La Salle University - Explorer Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA)
- Class of 1968
Page 1 of 256
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 256 of the 1968 volume:
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T izn LASALLE COLLEGE PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA r 4 1 3 Wl 1 7 c. u. c Blessed Brother Benilde, I am digging your entire act. sc 232 God is an idea Wally is real. sc 10 Bring back the Edsel. sc 7 ' WsP ' - ■f - 1, -« ■i« . , i { W l ga ffH m i . ■Lp f« '  ttL SS i t  «I .-,1 1 •uIv ' l r-ijtfVtJ 10 11 12 13 ft ES -fUSIIIIIIl- ; __j__ El ■1 jjjg m Mir- ' Jb r 1 1 iiiiiiiliWliriiniijj DooW ah Ditty c314 My soul weeps, sc 232 LaSalle CoUedge c214 14 15 Bored again. c214 E = Mc ' ! sc 1 Friday is groovy. h 107 16 17 18 Hi There Fun-seekers b210 God is a converse sneaker, c 214 20 T rf u0 f ll ' OT L u ood5. 22 23 24 26 ' ' 11 ' , x--, N ' tJC . • •• 27 Joe botes Eileen ' s guts! c301a Dr. Springer is too smart for us. w302 28 29 30 i a girl sits at this desk at night, please leave your name, address, and phone number under the arm of this chair. Thank You, Please leave a picture if pos- sible, then please erase this, will 31 32 33 34 35 36 The man is with it. b 103 37 yxsv : 40 mnm CHECK ONE OF THE FOLLOWING D COLLEGIAN D FARCE DRAG 41 Tom Smith, Editor-in-Chief Goo Goo Goo Joob It ' s a shaft, I mean a real shaft. All the normal things to get, and I get those clowns from the COLLEGIAN. So all right, you want truth. Here ' s an afternoon full down in 312 farm. Wednesday afternoon, the time of paste and obscenities. Smith, the boss man and self- appointed czar has neatly absented himself after dispatching a wheeled lackey down to the printer. (The printer ' s name is Borowsky, and in between the foulmouthing that generally accompanies its utterance is occasionally heard references to a Larry.) In troops the news staff, a loosely con- gealed mass of types apollonian and dionysian in aspect. There ' s Tom Curley, the mechanical the- oritician, from whom flows an endless stream of page-plan aphorisms and journalistic trivia. Sam- ple stream: Have to cut many grafs from this second take if we ' re going to put it on a two-story stress layout without a picture shifted left. Sure you do. Then Lehning. Quiet Jim. The quiet peo- ple traditionally do all the work. They never say no. Jim gets all the headline rewrites and other dirt. He ' ll learn. In walks Father Cawley, king of news, soon to be king of the whole megilla. He smiles a lot and conceals much. His smile fades quickly, as does everyone else ' s, as he announces Mike Heaney, Sports Editor 42 Will McKenna, Copy Editor that Curley ' s layout is definitely ofif the wall and has to be redone. Come over here, Klock, and stop playing with the paste. That ' s Joe Klock, and speaking of paste, here ' s Bill Checchio, the original paste boy who made it big, if Features Editor is big. Behind him is Mike Heaney, the Mohawk Kid who grosses out half of the present members before he gets to his desk, leading his own personal slave, Oddjob Karwacki, to the pasteup slaughter like a tranquilized lamb. Then, making an anticlimactic entrance equivalent to his position as resident lackey and housemother, Will McKenna, who also doubles as copy editor, enters, dragging in a most reluctant staff of Steve Jankowski. I don ' t care how many high D ' s Miles Davis hit, Polak. You start with features and don ' t miss any errors like you usually do (Steve once spelt his name wrong on a term paper and will never live it down). McKenna tells a dirty joke as he looks for the copy, and gives his audi- ence a short primer in surreptitious vocab when he doesn ' t find it. Bernie Krimm, aforementioned wheeled lackey, shows up with the copy just then and gets a recapitulation of interjectional type words from the McKenna who begins separating it and reading his copies. The setup ' s simple, drones my informant in newspaper techniques. You just measure the typewritten pages for the length in pica type, set it, lay out dummy pages, Dave Cawley, News Editor 43 get galleys back the next day and paste them up. Then how come scenes like: Yo, dope, that don ' t fit and besides where the hell does the pic- ture go . . . cut out three lines so ' s it ' ll fit . . . who set this simple ing headline that ' s two columns too wide . . . boy these pages are plenty screwed up ... do you have to use the scissors all afternoon? Words not even remotely printa- ble embarrass the walls as they bounce around in constantly increasing ranks, an occasional exple- tive waking Bill Stevenson, the neighborhood freak, who makes grunting noises to prove he exists. Bad to worse? Now for the icing on the cake. In prances the head Knight. Unshaved. Dressed like a privy-inspector. Really nice hair with halfbaked sideburns. His face is a cheerless snarl that threatens all in its way. He chucks his books onto the floor and gets grossed out in toto by everybody else in the room. Nice face. Smith. God. you look scronugy. Where the hell have you been. Move your books, hotdog, so I can stretch my feet. Oh eat my shorts you subhumans. He ' s got a really nice nouth, he ' s satiric, ironic and every other unpleasant thing you can think of. He sits down in the swivel chair he forces somebody to yield, and waits. Mostly he waits for Checchio, and he isn ' t disappointed. Tom I can ' t get all this crap in here and the editorial doesn ' t fit. It fits, wingwong, I measured it. Yeah, but look. How about the kicker and headline. Oh, yeah. A quick phone call to the business manager: Paul, Bobo says we owe him 2500 dollars. Like hell, I lost those bills. You hop over here, amigo, and find them. Bye. Hey Tom, can I use jockstrap in a headline? No, garbagemouth, and how about get- ting your sweatsuit out of here. Then a quick eye to the news staff, which is engaged in an epic paper clip encounter. Voice all affected sweet- ness: Oh, gee, fellas, you done your pages al- ready. How eificient. Cawley: No, we can ' t finish, we ran out of paper clips. Pause. Editor picks up one of many clips from the floor, deftly whips it in Cawley ' s direction, deftly misses, holds up his hands but he ' s too late at a broadside from all areas of the room smash his defenses and nearly put his eyes out. I get hit in the mouth with two, and get the hell away from those freaks. Three frightfully typical LaSalle people wander down the first floor of College Hall and pick up freshly unwrapped copies of the much-heralded LaSalle Collegian. Shorter of the three spreads paper open before him . . . there is a long silence — deep, reverent, awed, he is reading (you can tell, his lips are moving). He looks up and stares open-mouthed at his companions. He speaks: Jeez Steve, this is a good paper, six pages o ' sports — there ain ' t no crap in it this week! Steve Jankowski, Sports Editor Bill Checchio, Features Editor 44 How do you sum it all up? How do you say how good and bad and hopeful and dull and funny and, sometimes, pretty damn discouraging it all was? Review a year, one September to May time, at a Catholic Men ' s College where only a year ago the whole thing could be summed up by a sheaf of blank pages with an occasional basketball score in a lower lefthand corner. But that was a year ago, and all that has happened, or failed to happen, or is about to happen, is a bittersweet (insipid? apathetic?) something that might better be forgotten, but cannot. What was it all like? Well, what it was was: The second week in April: the bombing pause, the dropping out of LB|, the death of Dr. King, the burning of cities. . . cafeteria reforms : food prices were posted, silverware stayed dirty, orange juice came down, as did the size of the glasses. . . muggings of resident students, car strippings, and thefts in the parking lots and at the apartments, as the natives got restless ...a football club (founded and financed by students) that scored the first touchdown in 27 football less years at LaSalle on the second play from scrimmage... a football club that was shut out in four of its five games ...women, wimmin, females at LaSalle, as the evening division went coed full scale... a literary magazine in a bag... a stream of resignations within the C.U.C... Blessed Brother Benildus (Tall in the sight of Cod.!?) makes the big time. . .the war. . .the APO hippie incident over or under emphasized with a cast of thousands, including the Student Court, Dean of Men, and a stern warning... Newman— Cool Hand (What we ' ve got here is a failure to communicate.) Luke... the march h on the pentagon . . . Harding replacing Heyer...the president of the Residence Council on suspension for one year without appeal to Student Court... the unveiling of plans for a new classroom building and sports facility, with both scheduled for completion by 1969 — barring labor pains, earthquake, famine, and a decrease in enrollment . . . goo goo goo joob, I am the eggman, you are the eggman, I am the walrus, goo goo.. the advent of student power and accompanying lack of interest... the St. Joe ' s game, 32 points, 32 Points, 32 POINTS, goo goo goo joob... Student Government ' s attempt to vote itself out of its non-existence, and the splendid failure that followed. . . All you need is love, the banner and the chaplain... 5 Wilson fellowships for LaSalle seniors, including an evening division student, plus 3 honorable men tions . . . the occupation of Fort Teliow by the Campus Police (Ain ' t nobody allowed on this campus unless he stops here first!). . . Calvin Murphy ...efficient registration procedures that ruined the Black Hole of Calcutta tradition we all knew and loved... Gar ' s, raided or otherwise — Wally, Al, and postgame celebrations. .. Jerry Wolman and bankruptcy. . .Student What was it all like? Well, what it was was: Government proclaiming the Collegian to be a farce. ..Student Court proclaiming the Collegian to be a farce ...the Collegian proclaiming Student Court to be a farce . . , Father Ryan in out as chaplain, the issue that wasn ' t, or nearly was, or?... the Dow demonstration and SBK ' s reaction... Daniel Bernian at the ROTC Ball: My only regret is that LaSalle was not able to contribute more to WWI, WWII, and the Korean War ... Love is Blue... Scott and Heyer nominated for pawn of the year. . . LaSalle hippies excluded from the Honors Center... the Masque: The Importance of Being Earnest that never happened, and How to Succeed etc., that did . . . Rizzo . . . Cziracky vs Rizzo. . . Fatty. . . nameplates for each of the dormitories in six inch high black letters spelled Cassian ' s as Cashin ' s. . .classes in some courses at Chestnut Hill . . . Stringfellow, Theobald, and McKissick on the cities, the races, the future . . . Gresh . . . TKE ' s fraternity house store — the beginning of an era? ...day hops (Yo! Yo, Steve!) playing basketball in black hightops between classes in Wister...the residents ' midnight ride on the Inquirer. . .the meteoric obscurity of Bobbie Gentry... the soccer team loses some close ones: 14-0, 15-0... the ROTC question, to discontinue or not to discontinue. . . pass-fail on atrial basis. .. Ervin, super sub and hero, until we suddenly became evil . . . Hanz Holzer, hunting. . .the formation of the Student Alliance, and contested elections for the first time in many moons. . . Bonnie and Clyde. . . Dolson and Conlin— the saga of a personal vendetta. . the end of grad school deferments (I tell ya ' Ed, they ' re gonna get all of us.). ..the Soul Survivors... the Soul Survivors???., .the LJniversity of Pennsylvania ' s basketball team and the law of probability. . . Cheating. . . Sander Vanocur on the Election... Pueblo... a tuition increase, or, what to do with that $200 that just happened to be lying around . . .the Turtles. . . the Boston Garden Tournament, th Providence game, and all its ramifications. ..Student Government ' s demand for more of a role in school administration and said Administration ' s reply, We don ' t like troublemakers. . . . Dustin Hoffman as the Graduate... George Wallace as the patriot.. . Jim Garrison as the Jolly Green Giant... Bill Hall as Escofier...the Book Store as the Book Store. . . GO DIRVXTLY TO DO NOT DASS GO DO NOT COLLECT $200. T AND THM . RWY AES WITW RIGH HERETO AND THAT IN CAMPUS STANDS FOR COURT BAlLir-F! 6RIW6 (H THE PRIS(?NER ♦ HAO.L THE STINW RO Before mt 6EMCW, JUSTICE MUST 6E S A Hor eir T ' fei-ODfOcSS COURT Of. ! , t K ' YOO MOM H FTA K££P CROtR,tct ' . ... PluyTO LET S GET OK) WITH IT Wh vt are the charges? Wt AT CUARGES.r SAY! V ELl, mow do rovi PLEW ? HOW DO YOU PLtAD??? SLKlTY, GUILTY, OR Guilty?] Guilty, yousc GUYS CAUGH MEWiTW ME PANTS DOWM. vPRiTWE AFTER PROFOUt D DEHBERAT ON FROM TME GENTLErAEN OF THE BENCH, TXE Housed is FOUND GUILTY OF UMGENTLt- MANLY CONOUCT AND INDECENT EXR3SURE- VJE HEREBY SOLEMNLY AND SR SMOD C LLY SENTENCE YOU TO SAY C T Your le sure) one - our FATHER ANOTH E WAIL fAARYS- 1-lAVE VOU MIYTWNG TO SAY FOR YOUR- SELVES, SIRRAH? Sacrificial lambs needed Park your mutton in the Oct. 6 COLLEGIAN organizational meeting CU 312 ' ' Weekly Rag The Collegian it seems is now in a position of self-appointed arbiter be- tween what it deems acceptable and what would appear to be the truth. In the last issue of the Collegian in its envi- able position, printed an article in re- lation to the striking of a LaSalle stu- dent by an APO fraternity member. The article was perhaps guilty of some of the most flagrant bias ever printed by the Collegian and reminds one of the in- famous Yellow Press tactics employed at the turn of the century. The Collegian, in its article, gra- ciously condescended to withhold the names of the persons involved in the melee while at the same time attempt- ing the illogical conclusion that the action of one reflects the feeling of all the brothers of APO. The emphasis on the fact of the belligerants ' fra- ternity affiliation is quite irrelevant - or would the Collegian in its self- righteous position now attempt to up- set the whole balance of accepted logi- cal procedure and infer that a valid conclusion can be arrived at in pro- ceeding from a particular to a general. There were other factors involved which should be brought to the atten- tion of the student body. Last Tuesday night, the Managing Editor of the Col- legian attended an IFC meeting and warned that a letter of apology should by written by APO or else an editorial attacking the whole fraternity system at La Salle would be printed in that week ' s edition of the Weekly Rag. When the letter of apology was exacted from APO it was printed complete with decorative border - no bias involved here, of course - no doubt the Collegian editors felt it just looked more attrac- tive published that way. Far be it from the writers to im- ply that the Collegian staff are guilty of corruption and coercion but the facts of last weeks ultimatum would not in- dicate otherwise. Could it be that the tone of last week ' s article was merely a reflection of the anger experienced by the editor and faculty moderator in two La Salle students? Could it be that the Collegian is forsaking the basis of its existence in ceasing to make intelligent and impartial comment and, instead, using its influence as a political club to bludgeon those whom it cannot otherwise keep in line. Yes, it could be so and we challenge the Collegian to defend the rank abilses of its authority and try to again achieve the integrity of which it has been ob- viously short. Robe St Ch. Gould Paul E. Vignone Mediocrity and Patty Duke s s - La Salle over Niagara — Boston College over Nor La Salle over Providenci Providence over North C Boston College over La La Salle over Louisville West Virginia over Colun Boston College over Pen Syracuse over St. John ' s St. John ' s over Penn Sto Louisville over Columbt La Salle over West Virgil Real 3 CD D Dropping their beads Having spent almost four years here at La Salle I feel it is time for me to express myself on a subject which has long been a source of personal sorrow, namely, the general lack of devotion among La Salle men to Mary. How rare it has been in my stay here to see a student stop for a short prayer at the lovely Mary grotto outside Mc- Shain Hall! How infrequently have I seen students telling their beads in the dormitories, or even the chapel for that matter. On occasion, I admit, I have felt a swell of pride in seeing a student ' s beads drop as he fumbled for change in the cafeteria, but, in general, the overall picture of the typical La Salle student ' s devotion to Our Bles- sed Mother is grim. I dare venture to estimate that less than half the enroll- ment even carry their beads with them. Before coming to La Salle, I had imagined the La Salle family of stud- ents grouped around their dormitory counselor saying the evening rosary before going to bed — an idle dream. La Salle has yet to sponsor a Liv- ing Rosary on campus during May or October, Mary ' s special months. When the new chapel opened, I looked in vain for a place to light a candle and say a prayer for my studies before a statue of Our Lady — there is none! The recent troubles in the College Union, the Honors Center, the student court and the fraternities are patent examples of the kind of future prob- lems La Salle will face unless we beseech Mary, Our Queen, to bless our College. Sincerely, Richard T. Oliver, ' 68 A bunch of greeno, algae eaters CD 3 CD romp :::::¥:::::::::w::::a:::sa:f This Week ' s Collegian fswissssssssss Notes from the third floor: confident sports editor swears: Karwacki and Butcher will be here in a few minutes to finish the sports pages; three hours later harried editor must kidnap staff noodnik emerging from room 314 to get the pages done ... thanks a lot, guys (Heaney, you ' ll never leave here early again). Everwailing features editor groans: We ' re in trouble (note the we ), ' cause I can only fill two pages. Result: has-been hack keypusher impressed into service, fills half of page 4 in a clutch, then has to listen to the whimperer criticize: ( That ' s not very funny. ). Nice guy, you creep. News had three pages and Brother G. John gave them one of them (page 8). And then? Abovementioned page 8 goes through a perilous odyssey of near-arrivals at the printer ' s, near dis- posals in the circular file and generally haphazard and cavalier- ly treatment. As the dust and paper clips slowly settle, editor says the hell with it, trots down to Gar ' s, chains himself to a half-keg of Budweiser and stays there forever. This Friday: Our Christmas issue ty ROTC? Dear abbess: We are a group of hippies who would like to form a club on campus and Vdo our thing. We would like to have our own corner in the caf where we can grow flowers, be real, beat up fraternity mem- bers and exclude people we don ' t like, like honors students. Who do we see about doing this. Flowerily yours. Will Skrodie Speed McGill Jack Killer Gentle Dear flower children: I empathize with your desire to be together and have real experience but of course you people aren ' t too popular around here. First, a lot of students and others object, to the way you dress and keep your hair and while I ' m the fairest-minded of critics I kind of agree with them: I think it ' s disgraceful. Besides I am quite aware of the kind of things you bufas engage in like marching on Washington and caus- ing trouble and upsetting people by not agreeing with their politics and it ' s certainly tim e something was done about it as I ' m pretty fed up about the way you scum laugh at baseball and Mom and Applehood and if I had a pair of scissors right now I ' d cut every damned hair right off you crummy freaks. Don ' t try coming into the cafeteria or it ' s all over for you. Green machine takes elevator ride Greek Boy ' s Clubs WE HAVE o sports editor who sings Smokey a copy editor who backs him up on the bass file cabinet a news editor w ith a brogue listening devices in the adjacent rooms a merthileth busineth manager the best view on campus of the annual review WE NEED HELP COLLEGIAN organization meeting CU 312 October 6, 1967 Student Council i attempts suicide Dear Abbess: I ' ve been expelled for trying to steal one of the doors from the Science Build- ing for a souvenir. I felt this was un- fair as I only did it in the spirit of college fun and All-American prank- sterhood, I ' m wondering if I can ap- peal my case to Student Court so that I can get off with a warning or some- thing. Is there anyone I have to bribe? Warmly, Tobias Brute Dear Brute: Bribery is not necessary. The correct procedure is to plead not guilty on extenuating grounds so utterly ridiculous that the court will consider them seriously. Among more popular reasons: temporary insanity resulting from heartbreak; temporary insanity re- sulting from mass hysteria; diarrhea. As long as you stick to your guns, you ' re bound to get off easy. Girls G 1 MIXER G 1 Delta Sigma Pi R Accounting Assoc. R L S FRIDAY, DEC. 1 L S CLUBROOM Girls L.S.C. used to be a wonderful place to go to school, but things are getting ridiculous. These anarchic types do TTie Liberal View Vacillation and indicision HYPNOSIS We are willing to help you and render positive results for smoking, overweight, concentration, memory, mo- tivation and bad habits. Free consultation by appointment only CA 4-7930 American Institute of Hypnotherapy Paul S. Symmes, Ph.D., Director B QQ Yoyo crisis c I was pleased to see the book store finally stock something that has real relevance to the students of La Salle. I am, of course, speaking of the Yoyos which appeared on the shelves on Mon- day. However, a real crisis has arisen in regard to these valuable items. After using my brand new yoyo (shaped like a football, to remind me of the fealty I owe to the La Salle football club) for only one day, the string broke. But that is not the true crux of the problem, for, as everyone well knows, yoyo strings DO break. I was shocked — nay, appalled — to learn that the book store does not stock spare yoyo strings! Truly this is a circus of the first magnitude. Surely The COL- LEGIAN can bring its good offices to bear upon this problem so that in the near future the book store will stock, along with its fine line of yoyos, a fine line of yoyo strings. Sincerely, Francis R.X. Lyons A day in the life THIS IS TRUE Thomas Wynne Hesitantly swaying bits of yesterday jumped as the clock struck 6 A.M., and then fell apart with the morning clang of milk bottles on cool steps. Anthony Bootgrass nodded his head to a toothless old man wearing a pink tie, who asked him why he wasn ' t wearing white tennis sneaks: moving his dreaminfected head in a very definite no, he stabbed one eye with a corner of his pillow, and slowly opened the other, expecting to see a pink tie. A robin ' s song was lost in the quiet fog, which at this time was gathering up yesterday ' s remnants, and attempting to fill the bot- tom of the morning with them, the day obviously having to start somewhere. Anthony B. was instantly annoyed with a large for- eign object in his mouth, reaching in he discovered it to be soft and dry. The fog then rose quickly as a gentle light from the east melted the final stray piece of yesterday into softly swaying today. Bang! A. Bootgrass ' roomate knocked his fiddle over in a feeble maneuver to decapitate a genuine Mickey Mouse alarm clock. Both shouted, Jesus Christ at almost the exact same time, one an octave lower than the other. A.B. realized he had a tongue. Hearing the harmony echo through the small apart- ment, Anthony Bootgrass decided it was a good omen, and climbing out of bed he stubbed his toe on an empty Mateus bottle. He stopped dead in the middle of the livingroom- bedroom, as he remembered his Creek teacher saying, ' There will be an exam on Monday, chapter 9 to 18. Greek being an 8:30 class, and Monday being today, he walked over and sat down on the bed to consider the possibilities: Study one hour and leave the rest to my Muse. ..Don ' t study and leave it all to my Muse, healthy chick I hope. ..cut the test., .drop the course. He leaned back to relax, knowing it would be of no avail to become upset. He let his cool mellow. In a few minutes he was asleep. Two hours later A.B. woke up, realizing the die was cast with possibility number three. He was depressed so he began rationalizing about the poor educational system hewas forced into. Cuttingtests always depressed him, in fact it depressed him so much he usually couldn ' t study for the make-up tests, so he would cut those also, which, in short, depressed him more. Fortunately, Anthony B. ' s states of depression didn ' t depress him, for he had learned how to handle them; depression made him prey to meditation, meditation gave him philo- sophical joys, and philosophical joys made him happy. To stay happy A.B. would cut tests 1 could see the old man ' s blotchy red face from its A NIGHT ON THE TOWN John Caviston reflection in the window. His head was tilted to the left and he had a dreamy, smiling look. He leaned across the seat and, though 1 purposely wasn ' t looking in his direction, said to me, Hey, buddy. Howya doing? I looked at him, and was about to say something, but thought better of it and again looked out the win- dow. Mind you, now he said, clinging to the back of the seat, I had a lot of women, just never married any of them He started laughing, but after a minute or so his laugh trailed off and he was lulled into a sort of half doze. The old man gradually regained consciousness and wiped the sleepiness from his eyes. He leaned over again and tried to get my attention. Look, buddy he said, I done my duty. Raised seven kids. That ' s right! Seven of them. And now they ' re all raised and... He stopped for a second and turned to look out the window. And able to take care of themselves ' ' He sat there silently for about thirty seconds. I was about to try and catch a little shuteye myself, but the old man started up again. Seven of them! he burst out as if not able to hold it any longer. Raised them, fed them, and now He stopped for a moment and started to sob. And now they don ' t need the old man anymore He held h is two hands on the top of the seat in front of him, seemi ngly lost in his troubles. He shook his head, unable to understand. Regaining his composure, he said affirmatively, Well, 1 don ' t need them neither He leaned back and was soon asleep... The old man slowly awakened and leaned over to me again. Hey, buddy, know what? What, I replied, finally turning around and facing him. I never got married. Not me. Know why? No, why? I asked. Cause 1 couldn ' t give up the booze, that ' s why. Ha. Ha. Ha. went his laugh, which turned into a sob and. then a mixture as again, he fell asleep. Luckily, his head found a safe resting place between the window and the top of the seat. My stop was next so I got up and pulled the cord. As I stood on the steps, waiting for the green light over the door to brighten, I noticed that the rain streaks had formed a little branch pattern on the door window. Looking at it from the top down, they all started from the same place, but ended up going in all different directions. From the bottom up, they were all headed in the same direction. It made more sense that way. PAUL KELLY ODE: INTIMATIONS OF PERSONALITY So how shall I be, anyway? I ' ve decided that for once and for all I ' m going to be a man I can call My own. Not like yesterday: Sitting on the El, riding downtown. Sitting and staring at that girl And thinking. Lost in a whirl Of dreams, my mind ' s windblown And filled with visions. I smile to myself, look up and she ' s gone: So I blast myself with self-derisions. Well, that ' s all going to change. I ' m going to be someone And do things undone And think unthought thoughts. Strange What he ' s become, they ' ll say: He was so shy and quiet And unprepossessing. Why it Seems like only yesterday That he sat in that chair next to me. Yes, sir, that ' s how it ' s going to be. POOL JOHN RAFTER No where is better to think of you than in the pool at the Y Bobbing I float my drown proof float and follow your image through levels no one splashing knows HAIKU JAN KOBESKI C L, pV UJC IT J I make- T e i tOtJH ' f ' aiH Hv J Jc VCt-y -hinte I Jil i xy aair cS ae. -fie. t-trcir vta a. o a r H 1 f oy ' soiMe-lltitfy I Ji ' J ' 0 -f i cJ -h, J„ neu ' a€ tuat cUed litt tvae - c e  ? iTo«p Iff d ia i: ebhiey ' Tfom ami -ittas. . . . and some final words Co Garden State. sc4 Sidney Creenstreet lives. w305 Women are here to stay. c214 Damn the demonstrators and pass the ammo! w310 This class is driving me out of my mind. w306 Apple pie makes you sterile. w206 I love French Tate is great I am crazy. L9 Bernadette smoked pot. cBOIa Philosophy gives certainty to life. c204 Is John Veen Santa Claus? cu Bring back deposit bottles. c301a Night school student... What is your wife doing now? w306 We are doomed Mort c316 The United States Marine Corps 191 years of Blood Death and Destruction. The finest fighting force the World has ever known. Cung Ho! Gung Ho! Cung Ho! sc15 Romney for fool. c214 Join the Metaphysics Club now! Memberships are going fast. Don ' t be left out. w302 Strawbridge and Clothier are queer, cu joe Heyer lives! scl Be primative. b107 Dr. Cleary has post nasal drip. c314 The ROTC band has soul. (whose)? c314 Brother Benilde is a fake. blOl Business is a giant bore. c314 Lee Harvey Oswald . . . Where are you now that we need you? w209 Dear female night student, Get out of my desk! c306 Ronald Reagan eats peanut butter. L9 Day students are a bunch of Mama ' s boys. c314 Stokely Carmichael is a riot. w304 1 am dying from life. c214 The double standard is unfair. c204 Goldner fought for the Arabs. c204 Out is in this year. c204 Women ' s virtue is man ' s greatest invention. c214 Yea, Cod!! w207 Chastity is its own punishment. w206 Sarah. sc135 Virginity is curable. w209 One year till I get out of this hole. c314 RER OFFICE V All right, bud, what ' s the problem? Well officer, it seems that someone has stolen my car, I just went into this drugstore for a min-. . . Right, uh-huh, what ' s it look like? Well, its really kind of a mess, it hasn ' t been washed in about six mon-. . . Look, kid, I don ' t wanna know how dirty it is, I wanna know what it looks like — what make is it? It ' s a black 1963 Volkswagen with uh, no bumper, a piece of pink wire holding down the hood, and LOVE painted in white paint on one door, Bernie did that, he ' s Typical Philadelphia cop looks down at blond headed, red side-burned and moustached yearbook editor in sloppy blue navy coat and ratty blue and black muffler hanging to waist; surveys gathering crowd of typical Philadelphia innocent by- standers; takes one rather bored look across street; looks back at said yearbook editor and utters immortal words: Black ' 63 Volks huh, pink wire huh, LOVE huh — looks a lot like that one across the street? Whole crowd looks. Officer looks. Yearbook editor looks. Quite a lot, as a matter of fact — I really don ' t see how I could have missed it. No harm done though, my fault, no reason to get excited. Lm sure I can explain everything . . . You on drugs, punk? Well yes, you see, Lve been sick and that ' s why I was in the store, and . . . II Just stand in a corner and listen — monlogue: Yes, yes, I ' m sure we sent the pages in last week, we had them all done and in . . . omigod they ' re still here but that can ' t be, I told Wayne to mail them. Uh huh, no book unless you have them by tomorrow, right, I ' ll send them off special delivery. Okay, bye. Jan, we ' ll have to get these pages started tonight sometime. No, last time we tried to work at the apartment Arthur ate everything. Call Abe and tell him we need all eight hundred pictures by four. Kevin, you ready to take those organizations? No, Kevin, the shutter ' s on the other side of the camera, that ' s right, where you ' ve got your thumb. Hello, no, as far as I know, we won ' t have a picture of the rotorooter club in this year ' s book, okay, bye. Greg, what ' s a rotorooter club anyway? Ill Problems, complaints? There are a few: In one afternoon I ' m supposed to give him 800 pictures? Two hands, that ' s all I ' ve got, two hands . . . for one of the most important clubs on campus and he says there won ' t be one. Just because we missed 18 appointments . . . and they say, no you can ' t have your picture retaken, it won ' t do any good, the acne will show up anyway ' . . . don ' t antag- onize, don ' t antagonize, but would he listen, no! I moderate 45 1-1 Wayne Drozynski, Managing Editor Peter Frank, Moderator Bill Carroll, Editor-in-Chief 46 a nice peaceable book, a little fun, yes, but friendly, friendly. Freaks, they run everything! . . . the rotorooter club, of all things to slight!!! IV Personnel? Ah, what personnel — such talents, such devo- tion, such gall. On a staff whose lack of tact was exceeded only by its inability to meet deadlines, there was truly one man who stood out from all the others, one man who ' s ability and productivity separated him from the rest of the rabble, one individual who ' s sense of good taste and down- right hoss sense earned him special praise. Unfortunately, he prefers to remain anonymous and insists that he not be con- nected with the book or the rest of the squad in any way whatsoever. He did do a swell job though. As far as the rest of the staff was concerned, they were- are unique. There was the great chief, Carroll, keeper of the key to the file cabinet, wearer of brillo pad sideburns, em- bezzler of funds. At his right hand was Kobeski, from the Jan Kobeski, Literary Editor 47 Mark Zang Joe Murphy hill country, emptier of wastebaskets, disciple of Roget, two fingered typist. There was Greg (I was wondering about the trend) Steele, doer of tasks, and Brother R. Sampson, alias Rich, alias Sam, rebetta man and writer of interviews. Drozynski was there too — snow fetishist, dweller of dark- ened closets, occasionally referred to as Stupid Polock. There was Zang, the depressed, borrower of twelve stringed guitars, and Becker, pacifier of organizations, and Murphy, the near-sighted, taker of pictures. Who could forget the others. Louden the wonder typer, and Kronenburg the itine - ant, and Smith the special guest anarchist, and Towers the unseen, and Lee the invisible, and Arthur the dog. With such men as these, can there be any doubt why the book turned out the way it did? V . . . but officer, you don ' t understand, it was really quite a simple mistake, after all, Tm only human!!! What do you mean that ' s only my opinion, whatsa matter clod, you got something against flower children? 48 ST. GABRIEL ' S SOCIETY Leave it to the plebe mentality and you ' ll get, What the hell? You can ' t do nothing with kids like that. And then you talk with some of these guys and, maybe, you think, it ' s not like that at all. Most of them are straight, not the marsh- mallowy, We ' ve-got-to-go-out-into-the-depths-of-poverty-and-save-humanity types. They don ' t think Boys Town and Maria Montessori, they don ' t put on the Salvator hominum white. They could be your brother, or your roommate, because that ' s all they are, but they don ' t buy the philistine flak that calls a JD a little bastard, or worse yet, nigger. People are people, that ' s all, and for them, finding out where the people part of confused, unhappy kids is makes them a little more human. So the plebe says, Yeah, I wish I had the time, but here ' s a quarter to help you con- tinue your work, and he ' s not impressed. And you think, Boy, that was nice, giving a quarter, think I ' ll get change of a dollar so I can give something too. Keep the quarter. Blatant philanthropy is so humiliating. 49 •sn: ::!! ' :: 1 STUDENT GOVERNMENT Harry Carberry, President of Student Government The Executive Board; Frank Ferro, James Cunningham, Harry Carberry. 50 Minutes of the Council meeting dated something or another: Harry Carberry, President, opened with a prayer to Saint Demosthenes, the patron saint of marble- mouthing, and proceeded to rap his gavel and have the minutes read, which Frank Ferro did, his stentorian voice rising above the sounds of pillow-fluffing and con- tented snores of the early-starters; Carberry approved the minutes, noting that they were nicely typed, whereupon Joe Buckley leapt from his seat to denounce, con- demn, take issue with, and harangue interminably about the spelling or misspelling of the word dialogue on page 7, noting also that he had got a bad copy and so denouncing, etc. the ditto machine; Jim Cunningham rapped the gavel and Buck- ley, in alphabetical order, and asked that the constitution be suspended temporarily because it was being amended, or mended, as the case may have been, uncertainty arising from the fact that the constitutional dementing committee was unable to report that week, having bogged down in a profound debate about a possible misplaced modifier in Article II, section iii, paragraph 7, sentence 11, so that the attention of the few attentive was directed to the next item on the agenda, viz. old business, a matter which was shelved as being too dated to be of concern at present; in the midst of the recedings an astute head-counter noticed that the College Union had no representatives in attendance, a circumstance which, it was later learned, stemmed from the fact that no one could determine whether anyone in the organization last week was still in it this week; Dennis Salvagio motioned that a committee be formed to investigate the matter, and became riled when the chair asked for a consecutive translation of his broken-English statement; Sal- vagio accused council members of being bigoted against the Irish, from which nationality he claimed descent, thereby antagonizing Jim Cunningham, who threat- ened to ram the gavel down Salvagio ' s throat. When order had been restored, new business was called for, found too complex to handle at the time, and tabled for further commentary and study. The meeting ended, as all meetings do, with prom- ises of another. Doug Smith. Joe Buckley, and somebody else. Andrew Sacks 51 THE GAVEL SOCIETY ... And in reference to my honorable oppo- nent ' s plan to curtail nuclear proliferation to the under-developed states in the Near East as such a contingency would affect NATO, SEATO, COMECON and ANZUS, there are a few points I would like to call to question — points he neg- lected to mention in his first rebuttal. First in order of importance is the unavoidable fact that he is a jerk. Nothing personal, understand, but if I were you I wouldn ' t trust anyone that dumb looking as far as I could throw him. And as far as that grotesque outfit is concerned . . . And so it goes. LaSalle ' s Gavel Society has come a long way in recent years — from a nothing organization wallowing in relative obscurity to a something organization struggling in relative ob- scurity, but not minding, really. As 1966 State Champions in debate, the Gavel is expected to put up a vigorous defense, affirmativing and negativing and rebuttaling and generally con- founding their opponents through their wit, wis- dom, and guts. Then again, they might pull a strategic withdrawal into their office somewhere in Shaw House with all them funny little quotes to keep them company. 53 54 55 .W )p f ,i ] ALPHA EPSILON DELTA Remember back when you were a little kid, and every time Aunt Sheila and Uncle Gus came over to visit, one of them would bend over and ask you what you wanted to be if you happened to grow up? And you said you wanted to be a doctor. But then you grew up . . . These are fraternity men and I suppose they are good people, ready to fight for two dollar nights, motherhood, apple pie, and all that sort of thing. The fraternity is Alpha Epsilon Delta and is the group where the pre-med people can get together and pre-med or whatever it is they do. This year, we yearbook types had requested original, perhaps witty, perhaps clever, perhaps even a shade risque photo ideas from all the frats on campus. This was AED ' s contribution. I suppose you would have to call it risque. Swell. I guess it isn ' t a total loss though, the fourth gentle- man on the right did manage to keep his eyes closed, but other than that, this picture is pretty much a dud. They were supposed to submit a write-up for the picture, but that was too m.uch to hope for, so we really don ' t know too much about them. As far as we know, they are the only fraternity without a corner in the mess hall, so we have no idea what they do when they need to get together and em- pathize or practice bedside manner. They ' ve probably re- quisitioned a few tables in a lab somewhere where they can be traditional together. 56 There is a lot of snow in this picture, and I expect that several English majors are going to get the impression that, what with all the snow, the photographer was trying to use the stuff as a symbol (snow, whiteness, purity, virginity, that sort of thing) with all kinds of literary allusions. Forget it. True, there is snow in the picture. True, the brothers are, for all we know, upstanding citizens. But, unless Alpha Phi Omega changes its recruiting practices quickly, the purity will be lost. There have been generally unchristian rumors circulating that several of the long-hair types in the school, an insidious minority to be sure, have pledged and are on the verge of being accepted. Take it easy now, guys, it ' s nice to be forward-thinking and liberal and all, but you can carry that open-minded routine a bit far. It would be a genuine shame if APO — national service fraternity, Uglyman managers, car rafflers, keepers of a neat corner, and all-around swell guys — would ruin its reputation by fraternizing with a bunch of left-wing, liberal, commie weirdos. ALPHA PHI OMEGA 57 A little background on this one before we wade into the intimate details. The edifice against which the seven gentle- men are informally posed is the Rodin museum way down in Center City, and is not, I will repeat, not a. part of the campus of greater LaSalle, and should therefore not be con- fused with the south facade of Benilde Hall (even though there are some similarities thanks to a trace of peeling paint). The statue around which said gentlemen are informally posed is a facsimile of said sculptor ' s The Thinker, and therefore should not be confused with any member of Tau Kappa Ep- silon, the fraternity in question. We even have our doubts about the one with the beard — on the Collegian staff, maybe, in the Honors Center, probably, in TKE, really now. He could have just wandered in, we suppose. You might be wondering how such a small group has managed to survive in the rough-and-tumble, no-holds- barred world of the fraternities. In your place, so would we. But the terrible truth is that each of these gentlemen is really a representative (about 7 or 8 men per man) for TKE brothers the city over who either did not care to be identified with the fraternity, or who could simply not find the Rodin museum. It must be said (we ' re not sure why), however, that Teke is a national fraternity (here too, we ' re not sure why), a distinction it has held since 1959, when TKE became what it is today. In between two dollar nights and frat league football games, at which they are quite proficient, they like to make a big thing about their, moral assistance to the boys at St. Francis Vocational School. Moral assistance? Who helps who? TAU KAPPA EPSILON What with all the frantic commotion and overflowing en- thusiasm fairly leaping from the photograph, it is, perhaps, redundant to say that this is Sigma Phi Lambda, spirit fra- ternity at large. There ' s so much spirit in this picture you can almost taste it. Almost. Such a clever place for a picture too — a furnished cellar. But it isn ' t all their fault, I suppose, the picture had to be retaken — the first time, the lense malfunctioned or cracked or generally refused to take the picture. As they have often claimed, Sig Phi is responsible for the spirit at LaSalle, which is a good thing to know if anyone should ask whose fault it is. They are the fixtures in the chintzy looking sweaters at basketball games and, this year, the handful of people who attended the Football Club ' s efforts might also have recognized them by their futile hys- terics in front of the stands to rouse the typically comatose LaSalle fan to something approaching fever pitch. Sig Phi is also responsible (there ' s that word again) for TOR — the Tap Off Rally to the uninitiated, in which nu- merous high school bands are conned into providing musical accompaniment to the slow disintegration of every ffoat in the parade. It is generally a good show though, and unless you have some reading to do or there ' s a Young People ' s Concert you ' re dying to see, is recommended entertainment for young and old alike. SIGMA PHI LAMBDA 59 We ' re not normally the kind of guys who destroy illusions, but, lest some unwary reader get the wrong idea, let it be said that this is not a fraternity house. That is indeed Pi Sigma Epsilon draped around a house, but the relationship be- tween the two is, at best, nonexistent. It can be presumed that some wily homeowner is making a little extra money by lending his front lawn to homeless fraternities. Then again, Pi Sig might just have muscled in on their own. The Pi people like to remind us that they are a profes- sional brotherhood of men who have made, the most im- portant decision, of their lives — choosing a career in the business world. As they so ably said it in the ' 66 Explorer, they are, men joined in the common bond of working to- gether for knowledge and success in their chosen field. As the picture shows, they seem to be getting in a good deal of practice. All we can say is that it certainly looks like an inter- esting line of work. Someone had better warn the business world of what is about to be unleashed upon it. PI SIGMA EPSILON 60 In view of the protests raised by other fraternities that they could not be overly original in their yearbook pictures because it might damage their images (see Children ' s Digest, August, 1966), it might be assumed that BAL was willing to go to these lengths because it had no image to ruin. Then again, it might not. Beta Alpha Lambda is, like KEY, one of the younger fraternities at LaSalle, and harbors great hopes for growth (there ' s nothing like optimism, is there?) to the level where they can afford a motto. There had been rumors afoot that BAL had expired over the summer from lack of whatever it is that keeps fraternities alive and drinking. As you can see, however, the rumor was premature — how premature is an- other question entirely. But, let it be said, BAL is back! BAL lives! For all those interested in joining this select group. Beta Alpha Lambda was intimately involved in school functions, providing transportation to out-of-town athletic events, and . . . well, not to mention, uhh, ahh . . . the, ahh. . . . Well, they are a great bunch of guys, and they do take great yearbook pictures. BETA ALPHA LAMBDA SIGMA BETA KAPPA This is a zoo. This is Monkey Island at the zoo. This is Sigma Beta Kappa. Draw any conclusions you would like. Either way you will probably be wrong. SBK was the first fraternity to thrust itself on the LaSalle campus and therefore the first to declare sovereignty over a goodly part of the cafeteria. Some idea of their antiquity and steeped-in-traditionness can be appreciated from their motto: Esse Quam Videii, which alone is enough to send shivers coursing through the veins of even the most naive pledge. SBK ' s front is St. John ' s Orphanage at 49th and Wya- lusing (not be confused with the St. John ' s orphanage at 48th and Wyalusing) whose urchins are regularly set upon by the brothers of Sigma Beta Kappa who raise money, direct sports activities, sponsor a Christmas party and conduct les- sons in sportsmanlike conduct (a study in depth into such intricate subjects as not pulling the facemask and necessary roughness). When not helping out at the orphanage (or being coopera- tive for yearbook photographers), SBK finds time to squeeze in a bit of social life and good fellowship, not to mention the fun-filled afternoons of intramural bloodshed, where the dreaded green colored machine rules supreme. Usually. 62 Kappa Epsilon Upsilon has managed to exhibit a degree of frankness and honesty above and beyond the level nor- mally expected of fraternities on this or any other campus. If we can recall the propaganda correctly, KEY (clever name), is dedicated to social awareness (clever slogan — we ' re sur- prised it isn ' t in Latin), a handy amorphous phrase which, when translated, means that they really don ' t do anything other than take up space in the cafeteria and drain a few kegs on Saturday nights. As they admit, KEY is one of the newest fraternities at 20th and Olney — having been born (several years prema- ture) by a select group who either decided that having a fraternity of their own was a pretty good idea, or who couldn ' t get into any already established. The choice is left to the reader, members of KEY and residents of Alaska and Hawaii are not eligible to play. Despite a temporary setback caused by an unfortunate in- cident — the banishment of an ex-president because of con- duct unbecoming a KEY member (?) — there has been steady improvement in the KEY camp. Recently, KEY has even raised its standards: the ability to speak English and walk on your hind legs have gained steadily in importance and it seems that the days when an ambitious freshman could get in without even pledging are gone forever. Any year now they ' ll even start wearing three piece suits. KAPPA EPSILON UPSILON DELTA SIGMA PI As the first fraternity photographed this year, and the last for which we will have to concoct a writeup, it might be a good idea to try to say something nice about the men of Delta Sigma Pi. Fortunately, we should be able to keep that temptation under control. Really, I don ' t have anything against DSP, or any other fraternity for that matter. After all, some of my best friends are fraternity people. I just wouldn ' t want my sister to marry ' one, that ' s all. This is a happy group though, with their Wall St. Jour- nals, and Budweiser signs and quaint fraternity paddles and mugs — all very much at home amid the junk beneath the East stands of vast McCarthy stadium. Delta Sig is both a social (aren ' t they all) and profes- sional fraternity, and they at least make an effort to live up to the professional side of the claim. They have speakers. They go to career lectures. They visit companies to get a feel of the actual pulse of American industry. Last year they even visited Schmidt ' s brewery. Somehow, it figures. 64 PSI CHI THE PSYCHOLOGY CLUB 65 Big — that ' s how we ' ve got to think big: :we ' ll call it unione psychedelica and we ' ll have the whole union building open: :right, JV: :wheres my trusty and certainly stalwart chairman of the college union com- mittees: : a deathlike pause, punctuated by ribaldly phrased a capella speakings of the masses milling to eatdrinkandplaypingpongandstuff here am i quoth the c of the cue variously attired, you will in your as- tutestness notice as at one time frank champine then jack murphy and now for a time at least as mark kersetter sorry for that pause back there but i stopped to accept more resignations ! have fifty two now, all of them jokers: :great leaping acu-i returned JV in alarm can you mean to say that there could be — would be — may be or even do be those dissatisfied with their more or less lot here in cucia magna: :indeed and in fact yea verily why here for instance have we a resignation from that most wonderful of them all the king of the dance committee which as you must know is in the habit of running moneylettings which draw as sacrificial lambkins the young buds from the area sec- ondary school institutions (Notre Dame, Byberry, St. Huberts, Little Flower and assorted other insitutions around town) who for a pittancelike doorsoaking can expose their scrawniness and antisophistication to our neat college types who themselves tasteless find the spectacle sufficiently gratifying to allow like pecuniary dismunerations at the gate: :well i ' ll be hornswoggled this is an outrage how can i make my movie don ' t you think this is a veritable tragedy: :right, JV: :well milorditude spake c of the cue helpfully lets show them color slides of our groovy board meetings where so much in the way of neat things is in a manner of speaking accomplished and then leaving the viewer overwhelmed with that give him barely time to catch his breath before we expand his mind still further with colorful and at times startling oversize glossies of our trueblueandredandblackandwhite art committee mem- bers composing their wares: :matical enterprise a shot of oh gosh how adrenalinly will this look a shot of our big huskies in the house committee polishing micro- phone stands and filling waterpitchers: :great great what do you think: :right, JV: :okay get the pola- roid and roll em: :right, JV: 66 THE COLLEGE UNION 67 THE MASQUE Marge and me got there early and bought a program and some candy and went in. Somebody from the drill team marched us down to our seats, double time. The lights were still on, but it was already pretty crowded. People started stamping their feet and chanting We want ' The Importance of Being Earnest ' ' But that didn ' t last long. It ' s kind of a hard thing to stamp your feet to. The curtain opened and they weren ' t there. Seri- ously. Two (Masquerrians, Masquards, Masqueicians?) guys started walking through the audience explaining how it wasn ' t going to be Earnest at all because not the right guys had tried out for the parts, or not enough guys had tried out or everybody tried out but nobody got the parts or something. Right about then a little guy came on stage with a poster that said Ito-Agap- Annopa-Istop-Masque local 252. He started explain- ing how it meant I tried out and got a part and now there ' s not a play and I refuse to participate and then went on about maltreatment of the peasants by the no- bility. Some Masque pledges came out with buckets of soapy water and started scraping bubble gum off the seats and spil ' ing water all over the people. A tall guy joined the litt ' e fellow onstage and told us not to miss the Masque ' s next production — How to Succeed in Business and the World of High Finance or something like that. The PA system requested that some garbled name call 281, and the projectionist started to show the second reel of Charley the Lonesome Cougar back- wards. It was great — a real cultural experience! A guy behind us was telling his date how good the theater of the absurd could be when done properly, and I was explaining to Marge how it ' s like abstract art, and how some people think it ' s stupid and anybody could do it, but it ' s McLeod ' s interpretation of Earn- est that counts . . . like I just read Rhinoceros for English and . . . anyway, up where the lights are they were burning incense and throwing out balloons that said Vote for Salvagio on them, but we never got one because Marge said she wanted to leave. She said that she was one of those people who thought it was stupid. Sometimes Marge disappoints me. She ' s awful nice, but God! . . . 69 EL CLUB HISPANO You start off with some pomme de terre frites ( I just love them with ketchup and a little salt; don ' t you, mon amie? ), continue with some chile con came ( Golly-wolly, won ' t all this at- mosphere just be marvy, you lingually oriented devils, you? ), a side of Wurst mit Schmalz und Pfeffer ( Goethe is al- ways our favorite; some days we know everything he did; think how helpful this is for biographical studies of his work; the organization we can get! ) and for dessert, pizza pie a la mode ( Vanilla ice cream is just groovy. ) . .. ' — L W , li W W .r | ii 1 I 1 i 1 T - ' i i r , l! f ' 1 1 LE CERCLE CLAUDEL 70 GERMAN CLUB Now adjourn to the clubroom for drinks (dwinkies) and mellifluous con- versation. Par example (see how clever?) der folgende: Oh you stopped in Milano? Gosharootiewowiepoo (that ' s Basque, an extinct language). It ' s one of my favorite places. I got the nicest little coat there in one of the little quaint shops. See the epaulets? I ' m going to wear it every day during Language Week. Goethe? Well, we have Dante (insert also Baudelaire, Unamuno). r A 1 V J ?.;: J ii ■i Vr HIHB SH - 1 - i « _ 4- i IL CIRCOLO LA SALLIANO 71 11 1 1 !■■THE CAISSION CLUB What more can we say? The closer you look the hazier it gets. Vast translucent olive-drab nebulous larger, largest fraternal organization, gentlemen, on the (don ' t you forget it even if you can ' t see it) Campus, though rightly, who cares that stagnant is as stagnant doesn ' t unless you like Military Balls or if there are redeeming somethings wandering McCarthy hunting some- things worth redeeming mid the utter (novocaine injections just for kicks) knox gelatin world where everyone waits for Bobby Gentry ' s next album and presses their underwear for St. Bar- bara ' s day as if this is all something she meant whenever she said whatever it was she said and it ' s healthy and normal to be committed with all your heart and mind and soul to something even if it is apathy, after all they are the elite and if they are totally motionless it is perhaps an indica- tion of their motivation and tremendous sense of direction. What it is precisely is like the guys in the collegian office say, Lord, if there be ten among them. 72 Okay, shape up down there, shape up! Let ' s go, 5528287 HRA UW 751, let ' s move it, dress and cover, dress and cover, DRESS AND COVER!!! Idiot, hippie! What ' re you laughing at, 5526328 . . . , authorize my son, to participate in the President ' s Guard Drill Team activities at locations and times designated by the student commander of the team. I am aware that all training in which my son will participate will be closely supervised by members of the ROTC staff and or experienced students, and that partic- ipation in this activity is purely voluntary and is not required by the ROTC staff or the College. I fully realize that my son will engage in activities more hazardous than normal ROTC functions during his participation with the drill team. I fur- ther understand that neither the United States Army nor LaSalle College will assume responsi- bility for any injury or other mishap incurred dur- ing my son ' s participation with the drill team in any of the team ' s training or exhibitions. Date Wait a minute, you from the yearbook? You can ' t take a picture of our closet — it ' s dirty in there, and we ' re not in uniform, and HQ will just s pit if our picture has us out of uniform. After all, if you don ' t take a picture of all this chaos, it doesn ' t exist, right . . .? THE PRESIDENT ' S GUARD fff j iw 73 WEBER SOCIETY LAMBDA IOTA TAU 74 SOCIOLOGY CLUB BENILDE CLUB 75 NEWTONIAN SOCIETY EDUCATION SOCIETY 76 CHYMIAN SOCIETY p, Ao H 1 Tl Kb D. r.j Gd lb Dy Ho Er FABRICIAN SOCIETY 77 FINANCE ASSOCIATION CONSERVATIVE CLUB 78 ECONOMICS CLUB Oi, . i?ir, i .is- . ACCOUNTING ASSOCIATION 79 SEMPER FIDELIS MARKETING ASSOCIATION 80 I.R.C. ST. THOMAS MORE SOCIETY THE POLITICAL SCIENCE ASSOCIATION THE HISTORICAL SOCIETY 82 FOOTBALL Shouldn ' t we cheer ... or something? Huh? OH, yea, I guess. Wait a minute. Somebody ' ll start something. They ' re so very . . . very LaSalle. Any more sarcasm and you stay home next time. Why does that one have a blue shirt? Who? 73 Oh, whatsisname. He washed it with the pants. Oh ... Do you think they ' ll score now, honey? Just be quiet and watch, ok? I don ' t like it when you ignore me. What? I don ' t like it when you — Cummon, doggonit. What the hell are you guys — What happened? Nothing. Nothing. As a matter of fact if something doesn ' t happen pretty soon we ' re goin ' down your house and watch roller derby. Who ' s that? Who ' s what? Oh, Hanigan, Glen . . . That ' s Garfolo with him. He ' s all muddy. Uhhuh. . .Go Whapper!!Kickhis Honey? what? Who pays Garfolo? Me. Outta my lunch money Really? Yea. That one down there, that ' s Klenk. He picks pockets. He ' s cute. Goddam. We ' re better off just giving them the ball and playing defense! Honey? What. Is there a . . . ladies room or . . . (Prolonged silence) Are you joking? What inning is it, Honey? Can they still win? No. That ' s too bad. Yea They really did try, didn ' t they. Yea. They didn ' t even score though. No. Do you think they ' ll have a team next year . . . yea, yea Do you think we should start walking so . . . Just a minute . . . 84 Honey, it ' s raining. This is a new coat. Don ' t you think we ' d better . . . Will you please just shaddup and watch the game! I ' m sorry. Honest. They are good, really I think they try so very, very hard. ... I mean it is nice I guess and . . . they are so very, very ... La Salle. 85 86 SOCCER -sjy . Sam! Hey, Sam, what kindofasap you think I am? I been workin this linotype machine for 30 years, and I seen em all, so don ' t pull no stunts on me — I ' m on to the old phoney score trick. Jeez Sam, I played sports when I wuzzakid, best bocci ball player on Moyamensing Ave- nue, I ain ' t dumb y ' know. Whadayathink I am, stupid? I mean, nobody gets beat 14-1 in soccer, nobody!! You ' d think you thought I never got outa the third grade, 14-1, that don ' t even sound like a lousy baseball game. Your whole problem is that you don ' t think. Supposen I was to let this get by me, which I ain ' t, whud- daya think these two high schools is gonna think, this uh, uh. Fairly Dickson and Lassell. After all, everybody got feel- ins, you go an put 1 infrontofa 4 and you hurt a lotta kids feelins. How ' d you feel, you play a good game an get beat 4-1, and then some jerk linotype guy makes a joke out of it an puts a 1 infrontofthe 4 and makes it look like a, like a, like a root, makes it look like you didn ' t even take a goalie withya — 14-1, like you didn ' t even take a team with ya! You really oughta be sorry, Sam. Where is this Lassell place anyhow, I never heard of it. 87 BASKETBALL Part the First, in which a much-maligned Philadel- phia basketball team reaches the Never-never Land of its dribbled dreams and, in celebration, indulges in a bit of ceremonial mayhem. They had Williams up on their shoulders. Under normal, basketball-type conditions, he could have got- ten up a good deal higher, but at the moment the added height was sufficient. They were taking down the nets — a mob and Bernie — there was only one strand to go, and that job they had left to Williams. The net wouldn ' t come though, no matter how much prying and untangling he put into it. Finally, he tired of the puzzle, grabbed the liberated half of the net, and yanked the cord free of the wire watchamacallit. Five minutes earlier, this same Bernard Williams had poured a shot through this same net at the final buzzer to add the last touch to an 87-69 beating of Temple that would send the Explorers to their first NCAA tournament in thirteen years. The Owls had put up even less of a struggle than had that last bit of the net to Williams and the rest of the LaSalle basketball people, and now there was time to carry people in blue and gold uniforms around on our shoulders, and cut down nets, and do one helluva lot of yelling. Part the Second, in which our heroes set out upon their great adventure (an endeavor fraught with great danger) with little fanfare and modest expectations. Beyond the addition of Coach Jim Harding, the ' 67- ' 68 edition of the LaSalle College basketball team had, superfically, changed very little. Junior starters Larry Cannon, Stan Wlodarczyk, and the aforementioned Bernie Williams were back, but a combination of chronic foul trouble, injuries, and inexperience had severely limited their effectiveness the year before, and raised some doubts over their performances in the up- coming season. 90 w ' .,%%, .- t j y HMI 91 92 There were other holdovers from the LaSalle club that had posted a disappointing 14-12 record the previous year. Senior Dave Ervin (who had seen little service for reasons never fully explained or understood) could be counted on for steady basketball; reserves Joe Markmann, Fran Scott, and Mike Osborne were back, and even though they had seen only spotty service, there had been some solid performances that seemed to promise more in the future. True, there were some new faces — transfers Roland Taylor and Ed Szczesny, sophomores Fran Dunphy, Jerry Dugan, Stan Witalec, and Ed Hol- zer, plus Senior Dave Bednarik, returning after a year ' s layoff, but the new season brought only bland predictions by assorted bland sportswriters. Predictions notwithstanding, the addition of Harding proved to be the decisive factor of the year. He stressed practice and conditioning — long hours of it. He goaded, he threatened, he antagonized, and in the end, he got results. Using Cannon, Williams, Taylor, Wlodarc- zyk, and Szczesny as his starting five, Harding substituted sparingly and late, depending primarily on Ervin and Dunphy when foul trou- ble or exhaustion threatened. Using a man-to-man and a variety of zones, the Explorers discovered that they had a defense to comple- ment a fast-break that would notch twenty victories. Cannon, Wil- liams, and Wlodarczyk played the way their sophomore press re- leases said they could, Ervin earned the Instant Offense nickname that explains itself, Szczesny scored more than anyone expected him to, Taylor played defense (when he didn ' t have pneumonia) like a dervish, Dunphy threaded passes, and Harding stomped the sidelines to his heart ' s content. 93 Part the Third, containing little, and which it is rec- ommended the reader skip, lest he be reminded of as- sorted reverses he might otherwise have forgotten. The Explorer record of 20 wins and 8 losses was, as we were often reminded, the best in thirteen years. The whole thing started out innocently enough back in De- cember, with a 59-50 defeat of Rider at the Palestra. Victories over Gettysburg (96-58), Albright (82-40), and BuckneJl (84-69) followed in rapid succession, and LaSalle found itself riding a four game win streak. The streak and a few illusions crumbled to Niagara (83-100), and not much salvaging of either was ac- complished at the Boston Garden Tournament as La- Salle finished third — losing to Providence (56-77) and beating North Carolina State (68-63) in the consola- tion. The Holiday Festival in New York saw the Explor- ers open with the most beneficial loss of the season, as Louisville dumped them 71-94, but Harding ' s troops started to put most of it together, and in a six game win streak, played perhaps their best ball of the year. B H| HK[ pi E ' 1 A Hf V K. 1 H B° ni 1 Wi 94 LaSalle earned fifth place in New York by knocking off West Virginia (100-83) and Syracuse (78-68), out- lasted Miami 92-84, returned to the Palestra to maul St. Joe ' s 103-71, beat a Loyola (La.) slowdown (71- 51), and thoroughly dismantled Syracuse again, 1 OS- SI. Ranked third in the East, the Explorers suffered a damaging loss to Western Kentucky (79-84) that dumped them into a collective doldrum that would last till the Temple game. The bottom was reached in the 45-57 defeat by Pennsylvania, but LaSalle still had to stumble through another road trip, barely catching Duquesne (80-79) in overtime, and failing to catch Creighton, 71-76. The beginning of a five game win streak failed to see any improvement, as LaSalle list- lessly defeated West Chester (79-55) and Lafayette (74-45), but things returned to normal in come-from- behind wins over Temple (64-60) and American U. (74-65), and an 80-64 beating of Canisius. A 56-64 loss to Villanova cost the Explorers a share of the Big Five title, but they rebounded to beat Morehead State 81-73 and end the regular season on a winning note. The MAC playoffs saw LaSalle beat both American U. (84-57) and Temple (87-69) for the second time and clinch the NCAA berth. The whole thing came to an end on March 9 at College Park, Md., as Columbia eliminated the Explorers (69-83) in the first round. Part the Fourth, some reflections on this basketball thing in light of the recently completed enterprise. In quite a number of ways, the ' 67- ' 68 basketball season at LaSalle is one that will not soon be forgotten. On the surface, of course, there is the record and the tournament bid, but there was much more, both good and not so good. We had our share of controversy — 95 Harding ' s threat to scrub a few scholarships (after the Providence debacle), and the Inquirer inspired flap over Scott ' s decision to quit the team in mid season, his loss of scholarship, its reinstatement, etc., but what was going on on the court was far more impressive: Al- bright just barely scoring 40 points against the Explor- ers, Loyola not scoring from the field for twelve min- utes, Szczesny tossing in six straight points to beat Duquesne, Wlodarczyk blocking shots . against practi- cally everybody, Ervin coming off the bench to score 25 against St. Joe ' s, Williams and Cannon on fast breaks, Taylor on defense, Markmann against Lafay- ette, Dunphy at Canisius, Syracuse, Temple, American U. bowing twice. . . . The Columbia-LaSalle game had been over for nearly thirty minutes, and the Explorer cheering sec- tion was rather moodily watching Davidson and St. John ' s go at one another. Calmly, a man named Hard- ing walked toward a seat, but did not quite make it unnoticed — some of us were standing, some were sit- ting, but we were all applauding. 96 RIFLE TEAM The LaSalle College Rifle Team is certainly a credit to the college and the pride of the student body (Hey, can you stop prodding me with that goddamned gun, monkey? — Shuddup and write nice stuff:, kid). While maintaining a fine record in various meets with other colleges (What do you do, pretend the targets are Hve? — Don ' t get smart, kid) the team provides a healthy means of exercising the competitive spirit (war not being available) for the members of the ROTC cadre (Future NRA stars you build, right Wyatt Earp? — Who ' s Wyatt Earp, huh? You getting smart again?). With all these fine accomplishments to their credit, the Rifle Team must in any evalua- tion be rated as one of the finest activities availa- ble to frustrated cowboy types, and anyone suffi- ciently literate to read the manual of instructions (Hey kid.) BOOM. (Wise guy.) 97 98 CREW The sun slants golden from the water, From water that has no right to be golden. But a 4 o ' clock sun does not care, Nor the cars on the expressway, The long tree shadows across River Drive, Or the bridges, Casting great shadow bands that cut the goldness- So bright it hurts the eyes. Absorbing all it touches, Water and sky. Even the shell that goes bar-winking past. Slipping, Gliding, Water-striding along over the surface Through shade and golden glare. Quietly But for the thin, high voice That pushes it in staccato leaps down the river. And then the voice And the pencil-thin boat are gone Except for tracks and ripples That trip and merge And flash their sun gold Brighter still, Yet never reach the shore. 99 BASEBALL It is indeed difficult to write an article on a sport that has not yet begun. There is no possible way to say what a great so-so lousy year we had, or tell how good everybody was or wasn ' t, or even spout some clever phrases on how the whole season was salvaged because of the big win over Philly Pharmacy or Textile or Gratz. For all we know, we might not even play them — even if we do, God only knows what could happen between the time we fake the copy for the baseball team and the day they start to play (play? start to practice would be closer to the truth). For that matter, the world could end before the season starts, it might be on its way out right now while I waste my time writing a baseball write-up in this stupid yearbook office! Whoever is on the team com e April though, will be treated to the thrill of playing on an honest-to-goodness baseball field, something LaSalle base- ball teams in the past have missed. There used to be a field, of sorts, if you can call the flat (relatively) hunk of turf with all the rocks in it, and the sixth month growth of African violets, a baseball field. All has changed though, as LaSalle ' s Financial Dept. found in its heart to emphasize athletics: the outdoor indoor track still sits in right field, but the bigger rocks are gone (at least till the thaw). The grass is cut, and someone even put up a cyclone fence. With a few more pitchers and a good deal more hitting, we might even get a baseball team. 100 l CROSS COUNTRY AND TRACK Increasing cloudiness and a chance of snow this evening. Snow turning to rain or freezing rain later tonight, ending early tomorrow. Low tonight in the sub- urbs twenty-five degrees, high tomorrow in the city is expected to reach thirty- eight degrees. The present Philadelphia temperature is twenty-nine degrees, with winds out of the Northwest at fifteen miles an hour. There are people running. There are metronome legs snapping off the two- twenties, reaching. The El Greco figures of the distance men are sweeping . . . are always only distant, always sweeping. A very big man is laboriously shifting his shot from right to left ... to slap a tiny bead of sweat from his neck. I ' ll start with something like that, or maybe two broken track shoes lying in the snow. I could do the lonely runner thing, or work the spartan side and make the Sistine Chapel ceiling look like an ad for C.A.R.E. I ' ll write the smells and sounds and things, the rhythmic bite of spike to cin- ders, the almost voices sucking evening air. I ' ll write the tightening of tough, re- liable legs, the nervous hunger for the pain, the love of a green world pounding past. Or maybe of the most important thing . . . whatever it is that the fastest legs can find beyond the pain. I don ' t think I ' ll draw tears for wasted effort, or trigger a pep rally for the next meet. I think what I really want to say is that it ' s fascinating. I mean right in the middle of the whole snowballing tragi- comic frustration and all . . . there are people running. I don ' t know . . . I ' ll write something like that, spike it with virile collegian- isms and some stuff from Wetzler. If it doesn ' t come out right we ' ll just do some- thing else. 102 103 SWIMMING 104 The LaSalle College Swimming team (No, you can ' t take your rubber duck into the pool) under the direction of Coach Joe Kirk (Swim, swim, swim, swim . . .) is one of the least heralded (Often confused with the marbles club), yet one of the most interesting and successful sports in the spectrum (Reeks of Les Keiter) of LaSalle athletics. Such swimmers as Johnson, McKiernan, Lavin, and Strunk (We shave our legs to cut down resistence in the water, and that ' s all, hamburger) spend typically extensive hours training at the Germantown YMCA (No, we didn ' t sign up for the beadwork class) where they will continue to frolic and splash back and forth (Okay, now try it without the innertube) until the proposed Athletics build- ing (Dear alumnus, your contribution. . . .) rises majestically from the freshman parking lots sometime next year (Swim, swim, swim, swim, swim . . .). 105 GOLF TEAM • . ■' 106 ON The Evening Division program is oriented toward degree and college credit work, as opposed to the more leisurely, more informal terminal concept of adult edu- cation. The LaSalle College Evening Division Bulletin has motivated many men to achieve their degree in the program of their choosing. The evening men take great pride in achieving their goal — the coveted diploma. 107 ADMINISTRATION Mrs. Reeves, Cathy Buriese, Helen Handley _  Sm ■i ■3 ]fl 1 m BH , , i 11 T s- Mrs. Hughes John J. King, Assistant to the Dean, Registrar 108 Brother Emery Mollenhauer, F.S.C., Ph.D. Dean of the Evening Division David J. Smith, Assistant to the Dean, Registrar 109 Student Congress President John McDermott 110 STUDENT CONGRESS Since 1949, the Student Congress has acted as the official representative of the student body. It ' s primary purpose lies in the promotion and co-ordination of affairs of the Evening Division, such as the Congress Dance and the Fall Frolic. Congress Officers: Phil Schreiher, Secretary; Dennis Kensey, Vice-President; Jack McDer- mott, President; Jerry Zimmerman, Treasurer. Ill 1 f W ii SMik ■r wKL ■5 ' b ll f ' ' Tff J % jHt _ ; v w ., . .• . H H SPRISSLER AWARD The Joseph J. Sprissler Award was inaugurated by the Student Congress in 1952 to honor and perpetuate the name of the Founder of the Evening Division of LaSalle College. It is presented annually by the Student Con- gress to the senior who has been most outstanding in academic and extra-curricular endeavors. The recipient this year is John Mc- Dermott. John McDermott, Dr. Sprissler. Sprissler Award nominees: Lawrence Auer- weck, Robert Kelton, Joseph Braddock, Dr. Joseph J. Sprissler, John McDermott, Charles Kearns, Neil Kelley. 112 DEAN ' S AWARD Initiated a few years after the Sprissler Award, the Evening Division Dean ' s Award has been directed to- ward identifying and rewarding the member of each graduating class who has shown distinctive leadership qualities. This year ' s awardee is Lawrence Auerweck. Dean ' s Award nominees: Lawrence Auerweck, Robert Kelton, Joseph Braddock. Brother Emery, John McDermott, Charles Kearns, Neil Kelly. Lawrence Auerweck, Brother Emery. 113 CLUB ' 68 Club ' 68 officers: Neil Kelley, Vice-President; Larry Auerwect;, President; Chuck Kearns, Secretary. This year the Senior Class has been one of the most active stu- dent groups. The officers can proudly look back upon the ac- complishments of the Class of ' 68. By participating in an array of socially enjoyable activities which included Senior-Under- class football and basketball games, an outstanding Children ' s Christmas Party, four exciting dances, and the Senior Formal Dinner Dance, the seniors con- cluded their last year at LaSalle with fond memories. 114 K B 9 Kr 1 bV ' JB ' -flU Hr J i 9 ijj 115 ACCOUNTING ASSOCIATION ..,..;, r. orii cii: Charles Danihel, Treas- urer; Frank McCabe, Vice-President; Dave Leider, Secretary; Leo Craig, President. 116 ALPHA SIGMA LAMBDA Alpha Sigma Lambda, a na- tional evening college fraternity for honor students was inaugu- rated at LaSalle College in De- cember, 1966. This fraternity meets twice each year and in- cludes distinguished scholars among its guest speakers. 117 Counselor, Thomas R. Mayhew and President, Robert A. Vaughan. 1 • J_J • lli • 1-J • The Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers is a vital adjunct to the professional engi- neering organization. In the give- and-take discussions held, the members receive the latest infor- mation on the progress being made in the field. I.E.E.E. officers: Mel Richman; Robert A. Vaughan, President; Graziano Del Zetto, Vice- President; Francis H. Costello; Don Doberstein. 118 MASS OF THE HOLY SPIRIT The opening Mass of the Holy Spirit was cele- brated this year by Father Regis Ryan, O.P., in the College Hall Chapel. MARKETING ASSOCIATION The Marketing Association exists for the purpose of supple- menting the student ' s class expe- rience with a diversified program of lectures and films. Practical lessons in marketing techniques and ethical practices offer the members a realistic exercise in modern marketing methods. Marketing Association officers: Joe Devlin, Secretary; John Urmson, Treasurer; Tom Pap- pas, President; not pictured is Jim BottoroflF, Vice-President. 119 S.A.M. The Society for the Advance- ment of Management is the na- tional professional society of managers. Bringing the college student closer to the leaders in the field is one of S.A.M. ' s objec- tives. 120 EVENING COLLEGIAN Leon A. Polowczuk, Photo Editor; Dr. Victor D. Broolcs, Moderator; Jerry Davis, Editor. The Evening Collegian serves the student body by keeping them abreast of the current activities and re- cording the events and affairs of the year. 121 EXPLORER 1968 The Evening Explorer presents the activities and affairs in 1968 as a memo- rable chronicle for the graduating senior. With this goal in mind, the staff ap- proached its task of record- ing the events in the lives of the Evening Division Student. Editor: Leon A. Polowczuk 122 Joseph Braddock, President CROSS KEYS FRATERNITY Cross Keys officers; Robert Wassel, Recording Secretary; Robert Kelton, Treasurer; Joseph Braddock, President; Frank McCabe, Vice- President; John Lavin, Alumni President; Law- rence Auerwick, Corresponding Secretary. Cross Keys is a national Evening Divi- sion Student Service fraternity, chartered at LaSalle in 1960 as the Beta chapter. 123 WIVES ' CLUB The Wives ' Club was origi- nated in 1966, for the purpose of giving student wives an opportu- nity to meet with others of simi- lar interests and participate in a wide variety of social and charit- able activities. Wives ' Club officers: Debbie Freisheim, Presi- dent; Joy Wassel, Vice-President; Trudy Atkins, Secretary; Dot Jurek, Treasurer. 124 Ph.T. CEREMONY The Ph.T. (Putting him Through) was originated at LaSalle College to pay trib- ute to the wives of the graduating sen- iors. It is awarded in recognition of the sacrifices and efforts that the wives make in assisting their husbands in obtaining their degrees. On Stage: Brother Daniel Bernian, President: Brother Gavin Paul, Vice-President of Student Affairs; Father Francis Mc- Dermott; Dr. Joseph Sprissler, Vice-President for Business Affairs; John McDermott, President of Student Congress. 125 lie ADMINISTRATION ► Brother Daniel Bernian, F.S.C., Ph.D., LL.D., President 127 Bro. David C. Pendergast, F.S.C., M.A., Dean, School of Business Administra- tion Joseph J. Sprissler, B.S., D.C.S., Vice-President for Business Affairs iro. G. Robert Doran, F.S.C., M.A., Dean, School of Arts Sciences 128 3ro. Martin Stark, F.S.C., M.A., Vice-President for Student Affairs John L. McCloskey, M.B.A., Vice-President for Public Relations 5ro. Daniel Burke, F.S.C.. Ph.D.. Vice-President for Academic Affairs Brother G. Joseph Downing F.S.C. Ped. D., Registrar Brother Thomas Donaghy, F.S.C, M.A., Ph.D., Director of Summer Sessions 130 FACULTY (Thirty-nine year old chaplain at fair-to-middlin, urban, Catholic college sits in darkened office, conversing easily with two yearbook types and a tape recorder. He turns in his swivel chair and picks up a rather unassuming rock — shifting it from the circle of light beneath his desk lamp into the palm of his hand.) . . . Another time, well. La Strada was a film, and a great scene is when the clown explains to the young girl that everything is beautiful, and he picks up a pebble and he tries to communicate this to her. And so, I used it in the same talk — I used the fact that, you know, a stone, or even a little thing like that . . . (Points to hand magic-marked sign on door — a red and blue effort of a furry, basically ugly little beast with the printing, Love Me? , in neat letters beside it.) . . . even a little thing like that, all it has to be. is what it is, and if a thing is what it is, then it ' s good and it ' s lovable. But because people are the way they are, there ' s always a real question of whether I really am acceptable to somebody else, or I really am lovable as far as somebody else is concerned. (The phone rings, is answered and effectively satisfied. Later, it rings again and is consulted. There are knocks on the door and appointments made. On the back of the door are taped half-a-dozen index cards: Father Ryan will be right back, Back in 20 min., Back in 10 min., Fr. Ryan will be back at 7:30, Fr. Ryan will be available from . . . There are questions asked about purpose and expectations, and finally, Do you think you ' re succeeding? ) Ahhhh ... no. Because I don ' t know what the measure of success would be. I ' m a neurotic optimist. I ' m not discouraged about some of the frictions that exist between student groups; I ' m not discouraged by the fact that irritations would grow up between the administration, the students and faculty, because, well, I ' m not discouraged by practically anything. And when a controversy does arise, I always feel, and maybe this is a little Hegelian, that, somehow, out of this thesis and antithesis — in the resolution, there will be something better than there was before. (There is laughter outside the office. Inside, there is a rock on a desk, a drawing on the wall, and a college chaplain in a swivel chair. Very softly, the tape recorder begins to make noises.) 131 The house is at 3717 Spring Garden Street. It ' s not really a very new house, in fact, it ' s really pretty old, mellow, aging. It ' s got all the trade- marks of Victorian sturdiness — wrought iron gate, black double doors, monstrous windows, a bit of stained glass. It ' s got something else too, Mr. James (Jim) Fallon — philosophy teacher, human-type person, far from Victorian. A teacher needs students. A husband can ' t be a husband without a wife, and likewise, a teacher can ' t be a teacher without students. They are the ones who are a test for his ideas. A teacher ' s ideas are both important and valuable to him, and like most other things that are held valuable, if they aren ' t shared by people, they die. If the artist kept all the ideas for paintings in his head, no one would ever get any pleasure or enjoyment out of them. In a similar fashion, the same holds true for teachers. That ' s why it is so unfortunate that the educational system in America is working towards making the teacher unnecessary. If the teacher only amounts to a dispenser of facts, then a machine could do it just as well. A teacher doesn ' t merely convey the wisdom of the past, he uses this wisdom to create a world in which his students will live for a while. But at the same time, he has to ask— has to tell the student not to become a disciple, not to stay in this world. If he stays, the teacher has ruined him, for the student no longer will do his own thinking— he will just repeat someone else ' s ideas. Some teachers never ask their students to leave the world they have created, but even worse, some teachers never even ask those individuals placed in front of them to be students. All they ask for is tape recorders, and consequently that is all they get. When these individuals are asked to be students, they will be. A student just thanked me for a course he had had with me. He said, ' You trusted us. ' This is what I have to do — trust them. I plan my courses for the honest students and try not to worry about the cheater. The cheater doesn ' t enter into my world, and I am not going to gear my course so that a few won ' t be able to cheat and not take into account what the majority are getting out of it. 132 Someone down-to-earth and someone more; no compromised ideals for Joseph Cairo — Bearing homespun magnitude with much sincerity if not always grace. Twice my size but larger. Pardon me . . . did someone say someone was looking for me for something? Oh, why yes I . . . I ' m I. . . Hi. Do you remember the analogy we used the other day . . . The analogy Fd like to use again this morning, briefly . . . The analogy of the . . . never mind. I ' m not going to use that analogy again this morning. Let me begin again, ahem, Do you remember in the past few classes . . . ... I want to change our perspective entirely. On your own you will continue . . . but in our formal classes, let ' s step back and take a very broad view of ... a very broad and grand view. This is particularly dear to my heart because it is one place where I can enter into . . . some very inter- esting theatrics. Think now. You ' ve all seen those large machines they use to chop trees to sawdust when they cut them down. Of course you have. Remember, now, how one of those machines looks . . . Here it is, here. On this end is the hopper — Seriously now . . . Think with me. Across the room and back Quickly in long thumping strides feverishly imagining, describing, deliniating, illustrating, building this machine to cover every inch (occupied and otherwise) of his stage . . . Now think! to punctuate, Think now! for bolts and rivets, Now (carefully) Think explaining moving parts. And in the seventh minute, brow Shining, he smiled a weary smile finished up the throttle, and he rested. It is most important that you think in this way. You must take this very seriously. Into the hopper, now, we ' ll pour the resources. He pauses long enough to pour some land, labor, capital and things into the hopper. And if you ' re ready (are you ready gentlemen?) I will push the button and begin the machine. He pushes the button and begins the m m m m m m mm... This is serious, now! You must think with me. And now ... I pull back on the throttle! His brow shines again, he braces himself, leans backward, pulls hard on the throttle . . . m m m M M MM. I have ended the sound effects portion of the lec- ture. What hath God wrought, Mr. Cairo?! 133 DR. RALPH TEKEL: I was a graduate student at Purdue at the time. It ' s always an experience to get involved in something as mo- mentous as that, and yet when I first worked on it, I didn ' t know exactly what it was all about. We weren ' t told particu- larly what we were working with. It was merely top secret. We only found out about it toward the end of 1944. It was quite an astounding thing to hear that we were working on an atom bomb. Of course they had to tell us because they suddenly switched us from an area of organic chemistry to an area of inorganic chemistry. We started working with uranium waste which came off of the cyclotrons at Oak Ridge — this was the fusion process. It was kind of exciting to know that this was taking place. And probably far more devastating was the impact of such a situation. Because most of us had known that there was a theoretical probabiUty of an atom bomb prior to World War II, and that it would have been something like the nature of twenty thousand tons of TNT. I won ' t say it didn ' t have much effect on me. I can understand why so many scientists today are peace oriented. They are the parents of this ogre that hangs over our heads. They ' re the ones who came out right after the war and wanted to discontinue building atom bombs knowing what it did at Nagasaki and Hiroshima. I must say it had some effect on me. It reminds me of Alexander Graham Bell ' s What hath God Wrought! My God! the atom bomb is a little different than a telephone, certainly. It ' s had a great impact on civilization. I ' ve always felt that I was proud to have made a minor contribution — I was only one of one hundred thousand chemists, chemical engineers and scien- tists working on the atom bomb project. But it gives you cause to reflect what it is all about. I think the shaping of our civilization has been influenced by nuclear fission. And I think it ' s made many of us braggarts in the market place of politics. It gives you a lot of muscle. We were a great power before, but now we ' re a superpower. I think science unfortu- nately has political implications today. Now the scientist is beginning to have his say, and he ' s changing the whole world, changing everything about it. I think the scientists are just as fearful about it as anybody else, because they recog- nize the mechanical aspects of a burgeoning technocracy, to use the old pre-World II expression. Dehumanizing? Is that what it ' s called? I think it can dehumanize, but I at least want to point out to many of the boys that I have contact with, that just because you ' re a scientist, it doesn ' t mean that you don ' t breathe, and eat, and dream, and sleep, and hope, and fear. It ' s just that your orientation is a little different. And I think that there ' s still the common meeting ground, the interactions that other disciplines have too, that I not only think a scientist has, but should be continually promoted. I don ' t think we should be fearful of what we ' ve produced. I think we should perhaps strive to make better human beings along with it — to make life a Httle better for most people. I hope I ' m not just training chemists. I ' m trying to make bet- ter human beings of them as well — to recommend that it is a better way of life to learn how to get along and manage to understand the other man ' s position and his hopes and dreams regardless of who he is. 134 He is one of the good ones, perhaps one of the best. His name is George Swoyer and he exudes a confidence that travels before him like a shock wave and that suits him like the wooden sign in his office: George Swoyer USMC. But it is an old sign and there have been many classes and much teaching since Korea. The classes? Well, that which goes on for 50 minutes, three times a week in one of George Swoyer ' s classrooms is something that lecture or class are somehow inadequate to describe — experience or happening being far more appropriate. First, there ' s that whistle that he throws in just to keep everyone on their toes. Dogmatic? I ' ll never be dogmatic ... If you want to argue go ahead — you won ' t win, but go ahead. Or it might be his beginning — the happening before he walks in — like halfway down the hallway, yelling so that he can be heard. Or the long streams of repetition: No, no, no, no, no,! Come on! Come on. Come on Come on. You know the answer! Repeating, repeating, driving across the points that need to be made. The sub- ject matter is Sales or Marketing but somehow a sprinkling of everything else squirms in — beer bottles, and their pouring and automobile accidents and hippies and grades and books and authors and . . . A happening. Richest college in the city and we don ' t have any chalk. 135 He sums up his life in a series of dashes, words and phrases thrown carelessly at you to explain what has been done the years past. — St. James High — Diocesan School System — Mt. Saint Mary ' s College — Cath- olic U., M.A., Ph.D. — Notre Dame — Married, 5 kids (very tightly spaced) — teaching practically anything — kicking around here 1 1 years — Informality would be an understatement to describe this man, the only term that really comes close is sloppy, but in a kind of good, harmless sense — the same way a dorm room looks early Saturday morning or the floor of the Stock exchange after heavy trading. You talk to him, and he answers and rambles on with his tie spread all over the front of his shirt, or maybe his feet filed somewhere under F among the chaos on the desk, or his hair slipping determinedly onto his forehead. And you perhaps wonder what he could have to say. And the n he says it. You listen, to the demonstrations and marches, the causes and aspirations that this sociology professor named Connors has believed in and worked for and you come away impressed. Here, in this office, behind last month ' s blue books, last weeks correspondence and yesterdays coffee cups, is a man with purpose. I ' ve kind of got the virus I think, you get this busi- ness of demonstrating in order to make a point — putting your body on the line in a nice safe way. You ' re not putting your body on the line in Birming- ham, where some dog is likely to bite it. You ' re putting your body on the line in Washington, or out here in Ardmore where you ' re protected by the police . . . I ' m a little too old to be courting with going to jail, I guess, a little too old, a little too married, a little too nervous. I don ' t object to civil disobedience, I think there ' s a place for it. I think you have to figure what you ' re trying to do — if you ' re going to try an armed rebellion: is this real, is the cause that serious, do you have that much chance of winning? If you don ' t, don ' t try it, no matter how just your cause is. I ' ve really been too middle class to want a police record — I came awfully close over a street sign on Gowen Avenue . . . My wife thinks the causes are great, but she does think it would be nice if I ' d help my kids with their reading! I ' m really getting to the point where I have to go back and find out what ' s been happening at home for the past three years. When you ' ve got five kids, supper finishes at 6:45, and bedtime is 8:30, and you ' ve got homework to get done, and kids to get washed and in bed, and your husband is out for his seventh meeting in eight nights — things are not good. My wife is sympathetic to the causes, she ' s a pacifist — I ' m not. I just don ' t happen to like this par- ticular war! 136 Going down to eat now? No, I gotta stay here a minute Can I get you a sandwich, coffee, something? Sure, thanks. Oh, Jim ... we still doubling Saturday night? Yes, if you ' re still taking Dorothy. Hmmm, I don ' t know . . . kids have been down with something for a couple days. How about I call you Satur- day? Fine, I still have to call a babysitter, that ' s always the roughest part. Want to go about quarter to eight. Well, whenever you ' d leave if you were going alone. Quarter to eight, then, it ' s the second game. Good enough. The sign on the office wall, humorous in light of other signs on other walls in other (Say Theology, Philosophy, Sociology) offices, reads, We believe that profit is not a dirty word. That ' s intensified in class. Cash . . . can only buy happiness. Remember that, gentle- men, and someone else would always like to buy your happiness. He (This Reardon fellow) speaks of young, tough, decision-makers, the forceful men who play the game well. Himself, he might be called: decent . . . Would you rather take a ticket on this test, Mr. Manion? sincere . . . You ' ve learned the players of the game; you ' ve learned to score the game. You ' ve learned how the game is played. Up till now, this is all you ' ve learned! . . . And if it still doesn ' t balance you blow the whistle, take another swig of Mallox and get back to it but somehow he ' s not tough. . . . I have a bookkeeper at home who will not take orders. not pushy . . . Tve dealt with banks and they ' re absolutely rotten. In many ways Mr. Reardon is sort of a Woody Allen. Hobbies? Ah . . . name a couple of hobbies ... Oh, yes. I do run around the block every night at 1 1:30. My neighbors think I ' m an idiot. 137 — Dr. Lukacs, isn ' t it the privilege of every age to believe that it is on the verge of the millennium? Yes, but sometimes it ' s true! Perhaps, but he is a man with many opinions and much to say, and his classes, his conversation, his lectures overflow with opinion and hyperbole that are best described as, unique. My mind runs contrary to the modern, liberal idea of what should be an educated person. I have found by experience two things about many people who claim to be broadminded: one of them is that these minds are so broad as to be quite flat, and the other is that they are broadminded only about abstract things. Really, the modern academic mind, and even the liberal mind, can be extremely circumscribed and rigid and ungenerous. I have lived more now than I shall live, and I do have some convictions about some things that really show a certain skepticism about many ideas that are very broadly accepted today. There is a pause then, a brief slowing in the steady pace of dialogue. He waves a hand to shape his thought, and waves again as another comes. A final wave, and the words start again, this time on a favorite, familiar theme. I think everybody who wants to strike, today, a note of freedom must seriously consider whether he ought not spindle, fold, and mutilate. I really believe that the greatest enemies that all of us face are the technologists and people who want to reduce men to machines . . . Today, we are manufacturing great numbers of people who are hollow inside — they ' re not rotten inside, they ' re something worse, they ' re hollow inside. And this hollow man is worse than the rotten people, who had rotten hearts — they were rotten, but they still had hearts. This is the world for the complete phony, the complete phony can make out quite well. Good and fast! There is another pause, and before he speaks again the power in his voice has lessened to the tone of the thoughtful man who is about to tell you something he has not told many people. Only lonely people throw away their lives. Sufl ' ering? Because of suffering, you know, a person doesn ' t commit suicide. A person only commits suicide because he is lonely. And loneliness means purposelessness of life. The world will never go to pot because of a lack of mind, but from a lack of heart. I ' m very serious about that! 138 He is a man who has made a reputation in the theater, at home among the overhead Hghts and flats and fumbled lines and good poor talent and darkened houselights; a man whose productions in the summer music theater have been critically acclaimed. If you want to go to the trouble of checking old yearbooks, you might recognize him in a 1941 production of May time, featuring checked suits, bowler hats, girls in floor length dresses and Dan Rodden. Since then, that name, plays and players have been synonymous, yet of late he has had second thoughts about a more serious kind of play and a difl ' erent sort of player: I ' m a bit put off by the regalia that some of the students have affected in the past few years. There probably are places where there are sincere flower people and dedicated, devoted hippies. We have a few, but most of our people who affect these fashions are simply echoing something that they don ' t believe in very firmly themselves but which they regard as a kind of a protest against a time which, God knows, none of us understand very well. I suppose I feel this way: my own gen- eration had very absolute stimuli to which we reacted a bit more naturally, simply because they were stimuli to which you could react more naturally. We had a depression; we had a war. The war was a real, honest to God war, and most people believed in the justice and efficacy of it. As far as the depression went, people did what they had to do. Most of us in the LaSalle community were from lower middle-class families who had a very difficult time during the depression. But sometimes I think those two factors brought out qualities in that generation that I don ' t think we have a right to expect in this generation. I came on campus as a thirteen-year-old entering freshman at La Salle High in 1933, and saving four years in service, three at graduate school, and a year as a pre-Hippie on the upper West Side of Manhattan, I have been here ever since. To those who might well remark that I haven ' t gotten very far, I can only reply that I have been where I wanted to be. 139 Appointment at eleven twenty. Eleven twenty-seven he came galloping through the room and into his office with an armload of books and two students dogging his heels. First student: Change the economics to history, second semester. Why? Because . . . O.K. I to the second: . . . is this . . . ah . . . Mr. Halpin? Yep. Very busy man. My turn. Line forming at door. Mr. . . . I ' m only free Saturday morning, nine till ten. Next, please. His eleven thirty class began a little late. Saturday. Nine fifteen. His gallop looks a little tired. Probably what takes up most of my time is that ... ah ... it just seems that this ... is the office where a lot of people come if they think they ' re in trouble. Busy man. Early one Saturday morning. Just talking over coffee and doughnuts. Reflections: The inability to say ' no ' . . . and I like helping people . . . like involvement. My wife says, ' what do you keep getting involved for. ' But . . . The ah . . . so-called left wing who are supposed to be doves, are really hawks, the right wingers who are supposed to be hawks are really doves. (And an explanation) Oh, sure, very simply: the, um, activists are on the left, not on the right . . . people demonstrating, sitting down, shouting. People on the right feel ... if you ignore them they ' ll go away. Just because a fellow, in my opinion, because a fellow wears a beard, you know, er, you see I wear these kind of clothes myself just because I ' m afraid to take a chance be- cause the people on the left may just be right . . . so I wear these boots and . . . you know, wash and wear pants myself once in a while. So, well, if they take over they ' ll think I ' m one of them. To wear a beard . . . and demonstrations. I think this is good, this is healthy. Well, like, that ' s what I told my students when they came to my class, now you ' re going to get the truth, see, now you can listen to all these communists over in the Phi- losophy department and all the left-wingers upstairs in the Sociology and Political Science departments, but we ' re going to tell you, you know, tell us like it is, Charlie, you know? We ' re the ones who really tell it like it is, they don ' t tell it like it is. But of course you understand, you know I just use this to get them mad, upstairs with those left-wingers, intellectually not personally. You know, I tell my students at the begin- ning of the year, you know you can ' t believe everything I say, because I may say things just to get you mad. A busy man. With opinions to be heard. Some Saturday morning over coffee and doughnuts. How the hell do I know what the pope ' s going to do on the pill and contraceptives. 140 The cigar is what you think of first, when you think of Dr. Barth and Physical Chemistry, for it is part of him until he removes it to speak. It was a black knot when I met him for the interview, not long enough to be anything more than roughly triangular. Searching for an interesting topic, we talked about technology and science, pure science and ap- plied science. Liberal Arts and Science. Finally he relit the cold, black knot and began in a more interested, and serious voice: There are two contrary ideas that both seem to me to be very harmful. One is that science can do everything. Just throw in enough money and science will do anything — cure cancer, prevent death — whatever it is, science can do it. In a word, science is God. The other view is that science is a devil. Neither of these things are true. Scientists are human beings and science is a human activity. It can ' t do every- thing. This requires a little more thought, but I think the things that science does are neither good nor bad. If you say, I want to do a certain thing, science will say, here is a way to do it. But it doesn ' t say whether what you want to do is good or bad. If you want to drop an atom bomb, science can tell you how to make it and how to deliver it. But it will not tell you if it is a good thing. Society decides that, and after society had decided, they like to find somebody to beat over the head. Pure science interests itself in finding knowledge, but knowledge is a very dangerous thing. You can do lots of things with knowledge. What you do is another question altogether, and this is what society must decide. If they de- cide that everybody has to have five motor cars, we ' ll have a polluted atmosphere. A scientist is an expert in certain things. It seems to me it is the duty of the scientist to explain the consequences, in those fields in which he is an expert, of what society wants to do. I think that in this we might have been lax in the past — mainly of course, because the outcome hasn ' t oc- curred to us either. When you are dealing with a compli- cated situation like ecology, it is very difficult to know what a little change in one place will cause in another place. And very often nobody thinks these things through to the end. Then they ' re all surprised when something turns up that we don ' t like. I think that it is the duty of scientists to keep their eyes on that kind of thing. We have to speak out. Unfortunately we tend to speak in fields where we don ' t have sufficient knowledge. But I think it is better to speak and be foolish than not to speak at all. That ' s part of our duty, to make people aware of what their desires are going to lead to. 141 Albright? Yeah, I had Albright, he ' s brilliant, really brilliant, what a mind — he really just sort of throws things at you. He ' s a fantastic math teacher, when he throws this stuff at you, sometimes he throws more than anybody can handle, but he really makes you look at it all and it sticks. . . . Albright? You heard about Albright haven ' t you — about his thesis? Y ' see, he was learning Japanese at the time and so he decided to write the thing in Japanese just for practice ... Well, he ' s really, well, he likes . . ., well, I mean his field is Algebra — he ' s an algebraist — and sometimes you get the feeling he ' d just like to chuck all the calculus and do it all in Algebra ... . . . so when the time came to do his thesis he had to do it in Japanese, since no one in the U.S. was qualified to evaluate it . . . Hell yea, I had him for one class. Yea, I guess he was pretty good. I really can ' t say for sure, I didn ' t understand a word he said. . . . this field he did his thesis on, well this friend of mine told me that the only significant work ever done on it before had been in Hebrew, so he had to teach himself Hebrew, then translate the available material to English, before he could . . . And the one thing he keeps saying in class is that it all comes down to ' maps, ' everything is ' maps, ' but you don ' t understand math do you. so I guess you wouldn ' t understand . . .? ... there ' s this guy in the Math Department, name ' s Albrech, or Aldricht or something, supposed to have read Pride and Prejudice something like ten times! . . . read Pride and Prejudice twelve times . . . . . . likes the structure so much, he ' s read Austin ' s thing sixteen times . . . . . . and get this, he ' s read it twenty times at least! Of such stuff legends are made. 142 R.O.T.C. department, Sergeant Major Shrotz speakin. Afternoon Sergeant, may I speak to Colonel Silvasy? Who is this? Wayne Drozynski, Yearbook Staff. Gist a minute. Colonel Silvasy; Belinski from the Yearbook or some- thing for you. Good afternoon, Silvasy Speaking. Biographical Sketch: Col. Stephen Silvasy (as updated 19 Dec. 1967) Personal Data Born: 29 Dec. 1916, Philadelphia, Pa. Married: 12 June 1940 West Point, New York. Children: Stephen Jr., Capt. U.S.A. stationed at Ft. Benning, Ga. Geraldine, graduated Pennsylvania State Uni- versity, 1966. Janice L., student at Upper Darby High School, Ft. Washington, Pa. Education: U.S.M.A. 1940 Command and Gen. Staff School 1944 Artillery School 1950 Army War College 1960 List of Citations and decorations: Legion of Merit Army Commendation medal, with medal pendant Philippine Presidential Unit Citation Philippine Liberation Ribbon Philippine Independence Ribbon Service Medals: American Defense Service Medal Asiatic-Pacific Service Medal World War II Victory Medal Army Occupation Medal (Japan) Army Occupation Medal (Germany) National Defense Service Medal (With Oak Leaf Cluster) If you had a couple of days, I could tell you about my two grandchildren. My grandson is three years old, and he ' s really built. I mean like a little ox. There ' s a doctor that . . . Yes, sir. I understand, sir. 143 Dr. Cleary — a very formal man. In fact, precise — wherever you meet him. His mustache is meticulously trimmed, and his eyes seem to enlarge when he begins to discuss political matters. For various reasons, Russia seems well on her way to becoming a peace-loving country, dedicated to the defense of essential national interests. No longer the source and cen- ter of a monolithic International Communist Conspiracy aiming at World Domination, Russia is emerging as just another great power. Like other great powers, she has un- derstandable, even legitimate, strategic and economic inter- ests, and other natural political and cultural aspirations. It is true that the Soviet Union is not exactly like any other great power. She is still working off the hang-over from an earl- ier ideological intoxication; and she is much more powerful than any other state — except America, which towers above all. I fear that America ' s present outlook on Europe and the world is still too much imbued with the rhetorical imagery of a cold war that should be allowed to expire. The fact is that Russia, with all her power, and America with her superpower, can no longer influence the policies of resurgent peoples in Europe (and elsewhere) to the same extent they did a decade and a half ago. We never sought to dominate our allies; only to lead and protect them in the post-war years. Now that the post-war era is over, our lead- ership will have fewer and less resolute followers, unless it becomes better attuned to the real aspirations and emergent realities of the outside world. As far as Vietnam is concerned, I have always doubted the wisdom of the forward strategy in the Far East, adopted during the Dulles-Eisenhower era and later ex- tended into Vietnam. Under President lohnson a previously limited interest became a massive military commitment. In my view, the Vietnam war is a tragedy. The Viet- namese people have suffered two decades of violence and atrocity. Our belated decision to intervene massively creates real danger of an American national tragedy. All Wars are tragic for the men and women who suffer (or inflict) violence and irreparable loss. But for America, thus far, there has been only one authentic national tragedy: the Civil War. There are of course vast differences between our agony of the 19th century and the possible new catastro- phe of the 20th. Our Civil War could be won in an endur- ing, decisive way, and it was won in a just and noble cause. As I now view America ' s role in Vietnam, I do not think America can be victorious in the sense of having averted or redressed evils greater than those inflicted by the war itself. I do not now accept the view that we — or the world — has a stake in the outcome of that war that justifies the wounds and death suffered by so many brave American soldiers; nor do I see a stake that justifies the unremitting and intense vio- lence this war wreaks on friend and foe among the people in this brave, battered and bleeding nation. If it is true, as our political leaders now claim, that we cannot with honor simply withdraw, it seems probable that we cannot advance much further without inflicting (and perhaps incurring) indescribable horrors over a wide portion of the world. If it is wrong to go forward militarily, and impossible to go backward as we are told, I suggest we try moving sideways diplomatically — until we are well off the mainland of South East Asia. 144 Psychology probably focuses on that which man is. . . . A lot of the studies in college are and must necessarily be studies dealing with, the way I would phrase it, what man is about, what he is doing. ... It always seemed to me that it is somewhat missing the total picture if the only thing you study is that which man is doing and you don ' t study what man is. . . . There ' s more interest in the study of Psychol- ogy than there was in the past which may reflect some changes in the students in general, a deeper concern about the way a man functions, his motivation, dynamics of his behavior and so forth. In the main, the typical approach of the LaSalle College student is a bread and butter approach. They ' re here in college in order to prepare themselves for a livelihood. The pass-fail kind of thing, I think, is more geared towards being generally interested in learning for learning ' s sake. And therefore as far as LaSalle College stu- dents go, I think it has to be conceived of as an experiment. I don ' t know how they ' re going to react to it. I ' d like to see it work, I don ' t know whether it will or not. . . . Basically, I think, the final marks should be evidence of the power of the student to see relationships, to integrate his knowledge of that course with everything else he has ever looked at and learned. Later on, the conversation turned to whether the LaSalle student was different. No I don ' t think so, I ' ve been engaged in a lot of travel throughout the country and I can ' t see that he is any differ- ent. I think there are special problems confronting the col- lege — which is basically a commuting college — that other colleges and universities don ' t have. The quality and degree of his attachment and loyalty to the institution, I think, is a bit different. There are not the bonds of making the college here an integral part of his life, which you find in a basically resident college. As far as general attitude, reason for being in college, and so forth, I don ' t see that there is much differ- ence. There might be a difference in the level of academic preparedness for college, as in academic ability, but as is clear from our records, I think we ' re improving slowly year by year. Brother Austin, are you — would you describe your life as a busy one? That ' s an understatement of the first magnitude. It ' s ex- ceedingly busy, too busy at the point, in fact. Last weekend I was in Milwaukee, the week-end after this one I ' ll be in Seattle, the week-end after that I ' ll be in California. ... At the present I am booked through the summer of ' 69, and the future, I don ' t know, I suppose it ' s more of the same. 145 There ' s a slowness about it all. From the studied erasure of a blackboard, To the rich intonation of roll — through Lawlor and Povelski, Rappaport, Sanini, Sorski, and Tofkis, Even to the neat arrangement of names, Chalk-white and centered, On the board behind him. There ' s a softness, And a kind of precise choreography, As though all that he says, and does. And is, Had been blueprinted long before And polished To the lustre of antique brass. From the desks. His workbench permits a view Of only half the man. And as he moves, he glides With a slight shuffling Whispering out From somewhere beneath the robe. The robe? Yes, robe — companion, really. He stands there, behind the desk, With that black academic robe Hanging off him, Hands curled up inside it, Tie sneaking through it. Altogether comfortable, Broken-in, Even a bit dusty, Coaxing information at you. There are other movements. But only minor ones — An idle scratch. Little finger to right temple; A calm fondling Of a water spigot. Two hands on the stainless steel; A quick glance In slow motion Over the top of his glasses. And all of it, everything. Leads to the voice: The brow wrinkles Above the steel rims, The mouth curls up. And that voice rolls out — Sonorous, Molasses voice, Dirksen tumbling, flowing Down and out and over, And desk by desk. Syllable by syllable, Filling the room. . . . the drawback is, of course, that you can ' t self -fertilize animals as you can with plants. You ' ll remember some snails fertilize themselves, but then, they ' re funny animals anyway! ' Indeed, Dr. Holroyd, Indeed. I ' m a bad lead er you know. Some people revel in this sort of thing, you know, and I don ' t. It ' s just like getting a class ready. Have you got some questions there? I probably won ' t answer them. (Is your name French? Boudreau sounds like a French name.) Well yes. I ' m well, I ' m, what do you mean? It ' s French. My father ' s people were from Canada. Boudreau is a com- mon name up there. There are a lot of Boudreau ' s in Loui- siana — You know, the Cajuns. Evangeline and all that. They made a movie once which I saw years ago. It was called, Dark River, now I ' m not sure of that. It was with Fran- chot Tone and I think Merle Oberon, and that little fellow, something Junior. He ' s a funny little guy, always played the same kind of role. I can ' t think of his name. Something Junior. He usually was the little rascal, the semi-gangster. And this was one of those Spanish moss, ahh. Deep South, you know — plantation kind of movie. It was sinister, with pretty women being chased around dark, second story porches — you know, in those old plantation houses. Any- way, the family ' s name — there was a family there — name was Boudreau. See, if Hollywood chooses the name it must be pretty common in, well I guess the thing took place in Louisiana — you know, with the Spanish moss, and I can ' t think of his name. Something, Tyson? Junior. So anyway — well yes of course. Isn ' t that obvious? It ' s a French name. My father came from Canada. (Would you say that you form your method according to the individual students in class?) Yes, and by the way I feel about them, I suppose is the main thing — namely there is something always individual about it, which, it seems to me, gives you more responsibil- ity. If you have a so called method and if it doesn ' t work, you can say the method is wrong and go change it, because I guess there are lots of methods. The word sort of makes me, gives me hackles. Whereas if you go in sort of on your own, without that crutch of method, it ' s up to you to have a little ahh feel, like an artist maybe, on a stage, which is what you are. The setting is artificial — you know, three times a week, other classes. I suppose there is the feeling that because the little Portuguese children speak Portuguese, there ' s no reason why you can ' t. But of course it ' s — I don ' t know what it is. People are used to maybe buying things and you can ' t buy this, of course. No matter how many phrases you are forced fed you ' ve still got to look at the structure sometime, and the only way you can simplify it is just not bring that problem up. You need tension. It ' s like this business of pass-fail courses. I don ' t, I ' m not, I don ' t get into polemics, but I really don ' t see much sense in that. You won ' t do a thing unless you ' ve got tension about it. Even if it makes you lose a couple nights sleep. You can do that when you ' re young. You know, to get the paper in. And that ' s the same thing here. Language is supposed to be something that you do, but it is also something you look at and caress like a poem, and do all sorts of things with — make tables out of. It ' s got a gram- mar. Everything has a grammar. Every discipline has a grammar. It has its paradigms. Economics has its paradigms, Philosophy has its paradigms — my God! it ' s built of para- digms. Everything has its logic. And that ' s what the disci- pline is all about. And science and language has its own logic. Well, I don ' t, I ' m wondering at this point what you ' re going to do with all that. This whole business has me mysti- fied. Those two spinning wheels there. 147 Cairo - Ciesla - Dall - Duffy - Flubacher - Geruson - Grady - Kane - Meyer - Mooney - Sadnicki - Cairo - Ciesla - Dall - Duffy - Flubacher - Geruson - Grady - Kane - Meyer - Mooney - Sadnicki - Cairo - Ciesla - Dall - Duffy - Flubacher - Geruson - Grady - Kane - Meyer - Mooney - Sadnicki - Cairo - Ciesla - Dall - Duffy - Flubacher - Geruson - Grady - Ka ne - Meyer- Mooney - Sadnicki - Cairo - Ciesla - Dall - Duffy - Flubacher - Geruson - Grady - Kane- Meyer - Mooney - Sadnicki-Cau-o-Ciesla-Dall-Duff - ' i ' ' 7 - n--Mfver- Mooney -Sadnicki -Cairo -Cie la - Dall - Duffy - Rubacher - Gen, T7 f f ■r Ji Xf C ' Cairo - Ciesla - Dall - Duffy - Flu bacher - Geruson - Grady - Kane - Xj J W V-l iVl 1 VJ O - Duffy - Flubacher - Geruson - Gr ady- Kane -Meyer- Mooney -Sadr - Geruson -Grady -Kane -Meyer - Mooney- Sadnicki - Cairo - Ciesla- Dall - Duffy - Flu Dacner - Geruson - Grady - Kane - Meyer - Mooney - Sadnicki - C airo - Ciesla - Dall - Duffy - Flubacher - Geruson - Grady - Kane - Meyer - Mooney - Sadnicki - Cairo - Ciesla - Dall - D uffy - Flubacher - Geruson - Grady - Kane - Meyer - Mooney - Sadnicki - Cairo - Ciesla - Dall - Duffy - Flubacher - Ge rason - Grady - Kane- Meyer - Mooney - Sadnicki - Cairo - Ciesla - Dall - Duffy - Flubacher - Geruson - Grady - Kane - Ronald C. Alioto — 2137 W. Passyunk Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. Economics — Economics Club 3, 4 (Vice President 4). William R. Bernhardt— 910 Wilde Ave., Drexel Hill, Pa. — B.A. in Economics — Crew Team 1, 2 — Economics Club 1, 2, 3, 4 — Tennis 2. Cyril M. Biros — 11 Petunia Lane, Wil- lingboro, N.J. — B.A. in Economics — Caisson Club 3, 4 — Economics Club 3, 4 — Marketing Association 3, 4; Pi Sigma Epsilon 3, 4-— Project 74 2. Charles J. Bissell — 6610 Greenway Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Economics — Caisson Club 3, 4 — College Union Com- mittees 1, 2, 3, 4. David E. Bonner — 29 Chestnut St., Princeton, N.J. — B.A. in Economics — Caisson Club 3, 4 — Crew 2, 3 — Econom- ics Club 2, 3, 4 (Secretary 4) — Historical Club 2, 3, 4 — Track 1, 2— Triathlon 1. Earle G. Boyer — 400 Bethlehem Pike, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Economics — Sigma Phi Lambda 1, 2, 3, 4. James B. Cameron — 630 E. Hilton St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Economics — Economics Club 3 — Tau Kappa Epsilon 3, 4 — Advisory Board, Class of 1968. Robert V. CiccarelU — 8 17 A Parkview Apts. Collingswood, N.J. — B.A. in Economics — Economics Club 3, 4. James J. Clarke — 420 Blythe Ave., Drexel Hill, Pa. — B.A. in Economics — Collegian 2, 3 (Circulation Mgr.) — Delta Sigma Pi 2, 3, 4 (President 4) — Economics Club 2, 3, 4 — Student Council 4 — SOC 3, 4 (Vice President 4) — Freshman Orientation Com- mittee 3, 4— Who ' s Who 1968. 149 dMdMMM ikiftik John A. Dempsey — 5221 N. Sydenham St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Economics — Economics Club 2, 3, 4- — German Club 2. Niles A. Hall— 1224 Fillmore St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.A. in Economics. Paul E. Hindman — 8116 Flourtown Ave., Wyndmoor, Pa. — B.A. in Economics — Economics Club 2, 3, 4. David J. Holland— 1957 Woodvale Ave., Mt. Penn, Pa. — B.A. in Economics — Delta Sigma Pi 3, 4 — Economics Club 3, 4 — German Club 2. Donald E. Johnson — 4960 State Rd., Drexel Hill, Pa. — B.A. in Economics — Cross Keys 1 — Economics Club 1, 2, 3, 4— German Club 1, 2— NFCCS 1, 2, 3, 4 — Sigma Phi Lambda 1, 2, 3, 4. Gregory Kane — 318 Walker Rd., Ambler, Pa. — B.A. in Economics. Harry F. Kusick, Jr. — 1859 Graham Blvd., Pittsburgh, Pa. — B.A. in Economics — Caisson Club 3, 4 (Sgt. at Arms 4) — Dean ' s Honor List 1, 2, 3, 4 — Economics Club 2, 3, 4 — Residence Hall Council 2, 3. Clifford J. Lentz — Forrest Gardens Apts, Ambler, Pa. — B.A. in Economics. Thomas J. McGoldrick— 968 E. Price St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Economics — Dean ' s Honor List 1, 2, 3, 4 — Economics Club 3, 4 — St. Thomas More Society 3. John J. Murphy — 232 W. Fischer Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Economics — College Union Committees I, 2, 3, 4 (Vice-Chairman 3, 4) — Economics Club 4 (Treasurer 4) — Le Cercle Claudel 1, 2, 3, 4 (Treasurer 3) — Student Council 3, 4. Michael R. Sablowski — 1056 Broadway Blvd., Reading, Pa. — B.A. in Economics — Delta Sigma Pi 2, 3, 4 — Economics Club 2, 3, 4. Richard J. Schatz — 20 W. Haddon Ave., Oaklyn, N.J. — B.A. in Economics — Sigma Phi Lambda 1, 2, 3, 4. 150 Charles B. Skitsko — 406 Fitch Rd., Hat- boro. Pa. — B.A. in Economics — Econom- ics Club 2, 3, 4— Glee Club 2, 3, 4— Semper Fidelis Society 3, 4 (Secretary 4). Francis M. Staino— 8209 Narvon St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Economics — Economics Club 3, 4 (President 4) — Newtonian Society 1 — R.O.T.C. Band 1. James P. Steinitz — Pinebrook Rd., Eng- lishtown, N.J. — B.A. in Economics — Baseball 1, 2, 3 (Manager) — Economics Club 2— Praefectus Club 1, 2, 3, 4 (Sec- Treas. 3) — Residence Hall Council 1, 2 — Sigma Phi Lambda 1, 2, 3, 4 (Alumni Secretary 4) — School Mascot The Ex- plorer 3, 4— Who ' s Who 1968. Joseph M. Takach— 7259 Walnut Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Economics — Economics Club 3, 4. Paul H. Thim— 220 Pleasant Valley Rd., King of Prussia, Pa. — B.A. in Economics — College Union Committees 1, 2, 3 Collegian 1, 2, 3, 4 (News Editor 3; Bus. Mgr. 4) — Economics Club 3, 4 — Fresh- man Orientation 2, 3, 4 — El Club Hispano 2, 3, 4. James J. Weiss — 116 W. Gorgas Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Economics. John P. Winterhalter— 317 Locust St., Reading, Pa. — B.A. in Economics — Delta Sigma Pi 3, 4 — Economics Club 3, 4. John T. Wright— 1826 S. Ringold St Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Economics- Economics Club 3, 4. 151 - - JJevlm - Doran - Jc - MacLeod -McClc n - Younp -Ussiger-Kt.v iiau-i Lffe-Rodden-Shee! ' Uresii-i-iancineld-irlannur: aulits-Prips eir -Rademai: ink- Gibbons - viv.- iVAo.vv. V - ivJoUenhauer-P .DO - Branam - Burke - Devlin -:an-Kel -Sheek :. ' bons-G ENGLISH - Gibbons - Gresh -Handfield- Har KxsKey - ivj oilenhauer - Paulits -Pripstein - Radf. ton - Yoi! ng - Correale - App - Branam - Burke - Devlin - Doran - Ellis - Frank - Hissi : Heis - Koch - Kyle - MacLeod - McCloskey - Mollenhauer - P auii i P -i v ' rF- linrni ' Yin - Vmin o- f ' nrrf=nlr- - Ann- Rrfinfirn - Ri xrVsp --. ' ! ° ;•lin _ Tlr - neeKcy - i norn ndfield-Hannum- deman- . ..nk-Gibb Victor H. Allekotte— 5439 Thomas Ave., Warminster, Pa. — B.A. in English — Dean ' s Honor List 1, 2, 3, A — Lambda Iota Tau 2, 3, 4— NFCCS 2— Weber So- ciety 1, 3, A — Who ' s Who 1968. Joseph A. Blaney — 451 E. Clearfield St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in English-Educa- tion — Education Society 3, 4. Joseph F. Burke — 1375 Ashbourne Rd., Elkins Park, Pa. — B.A. in English. John F. Caviston — 222 E. Roosevelt Blvd., Philadelphia, Pa.— B.A. in English. William A. Checchio — 417 Jefferson Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in English — Gavel Society 3, 4 Collegian 3, 4 (Features Ed- itor 4). Russell G. Clements— 1709 W. Meeting- house Rd., Boothwyn, Pa. — B.A. in Eng- lish — Alpha Phi Omega 1, 2 — Weber So- ciety 4. Michael E. Connaughton — 620 N. Irving St., Arlington, Va. — B.A. in English — Dean ' s Honor List 1, 2, 3, 4 — Gavel Soci- ety 3 — Residence Hall Council 1, 2, 3, A — Weber Society 2, 3, 4. Gerard E. Connors — 1500 Gilford Ave., New Hyde Park, N.Y.— B.A. in English- Education. Francis J. Dalton— 30 S. While St., Shenandoah, Pa. — B.A. in English-Educa- tion Society 2, 3 — Tau Kappa Epsilon 2, 3, 4. 152 John P. Dalton — 342 Glen Ridge, Haver- town, Pa. — B.A. in English-Education — Benilde Club 1, 2 — Education Society 3 — Glee Club 3 — Psychology Club 1 — Weber Society 1. Gerald E. Davis— 4203 Frost St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.A. in English — Collegian 4, 5 (Editor-in-Chief 6)— Who ' s Who 1968. John P. D ' Amato — 1327 S. 27 St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.A. in English — Dean ' s Honor List 1, 2, 3. Gerald J. Deacetis — 273 Calvert St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in English — LaSalle Urban Center 4. Richard J. DiPasquale — 593 Larchwood Ave., Upper Darby, Pa. — B.A. in English- Education — Benilde Club 1 — Conservative Club 3 — Education Society 3 — Glee Club 3 — Sociology Club 3. Gerald E. Dzura — 4283 Glen Lytle Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. — B.A. in English — Col- legian 1, 2, 4 — Gavel Society 1, 2, 3, 4 — Lambda Iota Tau 4 — The Masque 2 — SOC 3— Weber Society 2, 3, 4 — La Salle in Mexico— Who ' s Who 1968. John R. Favorite— 615 S. Church St., Moorestown, N.J. — B.A. in English — The Masque 1, 2, 3, 4. Joseph R. Filinuk — 25 W. Linden Ave., Apt. 3B, CoUingwood, N.J. — B.A. in Eng- lish — Dean ' s Honor List 1, 2 — Weber So- ciety 1, 2 (Secretary 3), 4. Richard B. Findlan — 6447 Marchand St., Pittsburgh, Pa. — B.A. in English — Glee Club 2, 3, 4 — Residence Hall Council 1 — Sigma Beta Kappa 2, 3, 4. Francis X. Foley — 1132 Cottman St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in English — Track 1. Henry L. Franzki — 331 Crawford Ave., Maple Shade, N.J. — B.A. in English — Alpha Phi Omega 1, 2. 3, 4. Albert J. Garford— 116 Cherry St., Ham- monton, N.J. — B.A. in English — Tau Kappa Epsilon 2, 3, 4. 153 iftiikii Stephen P. Gary— 732 Spruce Rd., Warminster, Pa. — B.A. in English — Lambda Iota Tau 4 — Weber Society 1, 2, 3, (President 4). Pete J. Giannini— 1924 Dudley St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.A. in English. Louis A. Hieb — 250 Maple Ave., North Hills, Pa. — B.A. in English — Dean ' s Honor List 2, 3 — St. Thomas More Soci- ety 3, (President 4). Thomas S. James — 707 Mossbore Terr., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in English. Norman J. Jason — 5560 Ludlow St., Phil- adelphia, Pa. — B.A. in English — Benilde Club 3. 4 — Caisson Club 3, 4 — Kappa Alpha Psi 2, 3, 4 — The Masque 1 — Presi- dent ' s Guard 1, 2, 3, 4. Robert F. Kazorowski — 1236 Liberty St., Cambden, N.J. — B.A. in English — Ger- man Club 3, 4 — Weber Society 1, 2, 3, 4. Michael C. Koch— 128 Highland Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in English. Robert P. Koroly— 838 Morgan Ave., Drexel Hill, Pa.— B.A. in English. Robert Koziol— 356 SW 31 Rd., Miami, Fla. — B.A. in English — Baseball 2, 3, 4 — Collegian 3, 4 — Dean ' s Honor List 1, 2, 3, 4— Who ' s Who 1968. Charles H. Kronenberg — 1652 Whitehouse Rd., Maple Glen, Pa. — B.A. in English- Explorer 2, 3, (Senior Editor 4) — Student Council I, 2, 3, 4, (Treasurer Class of 1968 4) — Advisory Board 1, 2 — Freshman Orientation 3, 4 — Gar ' s 3, 4. Thaddeus S. Kruszewski- 3920 N. Park Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in English —Caisson Club 3, 4 — ROTC Band 1, 2, 3, 4, (First Clarinet 4) — Collegian 2. Thomas J. McCabe — 2017 Tomlinson Rd., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in English — Caisson Club 3, 4 — Collegian 2 — Dean ' s Honor List 1, 2, 3, 4 — Praefectus Club 2— Rifle Team 1, 2, 3, 4, (ROTC Captain 3)— Weber Society 4— Who ' s Who 1968. 154 Robert J. McDermott— 5760 N. Marshall St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in English. Mark G. McElwce — 4015 Center Ave., Lafayette Hill, Pa. — B.A. in English- Education — Collegian 4 — Education Soci- ety 4 — Swimming 1, 2, 3, 4 — Triathlon 1 — Who ' s Who 1968. Thomas R. Malatesta— 1431 S. 9th St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in English-Educa- tion. Dennis F. Manion — 308 W. Ruscomb St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in English-Educa- tion — Education Society 1. William J. Martin— 3605 Fisk Ave., Phil- adelphia, Pa. — B.A. in English-Education. W. Darrell Merkel — 918 Ridgewood Dr., Northfield, N.J.— B.A. in English— Col- lege Union Committees 1, 2 — Collegian 2, 3, 4 (Managing Editor 4) — Education So- ciety 3, 4 — Explorer 4 Glee Club 1 — Sigma Beta Kappa 3, 4, (Vice President 4). Dennis F. O ' Brien — 7106 Limekiln Pike, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in English — Soc- cer 2. 3, 4. Richard T. Oliver — 19 Locust Lane, Levittown, Pa. — B.A. in English — Glee Club 3— St. Gabriel ' s Club 1, 2. Michael J. Parlapiano — 219 N. Virginia Ave., Penn ' s Grove, N.J. — B.A. in English- Education — Caisson Club 3, 4 — College Union Committees 2, 3, 4 — Education So- ciety 3, 4. SSs V- Ukd iM Br. Gerard Parr F.S.C.— 1375 Ashbourne Rd., Elkins Park, Pa.— B.A. in English. John E. Paulits— 1159 Sanger St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.A. in English. Edward F. Peic— 208 Crum Creek Rd., Woodlyn, Pa. — B.A. in English. 155 James D. Petrilla — 1385 Rothley Ave., Roslyn, Pa. — B.A. in English — Weber So- ciety 1, 2. Robert Pinto — 441 Flint St., Bridgeport, Conn. — B.A. i n English-Education — II Circolo La Salliano 3, 4, (Treasurer 4) — La Salle in Europe 2. Walter J. Poroszok — 4323 Potter St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in English-Educa- tion Society 4 — The Masque 1 — Sigma Phi Lambda 1 — Weber Society 4. Joseph P. Punchello — 233 W. Ontario St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in English — Col- legian 3, 4 — Le Cercle Claudel 2. Joseph Ritvalsky — 7304 Sackett St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.A. in English-Education — College Union Committees 1, 2, 3, 4 — Education Society 3, 4. Walter A. Rossi— 1646 N. 59th St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.A. in English — Masque 1, 2, 3, 4. Frank W. Sauerwald — 7141 Cedar Park Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in English — Caisson Club 3, 4 — German Club 2 — Student Council I, 2, 3, 4, (Secretary 4) — Student Court 2 — Freshman Orientation 3, 4— Gar ' s 1, 2, 3, 4. John J. Scanlan — 136 E. Broadway, Clif- ton Heights, Pa. — B.A. in English. Thomas J. Smith — 7801 Dungan Rd., Philadelphia, Pa.— B.A. in English— Col- lege Union Committees 2, 3, 4 — Collegian 1, 2, 3, 4, (Managing Editor 3, Editor-in- Chief 4)— Deans ' Honor List 1, 2, 3, 4 — Freshman Orientation 3, 4 — Alpha Phi Omega 2, 3, 4— Who ' s Who 1968. Brother Paul Spisak — 1375 Ashbourne Rd., Elkins Park, Pa.— B.A. in English- Education. Carl P. Stevens— 8005 Colfax St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.A. in English. Brother Richard Stoutzenberger — 1375 Ash- bourne Rd., Elkins Park, Pa. — B.A. in Eng- hsh. i iM 156 Peter J. Tamagni — 17 Victory Ave., Vine- land, N.J. — B.A. in English — Key Frater- nity 2, 3. Richard Tiedeken— 1634 Worrell St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in English — Col- ian 1, (Features Editor 2, Editor-in- Chief 3) — Deans ' Honor List 1, 2, 3, 4 — Lambda Iota Tau 1, 2, 3, 4 — Weber Soci- ety 1, 2, 3, 4. William R. Van Buskirk— 228 Pensdale, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in English — College Union Committees 1 — Collegian 3— Dean ' s Honor List 1, 2, 3— NFCCS 1, 2, 3, 4 — Student Council 2, 3. Ronald S. Vinick — 39 Montrose Terr. Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in English — Tau Kappa Epsilon 3, 4. George M. Walsh— 524 W. Ashdale St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in English — Lambda Iota Tau 4 — Weber Society 3, 4 — Literary Magazine 3, 4 (Editor 4). WilUam J. Wame— R.D. 1, Box 250 East Stroudsborg, Pa. — B.A. in English — Education Society 3, 4 — Glee Club 3, 4. Thomas M. Wnorowski — 1421 Van Hook St., Camden, N.J.— B.A. in English — Weber Society 1, 2, 3, 4. Vincent J. Zappacosta — 2017 S. Cleveland St., Philadelphia, Pa.— B.A. in English- Education — Education Society 3. OkiM 157 Cziraky - Donaghy - Donini - Fair - Hennessy - Labunka - Lukacs - McCarthy - O ' Grady - O ' Toole - Rossi- Weinstein- Wrigley - Cziraky - Donaghy - Donini - Fair - Hennessy - Labunka - Lukacs - McCarthy - O ' Grady - O ' Toole - Rossi - Weinstein - Wrigley - Cziraky - Donaghy - Donini - Fair - Hennessy - Labunka - Lukacs - McCarthy - O ' Grady - O ' To ole - Rossi - Weinstein - Wrigley - Cziraky - Donaghy - Donini - Fair - Hennessy - Labunka - Lukacs - McCarthy - O ' Gr ady -O ' Toole- Rossi- Weinstein -Wrigley - Cziraky- Donaghy - Donini -Fair- Hennessy -Labunka- Lukacs-McCar thy -O ' Grady -O ' Toole- Rossi - Weinstei TTjr ■¥ nri T l onini -Fair -Hennessy -Labunka -Luka cs - McCarthy - O ' Grady - O ' Toole - Rossij xA X - JLj XV— X - onaghy - Donini - Fair - Hennessy - Labu nka - Lukacs - McCarthy - O ' Grady - O ' Toole - Rossi - Weinstein - Wrigley - Cziraky - Donaghy- Donini - Fair- Henn essy - Labunka - Lukacs - McCarthy - O ' Grady - O ' Toole - Rossi - Weinstein - Wrigley - Cziraky - Donaghy - Donini - Fair - Hennessy - Labunka - Lukacs - McCarthy - O ' Grady - O ' Toole - Rossi - Weinstein - Wrigley - Cziraky - Donag hy - Donini - Fair - Hennessy - Labunka - Lukacs - McCarthy - O ' Grady - O ' Toole - Rossi - Weinstein - Wrigley - Czira ky - Donaghy - Donini - Fair - Hennessy - Labunka - Lukacs - Mc Carthy - O ' Grady - O ' Toole - Rossi - Weinstein- Wrig Michael P. Althoff — 1053 East King St., Yor k, Pa. — B.A. in History — Historical Club 3, (Vice President 4) — Class of ' 68 Advisory Board 3, 4. Thomas J. Bachmann — 205 Glendale Rd., Upper Darby, Pa. — B.A. in History — Cot legian 2, 3 — Student Congress 5. Harry Francis Bamhrick — 631 Spring Mill Ave., Conshohocken, Pa. — B.A. in History- Education — Education Society 3, 4 — Glee Club 3, 4 — Historical Club 3, 4. Walter F. Beard— 3008 Teesdale St., Phil- adelphia, Pa. — B.A. in History-Education. Victor D. Brooks — 337 Powder Horn Rd., Fort Washington, Pa. — B.A. in History- Education — Chairman, Music Committee 1, 2, 3, 4 — Conservative Club 3, 4 — Dean ' s Honor List 2, 3, 4 — Historical Club 1,2, 3,4. Robert Henry Brown — 1225 Rosemont Lane, Abington, Pa. — B.A. in History — Collegian Staff 5, 6 — Liberal Arts Student Association, Co-Founder 6. Paul F. Bujwid — 4555 Vista St., Philadel- phia, Pa. — B.A. in History-Education So- ciety 2, 3, 4 — Historical Club 2. Edward Joseph Bursak — 1601 Chattin Rd., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in History — Education Society 3 — Historical Club 1. Thomas George Camp — 113 Cooper Ave., Collingswood, N.J. — B.A. in History — Education — Education Society 2, 4 — Ten- nis 2, 3, 4. 158 Charles S. Carr— 5543 Pulaski Ave., Phil- adelphia, Pa. — B.A. in History — Historical Club 2, 3, 4, (President 1968)— Slavic Club 3, 4. Alfred J. Casale— 445 Wellesley Rd., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in History. Francis A. Champine — 248 Valley Run Dr., Cherry Hill, N.J.— B.A. in History- Education — College Union Committees 1, 2, 3, 4 (Vice-Chairman 3, Chairman 4) — Education Society 3, 4 Historical Club 2 — Student Council 2. 3, 4 — Freshman Orientation 3, 4 (Treasurer 3). Eugene A. Cimis — 42 Lenhome Dr., Cranford, N.J. — B.A. in History — Educa- tion Society 3, 4 — Sigma Phi Lambda 1, 2, 3, 4 — Track 1, 2, 3, 4. Camillo C. Degregorio — 1930 East Pass- yunk Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in History — II Circolo LaSalliano 3. James P. Durkin — 515 Wayne Dr., Cin- naminson, N.J. — B.A. in History. John Joseph Fitzsimmons — 5525 Miriam Rd., Philadelphia, Pa.— B.A. in History- German Club 1, 2— Historical Club 2, 3, 4 — Marketing Association 2, 3, 4 — NFCCS 1, 2, 3, 4 — Pi Sigma Epsilon 2, 3, 4 — Political Science Association 3, 4. Paul F. Fragale — 4222 M St., Philadel- phia, Pa. — B.A. in History — Crew 1 — Cross Country 1 — Track 4. John J. Gallagher, Jr.— 2950 Brighton St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in History. John J. Gallagher — 5559 Greenway Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in History. Albert Joseph Gates — 19 Newington Dr., Hatboro, Pa. — B.A. in History — Baseball 2, 3,4. Eugene F. Gery — 408 Jefferson Ave., Beverly, N.J. — B.A. in History — Historical 159 James J. Grimes — 2909 Gilham St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.A. in History-Education. Andrew J. Gubicza — 3106 Guilford St.. Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in History-Educa- tion — Education Society 2, 3 — Historical Club 2 — President ' s Guard 1. Henry C. Guynn — 6347 Ross St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.A. in History-Education. HiM Joseph C. Haney — 40 Jones Ave., Flour- town, Pa. — B.A. in History. Daniel Henon — 6514 North 11th St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in History — Caisson Club 1. Thomas W. Herter — 3937 Bennington St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in History-Educa- tion — Education Society 3 — Historical Club 2. John M. Howard — 907 Dolores Lane, Croydon Acres, Pa. — B.A. in History — Cross Country 2 — Golf 1 — Historical Club 2, 3 — Political Science Assoc. 3 — Tennis 2. Richard J. Jimod — 6004 Loretto Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in History — His- torical Club 2. Robert M. King — 1013 Terrace Blvd. Trenton, N.J. — B.A. in History — College Union Committees 2, 3, 4 — Historical Club 3, 4 — Marketing Association 3, 4 — NFCCS I, 2, 3, 4— Pi Sigma Epsilon 3, 4. gAgJk Edgar J. Langdon — 8323 Forrest Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in History. Michael D. Lee— 1104 Woodcliff Dr., Alexandria, Va. — B.A. in History — His- torical Club 2, 3, 4 (President 3, Treasurer 4). Patrick O. McDouiell — 224 Warrior Rd., Drexel Hill, Pa.— B.A. in History— His- torical Club 3, 4 — Swimming 1, 2, 3, 4. 160 Robert J. McKee— 2114 Lehigh Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in History. George E. Matthews — 1315 Northup Rd., Drexel Hill, Pa. — B.A. in History— El Club Hispano 1 — Historical Club 1, 4 — Swim- ming 1. William F. Meyers — 4 Tomlinson Ave., Clementon, N.J. — B.A. in History — Cais- son Club 3, 4 — President ' s Guard 3, 4. Frank J. Milewski — 151 Jones St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.A. in History — Basketball 1 — Historical Club 4. Richard J. Monastra — 2207 South Lam- bert St., Philadelphia, Pa.— B.A. in His- tory — Education Society 3, 4 — Historical Club 3, 4. Martin N. Mooney — 56 Broadway St., Freehold, N.J. — B.A. in History — Sigma Beta Kappa 2, 3, 4. Joseph D. Murphy — 86 Hedgerow Dr., Morrisville, Pa. — B.A. in History — Cross Country 3, 4 — Explorer 4 — Track 1, 2, 3, 4 — Gar ' s 3, 4. James H. Noon, Jr. — 708 Orchard Way, Hatboro, Pa. — B.A. in History — Caisson Club 3, 4, (President 1967-1968)— Crew 2, 3— Praefectus Club 2, 3— SOC 4. Joseph M. Palmieri — 7605 Louise Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in History. George T. Pollitt— 153 Tree St., Philadel- phia, Pa. — B.A. in History-Education. James J. Quinn — 4528 Weymouth St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in History — His- torical Club 3 — Marketing Association 3 — NFCCS 3— Pi Sigma Epsilon 3. Francis W. Reagan — 4631 Germantown Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in History- Education. 161 iibii William H. Reinking— 2605 South 67th St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in History — Marketing Association 2, 3, 4 — Pi Sigma Epsilon 2, 3, 4 — Soccer 3, 4— IFC 1, 3, 4 (Vice President 4). James T. Rosenberg — 1008 Salem Ave., Burlington, N.J. — B.A. in History — Dean ' s Honor List 3 — Historical Club 3 — Political Science Association 3 — St. Thomas More Soc. 3. Sylvester A. Ryan, Jr. — 2211 Jersey Ave., Scotch Plains, N.J. — B.A. in History — Caisson Club 3, 4 — College Union Com- mittees I. 2, 3, 4 — Glee Club 3, 4 — Presi- dent ' s Guard 1, 2, 3, 4 — Residence Hall Council 3. Bro. Edward J. Sheehy, F.S.C.— St. Joseph ' s Hall, 1375 Ashbourne Rd., Elkin ' s Park, Pa. — B.A. in History-Educa- tion — Dean ' s Honor List 3, 4 — Gavel So- ciety 2, 3, 4 (Secretary 3, Treasurer 4). Dennis D. Smith— 3018 Kent Rd., Folcroft, Pa. — B.A. in History. Kevin C. Smith— 219 East Sedgwick St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in History — His- torical Club 1, 2, 3, 4 — Political Science Assoc. 4 — St. Thomas More Society 3, 4 — Student Court 2, 3, 4, (Chief Justice, Deputy Prosecutor, Chief of Prosecution) — Who ' s Who 1968. William J. Snyder — 1535 South Codies St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in History. Richard E. Stoebenau — 5827 Roosevelt Blvd., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in History- Education Society 3 — Historical Club 2, 3 (Secretary 3). Joseph J. Sugamele — 10 Victor Court, Hicksville, N.J. — B.A. in History — Histor- ical Club 3, 4 — Psychology Club 3, 4 — Sigma Phi Lambda 1, 2, 3, 4 (Treasurer 4). William I. Travers — 2252 Blvd., Jersey City, N.J. — B.A. in History-Education — Tau Kappa Epsilon 2, 3,4. John H. Truskowski — 8637 Perch Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in History-Educa- tion — LASA 6, (Vice President) — Col- legian 5 — Student Congress 6. Thomas P. Witt— 820 Chislette St., Pitts- burgh. Pa. — B.A. in History — Collegian 3, 4 — Dean ' s Honor List 1, 2, 3, 4 — Gavel Society 1, 2, 3, 4 (Secretary 2, Treasurer 3, President 4) — Historical Club 3, 4 — Who ' s Who 1968. 162 LANGUAGES Peter G. Aton — 428 George St., Ridge- wood, N.J. — B.A. in Classics. Peter C. Carrozza— 1643 S. 13th St., Phil- adelphia, Pa. — B.A. in German — Cross Country 2, 3 — Track 2 — Praefectus Club 3. Richard F. Connor — 4768 Whitaker Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in German — Ger- man Club 3. Frank J. Di GiUo— 2228 S. 21st St., Phil- adelphia, Pa. — B.A. in German — German Club 4. Bro. Augustin P. Dominguez — Carrera 15 38-00, Bogota, Colombia— B.A. in French — Le Cercle Claudel 4 — Soccer 4. James R. Gallagher — 1709 Avondale Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in German. John J. Gillespie— 5255 N. Fairhill St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Spanish — El Club Hispano 3. Joseph M. Golding— 7838 Prevident St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in German- Education — German Club 2, 3, 4. James M. Hardesty — 1615 E. Mount Pleasant Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in German — German Club 2, 3, 4 (Social Director 4). dMmh 163 Gerald F. Hebert— 5908 Lawndale Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in French — Band 1, 2. Richard F. Hunt — nemede, N.J. — B.A. man Club 3, 4. Engle PL, Run- in German — Ger- Whitey W. Klenk— 1385 Edgewood Ave., Roslyn, Pa. — B.A. in Spanish — El Club Hispano 3 — Freshman Orientation Chair- man of the Class of 1971— Football Club 4 — Gar ' s 4 — Who ' s Who 1968. giM Robert A. Massaro — 7631 Woodcrest Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in French — Dean ' s Honor List 3, 4 — Le Cercle Clau- del 1, 2, 4 — Pi Delta Phi 4 — LaSalle in Europe 3. Peter Mecznik — 5511 N. American Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in French. Duane D. Meeban — 1343 E. Upsal St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in German — Col- lege Union Committees 2, 3, 4 — German Club 3, 4. Gary S. Mencin — 502 Long Lane, Hat- boro. Pa. — B.A. in French — Dean ' s Honor List 1, 2, 3, 4 — Le Cercle Claudel 3, 4. Eugene M. Monaghan — 326 Plymouth PI., Cherry Hill, N.J.— B.A. in German-Edu- cation — German Club 3, 4. Donald W. Murphy — 1863 Eastman Ave., Bethlehem, Pa. — B.A. in Classics — Glee Club 4. John P. O ' Neill— 3464 F St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in German — Conservative Club 4 — German Club 4. Richard J. Regan— 909 Orlando Rd., Cherry Hill, N.J. — B.A. in German. Laurence S. Rudnicki — 175 S. King St., Apt. C11, Kingsbury Apts. Malvern, Pa.— B.A. in French— Slavic Club 3— Le Cercle Claudel 1, 2, 3, 4 (Vice President 3). 164 Francis X. Santelli — 256 Drexel Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. — B.A. in Spanish — Educa- tion Society A — El Club Hispano 4. Herman R. Szwajkowski — 2648 Ash St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Spanish — El Club Hispano 3. Carmen D. Valentine — 2990 Richmond St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in German — German Club 1, 2, 3, 4 (President 3J— Slavic Club Treasurer 4). 165 MATH i 1 1 - Sch ock - Sweetser - V dMim Lawrence H. Auerweck — 1174 Davisville Rd., Warminster, Pa. — B.A. in Mathemat- ics — Collegian 1, 2, 3, 4, 6 (Managing Ed. 3, 4-Bus. Mgr. 2, Contributor 5) — Cross Keys 4, 5, 6 (President 5, Corresponding Secretary 6) — Explorer 3, 4, 5, 6 (Editor 5, Associate Ed. 6), Senior Class Rep. 6 (President) — Student Congress 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 (Com. Chair 3, Secretary 4.) Patrick A. Belle— 121 Dalton St., Roselle Pk., N.J. — B.A. in Mathematics — Track 1, 2, 3, 4. John A. Ciarletto — 75 Silvermine Ave., Norwalk, Conn. — B.A in Mathematics — Caisson Club 3, 4 — College Union Com- mittees 1, 2, 3, 4 — Rifle Team 1, 2, 3, 4 — Student Court 2, 3, 4 (Chief Prosecu- tor 1, Justice 1). Eugene A. Davis — 1906 East Venango St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Mathematics. Albert P. Federico Jr. — 2944 S. Carlisle St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Mathemat- ics — Caisson Club 3, 4 — II Circolo La Sallianol. John M. Feeny — 330 E. Gowen Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Mathematics — Sigma Beta Kappa 3, 4. George J. Gillespie — 6005 N. Mascher St. — B.A. in Mathematics — College Union Comm. 1, 2, 3 (Chairman Social Comm. 2, Secretary 3) — Le Cercle Claude! 1, 2. John J. Green — 4632 Salmon St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.A. in Mathematics. Ronald Richard Hardy— 5826 N.3 St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Mathematics. Stephen F. Hober — 6155 Franklin St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Mathematics — Dean ' s Honor List 1, 2 — German Club 1, 2. 166 John J. Jelen— 9901 Sidney Rd., Silver Spring, Mo. — B.A. in Mathematics — Col- lege Union Committees 1, 2, 3, 4 — Dean ' s Honor List 2 — Praefectus Club 2 — Kappa Mu Epsilon 3, 4 — Soccer 3, 4. Gregory J. Keeley — 218 Glendalough Rd., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Mathematics. John F. Kenney — 747 Shawmont Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Mathematics. Mark C. Kerstetter— 5616 N 7 St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — College Union Committees I, 2, 3, 4 (Corresponding Secretary 3 — Recording Secretary 4) — Dean ' s Honor List 1, 2, 3— Student Council 4 — Who ' s Who 1968. Charles J. Ketterer III— 208 E. Nashville Ave., Wildwood, N.J. — B.A. in Mathemat- ics. James J. Korman — 377 Keswick Ave., Glenside, Pa. — B.A. in Mathematics. j iii Paul L. McDonnell— 5930 N.3 St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.A. in Mathematics — Col- legian 1, 4 — Explorer 4. Gerald J. McNeff— 7121 Louise St., Phil- adelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Mathematics — Kappa Mu Epsilon 4 — Student Court 2, 3. Bro. Kevin Malloy — 1375 Ashbourne Rd., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Mathematics David P. Potocki— 195 4th St., Bethle- hem, Pa. — B.A. in Mathematics. Joseph W. Rovelli — 161 Hancock Ave., Jersey City, N.J. — B.A. in Mathematics — Residence Hall Council 3, 4 (Rep.) — Sigma Phi Lambda 2, 3, 4. Raymond G. Scbannen — 1211 N. Howard St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Mathemat- ics — Caisson Club 3, 4 — President ' s Guard I, 2, 3, 4. k mk 167 Allen - Clouser - Fallon - Farnon - Fitz h tnn - Picryrh r-ilt:]. ' i - Plrillin ' ; - TJ nhrrf etta- Mihalich- Nau - 1 arnon - r iczgoraid. - ib oc !lips-Robe-t- ' erim-L AP-- ' ht. Allen - . hton - F erlin-LaN! ancy-M. pTTTT r CI PT-IV ps-Roberts-Spnm -Farnon a.cy-Maco i Hips - Roberts - Spn Ion- Farnon - F coretta- Mihalicli- i Jauglitoa - Pteizchalski - Phillips - Roberta. - Sprin Fitzseraid- Gibbons - Kerlin •■Laohchvk -McG ancv-Macoretta- Mi )n-Fitzg ' syK - ivics ..ia):icy - iviac;ji -; un- i Daniel J. Earley— 811 E. Thompson St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Philosophy. Robert F. Fishman — 7612 Woodbine Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Philosophy — Philosophy Club 3, 4 (Vice President 4). Frank B. Kuhl — 6 South Highland Ave., Baltimore, Md. — B.A. in Philosophy — Glee Club 2, 3, 4— St. Gabriel ' s Club 2, 3, 4. William J. Lawhorn— 939 So. St. Bernard, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Philosophy. Arthur G. Ogden — 1110 Duncannon Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Philosophy — Beta Alpha Lambda 1, 2, 3, 4 — Collegian 2, 3— Football Club 4 (Line Coach)— Philosophy Club 2, 3 (Vice President 3) — President ' s Guard 2, 3. William M. Sullivan— Apt. ED 229, 1001 City Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Phi- losophy — Collegian 2, 3 — Dean ' s Honor List 2, 3, 4 — NFCCS 3, 4 — Student Coun- cil 3, 4 -Student Magazine 3, 4 — Philoso- phy Club 3, 4 (President 4). 4i 4ik Daniel J. Whelan— 1525 Louden St., Phil- adelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Philosophy — Crew 1, 2, 3, 4 (Captain 4). Michael J. Wood— 2320 Kenilworth Rd., Ardmore, Pa. — B.A. in Philosophy. onard-McGo- POLITICAL SCIENCE ii iii dMii David M. Bednarik— 523 E. Fifth St., Bethlehem, Pa. — B.A. in Political Science — Basketball 1, 2, 3 — Beta Alpha Lambda 3, 4 — Political Science Association 3, 4. Charles G. Bowman — 159 W. Spencer St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Political Sci- ence — Political Science Association 3 — St. Thomas More Society 3. Robert G. Brigati— 10714 Haldeman Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Political Sci- ence — College Union Committees 1, 2, 3 (Chairman of Dance Committees 3) — Explorer 1. 2 — Kappa Epsilon Upsilon Fraternity 2, 3, 4 (President 4) — Semper Fidelis Society 2. 3, 4 (Vice President 4) — Who ' s Who 1968. Paul E. Carmel — 256 Saratoga St., Cohoes, N.Y. — B.A. in Political Science. William F. Carroll— 168 Mallard Rd., Holland, Pa. — B.A. in Political Science — College Union Committees 1, 2, 3, 4 — Explorer 1, 2, 3, 4 (Layout Editor 3, Edi- tor-in-Chief 4) — Freshmen Orientation 3, 4 — Football Club 3, 4 (Editor of the Football Club Yearbook 4) — Class of 1968 Advisory Board 2, 3, 4 — Student Or- ganization Committee 3, 4. Nicholas A. Carugno — 103 E. Broad St., Palmyra, N.J. — B.A. in Political Science. Francis B. Clossey — 6 Lake Ave., Oak- hurst, N.J. — B.A. in Political Science — Political Science Association 1. James F. Collins — 10 Conover St., Free- hold, N.J. — B.A. in Political Science — Political Science Association 2, 3, 4 — Residence Hall Council 1, 3, 4 — St. Thomas More, Society 1, 2, 3, 4 — Sigma Phi Lambda 2, 3, 4. Robert Dagney— 3347 Conrad St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.A. in Political Science — Political Science Association 2, 3, 4. 169 WkiM ikiM Michael G. DeFino — 1002 Longacre Blvd., Yeadon, Pa. — B.A. in Political Sci- ence — Political Science Association 3, 4. John F. Donahue — 3671 Gypsy Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Political Sci- ence. Eugene Evans Jr. — 515 Charles Ave., Har- rington, N.J. — B.A. in Political Science — Beta Alpha Lambda 2, 3, 4 (Vice Presi- dent 4) — Political Science Association 3, 4. Dennis D. Ferri — 1665 Country Lane, Chester, Pa. — B.A. in Political Science — Political Science Association 3 — Tau Kappa Epsilon 2, 3, 4. Edward J. Flanagan— 1746 S. 54th. St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Political Sci- ence — German Club 1, 2 — Political Sci- ence Association 3, 4. Joseph P. Flynn Jr.— 109 Hudson St., Phillipsburg, N.J. — B.A. in Political Sci- ence — Basketball 1 — College Union Com- mittees 1, 2, 3 (Chairman Special Events Comm. 2) — Residence Hall Council 2, 3 (Athletic Chairman 2, 3) — Student Coun- cil 1, 2 — Dormitory Counselor 3, 4 — Student Court 2, 3, 4 — Class Secretary 1, 2— Who ' s Who 1968. James P. Gallagher — 1634 Sullivan Dr., Norristown, Pa. — B.A. in Political Sci- ence. Richard P. Gallagher — 414 Comly St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. Political Science Education. Lawrence A. Grahenstein — 604 Greene St., Cumberland, Md. — B.A. in Political Science— Collegian 2, 3, 4 — Deans ' Honor List 3 — Political Science Association 2, 4 — Residence Hall Council 2, 4 — Sigma Phi Lambda 2, 3, 4 — Student Council 1, 2, 3 — Student Court 2 — Dormitory Coun- selor 3, 4 — Class Secretary 3 — Steering Committee 1— Who ' s Who 1968. Stephen W. Griesemer — 3449 Earl St., Laureldale, Pa. — B.A. in Political Science — Accounting Association 1 — Education Society 3, 4 — Sigma Beta Kappa 2, 3, 4. Patrick L. Hartnett— 1429 Chislett St., Pittsburgh, Pa. — B.A. in Political Science. Rohert A. Hodgkiss- 5292 Marlboro Pike, Hillside, Md. — B.A. in Political Science. 170 Attila C. Horvath— 215 E. Meade St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Political Sci- ence — Caisson Club 3, 4 — Crew 2. Daniel W. Keogh— 5366 N. Sydenham St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Political Sci- ence — Caisson Club 3, 4 (Vice President 4) — President ' s Guard 1, 2, 3, 4 (Com- mander 4). Michael D. Kevltch— 106 W. Olney Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Political Sci- ence — Caisson Club 3, 4 — Soccer 3. 4k Pasquale S. Lerario — 1913 S. Galloway St., Philadelphia, Pa.— B.A. in Political Science — Political Science Association 3, 4. Robert M. Liwacz — 552 Lamberton St., Trenton, N.J. — B.A. in Political Science — College Union Committees 2, 3, 4 — Polit- ical Science Association 1 — St. Thomas More Society 2, 3,4. Michael James McAndrews — 7 1 1 Summer St., Media, Pa. — B.A. in Political Science —Glee Club 3. m M Patrick O. McDonald — 1553 East Walnut Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Politic al Science — Collegian 3 — Crew 1, 2, 3, 4 — Political Science Association 4— Tau Kappa Epsilon 2, 3. Thomas H. McKnight— Box 24, Colt ' s Neck, N.J. — B.A. in Political Science. Thomas J. Mahon — 102 Lincoln Ave., Mt. Ephraim, N.J. — B.A. in Political Science — Intramurals 2, 3, 4 — College Union Committees 2, 3, 4. iikiilift William J. Mastalski — 877 North Judson St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Political Science — Crew 1, 2, 3, 4 — German Club 1, 2 — Political Science Association 3, 4 — ■St. Thomas More Society 3, 4. Joseph M. Morgan — 316 West Grange St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Political Sci- ence — Political Science Association 4. Thomas R. Murphy — 1608 South Ring- gold St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Politi- cal Science — Education — Education Soci- ety 3, 4 — Political Science Association 3, dMdimiM 171 William H. Muth— 7002 Copeleigh Rd., Baltimore, Md. — B.A. in Political Science — Caisson 3, 4 — College Union Commit- tees 1, 2, 3, 4 — Knights of Columbus 4 — President ' s Guard 1, 2, 4. Paul J. Nicoletti— 6308 Valley Green Rd., Flourtown. Pa. — B.A. in Political Science — NFCCS 3, 4 — Advisory Board, Class of •68 3, 4. Michael R. Palumbo — 801 Woodcrest Dr., Spring Lake Heights, N.J. — B.A. in Politi- cal Science — Education — Education Soci- ety 3, 4— NFCCS 1, 2, 3, 4— Political Science Association 1, 2 — Residence Hall Council 1, 2 — Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4 — Sigma Phi Lambda I, 2, 3, 4 — Cheer- leader 2, 4 — Soccer 3, 4 — Varsity Club 3, 4— Who ' s Who 1968. David J. Peashock — 561 A St., Swedeland, Pa. — B.A. in Political Science — College Union Committees 1, 2, 3, 4, (Chairman of Music Committee! 3 — Political Science Association 3, 4 — St. Thomas More Soci- ety 3, 4. James M. Pemiy, Jr. — 344 South Chester Pike, Glenolden, Pa.— B.A. in Political Science — Crew 1, 2, 3, 4. Robert C. Pirrotta — 1240 Lakeshore Dr., Camden, N.J. — B.A. in Political Science. Robert J. Raichle— 599 East Rosalie St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Political Sci- ence — Political Science Association 3, 4. Bernard J. Reneski — 4245 Roberts Circle, Cornwells, Pa. — B.A. in Political Science — College Union Committees 1, 2, 3, 4 (Secretary of Host Committee 3, Social Committee 4 — ) — Political Science Asso- ciation 3, (President 4) — President ' s Guard 1— SOC 4— Liberal Club 3, 4 — Student Court (Deputy Prosecutir 3, 4). David J. Rose— 2141 East Clearfield, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Political Sci- ence — Dean ' s Honor List 3, 4 — Political Science Association 3, 4. David C. Schuize— 114 Hendricks St., Ambler, Pa. — B.A. in Political Science — Marketing Association 2, (Vice President 3), 4 — Pi Sigma Epsilon 2, (Athletic Di- rector 3, 4) — Political Science Association 3, 4. Thomas J. Scomavacca — 28 Highland Ave., Jersey City, N.J. — B.A. in Political Science — Sigma Beta Kappa 1, 2, 3, 4. John W. Sharkey— 3701 Calumet St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Political Sci- ence. ik tktfM 172 Mik Kii Joseph J. Stimmler — 1394 Spruce St., Norristown, Pa. — B.A. in Political Sci- ence. Samuel E. Stubbs— 1815 S. 68th St., Phil- adelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Political Science. Daniel F. Sullivan — 4856 44th St., Wood- side Queens, N.Y. — B.A. in Political Sci- ence — Political Science Association 3, 4. Joseph Francis Sullivan — 278 Glenn Ave., Trenton, N.J. — B.A. in Political Science — Alpha Phi Omega 2, 3, (I.F.C. Represent- ative 4). Joseph J. Thomas — 2011 S. Bucknell St., Philadelphia. Pa. — B.A. in Political Sci- ence. Paul E. Vignone — 27 Fordham Dr., Matawan, N.J. — B.A. in Political Science — Political Science Association 3, 4 — Residence Hall Council 1, {Treasurer 2), (President 3) — St. Thomas More Soc. 3 — Sigma Phi Lambda 1, 2, (Secretary 3, President 4)— Student Council 3— SOC 4— IPC 2, 3, 4. John L. Walder— 243 W. Clarkson Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Political Sci- ence — Praefectus Club 1, 2, 3, 4. Edward Joseph Weklar, Jr. — 2714 Mower St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Political Science — College Union Committees 2, (Secretary, Committee of Intramurals and Athletics 3), 4 — Political Science Associa- tion 3, 4 — St. Thomas More Soc. 3, 4. Donald Michael Woods — 2031 Auburn St., Philadelphia, Pa.— B.A. in Political Science— IFC 4 — Le Cercle Claudel 1, 2 — Marketing Association 2, 3, 4 — Pi Sigma Epsilon 2, 3, (President 4) — Politi- cal Science Association 2, 3. (Treasurer 4) — Student Council 4 — SOC (Secretary 4) —Intramurals 2, 3, 4 — Who ' s Who 1968. Gregory J. Yost— 29 Hillfarm Rd., Bloom- field, Conn. — B.A. in Political Science — Conservative Club 4 — Deans Honor List 1, 3, 4 — Political Science Association 2, 4- — llaSalle in Europe 3. John G. Younglove — 626 Beaver St., Bristol, Pa. — B.A. in Political Science — Tau Kappa Epsilon 2, 3, 4. Victor J. Zarrilli — 700 Beech Ave., Glenolden, Pa. — B.A. in Political Science. 173 PRE-LAW nn-Hennessv-Kellv-Cr -G !i- G ry-umi-nill- Leonard M. Amodei — 3637 North Fifth St., Philadelphia, Pa.— B.A. in Pre-Law — St. Thomas More Soc. 3, 4. Ralph J. Avellino — 1115 Pierce St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.A. in Pre-Law — Circolo La Salliano 1, 2, 3, 4 — Kappa Epsilon Upsilon 2, 3, 4. James F. Barrett— 251 South 4th St., Gloucester, N.J. — B.A. in Pre-Law — Semper Fidelis Soc. 4. James J. Bradley — 8250 Michenor Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Pre-Law — Bas- ketball 1. James P. Bradley — 6826 Chester Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Pre-Law. John F. Brady — 5703 Park Ave., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.A. in Pre-Law--College Union Committees 1, 2. !■Rodger J. Britt — 4509 Aubrey Ave., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.A. in Pre-Law. Thomas G. Camp — 351 Broadway St., Westville, N.J. — B.A. in Pre-Law — Fabri- cian Society 2, 3, 4 — St. Thomas More Soc. 3, 4. David F. Carlamere — 200 Vine St., Ham- monton, N.J. — B.A. in Pre-Law. 174 Brian D. Daniel — 224 Forrest Ave., Elkins Park, Pa.— B.A. in Pre-Law — St. Thomas More Soc. 3, A — SOC 2, 3, 4 — Tau Kappa Epsilon 2, 3, 4 (Secretary 4) — Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4. Edward P. Delaney — 2432 80th Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Pre-Law — Alpha Phi Omega 1, 2, 3, 4 — College Union Committees 1 — Intramurals. Gary F. DiVito— 5360 North 15th St., Philadelphia, Pa.— B.A. in Pre-Law — Rifle Team 1 — LaSalle in Europe 3. Harry J. Dougherty — 2437 East Cumber- land St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Pre- Law — Le Cercle Claudel 1 — Marketing Association 3, 4 — Pi Sigma Epsilon 3, 4 — Political Science Association 2, 3, 4. James W. Dugan — 5847 Springfield Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Pre-Law. Brian H. Ferrie— 6015 Lawndale St., Phil- adelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Pre-Law. Thomas J. George — 333 North Ave., Apt. 30-B, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Pre-Law —Golf I. William F. Githens— 1920 Fitzgerald St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Pre-Law — Caisson Club 3, 4, (Secretary 4) — Student Council 1, Treasurer Class of 1968 — Class of 1968 Advisory Board 2, 3, 4. Thomas A. Gray— 95 Clayton Rd., Hat- boro. Pa. — B.A. in Pre-Law. Jerome D. Hatch — 21 Ninth Ave., Haddon Heights, N.J. — B.A. in Pre-Law— German Club 1, 2. Michael W. Heebner — 209 East Wyoming Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Pre-Law — Caisson Club 3, 4 — College Union Committees I, 2, 3. 4 — Collegian 1, 2, 4 — Crew 1. Charles D. Jaanus — 957 Brown Ave., Huntingdon Valley, Pa. — B.A. in Pre-Law — Dean ' s Honor List 1. 175 Joseph R. La Rose— 1167 South 10th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Pre-Law — Kappa Epsilon Upsilon 2, 3, 4, (Founder). John M. Lawfer, Jr.— 284 East Court Street, Doylestown, Pa. — B.A. in Pre-Law — Caisson Club 2. John Paul Leonard m — 6510 Devine Street, McLean, Va. — B.A. in Pre-Law — Glee Club 2, 3— Historical Club 1, 2— President ' s Guard 1, 2 — Semper Fidelis Soc. 1, 2, 3, 4, (Public Relations Officer 4). John M. Libonati — 1729 Carlton Street, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Pre-Law. John F. McCormick— 6130 North 4th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Pre-Law — LaSalle in Europe 2, Secretary of La- Salle in Europe Program 3. WilUam J. McDade — 4512 North Broad Street, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Pre-Law — College Union Committees 1, 2, 3, 4, (Vice-Chairman House Committee 2, Chairman House Committee 3). John T. McGeehan — 728 Maurus Street, St. Mary ' s, Pa. — B.A. in Pre-Law — Col- legian 4- — Residence Hall Council 3, 4, (President 4) — Student Council 3, 4 — Foot- ball Club 3, 4, (President 4). Paul T. McGeehan — 4635 Oakland Street, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Pre-Law — Baseball 4. Craig T. Maize— 1408 Chapel Hill Drive, Baltimore, Md. — B.A. in Pre-Law — Cais- son Club 3 — President ' s Guard 1, 2 — Stu- dent Court 2, 3, (Asst. Prosecutor 2, Chief Prosecutor 3). Anthony Louis Mussari — 203 Bramber Drive, Broomall, Pa. — B.A. in Pre-Law. Michael J. O ' Donnell — 5618 Mansion Avenue, Pennsauken, N.J. — B.A. in Pre- Law— Conservative Club 1, 2, 3, 4 — Poli- tical Science Association 1, 2, 3, 4 — So- ciology Club 1, 2, 3, 4 — Tau Kappa Epsilon 1, 2, 3, 4. Frederick Joseph Ostertag — 3682 Calumet Street, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Pre-Law — Accounting Association 1 — Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4 — Cross Country 1, 2 — Golf 3— Track 1, 2, 3. iiiitk 176 Ronald A. Parente — 70 Nevins Street, Rutherford, N.J. — B.A. in Pre-Law. Ronald James Roque — 2869 Comly Road, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Pre-Law. George W. Roesser — 16 Evergreen Ave- nue, Wyncote, Pa. — B.A. in Pre-Law— Crew 2, 3, 4. Gregory E. ScioUa — 681 Meetinghouse Road, Elkins Paric, Pa. — B.A. in Pre-Law — Crew 2, 3, 4, Varsity 2, 3, 4 — Tau Kappa Epsilon 2, 3, 4, (Secretary 3, Vice- President 4). John W. Wacther — 78 Homestead Drive, Doylestown, Pa. — B.A. in Pre-Law. John J. Zappile — 1349 East Mt. Pleasant Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Pre- Law — Caisson Club 3, 4 rew 1 — Kappa Epsilon Upsilon 1, 2, 3, 4 (Stu- dent Advisor 3, 4). 177 ' ilicetti-C ! -Dondero-Filicetti-Gr Ion den:-) - Filicetti - Grim _-onaero-rii; ondero-Filice } icetti - Grimes - Kovatch -McCarthy -Pfeiffer- Re PSYCHOLOGY ITOU-C Dondero-Filicetti-Grimes - jtvovaicn- -, n Haiv% -VAi rfifti - fl r ' : rnr-Q _ Y n !P: n-h - I ' J .i ' O-ir ' iUcem-Gnmes- Kovatch -McCartiiy-Fleitier-Kooney-iiclireiRer-oiinm-ljermef-U o - Filicetti - Grimes - Kovatch - McCarthy - Pfeiffer- Rooney - Schreiner- Smith -Bernier - Carro; Walter A. Bartashus — 61 E. Washington St,, Port Carbon, Pa. — B.A. in Psychology — Psychology Club 3, 4. Leonard R. Chomlnskl — 1955 N. Neva Ave., Chicago, 111. — B.A. in Psychology — Psychology Club 4 — St. Gabriel ' s Club 3, 4. William A. Conn— 3822 Janice St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.A. in Psychology — Psy- chology Club 2, 3, 4. — 1 William J. DeAngelis— 330 N. Jordan St., Allentown, Pa. — B.A. in Psychology — Psi Chi 3, 4 — Psychology Club 3, 4. Bernard R. Devlin— 201 Redford Rd., Oreland, Pa. — B.A. in Psychology — Psychology Club 2, 3, 4. Andrew G. Dolak— 3850 Frankford Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Psychology — German Club 1, 2, 3 (Treasurer 2, 3). Thomas A. Doyle — 6152 Argyle St., Phil- adelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Psychology — Psy- chology Club 2, 3, 4 — Tau Kappa Epsilon 3, 4. Edward J. Finegan— 273 Stahl Dr., Hunt- ington Valley, Pa. — B.A. in Psychology — Crew 1, 2, 3 — Psychology Club 2, 3. James W. Giamotti — 908 S. Temple Blvd., Temple, Pa. — B.A. in Psychology — Deans ' Honor List 1, 2— Psi Chi 3, 4 (Vice Presi- dent 4) — Psychology Club 3, 4 (President 4). 178 John J. Gibbons — 1325 New York Ave., Cape May, N.J. — B.A. in Psychology — Caisson Club 3, 4 — Glee Club 2, 3— Pai Chi 3, 4— Psychology Club 3, 4. John M. Hartke — 4105. Fogel Lane, Whealon, Md. — B.A. in Psychology. James G. Herndon — 2961 Sylvan Ramble Rd., Atlanta, Ga. — B.A. in Psychology — Deans ' Honor List 1, 2, 3, 4 — Gavel Soci- ety 1, 2— Psi Chi 3, 4 — Psychology Club 3,4. Richard F. Jennings — 178 Norristown Rd., Warminster, Pa. — B.A. in Psychology — Psychology Club 3, 4— NFCCS 3, 4. Robert J. Jurich — 249 Concord Rd., Chester, Pa. — B.A. in Psychology — Psy- chology Club 2, 3, 4. Darrell H. Kates— 3432 Wellington St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Psychology — College Union Committees 1, 2, 3, 4. Dennis G. Kelley — 7230 Penarth Ave., Bywood, Upper Darby, Pa. — B.A. in Psy- chology — Psychology Club 1, 2, 3, 4. Paul W. Licata— R.D. 1, Norristown, Pa. — B.A. in Psychology — College Union Committees 1, 2, 3, 4-— Psychology Club Charles J. Lindenlaub — 521 Broadlawn Terr., Vineland, N.J. — B.A. in Psychology. James J. McKeever — 2854 Sandyford ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Psychology — Psychology Club 3, 4. Timothy F. McKenna— 4735 Sheffield St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Psychology — College Union Committees 3, 4 — Psychol- ogy Club 4. Raymond E. Majewski — 15130 Carter Rd., Philadelphia, Pa.— B.A. in Psychol- ogy — Crew 1, 2, 3, 4 (Captain 1) — Psy- chology Club 2, 3, 4 — Sociology Club 3, 4 — Tau Kappa Epsilon 2, 3, 4. M mk 179 John Marsella, Jr. — 2824 South 11th St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Psychology. Joseph L. McGill — 1136 E. Rittenhouse St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Psychology — Orientation Committee 3, 4 — Psi Chi 3, 4 (President 4) — Psychology Club 3, 4 (Vice President 4) — Advisory Board 1, 2 — Class Officer (Vice President 4) — Who ' s Who 1968. Robert T. Moran, Jr. — 882 Wyoming Ave., Maywood, N.J. — B.A. in Psychology — Psychology Club 1, 2, 3, 4 — Residence Hall Council 1, 2 — Tau Kappa Epsilon 2, 3,4. Ralph J. Petrucci — Valley View Dr., Mid- dlefield, Conn. — B.A. in Psychology — Psychology Club 3. Thomas J. Powell— 6014 Duffield St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Psychology — College Union Committees 2, 3, 4 (Chair- man Host Committee 4). Edward J. Pszwaro, Jr. — 108 S. Home Ave., Gibbstown, N.J. — B.A. in Psychol- ogy — College Union Committees 1, 2, 3, 4 — Cross Country 1, 2, 3, 4 — Psychology Club 3, 4 — Sigma Beta Kappa 3, 4 — Track 1, 2, 3, 4 — Varsity Club 2, 3, 4. Larry A. Rosbach — RD 1, Forksville, Pa. — B.A. in Psychology — College Union Committees 2, 3. 4 — Deans ' Honor List 1, 2, 3, 4 — Glee Club 1, 2 (Music Librarian 2) — Psi Chi 3, 4 (Secretary-Treasurer 4) — Psychology Club 3, 4. Augustine J. Roth — 3168 Aramingo Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Psychology — Le Cercle Claudel 1, 2 — Marketing Asso- ciation 2, 3, 4 — Pi Sigma Epsilon 2, 3, 4 — Political Science Assoc. 3, 4 — Psychol- ogy Club 1, 2, 3, 4 — Sociology Club 3, 4. Julian V. Sanson — 146 Whitehorse Ave., Trenton, N.J. — B.A. in Psychology — Col- lege Union Committees 1, 2, 3, 4 (Social Coordinator 2) — Collegian 4 (Photogra- pher) — Explorer 4 (Photographer) — Glee Club 2, 3, 4— Psychology Club 1, 2, 3, 4. Armond J. Scavo — 1018 Vree St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.A. in Psychology — Psy- chology Club 1, 2, 3, 4 (Secretary-Treas- urer 4). John D. Steczynski— 6020 Tulip St., Phil- adelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Psychology— Cais- son Club 3 — Psychology Club 3. Robert M. Swanick— 5940 Elsinore St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Psychology — Chymian Society 1, 2 — German Club 1, 2 — Soccer 1, 2, 3, 4 (Captain 4). iiiii 180 Coffee-Connors-Hornu ; McEntee - Coffee - C e - Leonard - McEn . m - Kamerdze - Leonard mSQCIDLOGY ze - Leonard - McEntee - v m - Kamerdze - Leonard nnors-Homum-Kamerc j - ; wij mee- Coffee-Connors-HornuL _ ize-Leonard- IcEntee- Coffee- Connors -Hornum-Kamerdz Walter J. Weinrich— 2200 South 22nd St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Psychology — German Club 2, 3, 4 — Psychology Club 3, 4. Robert A. Yacobellis— 7326 Limekiln Pike, Philadelphia, Pa.— B.A. in Psychol- ogy — College Union Committees 2, 3, 4 — German Club 1 — Psychology Club 3, 4. Edmund F. Archual — 7711 Hartel Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Pre-Social Work— St. Gabriel ' s Club 3, 4. Brother Teofild Barrelro — 1375 Ash- bourne Rd., Elkins Park, Pa. — B.A. in Sociology — Sociology Club 3, 4. Robert L. Conroy— 7803 Dungan Rd., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Sociology — Caisson Club 3, 4 — College Union Com- mittees 1, 2, 3 — Semper Fidelis Soc. 1, 2 — Sociology Club 3, 4 — The Howitzer (ROTC Newsletter) 3, 4. Epifanio DeJesus, Jr. — 721 S. Hutchinson St., Philadelphia, Pa.— B.A. in Pre-Social Work— El Club Hispano 1, 2, 3, 4 (Presi- dent 3)— Sociology Club 1, 2, 3— SOC 3. Thomas A. Downs — 13431 Kelvin Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Sociology — Sociology Club 3, 4. Edward J. Fox — 517 Singley Ave., Bon- nemede. N.J. — B.A. in Pre-Social Work — Football Club 4; Sociology Club 4. John D. Gavin— 12 Springfield St., Bel- mont, Mass. — B.A. in Sociology — Sociol- ogy Club 1, 3, 4. 181 fikJi Donald C. Gehring — 6926 Horrocks St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Sociolotvy — College Union Committees 1, 2, 3, 4 (Chairman, Committee of Intramurals and Athletics 3) — Sociology Club 3, 4 (Presi- dent 4)— Student Council 1, 2 — SOC 4. Carl J. Hoffman— 32 Durand Rd., Hunt- ingdon Valley, Pa. — B.A. in Sociology — Consei-vative Club 3, 4 — Sociology Club 3,4. Joseph K. McCarthy— 5101 N.W. 5th Ave., Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. — B.A. in So- ciology — Marketing Association 3 — Sociology Club 3, 4. Dennis G. McGough — 222 Chantrey Rd., Timonium, Md. — B.A. in Sociology — Col- lege Union Committees 1, 2, 3, 4 (Appli- cant Committee Chairman 2, Board Treasurer 3, Open House Committee Chairman 2, Weekend Committee Vice- Chairman 2, 3, 4) — La Salle Council Knights of Columbus 3, 4 (Deputy Grand Knight) — President ' s Guard 1 — Sociology Club 3, 4 — St. Gabriel ' s Club 1, 2, 3. Michael J. Maguire — 306 Salaignac St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Sociology — Caisson Club 3, 4 — Deans ' Honor List 1, 2, 3— Sociology Club 3, 4. Francis J. Messaros — 136 Redford Rd., Oreland, Pa. — B.A. in Sociology — Sociol- ogy Club 3, 4 (Vice President). Michael P. Moran— 2735 Haverford Rd., Ardmore, Pa. — B.A. in Sociology — Sigma Beta Kappa 1, 2, 3, 4 (Secretary 3). Bernard J. Noll— 138 Milton PL, South Orange, N.J. — B.A. in Sociology. James D. Owens— 5624 Stokes St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.A. in Sociology — Sigma Beta Kappa 3, 4. Michael P. Saunders — 7315 Boyer St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Sociology. Robert G. Walker— 184 W. Ruscomb St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Sociology — NFCCS 3, 4— Sociology Club 2, 3, 4 (Recording Secretary 4). Anthony L. Wolf — 418 W. James St., Lancaster, Pa. — B.A. in Sociology — Gavel Society 1, 2 — La Salle in Europe 3 — Sociology Club 3, 4. 182 De ' uigcJio-Uucnn-iiaiScr-Markmann-Rearaori-5 veeney wemraan rkmann-Reardon -Sweeney-Weinman- Whitman-I Angelis-Guerin-Kaiser-Markmann-Reardon-Sweeney W nman-Whitman-DeAngelis-Guerin-Kaiser-Markmann-Reardon-Sweeney-Weinman -DeAngelis- v uerin-Kaiser-Markmann-Reardon-Sweeney-Weinman-Whitnian-DeAngelis-Guerin-. ...arkmann-Re ardon-Sweeney-Weinman-Whitnian-E)eAn.gelis-Guerin-Kai ser-M arkmann-Reardon-Sweeney-Weinnian-Wh itman-DeAngelis-Guerin-Kai; C ( C T TT Tr ' T ' ]VT |r itnian-DeAngelis-Guerin-Kais er-Markmann-Reardon-SweejtVvJ VJ V- LJ 1 ll JL X.ill VJ ser-Markmann-Reardon-Swee an-Whitman-DeAngelis-Guerin-Kaiser-Markmann-Reardon-Sweeney-Weinnian-Whitnian-DeA (igeiiy-uuciin-Kaiser-Markniann-Reardon-Sweeney-WeiBnian-Whitman-DeAngelis-Guerin-Kaiser-Marknia nn-Reardon-Sweeney-Weinman-Whitman-DeAngelis-Guerin-Kaiser-Markmann-Reardon-Sweeney-Weinma Whitman-DeAngelis-Guerin-Kaiser-Markniann-Reardon-Sweeney-Wemnian-Whitnian-EteAngelis-Guerin nin-l?r;;h don-Swft enm ' -Wetnman-Wnitman-DeAiieelis-Guerin-Kaiser-Markmann-Reard ■iiSRr-iVh ' i Richard T. Alsdorf— 1324 Mifflin St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 — SAM 3, 4. Nicolas F. Andruzzi— 439 Old Farm Rd., Wyncote, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 2, 3 — Beta Alpha 3. Peter L. Anzelone — 958 Adams Ave., Elizabeth, N.J. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 4 — Track 1, 2, 4. Arcadius R. Aspenleider — 234 Stearly St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting. Paul A. Balzano— 124 Key St., Con- shohocken. Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 2, 3, 4 — Alpha Phi Omega 3 (Pledge Master 4). Michael J. Balzer— 120 Glendale Rd., Upper Darby, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 1, 2, 3, 4. Joseph M. Betz — 624 Tennis Ave., Ardsley, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Senior C lass Rep. 4. John M. Bocelli — 824 W. Moyamensing Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — -B.S. in Account- ing — Accounting Association 1, 2, 3 — Beta Alpha 2. Charles J. Bonner — 2540 S. Robinson St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Glee Club 1. 184 Cornelius J. Boyle— 3506 Vista St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting. William G. Brennan — 128 A. Gloucester Ave., Mt. Epheaim, N.J. — B.S. in Ac- counting — Alpha Phi Omega 1, 2 (Service Chairman 3) — College Union Committees 1, 2, 3. Theodore J. Bukowski — 1435 Howell St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 2, 3, 4. Francis B. Burke — 100 Cambridge Ave., Marlton, N.J. — B.S. in Accounting — Industrial Relations Comm. 1. Thomas E. Byrnes — 104 Burdick Ave., Hammonton, N.J. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 2, 3,4. Peter Calhoun Jr.— 5946 N. 19th St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 1. John L. Callahan— 21 W. Forestvies Rd., Parkside, Chester, Pa. — B.S. in Account- ing — Accounting Association 3, 4. Frank R. Cardea — 23 Nostrum Rd., Npr- walk. Conn. — B.S. in Accounting — Col- lege Union Committees 1, 2; Crew 2, 3, 4. Robert J. Cardie— 990 Mueller Rd., Warminster, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting. Robert J. Carey — 1709 E. Moyamensing Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Account- ing. Frank A. Casciato — 1809 Porter St., Phil- adelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Ac- counting Association 1, 2, 3, 4— Beta Alpha 3, 4 — Delta Sigma Pi 2, 3, 4. Francis J. Cassidy— 912 Ripley St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Ac- counting Association 2, 3 — Beta Alpha 2, 3— Delta Sigma Pi 2, 3. 185 Francis P. Cavanaugh — 4920 Knox St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 3, 4 — Caisson Club 3, 4. Harold L. Cherney — 1 Orchard St., Otis- ville, N.Y. — B.S. in Accounting — Account- ing Association 2. 3, 4 — Beta Alpha (Pres- ident 3) 4 — Deans ' Honor List 2, 3, 4 — Delta Sigma Pi 2, 3, 4 — Soccer 2, (Cap- tain 3) — Student Court 3— IFC 3. Edward B. Cody — 25 Henley Rd., Over- brook Hills, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Caisson Club 3, 4 — Rifle Team 1, 2, 3, 4. Joseph E. Connery— 8030 Moro St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Ac- counting Association 2, 3, 4 — College Union Committees 1, 2, 3, 4. John L. Connolly — 210 Hampden Ave., Narberth. Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Cais- son Club 3 — Student Congress 1. Edward J. Coyle— 5934 Trinity St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting. John J. Crenny — 4042 Pechin St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Ac- counting Association 1, 2, 3, 4 — Delta Sigma Pi 2, 3, 4. William F. Curtis — 314 Rodman St., Jenk- intown, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Account- ing Association 2, 3 — Rifle Team 2. Charles E. Danihel— 7967 Williams Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — C. Of P. in Accounting — Accounting Association 2, 3 — Deans ' Honor List 3 — Student Congress 2, 3. Thomas G. Del Giorno Jr. — 1536 For- restal St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting. Joseph G. DeLuca — 2762 Phipps Ave., Willow Grove, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting. William A. DeMarco Jr.— 1975 Renovo St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting. 186 John J. Deniken— 7519 Beverly Rd., Phil- adelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting. James L. DeSalle — 902 Brandt Ave., New Cumberland, Pa. — B.S. in Accountings Accounting Association 1, 2, 3, 4 — Resi- dence Hall Council 4 — Sigma Phi Lambda 1,2,3,4. Patrick S. D ' Imperio — 2619 S. Darien, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 3. John S. Donaldson— 2725 S. Cleveland St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 2, 3, 4. William M. Donlan— 7329 N. 20th St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 5, 6 — Senior Class Rep. 6— SAM 5, 6. Joseph M. Dougherty — 5336 Upland St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 6 — Treasurer Sen- ior Class 6. George D. Downing — 141 Pencoyd Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 3, 4 — College Union Committees 1, 2 — German Club 1. Thomas J. Durkan — 5621 Belmar Terr., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 4. William J. Ennis — 48 1 1 Kingsessing Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting. Eugene P. Fenerty Jr.— 3113 Barnett St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 3, 4 — Caisson Club 3, 4 — College Union Committees 1, 2, 3 (Film Comm. Chairman 4). Robert H. Fischer— 3585 Brookview Rd., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting. William D. Fulgham— 889 Foulkrod St.— Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — College Union Committees 2, 3. 187 Joseph E. GafFney— 2384 Philmont Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 1, 2, 3, 4 — Base- ball 2, 3, 4. James J. Gately — 1737 Browning Rd., Pennsauken, N.J. — B.S. in Accounting. Nicholas J. Gaudio— 1739 S. 10th St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting- Accounting Association 1, 2, 3, 4 — II Cir- colo La Salliano 3, 4. Robert H. Geiges Jr. — 203 W. Rosemar St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 2, 3, 4. Nicholas J. Gerhardt — 176 Spencer St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — College Union Committees 1, 2, 3, (Chairman House Comm. 4). James L. Gibson Jr. — 128 E. Durham St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 4 — Sigma Beta Kappa 1, 2, 3, 4. ilMiM Joseph T. Gibson Jr. — 5900 Warrington Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Account- ing 2. Vincent J. Glennon — 5204 Burton St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 5, 6 — Student Congress 5. George P. Graham— 1138 Roberts Rd., Media, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Ac- counting Association 3, 4 — Caisson Club 3, (Treasurer 4). Joseph J. Grailcy— 817 Hoffwagle St., Phil- adelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Ac- counting Association 3. John T. Grosso — 340 Washington Ave., West Berlin, N.J. — B.S. in Accounting. Dennis J. Hood — 7532 Valley Ave., Phil- adelphia, P a . — B .S . in Accounting — Accounting Association 1, 2, 3, 4. Harry J. Hutzel— 2129 Griffith St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Ac- counting Association 3, 4 — Delta Sigma Pi 2, 3, 4. Matthew J. Jesiolowski — 3050 Salmon St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 2, 3, 4 — Chymian Society 2, 3— NFCCS 1, 2— Project 74 2, 3. Robert A. Jones — 230 Lynbrooke Rd., Sringfield, Pa. — B.S. in Accountingp — Stu- dent Council 2, 3, 4. Albert J. Kazanjian — 1100 Dolores Lane, Croydon, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting. Thomas P. Kelly Jr— 418 W. Mont Dr., Collingdale, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 1, 2, 3, 4. Timothy C. Kerrigan — 3710 Vista Terr., Harrisburg, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 3, 4. Paul D. King— 8037 Highschool Rd., Elkins Park, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 2, 3, 4. Frederick L. Kleinhenz— 3138 Derry Rd., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting 2 — Student Congress 4. James M. Knepp — 1625 March St., Read- ing, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 3, 4 — Beta Alpha (Vice Presi- dent 2, President 3, 4) — Deans ' Honor List 1, 2, 3, 4 — Deha Sigma Pi (Efficiency Index Chairman 2, 3, 4) — Counsellor La Salle Hall 3, 4— Who ' s Who 1968. 189 Richard C. Kraus— 5514 Hadfield St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Deans ' Honor List 2, 3, 4. Joseph A. Kredatus — 4544 Manayunk St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 1, 2, 3, 4 — Beta Alpha 2, 3, 4 — Deans ' Honor List 1, 2, 3, 4 — Delta Sigma Pi 1, (Senior Vice Presi- dent 2, 3), 4. Donald Kredensor — Manheim Gardens Apt. 2D, Philadelphia, Pa.— B.S. in Ac- Joseph M. Kridla— 1758 Juniata St., Phil- adelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 2, 3, 4. Charles E. Lally — 413 Edgeworth Ave., Middlesex, N.J. — B.S. in Accounting — Delta Sigma Pi (Ass ' t. Social Chairman 3), 4. Thomas P. Lambinus — 80 W. Godfrey Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Account- ing — Accounting Association 1, 2, 3, 4 — Delta Sigma Pi 1, 2 (Secretary 3, 4). David S. Leider— 5800 Overbrook Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 5, (Secretary 6), Sigma Lambda 6 — Deans ' Honor List 3, 4, 5, 6. Charles P. Lewis— 2934 Brighton St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting. George R. Liney — 529 W. 66th Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting. Mark J. Llevellyn— 101 Charles Dr., Havertown, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Sigma Beta Kappa 2, (Vice President 3), President 4). Richard Lopez — 704 Wyndmoor Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 2, 3. William T. Luskus— 112 ' 2 S. 13th St., Al- lentown, P a . — B .S . in Accounting — Accounting Association 3, 4 — Delta Sigma 190 Francis T. McCloskey— 9872 Veree Rd., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Marketing Association 3, 4 — Pi Sigma Epsilon 3, 4 (.Secretary 4). William J. McDonnell — 44 Sterner Ave., Broomall, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 3, 4. Robert J. McGonagle— 840 E. Sanger St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 2, 3, 4 — Beta Alpha 4— Delta Sigma Pi 2, 3, 4. Robert C. McKenna, Jr.— 101 Loney St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 2, 3, 4 — Caisson Club 3, 4. Thomas H. McManus — 2641 S. Bancroft St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Student Congress 1, 2, 3. John S. McNamee — 204 Lowell Terrace, King of Prussia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 3, 4. Albert J. Maahs — 2151 Woodlawn Ave., Glenside, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Ac- counting Association 2, 3, 4 — Beta Alpha Lambda 1, 2, 3, (Secretary 4) — Crevi ' 2. John J. MacGillivray— 2080 N. 63rd St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting. Michael P. Maddock— 4542 Fernhill Rd., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting. Francis E. Maloney— 231 Wole St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 2, 3, 4 — Caisson Club 3, 4. George E. Mansfield— 3329 Fairdale Rd., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting. Shaun E. Mara— 6030 Shislerst, Philadel- phia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Account- ing Association 4, 5, 6 — Deans ' Honor List 4 — Student Congress 4, 5, 6. 191 Albert F. Marker Jr. — 423 S. Granger St., Media, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 3, 4. Domingo Martinez — 513 W. Girard Ave., Philadelphis, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting. Joseph P. Matlock — 3531 Edgewater Lane, Brookhaven, Pa.— B.S. in Account- John J. Medvedlk— 141 Rolling Hill Rd., Elkins Park, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 3. Paul J. Michaloski — 510 Thorny Lane, Glendora, N.J. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 2, 3, 4 — Beta Alpha 3, 4. Michael J. Miklosovic— 6204 Cardiff St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 3, 4 — Alpha Phi Omega 2, 3, (Treasurer, Service Chairman 4)— Crew 1. Lawrence S. Minarik — 3460 Whitehall Dr., Willow Grove, Pa. — B.S. in Account- ing — Accounting Association 1, 2, 3, 4 — Class Advisor 3, 4. James A. Minchhoff — 1427 Belfield Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting A ssociation 4. Jeiry L. Misterman — 4562 N. Gratz St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 2 — Caisson Club 1 — College Union Committees 2. James J. Mohan— 2109 Stevens St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 2, 3, 4 — Alpha Phi Omega 2, 3, 4. Roger F. Morrison- 2568 Tulip St., Phil- adelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting. Joseph C. Murphy — 125 E. Camden Ave., Moorestown, N.J. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association (Treasurer 2, 3, Vice President 4) — Beta Alpha 4 — Deans ' Honor List 1— Delta Sigma Pi 2, 3, 4. 192 ilfe ifii i David T. Myers— 5205 N. Howard St.. Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — . er 3, 4) — Praefectus Club 3, 4 — Swim- ming 1, 2. Victor K. Myint— 5637 Wister St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 3. Thomas A. Nardi— 1212 Mifflin St., Phil- adelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Ac- counting Association 2, 3 — Delta Sigma Pi 2,3. Dennis L. Natali— 7949 Ridge Ave.. Phil- adelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 4, 5, 6 — St. Thomas More Soc. 4, 5, 6 — SAM 4, 5, 6. Richard W. O ' Connell — 1036 Nicholson Rd., Wynnewood, Pa. — B.S. in Account- ing — Accounting Association 2, 3, 4 — Alpha Phi Omega 1, 2, (Treasurer 3, President 4)— SOC 3, (Treasurer 4)— Swimming 1. Thomas P. O ' Grady— 1929 E. Lippincott St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 5 — S t u d e n t Congress 5. Martin J. O ' Halloran— 63 1 Cricket Ave., Ardsley, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Alpha Sigma Lambda 6. William S. Olarin— 23 E. Chestnut St., Merchantville, N.J. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 3, 4 — Glee Club 4. Michael P. O ' Malley— 6206 Hasbrook Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Account- ing — Accounting Association 2, (President 3, 4)— Beta Alpha 2, 3, 4 — Delta Sigma Pi 1, 2, 3, (Sr. Vice President 4) — Deans ' Honor List 2, 3, 4 — Student Council 2, 3— SOC 2, (Secretary 3), 4— Who ' s Who 1968. 193 Robert B. O ' Neill— 7331 Belden St., Phil- adelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Ac- counting Association 2, 3, 4 — Caisson 3, 4. Robert F. Onraet — 296 Hermitage St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 1, 2. John W. Patenaude— 6028 A St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — College Union Committees 1, 2, 3, 4. Roger J. Peasley — 3312 Lansing, Philadel- phia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Account- ing Association 2, 3 — Beta Alpha 1, 2. Kenneth S. Pers— 6218 Shelbourne, Phila- delphia, P a . — B .S . in Accounting — Accounting Association 3, 4. Anthony J. Pettinato — 8442 Forrest Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accotmting Association 2, 3, 4 — Beta Alpha (Secretary 3, 4) — Delta Sigma Pi 1, 2, 3, 4. James J. Pio— 1120 Orchid Rd., Warmins- ter, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 2, 3, 4 — Beta Alpha 3, 4 — Delta Sigma Pi 2, 3, 4. Charles J. Potoc Jr.— 2542 Gillingham St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 3, 4 — Caisson Club 3, 4 — Crew 1, 3, 4 — Tau Kappa Epsilon 3, 4. Francis X. Rigler — 302 W. Lindley Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting. Edward C. Rinck — Greenwal Court Apt. B-2, Jenkintown, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting. James J. Rubisch — 101 Washington Ave., Edgewater Park, N.J. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 3, 4 — Beta Alpha 2, 3, 4 — Delta Sigma Pi 2, 3, 4. George A. Sacks— 2147 Chew St., Allen- town, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Account- ing Association 1, 2, 3, 4 — Delta Sigma Pi 1, 2, (Treasurer 3, 4) — Residence Hall Council 2, 3, (Treasurer 4) — Student Council 4. 194 Charles J. Saile— 3425 Osmond St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting. Paul J. Santoro— 1735 S. 18th St., Phila- delphia, P a . — B .3 . in Accounting — Accounting Association 3, 4. William J. Sawn— 2623 South St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting. John E. Schank — 212 Guilford Rd., Lans- downe, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 2, 3, 4 — Beta Alpha Lambda 1, 2, (Treasurer 3, 4) — Class Representative 1. Joseph P. Schliep— 6905 Rodney St., Phil- adelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Beta Alpha 2, 3, 4 — Caisson 3, 4 — Delta Sigma Pi 1, 2, 3, 4. Edward C. Schmon— 3559 Sheffield Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accountng. Robert W. S c h w in ge r— 380 Kalmia, Warminster, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 1, 2 — Student Congress 1, 2. John T. Slevin— 5911 Crystal, Philadel- phia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting. Charles H. Smith — 407 Blacklatch Lane, Camp Hill, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 1, 2, 3, 4 — Sigma Phi Lambda 1, 2, 3, (Vice President 4) — Freshman Orientation 2, 3 — IFC 3, (Sec- retary 4)— Who ' s Who 1968. Philip N. Spinelli— 530 Laurel Rd., Yeadon, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting. George R. Stankovis — 419 Silver Ave., Willow Grove, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 2, 3, 4. John J. Sullivan — 3130 Englewood St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting 2, 3, 4 — Delta Sigma Pi 3, 4. 195 Timothy M. Sullivan — 1107 Second Ave., Ashbury Park, N.J. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 2, 3, 4 — Beta Alpha 2, 3 (Vice President 4)— Delta Sigma Pi 2 (Professional chairman 3, 4); The Masque 1, 2 (Board of Governors 3); Class Representative 1. Kenneth N. Szczepanski — 247 Mills St., Buffalo, N.Y. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 4 — St. Gabriel ' s Club 3, 4. Robert J. Tangi — 3920 Gideon Rd., Brookhaven, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 1 — Student Con- gress 2. Edward J. Taulane — 311 W. Cuthbert Rd., Westmont, N.J. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association (Secretary 2, 3) 4 — Delta Sigma Pi 2, (Vice President 3. 4). Louis A. Tavani— 1161 S. 13th St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting. James J. Troisi— 2903 S. 13th St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Ac- counting Association 3, 4. John R. Vasoli— 1436 S. 13th St. Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Ac- counting Association 3. George W. Vickers— 3228 Guiford St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 4 — Beta Alpha 2, 3, 4 — Deans ' Honor List 1, 2, 3 — Delta Sigma Pi 3, 4. James M. Ward— 109 N. Main St., Mul- lica Hill, N.J. — B.S. in Accounting — Ac- counting Association 3, 4 — Sigma Beta Kappa 2, 3, 4. 196 I Kkii Kenneth J. Walter— 1203 Tacoma St., Al- lentown, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Ac- counting Association 3, 4. Alan L. Waters — 316 Lexington Dr., Silver Spring, Md. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 3, 4. Harry J. Weidner— 103 W. Red Bank Ave., Woodbury, N.J. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 2, 3, 4 — Beta Alpha 3, 4 — Delta Sigma Pi 2, 3, 4 — Res- idence Hall Council 3. Ronald P. Wenger— 1722 Madison St., Cinnaminson, N.J. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 6 — Senior Class Rep. 6. John A. Whiteside— 3251 Wellington St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 3, 4 — Beta Alpha 3,4. Christian J. Wurst Jr.- 1190 Naussau Rd., Warminster, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting Association 3. Francis X. Zane— 1126 S. 2nd St.— Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Ac- counting Association 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 — Sen- ior Class Rep. 6 — Student Congress 5, 6. John J. Zarzycki — 4004 J, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting — Accounting As- sociation 2, 3 — S.A.M. 5. 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Adams Jr. — 968 Sanger St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Business — Cais- son Club 3 — Rifle Team 1. Ronald E. Alfano — State Old Marple Rds., Media, Pa. — B.S. in Business Admin- Edward J. Atkinson Jr. — 15147 Endicott St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in General Business — Marketing Association 4, 5 — Student Congress 4. Raymond P. Badyna — 32 Lincoln Ave., Mt. Ephriam, N.J. — B.S. in Business Ad- ministration. Benjamin David Barone — 2902 S. 18th St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in General Busi- ness — College Union Committees 1. Harry P. Carberry— 27 1 7 S. 71st. St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in General Busi- ness—Basketball 1— Football Club 4 (Business Manager, Board of Directors) — SAM 3, 4 — Student Council 1, 2. 3, 4 (Class President 1, 2, 3 — Student Govern- ment (President 4) — Triathlon 1 — Student Court Justice 2, 3, 4 — Freshmen Orienta- tion 2, 3, 4. James Francis Daly Jr. — 1133 McKinley St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in General Business. Stephen Demetrician — 502 Williamsburg Rd., Lansdale, Pa. — B.S. in General Busi- ness. Brother Henry John Dermer F.S.C. — 1375 Ashbourne Rd., Elkins Park. Pa. — B.S. in Business Administration. 198 John Patrick Dolan Jr. — 667 Montgomery Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in General Business. Kenneth B. Downs — 219 Runnymede Ave., Jenkintown, Pa. — B.S. in General Business. Richard A. Flynn— 3876 Kipling Place, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in General Busi- ness — Student Congress 1, 2. Harry G. Franke— 3875 Jeffrey Rd., Hunt- ingdon Valley, Pa. — B.S. in Business — IEEE 3— SAM 2. Elmer A. Fritz Jr.— 1533 Pulaski Dr., Norristown, Pa. — B.S. in General Busi- ness. John P. Gallagher III— 530 Elkins Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in General Busi- ness — Marketing Association 3, 4. Kenneth R. Girill — 156 Leverington Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Business Ad- ministration. Stephen W. Green — 20 Viewpoint Lane, Levittown, Pa. — B.S. in General Business. Patrick J. Haney — 422 Fairfax Dr., Exton, Pa. — B.S. in General Business — Cross Country 2, 3— Triathlon 2, 3. Edward C. Hughes — 203 Elm Ave., River- ton, N.J. — B.S. in Business — College Union Committees 1, 2, 3, 4 — Class of ' 68 Advisor 2, 3. Ronald P. Huller — 216 Coolidge Ave., Beverly, N.J. — B.S. in General Business — Deans ' Honor List I, 2. William W. Kennedy — 436 E. Van Kirk St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in General Business. 199 Harry K. Koehler— 3591 Primrose Rd., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in General Busi- ness. Leonard E. Lori — 511 Jefferson Ave., Bristol, Pa. — B.S. in Business Administra- tion — Sigma Beta Kappa 2, 3, 4. Brother John P. McErlean, F.S.C.— 915 Spring Ave., Elkins Park, Pa. — B.S. in Business Administration. Raymond Madden Jr. — 608 E. Annsbury St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Business Administration — Marketing Association 5 — Student Congress I. Michael S. Monastero — 824 W. Marshall St., Norristown, Pa. — B.S. in Business Ad- ministration — Golf 4. Robert P. Myers — 220 Linden Ave., Riv- erton, N.J. — B.S. in Business Administra- tion -S.A.M. 5 — Student Congress 4. Ralph I. Naughton — 1419 Grange Ave., Apt. B-3, Philadelphia, Pa.— B.S. in Gen- eral Business — College Union Committees 3, 4, (Social Committee Chairman 4) — Economics Club 3, 4. Thomas M. Prodoehl— 2936 Magee St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in General Busi- ness. John M. Reilly— 314 E. Broad St., Quak- ertown. Pa. — B.S. in Business. Arthur J. Schwabenbauer — 24 Robins Lane, Berwyn, Pa. — B.S. in Business Ad- ministration — Deans ' Honor List 6. Joseph F. Secsick — 1448 W. Lycoming St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in General Busi- ness — Advisory Board, Class of ' 68 3. Thomas F. Strickland— 350 Hilltop Drive, apt. 104, King of Prussia, Pa. — B.S. in General Business — Football Club 4. 200 iiM4 William J. Supernavage — State Church Sts., Penns Grove, N.J. — B.S. in General Business. Edward J. Trakimas — 2170 Meetinghouse Rd., Cinnaminson, N.J. — Certificate of Proficiency in General Business. John A. Trent— 5843 Belmar St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.S. in Business Administra- tion— S.A.M. 2, 6. MiMMMmm George P. Walker — 206 Virginia Rd., Norristown, Pa. — B.S. in General Business —The Masque 1, 2— S.A.M. 1, 2. R. John Werner— 6410 N. 8th St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.S. in General Business. Francis C. Woodring — 7009 Cedar Park Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in General Business — Marketing Association 4, 5. Joseph J. Zavodny — 103 Oakwood Dr. Cinaminson, N.J. — B.S. in General Busi- ness. 201 Christie - Henry - O ' Meara - Woods - Christie - Henry - O ' Mear a - Woods - Christie - Henry - O ' Meara- Woods - Christ ie - Henry - O ' Meara - Woods - Christie - Henry - O ' Meara - Woods - Christie - Henry - O ' Meara - Woods - Christie - He nry - O ' Meara - Woods - Christie - Henry - O ' Meara - Woods - Christie - Henry - O ' Meara - Woods - Christie - Henry - O ' Meara - Woods - Christie - Henry - O ' Meara - Woods - Christie - Henry - O ' Meara - Woods - Christie - Henry - O ' Me ara - Woods - Christie - Henry - O ' Meara - Woods - Christie - Henry - O ' Meara - Woods - Christie - Henry - O ' Meara - Woods - Christie - Henry - O ' Mear a - Woocfcl iT j l C IJ oods- Christie -Henry -O ' Meara -Wood s - Christie - Henry - O ' Meara - Woods - ChJsti JL J.N JLX. x VJ XLl Christie - Henry - O ' Meara - Woods - Chr istie - Henry - O ' Meara - Woods - Christie - Henry - O ' Meara - Woods - Christie - Henry - O ' Meara - Woods - Christie - Henry - O ' Meara - Woods - Christie - Henry - O ' Meara - Woods - Christie - Henry - O ' Meara - Woods - Christie - Henr y - O ' Meara - Woods - Christie - Henry - O ' Meara - Woods - Christie - Henry - O ' Meara - Woods - Christie - Henry - O ' Meara - Woods - Christie - Henry - O ' Meara - Woods - Christie - Henry - O ' Meara - Woods - Christie - Henry - O ' Mear a - Woods - Christie - Henry - O ' Meara - Woods - Christie - Henry - O ' Meara - Woods - Christie - Henry - O ' Meara- Wo Michael J. Callahan — 1427 Arline Ave., Roslyn, Pa. — B.S. in Finance — Sigma Beta Kappa 1 (Social Director). Thomas D. Canal— 2030 Wayne Ave., Haddon Heights, N.J. — B.S. in Finance. James B. Donahue — 11401 Monterray Dr., Wheaton, Md. — B.S. in Finance — Sigma Phi Lambda 2, 3, 4 — Finance As- sociation 2, 3, 4 — Knights of Columbus. Thomas J. Flynn — 260 Shadeland Ave., Drexel Hill, Pa. — B.S. in Finance — Economics Club 3, 4 — Industrial Rela- tions Society 4 — Psi Chi 6 — Student Con- gress 3, 4. Joseph A. Ganster — 401 Reading Ave., West Reading, Pa. — B.S. in Finance — Finance Association 3, 4. Richard A. Gartman— 2237 46th St.. Penn- saulcen, N.J. — B.S. in Finance. John P. Gordon — 4651 Horrocks St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Finance — Finance Association 3, 4 — SAM 3, 4 (Vice President 4) — Class of 1968 Advisory Board 3, 4. Howard D. Jasper — 12 Clover Lane, Newton Square, Pa. — B.S. in Finance — Track 1, 2, 3, 4 (Co-Captain 4). James R. Kelly— 1217 Mollbore Terr., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Finance — Finance Association 3. 202 James E. McCloskey— 1 102 Warwick St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Finance — Cais- son Club 3, 4 — Semper Fidelis Society 1, 2 — Soccer 1, 2 — Student Council 1, 2 — SOC 3, 4— Tau Kappa Epsilon 2, 3, 4 (President 4) — Finance Association 3, 4 — Triathlon 3— Football Club 3, 4 (Board of Directors)— Who ' s Who 1968. Frank B. McKeough— 6555 N. Smedley St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Finance — Finance Association 3, 4 (President 4). Edward McManus — 30 Edgemont Lane, Willingboro, N.J.— B.S. in Finance— SAM ikiMKk Frederick W. Maier — 4017 Bleigh Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Finance — Finance Association 3, 4. Andre P. Moutenot — 2 8th Bayway, Toms River, N.J. — B.S. in Fiinance — Finance Association 3, 4 — Track 1, 2. Robert P. O ' Halloran- 142 South Terr., Boonton, N.J. — B.S. in Finance — Caisson Club 3, 4 — Finance Association 3, 4 (Sec- retary 4). Stephen P. Reid— 2990 Eastburn Ave., Broomall, Pa. — B.S. in Finance — Beta Alpha Lambda 2, 3, 4 — Dean ' s Honor List 2, 3. Joseph E. Roche— 5946 Alma St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.S. in Finance — Caisson Club 3, 4. Edward T. Sasinowski — 4728 Almond St., Philadelphia, Pa.— Caisson Club 3, 4. Carl A. Sienkiewicz — 711 Fifth St., Delran, N.J. — B.S. in Finance. David J. Spingler— 8636 Rose Lane, Phil- adelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Finance — Track 1, 2,4. David A. Straub— 1968 Virginia Lane, Norristown, Pa. — B.S. in Finance. 203 Frederick J. Wennemer — 422 St. Louis Ave., Egg Harbor City, N.J.— B.S. in Finance. Thomas J. Wilkinson— 2557 N. Lee St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Finance. Richard E. Wilson— 530 Elm Ave., Woodbury, N.J. — B.S. in Finance — Semper Fidelis Society 3, 4. Norman W. Witkowski— 957 Pine St., Trenton, N.J. — B.S. in Finance — College Union Committees 2, 3, 4 — Finance Asso- ciation 3, 4 — Glee Club 3, 4. McCool - Halpin - McNeils - Goldner - MacLeod - McCool - Halpin - McNeils - Goldner - MacLeod - McCool - Halpl n - McNeils - Goldner - MacLeod - McCool - Halpin - McNeils - Goldner - MacLeod - McCool - Halpin - McNeils - Gol dner - MacLeod - McCool - Halpin - McNeils - Goldner - MacLeod - McCool - Halpin - McNeils - Goldner - MacLeod- McCool - Halpin - McNeils - Goldner - MacLeod - McCool - Halpin - McNeils - Goldner - MacLeod - McCool - Hal pin - McNeils - Goldner - MacLeod - McCool - Halpin - McNeils - Goldner - MacLeod - McCool - Halpin - McNeils - G oldner - MacLeod - McCool - Halpin - M(y|£l ' s ' |G|iyia ' - tBdb|-%I Orol - Halpin - McNeils - Goldner - MacLe od - McCool - Halpin - McNeils - GoldJrJMJJidli cSbl Jb K.- iJbNelis - Goldner - MacLeod - McCool - H alpin - McNeils - Goldner - MacLeod - McCool - Halpin - McNeils - Goldner - MacLeod - McCool - Halpin - McNeils - Goldner - MacLeod - McCool - Halpin - McNeils - Goldner - MacLeod - McCool - Halpin - McNeils - Goldner - MacL eod - McCool - Halpin - McNeils - Goldner - MacLeod - McCool - Halpin - McNeils - Goldner - MacLeod - McCool - Halpin - McNeils - Goldner - MacLeod - McCool - Halpin - McNeils - Goldner - MacLeod - McCool - Halpin - McNeil s - Goldner - MacLeod - McCool - Halpin - McNeils - Goldner - MacLeod - McCool - Halpin - McNeils - Goldner - Ma Thomas J. Anderson — 1735 Loney St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement — Baseball 2, 3, 4. George Andrulonis — 3526 Sussex Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement. Peter A. Arizzi— 833 Dickinson St., Phil- adelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Manage- ment — Collegian 1. 204 jiiiul Walter J. Arnoldy— 2839 Sebring Rd., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement — SAM 6. James J. Barbiers — 5639 Ormes St., Phil- adelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Manage- ment. Roger F. Bratby— 1016 Carousel Dr., Warminster, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement. George A. Broil— 1926 E. Wensley St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement — Marketing Association 1, 2, 3. William G. Buoni — 2895 Pennview Ave., Broomall, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Manage- ment — Marketing Association 1 — SAM 3. Antiiony J. Caporale— 5809 Wakefield St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement — Collegian 6 — SAM 5, 6. Donald I. Chait— 1125 Wellington St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement — Senior Class Representative 6 — SAM 3, 5, 6. James M. Cirillo — 3023 Livingston St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Rela- tions — Industrial Relations Committee 4. Daniel P. Clark— 4021 Taylor Ave., Drexel Hill, Pa.— B.S. in Industrial Rela- tions — SAM 1. Joseph M. Coleman, Jr. — 1436 Alcott St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement — SAM 3, 4. John R. Convery — 963 Decker Lane, Warminster, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement — Student Congress 6. Robert J. Corcoran — 6846 Marshall Rd., Upper Darby, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Management — SAM 4. 205 Joseph A. Craig— 1712 Elston St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.S . in Industrial Manage- ment — S.A.M. 3, 4. John P. Crumsho — 1209 Hollywood Ave., Upper Darby, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Re- lations. James M. Cunningham — 7011 Limekiln Pike, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Relations — Football Club 4 — Industrial Relations Committee 4 — Marketing Asso- ciation 4 — S.A.M. 3, 4 — Student Council 1, 2, 3, 4 (Treasurer Class of 1968 1, 2, 3, President 4, Vice President of Council 4). Frank J. Dancsecs — 39 Benjamin Street, Woodbridge, N.J. — B.S. in Industrial Management — S.A.M. 3, 4. Richard J. Delowery — 12478 Sweet Briar Rd., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Management— S.A.M. 1. Andrew F. De Luca — 11769 Di Marco Dr., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Management. Joseph J. DeVuono — 7307 Valley Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement — Student Congress 5. Donald P. Ensslen — 440 Woodland Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement. Steven E. Evans — 247 Holly Drive, Levit- town, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Management — Baseball 2, 3, 4 — Accounting Associa- tion 3— Varsity Club 2, 3, 4 — S.A.M. 3, 4 (Secretary 4). John J. Felloney — 234 Kingston Ave., Barrington, N.J. — B.S. in Industrial Rela- tions. Michael J. Fiorentino — 11300 Gait Ave., Wheaton, Md. — B.S. in Industrial Rela- tions — Industrial Relations Committee 2 — Residence Hall Council 3 — Sigma Beta Kappa 2, 3, 4. James G. Fitzgerald — 46 Russet Lane. Levittown, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement. 206 James P. Fitzgerald— 2830 Michael Road, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement. John C. Gray— 823 DeKalb Pike, Center Square, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Manage- ment. Thomas E. Harrison — 9251 Leon St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Rela- tions. Paul C. Herrmann — 128 Brownlie Rd., King of Prussia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Management. Vincent F. Hink — 45 Dewey Road, Chelt- enham, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Manage- ment — Alpha Phi Omega 2, 3, 4 — Ex- plorer 4 (Business Editor) — S.A.M. 4 — Student Council 1, 2, 3— SOC 4 — Triath- lon 1 — Inter Fraternity Council 4 (Presi- dent) — Student Court Justice 2 — Class of 1968 (Vice President 1, 2, 3). Paul C. Holmes — 130 Lewis Ave., East Lansdowne, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement. John L. Insogno— 215 Church St., Wil- liamstown, N.J. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement— S.A.M. 3, 4. Paul J. Jacox — 3665 Academy Road, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement — Senior Class Representative 4 — S.A.M. 4. Dominic R. Janusky — 815A Pittman Ave., Collingdale, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement — Marketing Association 4 — Sen- ior Class Representative 2 — S.A.M. 3. 207 John G. Jardinc— 1103 Cobbs St., Drexel Hill, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Management — Deans ' Honor List 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 — Alpha Sigma Lambda 5, 6. David Jones — 61 W. Spring St., Somer- ville, N.J. — B.S. in Industry — Cross Coun- try 1, 2, 3, 4 — Industrial Relations Com- mittee 3, 4 — Sociology Club 4 — Track 1, 2, 3, 4. John J. Karns— 6515 Theodore St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Manage- ment — Deans ' Honor List 2, 3, 4 — Indus- trial Relations Committee 4 — Sigma Beta Kappa 2, 3, 4 — SAM 3, 4 — Freshmen Orientation Advisor 3. John J. Kasperski — 944 Station Ave., Cornwells Heights, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Management — SAM 4, 5, 6. John A. Keck— 618 East Main St., Weatherly, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Rela- tions — Industrial Relations Committee 3, 4 — SAM 2, 4 — Class Advisory Board 2, 3, 4. Neil J. Kelly— 6207 Crafton St., Philadel- phia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Management — Cross Keys 5, 6 — Senior Class Repre- sentative 6 — SAM 3, 4, 5, 6 (Secretary 6) — Student Congress 4, 5, 6 — Vice Presi- dent of Senior Class 6. William G. Kelsch— 199 S. McDade Blvd., Glenolden, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Management — SAM 5, 6. Robert Eugene Kelton — 1001 Mueller Rd., Warminster, Pa. — B.A. in Industrial Management — Accounting Association 1, 2 — Cross Keys 5, 6 (Treasurer 5) — SAM 1,2, 6— Who ' s Who 1968. Paul M. Knitter — 255 Lincoln Hwy., Apt. F2-4. Penndel, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Management. George A. Leone — 391 Harding Hwy., Penns Grove, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Management — Caisson Club 3, 4 — College Union Committees 2, 3, 4 (Secretary of Applicants Committee 2, 3, Social Coordinator of Host Committee 3, 4) — ROTC Band 1, 2, 3, 4. George Francis Longshore — 3122 Aramin- go Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Indus- trial Relations. Charles V. Lyman — 8012 Narvon St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Rela- tions. 208 Joseph D. McColgan — 11821 Brandon Rd., Philadelphia, Pa.— B.S in Industrial Management. John J. McCormick— 124 Rolling Hills Dr., Holland, Pa.— B.S. in Industrial Rela- tions. Thomas P. McGee— 8643 Teal Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Rela- tions. John P. McGrath— 7303 Oak Ave., Mel- rose Park. Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement — SAM 3, 4. James F. McNulty — 8825 Bluegrass Rd., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement — SAM 1. Gerald K. McOscar— 2626 S. 65th St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement — Dean ' s Honor List 2, 3. Joseph T. Maurer — 2249 Harwood Ave., Upper Darby, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Management — Dean ' s Honor List 1, 2, 3, 4--SAM 2, 3, 4. Edward P. Mikulski— 24 W. Endfield Rd., Feasterville, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement — SAM 2, 3, 4 (President 4). Dennis C. Moore — 2517 Palmer Ave., Bristol, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Relations — Beta Alpha Lambda 1, 2, 3, 4 — Caisson Club 3, 4. Edward F. Mosczynski— 2321 Ripley St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement — SAM 2, 5. William C. Parent!- 5524 Wheeler St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement. Philip J. Pasquarello — 2023 S. 13th St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- 209 imink Nicholas S. Pileggi— 58 Bell Rd., Bell- mawr, N.J. — B.S. in Industrial Manage- ment — Kappa Epsilon Upsilon 1, 2 — S.A.M. 4. Richard T. Pionzio — 2 Peppermint Rd., Levittown, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement — Industrial Relations Committee 4. Thomas J. Purcell— 4326 Aldine St., Phil- adelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Manage- ment— S.A.M. 4, 6. Charles A. Reckner — 1512 E. Cliveden St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Management — Marketing Association 6 — S.A.M. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 — Student Congress 3,4. Robert W. Richardson — 239 Plymouth Rd., Wilmington, Del. — B.S. in Industrial Management. Bertram F. Rogers— 1621 Briar Hill Rd., Gladwyne, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement. Alvin J. Rollin— 3550 E. Vista St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Manage- ment. William Rubis — 1879 London Rd., Abing- ton, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Management. William F. Ryan— 320 Market St., Glou- cester, N.J. — B.S. in Industrial Manage- ment — S.A.M. 4. John Thomas Sasso— 5734 N. Camac St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement — Caisson Club 3, 4. David F. Schenkel— 8004 Rodney St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement — Delta Sigma Pi 2, 3, 4, (Histo- rian 3, 4)— S.A.M. 3, 4. Raymond Schiller, Jr.— 15040 Carter Rd., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement— S.A.M. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6. 210 William Jolin Speed — 4022 Fairway Rd., Lafayette Hills, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Management — Industrial Relations Com- mittee 4 — Tau Kappa Epsilon 2, 3, 4 (So- cial Chairman 4). Andrew C. Stienes — 636 Mueller Rd., Warminster, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement. William C. Terry— 11814 Brandon Rd., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement — Marketing Association 2, 3, 4 — Pi Sigma Epsilon 2, 3, 4 (Vice President 4)— S.A.M. 4. Anthony V. Warsavage — 3636 Dresher Rd., Cornwell ' s Heights, Pa. — B.S. in In- dustrial Management — I.E.E.E. 1, 2 — Sen- ior Class Representative 6. Paul Weiss — 5953 Warrington Ave., Phil- adelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Manage- ment— S.A.M. 3, 4. Stephen J. Wiest— 4237 N. Franklin St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Industrial Man- agement — Marketing Association 4 — Sen- ior Class Representative 6 — S.A.M. 3, 4, 5. ws ' ' 1 1 «s Joseph P. Yeager, Jr.— 10 8th Ave. Roebling, N.J.— B.S. in Industrial Rela tions — Industrial Relations Committee 3. George A. Zane — 28 Flintstone Dr., Marl ton, N.J. — B.S. in Industrial Management. 211 (.eck-Mc- . r i r - V? i ' ifi ff r-l ■iw -McCloskey- .eck-Mc IcCloskey-Swoye C ' loskey-Swoyer-Reitsteck- ReiVstecJVl..r lVJXl!j 1 1 W VJ Reifsteck-Mc js.ey - c vv oyci - ixCiii icck - McCloskey - Swoye .■fsLeck-McCloskev-3wover-R:.ifttecl --Mr. -.tvicL.iosicey-5 voyer-i . oyer- Reifsteck - McClc c ' i_,i.osKi: voyer-KeirsiecK-iVicc-JOSKev- jyer - Reifsteck - McCloskey - Swoyer - Reifs Joseph N. Bova— 10163 Ferndale St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing- Marketing Association 4, 5, 6 — Senior Class Representative 6. Joseph C. Braddock— 308 Greenhill Rd., Willow Grove, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing — Cross Keys (President 6) — Accounting As- sociation 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 — Marketing Asso- ciation 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 (Vice President 5) — Senior Class Representative 6 — Stu- dent Council 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6. William Michael Brennan — 4541 Shelmire Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.— B.S. in Market- ing. George H. Bullwinkel — 54 Locust Ave., Locust, N.J. — B.S. in Marketing — College Union Committees 1, 2, 3, 4 — Glee Club 1, 2. John F. Butler — 7954 Michener Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing — College Union Committees 3, 4 — Market- ing Association 4 — SAM 3, 4. William J. Clancy, Jr. — 2075 E. Somerset St., Philadelphia, Pa.— B.S. in Marketing. James P. Connor — 7621 Parkview Rd., Upper Darby, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing. William P. Coogan— 512 N. 19th St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing — Marketing Association 3, 4 — Pi Sigma Epsilon 3, 4 (Social Committee 3). Charles J. Corace — 173 N. Madison, Upper Darby, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing — Semper Fidelis Society 2, 3, 4 (Secretary 3, President 4). 212 diMmk dM James R. Corbett — 4 Holly Ave., Run- nmede, N.J. — B.S. in Marketing — Intra- murals 1, 2, 3, 4 — Economics Club 2 — Marketing Association 3, 4 — SAM 4. John H. D ' Angelo — 1530 Spring Ave., Jenkintown, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing. James C. Day — 361 Maple PL, Keyport, N.J. — B.S. in Marketing. Joseph B. Devlin— 721 Ripley PL, Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing Associa- tion 5, 6 (Secretary 6)— SAM 5, 6. Joseph P. Diamond— 820 69th Ave., Phil- adelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing — Mar- keting Association 3. Charles F. Dougherty — 855 Media Line Rd., Newton Square, Pa. — B.S. in Market- ing. Edward W. Duffy — 504 E. Tennis Ave., Ambler, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing — Caisson Club 3, 4. Robert M. Duffy— 6135 Alma St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing — Market- ing Association 3, 4 — SAM 2. Russell W. Dych— 11716 Telfair Rd., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing — Marketing Association 4, 6. Edward R. Edgar— 814 Cathedral Rd., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing — Marketing Association 4, 5, 6. Carl J. Ediund, Jr. — 25 Estelle Dr., Ver- non, Conn. — B.S. in Marketing. James J. Faulk— 210 Volan St., Merchantville, N.J. — B.S. in Marketing — Beta Alpha Lambda 3, 4 — Le Cercle Claudel 3, 4. 2 13 Paul Eugene Fenn — 10950 Helmer Dr., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing — Beta Alpha Lambda 2, 3, 4. James A. Gladu — D-3 Erden Ct., 6 Haws Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Market- ing — Marketing Association 6 — S.A.M. 6 — Student Congress 6. William J. Hartman— 2223 49th St., Penn- sauken, N.J. — B.S. in Marketing — Basket- ball 1. Norman A. Hayes — 4201 Lansing St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing. Norman Sheldon Heleman — 7215 Lynford St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing. Donald J. Hogeland — 3 Harvard Circle, Norristown, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing — Sen- ior Class Representative 1. 214 George R. Hubbard— 901 MacDade Blvd., Yeadon, Pa.— B.S. in Marketing— Intra- murals 3, 4. Leo J. Hughes— 615 Cricket Ave.. Arsley, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing — Marketing Asso- ciation A — St. Thomas More Society 3. Malcolm T. Humphrey— 141 Apache Trail, Medford Lakes, N.J.— B.S. in Mar- keting — Marketing Association 2, 3, 4 — Pi Sigma Epsilon 2, 3, 4 (Treasurer 3, Serg- eant at Arms 4). Walter C. Jenkins — 2021 Shelmire Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.— B.S. in Marketing- Marketing Association 4. Charles D. Kearns — 474 E. Van Kirk St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing — Cross Keys 5, 6 — Accounting Association 3, 4 — Marketing Association 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 (Vice President 4, President 5) — Senior Class Representative (Secretary 6) — S.A.M. 4 — Student Congress 5 — Who ' s Who 1968. Stephen C. Kiraly— 4532 Aldin St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing — Market- ing Association 4. Robert J. Klepczynski— 2644 Bridge St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing — Marketing Association 3, 4. Richard F. LafFerty— 408 Macada Rd., Bethlehem, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing — Marketing Association 3, 4 (Vice Presi- dent 4)— Pi Sigma Epsilon 3, 4 — S.A.M. 4 — SOC Representative for Marketing As- sociation 4-— Freshman Advisor 4. Joseph F. Livolsy— 11948 Glenfield St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing. John M. Loftus — 509 Norma Lane, Nor- ristown. Pa. — B.S. in Marketing. Lawrence G. Lupus — 4514 Forrest Ave., Pennsauken, N.J. — B.S. in Marketing — Caisson Club 3, 4 — Delta Sigma Pi 2, 3, 4. David J. McCarthy, Jr.- Philadelphia, Pa.— B.S. Crevi- 1. -7220 Devon St., in Marketing — gmiM 215 James M. McCoy — 21 Maurice Lane, Hatboro, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing — Mar- keting Association 5, 6 — Senior Class Representative 6. John D. McDermott— 2889 Rossiter Ave., Roslyn, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing — Cross Keys 4, 5, 6 — Industrial Relations Society 3 — Marketing Association 5, 6 — Senior Class Representative 6 — S.A.M. 1, 2, 3, 4 (Vice President 4) — Student Congress 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 (Secretary 3, Treasurer 4, Vice President 5, President 6). Aaron L. McKenna — 2602 2 Havana St., New Orleans, La. — B.S. in Marketing — Basketball 1, 2, 3 — College Union Com- mittees 2, 3, 4 — Golf 3, 4 — Marketing As- sociation 3, 4. Joseph F. McNally— 2442 S. Garnet St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing. Albert J. McNamara— 608 W. 29th St., Wilmington, Del. — B.S. in Marketing. Robert A. Mignatti — 109 Boncouer Rd., Cheltenham, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing — Freshman Orientation 4 (Treasurer) — Marketing Association 4 — Class of 1968 Advisory Board 2, 3, 4. Gerald J. Monahan — 280 Surrey Rd., Southampton, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing. Patrick Francis Norris— 5800 N. 7th. St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing — Marketing Association 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6. Dennis A. O ' Hara — Apt. 10- A Florence Gardens, Florence, N.J. — B.S. in Market- ing — Alpha Phi Omega 2, 3, 4 (Vice pres- ident 3, 4). 216 Richard O. Piper — 41 C St., Middlesex, N.J.— B.S. in Marketing— Knights of Co- lumbus. Peter W. Ragan— 221 Chicago Blvd., Seagirt, N.J. — B.S. in Marketing — Market- ing Association 3, 4 — S.A.M. 4. John Joseph Regan — 3901 Manayunk Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing — Marketing Association 5, 6. Gerald J. Reid— 1361 Pratt St., Philadel- phia, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing. William E. Ring— 6204 32nd St., Wash- ington, D.C. — B.S. in Marketing — Basket- ball 1,2, 3. Frank G. Rosci— 5657 Arlington St., Phil- adelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing. Steven A. Singer— 230 S. 22nd St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing — Col- legian 2, 3, 4 (Artist 2, 3, 4, Layout Art Editor 2, Managing Associate Editor 3, Cartoonist 2, 3, 4, Art Special Editor 4, Writer 2, 3, 4) — Dean ' s Honor List 2, 3, 4 — Literary Magazine and Special Projects 3. 4 (Writer and Artist 3, 4) — Who ' s Who 1968. William Franl lin Umek — 57 Vermillion Way, Levittown, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing — Beta Alpha Lambda 2, 3, 4 — Marketing Association 3, 4. Francis X. Whitcraft— 405 Dawson St., Moorestown, N.J. — B.S. in Marketing — Marketing Association 1, 2, 3. Gregory James Woodring — 7009 Cedar Park Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing — Marketing Association 2, 3, 4 (President 4) — Pi Sigma Epsilon 2, 3, 4 — SOC 4 (President)— •Who ' s Who 1968. Frank L. Bellezza — 2 Euclid Ave., Keans- burg, N.J. — B.S. in Marketing — Marketing Association 3, 4 — Political Science Associ- ation 2, 3 — St. Thomas More Society 1, 2, 3, 4 — S.A.M. 3. John P. Bonhglio — 232 Trinity Ave., Ambler, Pa. — B.S. in Marketing. 217 Bogacz- Chnstopner - nawiey - rtoiroya - is.siazeK - Lowery - renny - . u y - Holroyd - Ksiazek - Lowery - Penny - Sullivan - Wurtz - Bogacz - Ch ri ry - Penny - Sullivan - Wurtz - Bogacz - Christopher - Hawley - ' Bogacz-Christopher-HawIey-Holroyd-Ksiazek-Lowery-I ..... .....,, , .. y - Holroyd - Ksiazek - Lowery - Penny - Sullivan - Wurtz - Bogacz- Christoph ry- Penny-Sullivan- Wurtz-Bogacz- CI ' D T T f f ' V Bogacz - Christopher - Hawley - Holroyc mJ M. V- mJ kJ VJ X ley - Holroyd - ELsiazek - Lowery - Penny - SuUivan - W urtz - Bogacz - Christc wery - Penny-Sullivan- Wurtz-Bogacz-Christopher-Hawley- Holroyd - Ks z - Bogacz - Christopher - Hawley - Holroyd - Ksiazek - Lowery - Penny - Sul 1 i vvley - Holroyd - Ksiazek - Lowery - Penny - Sullivan - Wurtz - Bogacz - Christoph owery - Penny - Sullivan - Wurtz - Bogacz - Christopher - Hawley - Holroyd - Ksiaze Paul F. Aller — 618 Bell Lane, Mapleglen, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — Education Society 3, 4— Tau Kappa Epsilon 1, 2, 3, 4 (Hypophetes 4). Thomas A. Bochinski Jr. — 114 Fulton St., Boonton, N.J. — B.A. in Biology. Andrew J. Candelore Jr. — 431 E. 11th Ave., Conshohocken, Pa. — B.A. in Biol- ogy — Fabrician Society 3, 4. :) iih iin- Wurtz- ' hristopher-Hav, Carl S. Citron— 1130 Barringer St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.A. in Biology. Richard A. Close — 214 Poplar Ave., Wayne, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — Alpha Epsilon Delta 2, 3, 4 (Vice President 4) — Swimming 1, 2, 3, 4 — Who ' s Who 1968. Robert A. Copeland — 20 Bala Ave., Bala Cynwyd, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — College Union Committees 1, 2, 3, 4 (Vice-chair- man of CIA) — Education Society 4 — Fabrician Society 4. i M M Richard M. Coppola— 3046 Gilham St., Philadelphia, Pa.— B.S. in Biology— Fabrician Society 2, 3, 4. Robert J. Diaz— 118 East 21st St., Ches- ter, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — Collegian 2 — Fabrician Society 3, 4. Michael E. Difebbo— 5306 N. Sydeham St., Philadelphia, Pa.— B.A. in Biology— Fabrician Society 3, 4 (Vice President 4, Open House Committee Hosts ' Chairman 3) — President ' s Guard 1. 219 Albert M. Dipasquale — 593 Larchwood Ave., Upper Darby, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — Conservative Club 2 — Deans ' Honor List 1, 2, 3, 4 — Education Society 2 — Fabrician Society 4 — Historical Society 4 —Chess Club 4. Edward R. DiPaul— 2881 Thunderhead Rd., Roslyn, Pa. — B.A. in Biology. Anthony F. Di Stefano— 2732 N 24th St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Biology. Michael J. Donnelly — 1425 S. Ninth St., Camden, N.J. — B.A. in Biology — Educa- tion Society 4 — Fabrician Society 4. Gerald V. Doyle — Beaumont Dr. Rd. 1, Newton, Pa. — B.A. in Biology. Arthur E. Duncan — Apt. 9-b, Erringer Place Apts., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Biology. MiadMmk iiJj; )}■Francis J. Fedele — 1945 Berkshire St., Philade lphia, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — Alpha Epsilon Delta 1. Joseph A. Feola— 536 High St., Philadel- phia, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — College Union Committees 1, 2, 3, 4 (Board Re- cording Secretary 2, 3, Corresponding Secretary 3, 4) — Fabrician Society 3, 4 — Student Court 1, 2, 3, 4 (Court Clerk 3, Justice 3, 4) — Student Council 2, 3, 4 (Recording Secretary 3, 4, Corresponding Secretary 2, 3) — Orientation Committee 2, 3, 4 — Open House Committee 2, 3, 4 — Blue and Gold Committee 2, 3, 4. Stephen Fremer — 7701 Woolston Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — Alpha Epsilon Delta 2, 3, 4 — Deans ' Honor List 1, 2, 3, 4 — Fabrician Society 3, 4. Martin L. Friedman — 7224 Saul St., Phil- adelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — College Union Committees 2, 3, 4 — Fabrician So- ciety 3. Anthony R. Giorgio — 8135 Temple Rd., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — Col- lege Union Committees 2, 3, 4 — Fabrician Society 3, 4 (Treasurer 4) — Orientation Committee Advisor 3, 4. James J. Heger — 3317 Crestview Dr., Bethel Park, Pa.— B.A. in Biology — Alpha Epsilon Delta 2, 3, 4 (Historian 4)— Col- lege Union Committees 1, 2. 221 mMdk Robert O. Horvath— 2210 S. Bonnaffon, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — Fabrician Society 4 — Swimming 2, 3, 4. Wolfgange A. Huhn— 5732 N. 5th St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — Alpha Epsilon Delta 3, 4. Francis M. Krakowski — 1235 Ridge Ave., Fullerton, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — College Union Committees 1, 2, 3, 4 — Alpha Epsi- lon Delta 2, 3, 4 — Dean ' s Honor List 1, 2, 3, 4 — Fabrician Society 2, 3 — Residence Hall Council 3, 4. Michael R. Lewis — 1516 Harris Lane, Warminster, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — Alpha Epsilon Delta 3, 4 — College Union Com- mittees 1, 2, 3, 4 (Chairman — Games Committee 2) — Fabrician Society 3, 4 — NFCCS 2, 3. Rudolph A. Lucente — 42 E. Hellberg Ave., Chalfont, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — Glee Club 2, 3, 4. Patrick J. McCarthy — 6011 Kingsford Court, Bethesda, Md. — B.A. in Biology — Baseball 2, 3, 4. Warren F. MacDonald — 110 Elm Ave., Glenside, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — Alpha Epsilon Delta 2, 3, 4 (President 4). James V. Marcbesani — 19 5th Ave., Glen- dora, N.J. — B.A. in Biology. Harry G. Markow— 120 N. 7th St., Easton, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — Alpha Epsilon Delta 2, 3, 4 — Dean ' s Honor List 1, 2, 3,4. MM iiM Bruce J. Menkowitz — 1104 Arboretum Rd., Wyncote, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — Alpha Epsilon Delta 1, 2, (Treasurer 3, 4) — Dean ' s Honor List 1, 2, 3 — Fabrician Society 1, 2, 3, 4 (Treasurer 3, 4). Michael I. Miller— 6807 Kindred St., Philadelhia, Pa. — College Union Com- mittees 3, 4 — Fabrician Society 3, 4. Gerald J. O ' Keefe Jr.— 5907 Belden St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — Chymian Society 1 — Fabrician Society 2, 3, 4 — Newtonian Society 2. 222 Francis J. Ott— 621 Robbins St., Philadel- phia, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — Alpha Epsi- lon Delta 2, 3, 4 (Secretary 4)— Crew 2— Dean ' s Honor List 1, 2, 3, 4 — Fabrician Society 4— NFCCS 2, 3. Daniel E. Perugini— 7200 Edmund St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Biology. James F. Politowski— 5409 Fairhill St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — Alpha Epsilon Delta 3, 4 — College Union Committees 1, 2, 3, 4 — Weber Society 3, 4— Chess Club 2, 3, 4 (Team Captain 2, 3, 4). Eugene G. Porreca— 2444 S. Woodstock, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Biology— Fabrician Society 3, 4 (Secretary). William C. Rees — 9 Colonial Rd., Dallas, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — Alpha Epsilon Delta 2, 3, 4 — Dean ' s Honor List 3 — Ten- nis 2, 3, 4 (Captain 4). William J. Rieger — 1141 Rising Sun Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — Fabrician Society 3, 4. Michael R. Rudnick— 7933 Waltham Rd., Cheltenham, Pa.— B.A. in Biology- Alpha Epsilon Delta 3, 4. Philip R. Rudolph Jr. — 1422 Birchwood Ave., Roslyn, Pa. — B.A. in Biology. James M. Ryan— 1023 Shelmire Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — Cais- son Club 3, 4 — College Union Commit- tees 1, 2, 3, 4 — Dean ' s Honor List 1, 2, 3, 4— Howitzer 3, 4 (Editor 3, 4). Joseph H. Scbenk — 2614 Chesley Ave., Baltimore, Md. — B.A. in Biology — Alpha Epsilon Delta 3, 4 — German Club 1, 2, 3, 4 (Secretary 3). Joseph E. Scogna — 50 Hamilton Dr., Warminster, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — Dean ' s Honor List 1 — Fabrician Society 1. Hardy L. Sorkin — 1410 Academy Lane, Elkins Park, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — Fabrician Society 3, 4 (Social Chairman 3, President 4). MiA iikii 223 Alan M. Spagnola — 9 Edgewood Rd., Morristown, N.J. — B.A. in Biology — Alpha Epsilon Delta 2, 3, 4 — Basketball 1 — Dean ' s Honor List 2, 3, 4 — Fabrician Society 2. Robert William Sykes — 5600 Ogontz Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — Fabrician Society 4. Richard C. Tomczak— 2 Plumtree Rd., Levittown, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — Fabri- cian Society 3, 4 — Student Advisoiy Board 3, 4. Robert E. UseUer — 2423 Greentree Rd., Carnegie, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — College Union Committees 1, 2, 3, 4— Fabrician Society 4 — President ' s Guard 1, 2. James R. Wall — 475 Pleasant St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — Alpha Phi Omega 3, 4 (Pledge Master 3, 4) — Fabri- cian Society 3, 4. WilUam M. Wixted— 327 Sheffield Rd., Cherry Hill, N.J.— B.A. in Biology — Alpha Epsilon Delta 2, 3, 4 — Dean ' s Honor List 2, 3, 4 — The Masque 1, 2. £t Victor L. Woo — Apt 6J, Morgan House, Stenton Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A Biology — Fabrician Society 3. Harry L. Zamost — Park Towne Place 1811 West — 2200 Benjamin Franklin Pkwy., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — College Union Committees 3, 4 (Social) — Conservative Club 2, 3, 4 (Junior Deputy 3, 4, Senior Deputy 4) — Fabrician Society 2, 3. James H. Zavecz — 304 Hamilton Ave., Bethlehem, Pa. — B.A. in Biology — Glee Club 2. 224 Barth - Demitras - McFadden - Malone - Paul - Tekel - Wilson - Barth - Demitras - McFadden - Malone - Paul - Tekel - Wilson - Barth - Demitras - McFadden - Malone - Paul - Tekel - Wilson - Barth - Demitras - McFadden - Malone- Paul- Tekel - Wilson - Barth - Demitras - McFadden - Malone - Paul - Tekel - Wilson - Barth - Demitras - McFadden - Malon e - Paul - Tekel - Wilson - Barth - Demitras -McFadden - Malone - Paul - Tekel - Wilson - Barth - Demitras - McFadden- Malone - Paul - Tekel - Wilson - Barth - Demitras - McFadden - Malone - Paul - Tekel - Wilson - Barth - Demitras - Mc Fadden - Malone - Paul - Tekel - WilgT TT r 1 T O T IJaTM- Paul - Tekel - Wilson - Barth - Demit ras-McFadden-Malone-Paul-TelJLj XJLIL iVl Xd J. . IVieAMalone-Paul-Tekel- Wilson-Barth- Demitras - McFadden - Malone - Paul - Tekel - Wilson - Barth - Demitras - McFadden - Malone - Paul - Tekel - Wilson- Barth - Demitras - McFadden - Malone - Paul - Tekel - Wilson - Barth - Demitras - McFadden - Malone - Paul - Tekel - Wilson - Barth - Demitras - McFadden - Malone - Paul - Tekel - Wilson - Barth - Demitras - McFadden - Malone- Paul- Tekel - Wilson - Barth - Demitras - McFadden - Malone- Paul - Tekel - Wilson - Barth - Demitras - McFadden - Malon e-Paul-Tekel-Wilson-Barth-Demitras-McFadden-Malone-Paul-Tekel-Wilson-Barth-Demitras-McFadden- Casimir F. Chmielnicki— 2010 Tulip St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Chemistry. Richard J. Clarkson — Box 8, Wycombe, Pa. — B.A. in Chemistry — Chymian Soci- ety 2, 3 — College Union Committees 2, 3 — Dean ' s Honor List 1, 2, 3. Vincent M. Disandro — 6242 N. 4th St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Chemistry — Chymian Society 2, 3, 4. Gerald A. English — 1826 McCay Ave., Boothwyn, Pa. — B.A. in Chemistry — Chymian Society 1, 2, 3, 4. Roman Fedyna — 8826 Bluegrass Rd., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Chemistry — Chymian Society 4. Ronald Lee Frantz— 10181 Ferndale St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Chemistry — Chymian Society 2, 3, 4. John J. Gaffney — 4103 Bonsall Ave., Drexel Hill, Pa. — B.A. in Chemistry — Caisson Club 3, 4 — Chymian Society 3, 4 — College Union Committees 1, 2, 3, 4 — Semper Fidelis Society 1, 2. William R. Hall— 2233 St. Albans St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Chemistry — Chymian Society 6 — Collegian 6 — Cross Keys 6 — Dean ' s Honor List 6 — Student Congress 6 — Who ' s Who 1968. James P. Harper— 5545 Hill Creek Circle, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Chemistry — Chymian Society 1, 2, 3, 4. 225 John V. Izzo— 2042-A Mather Way, El- kins Park, Pa. — B.A. in Chemistry. Julius J. Jablonsky — 2919 Cottmon St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Chemistry — Chymian Society 1, 2, 3, 4 — College Union Committees 1, 2, 3, (Chairman House Committee 4) — I.E.E.E. 3, 4 — Rifle Team 1, 2. Gregory A. Koltonuk — 618 Robbins Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.— B.A. in Chemistry— Chymian Society 3, 4. David F. Kowalski— 1010 Townsend St., Chester, Pa. — B.A. in Chemistry — Chymian Society 2, (Delegate to Pasca 3), 4. George W. Luther — 6646 Algard St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Chemistry — Chymian Society 1, 2, (Secretary 3), 4. Gerald J. Mergen— 3823 Percy St., Phila- delphia. Pa. — B.A. in Chemistry — Chym- ian Society 1, 3, 4. 226 Robert F. Poiek— 4614 Pechin St., Phila- delphia, Pa. — B.A. in Chemistry — Chymian Society 1, 2, 3, 4 — College Union Com- mittees 2, 3, 4. Robert M. Powell— 1010 S. 49th St.. Phil- adelphia, P a . — B .A . in Chemistry — Chymian Society 3, 4 — Crew 1, 2, 3, 4. Francis J. Purcell — 2030 Tulpehocken St Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Chemistry— Chymian Society 1, 2, (Treasurer 3), College Union Committees 1,2, 3, 4. Dennis ' G. Sebastian — 568 Reed Road, Broomall, Pa. — B.A. in Chemistry— Chymian Society 1, 3, 4. Thomas G. Wiedmayer — 3041 Rawle St. Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Chemistry— Chymian Society 2, 3. 227 Devinney-Guttman-Quinn-Simmons-Strieb-Vujacic-Devinney-Guttman-Quirm-Simmons-Strieb-Vujacic-De vinney-Guttman-Quinn-Simmons-Strieb-Vujacic-Devinney-Guttman-Quinn-Simmons-Strieb-Vujacic-Etevin ney-Guttman-Quinn-Simmons-Strieb-Vujacic-Devinney-Guttman-Quinn-Simmons-Strieb-Vujacic-Devinney -Guttman-Quinn-Simmons-Strieb-Vujacic-E)eviimey-Guttman-Quinn-Simmons-Strieb-Vujacic-Devinney-G uttman-( iinn-Simmons-Strieb-Vujacic-I)evinney-Guttman-Quiim-Simmons-Strieb-Vujacic-Devinney-Gutt man-Quinn-Simmons-Strieb-Vujacic-E ' ppT ' rQ T ' Oimons-Strieb- Vujacic-Devinney-Guttma n-Quinn-Simmons-Strieb-Vujacic-DevX XJl X OX V-J Oons-Strieb-Vujacic-Devinney-Guttman- Quinn-Simmons-Strieb-Vujacic-Devinney-Guttman-Quinn-Simmons-Strieb-Vujacic-Devinjiey-Guttman-Qu inn-Simmons-Strieb-Vujacic-Devinney-Guttman-Quinn-Simmons-Strieb-Vujacic-Devinney-Guttman-Quinn- Simmons-Strieb-Vujacic-Etevinney-Guttman-Quinn-Simmons-Strieb-Vujacic-I vinney-Guttman-Quir mmons - Strieb - Vuj acic - Devinney - Guttman - Quinn - Simmons - Strieb - Vuj acic- Devimiey -Guttman - Quinn - Sim mons-Strieb-Vujacic-Devinney-Guttman-Quimi-Simmons-Strieb-Vujacic-Devinney-Guttman-Quimi-Simmo Alan J. Coleman— 941 Hilltop Rd., Warminster, Pa. — B.A. in Electronics Physics. Edmund J. Crossen — 607 Lisa Lane, Nor- ristown, Pa. — B.A. in Electronics Physics. Amedeo J. De Luca — 4535 Manayunk Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Electron- ics Physics. Graziano N. M. N. Del Zotto— 925 Pleas- ant Ave., Wyndmoor, Pa. — B.A. in Elec- tronics Physics — IEEE (Vice Chairman 5, 6) — Student Congress 5, 6. Elmer L. Donaldson — 106 Garfield Ave., Cherry Hill, N.J.— B.A. in Electronics Physics. Robert J. Galcik— 2125 Nifront St., Phil- adelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Electronics Physics —IEEE 5, 6. Joseph F. Halbeib— 219 Sedgwick St., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Electronics Physics— IEEE 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 — Student Congress 6. Jeffrey R. Heberley— 3309 Sheffield Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Physics — Dean ' s Honor List 1, 2, 3, 4 — Newtonian Society Raymond R. Jones — 1141 Windrim Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Physics — Base- ball 2, 3, 4. ki ii 228 Joseph A. McCormick — 38 Sycamore Dr., Burlington, N.J. — B.A. in Physics — IEEE 4, 5, 6. William H. McMonagle, Jr. — 43 1 Houston Rd., Ambler, Pa. — B.A. in Electronics Physics— IEEE 4, 5, 6. Ricbard D. Mallatratt— 2870 Senak Rd., Roslyn, Pa. — B.A. in Electronics Physics — IEEE 4, 5, 6 — Senior Class Representa- tive 6 — Student Congress 1. David Miller — 2169 Benson St., Philadel- phia, Pa. — B.A. in Electronics Physics — Cross Keys 3, 4, 5— IEEE (Vice Chair- man 1), 2, (Treasurer 3), Chairman 4, 5, 6 — Student Congress 3, 4. Frederick L. Oliver, Jr 213 S. Wood- stock Dr., Cherry Hill, N.J.— B.A. in Electronics Physics — IEEE 4, 5, 6. Michael S. Radvansky — 2248 S. Bonsall St., Philadelphia, Pa.— B.A. in Physics. Melvin Richman — 301 Heights Lane Apt. 26c, Feasterville, Pa. — B.A. in Physics — Deans ' Honor List 3, 4, 6 — IEEE (Treas- urer 6). Joseph E. Ruch— 2952 Thunderhead Rd., Roslyn, Pa. — B.A. in Physics. Albert J. Visek— 1316 W. 72nd Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Electronics Physics— IEEE 5. Bemhard A. Wiegand — 245 Shingowack Trail, Medford Lakes, N.J.— B.A. in Elec- tronics Physics — IEEE 6. 229 Gunther H. Blob— 7352 North 20th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.S. in Business Admin- istration. William H. Buschmeier — 2 Windybush Road, Newtown, Pa. — B.S. in Business Administration. Paul Dvorak— 52 Orchard Street, Floral Park, N.Y.— B.A.in German. Sr. Kathryn M. Fitzgerald— 700 East Church Lane, Philadelphia, Pa.— B.A. in Pre-Law. Michael J. P. Frank- 4926 Rubicam Street, Philadelphia, Pa.— B.A. in Sociol- ogy. John J. Grant— 2406 Poplar Road, Haver- town, Pa. — B.S. in Accounting. Brother Terrence Hughes — 7720 Doe Lane, Philadelphia, Pa.— B.A. in English. Ronald A. Krieger— 3701 Conshohocken Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.— B.S. in General Business. Brother Joseph Metzler — 7720 Doe Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Sociology- Education. Dennis M. Monahan— 838 Brill Street, Philadelphia, Pa. — B.A. in Economics. Roger W. Smith — 41 Woodlawn Road, Warminster, Pa. — B.A. in Mathematics. 230 Photographic Credits: The Explorer wishes to thank Mr. Abe Orhch and Mr. Kevin Nolan of Davor Studios for their assistance and un- derstanding and longsuffering and general omnipresence whenever the need for a camera-machine was felt; we are also compelled to express our gratitude to Mr. Joseph Crilley of Wm. J. Keller Inc. whose day of highly perceptive (need we say creative) shutter click- ing was equally appreciated. As a footnote to the above mentioned photographic excellence, a few kind words must be said for the efforts of student camera types Joe Murphy and Jan Kobeski, who managed to use up the film reserves in CU 300 with a gay abandon that defies description. The words and other stuff like that there scattered throughout the preceding 230 pages were the respect- ive nightmares of; Bill Carroll: pp. 132, 144. Wayne Drozynski: pp. 69, 72, 73, 85-86, 102, 133, 137, 143. Jan Kobeski: pp. 45-48, 53, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 72, 87, 89-96, 99, 100, 131, 135, 136, 138, 139, 142, 146. Bro. Richard Sampson: pp. 134, 139, 141, 147. Tom Smith: pp. 41-44,49, 51,67,70,97. Greg Steele: p. 145. Bill Stevenson: p. 105 Mark Zang: p. 140. 231 Fellow People: You can pour all kinds of goodies into a yearbook — you can quote people like Cummings and Gibran, and Hammarskjold, and Basho, and even a Zen fable or two. Just like too much motor oil, you can dump in words that sound fairly nice, and make pretty pictures, and keep everybody happy (from the President right on down to the notorious rotorooter club.) Yet six months later the whole thing sounds abysmal, some people would even call it esoteric. When we started out on this yearbook thing about eight months ago, we deter- mined to do two things: put out a book that would have a longer halflife, and, above all, have fun. As far as the first goal was concerned, it is still too early to tell — the true test will come in a few years when the decision will have to be made on whether or not to use the book to housebreak your dog. There were attempts at honesty, a good deal of exaggeration, and a heaping teaspoonful of healthy petti- ness. But most of what eventually turned up in the ' 68 Explorer was what we just happened to find lying around on desk tops or within easy reach — all we did was pick it up or cut it out, or record it, or hear somebody say it. We used it all. As for the second goal, we succeeded magnificently — putting the thing together was more fun than a barrel full of Student Court justices. On a more serious note, after all the work I have done on this book, I have to acknowledge that there were othes who deserve a little credit — very little at best, but it sounds nice to have me say that sort of thing. Before starting on them I do have to say a few good words about myself, though. I did everything. It s all mine, with the possible exception of all the photography, most of the writing, half the ideas, and a good deal of the work. Some of the others : Jan Kobeski, who did a little (when he could find the time), managed to be brilliant and, damn him, do half the book; Wayne Drozynski, whom we actually thought was working, but who only finished most of the sports section, several interviews and numerous odd-jobs; Greg Steele, who demonstrated more organization and sanity than the rest of the staff put together; Sam, who didn ' t let his vocation stand in his way; John Becker, who scheduled and rescheduled more appointments than we care to remember. For the rest, I can only mention them in passing, since they are pretty much freaks (Tom Smith, Bill Stevenson. Mark Zang) and are better forgotten, no matter how much they did in a short space of time. Added to these few, are Mr. Peter Frank (who actually thinks that what we wrote was the truth exaggerated to be funny); Abe Orlick and Kevin Noland who appeared on campus by request only to take what they referred to as photography about five times a week all year; Bob Davine, who made sure we got our consignments in only six weeks late; Steve Singer, who fabricated the dividers; two unidentified freshmen who turned up one night to type when we needed it most; all the clubs and fraternities who cooperated with our request for bizarre pictures; the U.S. Post Office, and, of course, the postage meter at work. It ' s been fun. William Carroll, Archbishop of Philadelphia 232 ® This book printed by VELV ATONE, a special process of litho- graphic printing. Sole producers: Wm. J. Keller Inc., Buffalo, N. Y. A ' o oilier priming firm is authorized to use the Velvatone method. .-IP .■,■' .,:• ■-v, ' ; ;vf EV?;f;j;t; nft ;iaiiafii4j88Bi . i 1 : : ; • 1 i i 1 jH« i?;: ifii:; II 1 111 III • ::-: M i :|||Mr - 1 II Ifflfii 1 1 III 1 : ill;
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