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1961 OAK INDIANA STATE COLLEGE Within these pages are hundreds of pictures, each one like an impressionistic painting relying for completion on the eye of the viewer. You are the viewer. As you turn your kaleido- scopic mind, the pictures used here will shift and rearrange themselves giving you with each reading a new book. For it is you with your experiences and associations who give life to the 1960-61 OAK, and you yourself are a shifting, ever- changing thing. A moment of time has been frozen in each of these pic- tures — a moment which can never be relived or recaptured. Thus, as time passes and as you change, your impression of each picture will change also, for this book is not independ- ent of you but rather a part of your experience and as such a part of you. This book will age with you, providing happy memories first — nostalgia or even sadness later. TABLE OF CONTENTS TITLE PAGE ADMINISTRATION STUDENT LIFE 1 4 14 CURRICULA AND SENIORS 34 HONORARY GREEKS SOCIAL GREEKS ORGANIZATIONS SPORTS PATRONS 108 120 156 182 198 J ■- 5 1 ■■■.-sr- s jU r r r VT 4 MtfArjI I ADMINISTRATION PRESIDENT PRATT Indiana is by far the largest state college in the Com- monwealth of Pennsylvania having an undergraduate enrollment of 3,125 and a graduate enrollment of 900 in addition to 200 part-time students. The physical plant of the College has greatly ex- panded during the past ten years. During the past year there have been completed two dormitories, Wahr Hall and Langham Hall; a science building, Walsh Hall; a music building, Cogswell Hall; an addition to the Keith School to house the several clinics; a new library, Stab- ley Library; and a new Student Union building con- structed by the Student Cooperative Association, In- corporated. During the coming year we expect to construct on the campus a new athletic field, three more dormitories for women, and a Home Economics building. Plans will also be drawn for a new field house, a dormitory for men, and a new dining room. While the physical facilities of the College have been expanded the faculty and administration are looking forward to an expansion of the curricular offerings as well. At the present time the College now offers cur- ricula in elementary education and secondary educa- tion and the special fields of music, art, home econom- ics, and business education. During the past year an- other special curriculum was added in special educa- tion. In the fields of graduate study the College now offers degrees in ten separate fields. The College looks forward to an expansion in 1970 to accommodate more than 5,000 students in order to keep pace with the rapidly growing student population desiring to attend institutions of higher learning in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Patrick F. McCarthy James L. OTooIe President Vice President Punxsiitawney Sharon Robert Reynolds Secretary Pittsburgh ( ' ;irl S, Wcyandl Treasurer Indiana Earl R. Handler Indiana BOARD OF TRUSTEES R. Dudley Tonkin Cherry Tree A. R. Pechan Ford City ADMINISTRATION Dr. Cordier Dean of Instruction Dr. Davis Director of Student Teaching and Placement Mis,s Esch Refiistrar Dr. Hadley Dean of Students Mr. Schuster Business Manager Miss Newkerk Dean of Women Dr. Nicholson Director of Public Relations Mr. Schnell Dean of Men Dr. Stright Director of Graduate Studies ADMINISTRATION Mr. Ganley Assistant Dean of Men Dr. Hoenstine Miss Palmer Assistant Director of Sltidenl Teaching Assistant Dean of Women Dr. Stouffer Assistant Dean of Instruction 10 LIBRARY At one point in every year a school seems to reach a high point. It may be a winning sports team, an outstanding personality, or an excep- tional theatrical production. This year Indiana reached its high point with the opening of the Rhodes R. Stablcy Library. Students looked for- ward to elbow room and more in the reference areas. They looked forward to a better opportu- nity to use microfilm readers, microcard readers, and phonographs and typewriters. Above all, how- ever, students anticipated new and greater num- bers of books which they hoped would till in some of the gaps on the library shelves, and since the new library is so close to the women ' s dormitory, they may even look forward to library dates. Mr. Lafranchi Head Librarian 11 At. • « I w. STUDENT COOPERATIVE ASSOCIATION u ?m Mr. Lingenfelter Mr. Baker Mr. Fetterman J 12 STUDENT HEALTH Dr. Waldo 13 14 4 STUDENT LIFE 15 Freshmen make the scene. Till death do us part. SEPTEMBER Why is everybody picking on me? What am I doing here? ; ' iW r?. ' ' ;ti :,  IfiTi; ' ., . ' ,.- M ' What ' s this going to be when it ' s finished? Set ' em up! OCTOBER Yeah! But will it fly ' . ' Watch the clean helmet, Buddy. Take your time. We have an hour yet. Which way are we supposed to turn? Put a little fun in your life — try dancing. Whiil ' Mc uorry? A So that ' s vour little girl? Buick Koes Tri-Sig. Congratulations! Dig that blonde in row three. OCTOBER The line forms on the right! Typical odds at I.S.C. •Tl — I wonder if he ' ll call tonight? Polish 3 times a week. 21 Benny Goodman and friends. The lei of ihc lust prom queen. I lold you so. NOVEMBER n H BHk ' l l tf Q m ■Wasting a vote. Look out! Here comes another Democrat. 22 Wired for sound. Here rests the memory of Emily Post. I want a caramel sundae. Cool, man! Cool! What ' s the penalty for fraud? DECEMBER It ' s a bird. M Biology was never like this! 24 Stairway to the stars. Million-dollar dream. If you entered a battle at this point . . . ' 25 Promise them anything, but give them chicken. ' I know you ' re hungry, but I have a few words DECEMBER If you don ' t like it you don ' t have to eat it. 3 ir n When I sing, everyone sings 26 I wonder how they passed the entrance test. C trt — 1 ' 3[ ' !W B i.1 JANUARY p ffi- f , They must have given me someone else ' s grades. Hurryl The section will close. 28 Dedication at the new Union. I ' d take more but that ' s all I can carry. I ) i- i - ' -- r Welcome to the Union. Snow! Snow! Snow I Snow! 29 FEBRUARY There must be a better way to spend Saturday afternoon. I ' ll teach you to wink at my girl All for my roommate. Let ' s have a man-to-man talk. 30 I knew our geometry would come in handy. If you don ' t go out with me I ' ll jump. Watch out! You ' ll break my heart. The Sophomores swing. 31 SWINGOUT I960 PAJAMA GAME % [ SALE H :M ml H YiDii l 32 CULTURAL LIFE The following is a list of all Cultural Life programs for the year: Les Grande Ballet Canadien Oetober 6 Canadian Players, Ltd., Julius Caesar November 7 The Weavers, Folk Singers December I Cili Wang, Comedienne February 1 Pittsburgh Symphony February 14 Cleveland Playhouse March 6 34 AND SENIORS 35 Dr. Kipp, Chairman Art may be the way in which we real- ize our perfection, or it may be what gives the highest quality to your mo- ments as they pass. To the artist it is both of these — and more. It is the final turn of a wheel — the final movement of a hand — which completes a bowl. It is the idea of a painting transferred to canvas just as you imagined it. It is a piece of quartz enclosed in silver or an abstract concept woven into a tap- estry. It is crushed glass melted on cop- per and the curve of muscles above the hip caught in clay or marble. Art is expression, purgation, transfer- ence from mind to material. It is the abil- ity to recognize and appreciate beauty in form, line, composition and color and the willingness to lead others to this appre- ciation. ■HKjM k 36 K ll ' ' ART SENIORS FRED A. BARKLEY CHARLES R. BARR Clarksburg Martinsburg Tyrone Confluence Pittsburgh FRANKLIN P. GARLAND ROBERT A. GRAZETTI BEVERLY A. HAMILTON Johnstown Apollo MRS. ARLENE RYGALSKI HENK Pittsburgh ROBERT B. HILD Natrona Heights BEVERLY A. HINMAN CLIFTON A. HUTTON Rouscville Indiana MRS. VALERY ANDERSON KAUFMAN Erie PATRICIA F. KRONEN JOSEPH KUZMIN JUDITH McCANN ADELE R. MAUST Tarentum ART SENIORS © €t ' M. ' i West Brownsville MRS, GRETA DONGES MOORE Meyersdale CAROL A. NEELY Beaver Falls Cokeburg Johnstown JOHN V. PASTOREK Tarentum MRS. LINDA BROUGHER SHAFFER Johnstown NANCY L. SHUNKWILER Indiana LAELA PHYLLIS PACE MRS. JANET N. PARKER 40 URSia.A H. STAMMI R KDWARD B. SIKIN BERNARD 1 . VANCiRIN, JR. ELEANOR VOLANSKY MRS. R FBECCA WHBER N. GREG WILLIAMS DOROTHY L. YUHAS DONNA L. ZANARINI Philip.sburg Slickville Sykcsville Elizabeth Greensburg Mr. Drumheller, Chairman The world may be fast becoming a world of automation, but it has not yet fully learned how to keep its own financial records, how to take its own dictation, how to do its own typing, or how to make its own master carbons. When it does — when the world can run itself and man can devote all of his time to making poems or to space flight — there will be no need for the business world, but just now there is a world of offices, and the Business De- partment is preparing people for those offices. As long as there is an account ledger, a typewriter, a shorthand pad, a mimeo- graph machine, or material to be sold there are jobs in the business world for millions who do not go on to college and for many who do. It is not enough that they strike the s instead of the d key or balance the accounts payable ledger correctly. They must also have business ethics and a feeling of responsibility and usefulness in their jobs. The business- bound person needs both technical and ethical training. The training of teachers to guide students to this knowledge is the desire of Indiana ' s Business Depart- ment. BUSINESS qm KSL BUSINESS SENIORS JAMKS AUDEY RICHARD C. AYERS J. DONALD BARTOLOMUCCI DWIGHT E. BROCIOUS FRANCIS T. BUYDOS MICHAEL W. CARLSON JEAN M. CASOLO DAVID B. CLOSKY JUDITH L. DOMINICK DALE L. ERAS C. DAVID ESCH ELIZABETH ANN GALLO H. WILLIAM GARDNER PATRICIA E. GEORGE JAMES L. GESIN LAWRENCE L. GONZALEZ JOHN GOWARTY STANLEY W. GRAY Dixonville Indiana Kane Ridgeway McKeesport Cabot Ernest Nanty-Glo Vandergrift Wexford MYRA R. GROSSER GEORGH D. GUNNER Barking [ ' ittsbiirgh HARRY E. HAENIG STANLEY J HARRIS RUSSELL D. HINDMAN KAY D HOWELLS PAUL W. HUNTER DOLORES C. JANCECH Library Ford City Mononf;ahela Johnstown West Natrona - BUSINESS SENIORS ANITA JANE KAHLE CONRAD F. KAMINSKI Clarion JAMES E. KARDOHELY PATRICK J. KELLY JOSEPH F. KLEIN RICHARD J. KREMPASKY MARIE F. LAMBERT GEORGIA A. LAMPROPOLOS Morrisdale Meyersdale St. Marys Iselin Johnstown DONALD P. LOWMAN GLENDA McCUNE JOAN I. McGREEVEY MARY JANE McMILLEN BARBARA J. MARSHALL EDWARD E. MILLER WILLIAM A. MINGLE JOSELYN M. MOLLECA MRS. NORMA WARD MURDICK Indiana Reynoldsville Curwensville Canister Philipsburg Clymer 46 NANCY R. POLLOCK JACK D. RININGER JEAN J. SABOLOVICH CATHERINE E. SCHEETZ JOHN D. SHORIINC ARItR WILLIAM A. SMITH MICHAEL S. SOUCHOCK RITA A. TALIANl ReynoldsviUe MARY JANE TOROK AMADEO C. TORTORELLA Brockway NANCY L. WEISMAN JOHN THOMAS WEYANT MARLENE J. WILEY MARY ANN WILSON CECIL L. WOODLE VIRGINIA M AKSICK Meadville Mt. Union Clairton 47 9 ' Dr. Lore. Chairman A person can have mastery of subject matter and still not be a teacher. He can understand the functions of the educa- tional system and still not be a teacher. The teacher must have both an under- standing of his subject and a knowledge of the system in which he is teaching. He must understand something of the moti- vation of students — their problems, their desires, their competencies at different ages — and it is in the Education Depart- ment that these problems are investigated and analyzed. It may be the use of audio-visual ma- terials as motivating forces the student is studying. Maybe he is investigating the development of speech and the methods for correcting defects in speech. Maybe the student needs to know how Stanford- Binet scores are computed, or how statis- tics can be used as an aid in objective testing. In many cases students may be discussing the development, the aims, or the approaches used in our education system. No matter what it may be, it is all aimed at taking an educated person and converting him into a person familiar with education and educational processes — in short, a teacher. EDUCATION nm ANN L. HERTZ DONALD F. Mcpherson JANET ONDRIZEK DIANA LEE PALLO ROBERT SMITH JAMES STANGARONE SPEECH AND HEARING SENIORS POLLYANNE GRIFFITH DON ELLIOTT HALL Ellwood Ciiy Harrisburg Zelienople Gibsonia Pittsburgh 49 Dr. Lott, Chairman The end depends upon the beginning, and the end product of our educational system depends upon the quahty of our elementary teachers. If they have aroused in their pupils an enthusiasm for Mathe- matics and Science we have a successful system. If they have guided their pupils to do good things in Art, Music and Literature, we have a healthy system. If they have given their pupils adequate opportunities for self-expression, we have a healthy pupil. And if they have in- structed their pupils in such a way as to give them sympathy and freedom from prejudice, we have a healthier world. This is a large order, and no one has ever said that the elementary teacher ' s job is easy. In one day he must allay fears, relieve anxieties, combat bad or in- different home attitudes, and still be con- structive in class. He must have knowl- edge, understanding, sympathy — in short, wisdom — and this is not easy to come by. It is little wonder, then, that the Elemen- tary Department is one of the busiest de- partments on Indiana ' s campus. ELEMENTARY 50 V€k M s « ELEMENTARY SENIORS NANCY J. ABRAHAM Greensburg PAIRICIA J. ANDERSON Indiana RONALD T. ANTHONY Carnegie MARGARET A. BARNETT Bruin SUSAN C. BARNETT Bradford LINDA J. BAUGHMAN Latrobe CAROLE SUE BECK Leechburg JUDY BELL New Castle CAROL L. BEURY Blairsville BARBARA BRAGG BOBLICK Indiana MARY ELLEN BOWSER Kittanning JO ANN BUSSARD West Newton JAYNE A CALDWELL Spangler MINNIE MARY CARNABUCI Avonmore BETTY J. CARNAHAN Sharon CAROL J. CHAPMAN Indiana EUGENE J. CHIODO Carnegie SAUNDRA J. CHOFF Ellwood City 52 MARY KAY COI I II K MAR ' LOUISE COLUMUUS jUDii II I KinrrAP cope ROBERT P. CORTESE JOAN M. CRONAUER BARBARA ROSE DAVIS JUDY ANN DAYTON RENA EILEEN DeZANET DOROTHY I. DiTULLIO New Bethlehem Elmora North Braddock Pittsburgh Leechburg Export Chambersville MRS. DONNA J. EDWARDS MARY ANN ENGLE E. JEANNE FAIT GWENETH E. FOX JOAN M. FRANSKO ANN ELIZABETH FREANEY KA FRENCH SALL ' ' A. FR E BARBARA A. GEE Indiana Beaver Greensburg Clearfield McKeesport Bradford Butler Monongahela Pittsburgh 53 ELEMENTARY SENIORS KAY A. GEORGE KAREN GAY GILPIN BETTY HARTMANN PATRICIA A. HAUGHT MRS. ANNA JANE HICKS GORDON HITCHINGS DWIGHT D. HOAGLAND JOAN HOLLENBAUGH JOYCE E. HOLSOPPLE Homer City Tyrone Indiana Clymer Clairton Beaver Gray MRS. I.ORNA NF-:STOR HUTION LINDA S. KESI.AR CAROLYN R. KIRSCHMAN PATRICIA A. KRUIS MRS. JOAN E. LAMISON LORIS L, LANGHOUT CATHERINE LANTZ LYNN W. LARSON LUCILE E. LAUGHLIN Indiana llanisburj; Pillsburgh Utahville Kittanning Washington Jewett Pittsburgh .t 9 i ANNAMAE LAWSON GERALDINE L. LEITL JUDITH A. LISKA LILLIAN R. LONG MARGARET D. LONG MILDRED R. LONGENECKER HELEN G. LUTHER LOU ANN LUX MRS. BETTY JO McCLELLAND Pittsburgh North East Davidsville Johnstown Wilkinsburg Ellwood City Ligonier Johnstown Beaver ELEMENTARY SENIORS M. BAYONNE McDOWELL Sligo GAIL McMANUS Vandergrift . R ALICE McMillan Pittsburgh NANCY A. MANGIN Monaca BONNIE L. MARTIN Lemont Furnace NANCY A. MFCHLING Brackenridge MARY CATHERINE MIRTO Johnstown FARL MOORE Emporium ROGER J. MORGAN Altoona MARY ORAVEC CHARLOTTE M. PATTERSON MRS. BETTY E. PEACH New Florenc 57 ELEMENTARY SENIORS DIANH K. PHARSON Windber kOSANN HKLLICCIONE Butler EVELYN C. PHEIFER Pittsburgh ALICE PILLOCK Nanty-Glo MARGARET J. PORTER Greensburg ELAINE C. POSTLEWAITE Rural Valley MARY ANN PREPELKA West Homestead H. ANN PROBERT Johnstown BARBARA A. RECESKI Indiana CARNA L. REED Reynoldsville PEGGY E. REESE Marlinsburg MRS. DORIS k. ROHLAND Uniontown KENNETH J. ROMETO Turtle Creek LOU RENE RUSHE Kennywood JUDY L. RYAN Pittsburgh ANITA L. SABO Johnstown DOROTHY A. SCHORMAN Duke Center SAMUEL PAUL SCHURR Johnstown HAr HARA L. SCHWARTZ LaRUK S. SCHWIKIAN NANC Y JANE STRAUSS NAN( Y J. SWIKA BRUCF A. THOMAS PATRICIA A. THOMPSON KATHl.l-FN J. IRKULA MARJORIE A. TURLEY MRS. BETTY JoANNE VICINI McKccsport Rcynoldsvillc Mineral Point East McKccsport Mt. Pleasant Cherry Tree CONNIE D. VOLK BARBARA ANN VOYTKO MARILYN R. WALLBAUM MELANIE E. WALTER GEORGETTA A. WATSON JUDITH A. WAUGH ANN L. WILLIAMS DALE G. WILLIAMS WENDY K. WILSON Ligonier RutTsdale Clymer Pittsburgh Duke Center Punxsutawney Bradford 59 Dr. Cireen. ( hcurman When I use a word, Humpty Dumpty says in Alice Through the Looking Glass, it means just what I choose it to mean — neither more nor less. The question is, said Alice, whether you can make words mean so many dif- ferent things. The question is, said Humpty Dumpty, which is to be master — that ' s all. Making the student the master of words is the function of the English De- partment. Through semantics, students learn to see the relationship between words and men. In philology the inter- action of words with words to form sen- tences is discussed and analyzed. In liter- ature courses the student learns some- thing of the application of words and the interaction between words and emotions. Aside from the courses are the student publications — The Oak, The Penn, The Indiana Student Writes, and The Cue, where students are given an opportunity to apply their knowledge. ENGLISH-SPEECH nm ENGLISH-SPEECH SENIORS DOROTHY BAKER LARRY R BELL JOSEPH P. BEDNAR THEDA G. BENCE DEANA J. BLANCHARD MABEL JANE BUSH ROBERT C. CABLE SANDRA R. CHITTISTER AMELIA M. CITRO Apollo Marion Center McadviUe Philipsburg Pittsburgh Bradford Mt. Pleasant ' % DORIS ANN DAVIS Kittanning J. BRUCE DeLOCHE. JR. Pittsburgh KENNETH R. ELKIN Irwin DONALD F. FICCO Greensburg MONA ELAINE FISHER Curwensville MRS. JOAN WHITLATCH FREEMAN Irwin DONALD P. FRITZ MRS SANDRA P FRITZ JAMES R. GELETKA Indiana ALICE GELSTON BETTY L. GIBSON MARY ANN GRABAN PHILAPENA M. GRANIRE IRA M. HANDELSMAN MARIE I. HAZLETT LINDA C. HUGHEY HELEN KIRKLAND Ford City McKecsport Homestead Homer City California Blairsville ENGLISH-SPEECH SENIORS MARCIA M. KRAYNICK Northampton LOIS M. LOTT Verona CAROLYN MORGAN Johnstown LAWRENCE F. NALEPA Oil City MONICA J. OSWALT Graceton JUDITH A. PAUL Conemaugh LINDA M. RABATIN Verona MARY M. REESE Greensburg LOIS E. SCHULTZ Ford City 64 IHOMAS H. SKILER CHARLI-S J SMIIU MARTHA SNYDER ALMA FAYF. STFELE SHIRLEY S. STEVENS NELLIE F. STEVENSON RICHARD L. STIVASON CATHY TALERICO CAROL A. TOBIAS JUDITH R. TUCKER JUDY M. VAGO MARY JUDITH WAROS Piltsburtih McKccsporl hJik Pittsburgh Sewickley Blairsville Freeporl Pittsburgh Greensburg Titusville New Castle Vandererift Dr. Bieghler, Chairman Whether the story of the Tower of Babel is factual or symbolic is of no concern to us here. What is of concern to us, how- ever, is that the multi-lingual develop- ment of man has created barriers to understanding among men. Of course we have translators and translations, but translation is at best an echo and echoes have been known to be deceptive. In a world of personal diplomacy such as we are now living in, it becomes im- possible to rely too heavily on a rough, on-the-spot translation. It becomes nec- essary for many — if not all — of us to speak, write, and understand the lan- guages of other nations just as it has be- come necessary for Americans to learn to understand the Southern, Mid-West- ern, and New England dialects. If a perfect — or even a relatively se- cure, relatively happy — society is to be established on earth, each man must con- tribute his bit to understanding and the defeat of prejudice. This is what foreign language students are training for — understanding. FOREIGN LANGUAGE nm JAMES R. KIRK CHERIE B. PALMER HENRI G. PROSPERI PAT J. STOUP YOLONDA TOCCO SYLVIA J. WILLIAMMEE Pittsburgh New Kensington Marion Center FOREIGN LANGUAGE SENIORS MARION P. AGOSTINO CLAUDETTE M. CHAM BON Donora 67 Dr. Gault, Chairman How can the historian interpret expan- sionist Russia without knowing Russia ' s need of a year-round warm water port? How can the anthropologist discuss the Seminole Indians without some knowl- edge of the climatic conditions they live under? How possible is it for the political scientist to explain the voting disparity between Mid-Western farmers and New England industrialists without taking into account the geographical environment of these groups? The student of geography must first understand the functionings of winds, seasons, soils, and tides and then go be- yond these things to the cultures of peo- ples. We can have geography as such, but geography becomes more meaningful when it and science become geology, when it couples with economics to be- come economic geography, or when it and the arts combine to explicate cul- tural patterns from Bantu, Africa, to com- mercial London. GEOGRAPHY nm GEOGRAPHY SENIORS WALT L. CARMO, JR. Blairsville SYLVIA LEE CAVANAUGH Guantanamo Bay, Cuba JAMES A. COOK Homer City JOHN T. DARKO Latrobe CARL O. DICKSON, JR. Pittsburgh DONALD H. GEORGE Homer City THOMAS L. HARRIS Indiana MELVIN E. McINTIRE Bracl enridge GEORGE T. MANN East McKeesport 70 ROBKRT S. PASIIRU JAMES J. PETRUNVAK GORDON M. PHII IPPOVIC DAVID H. RUTH SAM A. SCAVO KENNETH G. SIVULICH E. DENNISON SNYDER GEORGE L. SONGER MICHAEL J. STEFANO THOMAS R. SWIVEL MARGARET A. TATANISH STEPHEN P. WAREHAM Patton Altoona Old Forge Homer City Brookville Lewis Run Windber Huntington Houtzdale Martinsburg I i put, I VrtpohfS fttt.f, utltA • U 4 ' K T A ' -chef 1 T k7 - ' i % %{ ' ■•. 71 Mr. Miller. Chairman Not for Athens the mindless hero of the gridiron nor the cramped and stunted book-worm. Not for Indiana either. The Greeic ideal of the sound mind in the sound body is now the American ideal of the educated man. We recognize that it is necessary for educated man to be healthy, vital, and agile, and because we do recognize this necessity high schools have gyms, grade schools have playgrounds, and we have the Health and Physical Education Depart- ment. This department is responsible for giving us the opportunity to play, to exercise, or to relax; for giving us the opportunity to recognize the im- portance of physical health in our teaching. HEALTH AND PHYSICAL EDUCATION J ' li ' Dr. Rhodes, Chairman Getting married, having children and es- tablishing a home are tasks which are performed so often they are almost taken for granted. However, these are complex tasks— so complex, in fact, that America long ago considered Home Economics to be a must in its educational system. Home stands for cooking, sewing, laundering, and decorating, of course; it also stands for the place where children are nursed, where they take their first step and say their first word, where they first hear opinions and first form judg- ments, where they form attitudes and adopt beliefs which are to stick with them in some way as long as they live. Home, in short, is the base of our whole society. The Home Economics teacher then has the job of bringing to the attention of her students techniques and skills which will make their homes happier, more effi- cient, and more stable as a foundation to build on. HOME ECONOMICS nm :3__ tV ' awi ' HOME ECONOMICS SENIORS %X MRS. LOIS ANDERSON Sharon BARBARA KAY ANSELL Ellwood City BETTE DEANE ASHBAUGH Elders Ridge BARBARA F. BARNHART Mt. Pleasant GAIL BEATTY Sewickley BARBARA E. BENJESKI Duquesne JANICE M. BETUSH Natrona Hei ghts JOAN T. BONCAROSKY North Charleroi E. GWEN BUCKHAM Oil City BARBARA JEAN CAYLOR Punxsutawney JEAN E. CHARLES Lancaster LOIS E. CLARCHICK Rices Landing CYNTHIA L. COOK Uniontown ROSEMARY L. COPENHAVER Smithmill GEORGIANNA CRISHON Sharon MARTHA L. DeLUCA Blairsville M. LOUISE DEPNER Aliquippa LaVERNE M. FECHTER Pittsburgh KATHLFFN M. FOLTZ JOYCE H. FREY BARBARA J. GADSBY ROBERTA A. GODLA PHYLLIS A. G OGNIAT NANCY L. GROVE MARY L. GUST CLAIRE S. HAAS Polk Pittsburgh Marion Center Pittsburgh g ' r:j_ SALLY ROSE HACKNEY Gibsonia DONNA L. HALL Monaca JUDITH BELL HAVER Washington PATRICIA E. HIPKINS Cortland, Ohio PATRICIA A. HOKE Camp Hill SUSAN C. KINNEY West Alexander MARJORY L. KLEE Butler BARBARA R. KRAFT Ridgeway NANCY LOBAUGH Pittsburgh 77 HOME ECONOMICS SENIORS n MRS. SUZANNE WEAVER LOCKARD Indiana SUE A, McCORT Camp Hill PATRICIA LOU McCOY New Kensington MRS. LOUISE R. KLAWUHN McPHERSON Ridgeway JANE I. MARTIN Ligonier GEORGIA G. MERSHIMER Slippery Rock MRS. SANDRA J. MILLER Friedens JANET L. MYERS Sligo JO ANN ORR Shillington PAULA JO PAINTER Ford City GRETCHEN H. PENROD Mt. Wolf MARION B. PERKOWSKI McKeesport MARTHA J. PERRY Charleroi M. SUSAN POST North East JOYCE S. REHBURG Coraopolis KAREN E. ROBB Erie MARGARET M. RUSNAK Philipsburgh MRS. NANCY BREON SCHAEFFER Kittanning 78 CARLA J. SCHINK Dravosburg MRS. BONITA L. GRUNDY SEXTON Carlisle SHIRLEY ANN SHAFFER BARBARA L. SNELL CLARA M. STEVENSON BARBARA A. SWARTZ JOAN E. TALMAGE LOIS A. TWARDECK MARY J. VOLKER BEVERLY B. WILLIAMS BETTY A. YANELLI Johnstown Coraopolis New Wilmington Coraopolis Apollo Bentleyville Trafford Bentleyville Ellwood City 79 Dr. Mahachck. Cluiirman From quadrants and compasses, from logarithmic tables and electronic calcu- lators, mathematics students emerge ready for the technological age, ready to compute the strain on a steel girder or to train and prepare others to do so. They are all set to transmit to future genera- tions the theorems that Pythagoras and Euclid devised more than two thousand years ago. They have new tools ready at hand — statistical analysis or ballistic computation. They have worked from Euclid through Riemann to cybernetics; they can take others through the same processes from simple multiplication to square roots and compound fractions. They are trained for the space age. They are the men and women being called for by industry, by government, and by our schools. They have begun the race for space, they have enabled the wheels of industry to turn faster and more effi- ciently through their calculations, and now they must continue the job until others take up where they leave off. MATHEMATICS ®|53 ,,JI -€:ilX -€ ■' % ' •, ' . MATHEMATICS SENIORS U£ LOUIS J. ANGELO CHARLES A. BARR DAVID R. BENNETT MRS. MARY E. BOOSE EUGENE B. BRUNNER LAURA A. CAPPELLA RAYMOND J. CENNI WILLIAM P. DANNECKER RICHARD J. DeBASTIANI Pittsburgh Indiana Creighton Aliquippa Brady Camp Connellsville Colver JOHN C. DONEY ROGER S. FLEMING LESLIE PAUL FRYAR WILLIAM RALPH GRAY LEONORA R. GREENMAN JAMES K. HANCUFF THOMAS C. HEARD DENNIS C. LIGHTNER MARVA L. LITZINGER Vandergrifl Williamsburg Elders Ridge Washington Altoona 82 MARION .1 I UrCHKA BAKHARA J. MAKO STANIFY R. MALISZFWSKI THEODORE J. MEDVETZ THOMAS R. MORELLI KRISTINE E. OLSEN MARY E. ROSS DOROTHY A. SCHRADER Homer City Greensbiirg MRS. LOIS BITNER NESBEl.LA Lock Haven Windber Oakmont South Fork 83 MATHEMATICS SENIORS Tm DAVID W. SCULL TERRY A. SERAFINI DIXIE L. SMITH RICHARD L. SMITH THOMAS A. SMITH THOMAS J. SMITH DIANA M. SURRA CHARLES SZVITICH WALTER A. TRAISTER Pittsburgh Creighton Rockingham Rural Valley Indiana Coral Mclntyre K ■-K -  I ROHIRl K UKHANSKI Al.BFRT P. VKSHLICKY PAUL R. VOLCHANSKY RAMON J. VOLTZ CLARK WALTER JOANNE C. WILCOX JOAN L. WITHEROW WALTER WOJICK ARTHUR E. WORTH Vandcrgrifl C ' oncmaugh Sarver Garrett Clairton New Millport Clymer Indiana 85 Lt. Col. Deyo, P.M.S. T. America needs an army for defense, but even more than an army she needs men capable of leading the industries, govern- ments, and unions of the future. Thus, the R.O.T.C. has a double purpose: to train men to assume the position of sec- ond lieutenant in the United States Army, and to train leaders both for the army and for civilian life after the army. It is not enough for an officer to tell a soldier to drill or perform the manual of arms. He must first be able to do these things himself. The R.O.T.C. installa- tion at Indiana hopes to train its cadets in these fundamentals by offering them drills, tactical information, ritlery, ath- letics, and military history. It also hopes to train its cadets in leadership through the experience they get in the advanced R.O.T.C. program. President Eisenhower has said that, actual practice in leading others is of inestimable value, and it is hard to tell at this point what advantages may come to the country through men trained in the R.O.T.C. program. P MILITARY SCIENCE aw 86 MILITARY SCIENCE SENIORS Dr. Orendorff. Chairman The tremendous reception which Amer- ican musicians such as Van CHburn, Benny Goodman, and Louis Armstrong have received around the world, and the reception which we in America gave Dmitri Shostakovich and Kabalevsky seem to prove that music is the univer- sal language of mankind. Whether it be a rhythmic native drumbeat rolling through the door of a Manhattan jazz hangout or a foot-tapping swing band breaking-up the joint in a back-alley in Tokyo it ' s still music, and all people are stirred alike by its beat or its plaintive- ness or its lilt. It is the language of counterpoint and pentatonic scales, of mezzo-sopranos and basso-profundos, of string quartets, toc- catas, fugues, sonatas and Seventy-Six Trombones. It is a language in which Sibelius sounds the same to the rest of the world as he does to Finland, in which W. C. Handy sounds to Japanese ears just as he does to American ears, and in which Rodgers ' and Hammerstein ' s music appeals to audiences the world over even though foreign audiences may be unfamiliar with many topical refer- ences. The Music Department tries to in- struct its students in the principles under- lying this language and in the means of conveying these principles to students. MUSIC 89 MUSIC SENIORS JANE L AFFALTER DAVID L. AIKEY JOSEPH J BARSIC HELEN M. BERNAS DIANE E. BODAMER GARY L. COUCH RICHARD L. CURRY EILEEN G. DAILY PHYLLIS A. DAUGHERTY PEGGY LOU DILLMAN RICHARD G. DILLMAN MARCIA ANN DILLS JANICE A. FAITH FRANK FARINA RALPH J. FERA CONSTANCE M. GOHN DONALD L. GREGGS JOSEPH SCOTT HALL Verona Johnstown Trafford Titusville Beaver Falls Grampion Conemaugh Harbor Creek Brookville Uniontown Kittanning Pittsburgh Masontown Stoystown Erie Stewartstown GAIL S. HKNRY EDWARD J. HOSPODAR CAROL A. HOWARIH ARDEN D. KEPHART JUDITH G. KIPP JUDITH A. KOMPANEK JANICE E. MARSHALL HOMER I. MAXWELL SYLVIA R. MEYERS Duqucsnc Sagamore Indiana Cumberland. Md. Marion Center Indiana New Kensington 9] MUSIC SENIORS RONALD L. MILLER Grantham MARION A. PETRO Apollo LOUIS A. PISANI Brackenridge GLENNA C. PROPER Donegal ALICE ROACH El mora JUDITH M, SCHAKE Export RUDOLPH J. SCHEUERLE Trafford DANIEL D. SHAW Mount Pleasant CHARLES P. SIGNORINO Homer City ROBERT F. SKIBO norua baun skvari.a KENNETH J. SNYDER JUDITH A. TEREBUS GERALD A. TREMBLAY MARY J. WEYMAN Portage Johnsonburg Johnstown Nanty Glo Pittsburgh Dr. Sollberger, Chairman The first question of the true scientist must be, How does it work? He is in- terested in how things are synthesized, in how they move or see or reproduce, in how matter decomposes or in any number of other hows. Science students sometimes answer their own questions. In laboratories or field study they observe processes, check their observations, and finally find out for themselves how the bud forms, how the embryo develops, or how the disinte- gration of a satellite re-entering the earth ' s atmosphere is related to a tire catching on fire through friction or to a hot box on a locomotive. Sometimes, however, science students get their answers from the experts — the science faculty. Always they are guided by this faculty to the discovery of prin- ciples, the assembly of data inductively, and the testing of hypotheses deduc- tively. They are taught to appreciate the implications of the scientific method as a device to improve, broaden, and com- plete the lives of men, and to relate to theory the events they observe in the world. SCIENCE is s 95 SCIENCE SENIORS HARRY L. BARTON Altoona THOMAS E. BORIS Lucerne Mines E. ANN BRAMMER Pittsburgh GLENN J. BROWN Homer City WILLIAM S. CARLSON Indiana PATRICIA M. COMINSKY Windber WILLIAM F. CRAWFORD Ford City RUEL DAVIS Barnesboro EDWARD A. DEAROLPH Parker JAMES DICKIE Indiana GARRY C. FRESCH Trafford GEORGE J, GABRIEL, JR. Johnstown NORMAN W. GAGGINI Cadogan RALPH J. GARVELLI St. Marys W. GARY GOEPFERT Craigsville EARL E, HEWITT III Indiana JAMES A. KEARNEY Pittsburgh 96 DOUGLAS A. KLIMCHOCK ROBERT W. LENNOX GORDON R. MEREDITH NICHOLAS M. MURO PAUL H. SHIRING WILLIAM CLARK SMITH CHARLES A. SPRINGER ALICE MARGARET TATE FRED G. WASCOVICH TIMOTHY P. WILLIAMS MARY E. WOHLER Kersey Wilmerding New Kensington Indiana North Hills Mahaffey Lancaster Pittsburgh 97 Dr. Lee, Chairman All our past proclaims our future, and the warnings of the past must guide our present and future actions. We must heed the warnings contained in the fall of Rome or the decline of Babylon. We are responsible for recognizing the problems Locke, Rousseau, and Montaigne recog- nized as being inherent in a democratic form of government and prepare our- selves intellectually, philosophically, and morally to solve them when they arise. We must study and understand the eco- nomic predictions of Marx so that we may better refute the arguments of his ad- herents and avoid the pitfalls he predicted would arise in a capitalistic economy. Social studies students know they must understand the factors which caused Spain to decline so that we may avoid the same irresponsible economic policies. So- cial studies students examine religions — the differences and similarities between them — and the development of mankind, races, and ideas to learn what to preserve of the past and how successfully to avoid the extinction of our own culture. SOCIAL STUDIES ow SOCIAL STUDIES SENIORS JAMES E. AKE Indiana JOHN W. ALTMAN Creekside THOMAS S. ANDREWS Altoona JAMES B. BEDFORD Titusvillc LEONARD W. BOSWORTH Allegheny KATHRYN BROOKE Monroeville JOHN J. CANNING Pittsburgh MATTHEW P. CARROLL Greensburg DAVID E. CEDERBERG Allison Park 100 LARRY C. COGAN ROBERT CRAMER ANDREW DEETER WILLIAM M. FRATRICK WILLIAM A. GLENDENING JANET A. GREEN RICHARD G, HUNT ANTHONY lANNARELLI Verona Irwin MRS. IRIS CHAPMAN DEBASTIANI Indiana New Florence Greensburg Muse 101 SOCIAL STUDIES SENIORS CHARLES S. KING JAMES D. LEONARD GREGORY J. LEONE CHARLES J. LEVIS RICHARD B. LILL MAYNARD L. MAYER CHARLES A. MILLER ROBERT E. MILLER PHILIP J. MULVIHILL New Bethlehem Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Stoystown New Florence 102 ROBKRT A. NELSON JOHN R, NESBHT ANTHONY PF.JACK FRANK A. RACO ROBERT P. REICH LLOYD L. RUSSELL, JR. JOHN M. SEMBER SAMUEL J. SHERWOOD Ridgway East McKecsport Johnstown Johnstown Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Johnstown Somerset JOSEPH J. YOHMAN LAWRENCE W. YOUNG, JR. fS- i tW f t TIMOTHY C. SHINDLEDECKER Reynoldsville RICHARD W. STERNECKERT Pittsburgh 103 Dr. Davis Director of Sliideni Teaching and Placement New techniques, new advances, in methodology are continually being sug- gested, and there must always be a place where these ideas can be tested and ap- proved. In education this testing ground is the experimental school, and at Indiana our teaching laboratory is Keith School. Here many student teachers learn the ins and outs of teaching from competent supervisors. Here teachers and students come for guidance in choosing a position. Here supervisors interview prospective employees in search of the individual who will bring youth, zest, and ability to a public school classroom. Whether the project be foreign lan- guage instruction in the elementary grades, unit teaching in the field of Eng- lish, or new advances in the teaching of science or mathematics, Keith students are exposed to it. Its students, its faculty, student teachers, and visiting teachers and supervisors all learn from Keith. It repre- sents to all of them new lessons, new hope, and new horizons. KEITH SCHOOL 104 Dr. Stright. Director As man pushes back the boundary of the unknown, what he may know, needs to know, must know, is an ever-increasing body of information. He cannot learn all he wants to know in his four under- graduate years. He can, though, add to these more years of study, of investiga- tion, of testing his hypotheses, of revising his judgments. He can, in the graduate school of I.S.C., study more of science, of language, of music, or of history. He can continue to measure his teaching prac- tice with teaching theory. He will learn how little he knows in comparison with how much there is to know. He may broaden his knowledge by choosing a wide variety of courses, so as to sample all the arts and sciences, or he may specialize in one study, so as to dig deep and examine fully. If he does some of both, he can add to his creden- tials one more degree, the Master of Science in Education. GRADUATE SCHOOL nm 106 108 HONORARY GREEKS 109 ALPHA OMEGA GAMMA Their destination was added professional and so- cial experience. Their parkway was a booksale held for the Allen P. Mewha Loan Fund, which has been established to aid a freshman geography major. Their route took them to a Christmas party held in honor of the foreign students here at Indi- ana. The final roadways were traveled by the meetings of the National Council and the Penn- sylvania Council for Geography Education. OFFICERS President First Semester Second Semester Vice-President Secretary Treasurer First Semester Second Semester Advisor; Robert S. Pasierb Philip D. Koos, Jr. Donald Weidenweber Joan Badman Gordon M. Philippovic Thomas Torquato Dr. Zink Claudette M. Chambon James A Cook Donald H. George Robert S. Pasierb Gordon M. Philippovic Advisor: Dr. Zink 110 Music teachers must also be performing musi- cians. Members of Delta Omicron, woman ' s hon- orary music fraternity, perform in recitals, enter- tain at the Children ' s Home, and lend a voice at Swing-Out. That ' s not all. They have the job of scheduling recitals, and when you pass down the aisle of Fisher to hear the Pittsburgh Symphony or the Weavers, it is a Delta Omicron girl who ushers you to your seat. OFFICERS President 1 St Vice-President 2nd Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Chaplain Warden Choirister Advisor: Dorcas Moore Judith Packo Rita Bailey Susannah Jones Sylvia Gdovichin Judith Findley Ellen Suders Judith Ann Lloyd Mrs. Arvilla T. Harold DELTA OMICRON Helen M. Bernas Sylvia R. Meyers Mary J. Weyman 111 DELTA PHI DELTA Not Bohemians really, those Delta Phi Deltas, though you might so guess from their Clothesline Art Exhibit. As an honorary art society they are dedicated to promoting interest in art on cam- pus. Hence the Clothesline Art Exhibit, hence the annual show of works from the senior class. This year they made a special offering to Indi- ana ' s campus — a Mosaic table for the new li- brary. OFFICERS President Harry Susser Vice-President Nina Bruno Treasurer Mary Francis Burkett Recording Secretary Brenda Davis Historian Helen Yingling Advisor: Dr. Robert C. Seelhorst Mary Francis Burkett Brenda L. Davis Marilyn J. Dickinson Nancy J. Friday Lynette L. Friedline Clifton A. Hulton Mrs. Valery Anderson Frank R. Melega Carol A. Neely Kaufman John V. Pastorek Mrs. Linda Brougher Shaffer Edward B. Stein Bernard F. Vangrin, Jr. Advisor: Dr. Robert C. Seelhorst 112 Gamma Rho Tau is geared to develop the busi- nessman ' s businessman. Aiming for perfection in teaching business Education, the fraternity docs much to assist the Business Education Department through the use of visual aids. The fraternity showed weekly films to aid the perspective busi- ness teacher. They also compiled a brochure of these films available through the Indiana Film Service. OFFICERS President Kenneth Held Vice-President Clark Little Secretary Robert S. Kline Treasurer Louis B. Menegatti Historian Frederick E. McCoid Advisor: Dr. James K. Stoner GAMMA RHO TAU James Audey Francis T. Buydos Lawrence L. Gonzalez kW d Stanley W. Gray Stanley J. Harris Russell D. Hindman Paul W. Hunter Conrad F. Kaminski James E. Kardohely Richard J. Krempasky Edward E. Miller William .A. Smith Advisor: Dr. James K. Stoner 113 If you enjoy roasting weiners and discussing books like Dr. Zhivago, if you have four semesters of B ' s and A ' s, then you are a Hkely candidate for Kappa Delta Pi, Indiana ' s national education fraternity. You have to be invited, of course. If you are chosen you can have a part in promot- ing better teaching and better conditions for teach- ing. The Kappa Delta Pi ' s supply a scholarship yearly to a worthy student as their contribution to the advancement of Indiana ' s educational life. This year was a special year, made memorable by the visit of the national president of Kappa Delta Pi. KAPPA DELTA OFFICERS President James E. Kardohely Vice-President Ronald L. Miller Secretary Mary M. Reese Treasurer Jane L. AfTalter Historian Barbara Jean Caylor Advisor: Mr. George L. Spinelli PI Mrs. Lois Anderson Nancy J. Abraham Jane L, Allalter Mrs. Mary E. Boose Barbara Jean Caylor John J. Canning Richard L. Curry J. Bruce DeLoche, Jr. Kathleen M. Foltz Gweneth E. Fox Lynette L. Friedline 114 Ann Elizabeth Freaney Ralph J. Garvelli lU Ann L. Hertz Anita Jane Kahle James E. Kardohcly Lou Ann Lux Mrs. Joan t I Stanley R. Maliszewski Charles A. Miller Robert E. Miller Ronald L. Miller Carol A. Neely Shirley S. Stevens Pal J. Stoup Diana M. Surra Judy M. Vago Judith A. Wauch Marv J. Wevnian Joan L. Witherow Mary E. Wohler 115 Joseph J. Yohman Advisor: Mr. George L. Spinelli KAPPA OMICRON PHI From catering at the ROTC Ball to stuffing toy animals to tutoring may seem V ke one big step after another, but to the sisters of Kappa Omicron Phi these activities are easy steps. In this home economics fraternity senior girls entertain in their homes or apartments, faculty members give hints on what to look for on the job, and a home economics major makes fun out of work. OFFICERS President 1st Vice-President 2nd Vice-President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer Advisor: Patricia A. Hoke Gretchcn H. Penrod Donna Evans Susan C. Kinney Janet L. Myers Kathleen M. Foltz Mrs. Helen Hovis Mrs. Lois Anderson Gail Beattv Barbara Jean Caylor Kathleen M. Fotlz Roberta A. Godla Patricia A. Hoke Sii ' an C. Kinney Nancy Lobaugh Mary L. Gust Mrs. Suzanne Weaver Mrs. Louise R. Klawuhn Lockard McPherson Janet L. Myers Jo Ann Orr Paula Jo Painter 116 Gretchen H. Penrod Mary J. Volker With performing the works of talented American composers and of talented members, Phi Mu Alpha taps a quick beat. These musicians get to- gether socially to grow professionally. Their social scale includes recitals given by the members of the fraternity and the music faculty, and field trips to meet and hear the music pros. OFFICERS President Paul Owoc Vice-President Robert Acker Secretary Glyn Edwards Treasurer John Bender Advisor: Mr. Daniel DiCicco PHI MU ALPHA Richard L. Curry Ralph J. Fera Joseph Scott Hall 117 Arden D. Kephart Advisor: Mr. Daniel DiCicco Many of the future business leaders on our cam- pus can be found in Pi Omega Pi — Indiana ' s na- tional fraternity in Business Education. The fra- ternity compiles and files information about teach- ing typing, accounting, and office practice. This year the big activities were visits to Pitts- burgh business firms and the annual spring ban- quet for senior members. The fraternity then closed its ledgers on another successful year. PI OFFICERS President Clark Little Vice-President Beverly Goodman Secretary Lee Hunter Historian Justine Filipponi Recording Secretary Joyce Rickabaugh Advisor: Miss Patricia Patterson OMEGA PI Dolores C. Jancech Anita Jane Kahle James E. Kardohely Marie F. Lambert Gcoryia A. lampropolos Joselyn M. Molleca 118 Jean J. Sabolovich Advisor: Miss Patricia L. Patterson People nuist enjoy working. Why else would a group organize into a fraternity and then spend their time administering a revised Speeeh Sound Discrimination Test to several hundred school children? Of course all is not labor with the members of Sigma Alpha Eta. There ' s a lot of fun involved too. It ' s the kind of fun, though, one has when he talks to a group with the same interests, gripes, or problems. It ' s professional fun in a social setting. It ' s what is ofTered by Sigma Alpha Eta, Indiana ' s fraternity for those interested in speech and hear- ing correction. OFFICERS President Donald F. McPhcrson Vice-President Brenda Hegner Corresponding Secretary Patty Lewis Recording Secretary Diana Lee Pallo Treasurer Dolly Fundrella Advisor: Dr. Donald A. Hess SIGMA ALPHA ETA Donald F. McPherson Key Member Janet Ondrizek. Key Member Diana Lee Pallo. Key Member Robert Smith, Key Member Advisor: Dr. Donald h. Hess 119 120 SOCIAL GREEKS 121 ALPHA GAMMA DELTA Alpha Gamma Delta Fraternity checked something new in firsts this year. Baby ' s First Tooth, their Homecoming float, not only captured first prize but also won the distinction of being the first float ever to be hit by a garbage truck. A fall party, Hoboes Haven; an initiation ban- quet, the Feast of Roses; soliciting for the Cancer Fund; and working with the Indiana Crippled Children ' s Society — with all these the Alpha Gams had a crowded year. OFFICERS President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Advisors Diane Baker Glenda Willard Mary Lee Hill Berneita Sarada Miss Florence Wallace Mrs. Kehew Margaret A. Barnett Susan C. Barnctl Janice M. Betush Joan T. Boncarosky Jo Ann Bussard Jean E. Charles Judith Lightcap Cope Judy Dayton Nancy J. Friday Patricia A. Haught 122 Linda S. Keslar Marie F. Lambert Linda M, Rabatin Jean J. Sabolovich Advis()r: Mrs. Kthcw p B % r § ■B« ' ' vv U a L B Els jt fA L A KfVi v v flfllH F L VI ' A aU ] M • X ' J  • • A. 1° H 1 m ' . li ' ■■i .■. ' ' r in . , ' .: W 123 ALPHA SIGMA ALPHA Alpha Sigma Alpha began the year with an end of the year symbol, The First Thanksgiving, a Homecoming float portraying a familiar New England scene. Also in the American tradition was the decor of their pledge dance. Alpha Sigma Alpha Schoolhouse. Their Christmas spirit was expressed in a party they gave for mentally-retarded children, in car- oling at the homes of alumnae, and finally in their sorority room at their own Christmas party. Spring brought a visitation from the national vice-president and, of course, Swing-Out cele- brations, where they proudly displayed to alum- nae their newly-purchased Hi-Fi. OFFICERS President Joy Doverspike Vice-President Pat Dave Recording Secretary Lee Hunter Corresponding Secretary Sandra McWilliams Treasurer Pat Morris Advisors: Mrs. Mildred Young, Dr. Joy Mahachek Jane L. Aflfaller Judy Bell Mary Ellen Bowser Jean M. Casolo Mary Kay Collier Marianne Ciuzan Carol A. Howarth Mrs. Joan E. Lamison ' ' V t Marva L. Litzinger Alma Faye Steele Nancy Jane Strauss 124 Rita A. Taliani Judith R. Tucker Connie D. Volk Harbara Ann Voytko Joan L. Wilhcrow Advisor: IJr. Joy Mahachek Advisor; Mrs. Mildicd Young 125 ALPHA SIGMA TAU Only the sisters of Alpha Sigma Tau were eager enough to celebrate Christmas in October this year. They floated out the First Christmas for the Homecoming parade. It is just as well that they were ahead of the calendar, because they had big preparations to make for the visit of their national president. They showed the lady all honors. All of this ac- tivity plus the formal rush party, the Pre-Pan- hellenic banquet, the senior picnic and the Swing- Out tea has earned the Alpha Sigma Tau ' s a summer ' s rest. OFFICERS President Vice-President Treasurer Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Advisor Mrs. Sylvia Kattouf Ramona Monaco Bernie Hamilton Pat Picadio Pat Yacisin Donald B. Shank fT Carol L. Beury Mabel Jane Bush Laura A. Cappella Lois A. Clarchlck E. Jeanne Fait Margaret J. Porter Beverly B. Williams Virginia M. Yaksick 126 Kay Zanarini Advisor: Mrs. Donald B. Shank :Arr.; BETA SIGMA OMICRON There is a newly furnished sorority room on cam- pus and Beta Sigma Omicron has it. They used to have a rainbow, but it was taken apart after it traveled the streets of Indiana in the Homecoming parade. It was a short jump from the rainbow to the Hillbilly Stomp held at the College Lodge. From the moonshine-jug favors of the stomp to the quiet founder ' s day banquet was another short jump. A senior farewell dinner, a spring dance, and the Easter Bunny at the Easter party for un- derprivileged children completed a busy year. OFFICERS President Vice-President Treasurer Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Advisor Christina Caspero Sandra Deramo Jean Armagost Joyce Rickabaugh Susan Hood Mrs. Fairy Clutter 128 M. Louise IJepncr Carol A. Tobias I-iicilc I ' . Laiighlin Juiliih A. Liska Jo Ann (Jrr Advisor: Mrs. Fairy Clutter Oianc K I ' uarson 129 DELTA ZETA From their float, the First Olympics, to the final frenzy of their senior send-off, Delta Zeta ' s year was a quick paced marathon all the way. Pausing only to work in the coffee shop at the Indiana Hospital, the Delts began their race with the Homecoming parade and tea, rounded the first turn at their Christmas party, pulled into the homestretch with Swing-Out activities, and fin- ished the year with a job well done. T rrTTT-rtTTlf TTTiT- • OFFICERS President 1st Vice-President 2nd Vice-President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer Nancy McElroy Nancy Braun Sally McCarty Judy Elser Jean Freeman Virginia Harsch Advisor Miss Ruth Podbiclski 130 Minnie M. Carnabuci Manila 1.. DcLuca Peggy E. Reese Joyce S. Rehbiirg Marcia M. Kraynick M Bayonnc McDowell Nancy ' 1 Judy I,. Ryan Mrs. Nancy Breon SchaelTer Mrs Bonila I. drundy Sexton Cathy Talerico 131 PHI MU Sisters of Phi Mu took us right into the Garden of Eden this year. Adam and Eve was the theme of their Homecoming float. There were bountiful blossoms this year in their garden, events gay, colorful, spicy: Rustic Rumpus, Retreat, Alum- nae banquet, pledge dance, senior banquet and Swing-Out tea, and the Swing-Out banquet. OFFICERS President Virginia Adams Vice-President Diane Wysocki Treasurer Mary Ann McAdams Secretary Elizabeth Richards Advisor Miss Bernice Gattschalk E. Gwen Buckham Barbara Jean Caylor Mrs. Iris Chapman DeBastiani Mary Ann Engle Mrs. Joan Whitlatch Freeman Mrs. Valery Anderson Kaufman Patricia F. Kronen Nancy Lobaugh Carol A. Neely Mrs. Lois Bitner Nesbella A, Faith Noble Martha J. Perrv Joan E. Talmage 133 Mrs. Rebecca Harvey Weber Advisor: Miss Bemice Gottschalk SIGMA Elias Howe would have been pleased with the sisters of Sigma Kappa this year. Their Home- coming Float was a model of the first sewing ma- chine. Throughout the year one stitch after another was placed in Sigma Kappa ' s activity robe. In the fall the Halloween Party and the Christmas Party were particularly outstanding. Unlike Howe, though, the sisters are distinguished for charity, not invention. The Valentine Party for the chil- dren at Willard Home and the Maine Seacoast Mission are fine examples of the sisters ' work. KAPPA OFFICERS President 1st. Vice-President 2nd. Vice-President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Rush Chairman Advisor Bonnie Robbins Kathleen Vescio Penny Lane Adelaide Love Bobbie Helsel Fay Simpson Dr. Snyder, Mrs. Lavelle Nancy J. Abraham Patricia J. Anderson Diane E. Bodamer Reno Eileen DeZanet 134 Marcia Ann Dills Ann Elizabeth Freaney Mary Ann Graban Janet A. Green Sallv Rose Hacknev Dolores C. Jancech Susan C. Kinney Helen Kirkland Mrs. Louise R. Klawuhn Nancy Jane Olexsovich McPherson Gretchen H. Penrod Norita Baun Skvarla 135 Pat J. Stoup Mar ' Judith Waros m The Tri Sigmas had a Bundle of Joy this Octo- ber. They won third prize in the Homecoming pa- rade with it too. They had to redecorate their so- rority room, of course, couldn ' t have a bundle of joy trophy in an old sorority room. Violet and white, naturally, with pale blue. Yet all was not work for the Tri Sigmas. An au- tumn dance, a Beatnik party, a Christmas party, SIGMA two Big-Little Sister parties. Off kept Sigma Sigma Sigma and a Senior Send- busy. SIGMA OFFICERS President Louise BoUman SIGMA Vice-President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer Peggy Sgriccia Arleen Oberg Virginia Keverline Carol Nedley Rush Chairman Jan Albert Advisor Miss Ann Elliott Barbara E. Benjeski E. Ann Brammer Judith L. Dominick Philapena M. Granire Lynn W. Larson 136 If Mrs. Betty Jo McClelland Nancy A. Manj-in Sylvia K. Mcyc V Susan Marie Nahcr Barbara Ann N(,.,,- Paula Jo Painter Judith M. Schake Marjorie A. Turley Judy M. Vj Mary J. Volker Marilyn R. Wallbaum Marlene J. Wiley Mary Ann Wilson Advisor: Miss Ann Elliott 137 ZETA TAU ALPHA Blue belongs to Zeta Tau Alpha. Their sorority color, it became also the color of autumn at their fall dance, Autumn in Blue. This blue trend didn ' t carry over into their personalities, however, as a constant round of parties, teas, and dances kept the Zetas rosy and gay. In fact, from their Homecoming float the Declaration of Independ- ence to the pledging of independents the Zetas had a frantic year. OFFICERS President Vice-President Sandra Raley Dana Best Secretary Gienda McCune Treasurer Advisor: Veryl Morgan Miss Merriman Carol J. Chapman Sandra R. Chittister Carolyn D. Connelly Eileen G. Daily 138 Janice A. hailh Mrs. Sandra P. Fritz Judith G. Kipp C alhcrinc Lantz Glcnda McCune Patricia MorcKx Susan M. Post Dorothy A. Schorman Ann L. Williams 139 DELTA GAMMA PHI Delta Gamma Phi broke through this year with a submarine. Under-water boys, are they? Well, not really. The brothers keep their heads above water, but they did enter the Homecoming Parade with a lloat entitled A Sub Breaks Through. Shortly after, they splashed into their social sea- son with a Hallowe ' en party at the Eagles. Apples anyone? Next they dived into a Christmas formal and a February dance-buffet, surfacing into a for- mal dinner in May. OFFICERS President Vice-President Treasurer Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Advisor Robert M. Smith Patrick J. Kelly George D. Gunner Donald Kunkle Daniel Morningred Dr. Charles H. Duncan Richard C. Ayers 22St Stanley W. Gray 140 George D. Gunner Harry E. Haenig lH( ' Charles J. Levis Robert Smith Thomas L. Harris Conrad F. Kaminski Patrick J. Kelly Paul R. ' olchansky Cecil L. Woodle Advisor: Dr. Charles H. Duncan 141 DELTA SIGMA PHI What fraternity had top scholastic rating, a hay- ride when the weather was so cold you couldn ' t even smell the horse, and Santa Claus all in the same semester? Delta Sigma Phi, of course. All this and more went into their year. The spirit which followed them through the Christmas party for underprivileged children al- so followed them through the Sailors ' Ball at the Eagles and finally the Annual Carnation Ball, where their dream girl and her court were named. OFFICERS President Paul L. Henneman Vice-President Phillip Bianco Recording Secretary Charles Olescyski Treasurer William Moreau Advisor: Dr. Edward F. Carr Richard L. Curry 142 § §} Q Donald P. Fritz Leslie Paul Fryar George J. Gabriel. Jr. Don Elliott Hall M 1 tTkM Clifton A. Huiion Henri G. Prosper! Dixie L. Smith Richard W. Sterneckert Ramon J. Voltz Advisor: Dr. Edward F. Can- US KAPPA This has been the great come-and-get-it year for Kappa Delta Rho. Four of the brothers got new ideas and cemented intra-fraternal relations at the National Convention, and partly through the assistance of a growing alumni the Chapter House got a complete refurnishing and redecoration. Fraternity aims and policies got a rearrange- ment too, and the brothers of Kappa Delta Rho got new vigor and new anticipation for fraternal year 1961-1962. DELTA OFFICERS President N. Greg Williams Vice-President David E. Cederberg RHO Secretary James Stangarone Treasurer James L. Gesin Advisor Dr. J. Robert Murray James E. Ake Harry L. Barton David E. Cederberg William P. Dannecker James Dickie 144 Frank Farina Ralph J. (iarvclli James I.. Gcsin Richard (,. Hunl Douglas A. Khmchock Gregory J. Leone Stanley R. Maliszcwski Lawrence F. Nalepa Paul H. Shiring James Slangarone C u Charles Szvitich Stephen P. Wareham N. Greg Williams Joseph J. Yohman Advisor: Dr J. Robert Murray SIGMA PHI -BLs i i It was a different pad that greeted the Sig Ep alumni at the Homecoming open house this year. The brothers are now hving in a new red bricic house on Philadelphia. They christened their new house with their fall rush party entitled Ship- wrecked and rowed into their Christmas and Valentine parties. Docking finally at their spring formal, the brothers are now charting next year ' s voyage. EPSILON OFFICERS President Kenneth J. Rometo Vice-President Harold Preisendefer Secretary Robert Good Treasurer Jack Dean Advisor: Dr. Russel Nelson Walt L. Carmo, Jr. Ronald V. Drown William Ralph Gray Earl Moore 146 Clark Walter SIGMA TAU GAMMA The Sig Taus rolled into the social year on their Homecoming float entitled the First Wheel. Aft- er slowing down their r.p.m. ' s for two successful open houses, they picked up some new spokes at their rush parties and spun into their Playboy Party at full speed. They rolled smoothly from their Christmas party and their Valentine party, on to the White Rose formal and the senior ban- quet. No brakes applied! OFFICERS President Vice-President Treasurer Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary W. Gary Goepfert Terry A. Serafini Donald H. Crosby Samuel D. Lapcevic Thomas Frick Advisors Mr. C. M. Johnson. Dr. Willis Bell Louis J. Angelo Ronald T. Anthony J. Donald Bartolomucci Robert C. Cable Michael W. Carlson Eugene J. Chiodo Edward A. Dearolph Carl O. Dickson, Jr. John C. Doney 148 3 ' 4 R Roger S. Fleming Noirnan W. (iaygini H. William (iardner James R. Gelctka W. Gary Gocpcrt FT-— Thomas C. Heard Nicholas M. Muro David W. Scull Terry A. Serafini Richard L. Smith George L. Songer John Thomas Weyant Advisor: Mr. C. M. Johnson Robert F. Skibo 149 TAU KAPPA EPSILON The T. K. E. ' s entered the year on their Home- coming float the First CiviHzation, and imme- diately swung into the twentieth century by par- ticipating in intramural athletics, serenades, the Greek Sing, and an Inter-Fraternity dance. Much like their ancestors of the first civiliza- tion, the T. K. E. ' s centered their social life around eating and dancing. They ate at the Homecoming banquet and the Swing-Out banquet as well as at the spring picnic. They danced at the Christ- mas party and the spring formal rush party. OFFICERS President Russell Reese Vice-President Timothy P. Williams Treasurer Thomas Heilman Secretary Donald F. Ficco Advisors: Dr. Donald Hoflfmaster, Mr. John Price, Mr. Samuel Furgiuele, Dr. S. Trevor Hadley David L. Aikey David R. Bennett Larry C. Cogan Robert Cramer Richard J. DeBastiani 150 Kenneth R. Hlkin noiiiild 1 . 1 ic (iordon Mitchings Paul W Hunlc Mclvin h. Mclnlirc Gordon R. Meredith Philip J. Miilvihill Robert A. Nelson Samuel J. Sherwood Richard L. Stivason Amadeo C. Tortorella Bernard F. Vangrin, Jr. Timothy P. Williams Advisor: Mr. Samuel Furgiuele m, V 151 THETA CHI For the brothers of Theta Chi this was leap year. They began their year with a big leap from a campus house to a house on Church Street. Next they leaped into fourth place in the Homecoming Parade with their float Lindy ' s Leap. One leap they didn ' t take, however, was a downward leap in intramural sports. Their foot- ball team took up where their softball team left off and finished its season undefeated. The Hallow ' een Party and the Red Carnation Ball were the high points of their social season. President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Advisors OFFICERS John Canning Ronald Bergman John Cappelman Charles A. Barr Dr. Winslow, Mr. Kehew 152 Charles A. Barr l-iigcnc B. Bninncr John J. Canning Garry C. Fresch Frankhn P. Garland Anthony lannarelli Charles S. King John R. Nesbitt David H. Ruth Charles A. Springer Bruce A. Thomas Albert P. Veselicky Advisor: Mr. James G. Kehew Advisor: Dr. David C. Winslow 153 INTER-FRATERNITY COUNCIL Advisor: Mr. Schnell The Inter-Fraternity Council coordinates and regulates fraternity affairs on the Indiana campus. It legislates on rushing and initiation; it arbitrates when Alphas and Betas disagree. It keeps frater- nity conflicts reduced to family squabbles — fra- ternal tilts only. It promotes amicable relationship between fraternities and high academic and social standards for fraternity men. And fun as well. The annual inter-fraternity dance it sponsors is a big deal of the year. 154 PANHELLENIC COUNCIL If eight sororities have eight different methods of rushing, pledging, and initiating new members, the result is complete chaos. When eight sororities use one method of rushing, pledging, and initia- ting new members, the result is order — or at least as much order as possible. To bring order out of chaos is the purpose of the Panhellenic Council. This council — composed of two representatives from each sorority — makes and enforces the rules governing all campus sororities, establishing the time when rushing and pledging can begin and end and the practices which the sororities can legally use in initiations. Advisor: Miss Newlcerk 156 157 ■Pi Terry A. Serafini. Preiidenl STUDENT COUNCIL Student Councils were begun to promote good relations between school administrations and stu- dents. A real credit to Indiana ' s student body is the fine performance of her student council. Not only has it expressed student opinion, but through sponsoring of Homecoming activities, the Sopho- more Tribunal, cultural activities, and campus campaigns it has knit the students closer to each other and closer to their school. In fact the Coun- cil also has provided a link between Indiana and South America by sponsoring an exchange stu- dent from Bolivia. OFFICERS President Terry A. Serafini Vice-President James Vidra Forwarding Secretary Jan Anchors Recording Secretary Jean E. Charles Treasurer James E. Kardohely Advisor Mr. Schnell CLASS OFFICERS SENIOR Richard J. DeBastiani President Donald F. Ficco Treasurer JUNIOR SOPHOMORE Edwin Neff. Vice-President: Susan Yeager, Treasurer: Nancy Braun. Ronald Archer. President: Judy Ann Engle. Treasurer: Marita Thom- Secretary: Kenneth Humphrey, President. as. Vice-President: Connie Ritchie. Secretary. FRESHMAN James Jordon. President: Philip Dietz, Treasurer; Patricia Anne Miller, Secretary; Vincent Mellinger. Vice-President. 159 S= sB? CIRCLE K Circle K, a college affiliate of the Kiwanis Club, performs many and various social services for the college and community, among which are usher- ing for campus events, erecting Christmas trees on campus and on the streets of Indiana, collect- ing and delivering baskets of food for needy families, and carrying books from the old to the new library. OFFICERS President Vice-President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer Advisor; William Kozusko George Ponos Benedict Milazzo Robert Fleming Richard Sterneckert Dr. George StoulTer ALPHA PHI OMEGA This largest of the national service fraternities has dedicated itself to preserving in its members all of the fmest attributes of scouting. With the freshman picnic, homecoming, conducting tours of the campus, the members of Alpha Plii Omega have a full year of service. Aside from their service to the campus the Alpha Phi ' s also perform numerous functions in con- nection with scouting. They work as assistant scout masters, as explorer advisors, as assistants to the town scouting council, and as helpers for the Commissioner ' s staff. One reward for the year ' s labor was the Explorer Ball held at the Rustic Lodge. OFFICERS President Philip Koos Vice-President William Smith Secretary William Phoebe Corresponding Secretary Harold Hoch Historian Charles Barr Treasurer Wayne Cessna Sergeant at Arms Richard Lokar President of Advisory Committee: Dr. David C. Winslow Members of Advisory Committee: Dr. Clel Silvey, Mr. Monardo Scouting Advisors: Mr. Russell Landis, Mr. Russell Leinbach, Dr. Donald E. Hoffmaster, Dr. Lawrence F. McVitty, Mr. PaulM. Waddell THE OAK Reams of wrinkled paper, stacks of clipped pho- tographs, and mountains of bills are all that re- main of the 1961 Ocik staff. For those of us who worked on photography, scheduling, art, write- ups, or editing, the work was finished when you began to leaf through these pages. Our only hope is that the result of our anxious hours and our hard work will provide a few happy memories to all those who take the time to re-examine their past as it is recorded here. The following people made the 1960-61 OAK possible: EDITORIN-CHIEF: Robert S. Kline ART STAFF: Roger L. Stern. Editor : Janice Strobel. As- sistant Editor: Charles Battaglini. Marlin Clay. Carol Cochran, Petrona Domurat, Donna Eberman. Mary Er- nette, Joseph Neill, Suanne Shepherd BUSINESS STAFF: Sue A. Erwin, Business Manaf er COLLECTIONS STAFF: Mahlon Paul Beaty, Collec- tions Manager; Paul Carlson, Carol Clawges, Joyce De- Bone LITERARY STAFF: Thomas H. Seiler, Editor; Susan Albert!, Jeanne Artman, Robert Baron, Ethel Cagley, John Dellaquila, Agnes Dieffenbach, Nancy Engle, Car- olyn Fox, John Reese, Brenda Strong 162 Lawrence F. Nalepa Janice Strobel Seniors Editor Ass ' I Art Editor PATRONS AND TYPING STAFF: Donald Weigand, Editor: Wilma Fankhauser, Mary Oravec PHOTOGRAPHY EDITORS: Clifton A. Hutton and Arthur R. Pollock, Editors SCHEDULING EDITOR: Patrick B. Mikesell, Editor SENIORS STAFF: Lawrence F. Nalepa, Editor: Diane Baker, Jane Mong, Nancy Sivak, Joy Trinkley, Carol Walker SENIOR ADVISOR: Thomas Smith ADVISORS: Dr. Lucker, Dr. McVitty, Mr. Sheeder Thomas Smith Senior Advisor THE PENN Get your Penn right here! Snatch it from the stacks at Leonard, McElhaney, or the Union! Read all about the IVlasquers ' opening night. See your name in print. A tirst class paper, the independent voice of the student body, the Indiana Penn covers sports, reports campus news, gives the Greeks their say — gives any student a column for his letter to the press. Phil Bianco Editor-in-Chief First Semester Susan V. Reber Editor-in-Chief Second Semester Dr. Nicholson Consultant 164 FIRST SEMESTER STAFF Phil Bianco Susan Rcbcr Bob Cable Lois Baacke Chuck Barr V. Peter Jurjcvich Liz Richards Nancy McElroy, Ben Elisco Patti Lewis Ruth Gordon Jackie Bcrctincic, Pat Lanning Dixie Smith Dr. Arthur F. Nicholson Editor-in-Chief Ass ' t to the editor News Editor Ass ' t N ews Editor Sports Editor Ass ' t Sports Editor Feature Editor Society Editors Copy Editor Art Editor Exchange Editors Circulation Editor Consultant SECOND SEMESTER STAFF Susan V. Reber Liz Richards V. Peter Jurjevich Ed Rohrer Larry Judge, Jim Picard Lois Baacke Nancy McElroy, Jack Glavan John Perri Jackie Beretincic, Pat Lanning Patti Lewis Gilbert Forsman Dr. Arthur F. Nicholson Editor-in-Chief Ass ' t to the editor News Editor Ass ' t News Editor Sports Editors Feature Editor Society Editors Art Editor Exchange Editors Copy Editor Circulation Editor Consultant 165 THE CUE The Cue is a handbook published by the students for the students about the stu- dents. The booklet itself is a pocket-sized catalogue of school organizations and ac- tivities, regulations and facilities, faculty names and important dates. THE INDIANA STUDENT WRITES The Indiana Student Writes prints for all students to read the best of the year ' s lit- erary work done on campus. Poems, stories, and articles contributed are selected and edited by the Student Writes staff, headed by Shirley Stevens and advised by Dr. Maurice Rider and Mr. David Cook. 166 MASQUERS A play is not produced by actors alone. A corps of workers are needed — to design sets, sew costumes, and set lights. These jobs all depend on help volunteered or commandeered. Supplying these volunteers is the purpose of the Masquers, an or- ganization composed of all students interested in the success of theatre at Indiana. TEA AND TOUR Take tea and see could very well be the motto of the Tea and Tour Comm ittee. The reason — members of this committee take parents and friends of prospective students on a tour of I.S.C. ' s campus. At the end of the tour they rest in the Rec- reation Lounge, sipping tea. I 167 WOMEN ' S COLLEGIATE ASSOCIATION It is the Women ' s Collegiate Association, composed of girls chosen from each hall and each house, which serves as a governing body for resident women. JUDICIAL BOARD The Judicial Board, which makes and enforces rules governing resident women, is composed of girls elected by resident women. 168 MARCHING BAND The weather was indiflerent, the opposing team was late, and buses got lost, but the Indiana Marching Band played on to the applause of thousands of Indiana fans in California, Pennsyl- vania, and thousands of appreciative Pittsburghers in Forbes field. It took a lot of sweating, an occasional tear, and probably some pretty strong language, but when the marching band stepped off to Mr. Touchdown Indiana State College put its best feet forward.  V ' ' SYMPHONIC ORCHESTRA The Symphonic Orchestra, directed by Mr. Laurence Stitt, combines the best quali- ties of woodwinds, brasses, and strings. Those who heard their Thanksgiving Convo concert or either of their bi-annual formal concerts can vouch for the quality of this group. SYMPHONIC BAND Stirring marches and tone poems, Haydn and hit shows — any or all of these are played by the Symphonic Band. Who plays in the band? Any student who can pass the audition for eligibility given by Dr. C. David McNaughton, band director. Women as well as men, you know, are eligible. Note that, Moccasin Men! 170 STRING ORCHESTRA The soaring notes of Snowflakes, the waltzes of Strauss, and the measured move- ments of Mozart are all included in the repertoire of the Indiana String Orchestra. The orchestra is recruited from all departments of the college, composed of those who make music an avocation as well as those for whom it is a vocation. MELLOWMEN Hold it! Those swingin ' sounds could emanate from no other source! The ISC .Mel- lowmen have made the scene and all is well — for listening, dancing, or just plain en- joying. Mr. Charles A. Davis and his cool combination of talented Indians blow a mean concert from high jazz to subtle Latin rhythms. WOMEN ' S CHORUS The Women ' s Chorus, under the direction of Mr. Eugene Hulbert, are well trained performers, with a repertoire including secular, sacred, and popular music. They sing for the student body and they sing for audiences throughout the state, repre- senting Indiana State College before music lovers of many towns. 4 tCfQ- Kk€rOrSi QsS ' Kino I ji |i ' yrtn| Q iOOEL . H 172 r EQUESTRIAN CLUB Through snow and rain and pea-soup fog the Equestrian Club rides on. Despite blisters, minor aches and pains, and press- ing scholastic duties the members of this organization, the newest extracurricular organization at Indiana, continue to en- joy the kinship which can develop between horse and rider. The only requirements are riding boots and a love of horses. The reward, a good time. 173 CANTERBURY CLUB To help in maintaining the religious life of its members while they are away from home, the Canterbury Club has numerous social and re- ligious functions throughout the year. This year the members heard speeches on Religion in Mu- sic and Religion in Art. At Christmas they had a corporate communion and a communion break- fast. Canterbury members are Episcopalians, happy to join with others of their church, willing to join with those of other churches in Christian fellowship. President Vice-President Secretary Advisor OFFICERS Virginia Hileman John Webster Paul Owoc Dr. David C. Winslow 174 LUTHERAN CLUB The Lutheran Student Association combines de- votional activities and wholesome fun at its monthly gatherings. Every September starts with Hilltop Vespers. Also sponsored during the year was the Harvest Hop, the annual square dance. Sunday evening dinners at the church were followed by devotional meetings or guest speakers. Special events for the year were a Thanksgiving dinner and an annual Smorgasbord. The year ended as it began, with Hilltop Vespers. OFFICERS President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer Advisor Joseph Lettrich Yvonne Bordeaux Cynthia Fyke Miss Margaret Gabel NEWMAN CLUB This was a year of firsts for the Newman Club. They became the first religious organization to en- ter a float in the Homecoming parade. Appropri- ately, it was called The First Communion. This year for the first time they took possession of their new building, which serves as a home away from home for Catholic students on campus. They made the most of their facilities, with parties and dances to celebrate major holidays and with meet- ings and rehearsals to keep club work going smoothly. OFFICERS President Michael Kallay Vice-President Martha Snyder Treasurer Pauline Danish Corresponding Secretary Marian Perkowski Advisors; Father James Miller, Dr. Edward R. Mott 176 ORTHODOX CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP From the get-acquaintcd outing in the fall to the spring-is-here picnic in April, with bowling parties, a Christmas party, and a snow party, the Orthodox collcgiates have been practicing the brotherhood of the Orthodox Christian Fellow- ship. Organization of a choir and publishing of a newspaper were two more blocks on the founda- tion of fellowship. Besides playing together, the group prayed together in St. Michael ' s Orthodox Church in Clymer. OFFICERS President Vice-President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Advisor: Thomas Yawkey Ronald Archer Rose Plowchin Mary Jean Grega Miss Dunkelberger 177 ROGER WILLIAMS FELLOWSHIP For Baptist students there was fellowship, fun, and worship offered in an organization named ap- propriately, the Roger Williams Fellowship. For fun there were Christmas and Halloween parties and special dinners. For worship there were Sun- day devotionals. Sometimes these were followed by discussions of the problems most young people worry about: Can two people of different faiths make a good marriage? How can a marriage be kept a good marriage throughout a lifetime? OFFICERS President First Vice-President Second Vice-President Third Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Advisor: Erith Bowser Betty Brady Susan Taylor Donna Freeman Sylvia WilHams Gerald Knickerbocker Mr. Robert Hermann 178 Service to Methodist students both socially and rehgiously is the motto of the Wesley Fellowship. Through guest speakers, panel discussions, and informal lectures the Fellowship meets the reli- gious needs of its students. Through suppers and chat and chew sessions the students get to meet and know fellow Methodists. With the services Wesley offers to the Lion ' s Health Camp, the members of the Wesley Fellowship aid both the college and the borough of Indiana. President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Faculty Advisors: Director of Wesley Fellowship: OFFICERS Ethel Ketcnheim Richard OverdorfT Barbara McColgin Barbara Jo Culler Dr. and Mrs. Stanley W. Lore Rev. Harold Abram WESLEY FELLOWSHIP 179 The Graystone United Presbyterian Club and the Calvary United Presbyterian Club this year com- bined to form the Westminster Foundation under the direction of the Rev. C. Vincent Wilson. Thus they have doubled their numbers, their strength, and their activities. They have a student center and lounge for members and something going on all the time. The students gather on Sunday evenings for both religious education and Sunday socials. This year they held a special Christmas smorgasbord, took a trip to Camp Fairfield, and sponsored a trip to Westminster for a football game. What ' s more, they organized a student choir, a news- paper, and a Sunday School college class. The Foundation strives to unite fun, fellowship, and service. Although it is an off-campus organi- zation, it strives to become a part of the student ' s activities. OFFICERS WESTMINSTER President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Social Chairman Program Chairman Director: Keith Thompson Suzanne Perry Wilma Fankhauser Thomas Ringler Elaine Dallas Lawrence Allen Rev. C. Vincent Wilson FELLOWSHIP 180 ) i, STUDENT CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION Members of the Student Christian Association sponsor morning watches, promote Rehgion-in-Life Week meetings, and organize campus Christmas caroling. They bring the Christian spirit and Christian practices to college. CAMPUS CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP The Campus Christian Fellowship, a chapter of the Inter- Varsity Christian Fel- lowship International, is composed of students who have a sincere interest in deep- ening their spiritual life through Bible studies, discussions, and inspirational speak- ers. 181 182 SPORTS 183 FOOTBALL Looking back on l.S.C. ' s 2-4-2 football season, students may groan, but they should look more closely at the record. Indiana beat Westminster, which went on to win the West Penn Conference title. The Braves then whipped East Stroudsburg, which turned out to be the second highest scoring college grid team in the state. Besides winning these two games, they stopped both Slippery Rock and Edinboro with 14-14 deadlocks. Coach Sam Smith will lose seven men from the 1960 club. Heading the list are three four- year letter winners: End Sam Scavo, quarterback Eugene Davis, and halfback Tom Parsha. Also missing will be defensive tackle Ronald Drown, regular guard Jim Petrunyak, regular halfback Ralph Gray, and place kicker Walt Carmo. Head Coach: Sam Smith Asst. Coach: Owen Dougherty 184 BASKETBALL A two platoon system centered around returning veterans joined to new talent from last year ' s freshman team swept up for Indiana the title of the Western Division of the State College Con- ference. A two-coach system— a teamwork of McKnight and Betts— put the boys in winning form. Head coach McKnight built up alternate units around veterans Bucky Reich, George Wise, Al Bcane. Sam Sherwood, and George Zifko. The experience plus good ball-handling, sharp shooting, and a high rebounding average spelled defeat for teams like Slippery Rock, Alliance, and West Virginia Wesleyan. Head Coach Regis A. Asst. Coach Dr. William W. McKnight Betts. Jr. p p © 2 186 ly iPI fM yi [ 1 WRESTLING Once again Indiana ' s wrestling team twisted its way through a successful season. Certainly all wasn ' t perfect, but a rough inter-collegiate sched- ule and many tournaments in which Indiana ' s wrestlers participated as independents kept the boys busy and in shape. The team had quite a re- building job to do after the loss of some of its members last year, but the patience of coach Shaffer and weeks of hard work again gave Indi- ana a team to be proud of. BASEBALL The 1960 baseball season was one of the most successful ever experienced by an Indiana team. An effective combination of good starting pitch- ers, an excellent bull-pen staff, flawless fielding, and hard hitting batters gave I.S.C. the State Col- lege Conference crown. Besides this honor the Braves won the opportunity to represent Pennsyl- vania in the N.A.I. A. Baseball Tournament in Iowa. To get that the Braves had to overcome the powerful Westminster and Geneva nines. 190 GOLF Indiana ' s golf team, in competition witii some of the best college golfing talent in the country, made an excellent showing. In spite of the record of four wins and five losses the Duffers consistently shot good games. The Rinkus brothers, Don and Ron, managed to come in with low scores in match after match. With a good number of team members returning in 1961, Indiana .shows signs of becoming a top team in a top golfing area. TENNIS The tennis team, although lacking in experience, made a surprising showing against some highly seasoned teams in the 1960 outing. Coach James McKinley ' s team fared well against such competi- tion as St. Francis, Clarion, and Slippery Rock. One of the reasons for the success is the current popularity that the sport is enjoying on the cam- pus. Not only do the students get the chance to watch the intercollegiate matches, but they also have the opportunity to enter the amateur tourna- ments which Dr. McKinlcy has made an annual affair. E 192 TRACK Coach Bernard Ganlcy ' s effort to revive track and Held as a major sport on the Indiana campus met with success during the 1960 season. Facing some of the established teams in the Western Pennsyl- vania college circuit, the thinclads made a respect- able showing. The mile relay team came in with the winners, taking second place in the Penn Relays. With the first season problems solved and a host of experienced underclassmen returning, the track and field future for Indiana looks promising. 193 CROSS COUNTRY I.S.C. ' s cross country team had rough going in the 1960 season. Hampered by pulled muscles, blis- ters, and lack of experience, the harriers couldn ' t seem to outrun the opponents. Bob Darling, one of the experienced runners, managed to keep In- diana in the running in spite of the obstacles. Darling ' s return and the return of several expe- rienced freshmen and sophomores have brightened Coach Rowe ' s outlook for 1961. 194 RIFLE When the targets arc taken down and the judges analyze the scores, Indiana ' s rifle team is usually on or near the top. Successful and winning sea- sons are becoming a habit with teams coached by Sergeant DeLong, and when a team plays a sched- ule as varied as ours, that is a real accomplish- ment. This is the second consecutive year for the leadership of Charles Rupert, captain of the team. wf KV ' v ' 1 V nm S3 !!fvC llll m,j n If ' ■pw- yv- - . - ' -- r,.a m S M CHEERLEADERS Fight Team Fight! Fight Team Fight! Hear them, sec them, your Indiana cheerleaders who have shouted and screamed to push the ball across the goal line or into the basket. 196 VARSITY I The members of the Varsity I have many things in common. They have all done a lot of sweating and grunting; they have all been scratched, bruised, and bumped; they have all spent long hours practicing. Their talk? Why, one can imagine, the desperation pass, the last second basket, or the reversal which won th e match. WOMEN ' S ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION By scheduling intramural tournaments in basketball, volleyball, and badminton, by arranging hikes, ice skating and bowling parties. The Women ' s Athletic Association keeps co-eds active. At Playdays Indiana ' s women meet with sportswomen from other campuses. 197 PATRONS Recognition is given the following businesses for their support of the 196rOAK Brody Brothers Department Store Brown ' s Boot Shop Bruno ' s Restaurant Calderone ' s BowHng Center Capital Restaurant Central Drugs Clymer Water Service Co. Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Indiana C. S. Kunkle Lumber Co. Dairy Dell Dean ' s Restaurant First National Bank of Indiana Gatti ' s Pharmacy Henry Hall, Inc. Indiana Auto Dealers Association Indiana Dairy, Inc. Indiana Evening Gazette Indiana Lumber and Supply Co. Indiana News Co. Indiana Music House Indiana Printing and Publishing Co. John ' s Jewelry Gift Shop Jones Furniture Store Kay ' s Women ' s Apparel Shop Kovalchick Salvage Co. Knotty Pine Inn Luxenbergs McCreary Tire Rubber Co. Marion Center Creamery Montgomery Ward Musser Forest, Inc. One-Hour Martinizing Park Press Penn Furniture Co. Pennshire Stores, Inc. Reschini Insurance Agency Ruffners Syntron Co. Twin Pine Court Uncle Bill ' s Amusements United Door Corporation Waxier Men ' s Store Widdowson ' s Jewelers 198 I ' l,.,i., r.,|.lr, l.% |..-,c|)li J. Olllcy, New Il..|,c, Penrisylv  Where Artist and Craftsman Meet At Keller the eye of the artist and the hand of the craftsman meet to solve problems— just one of the things that make the distinctive difference in aVelvatone yearbook. WM J KELLER INC PUBLISHERS OF FI.XER lEARBOOKS BUFFALO 15. NEW YORK
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