advantage of the city’s opportunities. But change is painful and the administrators think we must all realize that frequent “block-ups” in fi- nances and communication among students, faculty, and administrators must be viewed as growing pains to be endured and expediently resolved. 58 HENRY W. HERZOG, Vke President and Treasurer; WILLIAM P SMITH, Vice President for Student Affairs ; LOUIS H. MAYO, Vice President hr Advanced Policy Studies ; HAROLD F. BRIGHT, JT ' ctf President for Aca demit Affairs BORIS BELL, Director of the new University Center; MARIANNE PHELPS, Dean of W omen 60 JAY BOYAR, Director of Stu- dent Activities; PAUL SHER BURNE, Dean of Men 61 Board of Trustees . . . i j he ‘new student,’ concerned and active in all facets of the University, pur- sues the source of policy decisions. Technically, the GW Board of Trustees embodies all of the University powers. In practice, however, the Board dele- gates full administrative powers to the Office of the President, reserving for themselves only those matters dealing with the University’s fiscal solvency. In 1968 the Board revised its bylaws to create five separate divisions, one of which specializes in student affairs. “Full student participation in the discussions of this group on student affairs enhances communication,” stated E. K. Morris, chairman of the Board, who devotes full time to the University. During the year the Board has given formal approval to the policies of the University regarding drugs, discrimination and other matters presented by the President to the Trustees. The forty-one Trustees are prominent figures in business, government, and philanthropy. 62 E. K + MORRIS, Chairman of the Board of Trustees 63 Alumni Relations JJeaded by Mr, El wood Smith, the Office of Alumni Relations serves a multiple purpose. It’s primary function is as an agent for increasing alumni interest in, and support for, GW and its pro- grams. At the same time, much of its effort is aimed toward the undergraduate and deepening his concern for the affairs of GW while he is still a student — an attempt to insure his continuance of these feelings after graduation. Each year the Alumni Office takes part in such events as Homecoming, Martha’s Marathon, and Spring Weekend. During the fall semester, 1968, great emphasis was placed on the activities of The Colonials, Inc., an alumni run group which held receptions for different groups of people, rang- ing from area high school coaches to GW students, before each basketball game. The theme of the Alumni Week activities last December was GW Today - — - Plans and Progress. The Alumni Of- fice is one of the most active departments on campus. Its programs help to stimulate interest, enthusiasm, and a sense of participation in the shaping of GW’s future. 64 ' •r: ■ 65 Day of Dialogue Friday, the thirteenth of December, President Elliott cancelled school in deference to a Day of Dialogue between students and faculty. Planned by a group of students under the leader- ship of Student Academic Committee Chairman, Sue Rappaport, and Rick Mink, the day began with a speech by Antioch President James Dixon, continued through a series of confrontations be- tween students and faculty from the different de- partments, and ended with topical discussions on general academic questions. The Day resulted in breakthroughs in several departments, disappointment in others, some hot tempers, and a passable amount of satisfaction. 66 68 69 71 jjfliis year saw one of the first confrontations be- tween white and black students. This came in the form of the Cherry Blossom Art Festival and the Black Arts Festival. The Cherry Blossom Festival had the aid of the Foggy Bottom Blues Band and drew many people who may not ordinarily have come out for a cultural event. When the Black Arts Festival appeared about three weeks later one could not help but make a comparison between the two. The Black Arts Festival had many facets of the Black People on display — all the way from some ex- amples of primitive African art to displays concerning the life and death of the late Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King. 74 Cherry Blossom Arts Festival and Black Arts Festival 75 The March on Rice Hall lie next major confrontation of the year concerned the administration and the combined forces of the Black Student Union and the Student Board of Trus- tees. Leaders of these groups sponsored a march on Rice Hall to protest the lack of scholarships for Black students and the lack of a course on the history of the Black People. At the same time they protested the small number of Negro professors on the faculty. They also demanded that the administration work for the establishment of a free university. Later in the summer, the University responded to some of these demands and allowed a free univer- sity to be housed in the University’s buildings during Resurrection City. So on this pleasant spring day, an enthusiastic body of students marched to the front of Rice Hall to have a meeting with a mildly upset but very apa- thetic administration The confrontation featured ha- rangues by both students and outside speakers. This event was the first in a continuing series of seminars between students, administration, and occa- sionally the police. 76 77 J esurrection City was dedicated as a living monu- ment to the late Reverend Dr. Marlin Luther King. Dr. King was assassinated in Memphis several weeks before the erection of the city. In response to his tragic death, the Southern Christian Leadership Con- ference (SCLC) paid tribute to this great man by bringing the poor of the nation to the capital city. Dr. King had spent his entire life trying to bring the plight of the poor to the attention of the United States government, and especially to the attention of the Congress, The SCLC had obtained a permit to construct a camp on the south side of the Lincoln Memorial early in May, so students and workers from all over the nation began pouring into the city to put together the shanties that would house the poor of the nation. Unfortunately, once the marchers moved in, it seemed as though the forces of nature were against them; there followed a period of almost a month when rain flooded the area every day and turned the happy city into a morose both of mud and despair. To consolidate feelings and to raise hope, Rev, Ralph Abernathy and the SCLC planned a day in mid- June to unify the people in the camp and men across the country. Solidarity Day brought in thousands of people w r ho showed their support. 78 Resurrection City and Solidarity Day Registration V 81 82 figuring the week of registration, the Student Board of Trustees sponsored a “Happening” behind Lisner Auditorium in an effort to psyched elicize the incom- ing freshmen. To accomplish this feat they imported the Psychedelic Power and Light Company and a huge parachute that was suspended from the surround- ing buildings. The Light Co. proceeded not only to use the parachute as a screen, but also all the sides of the buildings. A groovy time was had by all. 83 Sit-in at Thurston Much Ado About Nothing — William Shakespeare 84 85 Fall Concert 1968: Smokey Robinson mokey Robinson and the Miracles put on a very impressive performance in Constitution Hall this fall, performing many of their old favorites as well as some of their new material. In addition to this, they showed the Miracles Washington how a well-balanced vocal group can suc- cessfully interpret some of the soul music from the distant past. 86 87 Game of the Year — SDS vs. HUAC (Home) Jn October, the SDS and the House Un-American Activities Committee blessed the campus with a gen- uine happening. In this event, the top attractions were — a flag shirt worn by Yipple leader Abbie Hoff- man, a band, a fire, and assorted FBI. One major highlight of the evening was when Dermott Baird of the administration walked into the sixth floor Student Council meeting and announced that the fire alarm that had just been sounded truly indicated a fire in the basement. All but one exit had been locked but all walked to safety down the smoke-filled stair- well. 88 90 91 G Street Confrontation November 5, 1968 STRIKE! ij he Student Strike was organized to run during the election period and was intended to bring classes to a halt. Left-wing campus groups ar- ranged to have speakers from both the old and the new left. The most flamboyant of them was Rufus May- field. the ex-director of PRIDE, Inc. No sooner had he arrived and com- menced speaking, than he was rollick- ing and rolling with A1 Miller, owner of the Campus Club. Undoubtedly the most subdued speaker of the series was GW Presi- dent Lloyd Elliott. He consented to appear three days after the Metropoli- tan police stunned campus residents by arresting and clubbing some of them following demonstrations in Lafay- ette Park and later on G Street. 94 95 Jan Faul i0Pi wnS? FMj ■ fifS iP-BBl ii Hope Messing Tony Saa m MR. NOBODY’S SHOP THE POTOMAC Tangent-tipping to an expanding circle, he punches time cards in London, listens to silver coins exchanged for Venus of the Pawn Shop Window, and in the dream-time attic of coffee cups and shadows from pealed light bulbs, the scribe interprets this sect, that, falling, shouts into Florentine villas. The fanatic, a shout, another war, A shot, Franz Ferdinand, and the China breaks. TERRENCE LtSBETH A. Grossman December 16 Classes Resume Jan . 6 Flu Epidemic Closes School bv Mike Kotlen t . n . .. ot the Umvprtitv u.-il rarv, ' .; bv Mike Kotlen YES, IT ' S TRUE. NO MORE CLASSES UNTIL JANUARY 6. Vice President of Student Affairs William P. Smith officially announced at 11 p.m. that classes for this week had been cancelled. Smith, speaking for Pres, Lloyd Elliott, said, “In view of an unusual number of cases of influenza in the residence halls of George Washington University, up to 50 per cent in some halls, as well as reports of illness of non-resident students, Christmas recess begins today, December 16, for all schools and alleges of the University with the exception of the Medical School whose classes will be held as usual, Administrative offices of the Univer sity will remain open. 1 Figures released at 5 p.m. yesterday by the Office of the Dean of Women showed that Thurston Hall had been hit the hardest by the flu, with 250 cases reported. Miss Anne Casey, the nurse on duty at Thurston yesterday, said she had personalty seen at least SO girls yesterday and she was also receiving requests from the men ' s dorms for medicine or doctors’ names. Mitchell Hall was also hit hard, reporting 80 cases. Calhoun (30), Adams (30), Madison (50), Welling (40), Crawford (30), and Strong (15) Hall figures brought the total cases reported in dormitories to over 500. Miss Casey said that many of the students she had seen are not well enough to attend classes and she felt that classes should be cancelled. “They should all be in bed or at home, 5 she continued. At least five doctors circulated yesterday among the dormitories to treat the flu victims and to assess the situation for Vice President for Student Affairs William P. Smith. Smith said that he would wait until be heard from the doctors before he made a decision on classes, but if they recommended cancelling them “we can certainly do it.’ 1 Dr. John T. Hagen bucher, one of the physicians treating Council Approves NS A Affiliation cases at Thurston, said there were probably many different types of flu going around and that the outbreak was not primarily the Hong Kong variety. He said the best remedy was plenty of rest, plenty of liquids, and aspirin. The students with bad sore throats, he added, would he put on antibiotics, which have no effect on viruses, however. At 6 p.m,, Thurston, where rumors that all the schools in the Washington area had cancelled classes were fast and furious, all girls with the flu were asked to report Lo the dormitory infirmary. Kathy Rush, a freshman, said (between coughs) that at least 30 girls reported immediately and over 100 had signed a list to report their ailments. Some cases in Thurston were so severe that the girls could not even go to the infirmary to be examined, Meanwhile, only Catholic University has cancelled classes because of the epidemic. As of 8:30 last night, the Washington Post and WRC radio reported t hat no ot her sc bools had cancelled classes. In yesterday ' s Post it was reported that the major hospitals in the area were being left short-handed by the epidemic The article said that there as no “influx of patients, but “the problem is with the flu-stricken nurses, orderlies, and other staff members. 1 by Marc Yacker THE STUDENT COUNCIL voted 16-10 Wednesday night to reaffiliate with the National Student Association. H I feel that it is important for us to affiliate, said Dave Berz, Lower Columbian Rep. in leading the debate. He went on to say, “We are about to reorganize the University, NS A has a wealth of ideas with resources from its 300 member schools. U r t z B o e hner, M d . Commuter Rep,, inquired as to what GW’s responsibilities would be as to NBA, Sue Rap pa port, proxy for vice president Ron da Billig, answered her. “They don‘t constrict us. We only have to use them when we want to. But they do have invaluable files ’ Wednesday ' s Student Council action represented the second time the council reversed itself on the NSA question. In May, r v v Oct. 28 1967, a surprise motion to affiliate with the Association was passed, but last November, the Kaye council voted 15-12 to withdraw. A referendum to reaffiliate was defeated by the student body by 23 votes in February, 1967. At that time, newly elected Student Council President Jim Knicely said that he hoped the NSA issue would be considered again due to the closeness of the vote. In other council business, Mike McEboy moved that requirements, other than a 2.0 QPI, should be dropped for council offices This did not include the semester requirement of 48 hours for president, vice president and activities director, and 36 hours for secretary and treasurer. It did strike from Articles for Student Government the clauses requiring president, vice president and activities director to have 2.5 QPI ' s HATCHET Knicely Resigns J nUijr v 9 Ku Marr Yarlfpr School Out Tomorrow by Marc Yacker JIM KNICELY RESIGNED last night as President of the Student Council. K nicely ' s action came late in a regularly scheduled Wednesday night meeting of the Council. The resignation was the direct result of the Council ' s passage of a motion proposed by D.C Commuter Representative Dave Phillips. The motion called for a “non-violent protest march on Rice Hall to show student feeling about the administration’s failure to move exams from Inauguration week. Phillips earlier had proposed a student protest strike, but that motion was defeated. In speaking for the protest march, Phillips claimed that this was “the crux of student power ' He called on Council members to “question their consciences. Phillips called on Knicely to take a position on the issue. Knicely, however, although not refusing to enter debate, simply did not comment. The motion was passed by a hand vote, by a substantial margin. Knicely then called a brief recess, and it passed by word of mouth that if the motion was not reconsidered and defeated, Knicely would resign. Following the recess, Joel A I pert, proxy, moved to reconsider the question. In debate, Phillips pointed out that “if we strike this motion down, we laugh at ourselves. There is no reason to reconsider. Treasurer Brian O ' Neill also spoke against reconsideration. He castigated Council members for “voting one way, then five minutes later changing it all. A motion to reconsider requires a two -thirds majority. The vote, again by hand count, was far from reaching that figure. At this point Knicely spoke. He said, “I am opposed to this motion; it ' s ridiculous and borders on the absurd. 1 will not compromise my issues. I’ve been disagreeing with the Council ' s votes for a long time. As titular head 1 cannot stay in good conscience. I will not lead a non-violent march on this issue. These things have their place. I ' m announcing my resignation. He left the table and Vice-President Ronda Billig took the gavel. For Day of Dialogue SDS — Police Confrontation by Rick Mink FRIDAY THE THIRTEENTH: Day of Dialogue will attempt tomorrow to break some long felt silence between students and faculty, and possibly establish a precedent for communication and continuing action. James P. Dixon, president of Antioch College will speak, along with Columbian College Dean Calvin D. Linton at the opening session in Lisner Auditorium at 9:00a.m. After a period of questions, the Lower Division segment will begin discussion in 15 separate rooms. November 18 The evening workshops, on Leads to Over 20 Arrests Novemb er 6 by B.D. Colen and Henry Ziegler MORE THAN 20 students, including GW radical leaders Marc Tizer and Jim cHJouruij, were arrested in front of Monroe Hall Tuesday afternoon during the First major confrontation between students and District police at GW. The confrontation, involving about 600 students, climaxed a day of rallies and dashes with the police which began at noon on the football field at Constitution Avenue and 23rd Street NiW. Student Life Advises VP Of HR A Compliance and the educational system, will begin in 11 rooms throughout the campus. Some of the faculty members who will be participating in these workshops include Robert Jones and Clarence Mondale on “The School and the City, Thelma La vine and Steven Setoff on ‘ ' Academic Freedom, Grades and Tenure ' A.E. Claeyssens and Louis Schaeffer on The School and the Arts, and Dean Linton on “The Academic - Power Structure ' by Suzanne McMenamin AT ITS FRIDAY meeting, the Student Life Committee advised the office of the Vice President for Student Affairs that campus organizations would have to comply with Section ID of the University ' s Human Relations Act. Section ID states that all organizations must make and keep records of their membership selection and election procedure which are detailed enough to determine if the organization is in compliance with the anti-discrimination act, Dean of Women Marianne Phelps, representing Vice President William P. Smith’s office, reported to the committee that national organizations of five of GW ' s sororities forbid the keeping of such records. These sororities are Delta Gamma, Kappa Alpha Theta Sigma Delta Tau, Zeta Tau Alpha, Alpha Epsilon Phi. Since these records are kept partly for the protection of the individual organizations, the question arose of whether the group could waive the requirements of Section ID. The Student Life Committee decided that this section was of equal importance with the other sections of the Act, and that groups could be brought before the Hearing Committee on Student Affairs for violation of it. The students, who had been gathering behind Monroe after their eviction from Lafayette Park, poured out as a police car pulled the VW bus over to the side of the street The students apparently thought that the Nazis were fellow demonstrators being harassed by the police, but they began to do some harassing when they discovered who the ’brown shirts 1 were. Other demonstrators, still behind Monroe, thought their friends were taking over the street and soon joined them. In other committee business, the recount ion procedure for campus organizations was changed to alow non-university members to join them. In the past, members of these organizations had to be either registered students, faculty, staff or alumni of GW or outside members who had special grants approved by the Student Council. Under the new provision, non- University Z members will not have the same rights and privileges as members of I the University community, and will not be eligible to vote or hold offices in their respective organizations. In order to be given University recognition, new organizations now will be required to submit two or more names of officers or members who wilt take the responsibility for the organization. Student Life member David Fishback suggested that the several campus organizations who did not believe in officers and who function under the policy of “do your own thing could list their entire membership as responsible for the group ' s actions. The new application form would also contain Sectionn 1A of the Human Relations Act, making it a condition for recognition. This section states that the organization will have a provision in its I by-laws that there will be no restriction of membership on the f grounds of race, religion or national origin. The organization would I be agreeing to this when signing the application. editorials November 18 Loco FOR COUNTLESS AGES, institutions entrusted with the education of the young have derived their power to set rules to guide the ganduct of their charges from the principle popularly referred to as “in loco parentis. The institution, educators have argued, must function in the place of the parents. And for countless ages, the University, along with the grammar school, high school, and the boy scouts, has functioned as a parental institution. But now all that is changing, and there are very few who would argue against this change. University administrators, realizing that they can no longer control the lives of their students outside the classroom and still manage to educate, them, have themselves begun to attack, or even more importantly, to ignore the ll in loco parentis principle. Here at GW, for example, when students wanted to have extended visitation hours in the dorms, they attacked the concept that the University should act as a parent. ‘The University should be providing us with an education, ' they argued, ' not controlling our sexual behavior. We ' ve paid for our rooms, ' they said, and we should be able to do what we want in them. ' And the University agreed. Most of GW ' s administrators would like nothing better than to have the whole in loco parentis concept buried and forgotten. Some members of the Students Council, however, seem overly attached to the principle. When the Student Council Executive Committee voted to provide bail money for those students arrested at GW on election day, it revived the principle which most students have fought so long and hard to defeat. The Executive Committee was acting as a parent, bailing its children, be they guilty or innocent, out of jail. The members of the committee were not functioning as individuals, moved by the plight of their fellow students ; they were acting as members of the Student Council, an official organ of the University, There is no doubt that the students who were jailed on Tuesday had to be bailed out. But was it the Student Council ' s job to do the bailing. If the answer to this question is yes, then it logically follows that it is the duty of the Student Council to act as bail bondsman for any students involved in future altercations with the police anywhere in the GW area. For the members of the Executive Committee argued that their act was one of humanita nanism, not politics. They argued that they were not concerned with the guilt or innocence of the individuals, but that they simply wanted to get their fellow students out of jail. If the Executive Committee acted for the reasons it claims to have acted, then it has, in effect, abandoned the principle for expediency. For the members of the Executive Committee have acted in loco parentis,” or more correctly, in loco fratris.” And the same students who favor having open dorms, who attack the idea of a parental Unvie- ;y, when having a parent controlling them does suit their purposes, have in supporting the action of the Council, run for the shelter of a principle which they so violently attacked earlier. The Council is a student body, but that does not make it less an official arm of the University, And, in bailing students out of jail, that arm was acting in loco parentis. W arren and Muskie To Be Guest Speakers ■M, February CHIEF JUSTICE Earl Warren and Senator Edmund S. Muskie of Maine will be guest speakers at GW within the coming weeks. Warren will give the main address at the Winter Convocation at Constitution Hall on Saturday, Feb. 22 The Chief Justice will receive an honorary degree of Doctor of Public Service from University President Lloyd H. Elliott. Approximately 750 will receive degrees at the II a.m. ceremony. Senator Muskie, the unsuccessful vice presidential candidate of the Democratic Party last fall, has accepted an v invitation from the Pan Hellenic Council to speak on March 24 at Lisner Auditorium. The Senator will receive a $1000 honorarium for his appearance which will include a talk, questions and answers and a reception afterwards open to all students. Muskie h s appearance will take the place of the PanHel Prom because the Council, according to Carol Miller of Delta Phi Epsilon, wishes to work for the university rather than only itself. Specific topics have not been announced Tor Warren ' s or Muskie T s speeches. Wolf ' s Whistle- JUnU;iry 9 ‘It ' s the Puttinq Greens’ Dick Wolfsie IT HAS RECENTLY COME to the attention of this publication that Dr. Lloyd Elliott, President of GW, is a member of various country dubs which discriminate on the basis of race, religion, creed, and national handicap. In order to protect his image, Dr. Elliott decided recently to prove that such discrimination could not possibly exist. Rather than jeopardize his membership at his favorite country dub, Turning Tree Country Club (which will take no Jews), he went down the street to Burning Bush Country Club, an organization with quite a different philosophy. He drove up in his black limousine and asked for the manager. “Yes Sir, can I help you?” “Yes, my name is Elliott, and Td like to join Burning Bush Country Club,” “Well we’d be glad to have you Elliott. Now, tel) me, what is your last name.” “That Is my last name, Exordium Tm terribly sorry, you see Mr. Elliott, we’re all filled up just now. 1 ' “It ' s not Mr. Elliott, it ' s Dr. Elliott. “Oh, a doctor, huh. Maybe we could sneak you in anyway, but that last name has got to Tt go. “I’m not that kind of a doctor, Tm the President of George Washington University.” ' ‘George Washington Universal? Don ' t think I ' ve ever heard of it. Is it on the big board, or the American Exchange? “Now lets get something straight. My name is Lloyd Elliott. I’m not a doctor of medicine, Tm not the president of a corporation. I’m the President of the George Washington University. “Listen pal, I don ' t care if you’re financial director of Yeshiva University, with a name like Elliott you can ' t join this dub.” “Look, I’m a very important man at a very large University, I have a big, plush office, with three secretaries, on the eighth floor” “Say, now you ' re talking Like the gang. What ' s the name of your office building?” “Luther Rice Hall. “Oh. Are you sure you wouldn’t want to tend bar? Look friend, I understand the problem, but why don ' t you just go down the block to Turning Tree Country Club, they ' d love to have you ” I ' m afraid you don’t understand the point of why I ' m here.” “Oh T 1 get it. The reason you won’t go to Burning Tree is the principle, the sense of values, the moral question, the image of a University president, the power of the press, the ethical question ” “No, it ' s the putting Greens. Tableaux of Unreal World’ October 28 THE IMPACT OF student film-makers has sent shock waves to colleges throughout the country This year, 60,000 students have enrolled in 1500 film courses in 120 colleges; some equipped with a ’better’ idea for the ending of Blowup,’ 1 some with a knowledge of Godard ' s second grade finger painting experiments, some even with innate talent. GW has not forgotten about the film-making sweepstakes either. For the first time this year, GW offers, at the Corcoran School of Art, a course tau ght by Ramon Osuna, an independent film-maker. The class was forced into two sections by the almost 40 people who agreed to purchase a Super 8 movie camera, pay the $175 GW tuition and the $90 lab fee in order to participate. A showing of the class ' Dims is planned for later in the year. The cinema revolution has Protestanized the art form, making it respective to “be creative, Film-makers are not considered tike arto-fago composers once were but as craftsmen of the new technology. And hopefully, for Two Points every 1000 students simply having a good time and doing their thing, one student will go on to produce quality films. Seven of the best will be shown this Friday and Saturday in Lisner Auditorium at 8:30 p.m The collection is ' The Third National Student Film Festival and Includes ten short films selected early this year by a diverse panel of nine judges The fims include: “My House by Peter Simmons, San Fransiseo State; “Going to Work in the Morning from Brooklyn” by Phillip Messina, NYU; Now that the Buffalo’s Gone” by Burton C. Gershfield, UCLA; ' The Latter Day” by Donald MacDonald, UCLA; “An Idea” by Walton White, UCLA; “A Question of Color” by Richard Bartlett, BU; “Marcello, I ' m so Bored by John Millius, USC; Cut” by Chris Parker, U. of Iowa: “Kienholz on Exhibit 1 ' by June Steel, UCLA; “THX 1138 4EB” by George Lucas, jr., USC Student tickets for the program are $1.50 and are now available at the Student Union ticket office. It should prove of paramount interest to anyone interested in cinema. Spencer Wachtel The chances ot a student getting a studio contract through a class-made film is small ; unions are not encouraging and there are an awful lot of good people around. One exception is George Lucas, jr., whose THX 1133 4EB” will he shown this weekend. THX” shows a future world (shot entirely in Los Angeles) in which man is enslaved by computers and TV monitors Lucas has been awarded a contract by Warner Borthers-Seven Arts to expand ' ' THX” into a full length movie under the aegis of Francis Ford Coppola, himself a student film-maker who graduated form UCLA in 1967 and has recently completed his second feature film “Finian ' s Rainbow.” Cultural Compendium Opening this Tuesday, for three weeks at the National Theatre is David Merrick ' s new musical, “Promises, Promises.” Jerry Orbacb and Jill O’Hara star in the play based on Billy Wilder ' s famous movie, ‘The Apartment.” Music by Bert Bachrach and Hal David. Stageplay by Neil Simon. Southe rn Conf. - Ag February 10 am — Stu Sir kin SEEING that 1 have not criticized that fine and noble institution, the Southern Conference, in over a month, it is time that the situation be rectiFied. The topic today Is GW ' s difficulty in finishing second in the Conference due both to the Buff’s inconsistent play and the scheduling in the Southern Conference. GW plays 12 Conference games, including the powerful Davidson Wildcats twice. East Caroline meets only eleven of its Southern rivals. They play GW twice, VM1 twice, The Citadel twice, Richmond twice, William and Mary twice, and Furman once. Note the absence of one team, Davidson. Davidson, by the way, plays only nine Conference games, even though ten are required They had 11 scheduled until West Virginia dropped out of the Southern Conference League officials decided not to require the Wildcats to shift their schedule to make up the one game deficit. This is no surprise though, frequently in football Conference teams did not play the required number of league games. With second place difficult, the Colonials ' play this week could decide if they hold third. At least third place will leave them in a different bracket than first place Davidson, and a chance to reach the Conference Tournament finals. Monday night, GW faces East Carolina at Ft. Meyq The game will be at 9 p.m. as the second game in a doubleheader with American University. American faces Fa irleigh- Dickinson in the first game, and seating which GW shares with American, will be on a first come fust serve basis. The Pirates beat GW over Christmas break down there when Harold R hyae did not play and Mike Tallent lost his contact lenses and did not shoot the Last ten minutes. The Buff should get their revenge, although the Pirates are a balanced outfit with five players in double figures led by Rich Keir and Earl Thompson. Revenge will be the theme Wednesday night at Fordham also. The Rams were the seventeenth ranked team in the country Last year TOlr ' cll nk 62 HATCJ “ENCOUNTER Vol. 3, No. 2 The George Washington University October, 1968 Huber H, Humphrey Gerg d R. Ford Edmund S. Muskie COP TAPS NIXON ON FIRST BALLOT; HUMPHREY NOMINATED IN MIDST OF CHICAGO DISORDERS So read the banner headlines on a majority of American newspapers the mornings of August 8 and 29 respectively. Nominated when? Nominated by whom? Both of these nominations came as no surprise to the American populace. Both elicited great feelings of frustration and disappointment. In a sense they brought the question of the nominating process to a pinnicle for the public conscience. Nixon won all his primaries but was virtually unopposed. McCarthy won at least a percentage of each that he entered but, more often than not, lost the corresponding delegates. Humphrey never ran. Did New Hampshire to Miami and Chicago have any real purpose or significance? Or, more bluntly, is the existing primary and convention system supposed to be responsive to the wishes of the electorate or, is, in fact, the nominating meant to be done by the professional party politicians? One wonders if the proverbial smoky back room, filled with the likes of Boss Tweed, Mark Hanna, and Richard Daley, still in fact hoist the “party’s choke 1 ’ to the platform in 1968. Harold Hinton Peter Dominick Clement Zablocki The Question The idea of a national primary instead of a national convention is not a new one. In most election years since 1952, the Gallup Poll has asked: “It has been suggested that presidential candidates be chosen by the voters in a nationwide primary election instead of by political party conventions as at present. Would you favor or oppose this?” In 1952, 73 per cent said yes; in ' 56 the percentage dropped to 58; by 1964 it was up to 62 per cent; and last month 76 per cent of those polled said yes. Laymen and political professionals are all calling for some sort of change yet no one has, as yet, focused any constructive Nicholas deB. Katzenbach Thomas Dodd Everett Dirksen energies in the direction of that change. A national primary would probably be ideal. Yet, as Encounter ' s contributors have pointed out, the procedure would raise many legal, financial, and logistical problems. These are all large problems, but they are all capable of being solved. The system needs to be more responsive-in a very real sense, more democratic. The time has come when more of the electorate is seeing politics and those who play its games as only men who must respect the human emotions. The day of the tooth and nail fight for the nomination followed by the handshake and endorsement after “the great fight” is over. We certainly hope that the problems of Miami and Chicago will not be shelved until the summer of 1972 for indeed, it would be too late a date. The time to begin serious consideration of change is November 6-after Nixon, Wallace, and Humphrey have all shaken hands and some of the bitter acrimony of American politics subsides for at feast a little while. “Nixon’s the One.” Yes, he was the only one. “Promises Made, Promises Kept.” To whom? Once again on Tuesday, many voters must choose between the least of three evils And in 1972? is year the Butterfield Blues Band came to the Colonial Concert and put on the best show in years. Butterfield united with the Psychedelic Power and Light Company to create a form of total involvement never before shown at Lisner Auditorium. When the music ended everyone agreed that it was the best con- cert they had heard this year. The evening was marred by an apparent drug bust. Sargeant E. Olnick of the campus police reported that the air “smelled kind of heavy” and that he found traces of marijuana after the concert ended. He called in the Narcotics Squad of tahe Metropolitan Police. Be- fore their arrival, he took it upon himself to search the dressing rooms of the BBB and found a vial “con- taining traces of marijuana.” The police arrived and once again it was a case of entering the campus without the proper authorization, i.e., the third time in two weeks. One wonders if some administration officials wished that Olnick had never made the scene at Lisner. Colonial Concert 102 Presidential Counter-Inauguration 1969 “The mark of our time is its revulsion against imposed patterns, We are suddenly eager to have things and people declare their beings totally. There is deep faith to be found in this new attitude — a faith that concerns the ultimate harmony of all beings — Marshall McLuhan, 1964 I neus 1AUSWIT4 1969 Presidential Inauguration “ Happy is he who, like Ulysses, has made a fine voyage — Joachim du Bellay, ca. 1556 106 107 108 109 his year brought something new to the University community — five Presidential candidates. This space was formerly reserved for a lengthy discussion about student politics, but there will be only an announce- ment of the top four winners. For the office of President- — -Neil Portnow For the office of Vice-President — David Berz For the office of Secretary — Shelley Green For the office of Treasurer — Tim Dirks Student Awards, David Frye et. al. fP he combined act of David Frye and B, S, T was by far the most exciting act ever to come to GW for an Inaugural Concert. David Frye showed his witty impersonations of many screen stars and political figures. He has really mastered the expressions of LBJ and Wm. F. Buckley, Jr., hut the line that brought down the house was: “They call me Tricky Dickie. But I can’t imagine why. I’ve got 70$ of the popular vole. I’ve got two good arms, two good legs and two good faces — and I intend to take them to the public!” The weak part of the ‘show’ came during the seeming- ly endless awards and election results parade. Blood, Sweat and Tears brought their new hand to the people and were an amazing success. In fact much of the audience left with the impression that they were stoned by the music and nothing else. After the loss of one of the founders, they regrouped and now have a more united sound than ever before. Indeed their new singer is stronger than any other in the business. 112 113 Inaugural Concert 1969 1 he Student Center has played an important part in the lives of the students this year. Besides the many debates that have taken place over its mere existance, there have also been several escapades by the students into the depths of the structure and up onto the shell of the upper floors. For many weeks there was a running commentary on the world painted on the hoards surrounding the pit; hut now the shell is rising higher and higher. The upper floors echo with the sounds of scurrying feet and the lower floors twinkle with assorted hand-lamps. The structured surface of the concrete, when seen in sectional views, becomes an abstract statement. Watch This Site For a Block-Long Edifice Progress, 118 Buildings, Round 119 • ' ty i jeik w ■ . iC 1 lit jjk ' ■ : u ring the past few years the Agora has matured from its early days at the Faculty Club, to its own location at 20th and G Sts. During this time it has also grown from merely a tea-house to an establishment that offers a greater variety of beverages to suit more student “tastes.” During the formative years most of the entertainment consisted of excellent poetry readings by members of the faculty, but this year the club branched out into a solid program featuring everything from jazz to rock to folk music. Many students who were very talented but unheard of played at the Agora and gained both a great deal of experience and respect from their peers. Come to the Big “A” P he GW Annual Student Art Show, which ran through November in the Dimock Gallery, has elicited wide interest and approval by the University commu- nity. With entries and prize winners selected by a professional juror, the Student Show consists of the creative energies of University-enrolled students “ The show is a successful one for two reasons , It has provided students with an opportunity to exhibit their works in a professionalized and selective show . Additionally , the show reveals the technical ability and creativity of GW students who are in the arts” — Bobbie Heller, GWU Hatchet, Nov. 18, 1968 Student Art Exhibit: Professional, Selective Graduate Teaching Assistants i P luoughout the University there are many different roles for the GTA to play. They perform well in a variety of complex jobs — all the way from scientific research to monitoring laboratory sessions. The Art Department requires that they prepare an entire year’s curriculum for a course that they will be required to teach. 124 125 [ e role of the campus police force and their various attempts at control and thiev- ery have aroused a great deal of controversy this year. The Hatchet has teemed with vari- ous exposes of campus police activities, yet the police force has continued to grow from a cadre of night watchmen into an ominous organization, aid- ed during special periods of stress or threat of security by specially hired guards. 126 127 GW Psychological Clinic “ Jhe George Washington University Psychological Clinic, 718 21st Street, N.W., offers services which are available primarily to students enrolled in the University and secondarily to high school students and adults in the community. The services are designed to assist individuals in the evaluation of their educa- tional, personal, and social lives; diagnose academic difficulties and provide remedial measures such as study habits instruction and programmed instruction; and refer individuals to qualified agencies for as- sistance with problems not handled by the Clinic. Be- havior therapy, individual and group psychotherapy, and individual and group counseling are available.” 128 The aforementioned quotation is from the Univer- sity Catalogue, but considerably less than one-quarter of the University community has ever heard of the Clinic and less than one-eighth of the community knows where it is located. Yet in this school year there were approximately five thousand student contacts; for about one thousand different students. From a summary of data put out by the Clinic one sees that of their clientele, 10% go for educational- vocational help, 30% for educational skills and 60% for emotional-social help. The staff of the Clinic works in about fifty-five hours of counseling a week with 2.5 full-time counselors, as opposed to the national 129 average of one-hundred-twenty hours of counseling and 7.0 full-time counselors. For the current year there are about 555 student contacts per month and approxi- mately ninety students seeking counseling during the same period. Moreover, there is no waiting period for counseling to begin, versus the national averages of three days. On the other hand. 28.16 of the clients terminate their counseling by not showing up for their appointments. Perhaps the greatest thing to say for the capacity of the Clinic is that they refer only ten stu- dents to psychiatric services per year, as compared to the national average of twenty. All of this is achieved with the use of only five to six counselors working an average of one hundred hours per week. 130 Among their services they offer a complete section of tests designed to qualify an student’s motivations within his course of study and also within his life at the University and in the future. Within the same sphere they give tests to determine a student’s study habits and retention of material covered in an effort to correct inherent weaknesses in a student’s own method of study. In addition to this they have study booths set up so that students may come into the Clinic for distraction- free periods of concentration. This research done into the fields of study techniques by the staff of the Clinic had aided a great number of both University and high school students to overcome their study problems. In the past few years Dr. Tanck has assisted graduate students in psychology with many experiments in be- haviorial and clinical psychology. Some of these experi- ments have come into national focus, mainly through their positive results attained by the use of volunteer student participants, and dealing with nervous reaction to color and light, blood pressure changes resulting from aural sensitivity, and most notably over-reaction to nicotine in cigarettes. Dr. E. L. Phillips, Clinic head, expects that the clien- tele of the Clinic will expand, but that without some mea- sure of reciprocity on the part of the University, it will be impossible to expand their services to the community. 131 Martha s Marathon of Birthday Bargains — J artha’s Marathon of Birthday Bargains netted approximately $2140 this year, which was a bit less than was collected last year. The sale is held each year to add money to a scholarship fund named for the late Dr. Poe Leggett, speech professor and first auctioneer at MMBB. Several donations were made to the fund as well as the seventy items that were auctioned off. Part of the fund goes for the purchases of books for worthy 132 (MMBB 1969) students, while the rest goes into a scholarship at GWU. Much of the bidding was unenthusiastic, but this was helped by several students who purchased Presidential and Vice-Presidential positions within the University for a day; President for a day went for $125 and was bought for unsuccessful Student Assembly aspirant, Bruce Smith. All in all, many of the people in atten- dance had a good time. 133 134 Organize, Organize, Organize i • 135 Jt will take time to find your place. A big University allows a place for all but those who don’t want one. Some- times there’s a need to belong, and to some belonging distracts from the college experience. If you are a joiner or even a non-joiner, the University offers a wide range of areas in which individual and collective talents and interest can be expressed. Organiza- tions range from the purely academic, to the competitive, to the totally recre- ational. Each has its own purpose and ideals, and to the students involved it is a worthwhile experience and effort. But Washington is a big, moving city. Almost complete culturally except for dirty streets, Central Park, and the Village. If our clubs don’t capture everyone, surely something in the City has. The city acts as a school, play- ground, and factory for many of the University’s organizations. SERVE and Alpha Phi Omega cover the city areas with aids to the culturally de- prived, the sick, the homeless, and the lonely. The City can be too big and new and there is need to explain Thanksgiving to the Nigerian student, or to bring a little bit of home to the Argentinian coed away for the first time. ISS finds the time and recognizes the need. Not only does the city help us in growing, but we add to the City itself. Both the University’s ability to attract distin- guished speakers and performers as well as the cultural resources of the City result in the constant schedule of leading statesman, theater groups, and concerts. Besides national and City entertain- ment, we have developed attractions of our own. This was a year when George Washington made the News and television and the Dance Produc- tion Group made a name for them- selves. The orchestra attracted more attention with better talent and guest perform ers. So your club becomes something you believe in or simply groove in. Your life moves around those people and places. One thing you can say about organizations though — they train leaders and followers, doers and non- doers, businessmen, politicians and teachers — they must he doing some- thing right. 137 Alpha Phi Omega Jeff Winter, Mike Wolly, Steve Globter, Mike Sussman, Henry Zausmer, Ken Goldberg, Ben Cohen, Art Fried berg, George Biondi, Tom Quinn, John Warner, John Strempfer, Mare Yacker, Boh Goldman, Mike Kelkntz, Floyd Lane, Jeff Hartsough, John Cohanne, Rick Cole, Stan Barg, Tom Bond, Dave Kennedy, Jules Edloviuk Marc Freund, Bruce Cosner, Skip Barbar, Bob Wolfe, Steve Berezel, Phil Margolis, Jeff Sierdn, Steve Seltzer, Executive Board: KEN GOLDBERG, President ; MARC Y ACKER, hi Vice President ; GEORGE BIONDI, 2nd V ice President ; J 0 H N 5TREMPFER, Corresponding Sec.; STEVE SELTZER, Re- cording Sec.; FLOYD LANE, Treasurer. THE GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY UNITED CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP crirhAuy DAN HANKINS, President; Linda Hom- herg, Nancy Loy, Rev, Malcolm Davis. Old Men Executive Board: MIKE WO LEY, Presi- dent ; Eel Silverman, Yale Goldberg, George Biondi, Tom Smith, Tom Os- borne, Bob Simpson, Dave Nadler 140 Big Sis PAT SONDHEIMER, President, Michele Cohen, Linda Kulin, Heather Novy, Gail Rosenthal Judy Moer, Cookie Snow, Faye Mervis, Doris Babb, 141 142 University Players Carnival Jacquot Harvey Abrams Roustabouts . . Harry Corwin; Bernie Lott; Tom Veri-ill; Jim Walters Schlegd ........... Will Bdlais Rosalie . . . . . . . Patricia Peret Marco . , , Ted Holland Olga Lynda Kress Gladys Zuwicki Donna Alelyunas Gloria Zuwicki ........ Cyndee Szymkowicz Juggler Jeff Hartsough Greta Shlegel , . . . Robin Seltzer Lili Sally Stein Grobert Tom Scott Paul Petro Papageorge Dr. Glass .......... Michael Miller Carnival Chorus . . . Irwin Altschuler, Susan Avery, Sarah Bobrow, Candy Carter, Jane Cirker, Marion Eddman, Ronnie Finkel, Tim Frasca, Mary Hauptman, Mar- ilyn Hertzberg, Fay Kandarin, Don Larson, Deborah Laufer, Rosemary Murphy, Barbara Rayburn, Barbara Sloan, Barbara Sternberg, Ken Trom- bly, Susan Warshaw, Ruth Weis, Tony Williams, Laurel Winkler. 143 Dance Productions Orchestra GEORGE STEINER, Director 146 Chorus j K v f m wjPI JULES ZABAWA, Director 147 HATCHET Paul Panitz Editor-In-Chief Jeff Breslavw Business Manager Acting Editorial Staff Executive News Editor Pally News Chiefs News Assistants Executive Sports Editor Dally Sports Chiefs . . Cultural Affairs Editor ........ Assistant Cultural Affairs Editors Features Editors Copy Editors Columnist .................. S.D. Colen .Stephen Phillips, Lesley Alter . Bill Yard, Susan McMenamln . . . . Stu Sirkin , . . . Paul Hagan, Greg VaMiere .Paul Wachtel , , , Dave Bryant, Cary Malkin . . . Brian Cabell, Jim GoodhlEl Miriam Leopold, Tara Connell Dick Wolfsie General Staff Pat Assan, Debbie Watkins, Andrea Goodman, Jonathan Hlgman, Henry Ziegler, Linda Conway, Anne Chase, Bob Fine, Sherry LampJ, Ginger Metzler, Lesley Melamed, Susan Movshow, Rick Barasch, Mike Hotter, Mark Olshaker, Ron Tipton, Jerry Mercenberg, Judy Seale, Yale Goldberg, A1 Siegal, Linda Schoener, Al Barr, Henry Resnikoff, Tom Miller, Bob Weppner, Dave Pascuccl, Chris Lorenzo, Bonnie Solffer, Robert S wet nick, Rand Kroger, Eric Relnes, Carol Ebos, Mark Yacker, Mary Lou BeM, Art Mitchell, Susan Afpert, Dick Beer, Bob McClenon. Jane Ruben, Jeff Glass. Advertising Manager Neil Harbus Sales Manager Ken Chatetzky Production Manager Marvin lekow Production Staff Meme Colen, Alice Klein, Billie Stablein, Mike Bienstock, Ltrrda Steele, Bobbie Fultz, Claudia Peterson, Zaida Gonzalez, Linda Kuhn. B. D. COLEN, Executive News Editor 149 Committee on Student Life DR. JOHN A. MORGAN, JR., Chairman JAY H. BOYAR, Secretary Dr. Frank D. Allan Dr. Charles Naesor Dr. Carl 0. McDaniels Dr. Hugh L. LeBlanc Dr. Herbert E. Smith Prof. David Scidelson David Fishback James Knicely Kenneth Markison Ken Merin Susan Rappaport Wallace W. Sherwood Dean Sherburne Dean Phelps Neil Portnow 150 151 Engineer’s Council GEORGE STELLAR, President f JOHN DAVIS, Vice-President , CHRISTOPHER KOUTS, Secretary , BOB GRANT, Treasurer, Louis Kouts, Ken Dampier, Gurmi rider Bedi, Leonard Sirota, Michael Rohrer, Robert Keltil, Myron Schoss, James Wong, Steven Levin, Sandy Marenburg, Jim Bladen. 154 NED SCHERER, Treasurer; BOB NAGLE, Master of Rituals: FRED SPURLOCK, President; DENNIS ARROW, Vice-President; BOR WATSON, Secretary . Alpha Kappa Psi A.I.E.S.E.C. LESLIE MANTIN, President , Richard Baltimore, Andy Bay- er, Sheila Moore, Phylis Parker, Robert Wason, Ralph Crum, Philip Gottlieb. 155 WRGW DAVID MILLER, Station Manager, Tim Ash well, Shevi Flood, Eddie Lopez, Mike Barry. SANDY JOEL MARENBURG, President , James Wong, Doug Jones, Harrison ButurfT, Michael Rothschild, Howard Kellrnan, Chuck Schultheis, Tim Stegmaier, Greg Eichert, Mat DeMaria, Hugh Faust, David Forsyth, Mark Buehaller, Albert Lee, Steve Momii, Mark Litchfield, Bob Grant, Ali Abu Taha. Theta Tau 156 W.R.A. JOAN-ELLEN MARCI, Presi- dent; RGNNE ROGIN , S ecre tary - T reas are r; LOIS PFLUG, Vice President ; Mrs. Calva Collier, adviser; Chris Bradley; jane Restov; Cookie Snow; Frances Hill; Pat Car- ney; Heather Novy; Merrill Deming, LINDA DODD, President; Mrs. Collier, Pat Carney, Sue Hillyard, Ellen Fry, Robin Jackrel, Ginger Metzler, Becky Schmuckler, Susan Kossin, Mima Rose, I.S.A.B. 158 And drop a smile passing in the hall fP he Hall — Superdorm, Adams, or Strong. The place you go between classes not be- cause you like it, but because the Union is even worse. Halls so big somtimes there’s not even a smile in passing. As you grow you move to Crawford. You never see any- one to smile at. The dorm is many things to many people. Someplace to sleep, to call your own, to be with others or to be alone, to get away from. But on the whole they’re places with the facilities to live conveniently and comfortably. They have councils which work to make dorm life as good as it can be. It coordinates activities with the rest of the University. 159 Michael Assad, President ; John Newman, Ed Kalter, David Dan, At From, Joel Michaels, Nick Mascolo, Sam Glassner, John Kalodner, Andy Tolin, Todd Canned Mitchell 160 Thurston Jayni Perlman, Carol Brodie, Barbara Beier, Edie Marion, Judy Rubinow, Linda Preskell Arnee Blauer, jane Root, Shelly Green, President; Kathy Thomas, Diane Apostolos, Ruth Wein- stein. The changing campus scene affected the dorms Surely those in Crawford and Cal- houn would agree. Cement mixers and Peep- ing-Tonis started the morning much too early for the inhabitants But for the most part Superdorm stood as a monument for another year. Little affects life in Thurston or its neighbors. Removed from the G Street cam- pus, they support a steady stream of life and are the social spots. In contrast to these three, the dorms on the other end of campus are reserved and almost sophisticated But they are home to over 2000 students, and com- plain as you might, it’s a good feeling to know theyVe there. 161 JIM SWARTZ, President ; Tim Ash well, Carl Recine, Ben Richards, Jim Falk, Irv Lehman, Paul Nidich, Ray Jones. Welling Strong MARGIE BONIER, President r Myra Chaplin, Diane Hodgman, Mary Sue Polden, Fran Berger, Paula Segal, Margaret Hornig, Linda Rrissman, Cathy Ray, Betsy Larari, Nancy Kilt, 162 Crawford BETH MARCUS, President, Cheryl Thomas, Carol Naiman, Mary Davis, Wendy Fox, Betsy Mittell, Niva Kousins, Linda MaoConnell, Susan Bowman, Ellen House, Toni Walker, Claudia Smith, and Barbara Yasiiove. Calhoun DAVID MILLER, President, Steve Horowitz, John Chuplis, Sheldon Rappaport, Jon Zimmer- man, Dick Ehmann, Jr, onfidence put in fellow students. You didn’t know them, hut your interest or disinterest helped elect them. Now that they’re there, hope that it’s for the better and that the issues and changes will help you gain as much as you can from four short years. The Student Council is responsible to all the students. This became a reality this year. Not only the University, but the city watched it move to it’s new position of influence. Television cameras and Post reporters came to capture the varying degrees of crisis which de- veloped a few times. The Council’s action prompted acclamation, demonstration, remonstra- tion, and frustration. Not to mention a public appearance by President Elliott. They have taken steps this year which have set precedence and opened the way for a new Student Assembly. 164 Student Council JAMES KNICELY, President : RON DA BILLIG, VieeP resident; JOAN-ELLEN MARCI, Secretary; BRIAN O’NEILL, Treason r; Michael McElroy, Neil Portnow, Candy Erickson, Michael Rien- stock, Robert Johnson, Richard Crosfield, Doug Catts, Dave Ben, Alan Opresko, Joel Marenberg, Joel Dictrow, Linda Kulin, Susan Brown, Shelley Green, Gayle Rosenthal, Carol Miller, Donna Israel, Tim Dirks, Ken Morin, Steven Gass, Howard Jensen, Charles Kahn, Jr., David Phillips, Terry Gilmore, Eiiza beth Boehner, Arthur Eiseman, Hengameh Massoumi. 165 166 167 who ' s Shelesa L. Allison Gail A. Barth Ronda Billig Diana S. Blackmon Jeffrey I. Breslaw Douglas B. Catts Carollyn M. Chan Michele S. Cohen Peggy A. Cooper Richard S. Crosfield Mark A. Cymrot Candace J. Erickson David S. Fishback Mary E. Haas Michael R. Hanneld William N. Hobbs Arlyne F. Katz James J. Knicely Linda D. Kulin WHO Nancy D. Loy James J. Lyons S. Joel Marenherg Kenneth A. Markison Robert C. McClenon Michael M. McElroy Kenneth D. Merin Judith M. Murray Isa Nabovitz Brian G. O’neill Paul R. Panitz Susan I. Rappaport Steven R. Remsberg Wallace W. Sherwood Rona S. Silverton Marcia K. Simpson Richard A. Wolfsie Michael S. Wolly Phi Beta Bonnie Bair Robert Blanar Ann Benfield Robert Berry Frank Columbus Clare Crandall Carol Dunbar David Fishback Neil Foran Eric Geller Cynthia Goldstein Laurie Hamilton Arlyne Katz Kappa Allan Kulikoff George Lenches Laura Levin Robert McClenon Robert McCormick William Mensh Lorraine Middleton Alex Prengel David Reed Ruth Rice Nina Rosolf Peter Tarassoff Mary Watkins Hardaway Linda Kirtz - i MIKE WOLLY, President : Dave Fish bark Pro f ess or De An gel is, Bruce Be re a no. Professor Riegs, Bob McClenon, Mike McEIroy, Andy Mason, Omicron Delta Kappa 170 Mortar Board ISA NATOVITZ, President; Gail Barth, Arlene Katz, George Washington, Fat Sond heimer, Alice Klein, Michelle Cohen, Heather Mason. £ rarlrt Sfjr (Mrr of at ®ljr (gpn rgp JHasIfiugtmt Jlniumitg In recognition of outstanding and meritorious scholarship, leadership and service to the University Order of Scarlet TOM SMITH, President; John Sehlosser, George Blond i, James K nicely, Mike Wo)I , Bob Sugar man „ Tim Dirks, Steven Gelobter, Dave Berz, J, Warner, and Tom Osborne. 172 I.S.S. Executive Board: GIRARD T. MA LANKA, President; Zafar L Farooq, Vice-President; Ivonne Ramos, Program Director; George Lenches, Corres , Secretary; Geoffrey Rid- dell, Secretary; Anthony Walker, Rec. Sec- retary; Alexandra Todorovich, Publicity Di- rector; So, Manprasert, Treasurer; Henge- meh Massoumi, Student Assembly Repre- sentative; Dr, W. A, Walker, Advisor , 173 LESLIE GROSSMAN, President; Elinor Ingram, Rosemary Straka, Kathy Dippo, Mary Haas, Ellen Weiss, Arm Benfield, Sara Milliard, Nina Dinell, Liz Nelson, Wendy Saul, Sandy Groetzinger, Rose- ann lanco, Cathy Ray, Peggy Heinlein, Liddel Madden, Stephanie Stewart, Pat Sondheimer, Marilyn Miller, Joan Laycock, Pam Jordan, Michele Cohen, Andy Greenspun, Arlyne Katz, Sylvia Beathie, Jean Mann, Elena Vigilante, Marti Schulman, Carol Ducas, and Sue Franklin. Delphi 174 MYRA BROWN. President; MIRIAM MORSEL. Vice-Presi- dent; BETH DEUTSCH, Treasurer; ELLEN LICHTENSTEIN, Secretary; CLAUDIA DINTENFASS, Secretary. Sigma Alpha Eta Alpha Lambda Delta DORIS BABB, President; Deidra Allan, Hannah Hack- etL 11 va Klar, Cecelia Leahy, Edith Marion, Karen Mash- kin, Annette Osso. 175 Tassels Executive Board : Kathy Thomas President ; Grace LaValle, Membership Chairman; Debbie Klein Program Chairman; Chris Kaczmarek Project Chairman ; Cathy Canncll, Secretary; Amy Mazur, Publicity Chairman ; Penny Landay, Treasurer; Mary Jane Heinlein Sue Frankel Beverly Holoka, 176 Harrison Butturf, Gerald Wilber, ROB ERT KELTIE, President ; W. Thomas Packard, John Liebesny, Jorge Hidalgo, Karen Spindel, Tau Beta Pi W, Thomas Packard, Robert Keltic, Karen SpindeJ, JOHN LIEBESNY, President ; Mike Rohrer, Donald How- ard, and Joseph O ' Byrne. iNftVJy r i I H El 178 Greeks 179 I 180 Rush 181 183 185 Sfili L FAYE MERVIS — vice president 2. KATHI LUDLOW— secretary 3, Rosemary Straka 4. Mary Haas 5, Carol Ducas 6 Judy Zemsky 7, Bobby Rodden 8 Sally Burke 9. Made- line Breckinridge 10. Linda Stroud 11. SUSAN FIELDS — acting president 12. Elena Vigilante 13. Estelle Bezan 14. Karen Byrne 15. Twink Stewart. Panhellenic Council 192 Inter- Fraternity Council 1. Steve Burkett 2. Rich Steinberg 3, Bob Smith 4 Gene Green 5. Bill Snyder 6, A1 Skeina 7 STEVE SACKS — - rush chairman 8. KEN MARK ISON — president 9. BOB KAGAN — treasurer 10. Jeff Sunshine 1L SO MAN PARASERT — social chairman 12, JERRY PERKINS — vice president 13 Bob Grayson 14. Gary Kepplinger 15, Dick Larsen. 193 194 3. YOLANDE LANNT— Secreiary. 2- CATHY BERNARD 3. ROSE- MARY ST R AKA — President 4 + Dianne Smith 5. ISABELLA LAN- ZANO— Vice President 6. CATHERINE DI PRO — Treasu rer 7. Joanne Swanson 8. Sheryl Corcoran 9. BOBBIE ROD DEN — Pan - Hellenic Delegate 10 ELINOR INGRAM— Rush Chairman 1L Cheryl Turner 12, Connie Cookson 195 I. Mimi Beeher 2. Cookie Liebman 3. Ester Preuss 4 SUSAN K.0SS1N — PanheUenic Delegate 5 + Debbie Lubarr 6. Madelaine Kovner 7. Susan Pizer 8. Sandra Friedman 9. LESLIE GROSSMAN — Pledge Mother 10. Ellen Weiss 11. Bryn Wulmitz 12. Gail Kessel- man 13, Doris Hollenherg 14, Carol Rrodie 15, Eileen Zola 16, Caryn Fischer 17. Susan Kanas 18. Liz Zuggerman 19. MARY HAAS — President 20. Ellen Kailz 21. LAURIE LASKER— Secretary 22. RONNEE FRIED — Rush Chairman 23, Carol Zimmer 24. BAR ' BARA LEWIS — Social Chairman 25, Bonnie Rapoport 26. Sandra Greenberg 27. Barbara Berger 28. Beth Cohen 29. Lynn Sussman 198 1. Louise Snook 2. CLAIRE SUGDEN — Pledge Trainer 3, Karen MacKenzie 4 Susan Hillyard 5. PATRICIA CARNEY — Rush Chairman 6. Martha Cappelletti 7 Christine Young 8. Linda Stroud 9. CLAIRE BIQNDI — Treasurer 10. Judy Nauruan !L Nina Dinell 12. Ellen McNaught 13 Grace LaValJe 14. ANN BENFIELD — President IS. Susan Scholl 16. Margaret Sanders 17. Julia Lake 18. Mary- Anne DeCarnp 19, Renat e Hoinkes 20. Christine Ditata Our 3ofl tS Sinai I ftse. Atjoun 199 200 L Randal McConahy 2, Lee Fonte 3. WENDY SAUI First Vice Presi dent 4, Elaine Dickenson S. Janet Suza 6. Skerry Webb 7. Isabelle Meyer 8, Carolyn Qian 9, Elaine GaitskiB 10. Liz Bisso 11. Candy Carter 12. Mary Gibler 13. SANDY GROETZINGER — Second Vice Presi- dent 14, Nancy Epstein 15, Carolyn Dunigan 16. Corie Yamasaki 17. Ho31y Marie Madia 18, Lynn Gotleib 19. Susan Leary 20. Ann Berg 21. MADELEIN BRECKENRIDGE — Pan hellenic Delegate 22. Margaret Me- Court 23. SHEILA SHEA — Treasurer 24. Beth Morgan 25. Cathy Kasovic 26. Davia Lann 27. Carolyn Krause 28. Georgia Panarus 29, Wendy Fox 201 202 1. Joan Yarmovsky 2, Karen Norris 3, Susan Dushman 4 Susan Frenkel 5. Diane Charnovitz 6. Linda Feld- man 7. RHONDA TENEN- BAUM, Recording Secretary 8. ELLEN WIENER, Treas- urer 9. Rita Cohen 10- Bar- bara Gerson 11, Arlene Har- bor 12, ESTELLE BIZAN, President 13, SUSAN WIE NERj Vice President and Rush Chairman 14. MAR- SHA NATHANSQN, Corres- ponding Secretary 203 204 1 Susie Healey 2. Les- ey Clark 3. Patty Schap- pert 4 Anne Painter 5. Susan Palmer 6. Carla Vigilante 7. Arnie Blau er 8, Gretchen Basse 9. Chris Shcdd 10, ELENA VIGILANTE — President XL Carol Elder 12. Lau- rie Wallwork 13, Genie Humphries 14. Mary Butt 15. Susan Dowling 16. JEANNE MANN — Rush Chairman 205 ]. ( AT BRAMMAN — Social Chairman 2. KAREN KHOESEN- — Treasurer 3. Ginny Hedden 4 . Linda MacConnel 5. Susan Bowman 6, Mar isle ve Doyle 7 « Claire Cronin 8, jean Reaves 9. ROSEMARY MURPHY —Second Vice-President 10. Cathy Canneii 11. Cindy Murdaunt 12 COOKIE SNOW — -Pledge Chairman 13, Anne Easley 14 Janey Johnson 15. STEPHANIE STEWART — President 16 Sandy Watkins 17, Sherry Watkins 18. Candy Hobin 19 Tara Connell 20, Denny Rath 21, JOAN DEAL — Activities Chairman 22 Lily Lo 206 207 1, Sheila Bimbach 2, Sherri Kirschncr 3. Abbe Kligman 4. GAYLE ROSENTHAL — Record- ing Secretary 5, Marilyn Kirschner 6. Joan Such- man 7. Frann Golden 8. Ellen Frey 9. Robin Schwartz 10- Norma Harris 11. ARLYNE KATZ — President 12, Tina Schwartzbaum 13. JUDITH MOER — Treasurer 14. ANN ROSE — Pledge Train- er 15. Faye Mervis 16. Paula Cass 17. KATHIE LAUB — Corresponding Secretary 18. Cheryl Bonder 208 1. SALLY BURKE — Panhellenic delegate 2. Mary Zimmerman 3. Ellen House 4. Susan Roller 5. PAM JORDAN — Ftce President 6. Betty Love 7. Barbara Oakley 8. LINDA DODD- Scholarship and Social Chairman 9. KAREN BYRNE —President 10. Cindy Smith 11. APRIL WORKS — Treasurer 12. Joan Laycock 13. Margie Freeman 14. Barbara Buckler IS. Winky Denton 16. Toni Dibrell 210 211 1. MARTHA SCHULMAN — Second Vice-President 2 L CAROL BERMAN DUG AS — President 3. Margaret Berman 4. Carol Wachtenheim 5. Bev Ginsberg 6. Karen Kuker 7. Trudy Adlerstein 8. Nancy Block 9. Risa Dauber 10. Amy Mazur 11. Barbara Bock 12. Lolly Berlin 13, Linda Brown 14. Jane Pearl 15. LAURIE RIES— Corresponding Secretary lb MARGIE SHANES — Recording Secretary 17, Deena Levine 18. Eileen Gale 19. Louise Berman 20. Gail Hausler 2L Ellyn Stadler 22, Amy Rudes 212 213 1 NANCY ROSSI, First Vice President 2. Lisa Courtis 3. Sue Lynn 4. SHELESA ALLISON, President 5. Miles Henderson 6. JEANIE LESH, Secretary 7. Diana Fiala 8. Katherine Ludlow 9, DIANE HALE, Treasurer ran HP9S SHI gglsfj aSteS® ; y mmm 214 215 L Mike Wolly 2. John Colby 3. Sieve Goodwich 4 Harry W c s s e 1 5 , Alan Stissman 6, Marc To fit man 7. Alan Bernstein 8. Scott Burgess 9. Gary Goldstein 10. Pete Chel nick 11. Ira Handtman 12, Den nis Gottesmann 13. Jerry Kroll 14. Mark Rothenburg 15. Alan Skiena 16, Sian Barg 17. Mike K r auss 18. Paul Gurny 19, Steve Weinstoek 20. Jerry Rubinstein 21. RICHARD STEIN BERG — President 22. George Dudley 23. JOEL RUBIN — Pledge Master 24. Nate Bobrow 25, Dave Weidhorn 216 217 mfr 218 ' ■ ’ . .im . Ph- C. ' St ' if ' - ' - ' ' ' ' ••• - 7 L- • •• • • . . .--■■■■ •• - - . ' • . - ' -■■ • ..■ ...,- re; : ; v : -:■■■ -:Vv. • . .-•• 4 J .r --■% •: ' -. •• ' - _•-• ' ■ ■ . - • v. - •. •■ • ■ - ' ; :: ir ■ ■ rJfp V v : iW- r £L m igasP ii4 ■■ • .; 2 ' • -s . -. .. • . • ' •. • ? r s ? :.r : : v; : ; . 1. Chuck Finklestein 2. So Man 3. MIKE KEMPNER —Treasurer 4, Bob Patent 5, WARREN WAGNER — Rush Chairman 6. Bill Knorr 7. Walter Ob erlander 8, Paul Heller 9. Craig Pfan- schmidt 10. Jim Stoker 1L Alby Segal! 12. BERNIE SWAIN Athletic Chairman 13. MARK CYMROT — President 14. David Ridder 15. Derak Glover 16. Chris Lydan 17. LARRY ZEBRACK — Athletic Chairman 18. Scott Liberman 19. Gary Marmon 20. Steve Stein 2L Ken Sipsey N L v . - 1‘ 1 - 75i J. • . ‘ J i a - • • , i.i.P’ - l - - 219 I. Howie Weiss 2. JOHN SANET — Treasurer 3. Brian O ' Neill 4. Bill Rlumberg 5. MARV ICKOW-— President 6. A1 Barnard 7. J efT Siegfried 8, Mitch Ross 9. ROB MANHE1MER — Secretary 10. Leonardi Sirota 11. Boh Smith 12. Marc Marmaro 13. Mark Labovilz 14. Bart Kogan 15. RON GOODMAN — Vice-president. 220 221 222 L Lloyd La no 2. Deny Davison 3, Jeff Sunshine 4. Murphy Wysucki 5. Mike Menaker 6. RICHARD FRANKEL- President 7 . Murray Rosenberg 8, Stuart Terl 9- Phil Margolis 10- Mark Danzis 11. Art Kaufman 12. ALAN ZACKOWIT2— Vice-President 13. Ken Goldberg 14, Barry Goldman IS. Ben ' nie Bass 16. Milt Friedman 17- Jeff Marron 18- Ira Brenner 19- Ed Vo- chek 20- Al Nadel 21. Ed Silverman 22, Mitch Mastrin 23. Jerry Levin 24, Jerry Lewis 25. Michael Coper 26. Bill Kulak 27. Steve Gordon 28. Jerry Rosen 29. STEVE SILVERMAN — Secretary 30, Alan Pearlman 31. Noel Cohen 32, Ron Daniels 33. Bruce Yaffe 34 Dave Bert man 35, Phil Potts 36. Bob Kagan 37. Howie Wein 38. Bob Belaski 39. Paul Hclh mold 40. TUFFY 41. ANN DO REN- TER — Sweetheart 42. Steve Silverman 223 L Robert Eisenberg 2. JACK PHOLERIC — Treasurer 3. Curtis Schrocder 4. Stephen Custgarten 5. William Pogsen 6. LAW- RENCE DUNKELMAN — Secretary 7. Wil- liam Brookman 8. ALEXANDER SUTHER- LAND — President 9. Clyde Snider 10 Car- roll Potter 11. Kearney Bennett 12. Eu- gene Vincent 13. Martin Gold 14. John Mack 15. Dennis Dun 16, Richard Neitz 17. Timothy McCarthy 18. Fredrick Wal- lace 19. Peter Cole 20, Steven Ballon 21. Hugh Lichter 22, John Sands 23. Lowell Kabnick 24. Hal Stern 25. Craig Rockwood 26. Vincent Jankoski 27. Dennis Whelan 224 225 226 1. Bob Wolfe 2. Tom Keahy 3. JOE HANDY — Secretary 4. DICK LARSEN — Inter frater- nity Council Delegate 5. Kim Huston 6, John Hemphill 7. Marston Luce 8, Perry Smith 9. John Rogers 10 Fred Frank 11. Pete Pappas 12. John Chuplis 13 Dick Ehman 14. Bob Petersen 15 Stu Farber 16. TOBY R EU T — Pledge Trainer 17, Bill Shawn 18. Bob Savidge 19, Bruce Hahn 20. Rick Teitell 21. Jack Peat 22. Warren Trumbie 23. John Blom 24. Glen Oh sen 25. Craig Hulvey 26, Larry Lavezzo 27. CLIFF BRQWN TW- urer 28. Bob Wolf 29. JACK YATES — Presi- dent 30. Dennis Gal lino 31. Bob Millstein 32. A1 Wilson 33, Walt Boe fi- ner 34. Bob Sahlman 227 1. Nelson Levin 2, John Brindel 3. Bob Gildar 4. Gene Seligson 5, Julian Staffron 6, MARK GRAND — Secretary 7, TOM LOBE — Vice President 8, Howie Weiss 9. Dave Halem 10. Aaron Patlak 1L ANDY CONSOVOY — President 12. Jon Trevathon 13. Craig Brown 14, Carl Zebooker 15, Randy Horowitz 16. Ron Hagan 17, Brian Rieger 18. Steve Sacks 19. DREW TID- WELL— Treasurer . 228 229 1. Jim Bridgenum 2. Tom Clark 3. Larry Corbel I 4. Bruce Covill 5 Steve Sfcekely 6, Flo it Smith 7, BOR JOHNSON- Pledge Trainer 8. Craig Ford 9. Greg Gilmore 10. George Lamas 11. Steve Rem- stein 12. Joe Goran 13. Malcolm Van de Water 14. John MacIntyre 15. TERRY GILMORE— Vice-President 16 . John Marler 17. TOM SMITH — -President 18. Bruce Zagaris 19. Jack Krolark 20. Mark Heekor 21. Pete Kozak ik 22. Jim Corbel I 23. Frank Post 24. Bob Bowie 25. Mike Carrol 26. BOB VOLMER HAUSEN— Treasurer 230 231 I , f t- icpl r ro ■ t. ' y ‘ __i«T i 232 1. Ken Manni 2. Larry Den 3, Bob Rosenfeld 4. Lynn S telle 5. MIKE SUBIN- Treasurer f . Jack Nardil 7- Bob Whaley 8. ED BAKEN — President 9. Tom Cochran 10. Scratch Coburn II, Jack Driscoll 12, Sieve Driscoll 13, Dave Lieberman 14. Mauro Calcano 15, Jim Turk 16. Gary Kepplinger IT. Allie Ash. DR ' $m r DRiNR EU 233 L MICHAEL SAV AGE, Social Chair - man 2. Michael Shower 3. Sieve Lecter 4. Alex Snead 5. Steve Plembeck 6. BRIAN MORAN, Corres ponding Secretary 7. Steve Seal 8. Bob Bowman 9. Tony Watkins III 10. Geoff Riddell 11. JIM PATTI, President 12. RICH- ARD SAUL, Treas urer t 13. Dave Hiple 14. JAY KRAEM- ER, Vice President 15. Jeiry Kaminsky 16. Doug Smith 17. Bob Vahey 18. John Greenbaum 19. Dale Andrews 20. Bill Toutant 21. Carlos Go males 22. John Valenti 23. Dennis Crabb 24. Dave Howland 25. Ned Brantley 26. Wally Kinsinger 27. Frank DeMarco 28. Dave Sc h lac ter 29. Gary Harne 30. Thom Cole. 234 235 236 I. Leo Rose 2, Neit Zolkind 3, Jim Gerson 4, Hank Pass 5. Richard Aarons 6. Mark Needleman 7, John Raukoff 8 Steve Glicksman 9. Steve Strauss 10. Wayne Feldmann 1L Steve Shapiro 12, Mike Sehachere, 13 Don Geller 14, Sandy Duryee 15. Burt Zocks 16. Andy Pollet 17, Lenny Ross 18, Ken Coren 19, Jeff Keilson 20, ANDY BAYER — Secretary 21. Ken Trombly 22. Freddy Mann 23. Gary Frank 24. Hugh April 25, Steve Baer 26. Eric Landman 27, Cary Blum 28. Jeff Brenner 29, HERB BILSKY — Chancellor 30, Ken Heilman 31. ED PERL— Bursar 32, Art Rettmger 33. Jon Shimer 34, Dave Taxin 237 4 1. GEORGE BIGND1 Vice President 2. MICHAEL HEGEDUS- Secretary 3, JIM SAI’IENZA — President 4, TOM OSBORNE — Treasurer 5. Kent Hol- lingsworth 6, Jack Ed low 7. Tom Gizieki 8. Tim Dirks 0. Walt Zukidz 10. Hank Do! a way 11. George Dixon 12. Mark Fuller 13, Fred Shawh 14. Sluarl Loses 15. Doug Taylor 16, Lew Alport 17. Mark Johnson 18. Earl Sutherland 19. John Strempfer 20. Dave Singer 21. Miles Friedman 22, John Srhlosscr 23. Dave Bryant 24. Dennis Arrow 25, Roy Chang 26. Mike Me Elroy 27. Jim Reirhardt 28. Mark Feldman 29, John Warner 238 239 240 Sports COACH STEVE KORCHECK J Jank Bunnell won nine games last spring to lead the Colonial baseball team to a 12-10 record. Bunnell, who set records for victories, innings pitched, and strikeouts, was only a freshman and is expected to lead the Buff to an even better record this season. Tiie improvement of George Korte and Chuck Kendall and the addition of lefty Dick Baughman gave GW the promise of a tremendous pitching staff. Terry Grefe and Dick Hester are lost from last year, hut among the returnees are Eric Spink, Ray Gra- ham, Boh Dennis, Bernie Day, Bob Moltz, John Comitz and Cliff Brown. The addition of catcher- outfielder Bill Collins and infielder Dave Ritter give Coach Steve Korcheck the necessary depth and ma- neuverability. Kor check in his third season as coach has come up with a team that is the equivalent of any in the Southern Conference. The increased thirty game sched- ule the team plays this year also will help them de- velop more quickly. With all the young players on the squad, the future of GW baseball looks extremely bright. Baseball 243 Crew 244 tf Jj ast spring the crew team finished fourth behind winner Georgetown in the Dad Vail championships in Philadelphia for small college teams. Graduation hurt some- what, but the team promises to do as well this year. There is a sizeable number of returnees back from the varsity shell. The replacement will come from 1968’s top grade junior varsity and freshmen shells. GW’s tennis team had a 10-6-1 year and finished second in the Southern Confer- ence to Davidson with a team composed mainly of underclassmen. Graduation took Terry Denbow, but all the other top players are back including Ken Ferris, Ray and Phil Jones, Mark Geir, and Steve Legum. The addition of a couple of top-notch freshmen and a good junior college player gives the team plenty of hope of taking back the Con- ference title from Davidson. Golf had a disappointing 6-7-1 season last year and lost top shooter Jim Galvin through graduation. The leading returnee is captain Bob Carter, but there is a host of promising freshmen and sophomore candidates that give Coach Robert Faris hope for a successful season. 245 246 Tennis 247 Golf 249 Rugby 250 R ugby became a club sport only last spring; how- ever, a 16-1 record quickly establishe the Colonial ruggers as one of the best teams in the East. A com- bination of rugby experience as evidenced by the play of Tony Coates and Liam Humphreys, who learned the game in Europe, and ex-football ability embodied in Tom Metz and Jim Isom gave GW speed and power among the backs. The scrum was big and strong. The season was highlighted by willing the first 15 games. The 15th was the big one. GW downed Old Blue of Yale, a club that had been playing rugby for 35 years and was one of the top squads in the country. This Fall most of the backs returned, but much of the scrum did not. This combined with a lack of time to get in proper shape got GW off to a slow start. The Barbarians, as the club dubbed itself, lost its first two games to Washington rugby club and Balti- more rugby club. The team, however, righted itself against college opposition and won six straight. Wheeling was the first college team to ever beat the GW ruggers. This happened in the next to last game of the season. Virginia became the second college team a week later in the final game of the fall season. In the annual Seven’s Tourney, GW reached the quarterfinals before losing to eventual winner Prince- ton. However, the main season is the spring. With the experience the scrum gained in the fall and the im- proved condition of all the players by the spring, GW should once again be an Eastern rugby power. For a bunch of guys who are learning rugby as they play, that is pretty good. 251 252 253 Soccer 254 ■ 1 jp ' eorge Washington University won its first soccer championship in only its fourth year as a varsity sport last fall by swamping The Citadel, 12-0, for the Southern Conference title. The squad set several team and indi- vidual records in posting its finest season. Gengis Sagcan broke Roland Romain’s record for goals scored with eleven. Mario Cruz scored nine to tie the old record. Everst Ogu by scor- ing in six games broke another of Romain’s records. The season started off poorly with a 5-0 loss to a good Baltimore University squad as the GW goalies broke down; but the squad bounced back with a couple of wins. In the early season play Ogu and Quona Taylor led the attack as Sagcan was hobbled by a bad ankle. 256 Throughout the season Georges Edeline’s play at halfback continuously sparked the offense and strengthened the defense. Rudy LaPorta and Reg- gie Bonhomme led a strong defense and captain Jim Corbil did a good job in his conversion to goalie. Despite a vast number of injuries GW continued to play well. They lied a good Penn State squad and lost in the last minutes to a West Vir- ginia powerhouse. The Buff beat everybody in town but Georgetown and then slammed East Carolina in the final regular season game, 10-1, to win the Northern Division crown. Against The Citadel, freshman Gary Marmon and Mario Cruz scored three goals each. Sagcan had two goals and three assists. Fabian Lopez, LaPorta, and Ogu also added scores. GW’s future is bright with only Sagcan and Corbeil graduating. 257 Cheerleaders 258 259 260 Basketball Jn his second season as head coach, Wayne Dobbs gave GW its first winning season since 1959-60. The Colonials went into the Southern Conference Tourna- ment with a 13-10 record and the fifth leading scorer in the nation. The latter is Bob Tallent. Tallent after a year regain- ing his eligibility made his one year career at GW a memorable one. From the first game when he scored 31 points against the Citadel till the last home game against Georgetown, when he set the Colonial scoring record, the Colonials have been Bob’s team. The team shocked D.C. and GW fans by winning their first six games of the season. They downed the Citadel 101-91 over Thanksgiving and came home on Dec. 3 to defeat the Richmond Spiders 97-93. Virginia was next and the Colonials downed the Cavaliers 98-84 in Charlottesville. VMI fell next 83-72 at home. Georgetown and the flu came at the same time and Bob got out of a sick bed to score 24 and lead the Buff to a 74-73 overtime win. The Colonials had it lost several times, but the Hoyas could not convert the foul shots. Tim Mercier missed two with seconds left to send the game into overtime. Georgetown led by one with eight seconds to go when they missed another foul shot. Storng pulled down the rebound, flipped the ball to Tallent, who threw a long pass to Barnett. Barnett cut in for the driving lay-up with three seconds to go and GW had their fifth in a row and dreams of glory. 261 w I! iani and Mary was the Buff’s sixth victim, 82-72. Christmas came unexpectedly as the flu epi- demic closed school early. The following Tuesday Maryland closed GW’s victory streak at six as they edged the Colonials, 99-96. Christmas vacation was not good to the Buff. They were ambushed at East Carolina, 88-83. Harold Ryne did not play and Mike Tallent lost his contact lens and could not take a shot the last ten minutes of the game. In the Queen City classic, GWU lost to LIU 69-60 but rebounded to take third place by trouncing Can- isius, 96-74. Mike scored his season high, 34, against Canisius and both Tallents made the All Tournament squad. GW and Boh Tallent came back to have their best week of the year. Bob put on a true shooting display as the Buff downed Furman, 92-74. Boh scored 41 most on 25 foot jumpers. He hit eight of his first nine and amazed Colonial fans. Four days later he came hack to score 46 against Pittsburgh as GW won 92-68. Bob had 27 at the half and had GW fans hoping for a new single game record of 50. William and Mary brought the Colonials hack to earth 77-75 in banbox Blough Gym; but it was up to Davidson to really stun the Buff. Before a turnaway crowd, the Buff took an early 17-9 lead but quickly got into foul trouble and could not stay with the top- ranked Wildcats. A rematch with W. Virginia which the Buff lost 98-88 did not help their morale. But they did manage to outlast Navy 74-73 as the Middie could not get a shot off before the final buzzer. Davidson then em- barassed the Buff again, 126-98. GW came back home to beat E. Carolina, 70-69 as Dobbs picked up three technicals, but GW heat the Conferences second place team. A disappointing trip to N. Y. and a 67-50 loss to Fordham followed, as Bob’s consecutive foul shot streak ended at 41. GW put together one of its finest games by down- ing the Citadel, 84-53 but were stunned by VMI 90-86. Then came the annual GW birthday game against Georgetown. It was the greatest game of the year. Bob scored 31 and got a standing ovation b oth when he scored his 25th point, for a new GW record at 680, and when he came out of his final home game with five minutes to go. GW won 112-74. So they went into the tournament with 13 wins, an optimistic outlook, and high hopes for the tourney and for next year. 262 The Tallents year coaching the freshmen rather than a year doing nothing brought Bob Tallent to GW. A desire to play on the same team as his brother brought Mike here. Together they brought GW its best season in nine years. After a year in which Bob coached the frosh to a 17-2 record and Mike chipped in 29 points per game, they came to the varsity together. Two guards who could shoot the eyes out of the basket, break any press, and hit the opening man with the accuracy of a professional football quarterback. Bob had only one year in which to leave his mark, and he took good advantage of it. From the opening game when he scored 33 points against The Citadel, he gave the nation and GW word that he would be high in the national scoring average. He finished fifth in the nation and made the Honorable Mention All-American list. With the brothers’ accuracy killing any chance for box-and-one defenses against Bob, the Buff could always count on 50 ppg from the duo. Mike, only a sophomore, has two more years at GW. He will have a whole host of his brother’s records to aim for. Bob set records for most consecutive free throws (41), most points in a season (723), most field goals in a season (284), most field goal attempts in a season (677), most field goal attempts in a single game (38), best points per game average (28.9), and tied the record for most field goals in a game (18). 264 265 Freshmen J onnie Nunn, Lenox Baltimore, Maurice Johnson and Tim Riordan: they are only freshmen. The frosh lost their first nine games of the season and went into Christmas without a victory. They finished 7-12 by winning seven of their last ten. The whole team showed improvement in the second half of the season. Nunn led the scorers most of the season and finished with almost 30 points a game. Johnson developed a consistent shot as the season progressed and averaged over 25 for the second half of the season. He also dominated the boards. Len Baltimore, while not scoring as highly as ex- pected, proved to he a top defensive forward and rebounder; and Tim Riordan developed by the season’s end into a strong center. The team suffered throughout the season from lack of depth. They received good efforts the second half of the season from Paul Kleinberg, Mark Solomon, Ron Hagan, and Dennis Hoffman. VISITOR 266 L, . ' I Iky sa Season Ends with Semi-finals, 84-79 has done relatively well in the Southern Conference rifle competi- tion in the past and this year was no ex- ception. The Colonial gunners improved considerably in Dr. Herb Cross’ second year as head coach and show good promise for the future. Only Rick Pillsburg and captain Dave Ferreira are seniors. Dave Grant, Lou Kouts, Mike Lee, John Kahan, Mike Englestad, and Charlie Rollins are all coming back. 268 Clubs GWh several clubs besides rug- by. The lacrosse club has been in exis- tence for several years and is having a good year with extra depth for the first time. Yale Goldberg is a one man track club, and has done well in area long distance races. Soccer also fields a couple of club teams besides the varsity and last won the Third Division of the Washington Soccer League. This year the Third Division club has moved up to Second and last year’s Second Division team has made it to the top. 269 Intramurals or the first time in several years, there is a challenge to Delta Tau Delta for the overall intramural crown. With all the spring competition still to go, the Delt’s had a slim lead over the Lettermen, an independent team. The stage was set for this year’s close race last year when independents started grabbing off many of the team crowns. Calhoun during the spring took two volleyball titles, a bowling title, and the track title. The Lettermen took the “A” basketball crown, while Health Care Ad- ministration and Daddy Wags took the “B” titles. But the Delts still easily took the overall title. This year the Lettermen organized early with teams in all sports. They beat the Delts in the final game of the season to win the “A” league football championship. Phi Sigma Delta won one “B” crown while the Delts took the other. PSD won after a three team playoff by downing Ras- putin’s Raiders. The Delts squeezed by the Red Guards on penetration after the game ended in a tie. DaveSollenburgerof the Lettermen won the foul shoot- ing contest with Delt Larry Zebrack right behind. In basketball the Lettermen were leading “A” league once again in late February and were in a good position in U B” league. In the other league, ZBT was slightly ahead Still to come were volleyball, wrestling, swimming, softball, tennis, bowling and track. A close race down to the wire for the overall title seemed a certainty. 270 271 Wrestling 272 GW finally created varsity wrestling t his year and was rewarded with an outstanding first season. The team finished only 2-6 but showed great strength among the freshmen. In many cases it was only the lack of depth among the upper-weight classes that kept the Buff’s win total down. In Dave Greenberg, GW had an undefeated wrestler and a good possibility for a Southern Conference champion. Frosh Steve Silverman was also expected to have a good shot at a Conference crown. Senior Josh Howell in his first match set a GW record by pinning his man in 27 seconds of the heavyweight match. Howell missed much of the year due to injuries as did senior Paul Hagan. With them went most of GW’s upper weight class experience. With Silverman, Jan Sickler, Wayne Barbaro, Don Pashayan, and Ken Butler all only freshmen and Chuck Duda, a junior, coming back, the Buff have a bright wrestling future. 273 ACCOUNTING t ■ - J L Jumor Accountant iVi Sv ' F’+ i aw fe i Nr - v ' H%V NTVkS %fi 1 WAITERS SOt-T «RN AJIS%AY system AERO GEO ASTRO ATTENTION ' On ZrmH STUDENTS ASSEMBttRS MELPAR, I n 4 l V asKingt r ' n W • t €TAfc;K ,ZUT(V£ PET ARY YROLL LERK AERO GEO rrgo_ Seniors 275 Senior Citations [ he central theme of this year’s Senior Citations undertaking emphasized renovation and increased precision in the workings of the selection process. Through the combined efforts of a student committee and then a faculty committee which made the final selection, ivith the aid of personal interviews and letters of recommendation from faculty and administration, the Cherry Tree sought to select those seniors who have significantly influenced those people with whom they have come into contact during their University life. The search for the student who has been an inspiration to his colleagues and who, through his activities, has instituted innovations at GW or has improved and enriched some aspect of our campus life, culminated in the selection of eight seniors whose enthusiasm, dedication, and intellectual awareness ‘touched’ people. In sum, the Cherry Tree sought to make the award a very personal and unique one. The Cherry Tree, on behalf of the entire University community, wishes to express its gratitude and appreciation to these outstanding seniors. (jjail’s perception and intellectual awareness have been particularly instrumental in her achievement of distinction in the academic as well as in the extra- curricular life of the University. Outside the class- room, a large part of Gail’s daily energies were dedi- cated to publications as copy editor and member of the cultural affairs staff of the Hatchet and as asso- ciate editor of the Cherry Tree. For Gail, however, her most challenging and rewarding work in publi- cations was experienced while she served as associate editor and then editor of the Encounter. Academically, responsible independent thought and genuine concern led this honors history major to assume a leading role in a student effort to promote academic reform in general and to improve the history major in particular. A sophomore transfer from Wheaton College and Dean’s List student, she also served as Historian of Mortar Board, the senior women’s honorary. Gail’s future plans include graduate work in English history which she began during the summer of 1968 while studying at Exeter College in Oxford, England. ne cannot help but be impressed by David’s academic excellence as well as by the competency with which he has carried out his countless activities and services to the campus and the city. The mark of David’s outstanding personality will probably re- main most indelibly engraved in the ‘new’ SERVE which David developed for the University and com- munity as SERVE president from April 1967 to December 1968. Under David’s leadership, SERVE grew from a relatively small and ineffective campus community service organization to become one of the largest and most active groups on campus, with almost 250 students involved in some 14 different projects throughout the District. A genuine concern for the needs and problems of people also prompted David to chair last year’s symposium on “The White Campus in the Black City” and the Education Committee of the Poor Peoples’ Campaign Support Group. During his junior and senior years, this political science major was active in both the Student Council and Faculty Senate Urban Affairs Committee and in the Day of Dialogue Committee and Committee on Student Life. Outstanding in the academic sphere of the Uni- versity, as testified by his membership in Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Eta Sigma, and Alpha Theta Nu, David plans to join VISTA and then go on to law or graduate school. 276 JJill is a sociology major who has attained intel- lectual and responsible understanding of his field through deep dedication and involvement in com- munity projects. Already in his first year at GW, Bill was active as a member of the Executive Commit- tee of the Liberal Education Action Project, a director of one of its major programs, and the editor of its bi-weekly paper. In his junior year, Bill took a leave of absence from GW in search of more immediate and non-academic experiences in social change. He became a neighborhood organizer and public relations spe- cialist for the DC anti-poverty program and later helped found and administrate ACCESS, the successful Action Co-ordinating Committee to End Segregation in the Suburbs. Upon his return to school. Bill con- tinued to supplement courses with field work. He organized and informally advised such liberal-left groups as the Student Board of Trustees and the Ad Hoc Committee, and he served on the Hearing Com- mittee on Student Affairs for 1968-1969. After gradu- ation Bill plans to find employment in which he can help build a viable left in the District metroplois and, thus, continue to work toward the solution of pressing social crises. [Jnder Jim’s leadership, the Student Council con- tinued its steady growth to maturity in the areas of active and meaningful student involvement and in- creased understanding and rapport between students, faculty, and administration. Jim’s consistent criticism of faculty reticence to involve students in academic decision-making illustrated his deep concern for and commitment to constructive academic reform on the part of the Council. As student body president, Jim’s time and efforts were largely devoted to committee work for nine different University organs, the most important of which were Student Life, the Faculty Senate Committee on Student Relationships, the Poor Peoples’ University GW Support Program, and the Student-Faculty Day of Dialogue Committee. Variety was the mark of Jim’s countless other activities during his University years. This Dean’s List student chaired the High School Recruitment Committee designed to send present GW students out during vacations to meet prospective freshmen, served as vice chairman of the 1966 Academic Evaluation, and executed the role of secretary of Alpha Phi Omega service fraterni- ty. During the summer months, his employment ranged from Research Assistant to the Honorable David Martin to administrative aide on the National Com- mission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence. A major in international affairs, Jim plans to pursue a career in law. Jjjndowed with a dynamic breadth of knowledge and an invigorating creativity in endeavor, Jim’s major contribution to the University and the com- munity have been distinctive because of their unique- ness. As a senior, Jim served the Student Council in two unusual capacities, as chairman of the Council’s Symposium and as special assistant to its President. A freshman debator and holder of a debate scholarship, Jim has been a recipient of a Board of Trustees schol- arship since his sophomore year. He participated in still another unique project — the editing of the Rose Bibliography. To this GW-sponsored research project involving preparation of a computerized bibliography in the humanities and, particularly, of Negro maga- zines from 1865-1917, Jim dedicated 20 hours a week as well as two of his summers. This married stu- dent’s active membership in the Community Action Committee of St. Stephen-Martyr Church reflected his concern for the needs of the larger District community. And this will continue to be the focus of his concerns as Jim, an American Thought and Civilization major, plans to either attend graduate school in American studies or teach in the DC public school system. honors senior in speech arts, Isa has proven herself to be an invaluable asset to the curricular and extra-curricular activities of the Department of Speech and Drama. As a member and secretary of the Uni- versity Players, Isa either acted or served as a behind- the-scenes manager in each of the group ' s major dra- matic productions. An elected member and officer of both the Ensonian Society (Debate Honorary) and Delta Sigma Rho-Tau Kappa Alpha (National Debate and Forensic Fraternity), she also devoted a large portion of each of her four University years to the Varsity Debate Team. Her dedication and talent in these activities were testified by her receipt in 1968 of the award for outstanding persuasive speaker in a national tournament. To all this, add Isa’s involvement as president of Mortar Board, senior women’s hon- orary, two-time officer of Panhel, reporter and assis- tant Greek editor of the Hatchet, and teacher of creative dramatics and swimming during the summer. One readily sees that the refrain of all of Isa’s efforts has been excellence through versatility. ISA NATOVITZ n anthropology major planning a career as an anthropology professor, Sue’s many contributions to the University have focused on educational programs and reforms. Her interest in this field of endeavor was manifested early in her sophomore year in her role as secretary of the Academic Evaluation, In Sue’s junior year, she served as a member of the Student Academic Committee established by the Student Council, and this experience paved the way for her position as chairman of the committee in her senior year. This was not Sue’s only leadership responsibility, for during both her junior and senior years, she chaired the Free University program at GW, At the same time, she contributed her energies as a creative participant of the Committee for the Day of Dialogue, the Consti- tutional Revision Committee of the Student Council, and the Committee on Student Life. To all her activi- ties, Sue brought a concerned and enthusiastic frame of mind and a refreshing zeal for innovation and constructive change. [)ick will be best remembered by the University community for his creative endeavors and achieve- ments in the field of writing, but possibly, his most significant contribution has been his conscientious interest in University reform and community service. The light touch and penetrating glance at campus events as they unfolded highlighted the columns which Dick published weekly in the Hatchet for three years. The success of these columns culminated in the national syndication of JVolfs Whistle in 35 college papers. In a very different capacity, this American Thought and Civilization major contributed his gift for humor as an emcee at numerous University functions includ- ing twice at Martha’s Marathon of Birthday Bargains and at the IFC Greek Sing and Slave Auction, Dick’s ability to affect not only each member of the campus community but also the members of the overall DC community were demonstrated in his initiative in creat- ing and editing The Wig, the first humor magazine of GW, and in his capacity as a teacher of creative writing for seniors at Cardoza High School during the spring of 1968. A member of Order of Scarlet and a recipient of a Student Council Certificate of Recog- nition, Dick plans a career in teaching and writing. ABRAMS, KAREN: A.B,, Education. Cherry Tree; Dormitory Representative; Orientation Committee; Welcome Week. ABRAMS, SETH: A.B., Political Science. ABRAMSON, LOIS BARBARA: A.B., Liberal Arts. Big Sis; Sweet- heart of Phi Sigma Delta, 1967-68. ACKERMAN, PHYLLIS: A.B., English, Sigma Della Tan; Recording Secretary SDT; President of Women ' s Exe- cutive _ Council. ADAMS, LINDA SUZANNE: A.B., English Literature, Vice President and Pledge Trainer of Sigma Kappa. ADLER, LESTER BURTON: A.B., History. Chaplain and Secretary of Alpha Epsilon Pi; Fall Concert committee; Intramurals; Old Men; Alpha Phi Omega. ALBONETTI, PAUL JOHN; A.B., Economics. Alpha Phi Omega; Intramurals. ALESSI, MARILYN JEAN: A.B., Psychology. Transferred from St, John ' s University; Political Affairs Society; Newman Club; Serve; Secretary of Young Republi- cans, ALLISON, SHELESA: B.S.. Chemistry, President of Zeta Tau Alpha; Publicity Chairman of Alpha Theta Nu; Delphi; Tassels; Treasurer and Social Chairman of Big Sis; Newman Club; Dance Production Croups, ALP A UGH, MARY E. ; A.B,, Secondary Education. Basketball; Big Sis; Women ' s Recreation Association — Publicity, APRIL, JOAN BENSON: A,B., Sociology, Sigma Delta Tau — Treasurer; Alpha Kappa Delta; Tau Epsilon Phi Sweetheart Court; Hall Council; Welcome Week. ARLUKE, ARNOLD: A,B., Sociology. Political Affairs Society; Calhoun Dorm Council; Sigma Phi Epsilon; Alpha Kappa Delta; Sociology Club; Dean ' s List. ARROW ' , DENNIS WAYNE: A.B., Political Science, Tau Kappa Epsilon — Secretary, Pledge Master; Alpha Kappa Psi — Vice President; Delta Phi Epsilon — Vice President; Delta Sigma Rho ; Tau Kappa Alpha — - Secretary, Treasurer; Alpha Theta Nu; Order of Scarlet; Greek Way; Intramurals, Enosinian Debate Society; Model Governments; Political Affairs Society — President; Alpha Phi Omega, Interfraternity Council — Retreat Chairman; Student Directory Committee; Radio WRGW; National Model United Nations Dele- gate. BAGNOLE, JOHN WILLIAM: A.B.; International Affairs. Delta Phi Epsilon; International Students Society; Chess Club. BAILEY, CARL B,: A.B., English Literature. Intramurals; Transfer from the American College in Paris. BALTIMORE III, RICHARD LEWIS: A.B,, International Politics, Ski Club; International Students Society; Political Affairs Society; Model United Nations Delegate; Model Government, A.I.E.S.E.C. BA RBI ER I, AN- THONY JAMES, A.B., International Affairs. Crew Team; Transfer from St. John ' s University; Serve. BAROFF, IRENE: A.B,, Sociology. Hall Council Vice President; Inaugural Concert — Tickets; Fall Concert — Program Chairman; Blood Drive; Spring Weekend — Co-chairman; Hall of Fame; Student Center; SERVE. BARON, JEROME IRA: A.B., History. National Society of Pershing Rifles, BARR, ALBERT J.: A.B,, Journalism. Hatchet Photographer. BARRY, TIMOTHY M,: A.B,, Economics, BARTELMES, BETTE JEAN: A.R., Latin Literature. 280 KAREN ABRAMS SETH ABRAMS LOIS ABRAMSON PHYLLIS ACKERMAN LINDA ADAMS LESTER ADLER PAUL ALBONETTI MARILYN ALESSI SHELESA ALLISON MARY ALPAUGH JOAN APRIL ARNOLD ARLUKE DENNIS ARROW IRENE BAROFF JOHN BAGNOLE JEROME BARON CARL BAILEY ALBERT BARR RICHARD BALTIMORE TIMOTHY BARRY ANTHONY BARBRERI BETTE BARTELMES 281 GAIL BARTH MYRA BAYLIN MARJORIE BARTHOLOMEW JAMES BEADLES BETH BARUCH ROBERT BELAFSKY BERNARD BASS DONNA BELKIN HARVEY BASSOFF KEARNEY BENNETT BARTH, GAIL AMALIA: A.B., History-Honors; Mortor Board-historian; En counter- editor; Hatchet-copy editor; Cherry Tree-associate editor; Trans- fer from Wheaton College; Student Council National Affairs Committee; Parents ' Weekend-chairman; Liason- University Drug Committee. BARTHOLO- MEW, MARJORIE LOVEJOY : A t R„ Psychology; Choir; Chamber Choir. BARUCH, BETH R, : A.R., Journalism; Tofomac-Editorial Staff; Dorm Coun- cil; Transfer from Western Maryland College, BASS, BERNARD NOR- MAN. A.R,, Zoology; Phi Sigma Delta-rush chairman; Intramurals; Old Men. BASSOFF, HARVEY CHARLES: A.B., Political Science; Intra murals. BAYLIN, MYRA: A. II, Public Affairs; Hi I Id; Big Sis; Welcome Week; Young Democrats, BEADLES, JAMES C. : A.B., Political Science, BELAF- SKY, ROBERT BRUCE: A.B., Zoology: Phi Sigma Delta, BELKIN, DONNA LYNN: A.B., Education; Educational Council; SERVE. BENNETT, KEAR- NEY DOUGLAS: A.B., International Affairs; Phi Sigma Kappa. BERENS, JANET: A.R., Education; Dean ' s List; Big Sis; Welcome Week; Hillel; Up- shur Club. BERG, ANNE ALLISON: A.B., Political Science; Delta Gamma; Transfer from Elmira College, University of Puget Sound; Booster Board; Spring Weekend; Homecoming; Big Sis. BERG, BARRY S,: R.B.A., Business Administration; Cherry Tree-business manager; Intramurals; Alpha Epsilon Pi-editor; Academic Evaluation , BERGER, FRAN CINE CAROLE: A.B., Mathematical Statistics; Strong Hall Council; Big Sis; Hillel; Statistics Lab Instructor. BERNSTEIN, RENEE G. : A.B., Psychology; Thurston Hall IRHC; Orientation Committee; Big Sis; SERV E-executive board. BERRY, ROBERT STEPHEN: A.B„ Public Affairs; Academic Eva! uat ion-staff, editor, RERTIN, MICHAEL ANDREW: A.R., Public Affairs; Academic Evaluation; Potomac; W r RGW + RESKIND, DONALD HASKELL: A.B., Sociology; Phi Sigma Delta; Sailing Team-captain. BEZAN, ESTELLE R.: A.B., Psychology; Delta Phi Epsilon-president; Hatche t; Big Sis; Hillel. BIGGS, DEBORAH: A,B„ Political Science. 282 JANET BERENS ANNE BERG BARRY BERG FRANCINE BERGER RENEE BERNSTEIN STEPHEN BERRY MICHAEL BERTIN DONALD BESKIN D ESTELLE BEZAN DEBORAH BIGGS 283 MARTI BILES JOY BILHARZ RON DA BILLIG ROBERT BILLINGSLEY JOEL BIRKEN NORMAN BISHOP DIANA BLACKMON CARRINGTON BOOTH JANET BLIZARD GEORGE BLOOM STANLEY BORNSTEIN LINDA BOWER CARY BLUM ROBERT BOWIE 284 BILES, MARTI : A,B„ Economics. EILHARZ, JOY ANN: A.B., History; Newman Club. BILLIG, RONDA LYNN: A,B. American Thought and Civilization; Big Sis; Welcome Committee; Fall Concert- pro gram chairman; Inaugural Concert; Dorm Council-representative, president; Student Council vice president ; Women ' s Executive Board ; Dormitory Committee of Councils- chairman; University Library Committee-chairman; Student Academic Com- mittee; Steering Committee; A.C.U. Convention; NSA Congress; University Committee on Sponsored Research Policy; Food Service Committee. BILLING- SLEY, ROBERT: A.B. Political Science; Young Republicans; Pre-Law So ciety; Transfer from David Lipscomb College. BIRKEN, JOEL MICHAEL: A.B. Economics; Delta Phi Epsilon; Student Recruitment Committee; W ' RGW, BISHOP, NORMAN ROGER: B.S, Biology. BLACKMON, DIANA S.: A.B. International Affairs; Alpha Lambda Delta-vice-president; Tassels; Hatchet- news editor; Outstanding Freshman Woman; Outstanding Sophomore Wo- man. BLIZARD, JANET L.: A.B. Public Affairs; Young Democrats; Public Affairs Society. BLOOM, GEORGE M.: B.B.A. Business Administration; Alpha Epsilon Pi; Old Men-registrar. BLUM, CARY A.: B.B.A. Finance; Tau Epsilon Phi. BOISVERT, ELIZABETH J.: A.B. Psychology; Angel Flight; Dorm Council -scholarship chairman; Newman Club. BOLLINGER, BRUCE CHARLES: B.S, Zoology. BONIER, MARJORIE: A.B. Sociology; Golf Team; WRA Intercollegiate Day; Strong Hall-president; Student Book Exchange. BONSALL, PENELOPE: B.A., Business Administration. BOOTH, JR., CAR RINGTON LEON: B.S. Biology; Pre-Medical Society. BORSTEIN, STANLEY ARTHUR: A.B., Sociology; People- to- People vice-president; International Stu- dents Society-liason officer; The Wig-co- editor; Foreign Service Council of Washington, D.C.-GW representative; University Players. BOWIE, ROBERT W. : A.B. International Affairs; Sigma Chi-ritual chairman, tribune, executive committee; Intramurals, Old Men; Gate and Key. BOWLES, JEAN: B.B.A., Accounting. BOWMAN, ROBERT A,: B.B.A.. Business Administration; Sigma Phi Epsilon. BRAMMAN, PATRICIA ANNE: A.B., American Thought and Civilization; Kappa Kappa Gamma-social chairman. BRECKNER, CAROL L.: A.B. Economics; Transfer from UCLA; Cherry Tree . ELIZABETH BOISVERT JEAN BOWLES BRUCE BOLLINGER ROBERT BOWMAN MARJORIE BONIER PATRICIA BRAMMAN PENELOPE BONSALL CAROL BRECKNER 285 BRENNER, JEFF ELLIOT: B.R A,, Business Administration; Tan Epsilon Phi- sergeant of arms; Intramurals. BRESLAU, JEFFREY: B.B.A., Accounting; Homecoming-publicity; Billet; Dance Production Group; Modem Dance Con- cert; Inaugural Concert-co-ordinator; fffcAef -advertising manager, business manager; Omicron Delta Kappa; Phi Sigma Delta-corresponding secretary; Order of Scarlet; Madrigal Singers; Old Mem BRIDGES, SARAH T.: A.B., Anthropology; Kappa Alpha Theta-corresponding secretary; Hatchet; Anthro- pology Club. BRISSMAN, LINDA JANE: A.B., Speech Pathology and Audi- ology; Phi Sigma Sigma; Sigma Alpha Eta; WRA Sports Day; Dorm Coun- cil-vice president; Orientation Committee; University Players-stage crew; Big Sis. BROWN, ANDREW MITCHELL: A.B., Political Science; Crew Team; Rugby Team; Dorm Council, BROWN, MYRA: A B , Speech Therapy; Sigma Alpha Eta-President; Dorm Council; SERVE, BROWN, PHILIP SCHRAM: A,B., Public Affairs; Alpha Phi Omega; Cherry Tree-assistant editor; Debate Team; Enosinian Society; Old Men: Student Recruitment; Dean ' s List; Stu- dents for Better Government, BUCHQLZ, FRANK DIETRICH: A.B,, Inter- national Affairs; Hatchet; Young Republicans-executive vice president; Stu- dents for Nixon-president ; Academic Evaluation. BUCKLER, BARBARA JOAN: A R., English Literature; Pi Beta Phi-pledge trainer assistant, pledge president; ISAB representative; Deans List; Transfer from Madison Col- lege. BUNDY, BONITA MARIE: B.S., Medical Technology; Alpha Lambda Delta; Alpha Theta Nu; Leadership Conference Steering Committee; HOIST Tutoring Program. BURKE, ARLEEN H.: A.B., Psychology? BURKE, LUCY- ANN: A.B., Sociology; SERVE; Dorm Council; Newman Club. BURRIS, JACQUELINE E. : A.R Elementary Education; Sigma Delta Tau; Intra Resi- dent Hall Council; SERVE: Big Sis; Young Democrats; Ski Club CAMP- BELL, CHARLES RICHARD: B S., Physical Education; Intramurals; Student Co-ordinator for intramurals. CARPINTERO DIAZ, CARLOS RAMON: A.R., Anthropology; Intramurals; International Student Society -sec ret ary. CARSON, JOHNNY: A.B., Trivia; Phrenology Club; Varsity Basketball-star; Tonight Show-chairman ; Joey Bishop Hate Club; So clus Homesteaders Annonymous; Jack the Cat ' s Fan Club. CARTER, JAMES W. : B.S., Chemistry; Old Men; Intramurals CATAPANO, NIVALDO: A.R„ Sociology. CAVANAUGH, PETER ANTHONY: A B., History CHAMBERLIN, JOHN VINCENT: B,S„ Mechani- cal Engineering; Phi Sigma Kappa; Epsilon Nu Delta; Soccer-freshman var- sity; Soccer Club; Rugby Team; Maroon Key Service; Transfer from Farleigh Dickinson University. 286 JEFF BRENNER JEFFREY BRESLAU SARAH BRIDGES LINDA BRISSMAN ANDREW BROWN MYRA BROWN PHILIP BROWN FRANK BUCHOLZ BARBARA BUCKLER BONITA BUNDY ARLEEN LUCYANN BURKE JACQUELINE BURRIS CHARLES CAMPBELL CARLOS CARPENTERO BURKE JAMES CARTER NIVALDO CATAPANO PETER CAVANAUGH JOHN CHAMBERLIN JOHNNY CARSON 287 CAROLLYN CHAN JEANNE CHANEY MYRA CHAPLIN DIANE CHARNOVITZ KAREN CHECH YK JANE CIRKER MARJORIE CLIFF ELIZABETH CLUFF THAIS COBURN MICHAEL COHEN CHAN, CAROLLYN MARTI: B,B.A„ Finance; Delta Gamma-first vice- president, corresponding secretary, house chairman; Phi Sigma Kappa- Moonlight Girls; Gate and Key-Order of the Lacy Garter; Cherry Tree- sales manager; Booster Board-chairman, secretary; Homecoming Ball-co- chairman; Big Sis; Spring Weekend-publicity committee; Queen’s Com- mittee. CHANEY, JEANNE GARDINER; A.B., Sociology. CHAPLIN, MYRA LEE: B,S., Zoology; Dorm Council-secretary; Biology Lab As- sistant; Hall Judiciary Board. CHARNOVITZ, DIANE WINDY: A.B., Psy- chology ; Tassels; Delta Phi Epsilon-activities chairman, corresponding secre- tary; Big Sis, CHECH YK, KAREN HOPE: A,B„ Arts and Science; Phi Sigma Sigma, CIRKER, JANE ANNE: A.B., Elementary Education; Dance Production; Phi Sigma Sigma; Spring Concert; Homecoming Play. CLIFF, MARJORIE: A.B., Journalism ; Kappa Delta; Hatchet; ISAB; Young Demo- crats; Transfer from Fairleigh Dickinson University, CLUFF, ELIZABETH JUDD: A.B., English Literature; Transfer from Antioch College, CO- BURN, THAIS HEALD: A.B., International Affairs; Riding Club; SERVE, COHEN, MICHAEL STEVEN: A.D., English Literature; Sigma Alpha Mu; Potomac - poetry editor; Hatchet , COHEN, MICHELE NANCY: A.B., Psychology; Phi Sigma Sigma-treasurer, vice-president; Tassels- president; Mortar Board-vice president; Delphi; Outstanding Sophomore Woman; Out- standing junior Woman; Career Week Chairman; Big Sis-treasurer, vice- president; Freshman Orientation; Scholarship Advisor; Student Academic Committee. COLE, SUSAN: A.B,, Art History; afc ief-photography editor, CONESCU, JONATHAN DAVID: A.B., Political Science; Alpha Epsilon Pi. COOPER, ELIZABETH ANNE: A.R,, History; Newman Foundation- executive hoard, secretary; SERVE, COOPER, PEGGY ANN: A.B,, An- thropology; Hall Council; SERVE, Young Democrats. CORREIL, JAMES M. : A.B., Political Science: Sigma Chi; Gate and Key; Order of Scarlet; Varsity Soccer -captain. CORBETT, ALLEN BLAIR: B,S., Zoology; Intra- murals. COURTIS, LISA: B,S„ Zoology; Zeta Tau Alpha; Iota Sigma Pi- secretary-treasurer; Alpha Theta Nu; Orientation Committee; Pep Band; Tassels-co-project chairman; Biology Reorganization Committee, CRABB, JAMES DENNIS: A.B., International Affairs, CRANDALL, CLARE: B.S. t Biology; Dance Prod uet ion Groups- manager promotions manager, vice- president. CRODDY, JR„ ARNOLD JACKSON: A.B., Philosophy; Phil- osophy Club; SERVE; Pre-Medical Society; Potomac ; Golf Team; Old Men. CRONIN, JOHN P. : A.B., Public Affairs; Young Republicans; Stu- dents for Better Government-director of public relations. MICHELE COHEN SUSAN COLE JONATHAN CONESCU ELIZABETH COOPER PEGGY COOPER JAMES CORBEIL ALLEN CORBETT LISA COURTIS JAMES CRABB CLARE CRANDALL ARNOLD CRODDY JOHN CRONIN 289 CRONIN, MARY ELLEN: A.B., English Education; Transfer from Michigan State University. CROSFIELD, RECHARD JOHN: B.B.A., International Busi- ness; Student Council-Foreign Student Representative, School of Government and Business Representative; International Students ' Society-executive com- mittee; Cricket Club. treasurer. CRUM, RALPH EDWARD: A.B., International Affairs; University Players; Model United Nations Delegation, CUMMINS, JAMES j.: A.R., English Literature; Newman Foundation-executive board; Potomac; Intramurals. CURTIS, JOHN MARKLEY: B.S., Mechanical En- gineering; Engineering Magazine-circulation manager; Intramurals; American Society of Mechanical Engineers. DANICK, EDYTHE SUE: R.S , Zoology; Alpha Theta Nu; Big Sis; People to People; International Students 1 Society- secretary, Young Democrats ; Hatchet; Cherry Tree-associate editor; Orienta- tion Committee, DAY, BERNARD: FIB, A., Data Processing; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Alpha Kappa Psi; Varsity Baseball; Intramurals, DEANNA, PETER PAUL: A.B., English Literature. DEMKGVICH, LINDA ELYSE: A.B., His- tory; Dorm Council-scholarship advisor; Young Democrats. DEN, LAURANCE EDWIN: B.S., Marketing; Sigma Nu; Gate and Key; Aesculapian; Golf Team. DEUTSCH, BETH: A.R., Speech Pathology; Sigma Alpha Eta-treasur- er; Big Sis; Transfer from Cortland College. DIBRELL, TONI: A.B., Fine Arts. DINTENFASS, CLAUDIA: A.B., Speech Education; Sigma Alpha Eta; Big Sis. DIPPO, CATHERINE: A.B., Statistics. DIRHAN, MARYLOU: A.B., Psychology; SERVE; Hatchet. DOCHERTY, DAVID WILLIAM: A.B, Geo- graphy; Soccer Varsity; Soccer Club; Jntramurals. DODD, LINDA P.r A.B,, Sociology; Pi Beta Phi-social chairman, scholarship chairman; ISAB-president ; Little Sigmas. DODGE, DEBORAH D.: A.R.. Elementary Education; Pi Beta Phi; Transfer from Ohio University. DORENTER, ANN: A.B., Education; Phi Sigma Delta Sweetheart, Miss Venus 19G9; Alpha Epsilon Phi. DEAISIN, STEPHEN J.: A.B., History; Pre-Law Society; advertising manager; Cherry Tree; Intramurals; Senior Citations Committee. MARY CRONIN RICHARD CROSFIELD RALPH CRUM JAMES CUMMINS JOHN CURTIS EDYTHE DANICK BERNARD DAY PETER DEANNA LINDA DEMKOVICH LAURANCE DEN BETH DEUTSCH ANTOINETTE DIBRELL 290 CLAUDIA CATHERINE DIPPO MARYLOU DIRHAN DINTENFASS DEBORAH DODGE ANN DORENTER LINDA DODD DAVID DOCHERTY STEPHEN DRAISIN 291 LEE DRYDEN ANNE EASLEY CAROL DUG AS MARY EBZERY CAROLYN DUNN AC AN SUE DUSHMAN IE AN EDWARDS SCOTT EFLAND CHRISTINE DWYER JANE EHRLICH ARTHUR EISENMAN COLETTE EVANS DIANE ELIAS JANE FABRIKANT SONJA ELMER BARBARA ENGELSON CANDACE ERICKSON KATHLEEN FANELLI MIRIAM FARBER JAN FAUL DRYDEN, LEE S-: A.B., Philosophy. DUCAS, CAROL B.: A.B., Education; Sigma Delta Tau-president, rush chairman; Delphi; Young Democrats; Hall Council-representative, secretary; Big Sis. DUNNAGAN, CAROLYN R. ; A.B., Political Science; Delta Gamma-foundation chairman; Big Sis; Miss Model Pledge; Messial Chorus; Transfer from the University of the Seven Seas. DUSHMAN, SUE; A.B., Fine Arts; Delta Phi Epsilon-vice resident. DWYER, CHRISTIN M.: A.B., Psychology; Delta Tau Delta-queen; NADA-president; Transfer from Endicott College. EASLEY, ANNE JEFFRIES: A.B., Speech Pathology; Kappa Kappa Gamma; Sigma Alpha Eta; Panhellenic Council- treasurer, cultural chairman, parliamentarian; University Players; Enosinian Debate Society; Big Sis; Riding Club; WRGW. EBZERY, MARY ANGELA: A.B., Psychology; Transfer from St. Mary’s College. EDWARDS, JEAN CLAIRE: A.B., Art History; Intramurals; Newman Club; Young Democrats; Big Sis. EHRLICH, JANE DEBORAH: A.B., Political Science; Intra-Resi- dence Hall Council-secretary; Young Democrats; Big Sis. EFLAND, SCOTT IAN: A.B., Political Science; Alpha Phi Omega. EISENMAN, ARTHUR LOUIS: A.B., Psychology; Orientation Committee; Old Men; Sigma Alpha Mu; Students for Better Government; International Students’ Society; Stu- dent Council-chairman of parking committee; Maryland commuter represen- tative; University Commuters Association. ELIAS, DIANE J.: A.B., Inter- national Affairs; Cherry JYee-co-editor of Looking Back; SERVE, ELMER, SONJA G,: A.B., History. ENGELSON, BARBARA LEE: A.B., Sociology; Big Sis. ERICKSON, CANDACE J.: B.S., Chemistry; Alpha Theta Nu-soclal chairman, president; Tassels-proiects chairman; Iota Sigma Pi-president; SERVE; Student Council-Orientation Director. EVANS, COLETTE: A.R., Art History; Encounter ; Phrenology Club-vice president. FABRIKANT, JANE ELLEN: A.B., Art History. FANELLI, KATHLEEN M.: A.R.. Psychology; Transfer from Ml. Vernon Jr. College, FARBER, MIRIAM JEAN: A.B., International Affairs; Women’s Recreation Association; Dorm Hall Council; Ski-Club-chairman. FAUL, JAN W.: A.R. ? Fine Arts; Cherry Tree-activities editor; Hall Council 293 FEIN, EMILY A.B., Sociology. FELDMAN, NANCY ELLEN; A.B., Sociology-; Tau Epsilon Phi Sweetheart; Hi) lei ; Welcome Week Hostess; Students for Better Government; Student Council-National Affairs Committee, FERGUSON, MARGARET FAY: A.R., French Literature; Peopled People; Big Sis. FERRARI, ELIZABETH ANN: A.B„ Sociology; Hall Council; SERVE. FERREIRA. DAVID M.: A.B., Accounting; Alpha Kappa Psi; Rifle Team-captain; Intramurals. FERRIS, KENNETH ROBERT: A.B., Account- ing; Sigma Chi; Alpha Theta Nu; Tennis Team-freshman varsity; Southern Conference Tennis Singles and Doubles Champion; All-University Intramural Badminton Champion. FISHBACK, DAVID SIMON; A.B.. Political Science; Omicron Delta Kappa; Order of Scarlet; Phi Eta Sigma; Alpha Theta Nu; SERV E-president ; Student Life Committee; Poor People’s Campaign Sup- port Group-chairman; Student Council Urban Affairs Committee-chairman. FIXMAN, JANE: A.R.. Psychology. FLAHERTY, JEANNINE DANIELLE; A.B., Art History. FOOTE, ROBERT HOWE: B.S., Geology; Gate and Key Society; Intramurals; Crew Team-freshman varsity; Phi Sigma Kappa-House Chairman, Vice President; Geology Club. FORBES, CHRISTINE REGINA: A.B., International Affairs; Newman Club; SERVE; Angel Flight; Political Affairs Society. FOX, CAROLINE BETH: A.B., Psychology- Hillel-tff efore Puhlications-secretary ; Angel Flight; Commuters 1 Association, FRANKLIN, SUSAN JOAN: A.B., Elementary Education; Sigma Delta Tau-first vice pres ident; Delphi; Big Sis; Welcome Week; Dorm Council-hall representative, vice president of hall council. FREEMAN, SUSAN F. : A.B., History. FRENCH, ELIZABETH CORRELL: A.B., Art History; University Players-slage crew; Transfer from Western College for Women. FRIED, RONNEE SUSAN: A,E,, Elementary Education; Alpha Epsilon Phi-vice-president; Panhellenic Sing Chairman; Big Sis; Dorm Council. FULTZ, BOBBIE ELAINE; A.B., Fine Arts; Zeta Tau Alpha-activities chairman 1SAB Representative; Hatchet - Production Staff; Women’s Rifle Tram; Equestrain Team; Trail Club; New- man Society; Big Sis; Aquanaut Swimming Club; Water Folies; Transfer from Lynchburg College. FURCOLOW, MARILLA HORTON; A.B., Latin American Studies; Chi Omega-social chairman; Riding Club; Young Republi- cans-secrctary ; Panhellenic Housing Committee. FURLGW, JERLLIN: A.B., Fine Arts; Dean’s List; Foreign Student Orientation: International Students’ Society. GAIT5KILL, ELAINE EDWARDS: A.B., Art History and Theory: Delta Gamma-vice president; Delphi; Spring Concert Publicity; Inaugural Concert; Booster Board; May Day Follies-publicity co-chairman; Delta Tan Delta sister of the rainbow. EMILY FEIN NANCY FELDMAN MARGARET FERGUSON ELIZABETH FERRARI DAVID FERREIRA KENNETH FERRIS DAVID FISH BACK JANE FIXMAN JEANINE FLAHERLY ROBERT FOOTE CHRISTINE FORBES CAROLINE FOX 291 4 SUSAN FRANKLIN BOBBIE FULTZ SUSAN FREEMAN MARILLA FURCOLOW ELIZABETH FRENCH JERI-LIN FURLOW RONNEE FRIED ELAINE GAITSKILL 295 GALER, LINDA MURIEL: A.B., English; Transfer from University of Massa- chusetts. GAY, CARLTON FENNER: A.B., Political Science. GEFFNER, BARBARA BROWN: A.B., Political Science; Hall Council; Agora Committee, GELLER, ERfC PETER: A.B., Political Science; Order of Scarlet; Phi Eta Sigma; Academic Evaluation-sub-chairman ; Delta Phi Epsilon; Alpha Phi Omega; SERVE; Steering Committee of Student Recruitment, GELLMAN, CLAUDIA EVE: A.B., Anthropology; Anthropology Club; Hatchet. GEN NARIA, PATRICE BRONSON: A.B., Psychology; Young Republicans; Trans- fer from University of North Carolina. GIANES5I, LEONARD PATRICK: A.B., Public Affairs. GINDIN, PAMELA RENEE: A.B„ Secondary Education; Sigma Delta Tau; Big Sis; Welcome Week Hostess; Alpha Epsilon Pi Sweet- heart Court. GINSBERG, BARBARA GAIL: A.B., History; Transfer from University of North Carolina. CLICK, STANLEY BARTON: A.R., Psychology; Alpha Epsilon Pi; Intramurals; Dorm Council Representative. GLICKMAN, MARJORIE ELLEN: A.B., Political Science: Young Democrats; People-to- People. GLICKSMAN, ARNOLD CHARLES: A.B., English Literature. GOER- LINGER, LORETTA J.: A.B., International Affairs; People-to-People-treasur- er, co-chairman; Big Sis; SERVE; Newman Foundation. GGFREED, HOWARD: A.B., Economics. GOLD, MARTY: A B., International Affairs; Phi Sigma Kappa-social chairman rush chairman, activities charman, treasur- er; Homecoming-chairman; Spring Weekend Committee; Orientation Com- mittee; University Center Planning Committee. GOLDBERG, BARBARA RAE: A.B., Political Science; SERVE, GOLDBERG, JULIANA VERA: A.R., English Literature; Dance Production Group. GOLDBERG, YALE F. : B.B.A., Com- puter Programming; Phi Sigma Delta-athletic director; H atchetdntramura editor, business staff; Old Men-executive hoard; Hall Council-secretary; Spring Concert-comptroller; Inaugural Concert- publicity chairman. GOLDEN, CAR- OLE BETH: A.B., Secondary Education; SERVE; Transfer from Emerson College. GOLDEN, WILLIAM MORAN: B.B.A., Business Administration; Varsity Football; Intramurals; Alpha Kappa Psi; Students for Better Govern- ment; Delta Nu Alpha. GOLDMAN, DENNIS ALEXANDER: A.B., History; Hillel; Young Republicans. GONZALES, ZAIDA IRIS: A.B., English Litera- ture; Hatchet-production staff; Big Sis; Peoplc-to-People; SERVE. 2 % LINDA GALER CARLTON GAY BARBARA GEFFNER ERIC G ELLER CLAUDIA GELLMAN PATRICIA GENNARIA LEONARD GIANESSI PAMELA GINDIN BARBARA GINSBERG STANLEY CLICK MARJORIE GLICKMAN ARNOLD GLICKSMAN LORETTA HOWARD GOFREED GOERLINGER WILLIAM GOLDEN CAROLE GOLDEN MARTY GOLD DENNIS GOLDMAN BARBARA GOLDBERG ZAIDA GONZALES JULIANA GOLDBERG YALE GOLDBERG 297 JAMES COODHILL LINDA GORDON RICHARD GOODMAN MARJORIE CORODKQ ALAN GOOTT STUART G RAINES HENRY GORDON GARY GRANOFF JANE GORDON RONNIE GREEN GOODWILL, JAMES A,: A B , Philosophy; Phi Eta Sigma; Alpha Theta Nu; Phi Beta Kappa; HatchetAeatures editor; Students for a Democratic Society. GOODMAN, RICHARD ALAN: B.B.A , Business Administration; Alpha Epsilon Pi; Hillel; Intramural Football, La Crosse. GOOTT, ALAN F : A.B., Political Science; Young Republicans. GORDON, HENRY A.: A.B , Sociology; Academic Evaluation; SERVE; Sociology Department Student Im- provement Committee GORDON, JANE ELLEN: A.B., Psychology; Welcome Week; Hall Council; Orientation Committee. GORDON, LINDA: A B., Anth- ropology; Hall Council-treasurer; SERVE; Anthropology Club. GORGDKO, MARJORIE NAN: A B., Education; Cherry Tree - sports editor; Spring Week- end; Big Sis; Welcome Week. GRAINES, STUART J. : A.B., Political Science; SERVE; Young Democrats; Hillel; Sigma Alpha Mu-exchequer GRANOFF, GARY CHARLES: B B,A,, Accounting; Alpha Epsilon Pi-editor, exchequer; Alpha Phi Omega-chaplin ; Intramurals; Old Men. GREEN, BONNIE MAR- CIA: A B., Elementary Education; Dean’s List; Hillel; SERVE; Education Council GREEN, ELLEN ANNE: A.B., English, GREENBERG, DAVID: B.S., Zoology GREER, STEVEN NICK: A.B , Psychology Students for Democratic Society-chairman; Student Board of Trustees; D C-A.A U Boxing. GRELLER, SHEILA ELLEN: A.B., Psychology GROETZINGER, SANDRA ELIZABETH: A.B , American Thought and Civilization; Delphi-publicity chairman; Delta Gamma-vice president, activities chairman, rush chairman; Booster Board; Little Sigmas. GROSSMAN, LESLIE ANN: A.B , Psychology; Alpha Epsilon Phi-vice president, standards board chairman ; Delphi-president ; Hall Council; Big Sis; Welcome Week; SERVE. GRUBER, ADRTENNE FRANCIS: A.B., French GRUBER, KAREN A : A B., Education; Pi Beta Phi-recording secretary, treasurer; atc te -business staff; Big Sis. GUSTAV- SON, DALE STANLEY: B.B.A., Business and Economic Statistics. HAAS, MARY E.: A R., History; Alpha Epsilon Phi-president; Cheerleaders-captain; Cherry TVee-Greek editor; Booster Board; Alpha Epsilon Pi Sweetheart Court; Dorm Council; Big Sis; Student Recruitment; Homecoming Queen finalist; Greek Queen; Mech Miss; Greek Week-co-chairman, 298 ELLEN GREEN DAVID GREENBERG STEVEN GREER SHEILA GRELLER SANDRA GRGETLINGER LESLIE GROSSMAN ADRIENNE GRUBER KAREN GRUBER DALE GUSTANSON MARY HAAS 299 PAUL HAGAN DIANE HALL LAURIE HANDLERS JOHN HARTMAN SUE HEINLICH MARGARET HEIN LEIN LOUISE HELLER ROBERTA HELLER SUSAN HENDLIN PAULA ELLIOT HENSON JACQUELINE HERTZ ROGER HERTZOG HENDRICKSON JORGE HIDALGO 300 HAGAN, FRANCIS PAUL: A.B., Journalism; Delta Tau Delta; Sigma Delta Chi; Hatchets ports editor; The Greek JFay-editor; SERVE; Intra- murals; Crew; Wrestling; Rifle Team; Rugby Club; May Day Follies Committee. HAIL, DIANE LUCILLE: A.B., History; Zeta Tau Alpha- secretary, treasurer; Alpha Mu Gamma; Big Sis; Orientation Committee; Transfer from California Western University, HANDLERS, LAURIE: A.B,, Sociology- HARTMAN, JOHN EDWARD: A.B., Business Adminis- tration. HEIMLICH, SUE ANN: A.B., Speech Pathology and Audiology; Sigma Alpha Eta. HEINLEIN, MARGARET ELLEN: A.B., Psychology; Kappa Delta-president, secretary; Cherry Tree; Panhellenic Council- vice president, secretary; Big Sis; Young Republicans; Newman Club. HEL- LER, LOUISE GAYE: A.B., Elementary Education; Sigma Delta Tau; Hal I Council; Young Democrats; Big Sis; Panhellenic Council. HELLER, ROBERTA A.: A.B., Art History; Hatchet; Art Department -assistant; Transfer from Wilson College. HENDLIN, SUSAN: A.B., Elementary Edu- cation; Student Academic Evaluation Committee; Hillel; MMBB, HEN D RICKS ON, PAULA j.: A.B., Sociology; P om c-advertising staff- HEN- SON, ELLIOT M.: A.B., Zoology; Intramurals. HERTZ, JACQUELINE H. : A.B., Sociology ; Hockey Club ; German Club ; Orientation Committee. HERTZOG, ROGER STUART: B.B.A., Accounting; Phi Sigma Delta; Cherry Tree ; Intramurals; Fall Concert, HIDALGO, JORGE J,: B.S., Engineering; Sigma Tau; International Students Society; American So ciety of Civil Engineers-student chaplain. HIRSH, BARBARA A.: A.B,, Psychology; SERVE. HODGMAN, DIANE ELIZABETH: A.B., Anthro- pology; Strong Hall-treasurer; People-to People. HOLTZMAN, MYRA S,: Speech Pathology; Sigma Alpha Eta; University Players, HOMBURG, LINDA CHERYL: A.B., International Affairs; SERVE-vice president; Thurston Hall-treasurer of third floor. HORN, KAREN G. : A.B,, Art History; Alliance Francaise, HORNIG, MARGARET LESLIE: A.B., International Affairs; Strong Hall-hall representative; Newman Foundation- vice president, social chairman, literary chairman, board member; Big Sis; Public Affairs Society. HOROWITZ, MARILYN JUNE: A.B., Politi- cal Science, HOWELL, JOSH : B.S., Mechanical Engineering; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Lacrosse-most valuable player; wrestling-captain. BARBARA DIANE HODGMAN MYRA HOLTZMAN LINDA HOMBURG HIRSH MARGARET HORNIG MARILYN HOROWITZ JOSH HOWELL KAREN HORN 301 HSIEH, ROBERT C: R.S., Zoology; Alpha Chi Sigma-secretary; Intramurals; International Students Society, HUANG, CHELUN: A.B„ International He lations. HUNSUCKER, J. THOMAS: B.B.A., Business Administration; Cherry Tree. HURWITZ, SUSAN B.: A.B., Elementary Education. ICKOW, MAR- VIN LEE: A,B., Sociology ; Kappa Sigma- president ; ufchef-production manager, photographer; Cherry ' Tree photography editor; Dorm Council; Old Men. IMMERMAN, JOHN MICHAEL: A,B,, Psychology; Young Republicans; WRGW-news director; Aesculapian Society. INGRAM, ELINOR W. : A.B„ Ele mentary Education; Alpha Delta Pi-rush chairman; Delphi; Transfer from Hillsdale College. ISRAEL, DONNA G. : A.B., Psychology; Phi Sigma Sigma; Hatchet: Strong Hall publicity chairman; Student Council representative; HilleUocial chairman; People-to-People; Big Sis; SERVE. JAMES, KATHER- INE ANN: A.B., History; Tassels; Interfaith Forum-hostess; Political Affairs Society, JANUS, JAMES ANTHONY: A.B., Political Science. JASLQW, JULIE IRENE: A.B., Public Affairs; Orchestra; Chorus; chef-head line editor, copy editor; SERVE; Wig ; Young Democrats; Hall Council-publicity chair- man; Big Sis; Agora. JEWELER, LESLIE GAIL: A.B , Speech Therapy; Phi Sigma Sigma, JOHNSON, JANE SUSAN: A.B., Art History; Kappa Kappa Gamma; Little Sisters of Minerva. JONES, PAULA A.: Anthropology; Black Students 1 Union. JONES, RAYMOND V.: A.B., Political Science; Tennis- varsity. JORDAN, PAMELA SMITH: A.B,, Art History; Pi Beta Phi-vice president, assistant pledge trainer, historian; Little Sigma of Sigma Chi; Cherry Tree - assistant to the greek editor, JORGENSON, J, LISA: A.B., Geography; Transferred from Lewis and Clark College, KAGEL. RONALD M.: A.B., Political Science; SERVE, KAHN, JODY FRAN CES: A,B„ Politi- cal Science; Dorm Council; Big Sis; Transfer from the University of Wis- consin. KALEM, ALLYSON I,: A.B„ Sociology; IRHC; Dorm Council-vice president; SERVE; Big Sis.; Film Festival; Academic Evaluation. ROBERT HSIEH CHELVYN HUANG THOMAS HUNSUCKER SUSAN HURWITZ MARVIN ICKOW JOHN IMMERMAN ELINOR INGRAM DONNA ISRAEL KATHERINE JAMES JAMES JANUS 302 JULIA LESLIE JEWELER JUNE JOHNSON PAULA JONES RAYMOND JONES JASLOW LISA JORGENSON RONALD KAGEL JODY KAHN ALLYSON KALEM PAMELA JORDAN m FAY KUNDARIAN MORRIE KAPLAN ARLYNE KATZ ROSALIND KAUFMAN SUZANN KEENEY SARA KELLY ROBERT KELTIE CANDACE K ELTON KENNETH KEPHART LUCYANN KERRY KANDARIAN, FAY: A.B , Education; Kappa Kappa Gamma- vice presi- dent. KAPLAN, MORRIE ABRAHAM: B.S., Zoology; Phi Sigma Delta; Intramurals KATZ, ARLYNE F : A.B , French Language and Literature; Phi Sigma Sigma-president; Mortar Board-recording secretary; Alpha Lam- bda Del ta- pres i d en t ; Rig Sis-membership chairman; University Hearing Committee on Student Affairs; Cheerleaders-captain ; Alpha Epsilon Pi Sweetheart Court KAUFMAN, ROSALIND EVE: A.B., Speech Pathology and Audiology; Sigma Alpha Eta, KEENEY, SUZANN; A.R., International Affairs KELLY, SARA JANE: B S , Biology; Transfer from Wheeling College. KELTIE, ROBERT JOSEPH: B.S., Civil Engineering; Tau Bela Pi-vice president ; Sigma Tau-president ; American Society of Civil En- gineers-president. KEETON, CANDACE LENOIR: A.B., English Literature; Kappa Kappa Gamma, KEPHART, KENNETH RICHARD: A B„ Econo- mics. KERRY, LUCYANN SNYDER: A B„ Geology; Geology Club KES- SELMAN, BARBARA LYNN: A.B., French Literature; International Slu dents ' Society; Alliance Francaise; Big Sis; People-to-People. KIEFEB, JOYCE E.: A.B., International Affairs; Crawford Hall-vice president; SERVE. KLEIN, ALICE JUDITH: A,B , Political Science, Mortar Board; Academic Evaluation; Dorm Council-president; Steering Committee of Leadership Conference; Student Council Committee on Student Rights. KLINE, SHIRLEY HELEN: A.B , Political Science; Alpha Lambda Delta; Tassels; Phi Beta Kappa; Young Democrats; Political Affairs Society; Cercle Francais; Hillel; Alpha Epsilon Pi Sweetheart Court. KLOOG- MAN, JOAN GALE: A.B., Sociology, KNIE, TINA J,: A.B , Sociology: Big Sis; SERVE; Young Democrats; Ski Club. KOBLENZ, MICHAEL ROBERT: A.B., Alpha Epsilon Pi; Alpha Phi Omega; Old Men Board; Young Democrats; Orientation Committee; Student Recruitment Com- mittee; Hillel Foundation; Inlramurals; Dorm Counselor; Student Tours- chairman ; Dorm Council-secretary; Transfer Committee-chairman. KOCH, ROBERT H. : A.B., Political Science; Delta Sigma Phi, KOGAN, BAR- TON H. : B.B.A., Business Administration; Kappa Sigma-vice president, secretary, president of pledge class; Alpha Phi Omega; Alpha Kappa Psi; Gate and Key Society; Spring Weekend-publicity chairman; Dorm Council -publicity director; Welling Hall-administrative assistant; Ugly Man 1968 Student Council KOPLIN, LINDA N : A B., Psychology; SERVE; Transfer from Wilkes College. KOPPELMAN, MARIANNE; A.B., Speech Pathology and Audiology; Sigma Alpha Eta; Alpha Epsilon Phi. K OS- SOW, RENATA SLAVIN : A B., Art History, BARBARA KESSELMAN JOYCE KIEFER ALICE KLEIN SHIRLEY KLINE JOAN KLOOGMAN TINA KNIE MICHAEL KOBLENZ ROBERT KOCH BARTON KOGAN LINDA KOPLIN MARIANNE KOPPELMAN DENATA KOSSAW 305 KOUTS, LOUIS ALEXANDER: B.3., Mechanical Engineering; Rifle Team; Letterman; Intramurals; Engineers Council; American Society of Mechanical Engineers; ISS, KOVANDA, LOTS ANNE: A.B., International Affairs; People-to-PeopIe; Big Sis; Young Republicans; ISS; Political Affairs So- ciety, KRAFCHIK, LORA SUE: A.B., Elementary Education; Dean’s List; Young Democrats’ Welcome Week; Upshur Club. KRAMER, BARBARA: A,B„ International Affairs; The Encounter-co ’editor; SERVE. KRAUS, REGINA C. : A,B,, Speech Pathology and Pathology; Sigma Alpha Eta, KREGLOW, ALAN FRANK: A.B. Economics; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Omi- cron Delta Epsilon; Crew. KREFFZBERG, LEONARD ROY: A.B., Inter- national Affairs; Alpha Epsilon Pi; Student Directory ; Booster Board, KRETZ- MER, KATHLEEN JO: A.B., Psychology; Young Democrats; Hillel. KROE- SEN, KAREN McCRAY; A.B,, Fine Arts; Kappa Kappa Gamma; assistant rush chairman; Treasurer; Tassels; Dean’s list; volleyball; Big Sis; Delta Tau Delta Queen; Homecoming Queen; Messiah Chorus; Fall Concert Com- mittee; Spring Concert Committee, KRON, MARILYN: A.B., Education; Dorm Council; Hall Representative; Judicial Board; Hillel; Upshur Club; Dean’s List, KUBA, MICHAEL JAN: A,B„ Political Science; Students for Better Government; SERVE; Young Democrats; Dorm Couneil-Calhoun Hall; Lacrosse, KUHN, CAROLYN E, : A.B, T Fine Arts; Kappa Delta sororities; Alpha Theta Nu; Tassels; Student Council Representative; Junior Panhel Pres,; Panhell Secy; Cherry Tree Princess; Big Sis; Intercollegiate Council; Miss Model Pledge Runner-up, KULIKGFF, ALLAN LEE: A,B., American Stidoes; Religion in Life Committee; Hillel; SERVE. KULIN, LINDA DEE: A.B,, English Literature; Hatchet ; Big Sis soeial chairman, vice president; Student CounciUCrawford Hall Representative; chairman of Dorm Com- mittee; Dorm Council; Homecoming Committee; Orientation Committee; ISS; Messiah Chorus; Women’s Leadership Conference; Welcome Week. KUSAK, WALTER RICHARD: A.B., Political Science. LADERBBRG, WENDY ANN: A.B., Speech Pathology and Audiology; Sigma Alpha Eta. LAMAS, JORGE CARLOS: A.B., Economics; Sigma Chi; Scholarship Committee; Old Men; ISS. LANG, MAUREEN ELSE: B,S,, Education; Rifle Team; Basketball, LANG, TARA MAUREEN: A.B., Psychology; Neuman Club; Foreign Stu- dents Society; International Club; SERVE; Young Republicans; Political Affairs Club. LASKER, LAURIE C. : A.B,, Education; Alpha Epsilon Phi- secretary; Judicial Board; Big Sis; Fall Concert, 1969-secretary; Spring Con- cert, 1960-secretary; Fall Concert, 1968- secretary. LOUIS KOUTS LOIS KOVANDA LORA KAFCHIK BARBARA KRAMER REGINA KRAUS ALAN KREGLOW LEONARD kreitzberg KATHLEEN KRETZMER KAREN KROESEN MARILYN KRON MICHAEL KUBA CAROLYN KUHN 30(3 ALLAN LINDA KULIN KULIKOFF MAUREEN LANG JORGE LAMAS WALTER KUSAK TARA LANG WENDY LADERBERG LAURIE LASKER 307 MICHELE LATHAM IRENE LAWSON JUDITH LATLOOD JOAN LAYCOCK KATHERINE LAUR DENNIS LAZAR ANDREA LAUFER MARVIN LEHMAN DEBORAH LAUFER CARYL LEIGHTMAN GEORGE ANN LENNAHAN LENCHES JOAN LEVY FRANKLIN LEVINSON MARC LERNER RANDI LEVEY BARBARA LEVI GARY LEWIS ELLEN LICHTENSTEIN JOHN LIEBESNY LATHAM, MICHELE: A.B,, Journalism; nice kid, LATLOOD, JUDITH ANN: A.R., English; Volleyball Club, 1966-67; Hall Council, 1966-67. LAUB, KATHERINE LOUISE: A.B,, Education; Phi Sigma Sigma, corresponding secretary, LAUFER, ANDREA HELLER: A.B., Speech Therapy; Sigma Delta Tau; Sigma Alpha Eta; Dean ' s List; Hall Council Representative; Young Democrats; Hall Program Chairman. LAUFER, DEBORAH LAURIE: A,B., Anthropology; Anthropology Club, 1966; Presidents Committee of Performing Arts, 1968-69; Dance Company, 1965-69 — President, LAWSON, IRENE HELEN: A.B., Economics; Phi Beta Kappa — student marshall; Omicron Delta Epsilon; Tassels; Alpha Lambda Delta; Alpha Theta Nu, LAYCOCK, JOAN: A.B., Art History Pi Beta Phi — pledge chairman; scholarship chairman; rush chairman; Delphi, Big Sis; Cherry Tree- queens editor; Intersorority Athletic Board — president; Booster Board; publicity chairman; Sweetheart of Sigma Chi; Miss Model Pledge court; Miss Venus; Greek Queen Runner-up, LAZAR, DENNIS STEVEN: A.B., History; Alpha Epsilon Pi; Alpha Phi Omega: Old Men. LEHMAN, MAR- VIN: A.B., Economics, LEIGHTMAN, CARYL WOLFSON: A.B, Political Science; Tassels; Scholarship Honorary; Alpha Lambda Nu; Political Affairs Society-Fresh, Publicity Chairman; Soph, Secretary; Junior Secretary; Young Democrats, Social Chairman, Vice President, President; Hatchet; Cherry Tree , LENCHES, GEORGE JOHN: A.B., German; International Students Society, secretary; German Outing Club, President. LENNAHAN, ANN M, : B.B.A., Accounting; Newman Foundation, Secretary; Zeta Tau Alpha; Freshman Orien- tation Committee; Commuter Chairman; Women’s Leadership Conference Steering Committee; Crawford Hall President. LERNER, MARC ALAN; A.B,, Political Science; Anthropology Club; Intramurals. LEVERY, RANDI A.: A.B., Psychology; transfer from University of Rhode Island. LEVI, BARBARA A.: A.B., Art History. LEVINSON, FRANKLIN A.B., Sociology; Tau Epsilon Pi-pledge warden, vice chancellor; Gate and Key; Alpha Phi Omega; WRGW: Old Men. LEVY, JOAN LI A: A.B., Sociology; Hall Coun- cil, Vice president; Modern Dance Production; SERVE: MMBB; Big Sis; Pre-Law Society; Sociology Society. LEWIS, GARY L. : A.B., International Affairs; Assistant Manager of Student Union; Ticket Chairman, 1968 Fall Concert; International Student Society; Young Democrats. LICHTENSTEIN, ELLEN, F. : A.B., Speech and Pathology and Audiology; Sigma Alpha Eta, Secretary. LIEBESNY, JOHN PAUL: B.S., Electrical Engineering; Tau Beta Pi, president; Sigma Tau, president; Institute of Electrical and Electronics En- gineers, Inc., secretary, vice president; Engineer ' s Council. LIGHTE, PETER RUPERT: A.B., International Affairs. LIMMER, ELLEN F. : A t B + , Elementary Education; Phi Sigma Sigma; SERVE. LINDER, N, STEVEN: A.B„ History; Hatchet ; Ensonian Debating Society. LIPKIN, JANET M + : A,B., Russian; Dohro Slovo Russian Honorary; Russian Club- treasurer; Children ' s Theatre Production; SERVE; Dean ' s List. LISBETH, TERRENCE LEE: A.B., English Literature; Potomac ; SERVE. LITKOW- SKI, JOANNA GEISE: A.B., Internationa] Affairs; Pi Beta Phi; Alpha Theta Nu; Young Democrats; Puhlic Affairs Society. LOW, SUSAN BAR- BARA: A.B., Psychology; Tassels; SERVE. LOWENSTEIN, STEPHEN EDWIN: A.B., History; Sigma Alpha Mu; Gate and Key; Fraternity Intra- murals; Young Republicans; Political Affairs Society. LUDLOW, KATHER- INE, HUBER: A.B., Psychology; Zeta Tau Alpha; Delphi; Junior Pan- hellenic-viee president; Panhellenic council-secretary: LUGER, STEVEN W.: A.B., Geology; Intramurals; Geology Club; B ' nai Brith Hillel Council-of- ficer. LULOFF, MARTIN R. : B.S., Zoology; Alpha Epsilon Pi; Alpha Phi Omega; Aesculapian Society; High School Recruiting Committee. MA, DOROTHY CHING-YIN : B.B.A., Accounting; International Student ' s Society. MACCAFERRI, JAMES TILIO: A.B., History, MAC DONALD, KEVIN JOHN: A.B., Fine Art, MACK, ALEXIS: A.B., Psychology; transferred from St, Marys College; S,L,A,M. -board of directors; Young Republicans; Phren- ology Club. MACKENZIE, KAREN LANSDOWNE: A.B., International Af- fairs; Chi Omega; International Student Society; Big Sis. MAKOFF, SUSAN: A.B., English Literature; Alpha Delta Pi. MALANKA, GIRARD THO- MAS; A.B., International Affairs; Student Council; Young Democrat s-pro gram director; LS.S.-presideni; Student Affairs Committee, MALIK, CATH- ERINE: A.B., Sociology. MALONEY, WILLIAM JOSEPH: B.B.A., Business; Alpha Kappa Psi; Football-freshman, varsity; lacrosse; Intramurals; Dorm Council PETER LIGHTE ELLEN LIMMER STEVEN LINDER JANET LIPKIN TERRENCE LISBETH JOANNA LITKOWSKI SUSAN LOW STEPHEN LOWENSTEIN CATHERINE LUDLOW STEVEN LUGER MARTIN LULOFF DOROTHY MA 310 JAMES KEVIN MAC DONALD MACCAFERRI GIRARD MALANKA SUSAN MAKOFF ALEXIS MACK CATHERINE MALIK KAREN MACKENZIE WILLIAM MALONEY 311 MANDL, MARCIA N,: A.B., Elementary Education; Sigma Delta Tau; Dean ' s List; Orientation Committee; Big Sis; Upshur Club; Young Demo- crats; Hall Council-secretary. MANNING, ROSS ELLIOTT: A.B., Inter- national Affairs; Gate and Key; Transferred from University of Hawaii; In- tramurals; Sigma Nu-president, pledge marshal, social chairman; Orien- tation Committee; Old Men. MANUS, ALBERT H.; R.B.A., Accounting; Alpha Kappa Psi. MA REN BERG, SANDY JOEL: B.S., Civil Engineering; Theta Tau-scribe, regent; Student CoundLSEAS representative; ASCE: Stu- dent Relations Committee; Old Men; L5.S. MARKISON, KENNETH ALAN: ATI, Political Science; I.F.C President, Vice President; Rush Chairman; Alpha Epsilon Pi-pledge master, IFC delegate, pledge president; Order of Scarlet; Gate and Key; Delta Phi Epsilon; Alpha Phi Omega; Hatchet advertising; Young Democrats; Political Affairs Society; Old Men; Uni- versity Drug Committee; Careers Conference Committee; Student Life Com- mittee; National Interfraternity Conference. MARKOWITZ, MARCIA DALE; ATL, Sociology; Po omac-advcrtising editor; SERVE; Pre-Law Society. MAR- MARO, MARC: A.B., History; Deans List; Hatchet; Intramurals; Kappa Sigma-pledge president, pledge trainer, house army; Youhg Democrats; Young Republicans. MARON, JEFFREY JOEL: A.B., Zoology; Phi Sigma Delta; Intramurals. MARTIN, FRANCIS XAVIER: A.B., History; History Honors Program; Dean ' s List; Consortium Representative for History Majors. MAT- THEWS, SHARLYNN ELAINE: A.B., Sociology; Black Student ' s Union-re- cording secretary. MAURER, MARYANN: A.B.. Anthropology; Crawford Hall Council; Resident. Assistant at Thurston Hall; Anthropology Club; C.W. ' s Speleological Club. MC CART, JOHN PETER: A.B., Psychology SERVE. MC CARTHY, ELIZABETH ANN: A.B., Elementary Education; Angel Flight; Young Democrats; Newman Club, MC CARTY, JAMES ALLAN: A.B., Business Administration. MC CLENON, ROBERT CRAIG: AJL, Chemistry; Biology Reform Committee-Chairman; Omicron Delta Kappa- seerctary; Academic Evaluation Com mittee y ice chairman; Alpha Chi Sigma- president; Phi Eta Sigma. MC CLOSKEY, MARGARET ELLEN: AIL, Internationa] Affairs; Kappa Kappa Gamma-secretary; personnel com- mittee; Intramurals; Sweetheart of Sigma Chi; Little Sigma; Big Sis; Home- coming Committee; Orientation Committee. MC COURT, MARGARET ANN: A.B., Elementary Education ; Delta Gamma-corresponding secretary; Booster board; Young Democrats; Transferred from Sacred Heart Junior College. MC CULLOUGH, EILEEN AGNES: A.B., English Education; Riding Club; Big Sis; Lifeline; Transferred from Holy Family College. MC ELROY, MICHAEL MAURICE MARTIN: A.B., Public Affairs; Order of Scarlet- secretary; Gale and Key; Omicron Delta Kappa; Who ' s Who; Dean ' s List; Student Council-activities director, Adams Hall representative; Tau Kappa Epsilon-president, activities chairman, rush chairman ; Student Service Coun- cil-president ; Adams Hall Council-vice president, publicity chairman, athletic chairman; Inaugural Concert-publicity chairman; Freshman Directory- sales chairman; Orientation Committee; Academic Evaluation Committee; IFC; Students for Better Government- vice president; Students for Lowenstein; Mobilization; WRGW; Young Democrats; Book Exchange-chairman; Student Council Leadership Conference-chairman. MELANSON, MONA MARJORIE: A.B., Education; Cherry Tree: Hockey Club; Spring Weekend Committee. MELICHAR, PAMELA JOANNE: A.R., English Literature. MENSH, WIL- LIAM STANLEY: A.R., History; History Honors Program; Dean ' s List; Phi Beta Kappa. 312 MARCIA MANDL ROSS MANNING ALBERT MANUS SANDY MARENBERC KENNETH MARKISON MARCIA MARKOWITZ MARC MARMARO JEFFREY MARON FRANCIS MARTIN SHARLYNN MATTHEWS MARYANN MAURER JOHN MC CART r ® ELIZABETH MC CARTHY EILEEN MC CULLOUGH JAMES MC CARTY MICHAEL MC ELROY ROBERT MC CLENON MARGARET MC CLOSKEY MONA MELANSON PAMELA MELICHAR MARGARET MC COURT WILLIAM MENSH 313 KEN MERIN DIANA MILFORD LOUISE MICHELSEN SARA MILLARD ELLEN MC NAUGHT BARBARA MILLER LYNDA MICHELSON CAROLYN MILLER ROBERT MICHELSON DAVID MILLER MERIN, KEN: A.B., Political Science; Student Council; Student Life Com- mittee; Lacrosse Club; Intramurals; Dormitory Government; Model Govern- ment Commission; The Gidon, editor MICHELSEN, LOUISE ROWNEY: A.B., Political Science; Alpha Chi Omega; Dean ' s List; Cherry Tree ; Women’s Athletic Associa t ion -secret a ry ; Varsity Hockey; Model Government Association; SERVE; Young Democrats. MC NAUGHT, ELLEN: A.B., French Language and Literature. MICHELSON, LYNDA KELLEY: B.S., Medical Technology; Young Republicans; Russian Club; G.W. Chorus; Sweet- heart of Kappa Sigma. MICHELSON, ROBERT EDWARD: A.B., Political science; Kappa Sigma-vice president; Hatchet circulation manager; Spring weekend chairman; T.G.I.F. Committee; Homecoming Chairman; Young Democrats. MILFORD, DIANA LYNN: A.B., Fine Arts; Cherry Tree- organi- zations editor. MILLARD, SARA ANN: A.B., French Language and Litera- ture; Chi Omega; Delphi-secretary; Big Sis; Alliance Francatse. MILLER, BARBARA SUSAN: A.B., Fine Arts. MILLER, CAROLYN ANN: A.B„ Economics; Delta Phi Epsilon-historian, Panhellenic delegate; Tassels-member- ship chairman; Omicron Delta Epsilon; Career Week; MMBB. MILLER, DAVID C. : A.B., History; intramurals; WRGW-business manager, station manager; Hall President. MILLER, GARY WALTER: B.S., Physical Edu- cation; Basketball-freshman, varsity; Baseball- varsity. MILLER, MARILYN: A.R, Speech Therapy; Pi Beta Phi-social chairman, pledge supervisor; Del- phi; Academic Evaluation Committee; Greek Queen, 1968; Cherry Tree Prin- cess, 1%8. MINTZ, GLORIA JEAN: A.B., English Literature; Young Demo- crats; Big Sis; N.A.D.A. MODARESSI, BIJAN: A.B,, Mechanical Engineer- ing; Soccer Team; International Club; American Society of Mechanical Engineers. MODLY, ILONA MARIA: A.B., Internationa! Affairs; Dean ' s List; Modern Dance; International Student ' s Society; WRGW. MOLESKI, ALEXA MICHELE: A.B., French; Newman Club; Big Sis. MORRISON, PAMELA GAY; A.B., Music. MOSEHAVER, SUSAN: A.B., Psychology. MOSER, PATRICIA JEAN: A.B., International Affairs; Alpha Lambda Delta; French Club-publicity chairman; International Student Society, M05- KOWITZ, SIMOR L, : A.B., Political Science; Delta Phi Epsilon; National Foreign Service Fraternity; Intramural Football and Baseball, Rasputin ' s Ra iders- J u n ior and Sen ior. 314 GARY MILLER MARILYN MILLER GLORIA MINTZ BUAN MODARESSI ILONA MODLY ALEXA MOLESKI PAMELA MORRISON SUSAN MOSEHAVER PATRICIA MOSER SIMOR MOSKOWITZ 315 MARYANNE MOSORJAK MARY MOXNESS ROSEMARY MURPHY ROBERT NAGER ELAINE NAROD MIRIAM NATHAN ISA NATOVITZ RICHARD NEITZ SHARON NIEDERMAN JANET NIMOITYN ELIZABETH NELSON CHRISTOPHER POWELL NIXDORFF NICELEY TOMMY NOONAN MOSORJAK, MARYANNE: A.B., Art Education; Chi Omega-class presi- dent, pledge trainer; Student Council-Strong Hall Representative; Dorm Council; SERVE; Big Sis; Cherry Tree. MOXNESS, MARY L.: A,B., Elementary Education; Pi Beta Phi-corresponding secretary; Panhellenic Delegate; Big Sis; Newman Club; Angel Flight. MURPHY, ROSEMARY: A.B., English Literature; Kappa Kappa Gamma-house chairman, vice presi- dent; University Players; Big Sis; Newman Club; Sisters of the Rain- bow; Hatchet : Messian Chorus; Homecoming Committee; Orientation Committee; Meeh Miss. NAGER, ROBERT ALAN: Business Ad- ministration; Alpha Kappa Psi-vice president; Alpha Phi Omega-corres- ponding secretary; Old Men; I.S.S, ; HilleL NAROD, ELAINE JOYCE: A.B., Political Science; Alpha Theta Nu Scholarship Honorary; Phi Beta Kappa, Tassels; Hatchet; Lifeline; Majorline; Hall Council; Young Demo- crats, NATHAN, MIRIAM MORSEL: A,R., Speech Pathology; Sigma Alpha Eta-vice president; Big Sis; I.S.S. ; HilleL NATOVITZ, ISA: A B„ Speech Arts; Phi Sigma Sigma; Mortar Board-president; Delta Sigma Rho; Forensic Honorary-vice president; Enosian Doha ting-secretary; University players -secret a ry ; Tassels; Varsity Debate Squad; Panhellenic Council- treasurer; Jr. Panhellenic Council-vice president; Big Sis; Cherry Tree, NEITZ, RICHARD WILLIAM: A.B., Political Science; Phi Sigma Kappa- secretary, treasurer, president, inductor; Gate and Key; Young Demo- crats; Homecoming Committee; Old Men; Interfratemity Council Repre- sentative, NELSON, ELIZABETH: A,B., Art History; Delta Gamma-presi- dent; Delphi Spring Concert-chairman; Inaugural Concert- publicity chair- man; Booster Board-vice president; Big Sis; Madrigals, NICELY, CHRIS- TOPHER JOHN, A.B„ Secondary Education. NIEDERMAN, SHARON MAXINE: A.B., English. NIM01TYN, JANET: A.R., Latin. NIXDORFF, POWELL BYRD: A.B., Sociology. NOONAN, TOMMY A.: A,B., History honors; Cherry Tree-photographer; Cricket Club; Foreign Student Represen- tative. NUSSBAUM, SHARON JACQUELINE: A.B., French; Alpha Epsi- lon Phi; Tassels; Big Sis; Dance Production; Welcome Week; French Club. OAKLEY, BARBARA: A,B„ Art History; Pi Beta Phi. OBER, SHEILA RENEE: A.B., International Affairs; Phi Sigma Sigma-corresponding secre- tary; Big Sis; Booster Board; Fall Concert, O’CONNELL, SHARON MAUR- EEN: A.B., History; Alpha Lambda Delta; SERVE; Newman Center; Transferred from Marietta College. OLESZCUK, THOMAS ANTHONY : A.B., International Affairs; Phi Eta Sigma; Chess Club; Political Af- fairs Society-vice president. OLIVER, JOANNA LEIGH: A.B., Sociology; Alpha Delta Kappa; Women ' s varsity-Basketbalh volleyball; Women’s Recreation Association. O ' NEILL, BRIAN GREEN : B.B.A., Transpor- tation; Kappa Sigma-vice president, house maanger, pledge trainer, Gate and Key-vice president; Young Republicans-second vice president; Old Men; WRGW ; Delta Nu Alpha; Intramurals; Student Council; Student Council Treasurer; Student Facilities Director; Inter Collegiate Council; Interfraternity council-secretary ; Dialogue 19-chairman ; Committee on Architectural Barriers to the Physically Handicapped. O ' NEILL, KAREN A,: A.B,, English Literature; Cherry Tree ; International Student Society. SHARON BARBARA OAKLEY SHEILA OBER SHARON O ' CONNELL NUSSBAUM JOANNA OLIVER BRIAN O’NEILL KAREN O ' NEILL THOMAS OLESZCUK 317 ONG, PHILIP Y.: B.S., Engineering; Rifle Team; Institute of Electrical and Electrical and Electronic Engineers; International Students Society. ORR, SUSAN JOYCE: A.B., Art History; People-to-People; Anthropology Club; Dorm Council; Careers Week. OX MAN, BEVERLY CYNTHIA: A.B., English Literature; People-to- People; Hillel. PACKARD, WILLIAM THOMAS: B.S„ Mechanical Engineering; Tau Beta Pi-secretary; Sigma Tau; editor of Meckeleciv; Intramurals; ASME-vice president, president; Transferred from University of Rochester. PATELCUI3, GAIL ANN: A.B., Political Science; Young Democrats; French Club; Chorus; I.S.5. PATTI, CARMINE JAMES: A.B., History; Sigma Phi Epsilon-vice president, president; IFC: Gate and Key- vice president; Intramurals; Old Men; Newman Club; Young Demo- crats. PATTON, JOHN: A.B., History; University Commuters Association, PERL, EDWARD LEE: B.S., Zoology; Gate and Key; Lacrosse-captain; Tau Epsilon Phi-treasurer; Old Men; WRGW. PERLMAN, JAYNI DEE: A.B., Liberal Arts; Hall Representative-Dorm Council, floor president, PERLMAN, JEFFRY L: A.B., Political Science, PERRELLA, PHILIP NICHOLAS: A.R., Psychology. PETERS, KAREN KAY: A.B., Sociology ; Chi Omega; Alpha Kappa Delta; Big Sis; SERVE-executive hoard; Chorus; Cherry Tree Princess. PETERS, MARLENNA JO: A.B., Psychology. PFLUGH, LOIS ANNE: A.B., Sociology; Senior Sportswoman of the Year; Field Hockey; Volleyball; Basketball; Tennis; fntra-residence Hall Council Program Chair- man; Women ' s Recreation Association; MMBB-chairman; Strong Hall-senior assistant. PICKETT, TERI ANNE: A.B., Art History; Film Club Society; Scholarship Advisor; Judicial Board; Resident Assistant, PINE, STUART EDWARD: A.B., Religion; Tau Kappa Epsilon-pledge trainer; Intramurals. PJSETZKY, YICAL: B.S., Mechanical Engineering; AS ME. PITT, PENE- LOPE A.: A.B., French Literature; Alliance Franchise. PLANUTIS, ANN CLAIRE: A.B., French; SERVE. PLOTKIN, MARK LOUIS: A.B., History. PHILIP ONG SUSAN ORR BEVERLY QXMA WILLIAM PACKARD GAIL PATELCUIS CARMINE PATTIE JOHN PATTON EDWARD PERL JAYNI PERLMAN JEFFRY PERLMAN 318 PHILIP KAREN PETERS MAR LENNA PETERS LOIS PFLUGH TERI PICKETT PERRELLA YIGAL PISETZKY PENELOPE PITT ANN PLANUTIS MARK PLOTKIN STUART PINE 319 PRISCILLA POE MARY POLDEN PAULA PONTANI CARROLL POTTER ESTER PREUSS IVONNE RAMOS SUSAN RAPPAPORT CATHERINE RAY LAUREN REED HELEN REICHMANN POE, PRISCILLA A,: A.B., Sociology; WRA; SERVE; UCF; Ecumeni- cal Community. POLDEN, MARY SUZANNE: A.B., English Literature; Hall Council-publicity; LS.S. PONTANI, PAULA ANDREA: A.B., Liberal Arts, POTTER, CARROLL ARNN; A.B., Electrical Engineering; Phi Sigma Kappa; Crew; Business Manager of Mechelcciv; Engineer 1 ® Coun- cil-vice president, treasurer. PREUSS, ESTER: A.B.. French Literature; Alpha Epsilon Phi; I.S.S.-treasurer; Cherry Tree Princess; People-to- People; Big Sis, RAMOS, IVONNE: A.B., International Affairs; People- to-PeopIe; International Student Society-program director; Golden Heart of Sigma Phi Epsilon; Sigma Phi Epsilon Sweetheart, RAPPAPORT, SUSAN I.: A.B., Anthropology; Student life; SERVE; Student Academic Committee-chairman; Free University-chairman; Constitutional revision; Dorm Judicial Board. RAY, CATHERINE: A.B., Russian. REED, LAUREN M.: A,B„ Elementary Education, REICHMANN, HELEN: A.B., Psychology; I.R.H.C.-Scholarship Chairman; Majorline; Big Sis; Orien- tation Committee. REKSHAN II, WILLIAM RICHARD: A.B., Sociology. RELAC, RICHARD STANLEY: A.B,, Russian; Hatchet; Russian Club; German Club. RELKIN, PAUL EDWARD: B.B.A., Business Administration; Wig advertising manager. RETTING ER, ARTHUR L: Accounting; Tau Epsilon Phi. RICE, ELIZABETH A.: A.B., Elementary Education; Big Sis; Newman Club, RICE, RUTH ANN: A.B., Education; Alpha Theta Nu; Alpha Lambda Delta; Sigma Delta Pi-corresponding secretary; Student National Education Association. RICH, JULIAN G. : B.B.A., Alpha Epsilon Pi; Intramurals; Old Men; Hatchet. RICHENBACKER, WILLIAM HUDSON; A.B,, American Thought and Civilization; Christian Science Organization. RICHMOND, PHILIP JOEL: A.B,, Political Science; Ath- letic Director, Mitchell Hall. RIES, LAURA A.: A.B., Elementary Edu- cation; Sigma Delta Tau-ritualist, corresponding Secretary; Tassels; Hall Council Representative; Big Sis. RIOS, ILIA IVETTE: A.B., French Litera- ture; International Students Society-treasurer; Students for better govern- ment. ROBBINS, ARTHUR G. : B.B.A., Accounting; transferred from St. Martin ' s College, Olympia, Washington; Who ' s Who. WILLIAM REKSHAN RICHARD RELAC PAUL RELKIN ARTHUR RETTINGER ELIZABETH RICE RUTH RICE JULIAN RICH WILLIAM RICHENBACHER PHILLIP RICHMOND LAURA HIES ILIA RIOS ARTHUR ROBBINS 321 ROBBINS, RICHARD: A.B., Psychology, ROSE, ANDREA: A.B., Education; Hilld; Young Democrats; Delta Phi Epsilon. ROSE, ANN L. : A.B., Social Studies, Education; Phi Sigma Sigma-pledge mistress; Big Sis; Homecoming Queen Committee; Fall Concert-ticket committee; Spring Concert-entertain- ment chairman, ROSEN, ALAN MARK: A.B., Tau Kappa Epsilon; Delta Phi Epsilon; Alpha Phi Omega: Intramurals; Resident Assistant; Dorm Council, Mitchell Hall. ROSEN, THEODORE HOWARD: A.B., Psychology; Intramurals; Orchestra; University Players; Inaugural Concert. ROSEN- BERG, JOAN L, : A.R., English Literature; Tassels; Hatchet ; Big Sis; Freshman Orientation Committee. ROSEN STOCK, JOAN ELLEN: A.B., Ele- mentary Education. ROSENTHAL, JESSE SAMUEL: A.B., Biology; Aescula- pian Society; Dean’s List; Academic Evaluation Surrey-co-chairman; Sigma Alpha Mu-social chairman and chapter founder; Biology Teacher Assistant; Freshman Orientation Committee; Department of Admissions Guide; Old Men; Young Republicans. ROSOFF, NINA GAIL: A.B., Russian; Alpha Lambda Delta; Dobro Slovo; Russian Club. ROSS, LEONARD N.: A.B., History; Alpha Epsilon Pi; Order of Scarlet; Young Republicans; Publi- cations Committee; Intramurals; Booster Board-special activities director; Stu- dent Council-publicity director; Activities Council. ROSSI, NANCY C.: A.R., Spanish Literature; Zeta Tau Alpha-activities chairman, pledge trainer; Delphi; Intersorority Athletic Board; ROSTOV, JANE: A.B., Secondary Education; Welcome Week; MMBB; Women’s Recreation Association. ROXBROUGH, JANE NORRIS: A.B., English Literature; Hatchet. RUBINSTEIN, BIENA: A.B., Psychology; Dance Production Group. RUBINOW, JUDITH ANN: A.B., Psychology; Transferred from Ohio Wesleyan University; Student Assistant- Psychology Department; Floor President, Thurston Hall, RYAN, PATRICIA ANNE: A.B., English Literature; Big Sis; Newman Club. SAGCAN, CENGIZ: A.B., Economics; Soccer- varsity. SAM MARTINO, JOHN STEVEN: A.B., International Affairs; Young Republicans; Intramurals; WRGW; Dorm Coun- cil-treasurer, president. SANCIER, JULIE M. : A,R., Anthropology; Dean’s List; Anthropology Club; Hilld. SANET, JOHN ALAN: A.B., History; Kappa Sigma-treasurer, Grand Master of ceremonies, guard, intramural chairman; Gate and Key; Hatchet; Intramural Board; WRGW; Academic Suspension and Probation Guide; Young Democrats. RICHARD ROBBINS ANDREA ROSE ANN ROSE ALAN ROSEN THEODORE ROSEN JOAN ROSENBERG JOAN ROSENSTOCK JESSE ROSENTHAL NINA ROSOFF LEONARD ROSS NANCY ROSSI JANE TOSTOV 322 JANE JUDITH RUBINOW BIENA RUBINSTEIN ROXBROUGH JOHN SAMMARTINO JULIE SANCIER CENGIZ SAGCAN PATRICIA RYAN JOHN SANET 323 REBECCA SANFORD KENNETH SCHERER JAMES SAPTENZA NED SCHERER SANDRA SASKA PHYLLIS SCHILLER RICHARD SAUL DAVID SCHLACHTER STELIANOS SCARLIS RONALD SCH LIFTMAN MYRON JOHN SCHLOSSER SCHLOSS MARTHA SCHULMAN CURTIS SCHROEDER JUDITH SCHMIDT DEBORAH SCHURE SUSAN SCHRAUB MARTHA SCHWARTZ SANDRA SCHREIBER SUSAN SCHWARTZ SANFORD, REBECCA FLORENCE: A,R., International Affairs; Hall Coun- cil; Political Affairs Society; Model Government Association. SAPIENZA, JAMES K. : A.B., History; Tau Kappa Epsilon-scholarship chairman; Chaplain; Public Service chairman; vice president; president; rush chairman; Greek Way; Imramurals; Alpha Phi Omega; Student Council; Interfraternity Coun- cil-recording secretary, SASKA, SANDRA SUE: A.B., Journalism; Women ' s Rifle Team; Transferred from Bard College, SAUL, JR, RICHARD RAMBY: A B,j International Affairs; Sigma Phi Epsilon -sec ret ary, treasurer, pledge editors; Gate and Key; Old Men; Newman Club. SCARLIS, STELIANOS GEORGE: A.B., History; Russian Club-vice president; Russian Choir, SCHER- ER, KENNETH JOEL: A.B., International Affairs; Hall Council, SCHERER, NED STEVEN: A.B., Accounting; Delta Tau Delta; Alpha Kappa Psi- treasurer; Baseball varsity ; Basketball-freshman, varsity; Dorm council -presi- dent, SCHILLER, PHYLLIS LEE: A.B„ Elementary Education; Sigma Delta Tau; Young Democrats; Hall Council; Big Sis; Pledge Formal. SCHLACH- TER, DAVID JOEL: A.B., Political Science; Sigma Phi Epsilon -scholarship chairman; IFC delegate, pledge educator; IFC Rush-Book editor; Political Science Intern; Student Council. SCHLIFTMAN, RONALD CHARLES: A,B,, Psychology; Hatchet; Fre- Medical Society. SCHLOSS, MYRON A.: B.S., En- gineering; Engineer ' s Week-chairman; Engineers Council; University Pep Band; Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers; Phi Mu Epsilon. SCHLOSSER, JOHN A,: A, R,, Political Science; Tau Kappa Epsilon-vice president, social chairman; Order of Scarlet; Gate and Key; University Players; Student Council; Old Men; Dean of Men ' s Committee on Inter- residence Hall Council; Ugly Man Contest-chairman; Adams Hall-adminis- trative assistant; Intramurals. SCHMIDT, JUDITH MARGARET: A.B., Edu- cation; Unitarian-Universalist Club-secretary ; Interfaith Forum Committee; Big Sis; Ecumenical Community. SCHRAUB, SUSAN HOPE: A.B., Edu- cation; French Club, SCHREIBER, SANDRA LYNN: A.B., Elementary Edu- cation, SCHROEDER, CURTIS ALAN: B.S., Electrical Engineering; Phi Sigma Kappa-president; Sigma Tau; Alpha Theta Nu; Intramurals, SCHUL- MAN, MARTHA SUE: A.B., Elementary Education; Sigma Delta Tau-vice president, scholarship chairman, corresponding secretary; Delphi-vice president. Booster Board; Big Sis; Hall Council-secretary, treasurer; Fall Concert-secre- tary, SCHURE, DEBORAH M.: A.B., Art History; Sigma Delta Tau-rush chairman; Sweetheart of Alpha Epsilon Pi; Big Sis. SCHWARTZ, MARTHA TEICH : R,R,A„ Business Administration. SCHWARTZ, SUSAN BETH: A.B., Education; Cherry Tree; Student Directory; Transferred from Baltimore Junior College. 325 SCOTT, THOMAS WALTER: B,S, t Zoology; Sigma Nu; Intramurals; Madri- gals; Chamber Chorus; G.W. Players; Aescaulpian Society; Baptist Student Union, SEGAL, PAULA MIRIAM: A.B., Political Science; Dorm Council; Hillel; Big Sis; AMLECPolitical Science, SE1GEL, MARCIE JOYCE: A.B., An History; Transferred from Wheaton College, SELTZER, LAWRENCE JAY: A,B,, Psychology; Intramurals, SELZER, STEVEN MICHAEL: Sociology; Academic Evaluation ; Alpha Phi 0 mega -sec ret ary ; VISA-chairman ; Fall Concert; Order of Scarlet-executive board, reorganization committee; LS.S. ; Student Directory -advertising manager; Alpha Epsilon Pi; Student Council; Student Visit Program; Old Men; Alpha Kappa Delta; Committee on Academic Reform, SHAPIRO, LINDA RAE: B.S., Medical Technology; Alpha Delta Pi; Tassels; Delphi; Hall Council; Hillel; Big Sis; Panhellenic Council-activities representative; Welcome week, SHAW, LAUREN PHYLLIS: A.B,, Art History; Dean ' s List. SHEA, SHEILA fC: A.B., Psychology; Delta Gamma-treasurer; Cherry Tree; WRA-Basketball team, SHULMAN, BETTY JOY: A,B , Art History ; Orientation Committee; Agora Decoration Committee; Ski Cluh ; Young Democrats; Welcome Week; SERVE. SHULMAN, JAC- QUELINE PAULA: A.B., Speech Therapy; Phi Sigma Sigma; Sigma Alpha Eta; Big Sis, SICKLES, CHERYL J,: A.B., Sociology; Gymnastics Club; Stu- dent Council-publicity committee; Religion Colloquium Committee, SIEGEL, RENEE: A.B,, Political Science; Hall Council; Transferred from Queens College; Big Sis; Young Democrats, SILBERMAN, JAY ELLIOTT: A,B., American Thought and Civilization; Pi Kappa Delta; Alpha Theta Nu; Student Council, SILVER, STEVEN ALAN: A.B., Psychology; Phi Sigma Delta; Pre-mcd Society; Hatchet-business staff; Tennis, SILVERTON, RON A: A.B., Psychology; Alpha Theta Nu; Hillel; SERV E-executive board; Dean ' s List. SIMONE, LOIS MARIE ODILE; A,B., Economics; Hatchet: SERVE; Young Republicans; Professor Evaluation; Newman Club. SIMPSON, MARCIA K. : A.B., International Affairs; Kappa Delta-secretary, vice presi- dent, pledge trainer, editor; Panhellenic Council-president; Cherry Tree; The Greek Way; The Encounter- sales manager; Hall council; Booster Board- vice chairman; Welcome Week; Big Sis, SIRKIN, STUART: A.B,, Economics; Omicron Delta Epsilon; I ntra murals; Hatchet- sports editor; Cherry Tree- sports editor; Hillel; Chess Club. SMITH, ANNE CANNING: A.B,, Political Science; Model Government Association; Newman Cluh; Transferred from Smith College. SMITH, DIANNE JUNE: A.B., International Affairs; Alpha Delta Pi; Junior and Senior Panhellenic Council, SMITH, PAUL MC NEILL: A,R., Psychology; Old Men; 1FC delegate-social chairman; Phi Sigma Kappa; Gate and Key. SMITH, SUSAN LEIGH: A.B„ English Literature; Newman Club; 1,3. S,; Cercle Francais; Transferred from University of Richmond. THOMAS SCOTT PAULA SEGAL MARCIE SEIGEL LARRY SELTZER STEVEN SELZER LINDA SHAPIRO LAUREN SHAW SHEILA SHEA BETTY SHULMAN JACQUELINE SHULMAN CHERYL SICKLES RENEE SIEGEL JAY STEVEN SILVER RONA SILVERTON SILBERMAN ANNE SMITH DIANNE SMITH STUART SIR KIN LOIS SIMONE PAUL SMITH MARCIA SIMPSON SUSAN SMITH 327 THOMAS SMITH DIANE SOUTH GENE SOLOMON PATRICIA SONDHEIMER BARBARA J. SONNENSCHEIN SUZANNE SPECK BROOK SPEIDEL SONNENSCHEIN KAREN SPIN DEL STEVEN SPERLING SMITH, THOMAS CY : A.B., Economics; Sigma Chi-vice president; Order of Scarlet-president; Old Men vice president. SOLOMON, GENE M.: A.B., Secondary Education; Sigma Delta Tau; Big Sis; Booster Board; Orientation Committee; Dorm Council; Student Alumni Liaison Committee. SONDHEI- MER, PATRICIA LYNN; A.B., Political Science; Kappa Kappa Gamma- Panhelleitic delegate, marshal, rush chairman; Alpha Theta Nu; Tassels- projects chairman; Mortar Board; Delphi; Big Sis-social chairman, presi- dent; Inaugural Concert-chairman; Career week-co-chairman, SONNENSCHE- IN, BARBARA: A.B., Psychology; Dean’s List, SONNENSCHEIN, J. DORI- AN: A, B., Political Science; Dean ' s List, SOUTH, F. DIANE: A.B., History, SPECK, SUZANNE KRATZOK: A.B., Sociology; Phi Sigma Sigma; Big Sis; Booster Board; Fall Concert; Floor Representative. SPEIDEL, BROOK: A.B., Anthropology. SPERLING, STEVEN M. : A.B., Economics; Sigma Alpha Mu; Hatchet , SPINDEL, KAREN SUE; B.S,, Mechanical Engineering; Sigma Tau-secretary; Tail Beta Pi; ASME: Thurston Hall Council. SPIVAK, SUSAN R.: A,B. S Anthropology; Homecoming-publicity Committee; Big Sis; Anthro- pology ' Club. STABLER, ELLYN BARI: A.B., Psychology; Big Sis; Hall Council Representative; Deans List. Sigma Delta Tau. STARK, PAULA ELIZABETH; A.B,, Sociology; Young Democrats; Chorus; Hi I lei , STEIN- BERG, RICHARD: A.B., International Affairs. STELLAR, GEORGE GRE- GORY : B.S., Electrical Engineering; Engineer’s Council-assistant secretary, treasurer, president ; Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. STEW- ART, JOSEPH V.; A.B., Political Science; Sigma Chi. STEWART, RONALD NEIL: A.B., Political Science. STEWART, STEPHANIE S.: A.B., Inter- national Affairs; Kappa Kappa Gamma-president, pledge trainer; Delphi; ISAB; Big Sis; Homecoming Queen’s Committee. STRAKA, ROSEMARY: A.B., International Affairs; Alpha Delta Pi-vice president, president; Delphi; Cherry Tree-0 reek editor, ISAB-treasurer ; Big Sis; Newman Club, STRAUSS, LINDA M. : A.B., Secondary Education; Big Sis; SERVE; Alliance Francaise; MMBB; Welcome Week. : 28 SUSAN SPIVAK ELLYN STADLER PAULA STARK RICHARD STEINBERG GEORGE STELLAR JOSEPH STEWART RONALD STEWART STEPHANIE STEWART ROSEMARY STRAKA LINDA STRAUSS m MARILYN STRAUSS HARRY STRUNZ ROBERT SUG ARMAN CLAIRE SUGDEN MICHAEL SUSS MAN ALEXANDER SUTHERLAND PAULA SWARTZ DAVID TAXIN ALLAN SWERDLOFF TONI TAYLOR KAREN TANKEL RITA TESORIERO JANE TANNENBAUM JAMES TILLY 330 STRAUSS, MARILYN JOAN: A.B., Political Science; Biology lab assistant; Hall Council; Senior Asststant-Crawford Hall. STRUNZ, HARR J CHRIS- TIAN: B.S., Physics. SUGARMAN, ROBERT A.: A.B., Economics; Sigma Alpha Mu; Omicron Delta Epsilon; Order of Scarlet; Gale and Key; Alpha Theta Nu; WRGW-director of special affairs, SUGDEN, CLAIRE ELIZABETH: A.B , English Literature; Chi Omega-pledge trainer; Big Sis; Orientation Committee, SUSSMAN, MICHAEL STUART: A B., Politi- cal Science; Alpha Epsilon Pi; Alpha Phi Omega-vice president; Student Directory-e d ito r ; Academic Evaluation- coordinator; Hatchet; Wig; Intra- murals; Inaugural Concert-chairman; Old Men. SUTHERLAND, ALEX- ANDER LESLIE: B S,, Engineering; Gate and Key-secretary; Phi Sigma Kappa-pledge president, inductor, vice president, president, outstanding brother; ASME SWARTZ, PAULA RENEE: A.B., Speech Pathology; Alpha Epsilon Phi; Sigma Alpha Eta; Hillel; Welcome Week hostess; Big Sis, SWERDLGFF, ALLAN PAUL: A.B , History; Aesulapian So ciety, TANKEL, KAREN: Elementary Education; Young Democrats; SERVE. TANNENBAUM, JANE ELLEN: A.B , Art History; Big Sis. TAXIN, DAVID ROGER: A B., Political Science; Tau Epsilon Phi-pledge warden, scholarship chairman, rush chairman, historian, vice chancellor; Gate and Key; SBG; Student Union Board; Student Council assistant representative, TAYLOR, TONI ALLEYNE: A.B , International Affairs TESQRIERQ, RITA: A.B., Anthropology; Tassels; Young Republicans TILLEY, JAMES C. : B B.A., Business Administration; Political Affairs Society; Eastern Orthodox Club; SERVE; German Outing Club; Intra- murals. TRACHE, ROBERT: A.B , History; Della Tau Delta; Order of Scarlet; Gate and Key; Alpha Phi Omega; Student Council-orientation director; IFC-social chairman; Homecoming Chairman, I9GG TRACHT- MAN, DINAH ELLEN: A.B., Anthropology; Dean’s List; Big Sis; Booster Board-publicity; Anthropology Club TRGCCOLO, SUSAN MARY: A.B , Art History; University Players; Newman Club TURETT, J. STEPHEN: A.B., Political Science; Student-Faculty Mixer Committee-chairman; Orien- tation Committee TURK, JAMES JOSEPH: A.B., International Affairs; Sigma Nu-presidcnt, treasurer; The Greek Fay -bus in ess manager; Fresh- man Orientation Committee; Old Men; Interfraternity Council. TURNER, CHERYL JANE: A.B , French Literature; Alpha Delta Pi-secretary, stan- dards; Big Sis; Welcome Week. UPSHAW, CHARLES R,; A.B , History VAHEY, ROBERT B. : A B., International Affairs; Sigma Phi Epsilon; Gate and Key; Intramurals; Debate; Old Men. ROBERT DINAH TRACHTMAN SUSAN TROCCOLO j. TURRET! TRACHE CHERYL TURNER CHARLES UPSHAW ROBERT VAHEY JAMES TURK 331 VAN VQQRHEES, ROBERT F. : A.B., Political Science; Gate and Key; Sigma Nu; Greek Way; Young Republicans; Pre-law Society, VANZANDT, JAMES E. ; A.R., Geography; Sigma Nu-recorder; International Students Society; Old Men; Luthern Student Organization. VINCENT, EUGENE GEORGE: A.B,, Political Science; Phi Sigma Kappa-president, treasurer; Gate and Key; Cherry T ree-busmess staff; Intramurals; Old Men, VOGT, ANDREW A.; A.B., Political Science; Political Affairs Society; National Model United Nations; Cave Exploring Club. WACHTEL, P. SPENCER: A.B., Psychology; Sigma Delta Ri; Hatchet-cullurA affairs editor; Wig ; soccer; lacrosse, WAL- MAN, SHARYN ELAINE: A.B,, Elementary Education; Hall Council; Edu- cation Council; Hillel, house committee chairman; SERVE: Big Sis; Welcome Week hostess, WALTERS, CATHY ROSE: A.B., Psychology. WARREN, ILENE YVONNE: A.B., Psychology; Tassels; Psi Chi; Hall Council; Welcome Week; Orientation. WASSERSTEIN, CAROLE B,: A.B„ Elementary Edu- cation; Big Sis; Welcome Week hostess; Hillel; Young Democrats; Upshur Club. WASSERSTEIN, JOEL ALAN: B.B.A., Business Administration; New- man Club; Manager, The Pit. WEINER, BARBARA ZELLA : A.R., Psy- chology; Tassels; Freshman Orientation Committee; Big Sis; Scholarship Ad- visor; Dorm Council. WEINSTEIN, CHARLES ALLEN: A.B., French Litera- ture; Russian Cl ub- president ; Lc Ccrcle Francais. WEXSKOPF, LESLIE S. : A.B., Elementary Education. WEISS, ELLEN: A.R., Sociology; Alpha Epsilon Phi-historian, social chairman, treasurer; Del phi- registration chairman; Big Sis; Welcome Week hostess; Academic Evaluation Committee; Dorm Council- president; Executive Board-secretary; Little Sister of the White Star; Red Cross Representative. WEISS, PATRICIA RHEA: A.B., History; Young Democrats; Hillel, WEITZ, ELLEN: A.B., Elementary Education; Big Sis; Dean’s List; Dorm Council; Hillel; Upshur Club; Welcome Week hostess; Young Democrats, WELDEN, ROSEMARY: A.B.. English Literature; transfer student, WELSH, JOYCE CROCKER: A.B„ Art History and Theory; SERVE: Newman Club. WESSEL, PIERRE, JACQUES: A.B., History; United Christian Fellowship; SERVE; Religion Colloquium. WHINSTON, JEFFREY STUART: R.S., Psychology; Psi Chi; SERVE, ROBERT VAN VOORHEES JAMES VANZANDT EUGENE VINCENT ANDREW VOGT PAUL WACHTEL SHARYN WALMEIN CATHY WALTERS ILENA WARREN CAROLE WASSERSTEIN JOEL WASSERSTEIN 332 BARBARA CHARLES WEINSTEIN LESLIE WEISKOPF ELLEN WEISS PATRICIA WEISS WEINER ROSEMARY WELDEN JOYCE WELSH PIERRE WESSEL JEFFREY WHINSTON ELLEN WEITZ 333 STEPHANIE WILLIAMS JANICE WOLF RICHARD WOLFSIE BRYN WOLINITZ MICHAEL WOLLY FELIX WYSOCKI BARBARA YALISOVE JOHN YATES RONALD YONEMOTO ALICE YOUNGERMAN WILLIAMS, STEPHANIE KATRINA: A,B„ German; Black Students Union-senior assistant; SERV E-chairman of Eastgate project; I,S.$, ; Ger- man Club; Alumni Board Committee. WOLF, JANICE CHERYL: A.B,, Secondary Education; Big Sis; Hatchet; SERVE. WOLFSIE, RICHARD A.: A.B., American Thought and Civilization; Sigma Delta Chi-secretary; Order of Scarlet; JFig-editor; Hatchet; IFC rush delegate, WOLINITZ, BRYN L.: A.B,, Elementary Education; Alpha Epsilon Ph i pari lament a ria n ; Standards Board-chairman social committee; Alpha Epsilon Pi Sweetheart Court; Hall council, program chairman, president; Executive Board; Big Sis; Welcome Week hostess; Dean’s List. WOLLY, MICHAEL STEPHEN: A,B., International Affairs; Alpha Epsilon Pi-best brother; Order of Scarlet-vice president ; Gate and Key ; Omicron Delta Kappa-president ; Alpha Phi Omega; Old Men-president ; Outstanding Junior Man; General Alumni Committee-Student Liaison Committee; Student Government; United Givers Fund student division-chairman; Greek King. WYSOCKI, FELIX MICHAEL: A.B,, Political Science; Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Sigma Delta- secretary; Phi Eta Sigma, Men’s Honorary Society-president; Gate and Key; Student Academic Evaluation; Intramurals; Alpha Theta Mu; Old Men Orientation. YALISOVE, BARBARA: B,S„ Medical Technology; Hatchet; Cherry Tree; Dorm Council; Young Democrats; Transferred from University of Delaware, YATES, JOHN JACKSON: A.B., Public Affairs; Sigma Alpha Epsilon -president, vice president, recording secretary, corres- ponding secretary, rash chairman; Order of Scarlet; Gate and Key; Crew; assistant director-Grientation; Young Democrats, YONEMOTO, RONALD MASAHARU: A.B., Psychology, YOUNGERMAN, ALICE: A.B., English Literature; Tassels; WRGW ; University Players; Young Democrats; In- augural Concert Committee; Hall Council. ZALESKI, MARGARET ANN: A.R., Psychology; I,S,S. ZEMSKY, JUDITH SUSAN: A,B., Education; Sigma Delta Tau; Student Council; Big Sis; Welcome Week; MMBB; Booster Board; Panheltenic Council, ZIGMAN, BEVERLY: A.B,, Elemen- tary Education. ZIMMER, CAROL LAURIE: A.B., Elementary Education; Dean’s List; Cheerleading; Alpha Epsilon Phi-song chairman; Pep Club; Young Democrats; Fall Concert Committee; Welcome Week hostess; Big Sis; Inaugural Concert Committee. ZIMMERMAN, JON L.: B.B.A,, Busi- ness Administration; Intramurals. ZOLA, EILEEN: A.B., Art History; Young Democrats; Alpha Epsilon Phi -ritualist, activities chairman, song chairman; University Players; Big Sis, JOSEPH, JEFFREY: A.B. History, MARGARET ZALE5KI JUDITH ZEMSKY BEVERLY ZIGMAN CAROL ZIMMER JON ZIMMERMAN EILEEN ZOLA JEFFREY JOSEPH 335 LIZ NELSON Homecoming Queen Homecoming Court: TARA CONNELL, JUDY SOWN, ESTHER PKEUSS, MARY HAAS. 336 wfcm The so-called “student protest has not arisen as a collegiate fad. It is not merely a sign of youth; it is the force of youth mixed with knowledge. Taught beautiful theories by their professors, many are incapable of dealing with the realities wrought by less idealistic generations. Disillusioned by the stark contrasts many see about us, our target is human nature as much as the American power- structure. It is a protest of the voices of “ought” versus the forces of “is.” l rv Washington Post The protest cannot he written off as the machinations of arrogant militants. Most are quietly alienated, working for reform from within. The form of the protest is a continuem of responses. It is blindness to compare the student protest with the swallowing of goldfish. What is the student protest of today will he the voter protest of tomorrow. As McCarthyism was a reaction to the New Deal, so the protest is a reaction to the social retrenchment imposed by McCarthyism. Some will vocally settle down as they busy themselves paying mortgages, hut their concepts of national goals will continue. Washington Evening Star The call for change at GW is, in essence, a phase of the student protest. Its manifestations, from the radical to the rational, from G Street to the Student Assembly, have been pictured in these pages. The Cherry Tree is nearly a closed book, but what the Cherry Tree has pictured is page one of future history. Cherry Tree Staff MARV ICKOW, Photography Editor ; P A T R T C I A PARSONS, Editor-in- chief; PHIL BROWN, Assistant Edi- tor; GAIL BARTH, Associate Editor . herry Tree , 1969 was moved off campus this year in deference to the new Hatchet print shop. In its new ‘underground’ headquarters at the apartment of the editor and associate editor, it sought to capture the flavor of an activist year both on and off campus. The key words of this year’s Cherry Tree would be improvisation and transition: improvisation while we wait a year for a dark room and office in the new student center; and transition from a revised traditional yearbook to a revised current one. Both characteristics of this year’s Cherry Tree caused some organized disorganization, but hopefully they will enable the yearbook to continue as a viable student organization. An extensive introduction was included to show various aspects of the University. The Academics section chose a representative sample of professors and, by means of personal interviews, sought to give them a personality as well as a face. The Activities section attempted to do features on a random sample of University functions. A Publication insert gives excerpts from student publications and hopefully captures memorable moments more permanently than in newsprint. The Organizations and the Greeks tried to become more informal, natural and personal. Sports tried to be more informative. And the Seniors have included candids to break up all the smiling faces. The conclusion is an editorial comment on the University’s relationship to its environment. As for the patrons — like the picture says, the “song is love.” They at least postponed our bankruptcy. 346 r 4 ' ) V - 1 1 1 JUDY NAUMANN, Organisations Co Editor ; PAM JORDAN, Creek Assistant Editor JOE HANDY, Greek Associate Editor; SANDRA GREENBERG, Patrons Editor; KAREN KUKER, Academics Co- Editor i MONA MELANSON, Sports Assistant Editor; MARY HAAS, Greek Editor; JAN FAUL, Activities Editor; EVELYN HUWYLER, Senior Citations Edi- tor; SANDRA ALTMAN, Academics Co-Editor . 347 MB Patrons Dr. and Mrs. Walter W. Abramitis Mr. and Mrs. Joseph F. Actor Mr. and Mrs. Eugene J. Ambrogi Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Anderson Joseph C. Babb Mr. and Mrs. Lousi F. Baragona Mr. and Mrs. Ernest J. Barbieri Dr. and Mrs. Stanley Barr Bijou Barth Mr. and Mrs. Albert Battista Jack W. Bellinger Mr. and Mrs. Barry Berg Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Berg Dr. and Mrs. Reuben Block Jules and Esther Blum Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Braff Mrs. Henry Breckinridge Mr. and Mrs. Leo Brenner Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Brizek Mr. and Mrs. Jack Brown Mr. and Mrs. Leopold M. Brown Johnny Carson Mr. and Mrs. Victor C. Case John E. Chamberlin Ellyn B. Charlestein Dr. and Mrs. J. Kapp Clark Jon Cohanne Mr. Joseph A. Cohen Mr. and Mrs. Stanley L. Cohen and Family Shirley and Samuel Cole Mr, and Mrs. John F. Cummins Mr. and Mrs. Leo Cutler Mr. and Mrs. Leon Davidowitz Mr. and Mrs. Steve Deifik Dr. and Mrs. Michael B. Di Leo Mr. and Mrs. Leo M. Draisin Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Duke Mr. and Mrs. William G. Duvall Mr. and Mrs. I. Eisenstadt Mr. and Mrs. D. Elkins The Ellman Family Dr. and Mrs. Charles Farber Mrs. Sydney R. Feigenson Mr. and Mrs. Myron Finer Mr. and Mrs. Edward Fisher Mrs. Irene Forman Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Foster The Fowle Family Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Fox Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. Frasca Mr. and Mrs. George F. Friedlander Mrs. Marcus Galyean Mrs. Irene S. Garverick Martin Gelobter Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Gershon Paul D. Gilbert Terry R. Glass Mr. and Mrs. William Glassner Mr. and Mrs. Morris H. Goldman Mr. and Mrs. Rubin Goldstein Patricia Goodman Mr. and Mrs. Morris Gordon Mr. and Mrs. Gerard Graines Mr. and Mrs. Sherman M. Greenberg Mr. and Mrs. Donald W. Greendahl Mr. and Mrs. Edward P. Gurny Mr. and Mrs. John H. Hamilton Mr. and Mrs. Joseph B. Handy Mr. and Mrs. Jack Stanley Haney Mr. and Mrs. Gustav Haug Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Heller Dr. and Mrs. E. W. Higgins Jim Hirsch Mrs. W. Gordon Hoffman Mr. and Mrs. Ernest W. Hornig Mr. and Mrs. Otto Hruby C. Y. Hsieh E. R. Hubenette Mr. and Mrs. Jacob S. Hurwitz Dr. and Mrs. David J. Impastato Jack the Cat Mr. and Mrs. Walter S. Jaslow Mrs. Major Emil Johnson Leonard Kahn and Family 349 Patrons Dr. Harry Kanin Mr. and Mrs. Isadore Karp Dr. and Mrs. Jules J. Kelsey Mr. and Mrs. Albert W. Kiefer Mrs. Emmanuel H. Klein Dr. and Mrs. Michael S. Kline Dr. and Mrs. Albert Kleinman Mr. and Mrs. David Knie Mr. and Mrs. William R. Knight Mr. and Mrs. Herman Koblenz Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Koch Mr. and Mrs. Eward Korth Mr. and Mrs. Edward Kulick Mr. and Mrs. Philip A. Kulin Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Lackman Dr. and Mrs. George H. Laskey, 3rd Mr. and Mrs. K. R. Lawson Mr. and Mrs. L. Lehn Candice M. Limmer Carol L. Lisbeth Dr. and Mrs. Alfred C. Lowy Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Luloff Mr. and Mrs. John P. Malik Mr. and Mrs. George L. Marks Mr. and Mrs. Wayne S. McClinton Bill McGeary Dr. Lester Mermell R. Adm. and Mrs. Thomas H. Morton Mr. and Mrs. M. Jerry Nadel Dr. Leonard Nadler Aida and Max Nargil Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Natovitz Mr. and Mrs. Albert M. Newman Carol Devereux O’Connor Dr. and Mrs. John F. O’Leary Matthew C. Okoniewski Mr. and Mrs. Abraham J. Oxman Mr. and Mrs. George Parsons Mr. and Mrs. Irving Pearl Mr. and Mrs. Norman Petersen Mr. and Mrs. Louis Pickett Mr. and Mrs. Malin S. Porter Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Powers Mr. and Mrs. Harry Raker Dr. and Mrs. Sidney M. Rappaport Dr. and Mrs. Leonard Rapoport Harlan Remsberg Mr. and Mrs. Clay C. Rice Mrs. Donna S. Rodden Mr. and Mrs. George K. Rogers Mr. and Mrs. Bert Rose Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Rosen Mr. and Mrs. George K. Rosenfeld, Jr. Norman Rubin Friend of Jeffrey Rubinstein Mr. and Mrs. Saul Rudes Martha Anne Russell Mr. and Mrs. Horace N. Sampson Dr. and Mrs. William F. Sanders Mrs. Houston E. Schlosser, Sr. The Schures Dr. and Mrs. Saul A. Schwartz Brig. Gen. and Mrs. Richard M. Scott Mr. and Mrs. Jerome M. Slavin Mr. and Mrs. Frank S. Smith Mr. and Mrs. Herman Sody Mr. and Mrs. Seymour Sperling Dr. and Mrs. Milton J. Stark Mr. and Mrs. S. R. Strand Mr. and Mrs. John F. Strempfer Mr. John C. Trivisionno Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Vallone Joseph C. Vargyas, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph B. Vinick Dr. and Mrs. Justin Weiker Dr. Harold Weimer Mr. and Mrs. Laurence S. Weiss Mr. and Mrs. Julius Wile Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Wolfsie Dave’s One Hour Martinizing Ex-Speed-Ite Service, Inc. William Fox Clothiers Little Vienna Restaurant Park Lane Pharmacy The cover is a reverse print, double exposed pho- tograph by Betsy Sharp of “Trees”. The end sheets could be called “Cherry” red. Many thanks to Harvey Brasse; Jay Boyar; our advisor. Professor Robert Willson; the Senior Citations Faculty Committee of Professors Robert Jones, Charles Reid, Ronald Thompson, George Hennigan, Robert Ganz, and Miss Diane Weber; Dave Speck; Dean Nan Larabee; Tassels, the Hunter Publishing Company; Boris Bell; GW maintenance; Billy DeRosa; and all those who cooperated with the book. A special award goes to Big Sis and the Engineers’ Council for par- ticular patience with their pictures. Photography Credits SETH BECKERMAN: 6. 18, 22, 29, 74, 216, 218, 236, 243, 244, 245. JANA BLACK: 31, 242. BERL BRECHNER: 120, 121, 226, 227, 277, 336, 337, 346, 351. SUE COLE: 75, 178, 184, 185, 340, 341. B. D. COLEN: 79, 90, 91, 96, 101, 348. JAN FAUL, Activities Editor ; 21, 26, 27, 51, 72, 80, 82, 83, 88, 90, 92, 93, 94, 104, 105, 108, 109, 110, 111, 112, 113, 114, 118, 119, 122, 123, 124, 125. MARGOT FINN: 28. ARTHUR GOLDMAN: 136, 139, 146, 147, 150, 152, 153, 155, 158, 160, 161, 162, 163, 172, 173, 176, 177. MARC CROSS: 38, 39, 46, 53, 55, 64, 65, 68. DELL HOLMES: 39, 44. 54, 58, 60, 61, 63. 68, 69. 140, 158, 149, 164, 165, 166, 167. TOM HUNSUCKER: 17, 86, 87, 248, 249. MARV ICKOW, Photography Editor: 17, 34, 43, 62, 80, 81, 84, 85, 112, 113, 180. 181, 183, 193, 214, 220, 228, 240, 246, 247, 251, 253, 257, 258, 260, 261, 262, 263, 264, 265, 266, 267, 271, 274, 276, 277, 278, 279, 344, 345. LESLIE MANTIN: 168. RICK MINK: 56, 57. JUDY NAUMANN: 136, 139, 141. 146, 147, 150, 152, 153, 154, 157, 158, 160, 161, 162, 163, 164, 165, 166, 167, 170, 174, 175. TOM NOONAN: 102, 103, 142, 143. KIT O’NEIL: 138, 159. PATRICIA PARSONS, Editor-in-Chief: 27, 48, 192, 347. DAVE PASCUCCI: 232, 238, 253. Washington Post: 106, 107, 343. HENRY RESNIKOV: 250, 252, 254, 255, 256, 257. DAVE ROSEMAN: 156. BETSY SHARP: 5, 6, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 19, 23, 24, 50, 70, 82, 83, 84, 85, 88. 89, 90, 95, 134, 135, 190, 191, 194, 198, 200, 202, 204, 206, 208, 210, 212, 224, 234, 338, cover. BILL SHRINER: 114, 115. WAYNE THOMPSON: 20, 28, 40, 41, 45, 47, 49, 52, 94, 95, 171, 196, 222. 226. 230. ANDY WILE: 76, 77, 78, 79, 144, 145, 186, 187, 190. Art Work by PETER MIKELBANK. 3 Winston- Sofern HUNTER PUBLISHING COMPANY North Carolina 352
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.