Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA)
- Class of 1959
Page 1 of 408
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 408 of the 1959 volume:
“
2f 1959 EPITOME RICHARD K. BERNARD Editor-in-Chief EUGENE MERCY Business Manager THE 1959 EPITOME Volume S3 Published at LEHIGH UNIVERSITY Bethlehem, Pennsylvania ■.■%■i,,V ■1 ::f fe§i J ir-: % U4 I S ' jCl v GH UN Vf ? JDedica ted Jo X. HE door hung o pen in the unmistakable way that bespeaks an empty room; and Professor Riley left Chnstmas-Saucon Hall in the Spring of 1958. Behind him lingered the shadow of twenty-five years of schol- arship and service, calm words for the many who sought his advice, and mute words that filled the books that surrounded him, and were his life. To Professor Edgar H. Riley, we dedicate the 1959 Epitome. Professor Edgar H. Riley 0 M J 3 H | I B r H - P ' ' - ■PlilM 1 M Professor Riley often took time to counsel the many students uho sought his advice. Prologue Memories of Lehigh, born of a maze of personal impressions, fade as we grow older, and often are finally forgotten. The people and names that once seemed etched in the mind, disappear, leaving only scattered recollections of college life. As an antidote to time ' s acidity, the Ep ' itotue stands as an unchangeable record of those events which were most significant. A concise summary of University days, it represents a general approach to the individual reaction. The mosaic of faces that populated under- graduate life is imprinted on Ep ' itoDie ' s pages, and need only be seen to be remembered. To the student, the yearbook may only be froth, unappreciated without the veil of years to separate him from first-hand impressions. For the graduate, however, it is his final recollection of Lehigh and student life, memories of those years which fade in his mind, but lie preserved and waiting in the Epitome. From the Lookout high over the campus, he views these bmldnigs ill ubich he lived and attended classes. ; a mometit of solitude, this senior reflects on his days at Lehigh, and ponders the future away from the campus. Contents Scholarship Page 19 Administration 21 College of Arts and Science 31 ROTC and AFROTC 51 College of Business Administration 59 College of Engineering 69 (graduation s? Activities 127 Student Government 129 Student Publications 151 Religious Groups 163 Music and Drama 171 JdiviMg (groups isi Fraternities 183 Residence Halls 247 Athletics 279 Memories 339 Advertising 349 ' li I 116 University . . . through pictures-, never to become time ' s victim From the main entrance to the campus at New Street, Lehigh ' s visitors get this im- pressive view of the University Center which, since the completion of its remodeling in the Fall of 1958, has become the center of University activities. ■ii Vfci . i wiv --I f ' fe «■-  -- - ' . ' i ?V %i -4i i« . ' -v.yfeL.;r;.f- - - .: • ' • JmZ Ir - - -£a i ' S i r-l H| 1 J fc- C Tl2 Pf l ' l ' t ■HBtwMi ' : ••Viir:  ? ' 5? .- Christmas-Saticon ' s west approach, usually crowded during a change of classes, re- flects the drop-off during Spring fnals. Arcadia ' s bulletin board is an important source of information for students — par- ticularly for rides and articles for sale. A blaze of light reflected on a rare, heavy Lehigh snowfall gives a new perspective to Packard Laboratory ' s staid, gray walls on loner campus. 10 Dhik-capped jrosh predominate at Packard Lab at school ' s opening as classes are set for lectures, orientation, and recitations. JL A gray u inter day fiiids sin dents making their tvay briskly from labs in the Chem Building to classes in Christmas-Saticon. This tree-shaded lawn siirroiindtng the Chapel provides a natural listening post for overfloii crouds at Bach Festival- ■.-.- . ' . ' r.- u. ■■i: ■■■' •r 4  i ' ; S f : m i iff: i - ' .M ' ■' ' •i S -- - -im- ' 3§3C !? ' A chill on the morning air, multi-colored leaves cluttering the campus, and the appearance of heavier clothing are various signs of Fall and approaching W inter. 13 The dominant physical feature of the University, the tower of Packer Hall can he seen from this vantage point in a residence hall room on upper campus. 14 Freshmen take aJvanlage of opeu hours and warm Spring days during the semes- ter ' s finals to relax in the sun. A lengthy and sometimes trying day in classes and participat- ing in activities culminates in a long walk tdphill to the residence hall, and the relative peace and quiet of one ' s room. rjs WS ,w • -ii f ' t ' l ■♦H! ' 4 f -. , 11 - , JP; r; 4 T v : 5 A 1L J ' Ji v ' — TKjrlr TW ■f ikf . In Memoriam Earle F. Johnson Corporate Trustee Elliott W. Cheney Associd e Professor of Physics Stewart J. Cort Corporate Trustee Frederick W. Krehbiel Class of 1959 Each of these men, who are no longer with us, in his own way made noteworthy contributions to Lehigh. Trustees Johnson and Cort were two of Lehigh ' s most outstanding and faithful alumni, achieving prominence in their fields, and recognition as major University benefactors. Professor Cheney served with distinction in the class- room, guiding students in their preparation for later life. Fred Krehbiel will be long remembered as an outstanding athlete, as a fellow senior, and most im- portantly, as a friend. 17 SCHOLARSHIP; ' • ii vi 1 111 1 1 1 1 .1 . . f! m B - ' B ;] IH fl ' ' ' ' B fH is l — --i-Ji. f y our primary afm t i Administration . the heart of the campus The heart of Lehigh ' s complex administrative life- line is the Alumni Memorial Building, erected in memory of the Lehigh men who served in World W ar L and in particular to the forty-six who gave their lives. The north wing of the building houses the Offices of the Bursar, and the Director of Admis- sion. In the south wing are the Offices of the President, Vice-President, Dean of Students, Registrar, Superin- tendent of Buildings and Grounds, and business of- fices. Here, too, is the home of the students ' newest enemy — the IBM machine, which, among other things, makes out rosters and grades. The duties of the administration are many and com- plex, ranging from fiscal control to maintaining con- tacts with industry, alumni, parents of students, and other institutions of higher learning. It is here, also, that many physical developments at Lehigh are plan- ned and accomplished, as exemplified in the recent renovation of the Alumni Building itself. The Admission Office is highly respected for its abil- Incoming jreshnien complete registration for Freshman Week by receiving a room key and other pertinent materials. ity to select qualified students for Lehigh. Due to Lehigh ' s limited enrollment, the director and his staff must reject approximately eighty per cent of the ap- plications for admission to the three undergraduate colleges. This fact, plus the careful weighing of each applicant ' s abilities and merits, insure that only the highest caliber students are admitted. The Registrar and the Dean of Students are re- sponsible for registration and for the housing and feeding of students, respectively, while the Bursar is in charge of receiving and distributing the Uni- versity ' s funds. The Public Information Office and the Alumni Office are also located in the administration headquar- ters. The Information Office prepares news of Lehigh activities for newspapers and magazines, while the Alumni Office maintains contact, by both personal and printed means, with all Lehigh graduates. MARTIN D. WHITAKER President President Whitaker and his family reside in this bouse near the Alumni Building. Lehigh ' s modern, well-equipped Student Health Center is another product of the recent modernization and building program. The spacious, three-story struc- ture was erected in 1955. It serves the routine medical needs of Lehigh students and faculty. If more exten- sive attention is required, the patient is sent home or to a local hospital. Due to the importance of its func- tion, the Health Center is never closed; a night attend- ant is on duty from 5 P.M. to 8 A.M., and limited fa- cilities are available on weekends. The University Library, dedicated in 1877 by Asa Packer, is a five-story structure built of native stone, with limestone trim. An addition, financed by gifts of the alumni, was completed in 1929 which enlarged the library to its present size and provided adequa te seat- ing for 300. Considered one of the finest in Pennsyl- vania, it contains over 400,000 volumes, with an ac- cession rate of 10,000 books per year. MONROE J. RATHBONE Chairman of the Board of Trustees Board of Trustees Honorary Trustee Eugene G. Grace Corporate Trustees Emeritus Dr. William L. Estes Robert E. McMath Nevin E. Funk The Rt. Rev. Frank W. Sterrett Corporate Trustees Monroe J. Rathbone Leonard M. Horton Andrew E. Buchanan Edward A. Curtis Alfred V. Bodine Albert B. Maginnes Theophil H. Mueller Henry R. Maddox Frank L. Magee Kenneth L. Isaacs Members Elected by AluiiDii James M. Straub Howard S. Bunn James P. Langfitt Ralph L. Wilson Appointed Trustees Joseph A. Fisher Arthur B. Homer Hugh P. McFadden 23 Hwv - P E. KENNETH SMILEY ' ue-Piesiile)]t HARVEY A. NEVILLE Provost PAUL J. FRANZ, JR. Assistant to the President WRAY H. CONGDON Special Assistant to the President 24 JOHN D. LEITH Dc ' a ! of Slinle)Us Scholarship and Self-Help Beniamin M. Nead, Clarence B. Campbell, Co- ordttialor oi Scholarship and Selj-Help. Leaner R. Gilbert, Frederick E. Ressler, James H. Wagner, Registrar: Rodney E. Ressler. Registrar ' s Office WRAY H. CONGDON Dean of the Grcxduate School ROBERT A. HARRIER Executive Secretary of the Ah mni Association Campus Police ■•., Roy Steyers, Samuel Peters. Harold Feist, Harry ■: Klase. •iaM 26 Admissions Office Sealed: James W. McGeady, Charles A. Seidle. Standing: Samuel H. Missimer, Daniel G. Ritter. Treasurer ' s Office Karl L. Werkheiser, Edith A. Seifert, Elmer W. Glick, Treasurer: Stanley F. HefFner, Donald W. Schmoyer. Office of Public Information Sealed: Charles J. Moravec, Direclor: Lucille Barrett. Slanding: Alexander Bodner, Mary Agnes Burkhardt, Frank Weedon. Health Service Sealed: Rose Marie Temos, Jannette Zisko, June Maginnis. Slandhig: Dr. Joseph G. Pomponio, Lois R. Benson, James P. Mathews, Dr. George W. McCoy, Jr., Director: Victor E. Kobordo, Mary C. Ryan. Placement, Counseling and Testing Services Standing: Laurence A. McNellis, James C. Man- cuso, Andrew J. Edmiston. Sealed: Everett A. Teal, Director. Buildings and Grounds James Boyle, Howard Wiegner, Andrew Litzen- berger, Superiiileiideiil: Frank Weaver, Charles Anderko. WARREN GOULD Associate Director of Developinetit Institute of Research George R. Jenkins, Harvey A. Neville, Director. Sejted : Catherine T. Emerson, Margaret M. Caffrey, Margaret L. Dennis, Mary E. Gruber, William W. Kenawell. Suiid iig: James D. Mack, Liljr.irijii: Robert S. Taylor, Edward G. Rankey, Robert F. Riley, Margaret E. Evans, Ruth C. Pace. Library Staff 29 College of Arts and Science , , , the Idea as well as the fact Under the name School of General Literature , the College of Arts and Science was a part of the original plan of Lehigh, and remains an integral part of the University today. The courses offered by the college cover a wide range of learning. Even the engineering students are exposed to the arts courses in half of their freshman subjects, and in electives scattered throughout their curriculum. In fact, forty per cent of the grades given each semester by the University are in arts or science courses. Perhaps the main attraction of the College of Arts and Science is the academic independence that it offers the student. The range and number of electives avail- able make the thoroughness and broadness of a man ' s education dependent only upon his interests. During the first two years of the undergraduate ' s training, the college emphasizes a comprehensive study of all the broad areas of knowledge — the humanities, the natural and physical sciences, and the social sciences — and during the junior and senior years the student is given a thorough background in his chosen Christmas-Saiicou Hall Lwnses the Departments of English, Philosophy, and Mathematics. GLENN J. CHRISTENSEN Dec3 i of the College of Ails itiul Science Arts students must consult with Dean Cbris- tensen ivhen pre-regtstering for the follow- ing semester ' s classes. held of major interest. To assure the success of this program, the college maintains a competent staff of advisers and curriculum directors. Many students mterested in medicine, law, or similar graduate fields in which Lehigh does not offer a degree are given an outstanding preparatory background that enables them to attend any advanced school in the nation. Schools all over the country have slowly come to the realization that to be a success in the world the college graduate in engineering must not only possess the highest technical skills, but must also have an appreciation for the arts. In order to meet this chal- The character of Lamberton Hall has changed once again as it becomes the new home of three departments. lenge, the College of Arts and Science has teamed up with the College of Engineering to offer an outstand- ing five-year combined course in arts and engineering to the Lehigh student. Proof of the quality of education administered by the College of Arts and Science is found in the suc- cess of its graduates. Many now hold teaching and administrative posts in colleges throughout the coun- try. One out of five graduates has risen to the presi- dency, vice-presidency, or board of directors of his company, and three of the present members of Le- high ' s Board of Trustees hold B.A. degrees from the college. A major in chemistry does some research on an independent project. The new language lab sees its first year of use, as students improve their accents tvith the aid of electronics. A student catches forty winks in the library. Its cjuiet is as conducive to sleeping as it is to studying. 33 Education First row: Robert A. Bream, Harold P. Thomas. Second row: Hobarth A. Farber, Albert J. Maz- urkiewicz, Lemuel R. Johnston, Robert J. Smith. HAROLD P. THOMAS Head of Department BASIL W. PARKER Head of Deparliiient Biology Sealed: Francis J. Trembley, Basil W. Parker, Head of Department : Saul B. Barbar, Bradford B. Owen, Standing: Frederick H. Midlige, John A. Freeberg, Marvin H. Segel, Thomas H. Grainger, Michael Herbert. v W- ' Classical Languages Douglas D. Feaver, Joseph A. Maurer, Head of Deparimenl. Chemistry First row: Robert S. Sprague, Thomas E. Young, Henry Frankel, Robert E. Rehwah, Harold V. Anderson, Earl J. Serfass, Hejd of Departmei:!: Jerome Daen, Richard D. Wantman. Second row: Edward S. Gregorek, Robert Smerko, Robert L. Stubbings, Richard L. Beach, Raymond R. Myers, George Gonis, Albert C. Zettlemoyer, James E. Sturm, Judson Smull. Third row: David M. Hercules, Velmer B. Fish, Edward D. Amstutz, Dewey C. Holland, John J. Surash. Romance Languages Sealed: George Fame, Allan J. Barthold, Hejii of Deparlmeiit: Victor M, Valenzuela. Standiiii;: Herbert E. Isar, James R. Stamm, Isaias Aguirre. J. BURKE SEVERS Head of Deparlmeiit English First row: Earl A. Knies, Franklin A. Behrens, Ray L. Armstrong, Jasper J. Collura, William Frakes, J. Burke Severs, Head of Department: F. Strauch. Second row: Ernest N. Dilworth, Wallace McMuUen, Albert E. Hartung, David Hook, Albert A. Rights, Cloyd M. Criswell, Barrett Davis, William P. Keen. Third row: Eugene Vasilew, Richard A. Law, S. Blaine Barker, Walton H. Hutchins. Joseph B. McFadden, A. Neville, James R. John A. Hertz, Carl John R. Sivatko, E. M. Greene, Frank S. Bernard J. Paris, H. Edward A. Kopper, Ewing, Thoburn V. 1 FtTsi Row: Clifford W. Sloyer, Grant F. Heck II, George E. Raynor, Head of Department: Ranerio O. Reyes. Second row: Ira D. Berg, Mrs. Marguerite Gravez, Ralph N. Van Arnam, Clarence A. Shook, A. Everett Pitcher, Theodore Hailperin, Frank S. Beale, Chuan- Chih Hsiung, John Raleigh. Gerhard Reyna. Third row: Voris V. Latshaw, Peter A. Lachenbruch, Edward H. Cutler, Ervin K. Dorff, Kenneth C. Bouchelle, Merlin F. Hertzog, Arthur L. Hilt, Frank C. Oglesby, Roy E. Roberts, Samuel L. Gulden, Hanna 1. Nassar, David J. Foulis, Abraham B. Soble. Mathematics GEORGE E. RAYNOR HeaiJ of Depdiliiient Psychology Finl row: Arthur Brody, Nathan B. Gross, Head of Deparimenl : Shelby J. Harris, Solomon Wein- stock. Second row: Edward C. Stewart, Theodore Millon. Geology Firsl roll ' : Lawrence Whitcomb, Bradford Willard, Hedii of Deparimenl. Second row: H. Richard Gault, Bruce K. Goodwin, George R. Jenkins, Heikki V. Tuominen. Third row: Theodore K. Graham, Thomas C Mentzer, Ernest H. Ern. BRADFORD WILLARD Head oj Departiiiei t Fine Arts Richard J. Redd, Francis J. Quirk, He.id oj De- parimenl. German Ralph C. Wood, William V. Glebe, John S. Treniper, Head of Deparimenl: Arthur P. Gardner, Richard A. Watt. Aurie N. Dunlap, Carey B. Joynt, Head of De- pariment: Michael H. Banks, Henderson B. Braddick. International Relations Chaplain Raymond E. Fuessle, A. Roy Eckardt, Head of Deparlmenl. Religion GEORGE D. HARMON Head of Deparliiieiit History and Government Head of Deparlmenl : Ernst B. Schulz, Raymond G. Cowherd, Willard R. Yates. Second row: Rocco J. Tresolini, Henderson Braddick, Charles A. Hale. Third row: William L. Quay, Michael Lesser, Edward O. Smith, John McV. Haight. Undergraduate engineers collect data for completion of an experiment in the be- havior of light rays. RAYMOND J. EMRICH Head of Department Physics Richard M. Elrick, Wade A. Renn, Mildred Greer, George W. Grimm, Wesley R. Smith, Peter Havas, Raymond J. Emrich, Head of Depart- ment; Paul W. Thompson, Edward L. Foley, Donald B. Wheeler, Frederick A. Grosse, Wilber D. B. Spatz, Raymond B. Sawyer, David Weimer. 40 Music Robert B. Cutler. Jonathan B. Elku s. Sealed: Thomas M. Haynes, Howard J. B. Ziegler, HeaJ of Deparlmenl. Sunding: Nicholas Rescher, Adolf Grunbaum. Philosophy 41 . . , for cf cellcHce in scholastic ability Of all the collegiate scholastic honoraries, Phi Beta Kappa is probably the most universally known and respected. Founded at the College of William and Mary in 1776, it is the original Greek-letter fraternity. The Lehigh chapter, chartered in 1887, has done much to inspire and honor high scholastic achievement. Although the organization is sponsored by the Col- lege of Arts and Science, and is primarily for the liberal arts students, Lehigh ' s chapter also initiates four undergraduates from the Engineering College each year. The engineers selected are among the few in the country to hold a Phi Beta Kappa key. The greater part of the membership comes from students selected from the top ten per cent of the arts seniors. Phi Beta Kappa Firit Row: Adams, Roiahn, Lerche, Cowen. Second Row: Bakonyi, Brenan, Topping, Early, Schwartz. Third Row: Fisch, Fowler, Anthon, Talhelm, Pepper. 42 Phi Eta Sigma Pint row: Superdock, Paternoster, Burrick, Sec- retary, Brainerd. Second row: Hodge, Vice-Pres- ident: Deem, President: Robert T. Gallagher, Fucully Adviser: Polefka. Third row: Gucker, Kennedy, Weaver, Derse. . , , the most outstapidiHg freshmen For the past thirty years the top three per cent o£ the freshman class at Lehigh has been honored with membership in Phi Eta Sigma, the national freshman scholastic fraternity. The society ' s main objective is to encourage high academic achievement among the University ' s neophytes. For this purpose, Phi Eta Sigma presents a booklet of study hints to each fresh- man, and increases interest in studies by awarding a plaque to the freshman living group with the highest average. The group annually sends a representative to the national Phi Eta Sigma convention, where ideas are exchanged for inspiring, developing, and reward- ing high freshman scholastic achievement. 43 A break betueen classes offers these stu- dents a few minutes to shoot the breeze before the next class. Alpha Epsilon Delta First rou-: Thomas H. Grainger, Faculty Ad- viser: Dash, President: Jackson, Secretary: Mc- Carter, Treasurer. Second rou-: Rotberg, Swire, Friedman. Phi Alpha Theta First row: Roscoe, George D. Harmon, Topping, President; William W. Kenawell, Secretary- Treasurer; Raymond G. Cowherd, Quay. Second row: Smith, Martz, Young. Fricke, Drennan, Edward D. Amstutz. 44 Several honoraries are sponsored by the College of Arts and Science for students with unusual aptitude and great interest in a particular field. History enthus- iasts are welcomed into the national history fraternity. Phi Alpha Theta. The Lehigh chapter was chartered in 1940 and had eighteen active members this year. Initiates were chosen from candidates with at least a B average in twelve hours of history and government subjects. Two banquets and speakers at monthly meet- ings gave the group an active schedule. Delegates were sent to the national convention in Williamsburg. Pre-med students of high ability are invited to join Alpha Epsilon Delta. This year the Lehigh chapter celebrated its twenty-fifth year on campus. Its nine active members enjoyed hearing prominent speakers from the medical profession at their meetings. Pi Mu Epsilon selected its members from students who had demonstrated their ability and interest in mathematics by maintaining an A average in twelve hours of math courses. Monthly meetings with em- inent speakers in the numbers racket and the annual banquet were the main activities of the society this year. The Psychology Department is represented by Psi Chi. This honorary fraternity ' s members not only heard important speakers, but also delivered their own lec- tures for the Muhlenberg Psychology Club. The Psi Chis, who must have a B average in eight hours of psychology courses, were also very active socially, fea- turing a picnic, a banquet, and a Christmas party. Pi Mu Epsilon Pirst row: Lane, Felter, Pepper, Walendziewicz, Wagner Kunsman. Second row: LaMar, Brown, Suna, Secretary; Kauffman, President; Albert Wilansky, Faculty Adviser: Schwandt, Treasurer; Dally, Swartley. Third row: Weyer, Latshaw, Early, Whitehouse, Shulman, Parks, Scavuzzo, Fisch. 45 Delta Omicron Theta Delta Omicron Theta is the debate society of Le- high. It is a debating honorary, but maintains a sub- ordinate debate club as an integral part of the group. The t wo participate in their activities together and depend upon one another. The debate club has an intercollegiate debate schedule extending from Sep- tember to May. The competitors are placed in either a novice or regular class, depending upon their ex- perience. Membership in DOT is reached through active par- ticipation in the debate activities for at least three semesters, a point system being used to determine membership. Debating activities are open to all under- graduates, and the club ' s membership this year rostered twenty-four men, ten of whom were also active mem- bers of the honorary society. The Lehigh chapter earned recognition in Eastern debate circles during this school year as several members were awarded certificates of merit, which indicate superior debating in the various annual round-robin tournaments. First row: Eugene Vasilew, Faculty Adviser: Erdheim, Marshall, Glanstein, Holtz, Hughes, Treas- urer. Second row: Livdahl, Vice-President: Jablon, Enberg, Sumner, Gilhoul. Third row: Skyrms, Levine, Prestia, Miller, President: Moore, Freeman, Secretary. 46 Dames Club First tow: Mary E. Lundahl, Judith B. Turner. Deborah L. Grandin, Patricia V. Hubbard, Sallianne Bryson, Margaret E. Peek, Dolores S. Shadle. Second row: Dorothy S. Pearson, Rene W. Rost, Estelle S. Knapp, Virginia M. Rodgers, Jane F. McGuffey, Jean C. Clegg. Third row: Joan Latanision, Ethel P. Wolgamuth, Dorothy Fryer, Mary Jowanna, Carol A. Bryan, Gretchen G. Lewis. Fourth tow: Suzanne Sander, Janet B. Umbach, Margaret Bowker, Cynthia A. Murphy, Martha M. Martin, Rose M. Lerche, Dolores A. Kurtz, Marie Schaffer, Shirley A. Talhelm, Carol Ann Witte. These luo students reflect entirely different schools of thought in fine arts: one, an abstract form, and the other, a more conventional style. 47 American Institute of Physics First row: Pepper, President: Fowler, Secretary; Kauffman, Vice-President : Kuebler, Treasurer. Second row: Staas, Dash, Huber. Third row: Pierce, Freed, Faust, Payer. R. W. Hall Society Seated: Hertzberg, Friedman, President: Laaken, Vice-President: Singer, Secretary. Standing: Lang, McCarter, Dash, Coutant, Thomas H. Grainger, Faculty Adtiser. Student Chemical Society First row: Stidham, Gott, McClurg, Bayer, Storm, Klevit, Gold, Frestia, President. Student Chemical Society; George, Gartside, Waldron, Jenkins, Treasurer. American Chemical Society; Kinard, President, American Chemical Society. Second row: Casciani, Kozlowich, Snyder, Past, Shaughnessy, Schwenker, Martin, Joecks, Coffin, Roglieri, Sobyak, Raymond Myers, Faculty Adtiser: Freeman, Waltking. Third row: Felter, Hendricks, Marsh, Pcihoda, Danner, Hackworth, Clas- ing, Johnson, Walton, Lamar, Laslo, Gaiser, Wilson. iitttf il Pi Gamma Mu First row: Dudley W. Johnson, President: Ruth C. Pace, Secretary- Treasurer: Montville, Vice-President. Second row: Michael H. Banks, William W. Kenawell, Edwin C. Gooding, John D. Leith. The College of Arts and Science sponsors many course societies for students who wish to develop their specific academic interests outside the classroom. For government and political specialists there is the Politi- cal Science Assembly, while the physics and mathe- matics adherents may find the activities of the Ameri- can Institute of Physics and the Newtonian Society to their liking. Pre-med students have an opportunity to join the Robert W. Hall Society, and those with a bent for broadcasting participate in the Radio Workshop. The German Club and the Combined Chemical Society fill out the varied list of arts course societies at Lehigh. ■s- AFROTC and ROTC . . . drilliHg and parading Platoon sergeants, take charge of your platoons and proceed with the prescribed drill! Thus began many a Monday afternoon drill for the Army ROTC. And as the Army basics paraded under the commands of their upperclass officers, their classmates in blue were also drilling under the cadet Air Force officers. These familiar drills, however, were only a part of the Reserve Officers Training Corps program at Le- high. Indeed, the most important activities were the classroom meetings and the many military extracur- ricular programs. Army and Air Force ROTC at the University are organized basically the same as at hundreds of colleges and universities throughout the nation. Two years of the basic course are required of the cadet, and upon successful completion of this area of study, the top men in the class are afforded the opportunity to take the advanced program, which eventually permits them to receive their second lieutenant ' s commissions. The program does more than just give a man the chance Did I he inspector pull a jtiniij? This cadet ' s smile would seem to indicate so — or maybe he ' s just camera shy. to enter the services as an officer, for ' :he cadet develops a sense of responsibility, obedience and leadership which molds his entire character, and helps him greatly in later life. In conjunction with the military program, students may belong to any of the numerous extracurricular military organizations and societies. Scabbard and Blade, a national military organiza- tion founded in 1922, is a combined Army and Air Force honorary society whose members are chosen from the ranks of the advanced corps on the basis of scholarship and leadership qualifications. This year, as usual, the society awarded a trophy to the outstanding cadet in the combined corps. Arnold Air Society, the Air Force ROTC national honorary corps, attempted to further the concept, mission, and tradition of the Air Force by encouraging During drill, cadets are often required to undergo a rigid inspection administered by members of the Air Force cadre. t ' 7 ? l ?m? ' . COL. JOHN C. STAPLETON Prof, of Military Science and Tactics COL. KENNETH R. STRAUSS Prof, of Air Science and Tactics 52 • • • 1 - ,l, 1 L -. ! t . ' ) ... pr . - • -p . . f 1 • • fft ' «■Seated: Maj. Robert B. Rankin, Lt. Col. Wesley J. Simmons, Col. John C. Stapleton, HeMi of Deparimenl: Maj. Edmund R. Butch, Capt. Harold E. Durst. Standing: Sgt. Robert H. Ebert, Sgt. Wharton E. Fosselman, Sgt. Joseph Kasper. Sgt. Theodore J. Podolsky, Sgt. L ' lyssess J. Perry, Sgt. Francis J. Quinn. Army ROTC AFROTC First row: Lt. Tadeus L. Jakubowski, Capt. Albert H. Grefe, Maj. Donald J. Glenn, Col. Kenneth R. Strauss, Head of Department: Capt. Joseph Sara, Capt. Henry C. Fordham. Second rou - Sgt. Donald L. Cockburn, Sgt. Hugh R. Rogers, Sgt. William A. Farr, Sgt. Abram E. Ehrensberger, Sgt. Corrington R. Laughlin, Sgt. James R. Smith. r f h n. knowledge and teamwork not attainable in the class- room. The basic cadet ' s counterpart of the Arnold Air Society is the Sabre Society, which maintained basically the same objectives and standards. Upperclassmen interested in small bore rifle com- petition participated on the Varsity Rifle Squad, and all ROTC cadets (including freshmen) were eligible to join either the Army or Air Force Rifle Teams. Both these teams gave the student an excellent op- portunity to acquire the skills of competitive shooting through active participation. Many students found the Society of American Mili- tary Engineers, a national society of military and civilian engineers devoted to the interests of national defense, a worthwhile group. Lectures and informal gatherings provided an excellent means of learning AFROTC cadets consult the bulletin board for assignments and duties which are their responsibilities as a part of basic instruction. ' ..mi i;!Jii j;j i o. . ' iD Pershing Rifles Drill Team First Roll.- Marr, Cowles, Adams, Zigmund, Bennett, Pollock. Second Row: James, Johnson, Poole, Drennan, Boose, Roon, Stewart. Vl ' V y V Firil row: Friedman, Rudes, Stewart, Secretary: Ewing, Second Vice-President; E. R. Butch, Faculty Adviser; Elengo, President: Kunsman, First Vice-President; Domingue, Treasurer; Gralnick, Prosser, Cowles. Second row: Weiss, MuUins, Dimmick, Haney, Walsh, Freeman, Schmidbauer, Goelzer, Zigmund, Johnson, Pollock, Gallagher. Third row: Hancock, Jillsun, Mylks, Woolcock, Argue, Grant, Dorland, Thomas, Neithold, James, Marr, Nagle. SAME Sabre Society and Arnold Air First row: Dardick, Bauder, Treasurer; Croteau, Adjutant; Zenorini, Operations Officer; Wash- burn, Commander; McCarthy, Executive Officer; Bateman, Wilkinson, Weiss, Glover. Second row: Hampson, Yamagami, Cook, McGrath, Bartish, Baiter, Thomas, Hyiam, Feakes, Gough, Baldwin. Third row: Gyauch, Snyder, Huntington, Kline, Uhl, Oppel, Hellewell, MacVicar, Briggs, Asher. - ♦ fV .f ft ' tr ' - _ 7 how engineering skills are applied in the military or- ganization to create an effective fighting force. An integral part of the Sabre Society was the Air Force Drill Team, which performed in competitions throughout the entire nation. Along with the members of the Pershing Rifles, the Drill Team served as ushers at all home football games and many of the other athletic contests held at Lehigh. The well-known Pershing Rifles, national military organization founded shortly after World War I, and named after General John J. Pershing, acquainted its members with the friendship and fellowship which is an important factor in our military organization. The well-disciplined Company F-5 of PR ' s Crack Drill Team performed at the Military Ball, the highlight of ROTC ' s social year, and as well, competed, with excellent results, on the intercollegiate level. Air Force Rifle Team First row: Tait, Albala. Second rou - Sgt. William A. Farr, Coach: Kirsche, Manager: Pickands. Third row: Wade, Haberman, Erlei First row: Zimmer, Elengo, Vice-President: Gaiser, President: Weiss, Secretary: Dimmick, Hamer. Second row: Vaughn, Harbold, Griggs, Stanley, Fisch. Scabbard and Blade 56 Air Force Drill Team First row: Gyauch, Cook, Hyam, Baiter, Feakes, Gough. Second roiv: Banish, Thomas, Kline, Uhl, MacVicar, Huntington, Hampson, Commander. First row: Parliment, Cowles, Mueller, Levenson, Bradbury, Drennan, Elengo, Swingle, Command- ing Officer: Fisch, Goldstein, Kunsman, Marr, Galloway, Hessinger, Drawbaugh. Second row: Livdahl, Dreger, Barney, Stewart, Denenhower, Lindsay, Zigmund, Poole, Doty, Nichols, Lerch, Vogel, James, Bell, Weber, Schadler. Third row: Winters, Buck, Hamm, Bennett, Richter, Friedel, Boose, Kramer. Ennis, McGuire, Johnson, Hayes, Roon, Neithold, Steitz. Pershing Rifles 7 ■.Jl ■h t ' M,%vt.% ' ' r ' t % ' ' w • • ■- College of Business Administration . . . tmlmug ' complete ' busmssmett The goal of the College of Business Administration is to produce the complete businessman. With this aim in mind, the college has abandoned any teaching system which would emphasize only the acquisition of specific skills, and has substituted a broad training program which embraces every facet of the business world. It trys to instill the qualities of versatility and adapta- bility, and strives to lay a strong foundation upon which many different careers in fields of business may be built after graduation. This sound foundation can only be developed through an emphasis on funda- mentals, and accordingly the student is required to learn the principles that underlie all businesses. In addition to business courses, the Lehigh business- man also takes many courses m the Arts and Engineer- ing Colleges. It is recognized that for a successful career he must be a complete individual. His training must include the subjects that will give him a knowledge and understanding of the cultural and humanistic concepts of our modern world. Learning to use machine computers comprises an important part of the instruction received by students in business. CARL E. ALLEN Dean of the College of Business Adniinistration Drown Hall ' s lounge is a haven for students seeking a quiet spot for a few minutes on the books before a quiz. Dean Allen counsels tiio business men con- cerning difficulties each has encountered in his major program. Although the college ' s guiding principle is broad training, it realizes that it is also an asset to concen- trate on some particular field of business. The college offers seven fields of specialization: accounting, eco- nomics, economic statistics, finance, management, marketing, and general business. These majors are taught through the facilities of one or more of the school ' s three departments: Accounting, Finance, and Economics and Sociology. The Accounting Department presents the techniques for recording, classifying, summarizing, and interpret- ing business activities. Accounting today is one of the most important of professions. As industry becomes - i g Literature from the hundreds of companies which interview Lehigh students is available to interested seniors at the Placement Bureau. more and more involved, the executive needs the tools of accounting to enable him to understand and study financial reports. The ability to analyze efficiently the multitude of details and facts of past operations is necessary so that he can make decisions which will help him shape his future policies more intelligently. A thorough knowledge of accounting is indispensable for the future executive. However, a knowledge of accounting alone is not sufficient to make the complete, well-rounded business- man. The business student also takes courses in the Finance Department. Finance is the management of monetary affairs. It is foolhardy for an individual to The lounge in Drown Hall provides a quiet study area for students preparing for quizzes. Accounting problems seem a great deal easier when modern equipment such as this facilitates their solution. 61 Finance Sealed: Frederick A. Bradford, Head of Depart- ment: Finn B. Jensen. Standing: Leon E. Krouse. WENDELL P. TRUMBULL HecuJ of Depart7)ient Accounting Sealed: Thomas C. Kubelius, Wendell P. Trumbull, Head of Department: Carl E. Allen, Alfred P. Koch, Carl L. Moore. Standing: Edward H. Bartlett, Sidney J. Silver, William F. Muhr, Francis M. Brady, Wilson N. Serfass. enter the business world without at least a rudimen- tary understanding of his medium of exchange. Courses stress the intricacies of money and banking, the struc- ture of corporations, and the mechanisms of invest- ment. Last, but not least, is the Department of Economics and Sociology. This sector of the Business College offers courses which give the student an ability to use the present and past as a basis to predict what the future will hold for his particular firm or the economy as a whole. He is also given the opportunity to take a variety of marketing courses such as retailing, ad- vertising, and transportation, which acquaint him with the complexities of moving the manufactured product from the assembly line to the consumer. He gets an insight into our modern social structure, and also acquires a general knowledge of other societies throughout the world. This training is essential to the well-informed businessman. All in all, the graduate of the College of Business Administration has received, along with the special skills in his chosen field, a deeper, richer understand- ing of capitalism and its effects and a fuller apprecia- tion of the complex economies that make up our cul- ture. Thus the school achieves its aim of endowing the student with a broad background in business. Economics and Sociology First row: John H. Urban, Nicholas W. Balabkins. Second rou : Edwin C. Gooding, Max D. Snider, Dudley W. Johnson, Elmer C. Bratt, Arthur Benjamin, Donald Tailby. Third row: Sherwood G. Walters, Thomas J. Orsagh, Morris L. Sweet, Herbert M. Diamond. ELMER C. BRATT Head of Department Beta Gamma Sigma . . . top busiaessmeH In almost every field of endeavor honorary organ- izations have been formed to recognize the superior accomplishments and achievements of a distinguished few. In the field of business, Beta Gamma Sigma was created to this end. Every year a select group of stu- dents, which consists of the highest three per cent of the junior class and the top ten per cent of the gradu- ating class, is elected to this organization. These individuals become members with the knowl- edge that they will strive, as stated in the society ' s charter, to promote the advancement and spread of education in the science of business and to foster prin- ciples of honesty and integrity in business practice . Wesley W. Hackman, Richard C. Thiede, William F. Muhr, Thomas J. Verbonitz. 64 Alpha Kappa Psi Alpha Kappa Psi, the national commerce fraternity, came to the Lehigh campus in 1924. Since then it has grown in proportions, and today it plays an important role in the sphere of the business student. According to its charter, its main objectives are: to further the individual welfare of its members; to foster scientific research in the fields of commerce, accounts, and finance; to educate the public to appreciate and demand higher ideals; and to promote and advance in institutions of college rank, courses leading to degrees in business administration. First roti ' : Draper, V ' ke-Presidenl; Swenson, Presidenl : Gardner, Secretary. Second row: John H. Urban, Fjculty Adviser: Kell, Klink. Third row: Lohmeyer, Bethke, Reed. Lambda Mu Sigma, the honorary marketing fratern- ity, was founded at Lehigh in 1940. Since then it has spread to other campuses throughout the LJnited States, so that now the group claims over 5,000 members in eighty-six active chapters. Lambda Mu Sigma aims to keep its members well- informed on the current trends in marketing, and to familiarize them with the practical problems encoun- tered in marketing and allied fields. The society achieves this goal by featuring eminent speakers in the business world at its meetings. Field trips to local busi- ness operations also prove to be very rewarding. Lambda Mu Sigma First row: Belfanti, Graham, Rickert, Draper, President: Zenorini, Ostrom, Wardell. Second row: Semple, Schantz, Jacobi, Schock, Standeven, Georgas. Accounting Society The Accounting Society was founded in 1952 by Professor Roy B. Cowin. The main purpose of the organization is to give accounting majors, and also any other interested students, an opportunity to meet lead- ers in the accounting profession. At the society ' s meet- ings throughout the year, various individuals who are well known in the accounting field were invited to talk to the group about their work. Discussion was not limited to purely theoretical topics, for many times the speakers would cite their own practical experiences in the business world. This gave students an insight into their chosen profession which could never be gained by mere classroom work. The Accounting Society, moreover, is not purely an academic group. A year of rewarding fellowship was culminated by the annual picnic in May. OFFICERS Beltson, Vice-President: Mercy, Secreliiry-Tretisur er: Rush, Preside) !. f First row: Eisner, Udicious, Beltson, Vice-President : Rush, President: Mercy, Secretiiry-Treasurer ; Schaffer, Rohrer. Second row: Lebersfeld, Grierson, Segal, Combee, Samuels, Foster, Seagreaves, Horn. Third row: Foutrakis, Clark, Havsy, Winter, Pabst, Weisner, Skolnick. 66 67 VflriB r - ' ' JIB j M ■' ' S H B ' ■m  - Stfl ' Kf £ - - T -i ' j f .-. •- r J r« : College of Engineering . . . relating science and technology Although Lehigh is a university, a large part of its reputation is due to the high quality of the Col- lege of Engineering. One of the best faculties in the nation and a richly endowed physical plant combine to place Lehigh high on the list of the top engineering schools in the country. This high standing is reflected in the confidence in Lehigh exhibited by the industries of the nation. No fewer than lifty-seven company-endowed scholar- ships, many supporting two or more undergraduates, as well as twenty-four industrially supported fellow- ships were available last year. The large number of products sent to Lehigh, from all parts of the country, for testing and development is another acknowledg- ment of engineering quality. Of the eleven buildmgs on the campus used only for instruction, five are devoted solely to engineering subjects. About sixty-seven per cent of the under- graduates in any year are enrolled in an engineering curriculum as are the greater portion of the graduate students, while three of the departments have their E ■WIm ■■■■:. i; y ■III Mat!) hours of cooperative lab work are required of the engineering students, particularly these electrical engineers. own collections of technical volumes. Even the nick- name Engineers reflects the Lehigh specialty. Out of the eleven major options offered by the University, one can be found that will prepare a man for almost any job in industry, and with a Lehigh diploma the chances of getting the job are good. One of the characteristics of the College of Engi- neering is constant self-improvement and advancement. Each year every department comes up with changes and ideas that keep Lehigh abreast of the best in the nation, and 1958 was no exception. The Civil Engi- neering staff has been engaged in testing the prototype of a new bridge design that has attracted national attention (research began on pump design for the U.S. Army), and the testing machine in Fritz Lab had its usual active season. Members of the JMechanical Engi- neering faculty published two texts as well as numer- ous papers. A series of experiments with heat transfer kept the equipment in Packard Lab in high gear. Chem- LOYAL V. BEWLEY Dean of the College of Engiiieeritig This aliinini iiH hrnige. einbojy iig i ew prnniples of deiigii. withstood tests that sub- jected the structure to iiuviy times its iiuixnii nii load limit. 70 ical Engineering students saw the sub-critical reactor began operation this spring, began study in heat ex- change, and had the opportunity to register for the new Nuclear Reactor lab. The entire staff collaborated on a text on Unit Operations that is now in press. The youngest member of the Lehigh engineering family. Engineering Mechanics, graduated its first class this June. Industrial Engineering had a profitable year in its new process and computer labs. The Chemistry Department was brightened by $140,000 worth of new equipment, including some designed by the staff, and a course in radio chemistry was begun. Metallurgy con- tinued its program with industry, and Electrical Engi- neering enjoyed its first year with its new computer. Cox Lab and the Mining Department sponsored the same active summer field program. The Engineering Physics Department graduated another group of well- trained research engmeers. The year was full of change, benefiting the student, the college and the nation. Surrounded by chemicals and laboratory apparatus, a graduate student in chemical engineering reflects the intense concen- tration necessary for such precise work. The mechanics of fluids compose an important area of study for the students specializing in civil engineering. All engineers, whether majoring in electrical engineering or some other field, must take the EE series, wherein a good portion of the time is devoted to lab ii ' ork. Electrical Engineering First row: Alexander Takacs, Firman Tambunan, Hu-Hsien Hwang, Lloyd V. Slocum. Second row: John J. Karakash, Head of DepartmeiH: Joseph Teno, Arthur M. Forsythe. Third row: Joseph A. Hrusovsky, Leslie G. McCracken, Begamudre R. Das, Gadi V. Venkatesulu. JOHN J. KARAKASH Head of Depiuiiiieiil FERDINAND P. BEER Head of Department Engineering Mechanics Firsi row: Gerald F. Smith, Chet L. Kama, Albert de Neufville, Leon Bahar, George C. Sih, Julius Bede. Second row: Samuel Kaplan, Morris Ojalvo, Peter A. Engel, Jean-Michel Sturm. Third row: Fer- dinand P. Beer, Head: David M. Parke, Robert I. McGrattan, Joseph C. Osborn. Industrial Engineering Fir a row: George Kane, Arthur F. Gould, Wal- lace Richardson, Charles W. Brennan. Second row: David Wood, Charles Tallman, Richard Jacobs, William A. Smith. Pint row: Russell E. Benner, Jr., Frank Kreith, Thomas E. Jackson. Second row: Philip Olear, William Harrach, Michael A. Yatsko, Theodore A. Terry. Third row: Michael A. Saad, Robert A. Lucas, Fazil Erdogan, James B. Hartman, Head of Department, Hwa-Ping Lee. Mechanical Engineering Eckley B. Coxe Minitig Laboratory hi mid- campus is ivell equipped to serve the course requirements of tnining engineering students. Mining Engineering Arthur W. Brune, Robert T. Gallagher, Heod oj DtlKirtmeni: Lawrence Adier. Mining engineers gain practical experience in their summer employment. First row: Merton O. Fuller, Alexis Ostapenko, Konrad Easier, John B. Herbich, William J. Eney, George C. DriscoU, Morris 0)alvo, John D. Graham. Stcond row: Edward C. Sword, Arthur Crabtree, John O. Liebig Jr., Bruno Thurlimann, Carl E. Ekberg, Thomas P. Krehnbrink, John L. Rumpf, Samuel J. Errera, Roger G. Dittig, Matthew F. Borg, Karim W. Nasser, Michael D. Grigoriadis, Basil M. Assimacopoulos, Uner M. Taysi. WILLIAM J. ENEY Head of Deptir me ?t Civil Engineering Muny tests using the universal test- ing machine were conducted in Fritz Lah this year in which nearly full capacity was applied. moBf H I n I 1 I J 75 ' ' ' i - mi ■■v i 1s i, m 1 : ! 3 i III c! demoiutrat ' ion of the testing machine, this Lvuindted pillar is subjected to 4,840,- 000 pounds of compression. This student sets in motion a complex in- dustrial process, as he learns to apply the theory he has gained in the classroom to practical use in the chemical engineering laboratory. Chemical Engineering Firsi row: Leonard A. Wenzel, Curtis W. Clump, L. Bryce Andersen. Second row: Alan S. Foust, Head of Department; Louis Maus, Jr. The William H. Chandler Chemistry Build- ing is the home of both the Chemistry and Chemical Engineering Departments. The ivhite heat of the electric furnace veals its hidden secrets in the eye of the spectroscope held by the grad student. Metallurgical Engineering First row: Robert D. Stout, Head of Department: Stanley A. Agnew, Joseph F. Libsch, Harry Suprinick. Second row: Dominic Canonico, Edward H. Kottcamp, Karl E. Dorschv. Third row: George P. Conard, Herbert H. Johnson, Richard D. Morrison. Tau Beta Pi First row: Culver, Swingle, Sigley, Sobyak. Sec- ond rou.- Bakonyi, Umbach, Secretary; Talhelm, President; Fisch, Vice-President; Clegg, Treas- urer. Third row: Danner, Kuebler, Kauffman, Kapo. Fourth row: Rojahn, Pepper, McMurtrie, Coates. Fijih row: Brainerd, Gotwalt, Bailey, Kozlowski. Sixth row: Pickslay, Cazer, LaMar, Martin, Allen. . . . academic success for CMgimers Born at Lehigh in 1885, Tau Beta Pi has emerged from its lusty infancy into full maturity with over a hundred chapters throughout the country. Over the years the honorary fraternity has acquired a reputation for choosing as members only those engineering stu- dents with the highest standards of honor, integrity, character, and scholarship. Pledges are elected from the upper eighth of the junior class and the upper fifth of the senior class. One of Tau Beta Pi ' s outstanding activities at Le- high is the annual freshman slide rule class, which initiates the engineering neophytes into the mysteries of the all-important slip-stick . 79 Alpha Pi Mu came to Lehigh in 1952, one year after it was founded at the Georgia Institute of Technology. Being the only industrial engineering honorary society, it gives needed recognition to qualified students, in- forms them of the latest developments in industry, assists the IE Department in training men of high caliber, and fosters and maintains high professional standards in the field of industrial engineering. Founded in 1952, Chi Epsilon honorary society en- ables students of civil engineering to gain the benefits of a national honorary fraternity affiliation. The society presents films, projects, papers, and speakers at ban- quets and smokers throughout the year. All meetings are planned to further acquaint the civil engineering student with the established practices and new develop- ments of his profession. Alpha Pi Mu Sejted: Clegg, Vice-Presidenl; Norlander, Presi- dent: Dube, Secretary. Standing: Mountain Mc- Murtrie, Treasurer: Leyendecker. Chi Epsilon Sousa, Treasurer; Reimer, Schneck, Secretary: Walton, Coston, Vice-President: Culver, Presi- dent. Eta Kappa Nu, established in 1904 as a national honorary fraternity in the field of electrical engineering, provides a unique opportunity for EE ' s to extend the range of their professional interests beyond the class- room. Speakers from industry, tours through nearby industrial plants, and professional discussions all com- bine to supplement the technical background of the electrical engineering curriculum. Founded here in 1927, Pi Tau Sigma provides a means for outstanding students in mechanical engineer- ing to organize to broaden their knowledge and interest in their chosen profession. Serving the Department of Mechanical Engineering through its endeavors to advance the scholarship of its members. Pi Tau Sigma is a valuable adjunct to the regular scholastic cur- riculum. Eta Kappa Nu First row: Bailey, Schuiz, Sisle. Second row: Sigley, Treasurer: Coates, Secretary: Umbach, President; Talhelm, Vice-President. Third row: Wolfgang, Swartz, Allen. Pi Tau Sigma First row: Fisch, Thomas E. Jackson, Faculty Adviser; Cazer, President; Swingle, Vice-Pres- ident. Second row: Weyer, Kozlowski, Tamulis, Mitchell. American Society of Civil Engineers First row: Huntington, Reimer, Stewart, Sultan, Prosser, Fornwald. Second rou ' Gessner, Memolo, Rudes, Culver, President: Long, Secretary: Cool, Treasurer; Tomlinson, Davis. Third row: Schneck, Pontician, Dreier, Allen, Jorgensen, Wollcock, Sousa, Harrison, Litter. First row: Bailey, Sisle, Treasurer; Rahe, Umbach, Co-Chairman ; Talhelm, Chairman; D ' Elia, Co- Chairman; Bauder, Secretary; Leslie G. McCrack- en, faculty Adtiser; Lewis. Second row: Bach- man, Kurtz, Oldershaw, Coates, Dietrich, Sigley. Third row: Ziegler, Adler, Hvazda, Worth, Ar- none, Kapo, Zandel. Fourth row: Allen, Wolfe, Lichtenwalner, Featenby, Taylor, Swartz. Fijth row: Boettger, Polak, Staley, Hayes, Grason. American Institute of Electrical and Radio Engineers Firsl row: Gott, McClurg, Bayer, Storm, Gold, George, Roglieri, Treasurer: Sobyak, President: Azpurua. Second row: Casciani, Schwenker, Prestia, Past, Martin, Joecks, Kinard, Coffin, Gartside, Waldron. Wilson. Third row: Stidham, Hendricks, Marsh, Pcihoda, Felter, Clasing, Johnson, Walton, Lamar, Freeman, Gaiser. American Institute of Chemical Engineers American Institute of Industrial Engineers First Row: Moore, Dinkey, Daniel, Treasurer: Mountain, Secretary: McMurtrie, President: Clegg, Vice-President: Charles W. Brennan, Faculty Adviser: Bryan, Bowker. Second Row: McHugh, Anisko, Morris, Henningsen, Koch, von Bergen, Loper, Dube, Lipton, Black. Mf The engineering course society strives to keep its members abreast of the current advances in their field and to give them a better understanding of their place in industry upon graduation. During the meetings, the student can get an idea of the usefulness and applicability of the courses he is taking, and may also speak with his instructors in an informal atmosphere. The trend towards informality is carried even further by the social functions which the society sponsors, whether they be picnics or joint gatherings with other societies. All of the activities are pointed toward grad- uating well-rounded engineers, better fitted to take their place in their chosen profession. There are seven major engineering course societies: American Institute of Chemical Engineers, American Institute of Electrical Engineers and Institute of Radio Engineers, American Society of Civil Engineers, Ameri- can Institute of Industrial Engineers, American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Howard Eckfeldt Society, and Metallurgical Society. NWrWTTRJK AMTUJYXJL American Society of Mechanical Engineers Improvement has become the by-word of the Electrical Engi- neering Department as the installation of this Network Analyzer proves. First row: Robesch, Howe, Kuchler, Gotwalt, Leibensperger, Czeiner, Naylor. Second row: Gessner, Clark, Grandin, Vice-President; Swingle, President; Fisch, Montano, Bryson, Augustine. Tliird row: Ewing, Elengo, Marx, Giesey, Gleichmann, Spillman, Gazer, Leach. Fourth row: Walsh, Buchanan, Turner, King, Vogt, Ford, Pickslay, Parker, Jankowicz. 84 Howard Eckfeldt Society First row: Horak, Zimmer, Treasurer: Arthur W. Brune, Faculty Adviser; McCarthy, President; Eyer, Secretary: Hubbard, Knoebel. Second row: Washburn, Bischoff, Kent, Burrell, Neukirch, Walke. Third row: Warner, Eastland, Zakocs, Scattergood, Guidi, Hoffer. Metallurgical Society First row: Lawrence, Podgurski, Treasurer: Beattie, President: Brooks. Treasurer: Latanision, Horvath. Second row: Vaughn, Richardson, Campbell, Homsher, Oberholtzer. Third row: Ament, Long, Donaldson, Crawford, St. Clair, Perry. T GRADUATION; the beginning of a career . . , Ih8 CmSS of I959--- Icav ' m, with college beammg a fading memory From the forewarning arrival of carefully packed trunks to the hastily thrown-together departure as seniors, the life of a Lehigh man is filled with work and activity. In retrospect, the feelmgs of the day mingle with actual fact to present a panorama of devel- oping maturity. The worried freshman emerges as a confident senior, ready to take his place beside the many others who have passed through our halls. In the interim, a specialized, typically collegiate way of life develops which is both fun-filled and challeng- ing. To the fair citizens of Bethlehem, it must look rather strange to see dink-topped freshmen charging down the mountain. The almost blood-thirsty shrieks and cheers echoing up and down the Valley after a big game also must cause wonder among those not in the know. The girls in the area are glad to see that some 3,000 men live together on the South Side, and have Houseparties. The class was very kind to these girls, for it provided Duke Ellington and Dave Bru- beck at two successive formals. If the townsman would look carefully, he could see that the men of 1959 had zest and enthusiasm for more than social activities. The children entertained at Christmas each year, the contributions to community charities, and the support of a Hungarian student on campus speak for the high ideals of the seniors. Through active and spectator participation in school events, the men made the years very successful ones. And the Class of 1959 also honored its alma mater with record-breaking participation in the Class Gift Plan. Ajter the k;ci-off dinner of the Class Aie- inorial Gift Committee, workers pick cards for contacts during the sales period. 88 p.: -Ss i ,il   i Professor Brennan presents one of the many trophies received by seniors for leadership, excellence in scholarship, and extra- curricular activities. Never to be forgotten are Lehigh parties, and this is a scene that many graduating seniors uill return to on important football, wrestling, and alumni weekends. Following graduation, seniors, their parents, and guests spend a few moments at the flag- pole, the new alumni appearing reluctant to depart after four years on South Mountain. Lloyd Abrahams Brittain Adams Donald Adickes Harry Allen, Jr. Walter Allen Accounting English Industrial Engineering Electrical Engineering Chemical Engineering Woodmere, N. Y. Berwick, Pa. Ridgewood, N. J. Lancaster, Pa. Staten Island, N. Y. Albert Angulo Robert Anthony Jon Armstrong Philip Arnone Leonard Augustine General Business Psychology Arts Intl. Eng. Electrical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Bryn Mawr, Pa. Bethlehem, Pa. Pittsburgh, Pa. Trenton, N. J. New Market, N. J. (A e arrived, OV stroncf, in ept:eniver of I J J ; donned our dinUs Jan Balaz George Balbach Amis Balgalvis Ernest Barak Edward Barber Accounting Chemical Engineering Electrical Engineering Alarketing General Business Bethlehem, Pa. Arnionk, N. Y. Bethlehem, Pa. Havana, Cuba Mt. Vernon, N. Y 90 ' aul Bacak, Jr. Peter Bach Don Bachman Accouiiliiig Economics Electrical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. Maplewood, N. J. Williamsport, Pa. Russell Baer, Jr. Mecbitnical Engineering Baltimore, Md. Paul Baker Arts liid. Eng. Teancck, N. J. Stephen Bakonyi Mechanical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. cind toured the caynpits . . . William Bateman Donald Bauder Robert Bauder Daniel Baver William Beattie Mechanical Engineering Glenside, Pa. History Hellertown, Pa. Electrical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. General Business Maplewood, N. J. Metallurgical Engineering Philadelphia, Pa. ii s 91 Richard Beltson Accounting Bronxville, N. Y. Edward Bendrick Chemical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. William Banning Alechiiiiical Engineeri ng Williamsport, Pa. Melvyn Bergstein Management Nutley, N. J. Richard Bernard English Brooklyn, N. Y. .i iteopltutcs vc plciucd our traditional ,pHxf piaxf. James Blair David Blanchard Logan Blank Mechanical Engineering Chemistry Geology Reiffton, Pa. Cincinnati, Ohio Jeanette, Pa. John Boettger Paul Bogardus Roger Bohl ectrical Engineering Journalism Mechanical Engineering Scranton, Pa. Darien, Conn. Bethlehem, Pa. 92 John Berry Leonard Berry, Jr. Jean-Paul Bert Peter Bethke Robert Biggs Accounting General Business General Business Marketing Geology Bethlehem, Pa. Bronx ille, N. Y. Rahway, N. J. Briarcliff Manor, X. V. Millersville, Md le on JL arcixjette LxJeeUend . . . role on James Bonanno Carlton Bowker John Boyer Robert Brainerd Denis Brenan General Business Industrial Engineering Mechanical Engineering Engineering Physics Government Tenafly, N. J. Homer, N. Y. Allentown, Pa. Newtown, Pa. Freeland, Pa. KkJT Reynold Brenna Arthur Brooks Richard Brown Joseph Bruno Robert Bruns Metallurgical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Chemical Engineering Electrical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Trenton, N. J. Beechwood Vill, Ohio Pottstown, Pa. Reading, Pa. Brooklyn, N. Y. 93 Robert Bryan Robert Bryson David Buchanan John Burden, III Joel Burdick Ittd. Eng. Bus. Ad. Mechanical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Marketing Goi ' ernmenI Odessa, Fla. Hopwood, Pa. Wexford, Pa. Colonia, N. J. West Hartford, Conn i Uttk Charles Burger Edward Cali John Canova George Castles Donald Cazer Marketing General Business Accounting Accounting Mechanical Engineering Cleveland, Ohio Bangor, Pa. Glen Rock, N. J. Stewart Manor, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. ' J-JiJi oitscpariu cayne arouyid ana we learned svnat a William Comerford Anthony Cook John Cooper Joseph Corcoran, Jr. Charles Corns Mathematics Accounting Electrical Engineering Management Foreign Careers Bayside, N. Y. Mahanoy City, Pa. Packanack Lake, N. J. Bronx, N. Y. Rocky River, Ofiio dk.dM 94 I Gustave Chew, Jr. Accounting Linwood, Pa. Maurice Christatos Fhiiince New York, N. Y. Thomas Clark, Jr. Mechanical Engineering Pittsburgh, Pa. i i Lee Clegg, Jr. Industrial Engineering Cleveland, Ohio Raymond Coates Electrical Engineering Wenonah, N. J. Richard Coffin Chemical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. colleae weeUend was I the . . . Barry Corson Industrial Engineering New York, N. Y. Cyrus Cowen Accounting Brooklyn, N. Y. Charles Culver Citil Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. ira HllH H ki William Cummings, Jr. Management Winnetka, 111. Richard Currey Finance Summit, N. J. 95 Robert DalPozzol Bacteriology Torrington, Conn. William Daniels Physics Bristol, Pa. Joseph Danner Chemistry Northampton, Pa. Lawrence Dash Engineering Physics Saint Clair, Pa. George Davenport English Roslyn Heights, N. Y. 4J Itat sprincj semester ntanvj of its David Dimmick Industrial Engineering Havertown, Pa. James Dinkey Industrial Engineering Pittsburgh, Pa. Robert Domingue Mechanical Engineering Andover, Mass. Brooks Dorn Paul Dosik Gerard Downey Economics Electrical Engineering General Business Washington, N. Y. Woodside, N. Y. Woodside, N. Y. 96 Richard Davis Engineering Physics Pittsburgh, Pa. Robert Delay Carmine D ' Elia Philip Desch Terry Dietrich General Business Electrical Engineering Chemical Engineering Electrical Engineering Garden Cit , N. Y. Bayshore, N. Y. AUentown, Pa. Hamburg, Pa. loine d traternities . Robert Draper Marketing Havenown, Pa. Walter Drapinski Accounting Camden, N. J. John Driscoll Engineering Physics Ithaca, N. Y. Stephen Dube Industrial Engineering Brooklyn, N. Y. Walter Dunsby, Jr. Economics Wyckoff, N. J. JrMjm JM James Early, Jr. Metallurgical Engineering Washington, D. C. Frederick Eckel Mechanical Engineering Clarks Summit, Pa. John Elengo, Jr. Mechanical Engineering Hamden, Conn. 97 Harold Elliott Elmer Ellis Marketing Seaford, N. Y. Finance Tunkhannock, Pa Albert Engstrom Robert Epifano Peter Eshbaugh Michael Esposito Stephen Estroff Marketing Chemical Engineering Finance Mechanical Engineering Government Montclair, N. J. West Long Branch, N. J. Montclair, N. J. Scranton, Pa. Mt. Vernon, N. Y John Evans, Jr. Cecil Ewing Jon Farber Frederick Feus Benedict FiDucia Mechanical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Physics Marketing Government Scranton, Pa. Elkton, Md. Brooklyn, N. Y. Tenafly, N. J. Manhasset, N. Y. J ne tnrills or a wrestling niatcnf a great JL enian tradition Donald Foster Economics Brooklyn, N. Y. Wyman Fowler, Jr. Engineering Physics Honcsdale, Pa. Wayne Freese General Option Philadelphia, Pa. Leon Friedman Biology West Orange, N. J. George Fryer Civil Engineering Oneida, N. Y. 98 Jack Fisch Mechanical Engi eeiiiii; York, Pa. Gordon Fisher Metallurgical Engineering Baltimore, Md. Chandler Ford, Jr. Accounting Philadelphia, Pa. John Ford Gerald Fornwald Darwin Foster Mechanical Engineering Civil Engineering Accounting Chatham, N. J. Reading, Pa. Buffalo, N. Y. soon were enjoxied bu all Armin Fuchs Joseph Gaffney Charles Gaiser Girard Gallup William Gamble Industrial Engineering Elec. Eng. Eng. Phy. Chemical Engineering Industrial Engineering Marketing Milltown, N. J. Lyndhurst, N. J. Bethpage, N. Y. Newburgh, N. Y. Syracuse, N. Y. 99 ■Mdi M Robert Gardner Anthony Garro Stephen Gartside William Gates, III Edwin Geils Economics Psychology Chemical Engineering Industrial Engineering Accounting Summit, N. J. New Britain, Conn. South Orange, N. J. Waynesboro, Va. Jersey City, N. J y itr sopnomore uear saw most or its Oliver Gill, III Education Essex Fells, N. J. Francis Giordano Physics Brooklyn, N. Y. Milton Glover, Jr. Electrical Engineering Maplewood, N. J. Melvin Glucksman Accounting Maplewood, N. J. 100 David Goddard Industrial Engineering Dallas, Pa. Steven Gold Chemical Engineering Newark, N. J. Richard Gentzlinger James George Frederick Gessner Arnold Ghegan, Jr. Paul Giesey Physics Chemistry Mechanical Engineering Industrial Engineering Mechanical Engineering Schuylkill Haven, Pa. Allentown, Pa. Union, N. J. Merrick, N. Y. York, Pa. decidiyiq what course o stttdx ' cV Lawrence Goldstein Marsh Goldstein James Gorman George Gotwalt Howard Grace Accounting History Electrical Engineering Mech. Eng. Elec. Eng. Chemical Engineering, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Pittsburgh, Pa. Altoona, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. Secane, Pa. Frederic Graham, Jr. Marketing Philadelphia, Pa. Paul Gralnick Engineering Physics Philadelphia, Pa. Douglas Grandin Mechanical Engineering Fairfield, Conn. Richard Granger Chemical Engineering Union, N. J. Thomas Grebenar Chemical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. 101 Emanuel Green Ronald Grierson Thomas Griggs Peter Griswold Abram Groff, Jr. ectrical Engineering Accounting Industrial Engineering Genertil Business Marketing Verona, N. J. Teaneck, N. J. Waterbury, Conn. Palmer, Mass. Lancaster, Pa. William Gustafson Evan Hagenbuch, Jr. Jeffrey Hahn Edward Hamer Leon Harbold 1 Metallurgical Engineering Chemical Engineering Chemistry Mechanical Engineering Marketing Lynbrook, N. Y. Sunbury, Pa. Johnstown, Pa. Wallaceton, Pa. Pottstown, Pa. we vv woit a follow for tne remaining ucctrs of our collccjc stciu Peter Havel Business New York, N. Y. George Hawkins General Business Glen Cove, N. Y. Wayne Heath Physics Haddonfield, N. J. Richard Heckler Accounting Hazleton, Pa. Milton Hendricks Chemical Engineering Shamokin, Pa. 102 John Harding John Harmon Rupert Harris, Jr. Accounting Mathematics Chemical Engineering Fall River, Mass. Trenton, N. J. Elmhurst, Pa. Donald Harrison Nelson Hartranft Samuel Hartung Civil Engineering Springfield, N. J. Finance Hatfield, Pa. Finance Maplewood, N. J. E F K T n the aJL enicfh K- ampits . . . ' 3 Joseph Henningsen Industrial Engineering Port Jefferson, N. Y. Herbert Henze George Hiddemen, III Paul Hirsch Mechanical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Industrial Engineering Philadelphia, Pa. Pottstown, Pa. New York, N. Y. Adolf Hofmann, Jr. Marketing Hawthorne, N. Y. 103 William Hollabaugh Elec. Eng. Eng. Phy. Bethlehem, Pa. Frederick Homsher Metallurgical Engineering Wyomissing Hills, Pa. William Horn General Business AUentown, Pa. Paul Horvath, Jr. Metallurgical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. Robert Howe Mechanical Engineering East Greenwich, R. I. J ne constant drone or nammers and kichard Husser Charles Hutchinson Melvyn Hvazda Finance Government Electrical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. Trenton, N. J. Northampton, Pa. Otto Immel Charles Interrante John Ix Philosophy Metallurgical Engineering Marketing Morrisville, Pa. Norristown, Pa. Butler, Pa. 104 jAMi Sheldon Hubbard Robert Hughes George Hulse Richard Hunt Dean Hunter Engineering Mechanics English Marketing Management Industrial Engineering Freeport, N. Y. Tamaqua, Pa. Seaside Park, N. J. White Plains, N. Y. Bethlehem, Pa. wot-limen was Ueara tnat uear John Jacobi, Jr. Robert Jacobs Robert Jankowicz George Jennings Frederick Jillson Marketing Engmeering Mechanics Mechanical Engineering Marketing Classical Languages Bethlehem, Pa. Spindale, N. C. Trenton, N. J. Ridgewood, N. J. Syracuse, N. Y. Albert Joecks Carl Johnson Morgan Jones, III Harvey Jorgenson Ambrose Jowanna Chemical Engineering Chemical Engineering Marketing Civil Engineering Mechanical Engineering Haworth, N. J. Allentown, Pa. Maple Glen, Pa. Newton, N. J. Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 105 Robert Kalmey George Kapo George Karr, Jr. Willard Kauffman John Kell, Jr. English Chemical Engineering General Business Engineering Physics Accounting Ardmore, Pa. Mahanoy City, Pa. Flourtown, Pa. Allcntown, Pa. Wayne, Pa. Thomas Kelly, Jr. History Scarsdale, N. V. Glenn Kinard Chemical Engineering Red Lion, Pa. Paul King, III General Business Mountain Lakes, N. J. David Kingslake Education Rochester, N. Y. Jerold Klevit Chemistry Philadelphia, Pa. as vvc saw tne completion of yVic .. lintic- Viarsnall yioitsi Joseph Kroculick Industrial Engineering Jim Thorpe, Pa. Theodore Kuchler Mechanical Engineering Ruxton, Pa. Gerard Kuebler Engineering Physics Allentown, Pa. Michael Kuenne Marketing Jersey City, N. J. Stephen Kuhn Industrial Engineering Philadelphia, Pa. 106 William Klink David Knapp Edward Kotcher, Jr Finance Mechanical Engineering Chemical Engineering Merion, Pa. Baltimore, Md. Northampton, Pa. James Kowalick Chemical Engineering Philadelphia, Pa. Hilary Kozlowski Mechanical Engineering Tunkhannock, Pa. Frederick Krehbiel Industrial Engineering Elizabeth, N. j. an a tne j- ni a Itoits Gerald Kurtz Donald Kutz Wayne Lambertson John Lampe Nicholas La Para Electrical Engineering Chemistry Business Industrial Engineering Chemistry Nazareth, Pa. Hellertown, Pa. South Amboy, N. J. Glen Rock, N. J. Belleville, N. J. 107 k i Robert Laslo Myron Latanision Ronald Lauretti Lawrence LaVista Richard Lawrence Chemical Engineering Metallurgical Engineering Finance Industrial Engineering Metallurgical Engineering Clarks Green, Pa. Richmondale, Pa. Carlisle, Pa. Hawthorne, N. J. Perry, N. Y. J nc jail or our In tnior uectf saw one o f Byron Lichtenwalner Electrical Engineering Trexlertown, Pa. Fredric Lipton Ind. Eng. Bus. Ad. Jersey City, N. J. Richard Lohmeyer General Business Morristown, N. J. Charles Long Henry Long, Jr. Gilbert Loper Metallurgical Engineering Management Ind. Eng. Bus. Ad York, Pa. Lancaster, Pa. Port Jefferson, N. Y. 108 Gordon Leach Mechanical Engineering Verona, N. Y. Donald Lerche Mathematics Albany, N. Y. George Lewis Industrial Engineering Akron, Ohio Peter Lewis Electrical Engineering Trenton, N. J. Raymond Lewis, Jr. Finance Buffalo, N. Y. •sL ehicjn s most sitccessfttl James Loss Marc Lowenstein Joseph Lucarelli George Lummis Richard Lyncheski Government Fine Arts Finance Industrial Engineering Chemical Engineering Cleveland, Ohio ■Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Sea Girt, N. J. Haddonfield, N. J. Throop, Pa. dht £ George MacBride Tucker Machette John MacMurray John MacWilliams Martin Maloney Chemistry Marketing Finance Industrial Engineering Marketing Toms River, N. J. Stamford, Conn. Wynnewood, Pa. Abington, Pa. Sparta, N. J. 109 Joseph Mancari Biology Weehawken, N. J. Warren Marsh, Jr. Chemical Engineering Point Pleasant, Pa. Robert Martin Chemical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. Samuel Martin Chemical Engineering Pompton Lakes, N. J. Jon Marx j Mechanical Engineering Hatfield, Pa. Curtis Maynard Accounting Bethlehem, Pa. Frank McCarthy Engineering Mechanics Old Greenwich, Conn. Charles McClurg, Jr. Chemical Engineering Yardley, Pa. William McCurdy, Jr. Metallurgical Engineering Lancaster, Pa. John McHugh Industrial Engineering Scranton, Pa. Tootbctll teams in recent uectrs win the coveted .JL antbeyt y - itp Alfred Michon David Miesegaes Albert Miller Lewis Miller David Mitchell Economics Finance Mechanical Engineering Chemistry Mechanical Engineering Summit, N. J. Rutherford, N. J. Allentown, Pa. Allentown, Pa. Butler, Pa. 110 John McMurtrie Industrial Engineering Milton, Pa. William Meglaughlin Accounting Westfield, N. J. JM dm William Memolo Citil Engineering Scranton, Pa. Eugene Mercy, Jr. Douglas Merill LeRo) Meseke Accounting Chemical Engineering General Business West Orange, N. J. Plainfield, N. J. Baltimore, Md. suynoolic of g[fi sitpremacu . . . Andrew Montano, Jr. Joseph Montville Alfred Moore Darrell Morrow, Jr. Silas Morse, IV Mechanical Engineering International Relations Industrial Engineering Physics Metallurgical Engineering Hawthorne, N. J. Paterson, N. J. Huntington, N. Y. Altoona, Pa. Akron, Ohio til Roy Moulton Charles Murphy Charles Nathan Thomas Naylor David Nevil General Business Management Mechanical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Accounting Larchmont, N. Y. Stony Brook, N. Y. N. Merrick, N. Y. Baltimore, Md. Stroudsburg, Pa. . sell-out crowd tnat t prinq attended ' prina Lee Oldershaw Robert Olson John Onnembo Electrical Engineering Marketing General Business Moorestown, N. J. Passaic, N. J. Kearny, N. J. Fred Past Richard Patterson James Patton Chemical Engineering Engineering Physics Marketing Coral Gables, Fla. Hanover, Pa. Red Bank, N. J. 112 Joel Newman Edwin Nickey John Nilsson Robert Noll James Oberholtzer History Accounting Electrical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Metallurgical Engineering Monsey, N. Y. Hanover, Pa. Monnille, N. J. Fuilerton, Pa. Reading, Pa. me first K jloiiseparlu fttn (yu our class . . William Pcihoda John Pearson, Jr. Lachlan Peeke Brent Pendleton Roger Penske Chemical Engineering Metallurgical Engineering Ciiil Engineering Marketing Marketing Bethlehem, Pa. Harrisburg, Pa. Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y. Br n Ath n, Pa. Shaker Heights, Ohio Stephen Pepper Howard Perlmutter William Pickslay, III John Pieski Rudolph Polak Ingineering Physics Chemistry Mechanical Engineering Government Electrical Engineering Margate, N. J. Brooklyn, N. Y. Los Altos, Cal. Dickson City, Pa. Allentown, Pa. 113 Michael Politician Civil Engineering Catasauqua, Pa. Gene Pope Industrial Engineering Louisville, Ky. Samuel Popky Management Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Charles Preller, Jr. Accounting Valley Stream, N. Y. Paul Prestia Chemical Engineering Connellsville, Pa. Robert Proday International Relations Allentown, Pa. Gregory Purdy Engineering Mechanics Hingham, Mass. Charles Rahe, II Elec. Eng. Eng. Phy. Emmaus, Pa. Reuben Rawls, Jr. Industrial Engineering Doylestown, Pa. George Rebhan, Jr. Accounting East Orange, N. J. jf ' eatuying J-uuhe (Ellington and nis T and, it was D. Allen Rickert Marketing Souderton, Pa. David Riedel Industrial Management Ridgewood, N. J. John Rieke International Relations Packanack Lake, N. J. Edward Rinalducci Psychology Portsmouth, N. H. Richard Ringer Mechanical Engineering Slatington, Pa. 114 Joel Redler Joseph Reed Neil Reichard Accounting Accounting General Business Cedarhurst, N. Y. Fairfield, Conn. AUentown, Pa. Paul Reimer, Jr. Civil Engineering Fullerton, Pa. Walter Reller Industriitl Engineering Ambler, Pa. Wilbert Richardson Metallurgical Engineering Almonesson, N. J. the highlight of the wear . . . Darwin Rizzetto Donald Robesch Robert Robyns Michael Rockman William Rodgers lectrical Engineering AUentown, Pa. Mechanical Engineering Bethpage, Pa. Government Union, N. J. Accounting Great Neck, N. Y. Marketing Plainlield, N. J. 115 aj a James Rohrbach Stephen Rohrer Anthony Rohrs Theodore Rojahn James Rooney, Jr Marketing Accounting General Business Engineering Physics Accounting Bethlehem, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. Westfield, N. J. York, Pa. Nichols, Conn. ob-niintinqf Cfrcidttate scnoolsy and John St. Clair Richard Santoro Francis Schaefifer Metallurgical Engineering Accounting Management Pittsburgh, Pa. Bethlehem, Pa. Easton, Pa. iSMJfM lartin Schaffer Stephen Schaffer Gilbert Schantz Education Accounting Marketing AUentown, Pa. Stamford, Conn. Chatham, N. J. 116 ichard Rosenberg Myron Rosner Frank Rudes Max Rush George Russell History Marketing Civil Engineering Accounting History Florida, N. Y. Teaneck, N. J. Lynbrook, N. Y. Washington, N. J. Union, N. J. yytilitayu service occupied Carl Schier, III Government Baltimore, Md. Alan Schmidt Mechanical Engineering Rumson, N. J. Joseph Schmidt, Jr. Mechanical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. Allan Schneck Citil Engineering Allentown, Pa. Allan Schneider Elec. Eng. Eng. fhys. Union, N. J. Paul Schock Sterling Schoonover Robert Schrader Hugo Schwandt Robert Schwartz Marketing Civil Engineering General Business Engineering Physics Government hiladelphia. Pa. East Stroudsburg, Pa. Bethlehem, Pa. Coatesville, Pa. Port Chester, N. Y. 117 Donald Seagreaves David Seifert Louis Seitler Robert Shabaker Kenneth Shaner Accounting Geophysics Business Chemical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Allentown, Pa. Bethlehem, Pa. Mount Vernon, N. Y. Media, Pa. Pottstown, Pa. Jesse Shaw, Jr. Frank Shea William Sheppard, Jr. Robert Sherman Richard Sigley, Jr. Mechanical Engineering General Business International Relations Business Electrical Engineering Haddonfield, N. J. Summit, N. J. New Rochelle, N. Y. Hazleton, Pa. Bethlehem, Pa. much of oitr thoughts dttrincj the cireater part of Walter Smith William Smith Wilmer Smith Chemical Engineering Metallurgical Engineering Mechanical Engineering South River, N. J. Pittsburgh, Pa. Hatfield, Pa. Colin Snyder Mechanical Engineering Allentown, Pa. Francis Sobyak Chemical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. M yii yi 118 Mark Silverman Mitrieliag Great Neck, N. Y. Edward Singer Engineering Physics Englewood Cliffs, N. J. dhdm Mitchell Sisle Electrical Engineering AUentown, Pa. Edward Slater Education Great Neck, N. Y. Ralph Singer Biology Hillside, N. J. John Smile) Mathematics and ME Fairless Hills, Pa. MEfr our senior uear . r Thomas Sorokas Chemical Engineering Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Anthonv Sousa Citil Engineering West Catasauqua, Pa. Richard Spillman Mechanical Engineering Viayne, Pa. Richard Staley Elec. Eng. Eng. Phy. York, Pa. dm Thomas Standeven Marketing East Aurora, N. Y. 119 John Stanley Marketing Glen Rock, N. J. Clark Steinman Marketing Pittsburgh, Pa. Charles Stitt William Stolnacker Howard Stoney, Jr. Metallurgical Engineering Metallurgical . Engineering Marketing Glenshaw, Pa. Media, Pa. Chagrin Falls, Ohio itne 15 ntarhed the ctthnhiation of our efforts David Swaim Educat ion Glen Rock, N. J. Richard Sweet Citil Engineering Brooklyn, N. Y. James Swenson Accounting Wood Acres, Md. Robert Swingle Mechanical Engineering Scranton, Pa. Donald Talhelm Electrical Engineering Williamstown, Pa. John Tamulis Mechanical Engineering Edwardsville, Pa. 120 Kent Straat John Strieker Stephen Strickman Bernard Sultan Andris Suna Psychology Mechanical Engineering Industrial Engineering Civil Engineering Engineering Physics Norwalk, Conn. Ramsey, N. J. Hicksville, N. Y. Bronxville, N. Y. Broomall, Pa. as we yytounte J tL Jerard Tanner English Mt. Kisco, N. Y. Carl Terpack Electrical Engineering Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Robert Teufel, Jr. Journalism Allentown, Pa. Lwin Thein Electrical Engineering Rangoon, Burma Peter Thomas Mechanical Engineering Allentown, Pa. Richard Topping Lawrence Totton Douglas Trotter, Jr. Ray Turner Stephen Ulincy History International Relations Government Mechanical Engineering Finance Easton, Pa. Greenville, N. J. Allentown, Pa. Forty Fort, Pa. Bethlehem, Pa. 121 Paul Umbach Albert Van Mourick Joseph Varilla Ronald Vaughn William Vetovitz Elec. Eiig. E ig. Phy. Chemical Engineering Jo nnalism Metallurgical Engineering Finance Johnstown, Pa. Stony Point, N. Y. Frecland, Pa. North Hills, Pa. Nazareth, Pa. Charles Vogt David Waldron William Walker Donald Walsh Arthur Waltking Mechanical Engineering Chemical Engineering Electrical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Chemistry Freepon, N. Y. Rutherford, N. J. Philadelphia, Pa. Maywood, N. J. Queens Village, N. Y plcttforyyi in K race .Jlall to receive our diplomas jt rom David Webb Donald Weber James Weisberg Peter Weisberg Karl Weiss, Jr. iustrial Engineering Accounting Accounting Marketing International Relations Montauk, N. Y. Kingston, Pa. Lawrence, N. Y. South Orange, N. J. Arlington, Mass. r nPfP Charles Walton, Jr. Ciiil Engineering Moorestown, N. J. Stephen Walton, Jr. Chemical Engineering Eriton, N. J. Robert Wardell Marketing Blasdell, N. Y. 1 n g IT i I Vrthur Warden, Jr. William Washburn Don Weaver Accounting Geophysics Metallurgical Engineering South Orange, N. J. Pittsburgh, Pa. DuBois, Pa. tfie j ycsident or tlte LA niversUxj . . . Roger Weiss Atwood Welker Joseph Wenzel Allan Werft William Werner dustrial Engineering Civil Engineering Marketing Mechanical Engineering Electrical Engineering Springfield, N. J. Shamokin, Pa. Vonkers, N. Y. Uniontown, Pa. Forty Fort, Pa. 123 dM j John Wetterau Industrial Engineering Mountain Lakes, N. J. Walter Whitefield, Jr. Accounting Orange, New Jersey Edwin Wilkinson Industrial Engineering Willow Grove, Pa. David Williams Chemical Engineering Williamsport, Pa. Edward Williams Engineering Physics Hasbrouck Heights, N. J. AJe leave, nopina ifictt we shall v e able to return, William Wolfe Elec. Eng. Eng. Phy. Washington, N. J. Frederick Wolfert Management Warren, Ohio Jay Wolkowisky i Mechanical Engineering Jersey City, N. J. Paul Worth Electrical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. Clarence Wright Elec. Eng. Eng. Phy. Yardlev, Pa. Frank Yandrasits English Nazareth, Pa. 124 iMmki Donald Wilson Robert Winans David Wismer, Jr. Robert Woerhide John Woerner Chemical Engineering Civil Engineering Rock Island, 111. Shickshinny, Pa. Mechanical Engineering Phillipsburg, N. J. Finance Mount Carniel, Conn. Mechanical Engineering Saddle Brook, N. J. a cfcait to ottr LA,yiiversit i William Yandrasitz Robert Yates Ernest Young Robert Zeigler Norman Zelenko Accounting Management Stiles, Pa. Maywood, N. J. English Nanticoke, Pa. Mechanical Engineering Pottstown, Pa. Sociology and Education Forest Hills, N. Y. jf iTfcibiSii Robert Zenorini Marketing Palisade, N. J. Roger Zerweck Marketing Summit, N. J. Ronald Ziegler Electrical Engineering AUentown, Pa. 125 Peter Zimmer Engineering Mechanics Union, N. J. Arthur Zinck, Jr. Metallurgical Engineering Wayne, N. J. F ACTIVITIES; an integral part of student life . . . Student Government . . . encouraging active citizenship Student government is the most important non- academic student activity at Lehigh. It not only over- sees all other extracurricular activities, but it also has a voice in almost all of the other facets of University life which affect the undergraduate. Student govern- ment is accomplished through Arcadia, the officers and cabinets of the four undergraduate classes. Inter- fraternity Council, Residence Halls Council, and Town Council. Arcadia is the supreme student governing body at Lehigh. The council consists of fifteen members, seven of whom are elected directly by the student body, and eight appointed by the major student activities — re- ligion, music, drama and debating, publications, RHC, Town Council, IFC, and the honoraries. Last year ' s Arcadia was the first to be selected by this new system, and it was generally agreed that the new method achieved a more complete and a more diverse repre- sentation of the student body. The twelfth Arcadia was a hard-working council which not only compiled an impressive list of specific Balloting for candidates for Arcadia is accomplished at polls such as this operated by Alpha Phi Omega. PRESTON PARR Associate Dean of Students DOROTHY D. MORAVEC Director of Housing achievements, but also won the confidence and respect of the faculty and administration. Arcadia was repeat- edly consulted on important administrative decisions, and practically all of the solons ' suggestions were accepted. The new freshman and sophomore driving regulations, for example, were submitted to Arcadia before they were approved by the administration. The Arcadians made several suggestions which were adopted by the administrators, and the revised code went into effect last Fall. Arcadia ' s main responsibility is to represent the best interests of the student. The twelfth Arcadia accom- plished this in two main ways: first, by organizing student opinion and presenting it to the administration; and second, by representing the Lehigh man to other colleges and groups throughout the country. President Larry Wright had the tremendous responsibility of being the only single representative of the entire Lehigh student body. Arcadia ' s voicing of student opinion was clearly evident in the recent vacation schedule discontentment. The student body was very dissatisfied with this year ' s schedule, and through Arcadia ' s protestation, the ad- ministration agreed to restore the mid-semester and Thanksgiving vacations next year. Arcadians pressed for a solution of the parking problem, and new campus parking facilities have partially alleviated the trouble- 130 131 some situation. Other specific improvements include a new bulletin board outside the University Center, a railing in the snack bar, and a reorganization of the concessions system. In order to give students an ample opportunity to explore the possibilities of travel abroad, Arcadia established a travel room in the Center. On the lighter side, many students felt that spirit at pep rallies and games would be greatly improved if our cheer leading squad were augmented by a few members of the opposite sex. Arcadia went right to work and organized a squad of enthusiastic Cedar Crest girls, only to be disappointed when the Athletic Depart- ment threw cold water on the plan. Arcadia immedi- ately appropriated $250 for new cheerleading uniforms, taking consolation in the fact that even if Lehigh won ' t have beautiful girls leading cheers, it will at least have well-dressed boys! The twelfth Arcadia also successfully represented Lehigh throughout the country. Delegates were sent to the Campus Chest Conference, to a collegiate travel discussion, and to several student government confer- ences. Probably Arcadia ' s greatest achievement this year was the establishment of the Lehigh Valley Stu- dent Government Association. Leading the way towards a strong liaison among local colleges, Arcadia organ- ized the group last November. The executive commit- tees of the governing bodies of the five local schools, Moravian, Muhlenberg, Cedar Crest, Lafayette, and Lehigh, met to exchange ideas and to discuss problems common to all of the colleges. In 1950, Arcadia organized a subordinate body known as Arcadia Associates. This organization, com- posed of students interested in working for student government, performs the two-fold task of training future student leaders and of accomplishing many minor tasks which formerly commanded much of Ar- cadia ' s time. One of Arcadia ' s important delegated duties is that of appointing student representatives to the student- faculty committees. Serving on such committees as Stu- dent Concerts-Lectures, Discipline, Student Activities, Student Life, and University Center, undergraduates have the opportunity of making suggestions that may affect important University policies. Largely through the work of this year ' s Arcadia, student government was able to raise itself to a posi- tion of greatest prominence on campus. A large num- ber of candidates for the thirteenth Arcadia and a much higher vote, gives encouragement that student govern- ment has finally won the all-important student interest and will continue to grow at Lehigh. OFFICERS Fitii row: Wright, President: Myers, Vice-Presideul. Second row. Daniel, Treasurer: Draper, Secretary. Discipline Committee First row: J. Donald Ryan, J. Douglas Leith. Second Row: John M. Haight, Jr., McMurtrie. Arcadia Firs row: Jennings, Daniel, Treasurer; Lawrence Whitcomb, Faculty Adviser: Wright, President; Draper, Secretary: McNally, Penske. Second row: Prestia, Topping, Saari, Meier, Pendleton, Bran- ning, Weisberg. Arcadia Associates First row: Shulman, Kurtossy, Vice-President : Moore, President: Painter, Secretary-Treasurer : Paternoster. Second row: Neidell, Parker, Croteau, Rogers. Third raw: Richmond, Gaiser. 133 Student Concerts-Lectures Committee First rou : Charles J. Moravec, Robert B. Cutler, Docker. Lipton. Second row: Brainerd, Haigh, Gartside, McGarry, Heiss. Board of Publications Seated: Charles J. Moravec, Preston Parr, Chairman: Joseph B. McFadden, Secretary: Robert S. Taylor. Standing: Schier, Weisberg, Harmon, Bernard. 134 Student Activities Committee First row: H. Barrett Davis. Preston Parr, Chair- man: D. W. Johnson. Second rou : Daniel, Prestia. Student Life Committee Fir it row: George P. Conard, Joseph F. Libsch, Gilhoul. Second row: Clarence B. Campbell, Russell, Mitchell, Joseph B. McFadden, Preston Parr, Cassius W. Curtis, Rev. Raymond E. Fuessle. University Center Advisory Committee First row: Early, Preston Parr, Diffenbach. Sec- ond row: Wright, Mitchell. Class of 1962 Brandishing hula hoops, pin-up pictures, and assorted other goodies, the 706 members of the Class of 1962 arrived on campus a week later than many of their pre- decessors. As usual, they represented a wide range of states and schools. Since they ranged from 5 feet 3 inches to 6 feet 8 inches and from 100 to 250 pounds, it was hard to describe a typical freshman. But the Admission Office, which rejects the use of IBM ma- chines in choosing the members of the incoming class and relies instead on experience and intuition, again chose what appeared to be an outstanding group. To use the freshman terminology, the class is iirmly en- trenched between the ranks of the squirrels or yoyos and the animals . There were several innovations in the wealth of planned activities that greeted the new-comers. Orien- tation was changed to delete Activities Night, but to make use of the University Center; it included a series of feature movies and football films. During Freshman Week, the Gryphon Society was busy creating a new code for the yearlings, which went into effect after approval by the Dean of Students. Basically, representa- tion on the disciplinary board was changed to give the freshmen a voting member. Also, committees were organized in each section for the maintenance of some order in the active dorms. The committees carried weight since they had authority to dispense punishment. In legislative activities, the freshmen took the atti- tude of big business. The Executive Committee, with the inclusion of town members, became more repre- sentative of the entire class. Meeting regularly, the group was able to dispel many of the problems facing the class, including financial disagreements with RHC. Early morning breakfast music was provided by dink- less frosh with arrangements handled by Cyanide. It did the Lehigh spirit good to hear rousing school songs penetrating the pre-dawn mists. Spirit was the keynote of the social year, too. It erupted in the Lafayette Weekend festivities several weeks before the big day. LIsually unsuccessful raids on the sister organization did not kill the spirit. The pep rally skits, while lacking the ribald humor of previous years, showed ingenuity and a creativeness typical of the class. The bonfire and crusade in eve- ning garb were highly successful despite the usual profusion of raw eggs from on-lookers. The Lafayette bonfire blazes to the required sixty -two feet, a tribute to the constructive and protective efforts of the industrious freshman class. OFFICERS Seated: Ernst, President: Gratto, Vice-President. Standing: Roth, Secretary; Krupnick, Treasurer. CABINET First Tou : Gerrity, Gregor, Home, Gratto, Straub, Stewart, Schaub. Second row: Gilhool, Hughes, Shubin, Wagner, Ernst, Hals, Gelbard, Swartz. Third row: Wade, Rice, Burns, Krupniclc, Beacham, Hawkins, Ross, Lewis. Fourth row: Brubaker, Pepperman, Roth, Lytle, Poole, Gott, Thomas, Ehlers, Dyke. Lehigh freshmen lean into the rope as they defeat the Lafayette frosh in the annual tug-of-uar held this year at the upper-feld. 137 Class of 1961 Showing unusual spirit and preparation, the Class of 1961 began to lay the ground plan for this year ' s activities during last Spring semester. Upon return to campus, they began work immediately on the Dink Hop, which was held at the end of the first week of classes. As usual the welcoming function for the freshmen was a resounding success. For those dates who arrived early enough, there was the slightly rain- drenched excitement of the first home football game. The frosh then snowed the fair damsels from Harcum, Centenary, Cedar Crest, and St. Luke ' s School of Nursing with an outstanding meal planned by the Sophomore Cabinet, and served in the impressive Asa Packer Room. The evening was climaxed with the dance which featured the smooth sounds of Matt Gillespie and orchestra. All in all, the Dink Hop was a profit- able event for the freshmen, who initiated their social life by making a few of those all-important contacts , and for the sophomore class, which enjoyed a financial success. Coming with a wintry gust and an abundance of good-looking girls was the major sophomore social event of the year — Snowball Weekend. It provided the only big outlet between Houseparty and IFC Weekend. For early arriving dates on Friday night and again preceding the dance on Saturday night, Mustard and Cheese players presented the absorbing drama Time Limit . The effect was perfect in helping to create the cosmopolitan atmosphere of the weekend. Fresh from their triumph at the Ivy Jazz Band Ball in New York at Thanksgiving, Lehigh ' s famed Christmas City Six held the cushioned audience spellbound for an excit- ing three-hour jazz concert. The smart and sassy vocal blendings of the Cliff Clefs also rocked the jazz enthu- siasts. In the evening, men and their dates swayed to the music of Walt Simpson and his orchestra at the big Snowball. The weekend ended in the Gothic splen- dor of Packer Chapel with the Sunday Christmas Ves- pers. Dates departed full of praise for the Music Department, the Class of 1961, and the University. During the remainder of the year, the Cabinet tried to get the elusive Lehigh blazers which were a best- seller even before their appearance on campus. With a financially successful year drawing to a close, the Sophomores took time to enjoy each other ' s company at a banquet in the Spring. The industriousness of the sophomore class is exhibited by the racks of blazers ivaiting to be picked up by the buyers. OFFICERS Stilted: Rogers, Vice-President : Davidson, President: Standing: Hodge, Treasurer : Charles A. Hale, Facitlty Adviser; Martins, Secretary. First row: Richmond, Mezey, Neumann, Hart, Koehl, Danenhower, Bates, Colonna, Williams. Second row: Snyder, Paternoster, Ciaravino, Martins, Rogers, Davidson, Hodge, Goldenkoff, Harrison. CABINET Third row: Smith, D., Parker, Smith, K., Wrathall, Talucci, Hahn, Rust, Kramer, Shulman, Mummert, Livdahl. Fourth row: Danner, Carnell, Manacher, Bryant, Benedict, Brodsky, Haines, Bauknight, Wright, Swartz, Drury. A special committee of the Class of ' 61 has a meeting to decide on a Fall outing for their junior year. 139 Class of I960 Unity and good times were the keynotes of this year for the Class of I960. As soon as they reached campus in September, the spirited group moved ahead with plans for their full calendar of activities. The class picnic in the early Fall was probably the most success- ful of its kind held at Lehigh. Clams and liquid refresh- ment in great abundance set the pace for an all-around good time for everyone. So popular was the clambake that other groups immediately borrowed the idea, thus starting a kind of highly enjoyable campus tradition. Throughout the first semester, the juniors helped encourage the growing school spirit on campus with active participation in pep rallies and football game cheering sections. Serving to boost spirits considerably was the Fall weekend planned by the Class Cabinet. On Friday evening the Danish National Symphony, as the first attraction of the SCL program, held the capacity audience in Grace Hall spellbound. Despite the unfavorable weather and the rather bad score, Lehigh men and their rain-drenched dates enjoyed Saturday ' s game with Buffalo. Especially thrilling was the Brown and White Band ' s intricate military drill which received a much-deserved and precedent-form- ing ovation from the spectators. The highlight of the weekend was the appearance of the Gerry Mulligan quartet. Mulligan and cohorts held the over-flow audi- ence in their grasp as they drifted through three hours of smooth sound. As the Birdland of Bethlehem ended its existence, the week-enders mounted the formidable ramparts of Grace Hall to the upper floor where Dick Parry and company held sway under the auspices of the Gryphon Society. Thus the tradition of a Lehigh jazz week-end was started. The popular newsletter kept the men of ' 60 well informed as the Cabinet planned for the biggest social event of all — Spring Houseparty. All the months of negotiations and exhausting work seemed worthwhile as a record number turned out for this gala weekend. Ending the year on the same note of unity as at the start, the men joined together for a rousing class ban- quet. They deserved to be rousing too, for as juniors they had contributed much to the social, extra-cur- ricular, and academic life of the LJniversity. Dick Sprenkle, chairman of this Spring ' s Houseparty Com- mittee, and Bruce Snyder, Ticket Committee chairman, go over the ticket distrihi tion problem with Mrs. Moravec. OFFICERS Seated: Horton, Vice-Presidetit : Gilhool. President. Sfafiding: Connor, Treasurer : Snyder, Secretary. CABINET ■- ' ' ' ■■Kiley, Van Wickle, Kobran, Prescott, Russell, McGovern, Eberhart. Second row: Pavony, Lynn, Connor, Treasurer : Horton, Vice-President: Gilhool, President: William A. Smith, Faculty Adviser: Snyder, Secretary: Mountain, Daniel. Third row: Gill, Weisner, Peterson, Schumacher, Jackson, Stemme, Bride, Horn, Coutant, Haller. Fourth row: Brainerd, deHart, Garfinkel, Zug, Ulak, Watkins, Schlosser, Kennedy, Millsom, Gottheb. These members of the Class of I960 really dig those clams and all the trimmings at the big Fall outing, the annual class clambake. 141 Class of 1959 When a man has been graduated from Lehigh, there are a great number of things that he will always re- member well about his undergraduate days. Many of these memories will be associated with his senior year. The men of the Class of 1959 will probably have little trouble remembering their last days at school, for the seniors worked hard, played hard, and above all lived the four years in Bethlehem with such zest that they set a goal for future classes. As soon as school began in the Fall, plans were made for the highlight of the season — Houseparty Weekend. Abandoning the past ideas and starting a new tradition, the class decided to have three bands providing music in a full range of interest. With two name bands on the same floor, An Affair With Music set a precedent-shattering attendance record. On the lower floor of the music-bedecked Grace Hall, Lehigh couples whirled to the sounds of Dave Brubeck and Elliot Lawrence. Matt Gillespie contributed musically to the romantic atmosphere of the upper floor. For the second year in succession, the weekend was rather rain- soaked, but as usual, the heavy downpour failed to dampen the spirit of the affair. The Class of 1959 participated in the group insur- ance plan in record-breaking numbers. The ' 59ers can look ahead twenty years to the time when they will be able to give the University a gift of well over $100,000. The clearest memories of the senior year doubtlessly will include graduation and the many events associated with it. As a final expression of the fun of college life, Senior Weekend served admirably. It included all the best parts of social events from the preceding years, as well as something extra — the quality of change. Indeed, this celebration was the last social meeting of the class. Steamed clams, beautiful dates, and good jazz highlighted the picnic held in balmy June weather. After attending dinner parties at various places on campus, the formally clad seniors and dates moved to Hotel Bethlehem for a dance and midnight supper. The solemnity of the baccalaureate service mingled with the excitement of commencement itself. As Grace Hall filled to capacity with faculty, parents, and friends, the men of 1959 looked back upon a senior year filled with worthwhile activity and good fun. Fall Houseparty Queen accepts jloiiers from Carl Scbier, pres- ide it of the senior class. OFFICERS Sealed: Schier, Presideni : Mitchell. Vice-President. Standing: Walton, Secretary; Karr, Treasurer. Firs row: Popky, Swenson, Weisberg, Freese, Rojahn, Patterson, Steinman. Second row: Fisher, Zerweck, Walton, Secretary: Mitchell, Vice-President : Schier, President; Karr, Treasurer: John M. CABINET Haight, Jr., Faculty Adviser : Webb, Lummis. Third roiv: Bernard, Cooper, Desch, Schneider, Lipton, Allen, Jennings, Blair, Bauder, Eckstein, Werner. Fourth row: Pope, Harbold, Redler, Fiducia, Gamble, Lewis, Beattie, Beltson, Canova, Hartung, Draper. Eugene Mercy, chairman of the Class Gift Committee, kicks off the drive to enlist the ' 59ers in the group insurance plan. 143 First row: Brainerd, Gartside, Prestia, President: Walton, Treasurer : Rev. Raymond E. Fuessle, Secretary: Russell, Snyder. Second row: Varilla, Montville, Horton, Wismer, Shabaker, Brenan, Connor. Omicron Delta Kappa This year, Omicron Delta Kappa, the senior leader- ship honorary, completed its thirty-third year at Lehigh. Since its inception, the honorary has striven to encour- age smooth relations between students, and to promote student-faculty understanding and cooperation. In addi- tion to the select group of juniors and seniors, inter- ested faculty members participated in the spirited debates, which ranged from broad international topics to issues more directly affecting every Lehigh man. The campus topics were often received with great enthusiasm, and many times new light was shed upon pertinent Lehigh problems. The high standards of this honorary require at least a 2.5 cumulative scholastic average, supplemented by outstanding participation in campus activities such as student government, music, drama, and religion. OFFICERS Rojahn, Vice-President: Prestia, President: Rev. Raymond Fuessle, Secretary: Walton, Treasurer. I 1 r ■••x Mm. r IB iX nv ■P-.T jHrn If V i ' K iiK. i H OFFICERS Seated: Horton, President: Gilhool, Vice-President. Standing: Martin- dale, Treasurer; Segal, Secretary. Cyanide, Lehigh ' s junior honorary societ) ' , is com- posed of twenty men, selected each year on the basis of cumulative average, extracurricular activities, and a display of campus leadership. Their main purpose is to indoctrinate the freshman class and to smoothly incorporate them into the life at Lehigh. Cyanide ' s job began Freshman ' ' ' eek when the mem- bers of the Class of ' 62 first appeared on campus. A hearty handshake let them know that they were wel- come, and a little brown dink reminded them that they were greenhorns. Cyanide also organized the Freshman Cabinet, sponsored the song and skit con- tests, and ran the traditional tug-of-war with Lafay- ette. The formation of a new Thuse Committee proved to be a successful means of improving spirit at football games. Cyanide First Tou - Snyder, Mountain, Martindale, Treasurer: Horton, President: Gilhool, Vice-President: Segal, Secretary: Connor, McNally. Second rou-: Eberhart, Lebersfeld, Brainerd. Kiley, Smiley, Derse, Xiiler, Kurtossy. y 1 I ' :. .m Who ' s Who All over the United States 9,000 students share what is considered one of the highest honors a person can attain in an institution of higher education. These distinguished few, coming from over 760 United States campuses, are named as persons who contributed most to their school communities in the publication, Who ' s Who Among Students in American Colleges and Uni- versities . But there is more than just an honor con- nected to this achievement; these students, already likely to succeed thoroughly, have their chances in- creased still more by this national recognition of their achievements. Here at Lehigh, thirty students are selected annually by Cyanide, assisted by members of the faculty and administration. These thirty must be either juniors, seniors, or graduate students. No set rules are followed in selecting this privileged group, but such qualifica- tions as scholarship, leadership, significant participation in campus activities, and general services to the Uni- versity are qualities by which a Who ' s Who -to-be is to be judged. William G. Beattie Richard K. Bernard Denis V. Brenan Charles S. Burger Jack W. Fisch Wayne D. Freese William Gamble Jr. Stephen K. Gartside John J. Harmon George P. Jennings George W. Karr Jr. Eugene Mercy Jr. David H. Mitchell Joseph V. MontviUe Paul F. Prestia Roger W. Theodore C. Rojahn Carl E. Schier III Allan E. Schneck Robert H. Shabaker James B. Swenson Richard E. Topping Joseph A. Varilla Stephen A. Walton Jr. William T. Washburn David A. Webb James S. Weisberg Roger M. Weiss Donald E. Wilson David A. Wismer Jr. Clarence E. Wright Zerweck First row: Schneck, Gartside, Freese, Harmon, Gamble, Mercy, Webb. Second row: Burger, Mc- Murtrie, Beattie, Topping, Zerweck, Karr, Shabaker. Third row: Brenan, Swenson, Schier, Wismer, MontviUe, Bernard. k -,M ' ' ir ) mr 4 -Si - if A i: OFFICERS First row: Coutant, Execiitite Vice-President; Sprenkle, President: Hapke, Secretary-Treasurer. Second row: Masuda, Pittenger, Schulz. Alpha Phi Omega Alpha Phi Omega, the national scouting service fraternity, provides many services to the University. Its most significant endeavor is the annual Ugly Man Contest. This year marked the sixth of a series of such contests begun in 1954. As usual, living groups spon- sored candidates whom they billed as the ugliest on campus, and the student body was given the oppor- tunity to elect it by dropping donations into con- tainers on the library steps. One of the most spectacular demonstrations of the contest was staged by Sigma Alpha Mu ' s candidate, Hup Hollander, who held mass rallies complete with Cedar Crest girls and police escort. Needless to say, Hup was chosen victor by a wide majority, and APO ' s big project contributed well over $1,000 to the Campus Chest. First rou : Houston, Kantner, Vianello, Van Cott, Brand. Second row: Solender, Schulz, Masuda, Coutant, Executive Vice-President: Sprenkle, President: Hapke, Secretary-Treasurer : Pittenger, Panitz, Nagle. Third row: Richardson, Creighton, Gallagher, Pitts, Johnson, Jennings, Gucker, Cool, Coates, Clark, Fourth row: Gitlin, Rieper, Jarvis, Hayes, Snyder, Rothenberger, Wade, Smith, Grabner. 147  V First row: George, Kutz, Krause, Podgursky, Bauder, Fritchman. Second row: Vetovitz, Woods, Noll, Vice-President : Yandrasits, Treasurer : Grason, Secretary: Schneck, President: Sigley. Third row: Ziegler, Boyer, Miller, M., Shatoff, Shapple, Rahe, Grebenaur, Sisle. Fourll? row: Pontician, Miller, A., Kr esge, Daniel, Sobyak, Bakonyi, Snyder. Fijih row: Lichtenwalner, Schmidt, Seifert, Eckhaus, Polak, Pcihoda, Reimer. Lr.:: Town Council OFFICERS First row: Noll, Secretary: Yandrasits, Treasurer: Schneck, President. Second row: Grason, Vice-President. Town Council is the governing body of nearly one- third of the Lehigh student population which lives in the Bethlehem area. It strives not only to represent these students in student government, but also to give town men some of the advantages of college life enjoyed by dormitory and fraternity dwellers. Main- taining a representative on Arcadia, the council strives to make the voice of the town student heard on campus. Town Council also urges local men to participate more fully in the University ' s extracurricular program. An athletic committee encourages participation in sports, and the group always comes up with top intra- mural teams. The council also maps a social program. The highlight of its social calendar was the annual fall dance, held last November in the University Center. The new University Center has also provided a special Town Council meeting room, where officers and mem- bers gather to plan and coordinate activities. 148 Alpha Lambda Omega In the history of Lehigh, the men who commuted from the AUentown area were always a united group. It was not until 1942, however, that they molded their bonds of friendship into a social fraternity. Originally known as the AUentown-Lehigh Organization, the group has now expanded its membership to include any commuter to the University and has adopted the Greek name of Alpha Lambda Omega. With the main purpose of providing a social life for town students comparable to that of other groups liv- ing on campus, ALO centers its activities around purely social events. Parties were held this year on an average of twice a month, the most outstanding being during the two Houseparties and Lafayette Weekend. Prob- ably the most eagerly awaited event of the social season took place during the Christmas holidays, when mem- bers joined alumni for the annual reunion party. This affair is a yearly tribute to the active alumni organiza- tion, a vital part of the group set-up. OFFICERS First row: Sigley, Treasurer: Podgursky, President. Second row: Sny- der, Secretary: Bortz, Vice-President. First row: Morgan, Laub, Heiney, Krooilick, Keller. Second row: Kurtz, Snyder, Podgursky, President: Sigley, Treasurer; Grebenar, Hess. Third row: Latanision, Sobyak, Kalb, lobst, Diehl. Fourth row: Holben, Fritchman, Oravec, Shapple, Zaharchuk. Fifth row: Lundahl, Bauder, Daniel, Broniecki, Barylak, Falusy, Swegel. 149 NhdM ' , - J ' l -« Publications . . . informing tlie student body During their year and a half in new quarters, the student publications have reaped many tangible and intangible benefits from their modern facilities and have passed them on to the student body through better publications. Epitome, Brown and White, and WLRN moved into the new Richard Harding Davis Publications Wing in the fall of 1957. By last fall, most of the confusion resulting from the move to the new headquarters had been resolved into a new, effi- cient method of working. As always. Professor McFad- den and Mr. Hutchins were behind the scenes, offering helpful suggestions, good-natured criticisms, and knife- edged observations. Although too often taken for granted, their ready help and understanding brightened routine chores, and kept the three large publication units operating smoothly. The members of all of the staffs had a feeling of pride in their new University Center working quarters, and with good reason. Their wing cost a quarter of a million dollars. Studios, offices, a darkroom, and a large news room were all new, and they brought with Representatives of campus and area publications interview Senator Joseph Clark during h:s campus visit last Fall. JOSEPH B. McFADDEN Heoit of Division of JoHttialisin National election time brought many men from different sections of the Publications Wing to the aid of W LRN in its comprehensive coverage of the event. WALTON H. HUTCHINS Instructor in fournalism LOCAL II? them an appropriate amount of increased enthusiasm. The senior members of the staff were especially pleased, as memories of hectic, overcrowded conditions in the old Drown Hall basement still huddled in their minds. Moreover, it was not only staffers who appre- ciated the new setup. Many a weekend found other students and faculty members sticking their heads into doorways, and then proudly leading admiring dates, parents, and guests on a guided tour of the area. Good planning had provided a place for every- thing, and everything in its place , and consequently rooms were generally uncluttered, even when dead- lines and special events rolled around. The whole oper- ation was as much fun as work, a situation for which many organizations strive, but few achieve. The result- ing esprit de corps turned out better papers, pictures, yearbooks, and radio programs than in previous years, as the hard-working editors, managers, and general staff members took full advantage of one of the most modern publications setups in the country. 153 Brow n and White Brown and White had a very full year, probably the most significant in the semiweekly ' s seventy-one years of keeping Lehigh informed and interested in campus events. The move into new quarters last year proved to be greatly rewarding, as it enabled the staff to stop fighting equipment battles and to concentrate on solving quality and content problems instead. As a result, the enthusiastic staff turned out more high quality pages than have ever been produced in recent years. The elevated intellectual tone of the paper was attested by the increased number of articles on politics, religion, science, and education. The new facilities of the University Center were greatly appreciated and well-used. Typewriters were ringing throughout the day and lights burned late every night, not just on Sunday and Wednesday evenings when issues of Tuesday and Friday, respectively, went to press. For eighteen hours out of an average day someone could be found hard at work in the news room. Broivn ami White ' s 2,800 campus and 800 sub- scription readers were not the only ones to realize its high quality. The nationwide Associated Collegiate Press classified the paper as All-American, the highest possible rating. Only three other semiweekly college newspapers in the country were similarly honored. As a result, Editor-in-Chief Joseph Varilla represented Lehigh at the national ACP convention in Chicago. While he was there he exchanged ideas with other collegiate editors and participated in a panel discussion on the subject, The Student Newspaper and the Col- lege Community . This year marked the fourth time in its history that Brown and White has received the Associated Collegiate Press All-American award. Praise was received from other directions, also, the most significant coming from none other than the United States State Department. It selected Brown and White and several other newspapers as the most repre- sentative of American college journalism, and conse- quently, fifty copies of each issue were circulated in Poland and behind the Iron Curtain. Another im- portant honor was bestowed upon the paper when the national journalism honorary. Pi Delta Epsilon, awarded it first prize in its annual nationwide contest. Achievements such as these made Broun and White staff well-pleased with the year as a whole. JOSEPH VARILLA Editor-in-Chiej ROBERT WALTERS Editorial Director RICHARD HUSSER Busmen A jnjger A sound financial backing is important to any publication, and the success of the B W is due in part to the efforts of this industrious business staff. STAFF Seated: Cox, Make-Up Editor; Walters, Editorial Director: Varilla, Editor: Husser, Business Manager: Hood, Desk Editor. Standing: Grinchuk, Managing Editor: Keiser, Murphy, Miller, Cochnar, Neu ' S Editor: Brubalcer, Peller, National Adiertising Manager. The complexities of make-up are explained to this reporter as he inquires uhere his story uill be spotted. First row: Mezey, Scheduling Editor: Paternoster, Literary Editor: deHart, Managing Editor; Bernard, Editor: Mercy, Business Manager: Solomon, Financial Manager: Karr, Senior Editor: Helbraun, Advertising Manager. Second row: Shulman, Stebbins, Friedman, Administrative Editor: Selesko, Granat, Williams, Ades, Steinmark. McKenna. Third row: Haigh, Klein, Husser, Identi- fication Editor: Draper, McNamara, Fuld, Paulding, Groff, Brooks, Klesken. STAFF Proofs of seitjor picltires hate arrived from the engraver and this Epitome trio begins the task of identifying each man. RICHARD BERNARD Editor-in-Chiej EUGENE MERCY Business Mj ' iJger U. EDWARD deHART Managing Editor The Epitome Production of Epitome can only be completed by the com- bined efforts of many. Dick Bernard. Phil Alezey, and Dick Granat produce one of the many paste-ups. Creating a yearbook such as the 1959 Epitotue is a long, and frequently harrowing job. Work on this edition actually began back in the Spring semester of 1958, when the Board of Publications appointed the editor-in-chief and the business manager, and the mast- head staff was selected. Later in the semester, the editors prepared their prospectus, by designing a ten- tative miniature layout of the many subjects and their respective space allotments. During the Summer of ' 58, the editors tackled the tremendous job of expanding the smaller layout; each article and photo was assigned a final position on its page. Cover designs, styles of print, and ideas for section dividers were continuously hashed over until satisfactory schemes were devised. With the layout completed, the next objectives were scheduling the vast number of assignments and getting the sales campaign under way. Every freshman knows that the latter goal was in full swing during Fresh- man Week; omnipresent salesmen wore down many a tough prospect with an explosive verbal attack that challenged the blasting out of the old Lookout. Local businessmen were advised that it would be a good in- vestment to associate themselves with Epitotue. By the end of the first month of the semester, the literary and business staffs had received their aides, bringing the total staff to about thirty. Although the Epitome is far more than just a snap- shot album, the vast number of pictures in each volume present some of the most important problems. Inevit- able absences, cancellations, and rainy days made much rescheduling necessary to take the more than 2,000 photos that were eventually screened to 1,000. An interesting sidelight on Epitome is its cost in relation to its future value. Th e 1,600 books cost $22,000 to publish, all of which was raised without University aid, through the sale of space and issues, advertisements, and pictures to groups. Moreover, it is hoped that the potential value of this edition will rise steadily as it becomes a cherished storehouse of mem- ories of undergraduate days. Another Epitotne is hot off the press, from cover to cover a nationally merited yearbook, produced through the conscientious efforts of a staff that strove to make this edition a little more complete, a little better organized, and a little more original than previous volumes. WLRN I£ WLRN has many more such active years as this one, the only thing left to develop will be live campus television! Lehigh ' s radio voice took giant-sized steps this year to broaden its cultural vistas, building on an already extensive list of program olfermgs. As ha d come to be expected, the station presented its usual pot- pourri of programs to please every palate, including popular, classical, jazz, and rock and roll music, sports events and interviews, and the omnipresent news, time, and weather. But in addition, a new dimension in special coverage was achieved, and the results were worthy of national note. The most ambitious project was the special cover- age of the fall elections, which, although transmitted before by WLRN, reached epic proportions this year. Arrangements were made so that the station had direct telephone connections with the major election returns centers all over the nation. Preparations for the big night started weeks in advance, resulting finally in contact with centers from Boston to Los Angeles. In addition, returns were checked by means of direct lines to Democratic and Republican headquarters in New York. Through the facilities of the CBS Radio Net- work and local affiliated stations, WLRN ' s combined listening audience was estimated at 500,000. Sometime after three o ' clock in the morning, the bleary-eyed staff trudged out, dog-tired, but confident of a job well done. Another facet of the station ' s new emphasis on special events was the inauguration of a new interview series, Face the Campus . The first presentation fea- tured the Honorable Joseph S. Clark, the senior senator from Pennsylvania. Senator Clark toured the campus briefly, and then withstood the sharpened wits of WLRN panelists in a spirited question-and-answer de- bate. Other notables that appeared on the show in- cluded Dean Liston Pope of Yale. The WLRN staff took full advantage of their mod- ern facilities in the University Center, rated to be the best-equipped studios in the Lehigh Valley. They also tried to expand their audience, working on various systems that would bring their programs to all of the fraternity houses. All in all, through their progressive outlook and their enthusiastic willingness to work, this year ' s staff made WLRN more than ever the true Voice of Lehigh . JOHN HOOD SiMion Altiihtger LARRY WRIGHT Progrjm Dnector STEPHEN GOLD Business Manager The complexities of a modern radio conlro! panel are exhibited here as these two WLRN engineers attempt to fix a minor disturbance, as the chief engineer calls for tuaterial. First TOU-: Diener, Wright, Program Director: Gold, Business Manager; Hood, Station Manager; STAFF Green, Chiej Engineer; Schiffman, Ernst. Second row: Dolan, Emerson, Van Wickle, Gjchnar, James, Fuld, Advertising Director. One U ' LRS announcer airs election-night reports uhile other staff members compile reports for then turn at the mike. OFFICERS Weisberg, Secretary-Treasurer : Harmon, President; President. Merq ' , Vice- Pi Delta Epsilon For Pi Delta Epsilon, the national journalism hon- orary, this was a year of awards, both presented and received. The Lehigh chapter bestowed an honorary membership upon Donald P. Keith, the editorial page editor of the Easton Express, for the brilliance of his editorials. On the national level, BwtDi and White and Epitome received first prize awards in Pi Delta Epsilon ' s annual contest, and received certificates in recognition of their performance. On the other side of the ledger, the chapter itself was lauded when it received national mention in Editor and Publisher magazine, the second consecutive year for this honor. The men of Pi Delt, all outstanding members of publication staffs, selected a very worthwhile project this year. Showing an interest in being of service to the University community, they prepared a small desk blotter which listed the most necessary and frequently used telephone numbers. Useful projects like this help the campus to be more conscious of the honorary ' s service. First Row: Peller, Ernst, Dinkey. Harmon, President: Mercy, Vice-President : Petrane, Bernard. Second Row: Hood, Slack, deHart, Husser, Green, McAneny, Helbraun. 1 : iJi L, ■i J .1 ii i£LI CI i Pu J J Brown and White Ed ' ilor-in-Chiej Vaiilla faces a knotty problem tossed at him by the copydesk staff members who aivait his solu- tion before completi)ig their headlines. Managing Editor Ed deHart and his assist- ant Dick Shut man busily struggle with Epitome correspondence and makeup tasks as the 1959 edition moves into high gear. WLRN Program Di rector Larry Wright checks over the day ' s broadcasting log with Traffic Manager Tony Ernst while doing a stint at spinning records. v  . r ;f%,i . ,§:. ' ...- tl y •.-.e-. ?t 4 .-..IS,; t ' -, U : ' Religious Groups . . . stimulating spiritual growth The various religious organizations at Lehigh, an important part of the campus life, serve the school and the students in three ways. First, they offer the students an opportunity to preserve their own religious preference during their college years, and to strengthen these ties and develop a more sound and mature faith. Second, the religious groups try to broaden the stu- dents ' religious outlook and to erase any preconceived religious prejudices by increasing their knowledge of other faiths. The third service of Lehigh ' s spiritual program is to present ample opportunity for partici- pation in genial religious fellowship, an aspect of religious life which is sometimes overlooked. Heading the religious program at Lehigh is the Committee on Religious Life, which consists of alumni, faculty, and undergraduate members. With the cap- able advice and assistance of the committee. Chaplain Fuessle has organized a fine program of religious ac- tivity. The secret of success of this program is the Inter-faith Council, which coordinates the activities of the three major faiths and leads the way to a more Lehigh and Cedar Crest choristers sing out the Christmas carols at the annual Vespers service in Packer Chapel. CHAPLAIN RAYMOND E. FUESSLE sup ply mg a stnmg and vital part of campus life unified religious life at the University. The Jewish, Catholic, and Protestant faiths are represented in the council by the HiUel Society, the Newman Club, and the Christian Council, respectively. Besides acting as the overall governing body of the various religious groups, the Interfaith Council also sponsors the annual Conferences on Religion. These conferences are without a doubt the most important and enlightening single religious activity at Lehigh. Three gatherings each year bring prominent leaders in the Jewish, Catholic, and Protestant faiths to the University to lead discussions at assemblies, luncheons, classroom meetings, and fraternities. The first con- ference in November featured Rabbi Harry Halpern who spoke on The Value of Religion for Us and several other pertinent topics during his three-day stay on campus. The second conference in February brought the Very Reverend James J. McLarney, a distinguished Dominican priest, to the campus. Speaking on the main topic of Religion and the Experts , Father 164 Committee on Religious Life F ri rou - J. Douglas Leith, John O. Liebig, Rev. Raymond E. Fuessle, Chairman: S. Blaine Ewing, Rev. John W. Walters. Second row: Ol- stein, Interrante, Robert A. Harrier, Jacobi, Ross, Interfaith Council Firs row: Albert de NeufviUe, Faculty Adviser: Samuel J. Errera, Faculty Adviser; Interrante, President: Eli Schwartz, Faculty Adviser: Rev. Raymond E. Fuessle, Faculty Adviser. Second row: Castillo, Ross, Glynn, Schantz, Secretary; Neidell, Olstein. McLarney most ably led lectures and informal dis- cussions. The Jewish religion is represented on campus by the HiUel Society. The society ' s bimonthly meetings offered Jewish students a chance to satisfy their spir- itual, intellectual, and social needs. Discussions included classes on Arabic, Greek, and Hebrew history and philosophy. Brunches, banquets, and dances helped to complete their program. The representative group of the Catholic faith is the Newman Club. Through discussion groups, this year ' s members covered such topics as apologetics, the Bible, history, ethics, and philosophy. Often local priests were present to lead the talks. The Newmans kept their group well informed of all of the group ' s spiritual and social activities by publishing their own news sheet. The club ended another successful year with their annual weekend retreat. The Christian Council coordinates the efforts of the many Protestant groups and represents the Protes- 165 First row: Fox, Steckler, Grossberg, Bratspies, Gennet, Grawat, Gitlin. Second row: Winters, Sacks, Olstein, President; Rabbi William Frankel, Counselor; Skolnick, Vice-President; Jablon, Grant, Wildstein. Third row: Wildstein, Frankfort, Samuels, Weinberg, Copeland, Bloom, Sherrow, Debesh. fourth row: Schneidenman, Mellman, Frankel, Solender, Selesko, Gabler, Sumner. Hillel Society Newman Club First Row: Ralph Weyer, Secretary; Jose Castillo, President: Neal Duffy, John Edwards. Second Ruir: Samuel J. Errera, Faculty Adviser; James Guzzio, Brian Frikert, Charles Hofmann, Scott Armstrong. 166 tant faith on campus. This year the group worked hard through committees to strengtiien the religious life of the University. They worked with the Chaplain to publicize guest speakers and to extend typical Lehigh hospitality to them. They also compiled a library of religious publications, held a testimonial dinner, and sponsored a Spring Lenten program. Membership of the council consists of representatives from all of the Protestant groups on campus, which include most of the major denominations of the Protestant religion. Episcopal students from Lehigh, Moravian, and St. Luke ' s found a well-balanced spiritual and social pro- gram at the weekly me etings of the Canterbury Club. They participated in discussions, often led by guests, on such topics as Christian Problems of a College Student . Dancing and other recreational activities Christian Council First rou.- Miner, Rinalducci, Secretary; Fabian, Vice-President : Kimble, President; Brinton, Treas- urer; Wimmer. Second row: Ross, Schulz, Schantz, Hughes, Lawrence. Canterbury Club First row: Everett H. Emerson, Faculty Adviser; Bjerre, Treasurer: Anderson, President; Lawrence, Vice-President; Rev. Benjamin Minifie. Second row: Dorland, Heiss, Rettew, Keister, Hellekson. completed the calendar of events. Other Episcopal students served their church and school as members of the Acolytes Guild. Twice each Sunday they assisted the Chaplam by attending the altar in Packer Church. The Lehigh Inter Varsity Christian Fellowship is an interdenominational Christian organization, hi addition to the regular monthly meetings, the group also held a week of discussions and lectures centered around the topic, Faith and the Undergraduate . Weekly discussion groups in each dormitory in the form of Bible studies provided opportunity to investi- gate the relevance of the fundamental Christian prin- ciples to practical college living. At their bimonthly meetings, the members of the Intervarsity Christian Fellowship First row: Lambert, Niiler, Lahey. Second row: McCahan, Bradway, Stitt, Williams, Fisher, Swaim. Third rmc: Geney, Jacobsen, Beacham, Richters, Martin. Methodist Student Fellowship First row: Rev. B. Burns Brodhead, Bradley, Vice-Presidtitt: Griep, President: Brinton, Treasurer. Second row: Coates, Sharp. Cramer, Gallagher, Richardson. Acolytes Guild First row: Walsmith, Mason, DeWitt, President: Chaplain Raymond E. Fuessle, Faculty Adviser. Second row: Monson, Quackenbush, Merkle, Jones. Third row: ORyan, Braendel, Morgan. Fourth row: Bowers, Bryant, Rettew, Van Cott. Lutheran Student Association took part in a well-bal- anced program. Coupled with worship was a group of discussions, often led by prominent local speakers, which covered many aspects of religion, including faith healing. On the social side, the members enjoyed such activities as swimming, bowling, and dancing. Throughout the year, the ' estminster Fellowship gave Presbyterian students an opportunity to build and mature a profound Christian faith. Dinner, devotions, and song preceded the weekly meetings which featured speakers and discussion periods. The fellowship ' s out- side activities included picnics, skating, dancing, and caroling. The year was concluded with a retreat in the Pocono Mountains. Lutheran Student Fellowship First rote: Warne, H.illeman. Zakovic, Hearn. Clader, Grim, Porter, Smith, R., Moser, Kerath. Second rou - Kammerer, Clarence A. Shook, Fac- ully Adviser: Klesken, Weed, Hughes, President: Rev. Peter J. Dexnis, Lange, Smith, F., Brum- baugh, Jacoby, Secretary. Third row: Rosar, Marsland, Clark, Rumpf, Vice-President: Young, Richters, Lundquist, Heffner, Moyer, Lauer. Westminster Fellowship First row: Frantz, Mrs. Orey Joynt, Adviser: Borger. Second row: Schulz, Amstutz, President: Loper, Plumer, Bauknight, Harris, Neithold, Carey B. Joynt, Faculty Adviser: Lovingood, Eber- hart, ' ice-President. I ) m -■Km 1 f V, «• I !■' Sl ■- . 1 tij jfij Sr  «sa „-y i m rO Music and Drama . . . providiHg relamg eHtcrta ' mment Seventy-six trombones led the big parade, with one hundred and ten cornets close behind . With a few less than the fabled seventy-six trombones, the Lehigh Brown and White Band led the parade of collegiate marching organizations in the East. The fast-stepping troop generally out-performed the op- position throughout the football season, and climaxed their performances with a mathematically precise close order drill that rated an unprecedented standing ova- tion from the crowd. As the Fall season drew to a close, the musicians turned in their marching attire and immediately began new work as the Lehigh Concert Band. After the Le- Hi-Fi concert with the Glee Club, the group moved ahead with preparations for the Contemporary Amer- ican Chamber Music Concert , which was so success- ful that it was repeated at another college. As usual, the Pops Concert officially drew the curtain on the Band ' s activities for the year. Soft lights, checkered table cloths, an overflow crowd, and tremendous music made this last concert another outstanding success. Lehigh ' s smartly attired Band swings down the main stem in Cambridge in a parade before the Harvard game. Jonathan B. Elkus, Robert B. Cutler. Thoburn V. Barker, H. Barrett Davis. The Band The Fall social season at Lehigh usually includes at least one appearance of the Collegians. This semi- independent dance band performed at many local col- leges, and made plans for augmenting the group to enhance the big band sound. An enlarged Brass Choir performed a collection of early works at Christmas Vespers. They also acted as the traditional choir in summoning people to the Bach Festival, performing some of the earliest Moravian Chorales from atop the Chapel tower. The robust-sounding Lehigh Glee Club took to the road this year. After many performances in the Valley and on campus, the group packed their bags and headed for points beyond. On two occasions, the singers traded Lehigh ' s late Winter weather for the warm sunshine and pretty girls below the Mason-Dixon line. Their last trip took the form of a three-day tour to Virginia, with very successful concerts at Madison and The Collegians Firu Roil : Clausen, Stoner, Stajs, Davidson, Meloney, Heiss. Second Ron.- Henricks, Rickcrt, Laucks, Seitz. Third Ron ' : Sloyer, Schreiber, An- gello, Schoolman, Turner, Nietkoski, Long, Gor- man, Gregor, Katholi. Sweet Briar Colleges. The Glee Club spent most of their Spring hours preparing for the opera King David , which was presented with the Cedar Crest Choir at Lehigh and at Crest. The Cliff Clefs made their campus debut in the jazz concert of Snoball Weekend. Sporting gay vests and sophisticated songs, they were well received by all. A more sedate group of singers, the Chapel Choir greatly enhanced the solemnity of the weekly services at the Packer Memorial Chapel. Once again this year, the Music Department, with its many activities and revised course schedule, pro- vided an excellent opportunity for the Lehigh man to start an acquaintance with music. Indeed, they let the glad notes wake the echoes , and all of South Mountain resounded their musical strain. . . - performmg at football games a td concerts Glee Club First Row: Jones, Albers, Gallup, Ducker, Fabian. Monson, Hough, Donley, Johnson, Fisher, Cole, McGovern. Second Rou-: Pitman. Lewis, Carr, Gaertner, Ford, Gamble, Seagreaves, Froggatt, Miller, Polefka, Jeffers, Arensberg, Celauro. Third Row: Williams, Smiley, Lambert, Savage, Foster. Student Conductor: Bjerre, Dimmick, Pritchard, Holl, Corbett, Marple. Fourth Row: Pittenger, Krivsky, Resch, Hedges, Hayes, Cramer, McCune, Kalb, Shabaker, Manager: Achilles. Fifth Row: Garrett, Berentson, lobst, Kramer, Winter, Harris, Molter, Bergman, Accompanist. Brass Choir First row: T. Gregor, J. Gorman. Second row: B. Smith, J. Nieckoski, K. Adams, W. Clarke. Third row: C. Turner, D. Molter, F. Liener, C. Long. Fourth row: W. Schoner, J. Newark, R. Henricks, F. Laucks, T. Rojahn, D. Rickert. Fijth row: J. Cohen, R. Farace, W. Schoolman, C. Stetler, R. Noll, D. Klesken, D. Howell, G. Griffin, G. Lane, W. Ruhl, S. Walton, G. Schreiber, W. Heske, R. Roggio. 174 Cliff Clefs First Row: Lewis, Marple, Pittenger, Ford, Gallup. Second Rou - lobst, McCune, Hedges, Resch. Charles Long, Allen Rickert, George Ruhl, Gregory Lane, Michael Laucks, William Clark. Brass Ensemble Firjl roll.- Monson, Wagner, L ewis, Jones, Curletun, Hotchkin. Second row: Wolfgang, Sonderup, McGovern, Birdsall, Creighton, Meyer. Third row: Williams, Carr, Albers, Pitman, Froggatt, Cross, Watson. Fourth row: Corbett, Everett, Lerch, Samaha, Gamble, Hayes. Fijth row: Merchant, Schantz, Jones, Bjerre, Marple, Seagreaves. Sislh row: Hedges, Nichols, Krivsky, Smalley, HoU, Fabian. Chapel Choir By the expression on Band Director Jonathan Elkus ' s face he seems to have detected a sour note during this year ' s Winter Concert. Mustard and Cheese talented group of t he s plans For versatility, range of plays and excellence of per- formance, Lehigh ' s Mustard and Cheese Players are unsurpassed among Eastern college groups. The start of the school year found the group, directed by Pro- fessor H. Barrett Davis, recruiting new members and starting work immediately on the first production. This year the players ran the gamut from Korean prison camps to the world of Thomas aBecket and his cathedral. The stark realities of a Korean prison camp served as background material for the fall presentation, Time Limit , by Henry Denker and Ralph Berkey. The pur- suit of the single shred of evidence necessary to free a man from unjust condemnation held audience and critics spell-bound. Students and faculty agreed that it was one of the highlights of Snowball Weekend and the winter cultural season in the Lehigh Valley. Contributing in part to the success of the Mustard and Cheese productions this year was the new work- shop headquarters. For the first time in thirty years the Lehigh thespians were a unified activity with a dramatic home. The basement of Lamberton Hall, remodeled during the summer, was initiated at a party after Time Limit . The workshop, as well equipped as many pro- fessional counterparts, consists of four main areas. OFFICERS Fir it Row: Morse, Vice-President; Heckler, Presi- dent. Second Row: Hahn, Club Technician: Bul- los, Treasurer : Coutant, Secretary. An Af C pla)er rehearses his role in Mur- der in the Cathedral which was presented in Packer Chapel in April. w sm . j . H Ih ' H 1 ' ' ' fii ' v Hk r k Vj B l j K j|_ JBEiffV H KmfW B rT I 1 B ■' ■tf w dw yw mi ■H 1 r mm ■■CW ' 1 . H ' r r. ■■t L: ' .. I Work on the sets of the next Mustard and Cheese produc- tion is well under way in the new workshop installed this year in the basement of Lamberton Hall. Occupying the largest area is the rehearsal and social room, lined with the Mustard and Cheese library and the memory gallery of past productions. A second area used by the business and costume staffs has modern equipment including an electric sewing machine for use by the faculty ladies in costume preparation. The carpentry and paint shop contributed much to the near-professional sets in this year ' s productions. The fo urth area is a property room, storing all the myriads of items necessary for a single play. The drama season moved swiftly along with pre- parations for the spring production. This year, as in the past several years, the second play of the season was in a lighter vein. The aspects of humor were again presented to theater-goers with resounding success. As part of the final all-campus Conference on Re- ligion, the Mustard and Cheese Players presented T. S. Eliot ' s outstanding verse-drama, Murder in the Cathedral . The Gothic splendor of Packer Chapel provided the perfect setting for the first campus pres- entation of the troubles at Canterbury in seven years. The film division of the Mustard and Cheese pro- gram again exposed the Lehigh student to the best cinema on a bi-weekly basis. The thirteenth series ranged from the award-winning Red Shoes to the Moscow Art Theatre Inspector General . Mustard and Cheese production, Knight of the Burning Pestle , included clever lampooning of many standard dramatic conventions. 178 Knigbt Boh Clarke spies a poor family hi distress, and with the help of his dubious horse vainly attempts to give aid. One of the high points in the Mustard and Cheese production of ' ' Time Limit, pro- duced last Fall, occurred in this pre-court martial questioning scene. LIVING GROUPS; centers of un ' wersity social life WKC .- .- ,.. Fraternities . . . strengthcmg fdeptdships With chapters of thirty national organizations and over one third of the undergraduate body in its mem- bership, the Lehigh fraternity family is an extremely important part of the University life. Since its early beginnings, not long after the founding of the Uni- versity itself, the fraternity system has grown into a strong body of well-organized men — men who have pledged their active support to the betterment of Le- high, the fraternity system, and themselves. The Interfraternity Council must be complimented on the fine work that they did this year in an effort to solve the omnipresent problems of fraternity contact- ing, rushing, and pledging. This year ' s Fall contacting and Spring rushing program was an improvement over past systems, but far from the ideal plan in the eyes of many. The so-called Mickey Mouse activities of pledging were also criticized by administration and faculty. IFC ambitiously accepted the challenge and came up with a new rushing program for next year and also an amendment to its constitution which sets forth an impressive pledges ' Bill of Rights . The jaunt down the hill to class becomes more bearable in the Spring when heavy coats can be shed for lighter attire. It ' s the long, uncomfortable walk back up that makes one wish it were Winter again. Interfraternity Council . governing thirty fraternities The Interfraternity Council performs the important task of coordinating Lehigh ' s fraternity system. As the primary governing body of the thirty fraternities, the council represents over 900 Lehigh men. Rushing is one of the most important activities of a fraternity, and one of the biggest annual headaches of the Interfraternity Council. In the recent past the group has initiated several trial systems, all aimed at providing an adequate rushing procedure without un- due sacrifice of study time. A completely new scheme was tested this year, with contacting and rushing split between the first and second semesters, respectively. A more relaxed dormitory invasion period ended in December, and fraternity house doors were not thrown open to the freshmen until the week before Spring vacation. Student Life Committee and the Dean ' s Office were not completely satisfied with the program, however, and future IPC ' s will still face this harrowing problem. The Interfraternity Council annually sponsors the Lafayette Weekend display contest. A cup is presented to the house having the most original and attractive display, as determined by a group of judges. As usual, this year ' s contest proved to be an amusing and well- enjoyed feature of the traditional festivities, and pro- vided some friendly rivalry among the fraternities. IPC ' Weekend is always one of the highlights of Lehigh ' s social season. As a kickoff for the rushing period, this year ' s weekend featured a Mustard and Cheese play, and the traditional dance. F ' tnt row: Moran, Haller, Kuchler, Gamble, Gaiser, Secrelary; Gartside, Treasurer: Schier, Presi- dent: Mercy, Vice-Presidenl : Berger, Oltchick, Reinik, Taylor, Evans. Second row: McCurdy, Splatt, Mylks, Koch, Kiley, Hoben, Solomon, Grierson, Rawls, McMurtrie, deHart. Third row: Ulak, Draper, Zimmer, Bayer, Rogan, Koppenhofer, Venable, Bach, Apter, King, Shabaker, Achilles, Cook. 184 OFFICERS Fini Rou: James V. Eppes, Faculty Adviser; Dudley W. Johnson, Faculty Adiiser: Mercy, Vice-President. Second Row: Schier, President: Gaiser, Secretary: Gartside, Treasurer. Presic ent Carl Schier ponders a question from the floor during one of IPC ' s bi-iveeklj meetings held in Packard Laboratory. ?W Mu Chapter The Phi Mu chapter of Alpha Chi Rho gave its full support to campus activities this year with represen- tation in most of Lehigh ' s clubs, societies, and teams. With emphasis on the quality of leadership, the Crows whole-heartedly plunged into the extra-cur- ricular program with brothers on many teams, and in Cyanide, Arcadia, Tau Beta Pi, and other groups. Socially no one had a more active and interesting party life than did Alpha Chi Rho. Lafayette Week- end turned out to be a great success, and of course the great parties in the Fall and Spring were also well en- joyed by brothers and guests alike. Being in its entirety a close, well-knit organization, Alpha Chi Rho realizes the importance of true frater- nalism and strives to be a house full of close and last- inq friendships. Completing their forty-first year of membership in the Lehigh family, the Crows dis- played, as always, a well-balanced combination of strong campus interests, full social lives, and true fraternity spirit. AX P Alpha Chi Rbo ' s canine friend gets infor mal instruction in elementary social graces for the upcoming weekend. First roll : Fuchs, Eckstein, Treasurer; Wardell, Vice-President; Sousa, President: Leach, Hulse, Feuerbach. Second row: Weaver, Sheppard, St. Clair. Third row: Woodard, Planas, Dougherty, Higerd, Cazer, Gill, White, Sanford, Starkey, Hofmann, Hermanson, Armstrong, Daniels, Batcha. — 1 ■_ B ■F 1 ' 9 iHiit: i-j fi k.jt : -•ir J uV AD After eiery fia eri ly party comes clea !-np time. Here some Alpha S gs put their house ill shape and replenish stocks. First Rolf: Brumbaugh, Knoebel, Hughes, Vice-President : Eberly, Ketterer, Crippen. Second Roir: Hulsizer, Slinghoff, Galleys, Woerheide, Lefever, Welker, Gettys, Fields. Third Row: Bostrom, McMurtrie, President: Bjerre, McCurdy, Secretary: Knapp, Kelly, Moyer, Stidham, Beedle. Fouri j Row: Ford, Treasurer: Rumpf, Irwin, Gleichmann, Peck, Merkle, Brown, Young. c i I . ;: f Mpfia Sigma Phi This year Alpha Sigma Phi played host to its na- tional fraternity convention. The assembly was held at a Pocono resort, and chapters from all over the country were represented. The Alpha Sigs did well in sports this year, and also maintained their customary high scholastic aver- age. For the past two years the Lehigh chapter has been awarded the national Alpha Sigma Phi scholar- ship. In campus activities they were also well repre- sented; Alpha Sigs held the presidencies of Cut and Thrust and the Lutheran Students Association, and a member was on the discipline committee. Alpha Sigma Phi took to the hills as its extremely successful Fall Houseparty social took t he form of a hillbilly party. Practically before they could get the straw out of their hair, they plunged into another festive affair, an old-fashioned hayride. Within the next year work will begin on a new campus house for the Alpha Sigs in Sayre Park. In only three year ' s time a hard-working group collected the funds necessary for this ambitious project. Penns )ama Alpha Rho Chapter As one of the oldest fraternities on campus, found- ed at Lehigh in 1882, Alpha Tau Omega has contrib- uted much to the University throughout the years. ATO strives to be an activity house and still maintain high scholarship and genial brotherhood. This goal they have successfully accomplished again this year. ATO can be proud of the significant contributions of its brothers in diversified extracurricular iields ranging from sports to politics. The house could boast of having a considerable share of the leadership responsibilities throughout the campus with class cabinet officers, Arcadia president, band members, and WLRN direc- tors among the brothers. Tau, ATO ' s loyal pet and mascot for many years, was a well-known campus figure. The huge Great Dane, the largest mascot on campus, was known by name to all Lehigh students. It was evident this year, however, that the big dog was getting too old to keep up with the brothers, and the alumni graciously donated a fine puppy to the house. It is hoped that his reign will be as successful as that of his predecessor. AT ii These ATO pledges find there ' s more to fraternity life than drinking beer as they aid in Spring cleaning. Kneeling: Prescott, Rojahn, Vice-President; Wendlocher, Bateman, Secretary; Kobran, Buhl, Mac- Williams, Secretary: Wright, Venman, Moran, Manno, Smuck, Drury. Standing: Kennedy, Russell, Wolfert, Bischoff, Sedgwick, Fisher, Treasurer; Nowakowski, Zinn, Swartz, Hanson, Ross, Shaugh- nessy. Van Wickle, Baralt, Shannon, Werft, Wilkinson, Zimmer, Poscillico, Moore, President; McCarthy, DufFy, Little. filtX: rT Z r l : .--. .5 pS: B en I ' j a smash over the net and a try for that point as these Betas await dinner by play- ing a quick game of doubles. First row: Springman, Parker, Talucci. Second row: Bold, Burk, Hagerman, Sahlor, Triponey, McGary, McGuckin, McHugh, Iliffe, Romig, Hamer. Tl ' ird row: Stemme, Gartside, President; Gunst. Fourth row: Scheu, Schumacher, Van Deusen. Fijih row: Waldron, Wright, Blair ' . Sixth row: Smiley, Meyer, Karr, Secretary. Seventh row: MacNamarra, Gates, Vice-President; Horton, Treasurer. eta Zketa Pi Once more this year Lehigh looked to Beta Theta Pi for many of its campus leaders. As always their wide range of achievements reflected the high quality performance that is the basis of their attitude toward Lehigh and toward fraternity life itself. This year, as in the past, Betas were active in the University athletic program, with many varsity participants in the house, including the captain of the wrestling team. The Lehigh student governing bodies were also well stocked with Betas; the president of Cyanide, the treasurer of the senior class and the vice-president of the junior class were among the brothers. Participa- tion of Betas in many extracurricular activities was the policy, as they were also active in ODK, the Epitome, Tau Beta Pi, Brown Key, and the Glee Club. For Fall Houseparty, the house used quite success- fully the Nebish theme, with the brothers and their dates garbed in shapeless costumes for the gala party. Another important event on the Beta calendar was the annual Christmas party in which the brothers played Santa Claus for an appreciative group of local children. e hi phi ?s Of a}( iQx Chi Phi holds the unique distinction of being the oldest member of the Lehigh fraternity family. During its eighty-seven years at the University, Chi Phi has established, through the conscientious efforts of its members, a high reputation for fulfilling the aims of fraternity living and for enthusiastically participating in campus activities. The house takes particular pride in the spirit of friendship and brotherhood that under- lies all the actions of its brothers. This year Chi Phi showed its interest in extra-cur- riculars with members on the football, wrestling, and soccer teams, and participants in many other campus functions. Fall Houseparty found brothers and dates garbed in the typical floppy-eared costumes of a Play- boy party. Barbara Kehde, a Chi Phi date, was crowned Fall Houseparty Queen. Chi Phi is supported by a strong alumni organiza- tion which is always interested in improving the house. This year they helped defray the expenses of building a parking area and remodeling the second floor. X It ' s laundry day for the Chi Phis and two brothers add their bundles to the out-going heap at the foot of the staircase. — ti First row: Meitzner, Hildebran, Wilcox, Beacham, Groover, DeMartino, Hunt, Sprenkle, Shaner. Second row: Laucks, Semech, Krehbiel, Treasurer: Gotwalt, Cobb, RuUman, Ghegan, Briggs, Johnson, Secretary: Naylor, President; Hartz. Third row: Hofmann, Clauson, Laaken, Cassedy, Straat, Emery, Merrill, Hess, King, Thomasson, Witte, Adam, Malaney, Weidner, Adickes. j ii.ais. X T Pie. milk, and coffee is the snack menu for these Chi Psis who get an assist from their genial cook. First row: Patton, McNally, Treasurer; Peterson, Baer, Martindale, Gamble, Vice-President: DuBois. Second row: Burdash, President: Sattler, Kerr, Royal, Holden, Steinman, Schwenker, Hahn, Gage, McHugh, Watkins. Third row: Mummert, Kramer, Bayer, Tyrie, Hallcr, Kovach, Theiss, Cunning- ham. ' - ■' - , rKk li i ' . ; CkiPsi Alpha Qia Dt i(x C a} iQX ■. adTTS Mtaes ma, Chi Psis completed another outstanding year in the intramural sports program competition in their defense of the University athletic championship which they won last year. Their accomplishments in intramurals repre- sented a strong group effort with 100 per cent partici- pation by all of the brothers. The men of Chi Psi were also active in other campus activities, including varsity athletics, student govern- ment organizations, the honorary societies, and student publications. On a national brotherhood level, Chi Psi had very close contacts with several other of their chapters in the East, especially Rutgers and Cornell. One of the most successful inter-campus social events observed at Lehigh was the annual beer-softball game with the Rutgers chapter. Lafayette weekend brought out a unique creation for the Lafayette display contest. The skill and imagin- ation of the pledge class gave rise to a mechanized Lehigh man who shot a leopard from atop a huge cuckoo clock as The Clock Struck game time. Mta Cki Leh gfi C Q iQx iu y In early December, Delta Chi reversed the trend of the many Lehigh fraternities which have either recently moved on campus or plan to do so in the near future by m.oving off the University grounds into their new- house at Brodhead Avenue and Warren Square. The structure had formerly been used by Lehigh to house the members of the Instep Program. The move into the recently redecorated house has more than doubled Delta Chi ' s housing capacity and has given them much greater flexibility in planning their social events and other recreational activities. This was well-evidenced in the gala housewarming celebration during Snowball Weekend, when hundreds of Lehigh men and dates helped initiate the new domicile. Delta Chi is the youngest fraternity at Lehigh, hav- ing been founded in 1952. In these few years, how- ever, the group has already firmly established a few traditions, one of which is the annual keg-rolling con- test in which five pledges challenge five Delta Tau Delta neophytes to a race through Sayre Park. A X Pictorially reviewing happy occasions at Delta Chi brings smiles to these three brothers ' faces- First Row: Koch, Berger, Campbell, Meglaughlin, Cowles. Carlsen, Grierson, President: Houston, Vice-President. Second Rou : Drennan, Hahalis, Garland, Ganerich, Corresponding Secretary: Achenberg, Harrison, Cirello, Malcolm, Treasurer: Snyder, Scavuzzo, Rebhan, Munigle, Recording Secretary. ' --■n mi I a r. ai  ' f . 41 , i A Gosh darn it. ou ginned me! barks the shaggy Delta Phi as the house pet yawns in gleeful triumph. Kneeling: Long, Secretary: Slack, Treasurer : Fisch, Vice-President: Nilsson, President: Smith, Black, Walsmith. First Rou - McKee, Landsberg, Bray, Dardick, Bauer, Kennedy, Wagoner, Mihan, Miller, Kenny, Hunt, Dillman, Battershall. Second Row: Cornwell, Silver, McMullen, Hartenau, Rinehart, Simmons, Snyder, Mertz. w 4 ' fi-7KW: .  . , % ' Nu Chapter The Delta Phis, known fraternally as the Saint Elmos, had a double social event this year. The cele- bration of the seventy-fifth anniversary of the Nu chapter ' s founding at Lehigh was combined with the 128th annual convention of the national society. Rep- resentatives from Delta Phi chapters throughout the country poured into the Bethlehem area and helped the Lehigh brothers make a real blast of their anni- versary celebration. The Delts are proud of their past which dates to the founding of the fraternity at Union College in 1827. As a member of the famous Union Triad, Delta Phi is one of the oldest social fraternities in America. Locally the Delts still share fellowship with the other members of the Triad, Kappa Alpha and Sigma Phi, with at least one combined party each year. The Delta Phis believe in keeping active on campus and have shown this spirit in their affiliations with the musical societies, the lacrosse team, government bodies, and many other campus groups. Mta Sigma Phi Delta Sigma Phis literally had a real ball this year as they undertook the traditional Sailor ' s Ball and Carnation Ball. Both affairs are celebrated by Delta Sig chapters all over the country, and the Lehigh group observes them during the houseparty weekends. The dances were particularly successful this year, with representatives from many local Delta Sig chapters in attendance. Delta Sigma Phi was active in all types of campus activities, from sports to course societies and honoraries. Included in this list of organizations were the cross country and rifle teams, the Brown and White, and the Accounting Society. The secretary of IFC was a Delta Sig, as was the president of Scabbard and Blade. Delta Sigma Phi ' s Parents Club is very interested, as should be expected, in the house ' s academic record. Each semester they offer two scholarship awards for the highest average and the greatest improvement. These awards serve their purpose, as was evidenced by Delta Sig ' s very high house average this year. A 2 Guess this prospect won the Delta Sigma Phi blackball and is being neatly stuped in a trunk for exile. First row: Czeiner, Weisner, Secretary: Reller, Prendent: Buchanan, Treasurer: Rerig, G. Second row: Parker, Leyendecker, L ong, Kaiser, Gaiser, Harmoning, Vice-President: Bachman, Collier, Liebensberger. Third row: Augustine, Storm. Andrews, Jones, Thomas, Walker, Schlenker, Fahrney, Walton, Benson, Wilson, Miner, Rerig, R. '  ;n ;t;K ATA There ' s no rest for tlvs iinuary Delt as three brothers gang up with match in hand for a heat treatment. Kneeling: Krahnke, Holmes, Sweitzer, Recording Secretary: Galyon, Bentley, Williams, Ciaravino, Gaido, Corresponding Secretary: Colonna. First Row: Peoples, Brenner, Woerner, Vogt, Roglieri, President: Eelman, Swenson, Mazaleski, Blank, Rigby. Second Row: Elliot, Rigg, Somerville, Schmidbauer, Krzesiewski, Rohleder, Tindall, Freeman, Vice-President; Porter. T)elta Zau Delta Beta lambda Chapter A gala housewarming party on February 21 made official Delta Tau Delta ' s long-awaited move into a spacious new Sayre Park residence. Guests gazed with admiring eyes at the attractive American-Colonial-styled structure, and praised the interior for its spaciousness, beauty, and functionalism. The house easily accom- modates thirty-four men. Included in the basic layout are a spacious dining room with adjacent game room, twelve study rooms with built-in wardrobes, two large sleeping dorms, a handsome alumni suite, a library, and a gracious living room. It contains several special luxury features, moreover, such as provisions for a complete hi-fi public address system, dimmer-controlled lights, and a bar that opens into the game room. The move into the new house did not lessen Delta Tau Delta ' s traditionally keen interest in extracurricular activities. The Delts were especially prominent in var- sity athletics, student government, and the musical organizations. Delta UpsHon The men of Delta Upsilon made the scene socially this year with enthusiastic participation in Lehigh ' s social calendar. The first big weekend was the well- attended Pare nts ' Weekend, which gave the brothers and their parents the rare opportunity to socialize together at the house. Then followed a gala Fall House- party Weekend, with the house veiled in the atmos- phere of a street cafe. Lafayette Weekend soon came along with a fine Cat on a Hot Tin Roof display as the theme for the occasion. The yule season brought out the Christmas tree, Santa Claus, and the annual party for underprivileged children. In the Spring, fol- lowing the very successful IFC and Spring Houseparty weekends, the house held the traditional Mother ' s Day tea, which culminated a very active social program for the year. Delta Upsilon was also highly active in many other phases of Lehigh life. The house was well represented in the Glee Club, Ski Club, Alpha Phi Omega, class cabinets. Epitome, and many of the athletic teams. AT Wrestling never quite leaves the minds of Lehigh men; ereryuhere there may be seen aspiring matmen. Here tuo DU ' s tussle in their living room. First rou : DeHart, Secreury: Fay, Creamer, Vice-President; Eshbaugh, President; Webb, Treasurer; Kajsten. Second rou : Wilde, Superdock, Terr ' , Taylor, Swartley, Bonanno. Third row: Minsker, Barker, Thieme, Font. Fourth rou : Kerr, Van Buren, Kaiser, Fitch, Wolfe. Fifth row: Parrish, Berry. i . Jl K A These dale-ivise KA ' s aren ' t losing any time in lining up girls for the big Spring Hotiseparty W eekend. First row: Glomb, Monson, Byers, Everett, O ' Neal, Schneider, Foster, Sacks, Sullivan. Second row: MacMurray, Reboul, Bevan, Turner, Stevens, Miller, President; Rosencrantz, Hutchinson, Stepp, Kramer, Larsen, Desch, Achilles, Cooper, Dewitt, Danenhower, Shabaker, Spillman, Johnson. PMS ' ! ' T-- jg - ■• ■s HB vl ' BI KZ ii ' v «t ' M fc ■j r ■Ky y| ' wsn «. Hk - - hL H K- AT, - V 1 Ur A1 Hf ■' 9 ■fe ' L jymJ Wiyi W 1 Mi 1 UpJI ' m9 1 i 1 1 li H BIW - ' -f%- 1 lie. ' HV r g i i llriJMi Ji I Kappa Alpha ?enm[i )an a Alpha Chajpter As the oldest continuous social fraternity in exist- ence, Kappa Alpha kept its name high in the Lehigh family. The Kaps were strongly represented in nu- merous activities and played on the varsity lacrosse, football, baseball, tennis, and hockey teams. The class cabinets all had Kappa Alpha men represented, and the scholarship chairman of IFC was a KA. Probably the activity which produced the most interest among the brothers was the Glee Club. There was plenty of music around the house with the entire officer staff of the Glee Club composed of KA men. Although Kappa Alpha is the oldest fraternity, it is certainly not the largest, with only nine chapters in existence. This policy of a small, closely knit na- tional organization gave the Lehigh brothers an oppor- tunity to keep in close contact with other KA houses in this country and in Canada. The spirit of unity was always in evidence at Satur- day night parties, when the brothers and their dates could be found singing around the piano. Kappa Sigma Beta ota Chapter In the large brick house on Church Street reside the men of Kappa Sigma. Beginning their fifty-ninth year at Lehigh, the brothers still strive to maintain the objectives of the founders in making Kappa Sig one of the University ' s friendliest fraternities. The broth- ers share not only the warm bonds of fraternalism, but also common interests and activities. The Kappa Sigs verified their ardent interest in sports this year with spirited participation in both intramural and varsity contests; members were active in football, swimming, wrestling, golf, tennis, and sailing. Kappa Sigma also kept well abreast of the extracurricular life with representatives in all the major areas of campus activities. The social life at Kappa Sig this year was a full and varied one, with the biggest blasts during the two Houseparties, and during Lafayette and Snow- ball Weekends. The social highlight was the annual Kappa Sigma Christmas banquet. K 2 Initial scaffolding gels underway as three Kappa Sigs prepare their display for the Lafayette Weekend contest. First Row: McGoldrick, Muir, Engle, Abramson, Gorman, Lohmeyer. Smith, Ullery, President: Hecht, Treasurer: Roberts, Jones, Daly. Second Row: Talbot, Spellman, Crist, Paton, Secretary: HaUbauer, Stone, Koerner, Joecks, Haberlein, Anewalt, Gowin, Swanson, Vice-President: Schuster. Third Row: Solt, Lois, Phillips. Fourth Row: Horn, Martin, Dick, Snyder, Landes. A X A Slokitig their inferno, these men vigorously slave to keep all Lambda Chis in a warm and friendly condition. Pint Row: Reinik, Memolo, Vice-Prendent ; Harrison, Bruno, Ackerman, Lynn, Presideiil. Second Row: Jackson, Henry, Raynolds, Hammond, Stoney, Loss, Gessner, Laird, Gray. Third Row: Schaefer, Seel, Merk, Lambertson, Jacobi, McCaskie, Cook, Treasurer. Fourth Row: Mihal, Pickslay, Richardson, Miller, Westerman, Mashes, Waldron, Mancari. 1 k (oamma-?s Zeta Chapter C3 Fall Houseparty at Lambda Chi Alpha was a bit louder than usual this year, for the always present merriment was accompanied by vigorous gunplay among the brothers. The weapons, of course, were only cap pistols, but the effect gave a touch of realism to the Lambda Chi Corral, the Houseparty theme. In addition to the usual western decorations, a set of swinging doors and several bales of hay converted Lambda Chi ' s bar into an old-time cowboy saloon. The swinging doors were such a hit at the part} ' that they became a mainstay in the bar for this social season. On the more serious side, Lambda Chi continued its tradition of communit} ' interest and service. The annual Christmas part) ' for orphans was again very successful, as the children from the nearby area de- lighted at the warm-hearted entertainment by the brothers. An additional service project was also under- taken by Lambda Chi Alpha this year, in the form of a door-to-door drive to solicit funds for the local campaign for aid to the mentally retarded. ' f Pki Delta Zheta ?enns mma Eta Chapter The Phi Dehs are well known for their wide and enthusiastic participation in all phases of campus ac- tivities, and especially for their leadership in the many student governing bodies at Lehigh. This year the house had brothers on all of the class cabinets, with a total of eight representatives, and on Arcadia and Arcadia Associates. Sportswise, Phi Delts participated in varsity football, wrestling, swimming, fencing, and track. The house was also active in intramurals, last year winning trophies in football, swimming, and softball. A highlight of this year ' s social program at Phi Delta Theta was the house ' s annual Christmas party for orphans. The party was especially successful due to the attendance of the lovely Miss Pennsylvania, who made a very charming Santa ' s helper by presenting gifts to the children. At the end of this year, a building and renovating program was begun at the Phi Delt house, with plans including a redecorated interior and a new wing. A The dumb and brother wa ters team up to supply the Phi Delts with gallons and gal- lons of something at dinner. first row: Fiducia, Keiser, Rhoads, Bookbinder, Smith, D., Kiley, President: Painter, Whitten, Martins, Long. Second ' row: Smith, K., Austin, Croteau, Da% ' idson, Wagner, Hodges, Pendleton, Peterson, Treasurer; Rogers, F., Rogers, L., Jorgensen, Berentson. Third row: Salamon, Jones, Chouteau, Cook, Pope, GriflFin, Robertson, Robbins, Nathan, Secretary: Sayre, Boyce, Heath. Fourth row: Washburn, Vice-President: Taylor. ' C. v ' rri ' 4 9 A : tCi_ ' r A Neifs was apparently good for at least one of these Fijis drawn hastily to the ever- pnpi lar mail corner. First row: Kindt, Ash, Kurtossy, Scalzo, Myers, Rach, Corcoran, Burfeind. Bates, Grim. Second row: Schier, President: Sweet, Canova, Secretary: Manwarring, Groff, Rush, Treasurer: Lewis, Brooks, Highfield, Draper, Guidi, Connelly, Rust, Lull. Third row: Banister, Ache, Anglada, Jones, A., Jones. W., Hetfield, Eckert, Beattie, Wentz, Hodge, Edwards. llj y -I i. -1 r ' Vf t r vj. I ) fi - = ' - X, Phi 0am ma Delta Beta CW Chapter The Phi Gam house has always been one o£ effective leadership in student activities, student government, and varsity sports. Never was this fact more in evi- dence than this year, when the house numbered among its brothers the president of the Class of 1959. the captain of the football team, and the president of the Interfraternit) ' Council. Fijis were active in many var- sity ' sports and participated in Cyanide, Arcadia, and practically all of the Lehigh honoraries. A social event of special note at Phi Gam was the chapter ' s annual birthday party, which is rapidly be- coming a Lehigh tradition. This year ' s celebration at- tracted more than seventy-five representatives of other fraternities, the faculty and staff, and the adminis- tration. Spring Houseparty once again brought out Phi Gam ' s traditional Fiji Island theme. Sand, simulated by sawdust, on the ground and amazingly realistic palm trees overhead carried the partygoers away from the realities of the Lehigh campus to the romantic atmos- phere of a tropical island paradise. Phi Sigma Kappa The Phi Sigs began their fifty-eighth season at Lehigh this year, and only their second year in their luxurious Sayre Park home. One of the outstanding events of the Fall semester for Phi Sigma Kappa was a Christmas party for some children from the Allen- town State Hospital. With a Christmas tree, loads of presents, and even Santa Claus to lead the festivities, it was difficult to decide who had a better time, the children or the brothers. Phi Sigma Kappa strives to maintain close ties between its national organization and its individual chapters. One of the annual events nationally is the Phi Sig basketball tournament, in which Lehigh Nu chapter has done consistently well against its brother chapters throughout the country. The Phi Sig house realizes the importance of aca- demics, and encourages high fraternity averages by annually presenting a scholarship award at the Flag- pole Day ceremonies to the fraternity with the highest scholastic average. 2 K Swab the decks, ye lowly pledges, ex- claim two Phi Sigs as they teach two proteges the art of using elbow grease. V I H ■' • wij m ■' ' ' B n A i r l l P HV Hl X tiA Bn ' § 1 H H H; 1 r Kneeling: Dever, Liener; Barrett, Zenorini, Treasurer: Miller. First row: Meloney, Varrese, Lynn, Sterne, Kalmey, Michon, Vice-President : Henry, Weiss, President. Second row: Cook, Smith, Jackson, Taylor, Connor. Third row: Hedges, Haines, Morley, MacPhee, Gill. Founlj roiv: Barnes, Parsons, Engelke. Fijilo roiv: Stover, Secretary: Roberts, Negley, Sylvester. n K A Abotil to leave their north side home, these PiKA ' s don ' t appear too gleeful about the long trek to campus. First Rou - Epp, Hartung. ' ice-President: Davenport, Forstall, Coutant, Clark, Treiisurer: Evans, President: Flemish, Oplinger, Daniels. Second Row: Bowers, Fuerst, Williams, Braendel. Third Row: Riedel, Snyder, Sarine, Mennig, Parker. Fourth Row: Venable, Secretary: Grundy, Montano, Johnson, Mayrhoffer, Smith, Cuntey. Pi Kappa Mp Gamma lambda Chapter The traditional Dream Girl Dance was the high- light of the social season at Pi Kappa Alpha, when the name of the Dream Girl, selected from among the girls pinned to brothers, was inscribed upon a huge trophy provided for that purpose. Newly pinned broth- ers are also honored with the traditional baptism in the backyard fish pool. The Pikes were active on campus this year with representatives in Mustard in Cheese, the class cab- inets, and various honorar} ' societies. In athletics, a great in terest was taken in intramural activities, with practically all of the brothers participating enthusias- tically in the many sports in the program. The Lehigh chapter tries to keep in close contact with other local Pi Kappa Alpha chapters, especially the Pennsylvania chapter, which they challenge to a Softball game each year. This year they also kept up their traditional close relationships with Moravian ' s Alpha Epsilon Pi sorority with an impressive dinner party in the Fall and the annual modified softball- picnic affair in the Spring. PiCambda Phi The Pi Lams were rocking and rolling as the irre- pressible King ' s Men really raised the roof with the American Bandstand theme at Fall Houseparty. Having to match the highly successful Satellites of last year ' s Spring Houseparty, the band inserted a spirit into brothers and visitors that made the weekend one of the fi nest in Pi Lam ' s history. The members of Pi Lam made their greatest con- tributions to Lehigh life in campus government groups and student publications. This year. Pi Lam men were numbered among the editors of the Epitome, managers of the Brown and White, and officers of WLRN. There were also Pi Lam men in IPC offices, and in Cyanide, Arcadia, and all of the class cabinets. Intercollegiate Who ' s Who listed three Pi Lams in its group of top men on the nation ' s campuses this year. Away from the campus, Pi Lambda Phi strove to do the community service by soliciting in neighboring areas for funds for the mentally retarded children campaign. HA looks as though Asian Flu is paying another visit to the Pi Lam house; or maybe it ' s just house cleaning. First row: Eisner, Harkavy, Vogelson, Weisberg, Vice-President: Popky, Lister, Shulman, Rosen- berg, Baker. Second row: Beck, S., Gard, Blumenthal, Freeman, R., Secretary; Helbraun, Mercy, President; Lebersfeld, Bernard, Salwen, Friedman, Freeman, M., Rusoff, Kiselik, Welsch. Third row: Lemle, Talkow, Davis, Melnick, Haies, Fuld, Beck, A., Silverman, Feldman, Zelenko. Fourth row: Sider, Brody, Milner, Friedenrich, Goldstein, Halperin, Epstein, Estroff, Brodsky, Rudes. l« 01 V ri ' r r V ■■-M aI f ix 1 . - y m Y Pawn to the King ' s fourth in Psi U ' s chess room. As far as they are concerned, this beats poker anytime. First row: Pleasanton, President: Hart, Tomlinson, Erving, Gray, Diener. Second row: Rodgers, Debus, Day, OflFutt, Treasurer; Costello, Tanner, Jenkins, Belfanti. Third row: Bach, Vice-President : Chew, Buehl. Fourth row: Thyrre, Secretary: Hutchinson, Bryant, Bay. Psi UpsiloH The familiar high-pitched clang of the bell warned South Mountaineers of the approach of the Psi Upsilon fire engine. The large red monster of 1935 vintage was a familiar sight this year, carrying its spirited owners over the campus roads during festive weekends. The tradition was begun when Psi Upsilon iirst pur- chased the old 1925 pump truck, which became un- runable in 1953- The new mechanical mascot has faithfully been serving the house for the past two years. Psi Upsilon has always striven to create a favorable relationship between the fraternities and the faculty. A special faculty cocktail party this year was aimed at this goal, and was thoroughly enjoyed by facult) ' and brothers alike. Psi Upsilon is one of the five oldest social fraternities in the country, being founded at Union College in 1833. Proud of this long history of continuous exist- ence, the Lehigh chapter has tried to keep in close contact with all of its brother chapters. One such con- tact is the traditional Softball game with the Penn- sylvania chapter. Sigma Sp d M Sigma Kappa Chapter The Sammy house, always interested in doing their part in the activities in and around Lehigh, outdid all of their past efforts this year in their winning of the Ugly Man Contest in the Campus Chest drive. A well- planned and well-executed campaign, complete with Cedar Crest girls, police escort, and motor caravan, carried them to unquestionable victory. They not only proved themselves to be a group of energetic workers for the benefit of the entire University, but also had a wonderful time themselves in the project. Sigma Alpha Mu men took a great and varied in- terest in the many organizations on campus. They were represented on the class cabinets, varsity sports teams, and honorary and course societies. Managers of WLRN and the Epitome were Sammies and interest in one activity or another was held by everyone in the house. Sigma Alpha Mu looks forward to two major events in the near future, the celebration of the founding of the fraternity next Fall, and the building of a campus house within the next few years. DAM Sammies cavort about South Mountain seek- ing votes for Hup Hollander, successful candidate in Ugly Man Contest. First row: Gottlieb, SchafFer, Goldenkoff, Holzer, Mayzell, Karmatz, Greenberg, Klevit, Spirer, Hollander. Second row: Kashden, Magid, Sager, Hepps, Apter, Freeland, Taub, Xeishloss, Slater, Oltchick, Lipton, Siegel, Pickelner. Third row: Lindenbaum. Kuhn. Goodman, Freedman, Bergstein. Fourth row: Harris, Manacher, Kirschner, Hirsch, Turry, Miller. n V U1 L W S X Cedric observes indifferently as the Sigma Cbis polish busily, establishing that a dog ' s life is really great. First rote: Havel, Helfrich, Bechtold, Gordon, Gardner, ' ice-President; Currey, Kuchler, Deem, Swan, Pons, Hagenbuch, Chamberlain. Second row: Herring, DElia, President: Warden, Treasurer; McCarthy, Garfield, Brooks, Secretary; Schmoyer, Moore, Stone, Arcangelo, Dietrich, Lewis, Gery, Homsher, Roede, Demarest, King, Banman, Bradley, Burgdorf, Goddard, Phillips, Horger, Moody. rc i| r m .x H Vffl II fP rH ' :? ' i. Sigma Chi Alpha Rho Zha f i x ftv r f '  e ' tS t The Sigma Chi chapter is very lucky to have an alumni organization which is interested in the house and willing to help it out. This is evidenced in the striking modern house that the men now occupy in Sayre Park, which was financed entirely by this alumni group. Lafayette Weekend is always a social standout at Sigma Chi, and no small credit for this is due to the overflow crowd of loyal alumni which attends every year. The picking of the Sigma Chi Sweetheart is annually an enjoyable social event for the brothers. The Sweet- heart, selected from the girls who are pinned to a Sigma Chi at Lehigh, was crowned in early December and was presented with a special trophy commemorat- ing the occasion. Another social treat was provided by the annual dinner and dance held by the house in honor of Its founding. Sigma Chi has always tried to place University ob- ligations and scholastic achievement first and foremost, and can be proud of the great improvement in house average in recent years. Sigma J u ? Chapter In past years, Sigma Nu has always occupied a prominent position in the Lehigh athletic limelight. This year was no exception, with a considerable por- tion of the football team, including next year ' s co- captain, as brothers in the house. The captain of the basketball team was also a Sigma Nu, and the fra- ternity was represented on nearly all of the other University teams. Athletic achievement, although an important part of the house ' s life, was not its only attribute. Sigma Nus participated in many other phases of campus life, and also strove to maintain a good scholastic average. Sigma Nu arrived on the Lehigh scene m 1884, mak- ing this year the seventy-fifth at the University. An anniversary such as this is an excellent excuse for cele- bration, and the Sigma Nus took full advantage of the opportunity with a big anniversary party for the alumni. A large number of graduates attended and the affair proved to be a gala success. The Sigma Nu all-sports banquet also drew a fine showing of alumni, who helped make it a memorable evening for all. 2 N This inside look at the Sigma Nu barber- shop proves the old saying that too many Sigma Nu barbers spoil the head. Kneeling: Meier, Price,. Hunter, Butera, Crawford, Brenan, Daniels, Pennell, President: Donnelly, Colicchio, Wagner, Vice-President; Smith. Standing: Chicco, Hofmann, Secretary: Stoneburner, Robinson, Schmidt, DiClerico, Norwalk, Buckworth, Needham, Lewis, Allinger, Gersen, Dougherty, Murphy, E., Murphy, D., Hanington, Johnson, Ullman, Gustafson. m ■•■ ■■ ■- ' ' ' i? ' . ' j i ■.r3f v % t . . n--i 7;.,$J ,a- .W .J « . % Mipjg-N ' - ' ! MwM % m f ' laiii p n y 2 $ This Sigma Phi gives his all to master that crazy hula hoop to the complete iionderment of dog and brothers. First row: Lerch, Doumaux, Millsom, Nickey, Treasurer: Pisauro, Crawford, Lumis, Vice-President. Second row: Cummings, Davidson, Shaw, Engel, Berry, Brewer, Burden, President: Clark, Rup- precht, Mylks, Bliss, Secretary: LeVasseur, Minot, Lawrence. ni ' lfc m: ' .- ' Vi • ' ' ' - -SioM r: ' I W s $10 ma Phi Per ns )aY a Mpha Chapter As a member of the famous Union Triad, Sigma Phi is one of the oldest national social fraternities in America. The Lehigh chapter was founded in 1887, and now resides in a beautiful, ultra-modern house in Sayre Park. Making constant improvements on their dwelling, such as a patio several years ago and a hi-fi set last year, the Sigma Phis are now looking into the possibilities of an addition to the house in the near future. Unity and friendship are the goals of Sigma Phi ' s fraternity philosophy. Visitors always feel welcome at the house, and never fail to note the united fraternity spirit and the congenial atmosphere that surrounds all of the brothers ' actions. Sigma Phi was well represented in campus activities this year, with members in the Band, Glee Club, all of the class cabinets, the Brown Key, ' WLRN, and many of the military and religious organizations. Sports- wise the Sigs participated in varsity football, track, lacrosse, and cheerleadmg. Sigma PkiSpsilon Sigma Phi Epsilon anxiously looks forward to the erection of a magnificent new home in Sayre Park in the very near future. The University has approved the plans for the house; the building fund is near its goal; and all that now remains is the ground-breaking cere- mony. Sigma Phi Epsilon probably celebrates Lafayette Weekend more enthusiastically than any other Lehigh fraternity. The Sig Eps made a big blast of this year ' s party, packing hundreds of alumni into the jumping house. The weekend was a tremendous success socially and financially, as the alumni helped push the building fund toward completion. The annual Sweetheart dance was another highlight of the social season. The traditional dance was held on Valentines Day, and as usual a beautiful queen was chosen to add to the long list of lovely Sig Ep Sweethearts. A great emphasis was placed on scholastics in recent years at Sigma Phi Epsilon, and a greatly improved house average is proof of a job well done. 2 E Out with the old, in with the new at SPE. There ' s nothing like a new teleiision to im- prove the atmosphere. First row: Davis, Reed, Clausen, Champin, Harding, Secretary; Schneider, Steitz, Halverson, Lindsay, Campion, Ulak. Second row: Burrell, Boettger, Vice-President : Kent, McHugh, Rawls, Presideiil : Henry, Coniplrolter: Correll, Warner, Rand, Harrison, Heske, Young, Harris, Jorgenson. Third row: Wetlaufer, Manning, Plumhoff, Keller, Williams, Tiernan, Heldig, Riley, Vogel, Supplee, Jo hnson, Donaldson, Schadler. T A Tan Delts do have unusual pledging activi- ties- The scene is strangely reminiscent of Dante ' s Inferno. Ouch! ' t ■, ,.  • « • Kneeling: Notis, Dosik, Minion, Schiffman, Cowen, Duke — mauot : Horkheimer, Seitler, Hare, Green. Standing: Levenson, Redler, Levy, Grant, Mittenthal, Peller, Rothkopf, Getzler, Hertzberg, Sherman, Szatmary, Miller, Schneiderman, Deresh, Neidell, Gralnick, Pavony, Strickman, Solomon, Shore, Klass, Ramer, Friedman, Sultan. Zau Delta Phi Tau C a](iiex No one can doubt the scholastic abilities of the Tau Delts, as they consistently come through with top honors in fraternity academics. During the last four years, they earned the scholastic rating of number one among the fraternities, and certainly did their reputa- tion justice this year by holding down the top fraternity position and claiming the second highest rank among all of the University living groups. Music was literally everywhere in the house as the hi-fi set was well used to emit melodious strains from newly installed speakers throughout the house. A re- decorating spree found the Tau Delts hard at work completing a bar and remodeling the livingroom. A completely well-rounded fraternit) ' is the goal of Tau Delta Phi. A very successful social season was highlighted by an ingenious Dracula Drag Part) ' during Fall Houseparty. In extracurriculars, the house partici- pated in most of the honoraries, the publications, and student government organizations. Zketa Chi The red and white cap has practically become the trademark of Theta Chi, as the striking headpieces were faithfully worn by brothers at all football games and many other activities. The cap was certainly not Theta Chi ' s only claim to fame, however, for as usual the fraternity was noted for its outstanding scholarship, its roaring parties, and its long list of campus activities. Theta Chi ' s outstanding participation in extracurricu- lar activities was especially noteworthy. The house boasted of membership in over fifty separate activities, including Arcadia, Cyanide, Omicron Delta Kappa, Tau Beta Pi, Epitome, Brown and W ' hhe. Glee Club, and Band. Theta Chis occupied the president ' s chair in such organizations as the junior class. Delta Omicron Theta, Phi Eta Sigma, and Alpha Pi Mu. Theta Chi ' s scholastic achievements were as out- standing as its activities. Always near the top of the fraternity academic list, the house was proud of its ability to maintain excellent study conditions. 0X These Theta Chis indulge in a bit of late- night, after-studying chugging — with milk, of course. First row: Holl, Bethke, Howell, Hendricks, Grebe, Mountain, Treasurer: Gilhool, Vice-President; Mitchell, President; Snyder, Clark, Secretary: Hiddeman, Van Ness. Second row: Norlander, Dimmick, Gillespie, Wright, Kohut, Walters, Lampe. Werner, Kurtz, Brown, Francolini, Weiss, Canarra, Jennings, Hayes, Jordan, Ashworth, Bauknight, Dorn, Hughes, Langis, La Mar, Mezey. k) m A fl l Bi ' il BSljI 1 ; ' jjH H Bf v B lil U IH 1 A X Ire ihe hungry Thela Delts reaching for a descending tneathall, or is it just a vigor- ous game of basketball? Kneeling: Weaver, K., Secretary; Maco, Davidson, Vaughn, Allen, Prestia, Godley, Gross. First row: Benidict, Rogan, President; Schlemmer, Richmond, Secretary; Cowan, Smiley, Siuciak, Morgan, Driscoll, Patterson. Second row: Palfi, Weaver, S., CuUigan, Rutledge, Beilstein, Treasurer; Koppenhoffer. Giordanella, Henningsen. Zheta Delta Cki Nu )Q.wiQxon Q a]( iQx Theta Delta Chi is literally at the top of Lehigh Universit}-. Its prominent position atop Old South Mountain has made it a Bethlehem landmark, its white-pillared front entrance visible from all sections of town. Just as well known as the structure itself are the accomplishments of one of Theta Delt ' s most honored alumni, Eugene Gifford Grace, former presi- dent of Bethlehem Steel. Always interested in good sport, Theta Delts organ- ized a small-scale interfraternit) ' bobsled competition this year, with participants scooting around the upper regions of the mountain. The traditional alumni week- end was especially successful with a rousing clambake as one of the featured events. The varsity athletic teams were well supplied with Theta Delts, with brothers on the football, basketball, and wrestling squads. The house was also active in activities, claiming the presidents of the sophomore class and ODK. and many members of Brown Key Society. Zketa Kappa Phi !K a C a}(iU Theta Kappa Phi has the distinction of being the only national social fraternity founded at Lehigh Uni- versity. Begun in 1919, the organization has now spread to twenty-three other campuses throughout the nation. This year ' s Theta Kaps could rightly be proud of their recently redecorated home. Improvements on the stately t ' enty-room stone and stucco chapter building included repainting the whole house and redecorating the spacious social room. The party cellar was also renovated, and now boasts the longest bar at Lehigh. The future holds an even finer home for Theta Kappa Phi in Sayre Park, as the generous alumni have nearly filled the coffers of the building fund. Theta Kaps strive to serve not only their fraternity but also their school. Significant participation in ath- letics and extracurricular activities has always been house policy. This year the Theta Kaps engaged in such activities as the class cabinets, the Band, the Epitome, the Broun and W hhe, the Arnold Air So- ciety, and the many honorary campus groups. 0K Afler a hard day ' s work, these Theta Kaps decide to take a little time off for an intra- mural practice session. First row: Parker, Bayer, P., Christatos, Treasurer: Harding, President: Shea, Vice-President: Mont- ville, Bayer, D., Preller, Lane, Ix. Second rote: Janssen, Secretary: Masi, Nieckoski, Voccola, Fernandes. Thnd row: Downey, Napravnik, Hoben, Doane, Koehl, Malone, Olson, Dombal, Trostle. ■?S - ■. 4- les= wm m ,B appears as though Lord Byron would be glad to oblige all his friends, but he prom- ised that he ' d stay on the uaeon. First rotv: Hays, Secretary: Swingle, Vice-President : Vernon, Watkins, Jones, Treasurer; Rieke, President. Second row: Backman, Asay, Feus, Strieker, Sherry, Schmoll, Van Mourik, McGuire, Kinard, Ruhl. Third row: Larimer, Hay, Davis, Bensen. Fourth row: Laughinghouse. Ostrum, Weidenhammer, Digel, Gesell, Paulsen, Esposito, Staas, Prugh. Zketa Xi Expansion was the keynote of Theta Xi policy this year. The purchase of the other half of their duplex house and plans for renovating the entire structure will greatly improve and enlarge their sleeping and living quarters. Begun this year, the building project should be completed by Spring of next year, when the Theta Xis will be able to occupy the entirety of their new house. Theta Xi is very active in many campus activities and honor societies, including class cabinets, Band, Glee Club, Tau Beta Pi, Pi Tau Sigma, and various military organizations. The house was especially well represented in Mustard and Cheese and the Brown and White. Athletically, the brothers participated in varsity foot- ball, wrestling, swimming, track, cross country, and lacrosse. The house has always been strong in intra- mural sports, with a large majority of the members participating in the program. Theta Xi claimed the league trophy in intramural football four times in the last six years. . Residence Halls . . . providing congenial ' homes ' The entire residence halls system at Lehigh has undergone great improvement during the past five years. With the construction of McClintic-Marshall House and the renovation of the University Center, the life of the dormitory student has become a great deal more pleasant than that of his counterpart of several years past. The party room in M-M has greatly expanded the social life of underclass residence halls students, and the new dining rooms and Contract Din- ing Plan offer a great improvement over the old Lam- berton Hall pay-as-you-eat system. Continuous physi- cal improvement such as annual paint jobs, renovations of recreational facilities, and installation of new furni- ture are always evident. The most significant change in the dorm system m recent years has been the segregation of the freshmen in Richards, Drinker, and Dravo Houses and the upper- classmen in Taylor, Price, and McClintic-Marshall. This change is particularly beneficial to the freshmen. have a big surprise for you , this Lafayette-scalped frosh U ' arns his date before the weekend festivities. who, in living togetiier, can work out their common problems and develop a strong class unity. The segre- gation system has been accompanied by the rise of the Gryphon Society, one or two of whose members reside in each freshman living section. The Gryphons have done a fine job as big brothers and advisers to the freshmen, who must spend their entire first year at Lehigh in the residence halls. Not only did the residence halls experience physical improvement this year, but they also achieved a new high in dormitory spirit. Frequent parties were ex- tremely successful and well-attended. Residence halls men assigned the profits of the concessions to the pur- chase of television sets, and lounges in each dorm were set aside as special television rooms. M-M residents swung into the Lafayette display contest with a rocket display which won third place honors. Improvement is definitely the word for the resi- CLARENCE B. CAMPBELL Director of Residence Halls Residence Halls Council First row: Wagner, Russell, Stcrelary: Topping, President: Rodebaugh, Vice-President; Horn, Treasurer: Rice. Second row: Arnone, Christy, Garrd, Goldstein, Kissinger. 248 dence halls, and with these improvements, the growing importance of the Residence Halls Council is plainly evident. The specific aim of RHC is to provide a forum in which representatives from different dormi- tories can present their opinions of problems that are common to all houses. In this way it provides a better all-around life for students living in the residence halls. RHC acts as the supreme dormitory student gov- erning body and is the unified voice of all students not residing in fraternities or in town, some 1,150 in all. Residence Halls Council is composed of seventeen men: the six house presidents; the president, vice-presi- dent, secretary, and treasurer of RHC; an Arcadia representative; the chairmen of the Housing Facilities, Social, and Disciplinary Committees; and one Gryphon representative from each of the freshman houses. The chief social function of RHC is that of a co- ordinating and advising group for the preparation. planning, and carrying out of parties and dances. RHC enables the houses to carry on a full social pro- gram by providing advice and aid in the securing of bands and food, and extra items such as sound equip- ment and supplies. The council is also planning to hold a gala RHC weekend next year, which will in- clude a formal dance followed by living group parties. The Residence Halls Council is also responsible for the distribution of the profits of the concessions for dormitory improvements. In this way the students are actually providing for their own improvements when they make use of the residence hall concessions. Future plans include the expansion of a loan fund, which now totals $2,500, to enable more students to receive aid. With the continued improvement of the residence halls system, it is quite apparent that RHC will remain an integral part of the Lehigh picture and will con- tinue to grow in importance. Arnone, Price Hiill Presideiil: Garro, McClhilic-Marshall House Presi- deiil: Kissinger, Taylor Hall Preiidenl. Wagner, President of Richards: Rice, President of Draro : Hals, Pres- ident of Drinker. _- ' M ' Dravo House Dravo House is situated on top of the highest moun- tain in the Lehigh Valley, or so it seemed to the 280 freshmen who resided there this year. These hardy frosh developed their wind and legs climbing up and down the four steep flights of stairs leading to their massive dormitory. This year ' s Dravo crew took full advantage of their height as they achieved fame for their uncanny accuracy with flying missiles. Many an unsuspecting student suddenly found himself dosed with water bombs from an unknown source. The time: 8:05. The problem: how to finish dressing, and make it to class by 8:10. One of the skills a freshman learns is wash- ing his clothes: this engineer masters the intricacies of the art. Another Dravo frosh burns late-night oil as he works on those back-breaking CE 61 plates at 3:10 in the morning. Dravo A-l First row: Van Dyke, Adams, Rice, Niiler, Hackworth, Parnell. Second row: Witteman, Gross, Vianello, Martin, Kinzel, Gloekner, Baiter, Tait. Third row: Herceg, Pritchard, Miller, Gutowski, Jarvis, Henderson, Bussemey, McGrath. Fourth row: Nissley, Roach, Hawkins, Tarrant, Yehl, Coursen, Layton, Defeo. First row: Semcheski, Lawler, Ades, Gollow, Enberg, Poole, Buehler. Second row: Ogden, Turner, Jorgensen, Selesko, Howe, Alexander, McCahan, Foley. Third row: Harmon. Counselor: Bagley, Cohen, Smith, McAnern, Kramer, McKay, Veglia. Fourth row: Medlin, Brandl, Bello, Gaston, Shank, Solender, Burdash, MacAdam. Dravo A-2 252 Dravo B-l First row: Gabriele, Salter, Creighton, Cook, Eertolet, Doty, Oren, Field. Second row: Webber, Rohrer, Gitlin, O ' Lenick, Morse, Counselor: Cunitz, Vandivere, Gelbard, Kyprios. Third row: Cross, Froggatt, Cox, Miller, Rees, Keister, Engler, Granat, Jones, Johnson. Fourth row: Adkins, Barney, Bigelow. Bauer, Bartsch, Hancock, Silber, Lindquist, Hotchkin. First row: Ferraro, Smyth, Hartmann, Jones, Kleppe, Sproul, Straub, Kephart, Gallup. Second row: Shea, Frankel, Hickey, Schwartz, Triplett, Pollock, Hibner, Tomeske, Potter, Thurston, Hack. Third row: Morgan, Reiner, Albala, Johnson, Cramer, Erler, Wieland, Schoner, Jones, Scarborough, Emerson, Forman, Crecca. Fourth row: Thomson, Counselor: Hellewell, Gott, Sheppard, Geissler. Sockolof, Kane, Zigmund, Greene, Polarolo, Bloom, Hellekson. Dravo B ' 2  fV ■r o . 4. n I Dravo CA First row: Pahel, Rothenberger, Scheirer, Embley, McMillan. Second row : Galloway, Jones, Hessinger, Roflfman, LeGrand, Marsland, Holt, Jones, Kelly, Hildebrandt. Third row: Metzger, Barber, Greer, Bradley, Minnier, Wade, Lahey, Abraham, Young, Ehlers. Fourth row: Mover, Laub, Richters, Jacobsen, Rettew, Heinsohn, Ernst, Wismer, Counselor: Copeland. First row: Feakes, Einsel, Petrilak, Kamil, Moreland, Oppel, Counselor. Second row: Hecht, Datri, Dotti, Bleyer, Brown, Sleekier, Sunderland, Moyer. Third row: Ulrichs, Katholi, Fowler, Counselor: Coffin, Gennet, Thomas, Mehlhouse, Adams. Fourth row: DeMooy, Morrill, Grant, Labash, Beacham, Fitch, McGuire, Teeter. Dravo C-2 ' Dravo D-I First row: Denise, Drawbaugh, Donley, Klein, Wallace, Lange. Second row: Gerrity, Dreger, Wilson, Dorland, Telling, McVicar, Dornin, Welsh, Smith. Third row: Reiper, Ahbe, Fiedler, Kohler, Lehr, Burriss, Paulding, Arnold. Fourth row: Wolfgang, Ross, Cassel, Sagarin, Garrett, Strate, Begala. Lando. First row: Williams, Kammerer, Sheldon, Sacks, I., Mueller, Downing, Mclnerney. Second row: Topping, Traeger, Spindler, Skoda, Schmidt, Moran, Corbett, Nolen, Connell, Molter. Third row: Anderson, Adams, Counselor; Ritter, Weinberg, Ciaio, Rothenberg, Harris, Green. Gabler, Mell- man. Fourth row: Berglund, Sacks, H., Hoyt, Murchie, Ever, Counselor; Van de Kamp, Flegal, Grabowski, Krupnick, Wichterman. Dravo D-2 255 Drinker House Dr. Henry Sturgis Drinker, one of Lehigh ' s most illustrious sons and presidents, worked untiringly to build up Lehigh spirit by uniting the student body on the campus. It is quite appropriate that one of the University ' s dormitories now bears his name. This year Drinker, the smallest of the freshman halls, made up in spirit what it lacked in size. Fre- quent nighttime conversations were initiated by the Drinker boys with Dravo residents. Many a dull night was sharpened by these inter-dorm intellectual ses- sions. During contacting, the freshman residence halls are alive with fraternity men arranging dates for rushing. A few Drinker romeos try to line up dates for the weekend — a tough fob for Lehigh ' s earless freshmen. Drinker is turned into a gym as two aspiring athletes strain through their routine to re- lieve the tension of the day. Drinker I First row: Carleton, Sherrow, Bloom, Weisner, Edwards, Schwebel, Henricks. Second row: Peters, Bradbury, Vesilind, Cooper, Bendel, Vice-President ; Gratto, President. Third row: O ' Neil, Frikert, Toikka, Vosseler, Kitchen. First row: Gamble, Keller, Rotberg, Counselor; Harter, Birdsall, Groner. Second row: Sharp, Baldwin, Watt, Prior, Spear, Fiala, Siemer. Third row: Koehler, Counselor: Sample, Carpenter, Farrell, Butler, Held, Bywater, Lappin. Fourth row: Gallagher, Carr, Kalish, Rudman, Lytle, Mangione, Walter. Drinker 2 ' A 258 Drinker 2-B First row: Long, McGarrity, Ampula, Burns, Weed, Rubin, Savage, Erlces. Second row: Peterson, Marple, Harris, Blair, Krivsky, Rosar, Brackbill, Hals. Third row: Swoyer, Haupt, Lehman, Virkler, Noonan, Walder, Benzien. First rote: Cader, Easier, Leone, Hamp, Worthington. Second row: Masuda, Counselor: Braun, Dalling, Hakewessell, de Camp, Rudy, Amann. Third row: Shuhin, Henderson, Twaits, Bainbridge, Van Buskirk, Vogt, Briggs. Fourth row: Pogge, Hayes, Heiss, Adams, Munson, Manson, Teller. Drinker 3-A Drinker 3-B First row: Slater, Schaub, Epstein, Nichols, Runey. Second row: Lambert, Bayda, Morin, Ligerman, Groff, Gough, Wimmer, Counselor. Third row: Muffoletto, Gaertner, Dunn, Hannah, Bingley, Kupet, Steinmark. Fourth row: Mateer, Merchant, Parker, Pisano, Braunstein, Friedwald, Reilly. First row: Rothemich, Smith, L., Mitchell, Pavulak, Burger, Angell, Herrity, Vossen. Second row: Taylor, Goldberg, Henry, Bridenbaugh, Snyder, Sumner, Culver, Counselor: Maze, Leckie, Bremer. Third roll ' : Hyam, McCrady, Sowden, Edmunds, Kline, Cayatte, Yard, Hoffman, Bunting, Finkle, Borner. Fourth row: Wilshire, Weiser, Jensen, Garber, Smith, P., West, Maloof, Depue, Oyke, Strohsahl. Drinker 4 Price Hall Price Hall has been many things since its creation, including a brewery, a fraternity house, and now an upperclass dormitory. Housing only about forty men each year. Price tends to ha e an atmosphere more like that of a fraternity than that of a dorm. Because of Price ' s relative smallness, there tends to be greater fellowship and closeness among its residents than in any of the other residence halls. Although the outside of Price Hall is not particu- larly impressive, the recently renovated interior and new furniture in each room more than make up for the exterior. The house also enjoys the use of a new party room and bar in the basement, thanks to the cooperative efforts of its residents. This new social lounge added greatly to the house spirit this year, and provided for a much expanded social program. In recent years Price has enjoyed excellent success on the athletic held, and this vear was no exception. First rou.- Lure, Gleason, Dinkey, Secretary-Treasurer: Russell, President: Goldstein, Hayes. Caw- thorne, James. Second rou-: Dearden, Cohen, J., Sheporaitis, Kauffman, Apsey, Guydosh, Freious, Moore, Bean. Third rou : Alfitri, Olive. Rippke. Cohen, R., Sumner, Walendziewicz, Schmutz. Silber, Matthews. Fourth row: Dickson, Dube, Duffy, Gittleman. Giegerich, Meier, Standish, Jackson, Arnone, Folwell. 261 :A.ii.i«-i. ai... i iai ' - ' i i jiMtti ' ii - Richards House Richards House, the oldest of the three freshman residence halls, was named after Dr. Charles Russ Richards, Lehigh ' s fourth president. During his admin- istration. Dr. Richards proposed the construction of seven campus dormitories, with the aim of uniting the many non-fraternity men who were living olf campus into a compact social living group. This year, Richards House, the first of these dormitories which was erected in 1938, housed an ambitious crew of 210 freshmen. In the Fall, the house was also graced by the feminine charms of several hundred Houseparty dates. Mom may have done this at home, but fresh- men learn quickly the purpose of the white machines in their basements. A glum Richards freshman makes his bed. looking very abused on this Sunday, the maid ' s day off. ' ' Only two more days until Christmas la- cation. Boy, these last days drag. exclaims this anxious frosh. Richards I First row: Godshall, Lightcap, Clash, Graham, Meschter, Stewart. Second row: Fischer, Anderson, Manno, Burbank, Smith, Bois, Schoolman, LaPara. Third row: Freed, Gillespie, Cooke, Nuernberg, Jones, Downing, Mueller, Lewis, Johnson, Nieckoski. Fourth row: Inciardi, Gilchrist, Gyauch, Phelan, Loffler, Klein, Vajda, Flynn. First row: DeMaso, Vierling, Greiner, Samaha, Dolan, Counselor: Wagner, Robinson, Lenhrat. Second row: Stevens, Otocka, Harro, Bell, Hughes, Allstrom, Burrows, Ferrer, Letzing. Third rotv: Westhello, Rose, Vastine, Grossberg, Boswell, Feinstein, Keller, Ognibene, Richardson. Fourth roiv: Templin, Bauman, Pecora, Parish, Freed, Olandt, Phelps, Malone, Bohovich. Richards 2-A 264 Richards 2-B First row: Williams, Derse, Counselor: Sylvester, Tyrie, Gucker, Counselor: Duncan. Second row: Whitney, Winters, Brand, Haberman, Silverberg, Cramer, Ellenberger. Third row: Burger, Danielian, Kantner, Van Cott, Yetter, Everngam, Schier, Colio. Fourth row: Laird, Eckert, Heilman. Cutnell, Bardgett, Ringelheim, Mountz, Lawrence, Corson. First row: Milan, Babin, Detrixhe, Davidson, Orovan, Petrillo, Pepperman. Second row: Mulherin, Counselor: Williams, Glanstein, Lamborn, Zubin, Kanis, Mason, Wagaman. Third row: Webb, Thorne, Kirtz, Pitts, Tiernan, Ohlandt, Klesken, Clark, Weed. Fourth row: McConahey, McKenna, Bratspies, Roggio, Thompson, Dreves, Floyd-Jones, Lundquist, Kopp, Jensen. Richards B-A 265 Richards 3-B First row: Motion, Marshall, Pennell, Maus. Second row.- Fritze, Lauer, Farace, Dagostino, Erdheim, Campbell, Welling, Niiler. Third row: Zappala, Burbridge, Arbo, Garrett, Foltz, Jeransky, Boose, Harrison. Fourth rou- : Galloway, Buck, Brunt, Burke, Wilson, Zadra, Hensley, Johnson, Faulkner, Perneski. First roiv: Johanson, Taylor, Helmer, Schaffer, Guzzio, Hiatt, Wagner, Shovlin, Power. Second rou : Fry, Panitz, Alpert, Bancale, Chappie, Hale, Roon, Bagliani, Koko, Ailotto. Third row: Lipetz, Rossiter, Pitman, Carey, Chalfant, Parks, Gendell, Gatland, Seedorf, Bell, Eby, Edge, Evans, Counselor : Hayes. Fourth row: Anderson, Simons, Brubaker, Williams, Bennett, O ' Brien, Water- man. Happ, Albers, Cooper, Haldeman, Pusey. Richards 4 Leonard Hall Leonard Hall, founded in 1907, is a combination residence house, fraternity, and religious institution. It was organized by the late Reverend Ethelbert Talbot, a Bethlehem clergyman and Lehigh trustee, with the purpose of aiding in the preparation of Lehigh students for a career in the Episcopalian ministry. Actually, Leonard Hall is officially classified as a fraternity and is represented by the Greek name Alpha Chi Epsilon. Leonard differs from the other Lehigh fraternities in that its members are pledged at the beginning of their freshman year, and remain in resi- dence there for the full four years of college life. The residents of Leonard Hall have distinguished themselves throughout the years in all phases of college activities: in the classroom, on the athletic field, in various administrative posts, and as members of many honor societies. ' •Ilk ' ' •■• ' ;;;:.iiiin:yn!:i.i ii. i::;ii ' iiiitMH ■First roir: Croneberger, President: J. W. Walters, Deai:: Rev. Oliver Kingman, Docker, Secretary: Kimble, Treasurer. Second row: Hough, Walters. Smalley, Young, Jillson, Carr, Lewis, Cole, Miner. N • • ■• « ■Si 1 Wtk  • f f B 1 v - kl i| 1 1 LL i EpI Uw [ _« K J Es E 267 Taylor Hall Erected in 1907, Taylor Hall has the distinction of being the oldest dormitory on the Lehigh campus. Taylor, which housed 170 upperclassmen this year, can turn the clock back over years of proud tradition. The house was the gift of steel magnate Andrew Carnegie, who requested that it be named after his friend Charles Taylor, a Lehigh trustee. In 1933 a destructive raid on the dormitory by Lafayette students ignited an intense rivalry between men of Taylor and Lafayette which still manages to spring up each year just prior to the big football tilt with the Leopards. For these students who wish lo take a study break but don ' t want to walk to the Center, these vending machines are ai ' ailable. First row: Anisko, Anderson, Welsch, Gallay, Kissinger, President; Sorokas, Vice-President; Winans, Secretary-Treasurer; Nemitz. Second row: Daniels, Foulke, Horn, Storelli, Hayes, Fox, Terpack, Schoonover. Third row: Snyder, Mulholland, Faust, Moore, Smith, Orr, Martin, Reidler. Taylor A 269 Taylor B First row: Epifano, Rinalducci, Elengo, Vice-Preiident: Sietsema, President: McAneny, Secretary- Treasurer; Hill. Second row: Ewing, Jacobs, Krahnke, Jones, Townsend, Loper, Kaplan. Third row: Lyncheski, Klink, Rodin, BuUos, Kapo, Marx, Oldershaw. First row: Christman, Anton, Vice-President : Mullins, President: Kadel, Arbo, Cohn. Second row: Thomas, McElfresh, Robinson, Parker, Owen, Chrisman, Garabed. Third row: Strausser, Kane, Krause, Behnken, Marlowe, Odar, Ewing. Taylor C 270 Taylor D First tow: Koslowich, Jenkins, Secretary-Treasurer : Svenson, Pepper, Fornwald, Vice-President; Koziol, Slcyrms, President; Kuenne. Second row: Rickert, Vollmer, Martyak, Rees, Piacitelli, Livdahl, Zug, Clarke. Third row: Thomas, Perlmutter, Miesegaes, Pickands, Nye, Word, James, Lehman. First row: Stoner, Garber, Gorman, I ' ice-President: Early, President: Sobol, Secretary-Treasurer. Second row: Radzelovage, Davis, Dorey, Allen, Brinton, Richardson. Third row: Spill, Havens, Tetzlaff, Yamagami, Kahle, Saitoris. Taylor E 3 i ,;•:? . . t ' - ;, ? ■■ r ' Ilk ' ■;  % - - ' ' j- !iii I! McClintic-Marshall McCIintic-Marshall House, the newest dormitory at Lehigh, was completed in 1936, and for a year was simply called the New Dorm . The official dedication was held on September 28, 1957, when the large, mod- ern structure was named atfer Howard Hale McClintic and Charles Donnell Marshall, distinguished Lehigh graduates of the Class of ' 88. An outstanding feature of M M is the spacious recreation room. This room was put to excellent use after all home football games and many social func- tions. A bit of Christmas cheer appears in McCli)?- tic-Marshall as the finishing touches are put on the annual tree. This group of electronic engineers gives careful perusal to a new device designed to keep students ' averages at a low level. It ' s term paper time and one student finishes typing his project, while his roommate be- gins his research. MM l-A First row: Rich, Grosser, Seagreaves, Klingerman, Lee, Lewis, Swanson, ToUinger, Resch, Kahrs. Second row: Fabian, Zinck, Ernst, Lowenstein, Standeven, Secretary-Treasurer: Totton, President; Fuerst, Farber, McClurg, Jeffers. Third row: Oberholtzer, Funk, Georgas, Swire, Price, Geney, Jadamec, Seitz, D., Darlington, Stitt. Fourth row: Seitz, J., Grabner, Stolnacker, Hicks, Gallup, Clark, McCune, Kutchma, Schantz, Grossman. First row: Westhelle, Burrowes, Mackay, Samuels, Moll, Troxel, Skolnick, Lukens, Danner, Moyer. Second row: Weyer, Glover, Baker, M., Wetterau, Vice-President: Reynolds, Atwell, Petrane, President; Teepe, Kipp, Secretary-Treasurer; Tosi, Winters, Peat. Third row: Milford, Burrick, Beck, Buchanan, Bretz, Kozlowski, Groo, Heydon, Gulp, Huntington, Haigh, Baker, R., Hampson. Fourth row: Davidson, Bradford, Wildstein, S., Wildstein, M., Goldstein, Faile, Buhl, Broscious, Neithold, Bradshaw. Bauer, Asher. MM2-A 274 MM3-A First row: Jordan, Trotman, Shulman, Dodohara, Fitzhugh, Hahn, Welsch. Second row: Edge, Ciesluk, Larsen, McFall, Havsy, Secretary-Treasurer: Haywood, President: Gladeck, Vice-President; Stiffler, Gaebel. Third row: Pupke, Frankfort, Schulz, Pelcyger, Fenstermacher, Pabst, Green, Horn, Golden, Littman, Raymen, Perlman. Fourth row: Rohrs, Coates, Bonnell, Havens, Kirsche, Schneider, Reutelhuber, Kuney, Hartman, Wilson. First row: Parliment, Oliver, Heiss, Keyser, Moreland, Whitehouse, Weiss, Pittenger. Second Row: Marsh, Paternoster, Gold, Eberhart, Domingue, Vice-President: Howe, President: Bruns, Secretary- Treasurer; Hartz, Fell. Third row: Sweet, Gessner, Zahrobsky, Bartish, Lawrence, Foster, Duffy, Hoch, Davies, Bailey, Censure. Fourth row: Moyer, Assenheimer, Hamm, Opdyke, Jones, Parsons, Ritter, Claus, Griffin, Diffenbach, Brown. MM l-B IVIM2-B Fhil roll-: Keller, Trafton, Zandel, Remsen, Miller, Elton, Johanson. Second rou-: Robesch, Velle- man. Singer, Raskin, Christy, Green, President: Bergman, Schott, Hansen. Third row: Taras, Merenda, Ransom, Waltlcing, Schreiber, Featenby, Gold, Newark, Marr. fourth row: Walsh, Boehling, Pitzer, McCoy, Page, Gaffney, Auld, Kane. Spiller. First row: Rokhsar, Delahanty, Combee, Winter. Clark. Pogust, Cravzow, Davis. Second row: Felter, Earl, Clasing, Bert, Schwandt, Vice-President: Dreier, President: Brenna, Treasurer: Litter, Durling, Rohrer. Third row: Matsushita, Reed, Eckel, Mason, Selgas, Barnes, Krafchik, Pratt, Morris, Stras- burg, Prosser. Fourth row: Garrison, Davis, Matthews, Waterhouse, Tompkins, Allen, Andrcn. Woolcock, Rissmiller, Naylor, DeCesare. IV1M3-B Gryphon Society The members of the Gryphon Society provide one of the most important and thankless services at Lehigh. These upperclassmen must assume the roll of both counselor and friend to the 670 freshmen residing on campus. Since the freshman year is a period of great adjustment for students, the importance of efficient and understanding counselors cannot be underestimated. The Gryphon Society, organized in September, 19 7, consisted this year of forty-two members. The aim of the Gryphons has been and will continue to be the guidance of first-year men and the establishment of a strong freshman social program. OFFICERS First row: Wismer, President: Fowler, Vice-President. Second row: Derse, Treasurer : LaPara, Secretary. First row: Schickedanz, Wimmer, Stebbins, Fozard, Gucker, Bierley, Rotberg. Second row: Masuda, Dolan, Lambert, Derse, Treasurer; Fowler, Vice-President; Wismer, President: LaPara, Secretary: Morse, Gordon, Culver. Third row: Adams, Harmon, Troy, Niiler, A., Bradbury, Emerson, Thomson, Wolfgang, Veglia, Fischer, Quay. Fourth row: Niiler, P., Tamulis, Briggs, Long, Hackworth, Freed, Oppel, Eyer, Perneski, Mulherin. 277 for the development of the lohole man M  fjfir r ' - , % IK HB H •J .■L ' .Sv ,1 ' J . I ■- «s,rv ■.v-...-- ' - ' jilKfsJ- ' « is:.5 j , . ' ,A ..„x ' ?« «i«ll (  «« ' Physical Education . . . aiding in physical growth The Division of Athletics and Physical Education is a vital part of the University ' s educational program. Appreciating the ancient Greek goal of a sound mind in a sound body , the gym staff strives to improve the physical fitness of the undergraduate, just as the class- room sector seeks to develop and sustain his academic achievement. The three-phase athletic program consists of regular physical education, intercollegiate competi- tion, and intramural sports. Through its program of required gym participation, the Division of Physical Education aims to insure the health and physical development of every Lehigh stu- dent. Self-confidence, good sportsmanship, and a spirit of cooperation are valuable by-products of the course. Freshmen and sophomores are scheduled for physical education three times a week, and gymnasium facilities are always open to upperclassmen during the regular school day. During the past few years, the intramural program has grown tremendously. This year the rivalry was particularly keen as fraternity, dormitory, and town groups vied for the All-University Sport Trophy. Parti- By the look on this hopeful. Charles Atlas face, he seems to be having trouble lifting the bar bell on the Oth go-round. JOHN S. STECKBECK AisislMil Director of Physical Education These three students seen: intent on getting in shape for the Summer ' s beach season as they utilize a few of the many exercise devices in Taylor Gym. PERCY L. SADLER Director of Athletics and Physical Education cipation in such activities as touch football, tennis, basketball, swimming, wrestling, track, Softball, and volleyball brought competitors cumulative points to enhance their living group standings. The highlight of the program, as usual, was the mid-Winter Fight Night, which spotlighted the deciding play-offs for the Univer- sity intramural wrestling champs. The Division of Intercollegiate Athletics sponsors twelve varsity sports, five junior varsity squads, and many freshman teams. The successes of this program bring spirit and life to the University campus and carry the name and fame of Lehigh to rival schools through- out the East. Lehigh lost a devoted and enthusiastic man this year with the departure of John Steckbeck from the gym staff. As Assistant Director of Physical Education, he was loved by thousands of underclassmen who passed through his P.E. program. Memories of Steck will not soon be forgotten: his booming voice sounding out the commands of the Lehigh Conditioner ; his li ' ely wit and personality at pep rallies, banquets, and Flag- pole Day; and his established traditions of the Turkey Trot and Fight Night. 282 Coaching Staff SeMed: William T. Christian, Paul E. Short. Gen. Percy L. Sadler, Head of Departmeiil: Gerald G. Leeman. Standing: George F. Halfacre, Anthony Packer, Robert Chiodi, Michael T. Cooley, Emil A. Havach. By the looks on their faces, these runners have finished the annual Turkey Trot around the steep pathways of South Mountain. J '  They ' re off and running at the start of the Turkey Trot- How many will finish the grueling run is questionable. Football a year of squad rcbuildlHg It was one of those seasons for football. One of those seasons that could have been very successful — or very disastrous. But, as it turned out, it was neither. Three games wound up in deadlocks, games that, had they been won, would have made the 1938 cam- paign, in which the Engineers were plagued by the loss of many veterans via the graduate route, one of the most surprising in the history of Lehigh football. They were games that, had they been lost, would have made Lehigh fans bemoan a terrible year. But the gridders took the middle road — the road of ties. The remaining games also wound up in a deadlock of sorts — so far as the final record is concerned. Three of them were won, three lost. The final season mark: 3-.v3. And they were the crucial tilts that wound up in ties — Gettysburg, a team that was surprisingly strong but still a club that was weak enough to make a loss a terrible blow to the Engineers ' pride; Virginia Mili- tary Institute, almost the same Keydets who last year wrecked Lehigh ' s bid for an undefeated year (for Lehigh, this tie termed a moral victory); and finally Lafayette, always the big one, always the game that can spell the difference between success or failure in a particular season (it was almost natural that this one should wind up in a tie) made the year a complete stalemate. But the year did have a couple of promising fea- tures — most of them sophomores, who almost com- pletely dominated play. Lehigh football fans were WILLIAM B. LECKONBY Coach 284 ■-. c ..:.- :irs?r: i. Oiiarterback George ' Thehs is helped off the field after being Injured early in the game against Lafayette. already predicting at midseason that next year will be a different story. With a year of experience tucked away under their belts, these boys should be tough customers come 1959. The sophs dominated the 1958 statistics. Big names were Al Richmond, Al Gross, Bob Scheu, and Ed Murphy. Gross, who can both run and pass, led the team in total offense with 392 yards — 248 of them rushing. Richmond, voted the outstanding back in the Lafay- ette game, gained 280 yards on the ground to take rushing laurels. He averaged six yards per carry. Scheu led the passers with 298 yards on 25 com- pletions. Ed Murphy, a tough lineman who coaches expect to develop into one of the top centers in the history of The Varsity Kneeling: Lauretti, Daniels, DeFIavis, Donncll, Schaeffer, Stanley, Richmond, Murphy, Robbins, Gross, Bride, Burger, Fayko, O ' Ryan, Kovach, Theiss, Stoneburner, Swenson, Co-Manager. Standing: Edward Hudack, Assistant Line Coach; MacMurray, Co-Manager; Nevil, Hunt, Shreve, Beattie, Lehigh, received a place on the weekly All-East team after his yeoman work against Western Reserve. The team itself showed its faith in these sophs by electing two of them, Richmond and Murphy, to cap- tain the 1959 squad. The last time a sophomore was elected captain was in 1915. The Engineers started the 1958 campaign v. ' ith an upset win over the Blue Hens of Delaware. Halfback Al Kovach is dragged down from behind by a Delaware tackier after picking up yardage in the day ' s only TD. Edwards, Ache, Van Deussen, Buckworth, Parson, Clark, Kennedy, Moyer, Johnson, Larimer, Posillico, Jorgensen, Robert Chiodi, Eitii Coach: Arcangelo, Wentz, Highfield, Michael Cooley, Line Coach: Koziol, Springman, Jones, Scheu, Stoney, Perneski, Needham, William Leckonby, Head Coach. Losing 7-0 at halftime, Lehigh scored early in the third period on a freak play when Tom DeFlavis went back to punt, received a bad pass from center, and had to lug the ball instead. He did — 35 yards beyond a surprised Blue Hen line. He was finally brought down from behind by a fleet-footed secondary man. But he set up the touchdown which came several plays later. With the squad behind by one point. Coach Bill Leck- onby gambled on the new two-point after-touch down rule and won. Quarterback Scheu skirted left end and went over standing up. Neither team threat- ened again, and the Engineers won it, 8-7. It was the two-point play that again saved the day at Gettysburg. Lehigh was down 14-12 after scoring late in the fourth quarter; this time Leek had to go for the two-point score. The Engineers failed on the first attempt, but a penalty against the Bullets gave them a second chance. On the second try, fullback Ron Lauretti, the first Lehigh player to ever successfully make the switch from lineman to back, bulled over ]oe W enzel leaps over the heads of two Delatvare defenders to pull down a short toss from Bob Scheu. Bill Beattie Tackle Charles Burger Halfback ' ' U Tom DeFlavis Center Al Gross Halfback Captain Charlie Burger heads for daylight around left end in one of the few bright spots of the Hariard game at Cambridge which the Packers lost. 20-0. With Fran Schaeffer and Charlie Burger leading the blocking, senior halfback John O ' Ryan starts on his way to a five-yard gain around Harvard ' s right end. Somewhere under this mass of players is Charlie Lull after scoring the touchdown that tied Lafayette. «■«? - fcv T . u .i: ?- . A glum Lehigh team, behind by 14 points, takes time out in the prsi half against the Leopards whom ire finally tied. George Theiss is stopped by two Lafayette tacklers after picking up several yards on Lehigh ' s second TD drive. -. .. u,v i ' r - i;:y «« H , tackle to give Lehigh the tie. The first loss of the season came the following week at Cambridge, Mass., where the Crimson of Harvard paced by sophomore quarterback Charlie Ravenel bop- ped the Packers, 20-0. Its offense completely stymied by a strong Harvard line, Lehigh picked up only a total of 89 yards. Apparently stung by the setback at Cambridge, the Engineers the following Saturday took out their anger on the Red Cats of Western Reserve — to the tune of 47-0. An estimated Parents ' Day crowd of 10,800 watched the home club plow through the Western Reserve team almost at will. But the prosperity wasn ' t destined to last long. The Houseparty dates saw much the same kind of game that the parents had seen the week before — only this time Lehigh was on the short end of a lopsided score. Rutgers, out for revenge after last year ' s defeat, did just that — in the grand style of 44-13- Not even the rainy weather or the muddy Taylor ]oe Wenzel grabs a George Theiss pass for Lehigh ' s first touchdown against Lafayette. He was inimediatel) hit. Charlie Burger tries unsuccessfully to sidestep two Harward linemen. Seconds after this picture was taken, the two smashed him to the turf. 291 Stadium turf could stop the Scarlet ' s AU-American Bill Austin from turning m one of his best performances of the 1958 campaign. Hapless Bucknell was next, and the Engineers, paced by 15 sophomores, brained the Bisons, 35-14. With the members of the Class of 1961 playing most of the game, Lehigh fans got some indication of what the club would look like in the next two years. Returning from Lynchburg, Va., a week later, the Big Brown received a welcome almost unprecedented in Lehigh history. More than 500 students, the band, and cheerleaders turned out, despite a rainstorm, to cheer the victorious (for all practical purposes) team that had tied VMI, 7-7. The Keydets were practically the same that had stopped an Engineer win streak and spoiled an unbeaten year in 1957. A sensational 77-yard pass play from quarterback Bobby Scheu to senior end Bud Wenzel gave the En- gineers their only score at Lynchburg. But offense was not the team ' s principal forte that afternoon; three times Lehigh, led by the sparkling play of tackle Bill Beattie, stopped the Keydets less than five yards from the goal line. The defense wasn ' t the same the next week in the Buffalo game. The Bulls, who later were awarded the Lambert trophy, piled up a 34-0 lead by early in the Al Gross tries to sneak between two Lafayette lacklers. H s gain was instrumental selling up the game-tying touchdown against the Leopards. ' im ' i mm ' I V ■292 ' «r Ron Lauretti Fullback Dave Nevil End John O ' Ryan Halfback Al Richmond Halfback This Western Reserve player fust doesn ' t know where to turn as he is charged by four Lehigh tacklers. Mk 4 mm ' S - ' ' W ' ' George Theiss lies on the ground after being smothered when he attempted to heave a pass against the Leopards. The AIl-Aiidclle Athvitic Conference star leaps high to snag this Scheu pass against the Delaware Hens. ■: li Joe W ' enzel misses a Bob Schen pass as he is hit jroni behind by a Buffalo tackier late in the game. W ' enzel hauls in his last college pass for a touchdown against Lafayette. It was against Albright that he set a Lehigh record for most passes caught in one game. Al Richmond, the outstanding back in the Lafayette game, here picks up several yards against Harvard. Al Gross skirts left end for a four-yard gain early in the game against the Leopard. Later ■• he helped set up the tying touchdoivn. ■third period. Then the Engineer attack began to dick. The only trouble was that the clock continued clicking, and four touchdowns were all that the timepiece would allow. The Packers succumbed, 34-26. Next came the big one against the Leopards from Easton. The Lehigh club had to rally again this time — but this time it was just enough — another tie, 14-14. The team went into the locker room at the end of the first half on the short end of a 14-0 score. The sec- ond time the Big Brown took the ball after intermis- sion, it was on its way down the field . The drive was stopped, however, on the one-yard line of Lafay- ette and the Leopards took over. But on third down. Lafayette fumbled on the six, and the Packers were given a second chance. On second down, a quickie pass over the center of the line from George Theiss to Joe Wenzel produced a score. The Engineers then made it a new game as Theiss sliced through the line for two extra points. In the fourth period, Al Richmond paced the drive that netted the tying touchdown. He started the march by running back a punt 11 yards to the Lehigh 37. A few plays later he broke loose for 32 yards to the Leopard 10. On second down from that yard stripe, Al Gross hustled nine yards to the Leopard one. Then on fourth 295 A jubilant Lehigh student swings on Lafayette goal post after game. It canie down later — so did he. down fullback Charlie Lull bulled his way over for the six-pointer. Frank Koziol, who rarely misses on a point-after- touchdown kick, booted wide on this one, and the game wound up a stalemate to wmd up a stalemate year. Playing their final game against Lafayette were seniors Bill Beattie, John O ' Ryan, Dave Nevil, Fran Schaeifer, Tom DeFlavis, John Stanley, Dick Hunt, Charlie Burger, Joe Wenzel, Ron Lauretti, and Stanley Stoney. These 11 never tasted defeat at the hands of the Leopards. In their sophomore and junior years, Le- high won decisively — then the tie in their senior year. It was only the fifth class that was never defeated. The other four, however, won all three games. With the experienced sophomores returning, the cry on South Mountain during the winter months was the same as it was in Flatbush while the Dodgers cavorted there: Wait ' til next year . Willie Schaeffer Guard Bob Scheu Quarterback John Stanley Tackle Bud Wenzel End Freshman Football Freshman football players scrimmage on Lehigh ' s upper field the day before playing arch-riiat Lafayette College. First row: Muffoletto, Skoda, Co-Capuiii: Man- son, Harris. Detrixhe, Ampula, Fonzone, Mc- Cabe, Pennell, Hack, Denise, Twaits. Second row: George Halfacre, Coach: Michael Flood, Assis jui Coach; Taylor, Brown, Bartsch, Morgan, Braun, Gott, Dornin, Pritchard, Yard, Peters, Young, Westhelle, Co-Capiain. Third rou- : VosscUer, Parker, Arbutiski, Burns, Anderson, Bohovich, Schmidt, West, Pahel, Epstein, Hamp, Hickey, Herceg, Bruno Pagnani, Une Coach: Richard Pennell, AssisUitl Coach. Fourth row: Semcheski, Garber, McMillan, Virkler. 297 Kneeling: Salamon, Kramer, Bayer, McHugh, Brooks, dipuiii : Meier, Chamberlain, Jeffers. Suinding: Jones, Manager: Rach, Forrester, Holden, Schlosser, Bradley, Hess, Tryon, Serfass, Haines, William Christian, Coach. LETTERMEN Frederick Bayer Richard Bradley Harry Brooks Mark Forrester John Hess William Holden Peter Jeffers Joseph McHugh Paul Meier George Rach Dennis Schlosser John Serfass Hugh Jones, Manager Soccer cart often be a rough game as this goalie will attest to as he tries to block a kick by Lehigh Let term an Bill Holden. Soccer . . middle atluHtlc champs The soccer team compiled its best record in recent years in 1958 as a sophomore-dominated hneup booted its way to an 8-2 mark. Losing only one game in regular season play, the hooters copped the Northern Division title of the Mid- dle Atlantic Conference, but then lost to perennially powerful Drexel in a special playoff for the conference crown. The playoff score was 5-2. The season loss came at the hands of Swarthmore, 4-1. The hooters ' percentage mark in 1958 trailed only 1917 ' s 3-0 record, and the total number of wins trailed only 195rs 10 victories. In 1951, however, the soccer team lost three games. And the team was not without its individual stars. Sophomore Bill Holden, in his first year of varsity competition, set a new Lehigh record by tallying 15 goals. Fullback Harry Brooks, captain and one of the few seniors on the team won a place on the All-MAC team. Goalie George Rauch was honorable mention AU-American. Cross Country . a losing record There ' s an old saying that all good things must come to an end. The cross country team in 1958 discovered just how much truth that statement contains. During the three years previous, the runners had lost only two meets while piling up an impressive 19 victories. In 1957, the squad compiled an unbeaten record. But, in 1958, it was a different story — the long-dis- tance runners lost twice as many matches as they had in the previous three years, and were able to garner but one victory. The lone win came at the expense of neighboring Muhlenberg College, 15-40. In cross country, in which the low score wins, this amounted to a shutout — to compensate perhaps for the fact that Lehigh was shut out of the win column during the remainder of the year. The team was shocked early in December when it learned that Fred Krehbiel, top runner on the ' 57 squad, and ' 58 captain, had been killed in an auto mishap. Three cross country runners leave the upper eld at the start of one of their gruelling practice runs. LETTERMEN Tipton Gaylon Malcolm Hay Frederick Krehbiel Wight Martindale Kenneth Shaner Harvey Toub First row: Long, Toub, McNally, Krehbiel. Second rou : John S. Steckbeck, Coach: Adam, Shaner, Griep, Hay, Martindale, Goldstein, Manager. Sailing Club . . . ijear of largest membership Although not winning any of the regattas in which it participated during the Fall, the Sailing Club still managed to turn in a respectable record against some of the top sailing groups of the East. In five meets, all of which had more than five teams entered, Lehigh picked up three seconds, a third, and a fourth. Racing in the Middle Atlantics, the club scored a seventh among 24 entries. Sailing Club members were hoping to do even better in Spring competition. The sport is the only one at Le- high that has a split season. Some contests are raced during the Fall, with the remainder in the Spring. Sailing is also unique among Lehigh teams for an- other reason: It is the only sport where there is no competition against just one other team. Most races see almost a dozen different teams battling for the first place. Sailhig dull members ready their dinghies for a pentagonal meet on the Cooper River near Philadelphia. Firs! rou-: Davidson, Nichols, Hellekson, Wiesner, Vogelson, Abramson, Harkavy. Second row: Spindler, Sumner, Gerrity, Schumacher, Rear Commodore: Beck, Commodore : Brody, Secretary- Treasurer: Blumenthal, Hack. Tliird row: Jorgensen, Gilchrist, Cooke, McCrady. Dick, Cooper, Marshall, Lohmeyer, Doty. jT c r- -- I a ._ -.- .W- . ' fW % . ' i % Wrestling best in the Bast GERALD G. LEEMAN Coach The wrestlers weren ' t undefeated in 1958-59 as they had been the previous year, but in many respects this year ' s dual-meet campaign was better than 1957-58. One of the big respects was a victory over perenially potent Pitt, 16-12, in one of the most thrilling matches to be seen at Grace Hall in recent years. Last year, only a tie with Pittsburgh marred an otherwise perfect slate. This year, the only blemish on the team ' s record was the opening 14-11 loss to Cornell, the 1958 Eastern champion. The squad won the remaining 10 matches. In that match, Lehigh went into the 177-pound bout with an 11-8 lead, but lost the last two bouts and with them the match. One of these losses surprised the capa- city Grace Hall audience — tough Ed Hamer was de- cisioned by Al Marion, 2-1. It was his only loss in the dual-meet season. One of the grapplers that became known to sports- writers as Lehigh ' s Big Five, Hamer won his next 10 bouts, two of them by pins. Other members of the Big Five included Captain Dick Santoro and Leon Harbold, both seniors, and a couple of sophomore sensations, Greg Ruth and Thad Turner. Among them, the group compiled a composite record of 44 wins, three losses, and six draws. Neither Santoro nor Ruth lost a single match although they each drew one. The other three each lost only one, while Turner drew one and Harbold three. But perhaps the wrestler who became most popular witli the large number of Lehigh wrestling buffs was little Johnny DriscoU — mainly because of what can sophisticatedly be called intestinal fortitude, but which fans described as guts . DriscoU, a natural 157-pounder, wrestled heavy- weight throughout most of the campaign — usually against men who outweighed him by more than 50 pounds. In this competition, he split six bouts. 302 ' -m,. His first loss came against Dave Dunlop, 1958 EIWA champ from Cornell. But this Big Red heavyweight, who scaled some 55 pounds more than Driscoll, knew he had been in a fight. With the match score knotted at 11-11, Driscoll fought the Cornell heavy to a 1-1 draw for the greater part of three periods. But knowing that he needed a win for a Lehigh victory, he attempted a takedown in the closing seconds of the last period. Dunlop was just too big and too strong, and Driscoll, instead, found himself on the bottom. The Cornell man picked up another point for time to win the bout, 4-1. The Big Five went through the next three matches undefeated as Syracuse fell, 19-8; Penn State went down, 17-8; and Princeton was crushed, 23-2. But the next match against a supposedly weak Yale team almost brought disaster. Only a last-second take- down by Ed Hamer squeezed out the victory for the Captain Dick Santoro is about to throw Dick Carter of Cornell to the mat enroute to an impressive 17-2 decision in the open- ing match of the 1958-59 season. Captain Santoro, who was unbeaten in three years of dual- meet competition, works over Bob Smith of the U.S. Naval Academy. Santoro won this one. 8-0. Kneeling: Driscoll, Vaughn, Triponey, Harbold, Schmoyer. Standing: Gerald Leeman, Coach; Ruth, Santoro, Captain: Turner, Hamer, Slater, Gates, Manager. Greg Ruth, Lehigh ' s sophomore flash at 157, smashes F M man into the canvas. Rutgers coach, in one of the best bench shoivs at Grace Hall during 1958-59, prays for one of his players. ' r- ' y Thad Turner struggles in an effort to u-ork his Fninklin and Marshall opponent into a pinning combination. Jim Schmoyer 125 Pounds Ed Slater 150 Pounds Leon Harbold 157 Pounds Thad finally gets that pinning combination and has F M man ' s shoulders on the mat as referee signals fall. Dick Santoro 147 Pounds 1958,59 EIWA Champion Big Brown. Although he dominated throughout the bout, the Yale man had time advantage with the score, 2-2. Hamer was only five seconds away from a loss when he bulled his opponent to the mat for the win. Lehigh eventually lost the heavyweight bout, as anti- cipated, but still had enough points to win, 15-11. After lambasting the U. S. Naval Academy, 22-5, and the U. S. Military Academy, 22-6, the Engineers were face-to-face with the big test of the season — the tough University of Pittsburgh grapplers. A capacity crowd, minus the hundreds of fans who had to be turned away because there was just no more room in Grace Hall, was on hand expecting Bethle- hem ' s biggest wrestling show of the year. They weren ' t disappointed. Lehigh spotted the Panthers eight points in the first two bouts as Jim Schmoyer was pinned and Ed Slater decisioned. But then came the Big Five. Leon Harbold easily decisioned his opponent, 7-0. But Dick Santoro was surprised by Bob Bubb and had to settle for a 4-4 tie. Greg Ruth won, 5-2. Thad Turner could only gain a draw, and Hamer won, 3-1- All of which combined to put Lehigh into the lead. Dick Saiiloro. in a move that characterized his bouts, gets set to execute a body slam on Bob Smith of Navy. Sophomore Greg Ruth strains in an unsuccessful attempt to pin Don W ard of Navy during final 45 seconds of their bout. 307 Although he appears to he hi trouble here, Navy ' s Paul lg reversed to pin Kurt Laugh- in ghouse in 3:15 oj their bout- On his tvay to a 12-4 victory, Greg Ruth flips Don Ward of Navy during final period of their bout. 13-12, and set the stage for the heavyweight bout in which Johnny DriscoU found himself pitted against Bob Guzik who weighed in at more than 200 pounds. Neither man was able to gain a takedown in the initial period. But then shortly before the end of the second three minutes, DnscoU escaped to grab the lead, 1-0. But he still had to hold Guzik for t he final three minutes if he wanted to win the bout and with it the match. And in a David vs. Goliath-type linish, hold him he did. With a tight scissor around the leg of the big Pitt man, DriscoU stymied every move for a reversal or an escape, rode his man the entire last period, and won, 1-0. The partisan crowd swooped down from the stands at the final buzzer and carried him to the dressing room. The next three matches against Franklin and Mar- shall, Rutgers, and Hofstra were easily won by the Engineers and served as nothing more than a warmup for the Easterns. F M was dumped 21-8; Rutgers was clobbered to the tune of 19-8; and little Hofstra was brained, 29-3- In all three matches, the Big Five set the pace. Greg Ruth 151 Pounds Thad Turner 767 Pounds Ed Hamer 7 77 Pounds 1951,59 EIWA Champion 1959 NCAA Champion John Driscoll Heavyweight 1959 EIW A Champion Dick Santoro attempts to lake down Wayne Knoll of Rutgers early in the 147-pound bout. Santoro outclassed Knoll. 11-1. Leon Harhold has Sherm Moyer of Pitt in trouble in the last second of their bout, iihich Leon easily won, 7-0. te ' m Dave Angel is only seconds away from scor- ing a decisive fall against opponent from Rutgers University. Freshman Wrestling Pete GrMto. freshman grappler. attempts to lake down his opponent from Rutgers en- route to impressive win. Thad Turner. Lehigh ' s 61-pound entry in the EIWA tournament, seems to be having an easy time with Warren Miller of Army in the quarter-finals. He went on to win the match with d 5-1 edge. Easterns Nationals Paced by three individual champions, a second-place winner, and two third-place finishers, Lehigh in 1959 won its first Eastern Intercollegiate Wrestling title in 11 years. It was the first since Gerry Leeman took over the reins o£ the club. The Engineers piled up a total of 64 points. Penn State was second with 51. Individual champs were Dick Santoro at 137, Johnny Driscoll at 147, and Ed Hamer at 177. Santoro was also awarded the Fletcher Trophy. Sophomore Thad Turner advanced to the finals be- fore being defeated by Tom Alberts of Pitt. Leon Har- bold and Greg Ruth took third places. For the first time since Eddie Eichelberger did the trick in 1956, Lehigh this year had a dual EIWA and National champion — Ed Hamer. Hamer dropped from 177 to 167 before going out to the Nationals in Iowa City, Iowa. Fighting at the lower weight, he breezed through his preliminary bouts and then bulled his way to a 4-0 win over Tom Alberts of Pittsburgh in the finale. Other Lehigh wrestlers did not fare as well in the tournament won by Oklahoma State with 73 points. The Engineers, who advanced only Hamer past the quarter-final round, scored 20 points to take eighth place in a field of 67. Ed Hamer seems strained as he holds down Pittsburgh ' s Tom Alberts in the third period of their bout in the final round of the 167-pound NCAA wrestling championship. Hamer went on to win the bout, making him Lehigh ' s only champ. Basketball . first year in big time ANTHONY PACKER Coach The 1958-59 season was Lehigh ' s first in the basket- ball big time of the East. In many respects, it was a disastrous season, as the Engineers, little in basketball, came up against such court giants as LaSalle, Lafayette, St. Joseph ' s, and Army. The charges of Coach Tony Packer were able to pick up only six wins in a 22-game campaign. Packer predicted at the beginning of the year that any win by Lehigh would be of the upset variety. And indeed they were. The first upset, however, came early. The Owls of Temple LIniversity came to Grace Hall for the first game of the season riding on the crest of a 24-game regular season winning streak only to see it shattered, 70-66, by the Engineers. But this wasn ' t the same Temple squad that had compiled the long streak. It was hurt considerably by graduation losses, and early Lehigh hopes of a success- ful year were soon to prove false. In the following three games, the Engineers were beaten decisively by Delaware, 60-47; Bucknell, 74-52; and LaSalle, 81-47. But their most conclusive win of the year came in the following tilt when the Lions of Albright were bopped by a 69-56 game. The Lions were in Lehigh ' s class. That was the last win, however, that the squad was to experience for some time — 10 games to be exact. During the Christmas vacation, the Engineers par- ticipated in the Long Invitational Tournament at Hof- stra and dropped all three tilts. Only bright spot here was the sparkling play of Captain Denis Brenan, who scored more than 15 points in each game. He was named to the All-Tourney team. Against Hofstra, Brenan set the Lehigh season record of most points 312 i.f A Ar !ie Balgalvis drives in from the keyhole for an underhand lay-up against Rutgers in one of Lehigh ' s few wins of the year. One of Lehigh ' s most promising sophomores. Jack Palfi. goes in for a lay-up against a fairly weak Rutgers ' squad. scored as he canned 24 counts on 10 field goals and a quartet of free throws. After this tournament came losses to Lafayette, Gettysburg, Muhlenberg, Franklin and Marshall, Army, Gettysburg, and Lafayette, in that order. The wins by the Leopards of Lafayette were the 32nd and 33rd consecutive victories that the squad from Easton has racked up against the Engineers. But then came a different story — the charges of Tony Packer went off on their largest win streak of the cam- paign — three games. Victories came over Dickinson, 75-67; and Rutgers, 56-45 and 38-36. After losses to Penn State and Delaware, the Packers came through with their biggest win of the year by scoring an upset over Muhlenberg, 79-66, at the Allen- town court of the Mules. Lehigh had gone into this tilt as a 30-point underdog by virtue of its early season loss to the Berg club, 91-62. The Lehigh team looked good in the final game of the year also, even though it dropped an 85-63 decision to the Hawks of St. Joseph ' s College, the team that was later to represent the Middle Atlantic Conference in the NCAA tournament. But the score in this one didn ' t tell the whole story. The Engineers were down by 25 points in the first half and then outscored their larger opponents in the second half by three counters. Bdlgdlvis inches over the outstretched arm oj a La Salle defender to score one of the few baskets made against this tough team from Philadelphia. Ross Cnll gan drives in underneath the basket for an underhand lay-up against one of Lehigh ' s toughest opponents. La Salle. 315 In the first part of a donbleheader at the Palestra, Norm Lelenko drops in a left-hander over the arms of a tight La Salle defense. Arn e Balgalvis reaches over the shoulder of a La Salle defender in an attempt to tap the ball into the trailing hands of teammate, Ross Culligan. Al Hofmann Forward Denis Brenan Guard Norm Zelenko Guard Terry Eckert Foruard Top scorer for the Lehigh team during the 1958-59 season was senior Norm Zelenko who taUied a total of 179 points in 19 games for a 9-4 average. Zelenko also had the season record for total free throws in a single game when he converted nine against the Nittany Lions of Penn State University. Top rebounder for the Lehigh squad was 6-6 senior Arnie Balgalvis, who dragged 196 off the boards. He scored 176 points in 22 games for an 8.0 average. Captain Denis Brenan was second in average and third in scoring. He tallied 164 points in 20 games for an 8.2 average. As a team, the Engineers averaged only 57 points per game as compared with almost 68 for their oppo- nents. Ironically, the team ' s season low came in the Rutgers win when only 38 points were dunked through the hoops. The Scarlett Knights, however, were only able to tally 36 points in the defensive battle. Even though Packer is losing three of his starters, he is still confident that next year Lehigh will have a better season. The club had a great number of sopho- mores who, because of the losing year, were able to grab invaluable experience. Outstanding among the sophs were Ross CuUigan and Jack Palfi. But the biggest noise for the Packers next year will probably be two boys who played freshman ball this year. Norm Brandl has the potential to become one of the top scorers in the school ' s history. He averaged about 30 points a game in freshman competition. Another frosh. Bob Happ, averaged almost 20. Kneeling: Zelenko, Allinger, Weaver, S., Eckert, Culligan, Rogan, Brenan, Captain: Eisner, Manager. S anJing: Pavoni, Manager: Lindenbaum, Weaver, K., Dougherty, Balgalvis, Benedict, Hoffman, Palfi, Anthony Packer, Coach. The Varsity m A Norm Zelenko, high u ' lth 14 in this game with Delaicare, takes a jump shot off All-East Frank W ' ' icks. Norm Brandl, the frosh sensation trho averaged 28 points a game this season, goes up for a rebound. Arnie Balgalvis Center Barrie Lindenbaum Guard Jack Palfi Forward Bob Rogan Forward Norm Zelenko looks as if he ' s having a mighty tough time passing off from between these two Delaware defenders. Freshman First row: Happ, DeMooy, Yetter, Mclnerney, Brandl, Ross. Second row: Robert Chiodi, Coach, Werley, Jacobsen, Beacham, Sylvester, GoUow, Babin, Manager. Captain Deney Brenan goes up for a long jump shot from the outside against Dickin- son whom we finally beat, ' iG-A ' y. First row: Crawford, Godshalk, Bonanno, Presi- dent; Bride. Second row: Shannon, Mueller, Yates, DuBois, Kramer. Third row: Ellis, Apsey, Sailer, James, Gott. Skiing en joying one of winter ' s favorite sports Skiing was one sport tliat was pursued by Lehigh students only for fun during 1958-59- The Skiing Club, one of a number of sports clubs on the Lehigh campus, participated in no intercol- legiate competition during the year. Its participation in the sport was limited to several weekends at the Big Boulder ski run at Split Rock m the Poconos. The general lack of snow during the year hampered the club somewhat in its pursuit of this snow sport. However, the Split Rock ski run is covered with arti- ficial snow. The Skiing Club is financed by the members them- selves who pay five dollars in dues per year. The money is used primarily to cover transportation costs. Ski Club president, Jay Bonanno, executes a near-perfect turn at one of the group ' s frequent meetings at a Stowe, Vermont, ski resort. 4 Hockey . . . 7 season of vast improvement Despite a 2-6 season record, the year proved to be a very bright one for the Hockey Club. The skaters im- proved their financial position, drew over 500 fans in a series of four home games, replaced much of their worn equipment, and acquired the services of Mike Runey, a rising freshman star. The stickmen managed to win only against Penn and Villanova during the season, but Runey and several other up-and-coming skaters provided promise for the future. Other clubs faced this year included Long Island, New Rochelle, and Hill. A highlight of the season was a match sponsored by Lehigh ' s North Jersey Alumni Club. The Engineers faced Penn before 800 spectators. Financially, the team fared well, receiving much support including a $500 anonymous gift which helped to buy the new equip- ment. Freshman star AUke Riaiey fights for the puck against the Long Island Hatiks at the Alheth rink. First row: Apsey, Donnelly, Morgan, Gill, Von Bergen, Rosencrantz, Darlington, Loss. Second row. Morley, Dominici, Heske, Jordan, Hannah, Holahan, Runey. 321 Swimming third MAC crowH After compiling a 6-2 regular season mark, Lehigh ' s swimmers really hit their peak in post-season competi- tion as they fought from behind to win the Middle Atlantic Swimming Tournament at Franklin and Marshall. Lehigh, a team that wasn ' t even seeded, nosed out the favorite West Chester State Teachers College team, 73-62. In winning, the Engineers set four MAC records and one school standard, copped six of 13 first places, and picked up 21 medals. Outstanding natators includ- ed Marty Maloney and Brian McHugh. THE RECORD Lehigh Opponent 37 Colgate 50 62 Delaware 23 40 Pittsburgh 46 60 Syracuse 26 51 Pennsylvania 35 61 Lafayette 25 56 Army 30 61 Rutgers 25 f V.t row: Painter, Royal, Maloney, Co-Captain: McHugh, Folwell, Abramson. Second row: Pratt, Thorne, Salamon. Third row: Little, Gotwalt, Co-Captain: Meitzner, Cawthorne, Leach, Murphy. Fourth row: Tyrie, Jones, Heist, Manager: George F. Halfacre, Assistant Coach: William T. Christian, Coach. Four Lehigh mermen are about to hit the u ' ater during a daily practice session. With U ' ater cascading off his body, George Gotwalt leaves the water after a match. First row: Slater, Doty, Smyth, Taylor, George F. Halfacre, Coach. Second row: Bridenbaugh, Reiner, Baiter, Farrell, Foster, Manager. Freshman Swimming 323 First row: Kirsche, Sigley, Manager; Sgt. William A. Farr, Asshtanl Coach. Second row: Bretz, Pearson, Apter, Venable, Secretary-Treasurer : Capt. Harold E. Durst, Coach. Third row: Thom- as, MacPhee, Captain: Horvath, Lane, Sgt. Whar- ton E. Fosselman, Assistant Coach. Rifle Team a ' record ' season Lehigh teams just didn ' t come any more successful than the rifle squad m 1958-59, as the Brown and White sharpshooters compiled a perfect 8-0 dual-match record. And it was in grand style that they did it. Prior to this year, the record high for a Lehigh rifle team was 1410 points. This record flew by the boards in the fourth match of the season against LaSalle, as a total of I4l4 was registered. The rifle team then went on to shoot 1413 against Penn State, 1425 in a triangular meet against George- town and Washington and Lee. The season closed with another record-breaking 1430-1426 victory over St. John ' s, one of the outstanding teams in the East. During their daily practice sessions, these two Lehigh nimrods try their luck jrnt t the standing position. Fencing . . . third in the Middle Atlantics With a number of veterans returning, Lehigh ' s fencing team turned in a very respectable 6-3 season record for 1958-59- The mark was a big improvement over the four wins and five losses of the year previous. Wins this year came at the expense of Rutgers, 14-13 ; Johns-Hopkms, 18-9; Haverford, 14-13; Stevens, 15-12; Temple, 15-12; and Muhlenberg, 14-13- Big disappointment for the fencers, however, was their failure to win the Middle Atlantic Conference championship. The team, which entered the tourna- ment as favorites by virtue of its not having lost to any MAC opponents in the regular season, had to settle for a third place finish. It ' s a ponil for the opponent jrom Temple as he completes his lunge in this hard-jought sabre match in Grace Hall. First Row: McElfresh, Manager: Cohn, Holzcr, Wright, Davis, Nemitz, Winnmer, Manager. Second Row: Harry T. Boutsikaris, Coach: Jackson, Stetten, Adams, Freed, Wismer, Captain: Bethke, Rees, Nesslage, Veglia. Flying Club . . . flying a new plane The major problem for the Flying Club this year was to find a replacement for its airplane, which was demolished in a July 9 crash in Flemmgton, N. J. Pilot- ing the ill-fated craft at the time was Ted Hortsmann, ' 59, who suffered compound fractures of both legs in the mishap. The club never did get another plane until late in February when it purchased a single-engine Taylor- craft two-seater. The demolished plane was an Aeronca Champion. mnnjuif This sleek, new single-engine Taylorcraft is all set to purr down the airport runway and ivhisk club members into space . First Roil : Bruwn, King, Treasurer: John H. Urban, Faculty Adviser: Michon, President; Barn- hart, Snyder. Second Row: Pearson, Sandford, Roggio, Parker, Lambert, Noll, Benson. 326 Golf . fourth in MAC Zoumey Lehigh ' s golfers won their third Middle Atlantic Conference golf championship in 1958 as the four-man team went over the American Legion Country Club course at Mount Union, Pa., in 688 strokes. Sophomore Stewart Iliffe, who was the top Brown and White golfer in regular season play, also paced the team in the tournament with a 161 score for the 36 holes. Bill Cumminges was second with 166, Sam Hartung third with 167, and John Ramsey fourth with 174. The regular season was another winning one for the charges of Coach Bill Leckonby as they posted an im- pressive 7-2 mark. Their only two losses came early in the season — in the first match, 4-3, to Penn; and in the third, 7-0, to the Nittany Lion swingers from Penn State. Golfer Bill Ciinimings loosens up his swing at Saucon Valley Country Club. Kneeling: Ramsay, Iliffe. Standing: Cummings, Widmayer, Manager: Hartung, Ginsburg, Weaver, Phillips, Davidson, William B. Leckonby, Coach. 327 First row: Williams, Manager; Schafebook, Hay, Shaner, Martindale, Oldershaw, Shaw, Manno, Gilbert, John S. Steckbeck, Coach. Second rotf: Goldstein, Manager; Randall, Culver, Tachovsky, Hensch, Rudes, Horstmann, Silverman, Bayer, Rumpf, Thomas, William T. Christian, Assistani Coach. Track . , , a new mile record set The big noise for the track team in 1958 was Wight Martindale who waltzed to an easy win in the Middle Atlantic Conference tournament. For Martindale, who first ran long-distance when he romped to an impressive victory in the 1956 Turkey Trot, this was the highpoint in a rags-to-riches career. Coach John Steckbeck ' s thinclads, as a team, had a losing season as they compiled a 2-3 record. The team bopped Delaware in the opening meet, 68-57, then placed a distant second in a triangle meet against Penn and Rutgers. U. of P. picked up 911 ? counters, while Lehigh tallied, 41, and Rutgers, 38. The team then lost to Haverford, 55-71, and to Lafayette, 541 2-711 2 ' before clobbering Temple, 108- 17. The year closed with a fourth in the Middle At- lantics. ]ohn Driscoll seems out to prove that his athletic prowess is not confined to the narrow area of a tirestling mat as he clears the high bar in a successful jump. THE RECORD Lehigh Opponent 68 Delaware 57 41 Penn 911 2 Rutgers 38 55 Haverford 71 541 2 Lafayette 711 2 108 Temple 17 LETTERMEN Daniel Bayer Peter Bayer Bruce Gilbert John Harkrader Richard Hensch Theodor Horstmann Frederick Krehbiel Frank Manno Wight Martindale Lee Oldershaw Murray Randall Frank Rudes Norman Rumpf Kenneth Shaner Josiah Shaw James Shea Mark Silverman Peter TTiomas Owen Williarris, Alatiager Running with a pulled thigh muscle, track Co-Captain John Harkrader gives a strong finishing kick to outdistance his Lafayette opponent and take the 440 in 50.8. h MB Freshman Track First row: George Halfacre, Coach: Pons, Bros- cious, Davidson, Buchanan, Young, Ruhl. Second roic: Wright, Nowakowski, Burrows, Adams, Taub, Holden, Watters, McHugh. Third row: Foster, Alariager ; Bradway, Bryant, Rich, Varrese, Darlington, Benedict, Jones, Allinger, Dobrota, Reidle. 329 Baseball . good start — boom The 1958 Lehigh baseball squad played almost the same kind of ball as had its predecessors. In 1957, the team ' s record was 6-9. In 1958, it was also 6-9 with a tie thrown in just to break the monotony. Paced by the lusty swatting of Bob Hirsch, the Engineers began the season with a trio of victories. Swarthmore bowed, 11-6, in the opener, followed by Farleigh Dickinson, 8-3, and Hofstra, 3-0. Up to the Hofstra game, Hirsch was clipping the ball at a phenomenal .750 pace. Though he still wound up the year with a very respectable .371, good enough for the Lehigh batting crown, his hits were a bit more spaced, and so were the Lehigh wins. The next victory after Hofstra came against Rutgers, 6-2, five games later. Other wins were at the expense of Bucknell, 7-1, and neighboring Muhlenberg, 3-2. Other individual leaders for the charges of Tony Packer, in addition to Hirsch, were Captain Dick Hoog- straten whose 11 rbi ' s were tops, and Fred Homsher, whose two homers gave him the slugging title. Offensive play, as well as defensive, pointed the way to Lehigh ' s 6-2 tvin over Rutgers. Dick Hoogstraten belted two doubles and a single to lead in hitting. First row: Morrow, Sahler, Shaughnessy, Homsher, Helfrich, Butera, Anthony Packer, Coacli. Second row: Bevan, Smith, Halperin, Hirsch, Hoogstraten, Siuciak, Christie, Holahan, Fuhrman, Manager. Third row: Nevil, Schickedanz, Anderson, Serfass, Williams, Herring, Koch. LETTERMEN Craig Anderson Robert Bevan Edward Butera Stephen Halperin Robert Hirsch Richard Holahan Frederick Homsher Richard Hoogstraten Douglas Koch David Nevil Ernest Schlckedanz John Serfass Walter Smith Thomas Fuhrman, Manager Freshman First row: Highfield, Jeffers, Palfi, Rutledge, Scheu, Wentz, Larimer, Daily, Chiodi. Second row: Westerman, Turner, Terry, Berger, Schmesch, Bischoff, Meyer, Reinik, Skolnick, Manager. ' I Slete Halperm steals third from an inept Rutgers defense man to hack up Craig An- derson ' s three-hitter. THE RECORD Lehigh Opponent 11 Swarthmore 6 8 Farleigh Dickinson ... 3 3 Hofstra 1 Wagner 2 4 Delaware 15 7 Muhlenberg 7 2 Pennsylvania 5 12 Colgate 17 6 Rutgers 2 4 Ursinus 15 7 Bucknell 1 4 Columbia 6 3 Muhlenberg 2 Lafayette 5 11 Gettysburg 15 Rutgers 2 331 f rj row: Swanson, Sider, Venman, Dimmick. Second row: Werner, Dominici, Havel, Pijawka, Captain; Biggs, Frank Maze, Coach. Third row: Brian, Manager. Brooks, Bert, Wardell, Estroff, Sweitzer, Vogt, Bateman, Ostrom. Lacrosse another loser It was another dismal season for the lacrosse team in 1958. The stickers picked up only two wins to equal the 1957 victory total, and double the total for the two years previous to that. And it was the two same teams that bowed to the Brown and White in 1957 that also went down to defeat in 1958. Franklin and Marshall was clobbered, 21-2, in the opening game of the campaign, and Lehigh fans began predicting that things were going to change on the lacrosse front. But after that. Engineer rooters had little to cheer about as the stickmen topped only Lafayette in the remaining nine games. The Leopards, who were nosed out 6-5 in 1957, lost 6-3 m 1958. Lehigh and U. of P. micifielders collide as the Quakers stage a late rally to beat the Engineers. 6-3; Penn scored four goals, giving the lacrosse team one of its eight losses of the year. Tennis . . . Eastern J Mter collegiate title holders The 1958 tennis team started slowly with successive 4-5 losses to Swarthmore and Haverford, but more than made up for this at the end of the season as it copped the team championship in the Eastern Inter- collegiate Tournament. Top individual performer for Coach Gerry Leeman ' s club was Lowell Latshaw who blasted his way to the singles crown in the EIC, and then teamed with Bill Scarlett to give Lehigh a clean sweep of the tourna- ment. The middle of the season was also successful so far as the tennis team was concerned. After the opening game losses, it romped to easy wins over six opponents, before dropping another 4-5 match to Bucknell. The netters closed out the regular season with a 5-4 victory over arch-rival Lafayette. Lowell Latshaw proved in the Eastern In- ter-collegiate tennis championships that this Steel Field practice pays off. Lehigh 37 . 62 . 40 . 60 . 51 . THE RECORD Opponent .Colgate 50 .Delaware 23 . Pittsburgh 46 . Syracuse 26 .Penn 35 61 Lafayette 56 Army 61 Rutgers . 25 30 25 Kneeling; Weiss, Kohut, Sullivan. Shuiding: Gerald Leeman, Coach; Wright, Latshaw, Scar- lett, Earl. Brown Key Society Visiting teams and spectators at Lehigli ' s athletic events have always found the wearer of the Brown Key arm band a helpful host and a welcome guide. This society is made up of 30 men engaged in the promotion of better athletic relations between Lehigh and her opponents. Representatives of the society act as hosts to all visit- ing athletic teams, endeavoring to provide assistance and service aimed at increasing good will between the schools. This Spring the Brown Key Society held its annual outing. OFFICERS Sealed: Hamer, President; Gates, Vice-President. Standing : Patton, Secretary-Treasurer. First roir: Springman, Popky, Triponey, Corns, Iliffe. Second row: Sedgwick, MacWilliams, Mc- Carthy, Gates, Vice-President : Hamer, President; Patton, Secretary-Treasurer ; Gamble, Thomas. Third row: LeVasseur, Gard, Gessner, Thomasson, Wolfert, Halperin, Steinman, Sahler, Vaughn. ry Intramurals maiHtaiH ' mg physical fitness The intramural program sufiered a blow in 1959 when Coach John Steckbeck, who in three years as its head had whipped intramurals into outstanding shape, resigned in the middle of the second semester. George Halfacre, freshman football coach, was named to take over the PE office until a successor to Steckbeck is chosen next Fall. Among the many innovations devised by Steck, as he was known to the students, was the Turkey Trot won this year by Dick Novvalk. The team title for this pre- Thanksgiving run around South Mountain was garnered by Sigma Nu. In the three years that the Trot has been in existence, it has developed into the most-participated-in si ngle event on the campus sports scene. More than 300 men compete in it annually. Steckbeck also revised Fight Night, when fraternity and dormitory champions battle it out for the University title in the various wrestling weights, to the stage where it draws almost as many fans as a varsity match. This Maintaining physical fitness is an important objective of the intramural program, and these participants are giving it their all. Fight Night, the culmination of several days of elimination wrestling, finds these two hopeful champions pitting their skills against one another. It ' s skins against the shirts in one of Lehigh ' s expanded intramural program games, held so that each student may have the opportunity to participate in one of the many athletic events. year ' s living group champion in intramural wrestling was Chi Phi in a walkaway. The 1958 winner of the coveted All-University, AU- Around sports trophy was Chi Psi, ending a five-year monopoly on the cup by Sigma Nu. In 1958-59, intramural events were held in every major sport as well as such semi-sports as ping-pong, foul shooting, and others. A brawny specimen of the Lehigh male feverishly works at improving his already sinuous frame in an attempt to prepare himself for a forthcoming Houseparty. Starting on his leap upwards, this budding volley-bailer attempts to return a high smash in one of the many intra- mural dormitory contests. Fight Night Chi Phi triumphant Amassing a total of 72 points, Chi Phi fraternity topped all Greek and dormitory competition in 1959 to cop the Fifth Annual Fight Night Tournament. Chi Phi was able to beat both Phi Gamma Delta, the fraternity champion, and Richards 3A, town residence hall champion, on the basis of a strong showing in the iinals of the big wrestling intramural tournament. Coach George Halfacre, who conducted this year ' s Fight Night, estimated that more than 375 students wrestled during the four-day schedule. Some 600 had signed up, and more than 400 weighed in. Behind Chi Phi in the team standings were Phi Gamma Delta with 69 points, Sigma Phi Epsilon, 61; Drmker 4, 59; Richards 2A, 56; Chi Psi, 55; Richards 3A, 53; Tau Delta Phi, 52; and Beta Theta Phi, 51. The All-University Sports Trophy, synibolic of intramural supremacy, is much coveted by both dormitory and fraternity living groups. Phi Gam ' s entry at 165 pounds, Doug Edwards, stalks his dorm opponent. Ed Bradway, whom he finally pinned. ]ohn Hess of Chi Phi proceeds to squeak out a 2-0 d over Bill Burroivs for the All-University title at 185 pounds. decision MEMORIES; f • lasting impressions of four years . . In Retrospect a year ' s frivolous and serious episodes Spring returned to Bethlehem, and undergraduate blood and undergraduate imaginations warmed to the vernal equinox. From the flagpole, a swastika banner hung, aloof from the combined removal efforts of Lehigh ' s contingent of Air Force sergeants and the Bethlehem Fire Department. Only when an unsym- pathetic tree surgeon loaned a pruner, did the flag fall, plucked from the pole. Quickly removed from the scene, it disappeared from Lehigh eyes, but anony- mous faculty members viewed the stunt as imagin- ative . Flagpole Day came, without a flag of any affilia- tion, and then was gone as Lehigh men looked for- ward to finals and Summer vacation. By the grace of the far-seeing administration. Summer lasted an extra week, and we returned long after Labor Day. Lehigh was much the same at first glance. Grass had grown over the grave of the old math building, Its inhabitants long since installed in Christmas-Saucon. Lamberton, sporting a new fire escape to hail the change inside, now offered languages instead of lunches, and was pine-paneled and proud of its ear- phone-filled, cubicled language lab . The techno- logical, educational and aesthetic improvements here and elsewhere were heralded by an even huskier tui- tion figure, that put Lehigh in the ranks of the Ivy League. Last Full ' s newcomers listen pensively CIS LU ' s traditions are revealed . . . Soon they follow an ancient custom by- greeting the players with a finmel . . . 340 Then it ' s Fall Houseparty time, first big weekend of the season, and Barbara Kehde bows in as Queen to reign over the festivities . . . - S Boom goes the old ca)iuo i. signaling another of the many Lehigh touchdoivns on the gridiron this year . . . As Houseparty Weekend arrives, a long procession of arriving dates signifies opening of events . . . Happy is the throng of dancers which pauses to admire the lovely candidate as she learns that the Queen ' s crown is to be hers . . . 342 Taylor Stadium filled for the first time in the new school year, to watch Lehigh play a one-point ad- vantage into victory over Delaware. That the win was significant was a common hope, expressed with crossed fingers. Charity colifers filled with coppers as the philan- thropist and anti-philocalist cast ballots for Lehigh ' s ugliest. A combination of high-powered advertising and natural gifts awarded the dubious distinction to a member of Sigma Alpha Mu. Weeks melted and the Big Brown went to Cam- bridge to be handed a 20-0 defeat despite valiant early- period offense. After Harvard weekend, however, Lehigh ' s fortunes seemed to improve as the Brown and White copped an AU-American rating. Our parents, pardonably inter- ested in seeing what they were paying for, visited Lehigh in record droves to see the Engineers defeat Western Reserve. While their cheers rose sk) ' ward, Bethlehem Steel crept up the back of South Mountain Fall guests of the Unifersity noted one of the big ini- proveineiits was the demise of the Math building . . . In the interims between the exciting and diverting events of the Fall and Winter seasons, they found time to study in the Library . . . fl •« w 1 1 5 m And sovietimes they just couldn ' t help jailing asleep ill that peaceful, quiet Library atmosphere . . . and began a clandestine crew-cut of undeveloped acres that is still pushing onward. Steel ' s eventual goal is a research laboratory which will enhance the mount with long, low buildings that look like cement greenhouses, and which will benefit Lehigh with a new recreation center. The sound of blasting was obscured however, by the cooler sounds of Dave Brubeck, the Class of ' 59 ' s Fall Houseparty offering. In the Brown and Vf hite ' s Houseparty issue. Cedar Crest exchange editors said they liked us, and revealed a good taste unsuspected by contingents that import their dates from more far-flung quarters. Houseparty disappeared and the ' 58 gridiron record was enhanced by a qualified win over a highly favored ' VMI, 7-7. Morale ran high, and the freshmen dragged their opposite numbers from Easton all over the lot by virtue of a rope-load of muscles, straining in reverse. Lafayette ' Weekend arrived, as it always seems to, on the well-chewed heels of Houseparty, and another tie-score gridiron match went into the books. With The rude awakening was sure to come; and it did, many times, with the first hour quizzes, and the second, and then the Fall finals . . . 344 ;; the Spring, the second big Houseparty is hailed ivith due excitement, and another Queen. Karen Kenerick, clasps the coveted cup . . . W Lafayette came the traditional display contest from which ATO emerged winner with an adaptation from Macbeth. February and the Spring semester brought a new word to the Lehigh vocabulary; the LUGDEM en- trenched itself in history. Lehigh ' s wrestling team en- joyed a strong season, losing only to Cornell, and climaxed with an EIWA win, the first in eleven years. The year had washed away, quizzes and rushing came and went, and the Class of ' 59 prepared to graduate. Wondering where four years had so quickly disappeared, we left Lehigh with mixed emotions of men who watched the future with trepidation, and had begun to miss the security of a brief past that had meant so much. We said good-bye to Lehigh, to the people and events, to all those moments which had been university life. At this Houseparty gala, these cats try a Charleston in Western and Roar ' in ' 20 ' s attire . . . In more conventional garb, these hundreds of dancers at the highlight event of Houseparty whirl to the flashing rhythms of Duke Ellington . . . 346 As the term draws to an end, awards day brings hundreds to the flagpole . . . Sometimes it ' s a target of espionage, frustrating the guardians of the flag. ADVERTISING; our share m a grow ' mg co mm i- ' C f mi y f4 r.-K Vk J - . A, - ' ■T -i V- ' ' ' N 3 ' Bethlehem v . filling our daily needs A number of years ago a couple of Lehigh students burned the Christmas tree on the Hill-to-Hill bridge and in the process damaged a portion of the bridge itself. Some Bethlehemites were incensed to the point that they were ready to lead a march on the campus. Then two years ago a group of Spring Houseparty picnickers littered the Lehigh Parkway in AUentown. The usually noncommital AUentown Morn ' nig Call was so annoyed that it wrote in an editorial, Swine would and could not have acted as contemptibly as this group . Finally, in July of 1957 several Bethlehem youths jumped and beat a Lehigh student. The Brown and White, noting that there was an anti-Lehigh attitude in some quarters in Bethlehem, advocated that students travel in groups late at night . The above are the incidents usually cited when a townee or a gownee wants to make the point that there is animosity between Lehigh Valleyites and Le- high students. The fact that so few such events can be marshalled for a period of almost ten years is the best rebuttal to any argument of that kind. This view of the busy Hill-lo-Hill bridge greets a Lehigh shopper traveling North during the five o ' clock rush hour. Moreover, much evidence can be mustered to show that town-gown relationships between Lehigh students and residents of the Lehigh Valley are very good, in- deed, and that both Lehigh and the Valley contribute much to each other ' s welfare. The editor of the Bethlehem Globe-Times. John Strohmeyer, who can be reasonably expected to have a better feeling of the pulse of his town than any other man, said this past year that town-university re- lationships are among the very best I have ever seen . Mr. Strohmeyer feels that Bethlehem itself is an above average college town . He gave two major reasons: First, Lehigh is cognizant of Bethlehem, much more so than is the case in many other similar situations. He said, Lehigh offers its facilities and experts much more than do most colleges . This is evidenced by the large number of Lehigh faculty and administration members who hold important posts in local service clubs and other civic organizations. When the Lehigh student thinks of top quality clothes, he thinks of Tom Bass where the ' Ivy look predominates. Residence improvements through- out the University are frequently completed tvith lumber and other supplies from Brown-Borhek. For that iiieJ out, (larticidaiiy on Sum ay, Lehigh me)! find Plaza Restaurant .; the top of their list. Ken ' s Gulf Service on the North Side pro- vided the essentials for many of Lehigh ' s large car population. Its convenient near-campus location and four barbers made Derrico ' s Barber Shop a fre- ij iently visited spot. ]i st doifii the hill in a feu- minutes brought droves of campus residents to New Mer- chants Barber Shop. The student could pick up almost anything from a Valentine to a candy bar at the F. W. Grand 5-10-25 Cent Stores, Inc. An attendant at Richard ' s Esso Service fills up a Lehigh man ' s gas tank for that long awaited for ride home. A Lehigh student pays his cleaning and pressing bill at Milton ' s Laundry, which made many a pair of khakis like new again. Valentine ' s Day, Christmas, Mom ' s birth- day, or what have you — Lehigh Stationery has the right card to send. For a new Chevy or for top quality service, Lehigh drivers frequently journeyed to Hauser Chevrolet on the north side ' s Broad Street. 3 I TED STEELWORKERSOFAMER Qk The United Steel Workers of America ' s headquarters on the North Side ojfers the Lehigh student an opportunity to study labor-management relationships first hand. Offering the Lehigh man the chance to en- gage in America ' s number one indoor sport is the Boulevard Bowling Center. Proriding refreshing relaxation for students for many years, the Tally-Ho has become a Lehigh institution. Lehigh University Second, in Bethlehem, a student receives his great- est welcome from the town ' s eligible young ladies — certainly something that many students are quite pleased about. Mr. Strohmeyer admitted that he had never seen this before. Bethlehem Mayor Earl E. Schaffer seemed very well pleased with his part-time citizens on South Moun- tain. And his sentiments were echoed by his full-time citizens — the Bethlehem residents, even though one of them complained about the students in a letter to the Bethlehem Globe-Times early this year. The irate letter writer asked that a pit be dug on South Mountain for off-campus fraternities. He charged further that these students were too loud, were unman- nerly, and were even destructive. But other residents sprang to the defense of the Lehigh men. In a Brown and U j ' e-sponsored poll of persons living contiguous to Lehigh off-campus frater- nities, the following views were uncovered: Through its religious services and musical programs, such as Bach Festival and Christmas Vespers, the Lehigh University Packer Chapel is jrequently a meeting place for students and residents of the Lehigh Valley. Valley Supply and Equipment Co. iv ' tth ils fine line of high- speed tools and other equipment is an important concern in the Lehigh Valley. Many were the dates of Lehigh men ivho marveled at the Americus Hotel accommodations and food after spending a weekend there. Printing Lehigh ' s All-AmericuH Brown and White is a service well performed for many years by Schlechter ' s Printery. BLi ■iililiiiiii fir m. liiiiiiB Ace Hotel and Bar Supply ' s d i ' ers ly of stock is shown by this display of crockery often purchased by Lehigh ' s living groups. Noted for its fine artistry in floral arrange- ments :nd that special personal touch, Beth- lehem Flower Center frequently serves the Lehigh community. Many of Lehigh ' s student organizations store their funds at the Bethlehem National Bank, a member of the Federal Deposit In- surance Corporation of America. For the Lehigh student who teas always coming down with colds and other ills, it ivas nice to have Devers Drugs not jar off. The Campus Barber wares his scissors as he prepares to put the finishing touches on hair- cut he is giving a Lehigh official- For gas, an oil change, or a new motor, many Lehigh students look their automobiles to Joe Moretz ' Esso Servicenter. When publicizing one of Lehigh ' s extracur- ricular activities, students visit Menne Print- ery in Bethlehem ' s South side. Scrapes and dents seem to be a necessary part of driving as evidenced by the frequency of visits made by students to Champion Auto Body Service in Behlehem. As part of its ever-expanding service, P. A. Knaus has in- creased its facilities to include an on-the-premises shirt laundry. ' m-„mms m Hotel Traylor, with its excellent appoint- ments and cuisine in Allentown. houses many dates and parents visiting Lehigh. The boys never make too much noise . If I could complain, the only thing I could say would be that they take up too much parking space . I have lived next to a fraternity for years and I like It — I even like to have the boys come over to the house . When I went to college, we made a lot more noise than these boys do . If anything, we keep them up . One resident told the story about the fraternity house that inadvertently burned rubbish on a wash day. When the clothes became soiled, the students volun- teered to have them laundered at their own expense. And so go the stories by the residents of the city — interspersed with only rare tales of woe. And the other side of the picture — the student ' s view of the town residents — is just as heartening to the per- son who believes there should be good town-gown re- lationships. As Mr. Strohmeyer said, the girls of the city tender In addition to prescriptions. Dennis Drug Store also was able to fill many of the gift needs of Lehigh students. The four barbers of Louie ' s Barber Shop maJe sure that the Lehigh student didn ' t have to wait long for his haircut. 360 For the Lehigh student who just didn ' t see that tree, Highway Auto Body Shop ti ' as a wonderful sight. North Side dwellers hare found the Maples a perfect spot for that special meal or after- movie snack. An important spot to the student was Union Bank and Trust Co. where he cashed checks. Any car looked as good as new after being sudsed at Modern Car Wash ' ; Bethlehem. Kauffman Electric was the place to buy that gift for that special girl. a huge welcome to the student. He could have added that the students in return think quite a bit of the Bethlehem variety of femininity. No figures have ever been compiled of the number of marriages that result annually between Lehigh men and the Christmas city sweethearts they met while at- tending college — but many indications are that the number would be quite large. A person who has ever party-hopped on a Saturday night from fraternity party to fraternity party realizes the great number of town females that are always present — many of them with a fraternity pin gra cing their blouses. The student usually makes other friends also during his four-year semi-residency in Bethlehem: The police captain who trains faithfully at the gym. The wrestling butf who never misses a Lehigh home match. The little boy who writes a Big Brown quarterback that you ' re the greatest football player in the whole world . The steelworker with whom he played shuffleboard and darts at a local pub. The Linden Hotel is a javorite among Le- high students who wish to house their dates or enjoy a satisfying meal. A representative of L. G. Balfour Co., manufacturers of the official University ring, takes orders for some of his products. Construction has already started atop South Mountain on Bethlehem Steel ' s new multi- million-dollar Research Center. Being built in two stages, the laboratories will bring together research aclirilies now being con- ducted at fourteen separate locations. 362 The Uiiiiersity Center dining hall coiinler girl keeps the trays filled iiilh glasses of Freeman ' s Dairy milk as students pick up this ever-popular menu item. Without the beierages supplied by Frank Piff and Son, no party uas really a party at a South Alountain fraternity. A must at any University Center breakfast uas toast — made, of course, from Heim- bach ' s delicious bread. 364 ■-k;. •— The big, white Penn Coat Apron Supply Co. truck has arrived at McCliiitic-Marsball with another load of clean bed l neu. (g(g f g im.m mm, ' The concessioiinaire handing out new sheets from Penn Coat and Apron Supply will be a Lehigh scene as long as students sleep- Here is one student who couldn ' t wait for the maid to make up his bed with his new linen from Penn Coat and Apron Supply Co. Supplying the meat for the hundreds of resi- dence hall diners, and pleasing the majority of them, is the task so well performed by Evans and Heeps of Allentown. Without the services of electrical contractor H. P. Foley, Lehigh students would really find themselves in the dark. It was R. F. Sell who handled the excavation for the many Lehigh buildings constructed in the past few years. The minister, the priest, or the rabbi with whom he was associated in Bethlehem. The counterman at the little coffee shop which he frequently visited about 1 A.M. for a couple of hot dogs and a coffee — no cream . His boss, who arranged his part-time work schedule to fit his class schedule. Ad infinitum. Of course, many of the persons with whom he be- came familiar while staying in Bethlehem were mer- chants. And with the merchants, the student had a one-to- one relationship similar to that with the residents. He needed the merchants and the merchants needed him. Rare, indeed, is the student who does not have a great deal of personal contact with the Bethlehem business man. From the time the student arrives at Lehigh, he usually purchases much of his clothes here, buvs all of The Lehigh Supply Bureau is almost a one- stop general store that takes care of the student ' s campus needs. Bethlehem Fabricators, one of the area ' s leading industries, has prepared many of the structural materials which have gone into Lehigh ' s buildings through the years. wasn ' t long ajler this picture nas taken at Sanbrook farms that these chickens were in front of some University Center diner. A Bethlehem Coal Supply Co. driver is about to fill np the oil tank at a fraternity, one of his many stops at Lehigh houses. To the man) students who use the Univer- sity Center daily the cooling and heating sys- tem installed by Air Engineers is a welcome relief when the weather becomes bad. 368 This console controls the flow of music and announcements over the sound system in the University Center installed by Audio Labs. There ' s nothing like a 7-Up for a refreshing break before hitting the books. Maintaining the health of Lehigh students and, at times, their dates is a fob so ably performed by Norbeth Dairy of Bethlehem. Keeping Lehigh students well stocked ivith both uriting and typing paper is the Lehigh Valley Paper Corporation. Conrey iig good spirit among Lehigh stu- dents has been the part played by Banko Beverages jor many years. lilfA BANKO BEVERAGE CO. This truck from the Allen Laundry made countless stops at Lehigh fraternities to pick up soiled clothes ivhich would be returned clean and neat. A student takes advantage of the facilities installed in the netv Delta Tau Delta house by Central Plumbing and Heating Company. When the buildings begin to leak rain on the classes, that ' s the time to call J. J. Morello to fix the roof. his toilet articles from Bethlehem merchants, gets his parents Christmas and birthday gifts from Bethlehem stores, and buys — you name it — from city proprietors. In addition, he houses his dates at Lehigh Valley hotels, attends Lehigh Valley movies and sporting events, frequents local taverns, soda parlors, and res- taurants, purchases the food for the fraternity meals and the ice and beer for the fraternity party from area merchants, has his clothes cleaned at Valley laundries. Again, ad infinitum go his contacts. And the Bethlehem businessmen are glad to see the student, also (unless, of course, the businessman hap- pens to be a tavern owner and the student is underage) . One of the first things a freshman arriving at Le- high in early September notices is the great number of signs on South Side business establishments: WEL- COME LEHIGH. And with more than 2,600 students heading for their South Mountain home every September to remain there until the following June, it is understandable ' ' 1 S? V i Many of the fine vegetables and other foods served to diners in the University center are supplied by Stravino ' s. I iMs t .r IMPORTED e DOMESTIC GRCX IMGTOHST. 371 This man from Reber Korn Co. is nuking an adjustment on one of their many heating systems installed at Lehigh. that there is a smile on the merchant ' s face as he sees the first freshman trudging toward the campus from the railroad station. Executive secretary of the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce, Harry Trend, during the past year called Lehigh one of Bethlehem ' s biggest industries in terms of dollars and cents. He added that it would be an economic catastrophe if the University ever decided to move to another locale. Someone reminded him that there is no fear of this, pointing out that with the current building and re- modeling boom on South Mountain, the city will prob- ably have the University for at least a thousand years . It was during this building boom that the student came to know other residents of the Lehigh ' Valley — the many carpenters, masons, plumbers, electricians, engineers, architects, and others who worked for the many contracting firms that helped Lehigh grow physically in the last four years. But it isn ' t only the Bethlehemites, or Allentonians, or Quakertonians that the student will recall when he Trimble Bros, supplied fresh fruit all year round to help give University Center diners a balanced diet. A Snack Bar waitress offers a sundae made with the ice cream Lehigh students call the best — Sealtest, of course. 372 Lehigh Valley Cooperative Farmers for tiian) yeais nou- has kept dormitory students freshly supplied iiilh nholesome milk. Canned goodi under the Stephens label, such as this Cranberry Sauce, have added zest to countless meals served in all the dining halls in the University Center. Earl W. Ecker, Inc., General Contractors constructed the new Delta Tan Delta jra- lernity house in Sayre Park. Keeping Unaersity Center diners supplied with fresh quantities of milk each day is a job so well performed by Suncrest Farms. 374 reminisces about Lehigh in the years following his graduation. Chances are good that he ' ll remember, also, the other part-time citizens who make the Lehigh Valley their quasi-domicile for nine months out of the year. These are naturally the co-eds at Cedar Crest, Mora- vian, and Muhlenberg and the student nurses from AUentown General, AUentown Sacred Heart, and Bethlehem St. Luke ' s Hospitals. There are few — if any — Lehigh students who dur- ing their undergraduate years didn ' t have one date from at least one of these institutions. And there are many who had dates from all six. Probably the favorite tramping ground for Lehigh date-seekers is the Cedar Crest campus. After a Satur- day night when a number of fraternities hold parties, it is nearly impossible to drive onto that AUentown campus without running into a traffic jam. So many of the Lehigh men and Cedar Crest gals get together for a lifetime that the two institutions can almost be called mates by this time. Yes, those Lehigh Valley residents, businessmen, and quasi-residents can certainly say that Lehigh is a nice institution to have around. For that late-at-night study break or for just plain refreshment, a Coke from one of the many distributing machines around campus really fills the bill. Most of the plumbing and heating equip- ment at the University comes from the Hajoca Corporation of Bethlehem. Acknowledgments . , , , our thanks to the staff, faculty, and students who have done so much to make this yearbook possible. To Mr. Walton H. Hiitchins. whose interest and aid in every phase of publication made this yearbook a success. Without his help, it can be truly said, this annual would not have been possible. To the Head of the Division of foiiynalisni, Associate Professor Joseph B. McFadden. who oversaw the general production of the book and freely offered his time to aid us in the solution of many of our problems. To the Class of 1959, out of whose funds a major part of this book was financially supported. To the students and faculty, who pa tiently cooperated with us in the taking of pictures and supplying of much of the information contained in the book. To Mrs. Dorothy Moravec, Mrs. Marge Szabo, Mrs. ]ean Foley, and Miss ]udy Morgan, whose aid in typing countless forms, copy, and many other items freed us from looking after many details. To the Presidents of all the honoraries, activities, and living groups, who aided us in scheduling their group pictures. To the Office of Public Information and the Alumni Bulletin, which supplied us with many of the pictures on the preceding pages. To Mr. Frank Weedon. Assistant University News Editor, for his aid in compiling the vast amount of data necessary to complete our sports pages. To our advertisers, whose financial support kept this book sound. To Mr. William O ' Connor of the Jahn and Oilier Engraving Company, for his immeasurable as- sistance in the design and layout of this book. To Mr. Chester DeTurk of the Kutztown Publishing Company, who aided us in the selection of the varied type faces in the book. To the photographers and staff of Merin Studios, who aided us where it counted most, that is, in the taking and processing of the many photographs contained in this yearbook. Finally, to the staff of the 1939 Epitome, whose devo- tion to their job, which at times was extremely tedious, for making this annual the success we all hoped it would be. The Editors. 376 Jahn Oilier plates are proofed by expert printers in the Proofiiig Department to check for quality reproduction before they are shipped to the printers of the Epitome. Jahn and Oilier The quality of any yearbook is dependent upon the quality of the reproduction of the pictures between its covers. If the engraving of these pictures is inferior, so will the book be inferior. The Epitome has been fortunate for many years in having our pictures en- graved by the ]ahu and Oilier E)igriiviug Company, one of the finest engravers in the country. J O ' s sixty-six years of experience in the photo-en- graving business has enabled them to develop methods which actually improve the quality of the pictures. In many cases, for instance, imperfections are removed by an air-brushing technique. However, there is another side to the story of fahtt and Oilier ' s service to the Epitome. The liaison between the editors and the photo-engraving plant is an im- portant link in maintaining adequate communications between the two organizations. Producing a yearbook is a complex business and it has its baffling problems. William O ' Connor, J O ' s representative to the year- book, has proved indispensable in the solution of these problems. Bill, as he is known to yearbook staffs all over the East, teaches fledgling editors the time-saving shortcuts, which is the product of experience gained by working with hundreds of yearbook staffs. This is a section of J O ' s Finishing Department where plates are checked for proper size, and any necessary tooling is done. Merin portrait photographer, Milt Cantor, checks to see if everything is just right be- fore photographing one of the many senior Epitome portraits. Merin Studios The Epitome owes the quaHty of its photographic work directly to the efforts of A erin Studios. Every year this firm undertakes the tremendous task of taking the multitude of pictures that a yearbook requires. Each and every one of these pictures must be of the highest quality. A single bad photograph can impair the over-all character of the yearbook. More than half of Merin Studios ' time is devoted to the taking of the senior portraits. Milton Cantor is due credit for an excellent job. Although he spends only a few minutes with each student, the finished portraits are a perfection in photography. Responsible for photographing the large number of groups that appear in the Epiloitie is Irving Jacobs. Proof of his skill is the large number of pictures or- dered by Lehigh students every year. We of the Epitome staff are grateful to Marvin Merin and his entire staff who have aided immeasur- ably in the production of a yearbook outstanding, in part, because of the quality of its photographs. Senior portraits are touched up in the studio to produce the quality work that Merin is known for on many a college campus. SSSb A ' . Kutztown Publishing The finished yearbook represents only the final phase of the vast amount of work that the Kutztown Publish- ing CoDipany does for the Epitome. For every page of finished copy that appears in the Epitome. Kutztown set the type, and prepared galley and page proofs. Copy, consisting of articles, captions, and identifications, was first set in type and returned to Lehigh as galley proofs. After proofreading by the staff, the galley sheets were revised and returned to the printer to be set in page forms with the engravings. Then page proofs were checked by the editors before the final printing could begin. Sometimes whole para- graphs had to be reset by the patient linotype opera- tors at Kutztown before the editors decided that the wording and typography were as perfect as possible. Only after this procedure was completed for every page did the presses begin to roll in the final stage. To help us in the solution of our many printing problems, the Epitome was fortunate in having the services of Chester DeTurk, who heads the Kutztown shop. We also owe a special debt of gratitude to Jacob R. Esser, assistant to his father, Charles H. Esser, President, whose firm has been publishing the Epitome for more than a decade. Fifteen yearbooks, including the Epitome, are printed in this home of the Kutztown Publishing Co. This row of linotype machines at Kutztown provides a ivide variety of type styles and sizes for the use of yearbook staffs. 379 Senior Directory Lloyd Michael Abrahams Accounting Woodmere, N.Y. Town; Alpha Kappa Psi; Accounting Society; Hillel — treasurer; Interfaith Council; Sabre Society. R. Brittain Adams English Berwick, Pa. Dravo D-3; Arcadia; Arcadia Associates; Brown and White; Phi Eta Sigma; Band; Collegians; Mustard and Cheese; Gryphon Society; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Wilbur Mathematics Prize; Chandler Chem- istry Prize; Williams Junior Composition Prize. Donald Herman Adickes Industrial Engineering Ridgewood, N.J. Chi Phi; Football, freshman; Lacrosse; AIIE. Harry S. Allen, Jr. Electrical Engineering Lancaster, Pa. Theta Delta Chi — president ; Senior Class Cabinet; Eta Kappa Nu; AIEE, IRE; Fresh- man Honors ; Deans List. Walter Rue Allen Chemical Engineering Staten Island, N.Y. Town. Albert W. Angulo General Business Bryn Mawr, Pa. Town: Sabre Society; Flying Club — treasurer; WLRN; Newman Cluh. Robert Milton Anthony Psychology Bethlehem, Pa. Town: Psychology Club; Psi Chi. Jon Scott Armstrong Arts Ind. Eng. Pittsburgh, Pa. Alpha Chi Rho — secretary; Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Mu Epsilon; Newtonian Society; Track, fresh- man; AIIE; Newman Club; Alpha Phi Omega; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Deans List. Philip Anthony Arnone Electrical Engineering Trenton, N.J. Price Hall: RHC Concessions Committee; AIEE, AIRE. Leonard Joseph Augustine Mechanical Engineering New Market, N.J. Delta Sigma Phi: AIEE, IRE; ASME; WLRN; Newman Club; Mustard and Cheese; Bowling Club; Radio Workshop. Paul George Bacak, Jr. Accounting Bethlehem, Pa. Town: Town Council. Peter Harrison Bach Economics Maplewood, N.J. Psi Upsilon — vice-president, secretary; IFC; Track, freshman; WLRN — chief announcer. Don E. Bach man Electrical Engineering Williamsport, Pa. Delta Sigma Phi — pledge master; Newtonian Society; Pi Mu Epsilon; Tennis, freshman; AIEE, IRE; Pershing Rifles; Model Railroad Club. Russell Edward Baer, Jr. Mechanical Engineering Baltimore, Md. Chi Psi: Freshman Cabinet; IFC; Lacrosse, freshman, varsity; ASME. Paul Charles Baker Arts 6 hid. Eng. Teaneck, N.J. Pi Lambda Phi — vice-president, treasurer; Ar- cadia Associate ; Epitome — Administrative Edi- tor, Picture Sales Manager; AIIE. Stephen Michael Bakonyi Mechanical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. Town: Town Council; Pi Tau Sigma — treas- urer; Tau Beta Pi; Phi Eta Sigma; ASME; Newman Club; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Deans List. Jan M. Balaz Accounting Bethlehem, Pa. Town: Town Council. George E. Balbach Chemical Engineering Armonk, N.Y. Town. Arnis Balgalvis Electrical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. Town: Basketball, freshman and varsity; Cos- mopolitan Club — vice-president, secretary. Ernest Lopez Baralt Marketing Havana, Cuba Alpha Tau Omega: Soccer, varsity; Alpha Phi Omega; Newman Club; Ski Cluh. Edward James Barber General Business Mt. Vernon, N.Y. McClintic-Marshall B-2; McClintic-Marshall House — vice-president; Senior Class Cabinet; Epitome: Ski Club. William Donald Bateman A echanical Engineering Glenside, Pa. Alpha Tau Omega — Alumni Secretary; Fresh- man Class Cabinet; Arnold Air Society; La- crosse, varsity; ASME. Donald James Bauder History Hellertown, Pa. Leonard Hall — vice-president; Phi Alpha Theta — vice-president; Eta Sigma Phi — secre- tary-treasurer; Classics; Baseball, freshman; Canterbury Club; Intramurals; Washington Semester; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Deans List; Wilbur Scholarship Prize; College Honors Program. Robert Elmer Bauder Electrical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. Town: Town Council; Senior Class Cabinet; Arnold Air Society; Tennis, freshman, varsity; Rtfle Team, freshman; AIEE — Secretary; Cam- pus Chest Drive. Daniel King Bayer General Business Maplewood, N.J. Theta Kappa Phi: Hockey, freshman, varsity; Track. William Graham Beattie Metallurgical Engineering Philadelphia, Pa. Phi Gamma Delta: Junior Class Cabinet; Senior Class Cabinet; Cyanide; Football, fresh- man varsity; Metallurgical Society — vice-presi- dent; Freshman Honors; American Metals So- ciety scholarship. Richard Dimitri Beltson Accounting Bronxville, N.Y. Theta Delta Chi — pledge master; Junior Class Cabinet; Senior Class Cabinet; Basketball, var- sity; Acc ounting Society — vice-president. Edward Stanley Bendrick Chemical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. Town. William Arthur Benning Mechanical Engineering Williamsport, Pa. McClintic-Marshall; ASME; APO; Flying Club. Melvyn Howard Bergstein Management Nutley, N.J. Sigma Alpha Mu — pledgemaster, rushing chairman; Inter-faith council; Student Con- cert Lecture Committee; WLRN — music direc- tor, advertising manager; Tennis manager, freshman, varsity; Hillel. 380 Richard Kassel Bernard English Brooklyn, N.Y. Pi Ljmbdj Phi — secretary ' , pledge marshal; Senior Class Cabinet; Epitome — assistant to the managing editor, managing editor, editor- in-chief; Cyanide; Pi Delta Epsilon; Board of Publications; Who ' s Who; Senior Class Gift Committee; Phi Alpha Theta, Trustee Scholarship. John Hamilton Berry Accounting Bethlehem, Pa. Town; Town Council; Freshman Honors; Deans List. VC ' . Leonard Berry, Jr. General Business Bronxville, N.Y. Sigma Phi. Jean-Paul Alain Bert General Business Rahway, N.J. .McCliniic-Marshall — athletic chairman, house council; Lacrosse, freshman, varsity; AIIE; Cosmopolitan Club; Flying Club. Peter Daye Bethke Marketing Briarcliff Manor, N.Y. Theta Chi — assistant treasurer; Alpha Kappa Psi — pledge marshal; Cut and Thrust Society — secretary-treasurer; Fencing; Lambda Mu Sigma. Robert Bruce Biggs Geology Millersville, Md. Delta Tau Delta; Lacrosse, freshman, varsity; Howard Eckfeldt Society; Mustard and Cheese. James Malcolm Blair Mechanical Engineering Reiffton, Pa. Beta Theta Pi — pledge chief; Senior Class Cabinet; Mechanical Engineering Society; Junior Houseparty Ticket Committee. David Dennen Blanchard Chemistry Cincinnati, Ohio Gryphon; RHC; Mustard and Cheese. Logan F. Blank Geology Jeannette, Pa. Delta Tau Delta — president, assistant treasur- er; Glee Club; Chapel Choir; Lacrosse; Howard Eckfeldt Society vice-president. John Thomas Boettger Electrical Engineering Scranton, Pa. Sigma Phi Epsilon — vice-president, house manager; AIEE. Paul Hurley Bogardus, Jr. Journalism Darien, Conn. Psi Upsilon — vice-president; Broun and While: Pi Delta Epsilon; Hockey; Deans List. Roger Hill Bohl Mechanical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. Town; WLRN; Tau Beta Pi; Assistant Resi- dent Hall Counselor; Freshman Honors; Sophomore Honors; Junior Honors; Deans List. James Quentin Bonanno General Business Tenafly, N.J. Delta Upsilon — secretary, rushing chairman; Ski Club — president; vice-president; Newman Club. Carlton Gene Bowker Industrial Engineering Homer, N.Y. Town: Sophomore Honors. John Albert Boyer Mechanical Engineering Allentown, Pa. Town; Town Council; ASME; Intramural Sports. Robert Forrest Brainerd Engineering Physics Newtown, Pa. Theta Chi; Marching Band; Concert Band; Brass Choir; Orchestra; Bach Brass Choir; Freshman Honors; Sophomore Honors; Deans List. Denis Vincent Brenan Government Freeland, Pa. Sigma Nu; Arcadia; Epitome; WLRN; Cy- anide; Basketball-captain; Lacrosse, freshman; Mustard and Cheese; Freshman, Sophomore, Junior Honors. Reynold Thomas Brenna Metallurgical Engineering Trenton, N.J. McCtintic-Marshall B-i — treasurer; Metallur- gical Society. Arthur Charles Brooks Mechanical Engineering Beechwood Vill, Ohio Phi Gamma Delta; Epitome — sales manager; Swimming, freshman, varsity; Lacrosse, fresh- man; Soccer, varsity; Newman Club; ASME. Richard John Brown Chemical Engineering Pottstown, Pa. McClintic-Marshall B-1. Joseph Lucien Bruno Electrical Engineering Reading, Pa. Lambda Chi Alpha; IRE. Robert Bruce Bruns Mechanical Engineering Brooklyn, N.Y. McClintic-Marshall — secretary-treasurer; AS- ME; Sabre Society; Arnold Air Society. Robert Woodruff Bryan Ind. Eng. Bus. Ad. Odessa, Fla. Town; Pershing Rifles; Soccer, freshman, var- sity; AIIE. Robert Andrew Bryson Mechanical Engineering Hopwood, Pa. Town; ASME. David R. Buchanan Mechanical Engineering Wexford, Pa. Delta Sigma PA; ' — treasurer ; ASME; Alpha Phi Omega; Pershing Rifles. John Wilkins Burden, III Marketing Colonia, N.J. Sigma Phi — president, secretary; IFC; Brown White — circulation manager; SAME. Joel Wakeman Burdick Government West Hartford, Conn. Sigma Nu — president, steward; IFC; Bridge Club; Ski Club. Charles Stuart Burger Marketing Cleveland, Ohio Phi Gamma Delta: Sophomore Cabinet; Foot- ball, freshman, varsity — captain; Lacrosse, freshman, varsity. Edward Cali General Business Bangor, Pa. Town; Flying Club. John L. Canova Accounting Glen Rock, N.J. Phi Gamma Delta — secretary ' ; Class Cabinet; Arcadia Associates; Football, freshman, var- sity; Accounting Society; Brown Key Society. George William Castles Accounting Stewart Manor, N.Y. Town; Newtonian Society; Accounting Society. Donald E. Cazer Mechanical Engineering Brooklyn, N.Y. Alpha Chi Rho — pledgemaster ; Pi Tau Sigma —president; Tau Beta Pi; ASME; Alpha Phi Omega; F reshman Honors; Sophomore Hon- ors ; Deans List. GusTAVE Eugene Chew, Jr. Accounting Linwood, Pa. Psi Upsilon. Richard Chichester Mathematics Wilmington, Del. Town; Richards B-4 — treasurer; Pi Mu Ep- silon; Tau Beta Pi Tutor; Acolytes ' Guild. Maurice John Christatos Finance New York, N.Y. Theta Kappa Phi — secretary, treasurer ; Fresh- man Football — manager; Alpha Kappa Psi; Newman Club; Pershing Rifles. 381 H. Thomas Clark, Jr. Mechanical Engineering Pittsburgh, Pa. Theta Chi — secretary; Band; Brass Choir; ASME. Lee Milton Clegg, Jr. Industrial Engineering Cleveland, Ohio Town; Tau Beta Pi — treasurer; Alpha Pi Mu — vice-president ; AIIE — vice-president ; Sopho- more Honors; Deans List. Raymond James Coates Electrical Engineering Wenonah, N.J. McClintic-Manhall A-i RHC Concessions Committee; WLRN; Pi Mu Epsilon; Eta Kappa Nu— secretary; Tau Beta Pi; AIEE; IRE; Alpha Phi Omega; Methodist Student Fellowship; Christian Council; Radio Work- shop; Freshman and Sophomore Honors. Richard Joseph Coffin Chemical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. Toii ' n; Town Council; AICHE; Chemical So- ciety; ALO; Intramural Basketball. William Herbert Comerford Mathematics Bayside, N.Y. Town; Newtonian Society; Pi Mu Epsilon; Sophomore Honors. Charles George Culver Ciiil Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. Tinrn; Tau Beta Pi; Chi Epsilon — president; Track, freshman, varsity; ASCE — secretary, president; ASTM; Pershing Rifles; Gryphon Society; Alpha Lambda Omega; Chi Epsilon Prize; Sophomore Honors; Deans List. William Grosvenor Cummings, Jr. Management Winnetka, 111. Sigma Phi — vice-president; IFC Representa- tive; Golf, varsity — captain. Richard Clinton Currey Finance Summit, N.J. Sigma Chi — secretary; Broitn and White; La- crosse, varsity; Newman Club. Robert Joseph Dal Pozzol Bacteriology Torrington, Conn. Taylor C: Band; Fencing, varsity; R. W. Hall Pre-Med Society; Sabre Society; Collegians. William John Daniels Physics Bristol, Pa. Taylor A. Philip Craig Desch Chemical Engineering AUentown, Pa. Kappa Alpha — secretary, pledgemaster; Junior and Senior Class Cabinets; Interfraternity Council AICE; SCS; Sabre Society; Williams Freshman Composition Prize. Terry Warren Dietrich Electrical Engineering Hamburg, Pa. Sigma Chi; Epitome: Glee Club; Tennis, fresh- man; AIEE; IRE; Radio Society. David Henry Dimmick Industrial Engineering Havertown, Pa. Theta Chi: IFC; Scabbard and Blade; Concert Band; Marching Band; Brass Choir; Music Festival; Lacrosse, freshman, varsity; AIIE; SAME — secretary; Sailing Club; Psychology Club; Alpha Phi Omega; Campus Chest. James Vail Dinkey Industrial Engineering Pittsburgh, Pa. Price Hall — secretary-treasurer; RHC Housing Committee; WLRN; Pi Delta Epsilon; AIIE; Westminster Fellowship; Psychology Club; Music Festival. Anthony Edward Cook Accounting Mahanoy City, Pa. Phi Sigma Kappa: Arcadia Associates; La- crosse, freshman ; Newman Club. Joseph Calvin Danner Chemistry Northampton, Pa. Town: American Chemical Society — vice-pres- ident; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Chandler Chemistry Prize. Robert Alton Domingue Mechanical Engineering Andover, Mass. McClintic-Marshall B- — vice-president; Brown and White — photo editor; Alpha Phi Omega; SAME — treasurer. John Edward Cooper Electrical Engineering Packanack Lake, N.J. Kappa Alpha — vice-president; Arcadia Asso- ciates; Junior Class Cabinet; Senior Class Cabinet; Newtonian Society. Joseph Andrew Corcoran, Jr. Management Bronx, N.Y. Phi Gamma Delta: Wrestling, freshman, var- sity; Lacrosse, freshman; Soccer, varsity. Charles Edwin Corns Foreign Careers Rocky River, Ohio Theta Delta Chi; Brown Key; Swimming, freshman, varsity; Ski Club; Sailing Club; Political Science Assembly. Barry Arthur Corson Industrial Engineering New York, N.Y. Town; Taylor B — treasurer; Track, varsity, freshman. Cyrus Steven Cowen Accounting Brooklyn, N.Y. Tau Delta Phi — vice-president, rushing chair- man; Freshman Class Cabinet; Arcadia Associ- ates; Delta Omicron Theta; Accounting So- ciety; Alpha Kappa Psi; Hillel; Freshman Orientation; Sophomore Honors; Deans List; Price Waterhouse Prize. Lawrence Allen Dash Engineering Physics Saint Clair, Pa. Town; Town Council; Freshman Cabinet; Alpha Epsilon Delta — president, secretary; AIP; R.W. Hall Pre-Med Society; Gryphon Society; Music Festival; Freshman Counselor; College Honors Program; Freshman Honors. George Keefe Davenport English Roslyn Heights, N.Y. Pi Kappa Alpha — secretary; Pershing Rifles; SAME; Mustard and Cheese; WLRN. Richard Kent Davis Engineering Physics Pittsburgh, Pa. Sigma Phi Epsilon — comptroller. Robert Allen Delay General Business Garden City, N.Y. Tou ' n; Sophomore and Junior Honors. Carmine Ralph D ' Ella Electrical Engineering Bayshore, N.Y. Sigma Chi — secretary, president; Junior Class Cabinet; IFC Representative; Newtonian So- ciety — president; Swimming, freshman; AIEE — vice-president; Newman Club; Freshman Honors. Brooks Weston Dorn Economics Port Washington, N.Y. Theta Chi: Class Cabinet; APO. Paul Henry Dosik Electrical Engineering Woodside, N.Y. Tau Delta Phi — house manager, steward; AIEE; IRE. Gerard Joseph Downey General Business Woodside, N.Y. Theta Kappa Phi. Robert Scott Draper Marketing Havertown, Pa. Phi Gamma Delta: Arcadia — secretary; Class Cabinet; Epitome: Band; Tennis, freshman; Alpha Kappa Psi — vice-president; Lambda Mu Sigma — vice-president. Walter Robert Drapinski Accounting Omden, N.J. McClintic-Marshall 6-1; Howard Eckfeldt So- ciety. 382 John Cuervo Driscoll Engineering Physics Ithaca, N.Y. Thela Delta Chi: Glee Club; Football, fresh- man; Track, freshman, varsity; Wrestling, freshman, varsity; Sailing Club. Peter Berry Eshbaugh Finance Montclair, N.J. Delta Upsilon — vice-president; IFC represen- tative. John Arthur Ford Mechanical Engineering Chatham, N.J. Alt ha Sigma Phi — treasurer; Band; Glee Club; Cliff Clefs; ASME. Stephen Dube Industrial Engineering Brooklyn, N.Y. Price Hall: Alpha Pi Mu — secretary; Music Festival; AIIE; Hillel; Sophomore Honors. Walter Everett Dunsby, Jr. Economics Wyckoff, N.J. Town; Taylor B — secretary-treasurer. Michael A. Esposito Mechanical Engineering Scranton, Pa. Theta Xi; ASME. Stephen Edward Estroff Government Mt. Vernon, N.Y. Pi Lambda Phi: Football, freshman, varsity; Lacrosse, freshman, varsity; Mustard and Cheese; Hillel. Gerald C. Fornwald Civil Engineering Reading, Pa. Taylor D — secretary-treasurer, vice-president; Band, Marching; Concert Band; ASCE; Chess Club. Darwin Martin Foster Accoiinliiig Town. Buffalo, N.Y. James G. Early, Jr. Metallurgical Engineering ' Washington, D.C. Taylor E — president; Newtonian Society; ASM; ASTM; Freshman Honors; Sophomore Honors; Deans List. Frederick Douglas Eckel Mechanical Engineering Clarks Summit, Pa. McClintic-Marshall B-3. John Francis Eckstein, III Finance Lake Hiawatha, N.J. Alpha Chi Rho — rushing chairman, treasurer; Junior and Senior Class Cabinets; Band; Lacrosse, freshman; Newman Club; Sabre Society. John James Elengo, Jr. Mechanical Engineering Hamden, Conn. Taylor B — vice-president; Scabbard and Blade; ASME; Pershing Rifles; SAME — president; Radio Society. Harold Robert Elliott Marketing Seaford, N.Y. Delta Tau Delta: Glee Club; Chapel Choir; Acolytes Guild. Elmer Joseph Ellis Finance Tunkhannock, Pa. Town; Alpha Kappa Tau. Albert Robinson Engstrom Marketing Montclair, N.J. Chi Psi. John Harold Evans, Jr. Mechanical Engineering Scranton, Pa. Pi Kappa Alpha — vice-president, secretary ; Newtonian Society; Westminster Fellowship. Cecil Eugene Ewing Mechanical Engineering Elkton, Md. Taylor C; ASME — vice-president; Pershing Rifles. Jon Zachary Farber Physics Brooklyn, N.Y. McClintic-Marshall A-l; Broun and White: AIP; Newtonian Society; Pi Mu Sigma; Hillel; Freshman, Sophomore Honors; Deans List. Frederick William Feus Marketing Tenafly, N.J. Theta Xi: Brown and White — sports staff; Baseball, freshman; Soccer, freshman; Ac- counting Society ; Lambda Mu Sigma ; Mustard and Cheese. Benedict Anthony FiDuclv Government Manhasset, N.Y. Phi Delta Theta — rushing chairman ; Class Cabinet; Newman Club; Sailing Club; Politi- cal Science Assembly. Jack William Fisch Mechanical Engineering York, Pa. Delta Phi — vice-president, treasurer; Phi Eta Sigma — vice-president; Pi Tau Sigma; Tau Beta Pi — vice-president; Newtonian Society; Scabbard and Blade; ASME; SAME — presi- dent; Ski Club; Pershing Rifles; ASTM; Freshman, Sophomore Honors; Deans List; First Defenders Trophy. Donald John Foster Economics Brooklyn, N.Y. Kappa Alpha: Glee Club; ClifT-Clefs; Chapel Choir; Accounting Society, AIIE. Wyman Beall Fowler, Jr. Engineering Physics Honesdale, Pa. Gryphon Society: Phi Eta Sigma — secretary; Tau Beta Pi; AIP— secretary ; Deans List; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Pi Tau Sigma Prize; Wilbur Mathematics Prize; Williams Freshman Composition Prize; Tau Beta Pi Essay Prize. Robert Matthew Freeman Chemical Engineering New York, N.Y. Delta Tan Delta — secretary, rushing chairman; Newtonian Society; Swimming, freshman, var- sity; AIChE; Music Festival. Wayne Delmar Freese General Option Philadelphia, Pa. Phi Sigma Kappa — president, rushing chair- man; Class Cabinet, freshman, sophomore, junior, senior; Glee Club; AFROTC Drill Team; Houseparty Judiciary Committee; IFC Jazz Concert Chairman; Newtonian Society. Michael Rocco Fresoli Marketing Bethlehem, Pa. Town; AIIE. Leon Friedman Biology West Orange, N.J. Tau Delta Phi — secretary; Alpha Epsilon Del- ta—treasurer; R.W. Hall Pre-Med Societ)-— secretary, president; Hillel. Robert Nicholas Epifano Chemical Engineering West Long Branch, N.J. Taylor B; ACS; AICHE. Gordon Lloyd Fisher Metallurgical Engineering Baltimore, Md. Alpha Tau Omega — treasurer; Junior and Senior Class Cabinets; Swimming, freshman. George Arthur Fryer Civil Engineering Oneida, N.Y. Town; Baseball, freshman, varsity; ASCE. Anthony Ernst Elec. Eng. Eng. Phy. Ventnor City, N.J. McClintic-Marshall A-l, WLRN; Pi Delta Epsilon. Chandler Ford, Jr. Accounting Philadelphia, Pa. Town: Residence Halls Concessions — business manager; Glee Club. Armin Fuchs Industrial Engineering Milltown, N.J. Alpha Chi Rho; Class Cabinet, freshman, sophomore; Newtonian Society — vice-pres- ident, treasurer; AIIE; Skiing Club. 383 Joseph Frederick Gaffney Elec. Eng. Eng. Phy. Lyndhurst, N.J. McClhitic-Marshall B: WLRN — engineer; In- stitute of Radio Engineers; Radio Society. Charles Henry Gaiser Chemical Engineering Bethpage, N.Y. Delta Sigma Phi — pledgemaster, steward; IFC — secretary; Arcadia Associates; Scabbard and Blade — president; ACS ; AIChE. James William George Chemiilry Allentown, Pa. Toun: AIChE; Student Chemical Society; American Chemical Society; Town Council; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; AIChE Scholarship. Frederick Benedict Gessner Mechanical Engineering Union, N.J. McClinlic-Marshall B; ASME; Newman Club. James Wilson Gorman Electrical Engineering Altoona, Pa. Taylor E — vice-president; Band; Orchestra; Brass Choir; Collegians; IRE; Radio Society — George Curtis Gotwalt Mech. Eng. Elec. Eng. Philadelphia, Pa. Chi Phi: Swimming, freshman, varsity — co- captain; Sophomore Honors. GiRARD Robert Gallup hiduurial Engineering Newburgh, N.Y. McClinlic-Marshall A- ; WLRN— assistant producer; AIIE; Mustard and Cheese — vice- president; Newman Club; Music Festival. William John Gamble Marketing Syracuse, N.Y. Chi Psi — vice-president, secretary; Arcadia Associates; Class Cabinet, junior, senior; SAME; Brown Key Society; Soccer, freshman, varsity; Track, varsity; Lacrosse, freshman; Ski Club — president, secretary, treasurer; Chi Psi Scholarship. Robert Reed Gardner Economics Summit, N.J. Sigma Chi — vice-president, rushing chairman, treasurer; Epitome — financial manager; Broun and White — business staff; Alpha Kappa Psi — secretary; Lambda Mu Sigma; Williams Ex- temporaneous Speaking Contest, first place. Anthony Paul Garro Psychology New Britain, Conn. McClinlic-Marshall — president; RHC; Golf, varsity. Stephen Krone Gartside Chemical Engineering South Orange, N.J. Beta Theta Pi — president, treasurer; IFC — treasurer; Broun and White — business staff; Cyanide; Omicron Delta Kappa; AIChE; Stu- dent Concert Lectures Committee; University Bookstore Advisory Committee; Student Gov- ernment Reorganization Committee; Freshman Honors. William Benjamin Gates, III Industrial Engineering Waynesboro, Va. Beta Theta Pi — vice-president; J.V. and Var- sity Wrestling Manager; AIIE; Brown Key — vice-president. Edwin John Geils Accounting Jersey City, N.J. McClintic-Marshall B-1. Richard Victor Gentzlinger Physics Schuylkill Haven, Pa. Town. Arnold Kingston Ghegan, Jr. Industrial Engineering Merrick, N.Y. Chi Phi — vice-president, secretary; Swimming, freshman, varsity; AIIE. Paul Edward Giesey Mechanical Engineering York, Pa. Taylor A: Golf. Oliver Wentworth Gill, III Education Essex Fells, N.J. Phi Sigma Kappa — secretary, rushing chair- man; IFC; Glee Club; Soccer, freshman, var- sity; Newtonian Society; Sailing Club; Hockey Club — president. Francis Anthony Giordano Physics Brooklyn, N.Y. Town; Newman Club. Milton Herbert Glover, Jr. Electrical Engineering Maplewood, N.J. McClin tic-Mar shall; Track, freshman, varsity; AIP; AlEE; IRE; Sabre Society; Arnold Air Society; Chess Club; Bowling Club. Melvin Asher Glucksman Accounting Maplewood, N.J. McClintic-Marshall B-i; Bridge Club. David Fenton Goddard Industrial Engineering Dallas, Pa. Sigma Chi: AIIE. Steven Jerry Gold Chemical Engineering Newark, N.J. McClintic-Marshall B-1; Epitome — identifica- tions staff; Newtonian Society; ACS; AIChE; Student Chemical Society; Hillel. Lawrence Goldstein Accounting Mt. Vernon, N.Y. McClintic-Marshall B-3. Marsh Merle Goldstein History Pittsburgh, Pa. Price Hall — president; RHC Concessions Com- mittee; WLRN; Music Festival; Track — man- ager; Cross-Country — manager; Basketball — freshman manager. Howard Arthur Grace Chemical Engineering Secane, Pa. Town; Taylor C — treasurer. Frederic William Wilson Graham, Jr. Marketing Philadelphia, Pa. Psi Upsilon; Wrestling — freshman manager; Special Drill Team. Paul Edward L. Gralnick Engineering Physics Philadelphia, Pa. Tau Delta Phi; AIP; SAME. Douglas Gordon Grandin Mechanical Engineering Fairfield, Conn. Sigma Chi: Glee Club; Soccer, freshman; Hockey ; ASME — vice-president. Richard Joseph Granger Chemical Engineering Union, N.J. McClintic-Marshall B-1. Thomas Joseph Grebenar Chemical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. Town: Town Council; Baseball, freshman; Cross-Country, freshman; AIChE; ACS; SCS; Alpha Lambda Omega. Emanuel Barnett Green Electrical Engineering Verona, N.J. Tau Delta Phi — house manager; Brown and White, photography staff; Soccer, freshman, varsity; AIEE; Photography Club. Ronald Edward Grierson Accounting Teaneck, N.J. Delta C ;;— treasurer; IFC; Wrestling— J.V. and freshman manager; Accounting Society; Sabre Society. Thomas Stearns Griggs Industrial Engineering Waterbury, Conn. Psi Upsilon — vice-president; Mustard and Cheese; Pershing Rifles; Scabbard and Blade. Peter Eugene Griswold General Business Palmer, Mass. Town. 384 Abram Lloyd Groff, Jr. Mjricting Lancaster, Pa. Pdi Gamma Delia: Epitome: R.W. Hall so- ciet ' — treasurer ; Brown Key. Samuel Brooks Hartung Finance Maplewood, X.J. Pi Kappa Alpha — treasurer; Class Cabinet, junior, senior; Track, freshman; Golf, varsity; Methodist Youth Fellowship. WiLLL M Fowler Hollabaugh Elec. Eng. Eng. Phy. Bethlehem, Pa. Town: Epitome — engravings editor, sched- uling editor; WLRN; Music Festival; Sopho- more Honors; Deans List. William Karl Gustafson Chemical Engineering Lynbrook, N.Y. Sigma Su: Wrestling, freshman, varsity. Evan G. Hagenbuch, Jr. Chemistry Sunbur ' , Pa. Sigma Chi — pledge trainer; Student Chemical Society; ASC. Jeffrey C. rl H. hn Mechanical Engineering Johnstown, Pa. McClintic-Marshall A-5; Camera Club; Mus- tard and Cheese. Edward James Hamer Maricting ' allaceton. Pa. Beta Theta Pi: Sophomore Cabinet; Junior Class Vice-president; Wrestling, freshman, varsity; Golf, varsity; Brown Key — president; Scabbard and Blade. Leon Moser H. rbold Metallurgical Engineering Pottstown, Pa. Beta Theta Pi — rushing chairman; Class Cabinet, junior, senior; Scabbard and Blade; Baseball, freshman; Wrestling, freshman, varsitv; ASM. John Ch.arles Harding Accounting Fall River, Mass. Theta Kappa Phi — president, secretary, steward; IFC; Class Cabinet, freshman, sopho- more, junior; Accounting Society; Metallurgi- cal Societv; Newman Club. John Johnston Harmon Mathematics Trenton, N.J. Gryphon: WLRN — station manager, business manager, music direaor; Pi Delta Epsilon — president. Peter Jerome Havel Business New York, N.Y. Sigma Chi: IFC; Houseparty Judiciary Com- mittee; Class Cabinet, senior; Swimming, freshman, varsity; Lacrosse, freshman, varsity; Metallurgical Society; Westminster Fellow- ship. George Edwin Hawkins General Buiinai Glen Cove, N.Y. Town: Band, freshman; Outing Club. Wayne Norman Heath Physics Haddonheld, N.J. Phi Delta Theta. Richard Walter Heckler Accounting Hazleton, Pa. Town; Accounting Society; Mustard and Cheese — treasurer, president; Newman Club — president. Milton Henry Hendricks Chemical Engineering Shamokin, Pa. Theta Chi: IFC; AlChE; ACS; L.ampus Chest — treasurer; Alpha Phi Omega — vice-president; Pershing Rifles; Radio Workshop; Mustard and Cheese; Freshman Honors. Joseph Herman Henningsen Industrial Engineering Port Jefferson, N.Y. Theta Delta Chi; Football; AIIE. Herbert Otto Henze Mechanical Engineering Philadelphia, Pa. Town: SCL Committee; Deans List; Freshman and Sophomore Honors. Frederick Lee Homsher Metallurgical Engineering Wyomissing Hills, Pa. Sigma Chi — secretary, steward; Baseball, var- sity — captain; SMS. Willlam Robert Horn General Business Allentown, Pa. Taylor A. Paul Joseph Horvath, Jr. Metallurgical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. Town; Town Council; Rifle Team, varsity — captain ; ROTC Rifle Team, freshman ; SMS. Robert Edwards Howe Mechanical Engineering East Greenwich, R.I. McClintic-Marshall B-I— president; WLRN, announcing, disk jockey ; ASME ; Camera Club. Sheldon Jackson Hubbard Engineering Mechanics Freeport, N.Y. Town; Howard Eckfeldt Society — treasurer. Robert George Hughes English Tamaqua, Pa. Alpha Sigma Phi — vice-president; Phi Alpha Theta; Lutheran Students ' Association — pres- ident. George David Hulse Marketing Seaside Park, N.J. Alpha Chi Rho — steward; Lambda Mu Sigma; Newman Club. Richard Willlam Hunt Management White Plains, N.Y. Chi Phi: Football, varsity, freshman; Newman Club; Senior Class Gift Committee. Rupert Bowen Harris, Jr. Chemical Engineering Elmhurst, Pa. Sigma Phi Epsilon: Arcadia Associates; Glee Club: ACS; Westminster Fellowship — presi- dent; WLRN; Intervarsity Christian Fellow- ship; H. Kemmerling Scholarship; Freshman, Junior Honors. Donald Bruce Harrison Citi! Engineering Springfield, N.J. Delta Chi — treasurer, president; Brown and White — make-up editor; ASCE. Nelson Robert Hartranft Finance Hatfield, Pa. Delta Phi. George H. Hiddemen, III Mechanical Engineering Pottstown, Pa. Theta Chi — house manager; Campus Improve- ments Committee; ASME; Pershing Rifles. Paul M. Hirsch Industrial Engineering New York, N.Y. Sigma Alpha Mu; Newtonian Society; Persh- ing Rifles; Psychology Club; AIIE. Adolf Hugo Hofmann, Jr. Marketing Hawthorne, N.Y. Sigma Nu — secretary; IFC; Basketball- fresh- man, varsity; Baseball, freshman; Newman Club; SAME. Dean Clark Hunter Industrial Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. Chi Phi — rushing chairman; Swimming — manager. Richard Robert Husser Finance Bethlehem, Pa. Town: Town Council; Brown and White— advertising manager, business manager; Epi- tome — identification editor; Pi Delta Epsilon; International Relations Club; Newman Club. Charles Percy Hutchinson, Jr. Goiernment Trenton, N.J. Psi Upsilon — vice-president, steward; Epitome; Brown and White; Sailing Club. 385 Melvyn Charles Hvazda Electrical Engiiieernig Northampton, Pa. Town; Town Council; ALO; Radio Society; AIEE; IRE. G. Morgan Jones, III Marketing Maple Glen, Pa. Town; Senior Class Cabinet; Lambda Mu Sigma; Flying Club — president; Canterbury Club — treasurer; Acolytes — vice-president. Paul Bernard King, III General Business Mountain Lakes, N.J. Town : Town Council ; Wrestling, freshman, JV ; Flying Club — treasurer. Otto Wigaart Immel Philosophy Morrisville, Pa. Town: Freshman Cabinet; Arcadia Associates; AIEE; IRE; Astronomy Club — vice-president. Charles Gabriel Interrante Metallurgical Engineering Norristown, Pa. Town: Arcadia; Band; Track, varsity; Wrest- ling — manager; ASM; Newman Club — pres- ident; Interfaith Council — president; Commit- tee on Religious Life. John Michael Ix Marketing Butler, Pa. Theta Kappa Phi — treasurer, steward; New- man Club; Flying Club. John Edward Jacobi, Jr. Marketing Bethlehem, Pa. Lambda Chi Alpha: Brown and White: Lambda Mu Sigma; Ten nis, freshman, varsity • — manager. Robert Lewis Jacobs Engineering Mechanics Spindale, N.C. Taylor B: Marching Band. Robert Adam Jankowicz Mechanical Engineering Trenton, N.J. Town: ASME. George Paul Jennings Marketing Ridgewood, N.J. Thela Chi: Sophomore, Junior Class Treasurer; Arcadia; Brown and While: Lambda Mu Sig- ma — treasurer; Soccer, freshman; Marketing Society; WLRN; Chairman, houseparty finance, concessions committee; Alpha Phi Omega — treasurer; FPA — National Convention; L.U. Parking Committee. Frederick Fellows Jillson Classical Languages Syracuse, N.Y. Leonard Hall: Freshman Cabinet; Alpha Sig- ma Phi — .secretary; Music Festival; JV Wrestling; Canterbury Club — secretary-treas- urer. Harvey William Jorgenson Civil Engineering Newton, N.J. Sigma Phi Epsilon: Marching Band; Concert Band; Music Festival; Swimming, varsity; ASCE. Ambrose Jowanna Mechanical Engineering Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Town: ASME. Robert Pohl Kalmey English Ardmore, Pa. Phi Sigma Kappa — vice-president, steward, pledgemaster; Brown and While — advertising; Pershing Rifles; Deans List. Manuel M. Kaplan Accounting Bridgeton, N.J. Taylor B: Delta Omicron Theta; Bridge Club; Political Science Club. George Kapo Chemical Engineering Mahanoy City, Pa. Town: Town Council; Band; Collegians; Track, varsity; AIChE; Newman Club. George Wills Karr, Jr. General Business Flourtown, Pa. Beta Theta Pi — secretary; Senior Class treas- urer; Class Cabinet, Junior, Senior ; Epitome — senior editor; Swimming, freshman, varsity; House Party Judiciary Committee; Chairman of House Party Ticket Committee. Willard Leonard Kauffman Engineering Physics Allentown, Pa. Town: Town Council; Pi Mu Epsilon — pres- ident; Tau Beta Pi; AIP — vice-president; Freshman Honors; Sophomore Honors; Deans List. John Fischer Kell, Jr. Accounting Wayne, Pa. McClintic-Marshall B-1; Pi Gamma Mu; Alpha Kappa Psi; Sophomore Honors. David Conrady Kingslake Education Rochester, N.Y. Town. Jerold Goode Klevit chemistry Philadelphia, Pa. Sigma Alpha Mu — secretary, treasurer, presi- dent; Arcadia Associates; Music Festival; Cheerleader; Student Chemical Society. William Lee Klink Finance Merion, Pa. Taylor B; Alpha Kappa Psi; Accounting So- ciety; Sophomore Honors; Deans List. David John Knapp Mechanical Engineering Baltimore, Md. Chi Phi — secretary; Swimming, varsity; SMB. Edward J. Kotcher, Jr. Chemical Engineering Northampton, Pa. Town; Town Council; AIChE; Alpha Lambda Omega. Richard Benard Koth International Relations Elizabeth, N.J. Taylor C: Music Festival. James Francis Kowalick Chemical Engineering Philadelphia, Pa. Town. Hilary John Kozlowski Mechanical Engineering Tunkhannock, Pa. McClintic-Marshall A-2; ASME. Frederick William Krehbiel Industrial Engineering Elizabeth, N.J. Chi Phi — treasurer; Cross Country, varsity; Track, varsity; John W. Maxwell Cross Coun- try Cup. Albert Karl Joecks Chemical Engineering Haworth, N.J. Kappa Sigma — vice-president; rushing chair- man; IFC; Baseball, freshman; AIChE. Thomas Leo Kelly, Jr. History Scarsdale, N.Y. Alpha Sigma Phi: Brown and White — national advertising manager. Joseph Andrew Kroculick Industrial Engineering Jim Thorpe, Pa. Town: Brown and W hite — circulation man- ager; AlIE; ALO. Carl Herbert Johnson Chemical Engineering Allentown, Pa. Kappa Alpha: ACS; AIChE; Chess Club — president; Sabre Society. Glenn Eugene Kinard Chemical Engineering Red Lion, Pa. Theta Xi: Chapel Choir; SAACS — president; Sabre Society. Theodore C. Kuchler, Jr. Mechanical Engineering Ruxton, Pa. Sigma Chi — house man,iger, pledge trainer; Lacrosse, freshman, varsity; ASME; AFROTC Drill Team; Mustard and Cheese. 386 Gerard Philip Kuebler Engineering Physics AUentown, Pa. Toun: Town Council; Tau Beta Pi; New- tonian Society; AIP — treasurer; Gryphon; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Deans List. Michael L. Kuenne Marketing Jersey City, N.J. Taylor D: Lambda Mu Sigma; Football, fresh- man; Track, varsity; Newman Club. Stephen David Kuhn InJustrijl Engineering Philadelphia, Pa. Sie.ma Alpha Mu — secretary; IFC; Epitome; AlIE; Hillel; Campus Chest. Gerald William Kurtz Electrical Engineering Nazareth, Pa. Town; AIEE; IRE; Alpha Lambda Omega. Donald Henry Kutz Chemistry Hellertown, Pa. Town; Town Council; Student Chemical So- ciety; German Club. Bernard Richard Laaken Biology Chester, Pa. Chi Phi; Freshman Class Cabinet; Football, freshman; R.W. Hall Pre-Medical Society- vice-president. Wayne Roger Lambertson Business South Amboy, N.J. Lambda Chi Alpha; Baseball, freshman, var- sity; AIChE; SAME. John Bruce Lampe Industrial Engineering Glen Rock, N.J. Theta Chi — treasurer; Newtonian Society ; Glee Club; AllE; Ski Club; Bowling Club. Nicholas Anthony La Para Chemistry Belleville, N.J. Gryphon : Air Force Drill Team ; AChS ; Freshman and Sophomore Honors. Robert Paul Laslo Chemical Engineering Clarks Green, Pa. Toun; Town Council; Rifle Team; ACS; Stu- dent Chemical Society; AIChE; Mustard and Cheese; ALO. Myron Thomas Latanision Metallurgical Engineering Richmondale, Pa. Toun; Rifle Team; SME, ASM; Howard Eck- feldt Society; Alpha Lambda Omega. Ronald F. Lauretti Finance Carlisle, Pa. Sigma Nu; Football, freshman, varsity; Howard Eckfeldt Society; Newman Club; Varsity L Club. Lawrence Edward La Vista Industrial Engineering Hawthorne, N.J. Taylor A — vice-president; Alpha Pi Mu — sec- retary; AIIE; Sophomore Honors. J. Richard Lawrence Metallurgical Engineering Perry, N.Y. McClintic-Marshall B-1; Metallurgical Society; Canterbury Club — vice-president; Sabre So- ciety. Gordon Earl Leach Mechanical Engineering Verona, N.Y. Alpha Chi Rho — secretary; IFC; Swimming, freshman, varsity; ASME; SAME. Donald Kenneth Lerche Mathematics Albany, N.Y. Town; Swimming Team, freshman; New- tonian Society. George Hamilton Lewis Industrial Engineering Akron, Ohio Sigma Phi Epsilon — president; IFC; Senior Class Cabinet; AIIE; Ski Club. Peter A. Lewis Electrical Engineering Trenton, N.J. Toun; Price Hall — president, vice-president; RHC Disciplinary Committee; IRE; AIEE; WLRN; Broun and White. Raymond Harper Lewis, Jr. Finance Buffalo, N.Y. Town; Accounting Society; Newman Club; Flying Club; WLRN; Music Festival. Byron Dale Lichtenwalner Electrical Engineering Trexlertown, Pa. Town; Town Council; AIEE; Radio Society — president. Fredric Warren Lipton Ind. Eng. Bus. Ad. Jersey City, N.J. Sigma Alpha Mu: Junior and Senior Class Cabinets; Music Festival; AIIE; Student Con- cert Lectures Committee. Richard James Lohmeyer General Business Morristown, N.J. Kappa Sigma — president, vice-president, treas- urer; IFC; Brown and While — business of- fice; Alpha Kappa Psi; Sailing Club. Charles Joseph Long Metallurgical Engineering York, Pa. Delta Phi — secretary; Band; Brass Choir; Bach Festival; Collegians; Music Festival; ASM; Metallurgical Society; Freshman Honors. Henry Keiper Long, Jr. Management Lancaster, Pa. Phi Delta Theta — house manager. Gilbert Edward Loper hid. Eng. Bus. Ad. Port Jeflerson, N.Y. Taylor B; AIIE; Mustard and Cheese — treasur- er; Westminster Fellowship. James Peter Loss Government Cleveland, Ohio Lambda Chi Alpha — rushing chairman; Band; Hockey, varsity — co-captain. Marc Cedric Lowenstein Fine Arts Mt. Vernon, N.Y. McClintic-Marshall A- Psychology Club; Mustard Cheese. Joseph Peter Lucarelli Finance Sea Girt, N.J. Theta Delta Chi; Football, freshman; New- man Club; Ski Club; Interfaith Council. George Kessler Lummis Industrial Engineering Haddonfield, N.J. Sigma Phi — vice-president; Junior and Senior Class Cabinets; AIIE; Freshman Rifle Team. Richard Anthony Lyncheski Chemical Engineering Throop, Pa. Taylor B. George E. MacBride Chemistry Toms River, N.J. Town. H. Tucker Machette Marketing Stamford, Conn. Beta Theta Pi: Class Cabinet; Lambda Mu Sigma; Football, varsity; Skiing Club — vice- president; Brown Key. John Wollaston MacMurray Finance Wynnewood, Pa. Kappa Alpha — treasurer, steward; Football, varsity — manager. John L. MacWilliams Industrial Engineering Abington, Pa. Alpha Tau Omega — secretary; Baseball, fresh- man; Lacrosse, varsity; ASIE; Brown Key Society. Martin James Maloney Marketing Sparta, N.J. Chi Phi — steward ; Swimming, freshman, var- sity — co-captain. Joseph Albert Mancari Biology Weehawken, N.J. Umbda Chi Alpha; R. W. Hall, Pre-Med. Society; Sabre Society; Newman Club. Warren D. Marsh, Jr. Chemical Engineering Point Pleasant, Pa. McClintic-Marshall; ACS; AIChE; WLRN; Mustard Cheese. 387 Robert Jay Martin Chemical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. Town. Douglas T. Merill Chemical Engineering Plainfield, N.J. Chi Phi; Swimming, freshman and varsity. Roy Edward Moulton General Business Larchmont, N.Y. Town; Flying Club. Samuel T. Martin Chemical Engineering Pompton Lakes, N.J. Kappa Sigma — treasurer; Newtonian Society; AlChE; ACS. Jon a. Marx Mechanical Engineering Hatfield, Pa. Taylor B: Newtonian Society; ASME. Curtis Robert Maynard Accounting Bethlehem, Pa. Town. LeRoy Augustus Meseke General Business Baltimore, Md. Delta Tau Delta; Epitome: Music Festival; Lacrosse, varsity; Air Force Crack Drill Team. Alfred Edmond Michon Economics Summit, N.J. Phi Sigma Kappa — treasurer; Flying Club. David Henry Miesegaes Finance Rutherford, N.J. Taylor D: WLRN; Political Science Assembly. Charles Laurence Munigle Civil Engineering West Hartford, Conn. Delta Chi. Charles Peter Murphy Management Stony Brook, N.Y. Town; Basketball, freshman. Charles Allan Nathan Mechanical Engineering N. Merrick, N.Y. Phi Delta Theta — secretary; Basketball, fresh- man; JV Wrestling. Frank Joseph McCarthy Engineering Mechanics Old Greenwich, Conn. Alpha Tau Omega; IFC; Howard Eckfeldt Society — president; Brown Key; Arnold Air Society — executive officer; AFROTC; New- man Club. Charles Franklin McClurg, Jr. Chemical Engineering Yard ley. Pa. McClinlic-Marshall A-l; AlChE; ACS; Persh- ing Rifles; Freshman and Sophomore Honors. William McCurdy, Jr. Metallurgical Engineering Lancaster, Pa. Alpha Sigma Phi — secretary; IFC; Marching and Concert Bands; Music Festival; Freshman Honors; Metallurgical Society. John Richard McHugh Industrial Engineering Scranton, Pa. Sigma Phi Epsilon; Arcadia; AIIC; Newman Club. John Bennett McMurtrie Industrial Engineering Milton, Pa. Alpha Sigma Phi — president, secretary ; Fresh- man Cabinet; Pi Mu Epsilon; Tau Beta Pi; Alpha Pi Mu — treasurer; AIIE — president; Deans List; Freshman, Sophomore Honors. William T. Meglaughlin Accounting Westfield, N.J. Delta Chi; Accounting Society. Willlam Joseph Memolo Civil Engineering Scranton, Pa. Lambda Chi Alpha — vice-president; ASCE. Eugene Mercy, Jr. Accounting West Orange, N.J. Pi Lambda Phi — treasurer, president; IFC — vice-president; IFC Judiciary — chairman; Broun and White — advertising Manager; Epitome — business manager, advertising man- ager; Pi Delta Epsilon — vice-president; Ac- counting Society — secretary-treasurer; Senior Class Memorial Gift Fund — chairman; Who ' s Who. Albert Samuel Miller Mechanical Engineering Allentown, Pa. Town: Town Council; Band. Lewis Marshall Miller Chemistry Allentown, Pa. Town: Town Council; Student Chemical So- ciety. David Harder Mitchell Mechanical Engineering Butler, Pa. Theta Chi — president, tre asurer; Senior Class — vice-president; IFC; Senior, Junior, Soph- omore Class Cabinets; Freshman Cabinet Ad- visor; Epitome — assistant managing editor; Tau Beta Pi; Pi Tau Sigma; Omicron Delta Kappa; Cyanide — vice-president; Advisory Committee to Lehigh University; Alpha Phi Omega; Freshman Honors; Deans List. Andrew Montano, Jr. Mechanical Engineering Hawthorne, N.J. Pi Kappa Alpha — treasurer, house manager; IFC; R.idio Club. Joseph Vincent Montville International Relations Paterson, N.J. Theta Kappa Phi — rushing chairman; IFC; Freshman Cabinet — president; Sophomore, Junior, Senior Cabinets; Arcadia; Pi Gamma Mu; Omicron Delta Kappa; Marching and Concert Bands; Collegians; IRC — president; Trustee Scholarship. Alfred Robert Moore Industrial Engineering Huntington, N.Y. Alpha Tau Omega — president; Sophomore Class Cabinet; IFC; Arcadia Associates — president; Cyanide; Omicron Delta Kappa; Track, varsity; Football, freshman; AIIE; Deans List. Darrell Roy Morrow, Jr. Physics Altoona, Pa. Town; Baseball, varsity; AIP. Silas Livingstone Morse, IV Metallurgical Engineering Akron, Ohio Gryphon: Mustard Cheese — secretary, vice- president; Deans List; Freshman Honors. Thomas Hockley Naylor Mechanical Engineering Baltimore, Md. Chi Phi — president; Lacrosse, freshman, var- sity; ASME. David R. Nevil Accounting Stroudsburg, Pa. Sigma Nu — treasurer; Football — varsity; Base- ball — varsity. Joel Alan Newman History Monsey, N.Y. Town; Brown and White: Phi Alpha Theta; Psi Chi; Psychology Club; Hillel Society. Edwin Shaffer Nickey Accounting Hanover, Pa. Sigma Phi — treasurer; Accounting Society. John Bedford Nilsson Electrical Engineering Montville, N.J. Delta Phi — president, rushing chairman, steward, pledgemaster ; AIEE; Flying Club; Alpha Phi Omega. Robert Carlton Noll Mechanical Engineering Fullerton, Pa. Town — secretary, vice-president; Town Coun- cil; Marching and Concert Bands. James Roy Oberholtzer Metallurgical Engineering Reading, Pa. McClintic-Marshall A- Metallurgical Society. Lee Ellis Oldershaw Electrical Engineering Moorestown, N.J. Taylor B; Track, freshman, varsity — captain; Cross-Country, freshman; Freshman Honors. Robert C. Olson Marketing Passaic, N.J. Theta Kappa Phi; Freshman and Sophomore Class Cabinets; Arcadia; Delta Omicron Theta; AIIE; American Marketing Associa- tion; WLRN; Newman Club; Ski Club; Williams Debate Prize. 388 Town. John J. Onnembo Kearny, N.J. Fred J. Past Chemical Engineering Coral Gables, Fla. Town: Brown and While — photography staff; AIChE; ACS; SCS; Hillel; Bowling Club; Photography Club; Bridge Club. G. Richard Patterson Engineering Physics Hanf ver, Pa. Theta Delia Chi — rushing chairman; Senior Class Cabinet; Band; Music Festival; WLRN. James Palmer Patton Marketing Red Bank, N.J. Chi Psi — secretary; IPC; Basketball, freshman, varsity; Brown Key — secretary-treasurer. William Walter Pcihoda Chemical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. Town: Town Council; AIChE; ACS; SCS. John Bevan Pearson, Jr. Metallurgical Engineering Harrisburg, Pa. Town: Rifle Team; Political Science Assembly — president, secretary; Flying Club; Camera Club Lachlan Cage Peeke Ciiil Engineering Hastings-on-Hudson, N.Y. Phi Sigma Kappa — house manager; Pershing Rifles. Brent Pendleton Marketing Bryn Athyn, Pa. Phi Delta Theta — rushing chairman, pledge- master; Arcadia; Football, varsity. John Edward Victor Pieski Government Dickson City, Pa. Gryphon: Phi Alpha Theta; Phi Beta Kappa; Political Science Ass.; Newman Club; Deans List; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Trustee Scholarships; Assistant Instructor. Rudolph Paul Polak Electrical Engineering Allentown, Pa. Town: Town Council, AIEE; IRE. Michael Pontician Ciiil Engineering Catasauqua, Pa. Town: Town Council, ASCE. Gene Monroe Pope Indtistrial Engin eering Louisville, Ky. Phi Delta Theta: Sophomore, Junior, Senior Honors; Glee Club; Chapel Choir; SAME; AIIE. Samuel Stephen Popky Management Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Pi Lambda Phi: Senior Class Cabinet; Swim- ming, freshman; IFC Wrestling Champion; Cheerleader; Brown Key. Charles Frederick Preller, Jr. Accounting Valley Stream, N.Y. Theta Kappa Phi — treasurer; Track, freshman, varsity; Accounting Society; Newman Club. Paul Francis Prestia Chemical Engineering Connellsville, Pa. Theta Delta Chi — steward; Arcadia; Chair- man Spring Houseparty 1958; Freshman, Sophomore, Junior, Senior Cabinets; Delta Omicron Theta — president; Omicron Delta Kappa — president; Cyanide — secretary; AIChE; SCS — president; Intercollegiate De- bating; Williams Intramural Debate Contest and Speech Prize. Joel Bennett Redler Accounting Cedarhurst, N.Y. Tau Delta Phi — president, treasurer; IFC; Senior Class Cabinet; Epitome — financial man- ager; Newtonian Society; Accounting Society; Hillel. Joseph W. Reed Accounting Fairfield, Conn. Sigma Phi Epsilon — treasurer; Alpha Kappa Psi. Neil Owen Reichard General Business Allentown, Pa. Theta Delta Chi: Football, freshman; Track, varsity, freshman; Flying Club. Paul Herbert Reimer, Jr. Ciiil Engineering FuUerton, Pa. Town: Town Council; Chi Epsilon; Marching and Concert Bands; ASCE. Walter Lynn Reller Industrial Engineering Ambler, Pa. Delta Sigma Phi: IFC; AIIE. Wilbert Joseph Richardson Metallurgical Engineering Almonesson, N.J. Taylor E: Metallurgical Society; Alpha Phi Omega. D. Allen Rickert Marketing Souderton, Pa. Taylor D: Marching and Concert Bands ; Brass Choir and Ensemble; Lambda Mu Sigma; WLRN. David Prescott Riedel Industrial Management Ridgewood, N.J. Pi Kappa Alpha: Photography Club; Ski Club; Flying Club. Roger S. Penske Marketing Shaker Heights, Ohio Phi Gamma Delta: IFC; Arcadia; Football, freshman; Lambda Mu Sigma; Sabre Society; Air Force Drill Team. S tephen Victor Pepper Engineering Physics Margate, N.J. Taylor D: Phi Eta Sigma — treasurer; Pi Mu Epsilon; Newtonian Society — president; Tau Beta Pi; AIP — president; Radio Club; Mus- tard and Cheese; Freshman Honors; Sopho- more Honors; Deans List. Howard David Perl mutter Chemistry Brooklyn, N.Y. Taylor D: Tennis, freshman; SCS; ACS; Po- litical Science Assembly. Robert Joseph Proday International Relations Allentown, Pa. Toitn. Gregory P. Purdy Engineering Mechanics Hingham, Mass. Taylor C. Charles Hoshall Rahe, II Elec. Eng. Eng. Phy. Emmaus, Pa. Town: Town Council; AIEE-IER — correspond- ing Secretary. Reuben Rice Rawls, Jr. Industrial Engineering Doylestown, Pa. Sigma Phi Epsilon: International Relations Club. John W. Rieke International Relations Packanack Lake, N.J. Theta Xi — president, vice-president; IFC; In- ternational Relations Club. Edward J. Rinalducci Psychology Portsmouth, N.H. Taylor B. Richard Malcolm Ringer Mechanical Engineering Slatington, Pa. Town: Tau Beta Pi; Pi Tau Sigma; ASME; Freshman and Sophomore Honors. Darwin John Rizzetto Electrical Engineering Allentown, Pa. Town: AIRE; AIEE. William Morton Pickslay, III Mechanical Engineering Los Altos, Cal. Lambda Chi Alpha: Rifle Team, varsity; ASME; Canterbury Club; Freshman, Sopho- more, Junior Honors. George John Rebhan, Jr. Accounting East Orange, N.J. Delta Chi — president, pledgemaster; Basket- ball, varsity, freshman; Canterbury Club. Arthur Waoing Roberts, III Psychology Greenwich, Conn. Phi Sigma Kappa: Glee Club; Sabre Society; Canterbury Club. 389 Donald Arthur Robesch Mechanical Eiighieering Bethpage, Pa. McClhitic-Marshutt B-2; ASME. Robert Raymond Robyns Government Union, N.J. AUCIiritic-Marshall. Michael D. Rockman Accounting Great Neck, N.Y. Pi Lambda Phi — secretary; Epitome: Lacrosse — varsity manager; Accounting Society; IFC, athletic committee. William Edward Rodgers Marketing Plainfield, N.J. Psi Upsilon — president, vice-president; Lamb- da Mu Sigma ; Campus Chest Committee. James Oswald Rohrbach Marketing Bethlehem, Pa. Town. Stephen D. Rohrer Accounting Philadelphia, Pa. McCtintic-Mar shall B-3; Accounting Society. Anthony Charles Rohrs General Business Westfield, N.J. McClintic-Marshall A-i Soccer, freshman; Ski Club. Theodore Carl Rojahn Engineering Physics York, Pa. Alpha Tau Omega — vice-president; Freshman, Sophomore, Junior, Senior Class Cabinets; Pi Tau Sigma; Pi Mu Epsilon; Newtonian So- ciety; Cyanide; Omicron Delta Kappa; Band — manager; Brass Choir; Chairman of Fall Houseparty; Freshman, Sophomore Honors; Deans List. James Donald Rooney, Jr. Accounting Nichols, Conn. McClintic-Marshall B-2 — secretary-treasurer; WLRN; Newman Club. Allan Richard Rosenberg History Florida, N.Y. Pi Lambda Phi — steward; Music Festival; Soccer, freshman, varsity; Baseball, freshman; Phi Alpha Theta. Myron Rosner Marketing Teaneck, N.J. Touii: Taylor C — vice-president; Lambda Mu Sigma; Hillel — vice-president. Frank Rudes Ciiil Engineering Lynbrook, N.Y. Pi Lambda Phi: Track, freshman, varsity; ASCE; SAME; WLRN; Pershing Rifles, Max Wilson Rush Accounting Washington, N.J. Phi Gamma Delta — treasurer; Junior Class Cabinet; Football, freshman; Baseball, varsity; Accounting Society — president; Brown Key. George Charles Russell History Union, N.J. Price Hall — president; RHC — secretary. John M. St. Clair Metallurgical Engineering Pittsburgh, Pa. Alpha Chi Rho. Richard Donald Santoro Accounting Bethlehem. Pa. Beta Theta Pi: Wrestling, varsity, captain. Ronald Scattergood Engineering Mechanics Philadelphia, Pa. McClintic-Marshall B-2; Eckfeldt Society; AIME; Deans List. Francis William Schaeffer Management Easton. Pa. Delta Tau Delta: Varsity Football; Varsity Wrestling. Martin Frederick Schaffer Education Allentown. Pa. Toun. Stephen Noel Schaffer Accounting Stamford, Conn. Sigma Alpha Mu — house manager; Football, freshman. Gilbert Allan Schantz Marketing Chatham, N.J. McClintic-Marshall A: RHC; Glee Club; Chapel Choir — president; Lambda Mu Sigma; Christian Council; Interfaith Council; Acolyte Guild. Carl Frederick Schier, III Government Baltimore, Md. Phi Gamma Delta — president ; Freshman Class — vice-president ; Sophomore, Junior, Senior Class President; IFC — president; Epitome — managing editor, editor; Student Life Com- mittee; Cyanide — president; Omicron Delta Kappa; Pershing Rifles; Sophomore Honors; Deans List; Honors Program. Alan W. Schmidt Mechanical Engineering Rumson, N.J. Town; ASME; Ski Club. Joseph Francis Schmidt, Jr. Mechanical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. Town: Rifle Team, freshman, varsity. Allan Edward Schneck Civil Engineering Allentown, Pa. Town: Town Council — president, vice-pres- ident; Chi Epsilon — secretary; Baseball, fresh- man; ASCE; Arcadia; Houseparty Judiciary Committee; Alpha Lambda Omega. Allan Schneider Elec. Eng. Eng. Phys. Union, N.J. Kappa Alpha: Senior Class Cabinet; New- tonian Society; Band; IRE; Alpha Phi Omega; Westminster Fellowship. Paul Frederick Schock Marketing Philadelphia. Pa. Town: Brown and White — staflf writer; Lambda Mu Sigma. Sterling James Schoonover Ciiil Engineering East Stroudsburg, Pa. Taylor A: Baseball, freshman; Sabre Society; Ski Club. Peter Jacob Schorer English Valhalla, N.Y. Town: Mustard and Cheese; Christmas City Six — leader; Freshman Honors. Robert Thomas Schrader General Busintss Bethlehem, Pa. Town: Wrestling, freshman. JV. Hugo B. Schwandt Engineering Physics Coatesville, Pa. McClintic-Marshall B-.i — vice-president; New- tonian Society; Pi Mu Epsilon — treasurer; AIP. Robert Edward Schwartz Government Port Chester, N.Y. McClintic-Marshall A- ; Brown and White: Phi Alpha Theta; Newman Club; Political Science Assembly; Freshman Honors; Sopho- more Honors; Deans List. Donald Clarence Seagreaves Accounting Allentown, Pa. McClintic-Marshall A- Glee Club; Chapel Choir. David Elvin Seifert Geophysics Bethlehem, Pa. Town: Town Council; AIME; Howard Eck- feldt Society. Louis Seitler Business Mount Vernon, N.Y. Tau Delta Phi — treasurer; Newtonian Society; WLRN. Robert Humphrey Shabaker Chemical Engineering Media, Pa. Kappa Alpha — president, rushing chairman; IFC; Sophomore Cabinet; Phi Eta Sigma — president; Cyanide; Pi Mu Epsilon; New- tonian Society; AIChE; Student Chemical So- ciety; Robert W. Blake Memorial Prize; Alpha A. Diefenderfer Award; Freshman, Sophomore Honors. 390 Kenneth Richard Shaner Mechjnn d Engineerip! Pottstown, Pa. Ch: Phi — secretary; Freshman Cabinet; Track, freshman, varsity; Cross-Country, freshman, varsity. Jesse Boucher Shaw, Jr. Mechanical Engineering Haddonfield, N.J. Sigma Phi — steward; Class Cabinet; Scabbard and Blade — treasurer; Track — varsity; SAME. William Ellison Smith Metallurgical Engineering Pittsburgh, Pa. Kappa Sigma — steward, house manager; New- tonian Society; Lacrosse, freshman; ASM; Westminster Fellowship. WiLMER Robert Smith Mechanical Engineering Hatfield, Pa. Delta Phi — vice-president, secretary; IFC; ASME. Charles Alexander Stitt Metallurgical Engineering Glenshaw, Pa. McClintic-Marshall A-l Rifle Team; Hockey, freshman; Inter-Varsity Christian Fellow- ship — president; Pershing Rifles; Westminster Fellowship. Willlam Joseph Stolnacker Metallurgical Engineering Media, Pa. McClintic-Marshall A- ASM. Frank Joseph Shea General Business Summit, N.J. Theta Kappa Phi — vice-president; Wrestling, varsity; Newman Club. William Watterston Sheppard, Jr. International Relations New Rochelle, N.Y. Alpha Chi Rho — secretary; International Re- lations Club; Newman Club. Colin Edward Snyder Mechanical Engineering AUentown. Pa. Town; Town Council; ASME. Francis Joseph Sobyak Chemical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. Town: Town Council; AIChE — president; ACS; SCS; Alpha Lambda Omega; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Deans List. Howard Stanley Stoney, Jr. Marketing Chagrin Falls, Ohio Lambda Chi Alpha — rushing chairman; Base- ball, freshman, varsity; Football, freshman, varsity; Marketing Society. Kent Leon Straat Psychology Norwalk, Conn. Chi Phi: Lacrosse, freshman; Psychology Club; Ski Club; Newman Club; Interfaith Council. Robert J. Sherman Business Hazleton. Pa. Tau Delta Phi: Accounting Society; Hillel. Richard Milton Sigley, Jr. Electrical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. Town: Town Council; Tau Beta Pi; Eta Kappa Nu — treasurer; Rifle Team — manager; AIEE; Alpha Lambda Omega — secretary-treasurer; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Deans List. Mark Leonard Silverman Marketing Great Neck, N.Y. Pi Lambda Phi — rushing chairman; Track, varsity. Edward Stuart Singer Engineering Physics Englewood Cliffs, N.J. McClintic-Marshall B-2; AIP. Ralph M. Singer Biology Hillside, N.J. Town: Epitome: Psi Chi; RW Hall Pre-Medi- cal Society — vice-president, secretary; Psy- chology Club; WLRN; Hillel. Mitchell Eli Sisle Electrical Engineering AUentown, Pa. Toun; Town Council; Pi Mu Epsilon; AIEE — treasurer; Deans List. Edward Matthew Slater Education Great Neck, N.Y. Sigma Alpha Mu — president, treasurer; IFC; Wrestling, freshman, JV. varsity; Hillel. John Daniel Smiley Mathematics and ME Fairless Hills, Pa. Theta Delta Ci — secretary; IFC; ASME. Walter Robert Smith Chemical Engineering South River, N.J. Pi Kappa Alpha — pledgemaster; ACS. Thomas Peter Sorokas Chemical Engineering Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Taylor A — vice-president; Newtonian Society; AIChE; Sabre Society — executive officer. Anthony Phillip Sousa Citil Engineering West Catasauqua, Pa. Alpha Chi Rho — president; IFC; Chi Epsilon — treasurer; Scabbard and Blade; Baseball, freshman; ASCE; Canterbury Club. Richard Roberts Spillman Mechanical Engineering Wayne, Pa. Kappa Alpha — rushing chairman, vice-presi- dent; Arcadia Associates — vice-president; AFROTC Rifle Team. Richard Melching Staley Elec. Eng. Eng. Phy. York, Pa. Town: Band. Thomas William Standeven Marketing East Aurora, N.Y. McClintic-Marshall A-l — secretary-treasurer; Lambda Mu Sigma; Band. Paul F. Stang Accounting Kingston, N.Y. Town: Accounting Society; Political Science Club. John Charles Stanley Marketing Glen Rock, N.J. Phi Gamma Delta: Scabbard and Blade; Foot- ball, freshman, varsity; Marketing Society; Inter- Varsity Christian Fellowship. J. Clark Steinman Marketing Pittsburgh, Pa. Chi Psi: Arcadia Associates; IFC; Class Ob- inets, freshman, junior, senior; Soccer, fresh- man, varsity; Brown Key Society; Westmin- ster Fellowship. John George Stricker Mechanical Engineering Ramsey, N.J. Theta Xi — steward; IFC; Track, freshman; varsity; ASME. Stephen E. Strickman Industrial Engineering Hicksville, N.Y. Tau Delta Phi — president, vice-president; IFC; Brown and White: AIIE; Bowling Club. Bernard Wollman Sultan Citil Engineering Bronxville, N.Y. Tau Delta P — steward ; ASCE; Pershing Rifles. Andris Suna Engineering Physics Broomall, Pa. Town: Epitome — literary editor; Phi Eta Sigma; Tau Beta Pi; Pi Mu Epsilon— secre- tary; AIP; Deans List; Freshman, Sophomore Honors; Tau Beta Pi Prize. David Glenn Swain Education G ' e R ' J- Town: Christian Fellowship — secretary. Richard Sheldon Sweet Ciiil Engineering Brooklyn, N.Y. McClintic-Marshall B-1; ASCE; Hillel. James Bennett Swenson Accounting Wood Acres, Md. Delta Tau Df .i— treasurer, pledge trainer; Class Cabinets; Alpha Kappa Psi— president; Cyanide; Football— varsity manager; Account- ing Society; Freshman Honors; Deans List; Price Waterhouse Foundation Grant. Robert Warren Swingle Mechanical Engineering Scranton, Pa. Theta Xi — vice-president; Pi Tau Sigma— vice-president; ASME — president; Pershing Rifles; Freshman Honors. 391 Donald Lee Talhelm Electrical Engineering Williamstown, Pa. Town; Phi Eta Sigma; Eta Kappa Nu — vice- president; Tau Beta Pi — president; AIEE; IRE; Freshman, Sophomore EE Prizes; Fresh- man, Sophomore Honors; Deans List. John Carl Tamulis Mechanical Engineering Edwardsville, Pa. Gryphon; Tau Beta Pi; Pi Tau Sigma; Base- ball, freshman; Freshman. Sophomore Honors; Deans List; Dravo Scholarship. Jerard Edward Tanner English Mt. Kisco, X.Y. Pit Upsilon — vice-president; Hockey. Daniel P. Tanzman Metallurgical Engineering Far Rockaway, N.Y. Toun: ASM; Bowling Club; Chess Club. Carl Terpack Electrical Engineering Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Taylor A: Wrestling, freshman. Stephen Bernard Uhncy Finance Bethlehem, Pa. Town: Town Council; Glee Club; Newman Club. Paul Ernest Umbach Elec. Eng. Eng. Phy. Johnstown, Pa. Town: Eta Kappa Nu — president; Tau Beta Pi — secretary; AIEE; IRE; Freshman, Sopho- more Honors; Deans List. Albert C. Van Mourick Chemical Engineering Stony Point, N.Y. Theta XI. Joseph Andrew Varilla Journalism Freeland, Pa. Sigma Nu : Arcadia Associates — secretary ; Freshman Cabinet; Broun and While — editor- in-chief, news editor, sports editor; Epitome — sports editor; Phi Eta Sigma; Cyanide; Pi Delta Epsilon; Omicron Delta Kappa; New- man Club; Deans List; Freshman Honors; Washington Semester; Senior Class Gift Com- mittee — captain. Charles Levi Walton, Jr. Civil Engineering Moorestown, N.J. Delta Sigma Phi: Freshman Cabinet ; Chi Ep- silon; ASCE — treasurer; Pershing Rifles; Sophomore Honors. Stephen Anthony Walton, Jr. Chemical Engineering Erlton, N.J. Alpha Tau Omega — treasurer; Sophomore, Junior, Senior Class Treasurer; Cyanide; Omicron Delta Kappa — treasurer; Newtonian Society; Pi Mu Epsilon; Band; Orchestra; Brass Choir; Student Band Director; SCS; AIChE; Alpha Phi Omega; Campus Chest — secretary ' ; SCL Committee; Freshman Honors. Robert Prosser Wardell Marketing Blasdell, N.Y. Alpha Chi Rho — secretary, vice-president; Lacrosse, freshman, varsity — captain; Football, freshman; Lambda Mu Sigma; Ski Club. Arthur Gordon Warden, Jr. Accounting South Orange, N.J. Sigma Chi — treasurer; Track, freshman, var- sity; Newman Club — treasurer. Robert Joseph Teufel, Jr. Journalism Allentown, Pa. Theta Kappa Phi: Senior Cabinet; IFC; Broun and White — news editor, managing editor; Pi Delta Epsilon — secretary; Fencing, varsity; Newman Club. LwiN Thein Electrical Engineering Rangoon, Burma Price Hall: AIEE; Chess Club, Cosmopolitan Club. Peter Alan Thomas Mechanical Engineering Allentown, Pa. Taylor D: Track, freshman, varsity; ASME. Richard Edmond Topping History Easton. Pa. McClinlic-Marshall B-2; RHC— president; Ar- cadia; Chairman of Campus Chest; Ph i Alpha Theta — president; Houseparty Judiciary Com- mittee; Deans List; Sophomore Honors; Wil- liams Essay Prize. Lawrence Totton International Relations Greenville, N.J. McClintic-Marshall A- . Douglas Dunbar Trotter, Jr. Government Allentown, Pa. Town; Town Council; Cosmopolitan Club; German Club; Political Science Assembly. Ray Wendel Turner Mechanical Engineering Forty Fort, Pa. Toun. Ronald Heller Vaughn Metallurgical Engineering North Hills, Pa. Theta Delta Chi — steward, pledgemaster; Sophomore Cabinet; Chairman Houseparty Judiciary; IFC — secretary; Brown Key Society; Wrestling, freshman, varsity; Metallurgy Society. William Victor Vetovitz Finance Nazareth, Pa. Toun: Town Council; Lambda Mu Sigma; Newman Club. Charles William Vogt Mechanical Engineering Freeport, N.Y. Delta Tau Delta — vice-president, secretary; Lacrosse, freshman, varsity; ASME. David Edward Waldron Chemical Engineering Rutherford, N.J. Umhda Chi Alpha: AIChE; ACS. William Taulane Walker Electrical Engineering Philadelphia, Pa. Delta Sigma Phi: AIEE. Donald Martin Walsh Mechanical Engineering Maywood, N.J. McClintic-Marshall B-2; ASME; SAME. Arthur Ernest Waltking Chemistry Queens Village, N.Y. McClintic-Marshall B-2; Track, freshman; SCS ; ACS ; Sabre Society. William Taylor Washburn Geophysics Pittsburgh, Pa. Phi Delta Theta — steward, rushing chairman; IFC: Dravo — president; Vice-President of Senior Class; Arcadia Associates; Cyanide; Sabre Society; Arnold Air Society — com- mander; AFROTC Drill Team. Don M. Weaver Metallurgical Engineering DuBois, Pa. Alpha Chi Rho: IFC; Glee Club; Golf- varsity. David Allyn Webb Industrial Engineering Montauk, N.Y. Delta Upsilon — treasurer, rushing chairman; Arcadia Associates — president; IFC; Class Cabinet; Cyanide; Omicron Delta Kappa; Track, freshman, varsity; AIIE; Westminster Fellowship. Donald D. Weber Accounting Kingston, Pa. Town. Peter Weisberg .Marketing South Orange, N.J. Sigma Phi. James Stuart Weisberg Accounting Laurence. N.Y. Pi Lambda Phi — vice-president, alumni secre- tary; Arcadia; Freshman, Junior, Senior Class Cabinets; HP Band Committee Chairman; Brown and Vf ' hite: Epitome — photography edi- tor; Pi Delta Epsilon — treasurer; HiUel; Camera Club; Board of Publications. 392 Karl Everett Weiss, Jr. Internaiionat Relalions Arlington, Mass. Phi Sigma Kappa — vice-president; president; Glee Club — manager. Roger ALax Weiss Industrial Engineering Springfield, X.J. Theta Chi; Broun and While; Scabbard and Blade — secretary; Cyanide; Tennis, freshman, varsit)-; AlIE; SAME; Christian Council — secretary; Freshman Honors; Sons of Ameri- can Revolution Medal. At ' OOD Lee Welker Citil Engineering Shamokin, Pa. Alpha Sigma Phi; ASCE. JOESEPH M. WeNZEL Marketing Yonkers, X.Y. Sigma Nu; Football, varsity. Donald Earl Wilson Chemical Engineering Rock Island, 111. Theta Delta Chi — treasurer; Arcadia Associ- ates — secretary; Senior Cabinet; Epitome — literary editor; Cyanide — treasurer; Track, var- sity-; ACS; Chairman HP Decorations and Disciplinan- Committee; Westminster Fellow- ship; Freshman Honors. Robert Clair Winans Citil Engineering Shickshinny, Pa. Taylor A. David Arthur Wismer, Jr. Mechanical Engineering Phillipsburg, N.J. Gryphon — secretary; Arcadia Associates; New- tonian Society; Cut and Thrust — secretar) ' - treasurer; Band Music Festival; Track, fresh- man, varsit) ' ; ASME; Fencing, varsity, captain; HP Judiciary Committee; Cyanide. Robert B. Woerhide Finance Mount Carmel, Conn. Alpha Sigma Phi. William Yandrasitz Accounting Stiles, Pa. Town. Robert D. Yates Management Maywood, N.J. Chi Pii. Ernest Samuel Young English Nanticoke, Pa. Leonard Hall — secretary; Arcadia; WLRN; Christian Council — secretary-treasurer; Mus- tard and Cheese; Canterbury Club. VC ' . Robert Zeigler Mechanical Engineering Pottstown, Pa. Town; Cross-Country, freshman, varsity; Track, freshman; ASME. Allan Judson Werft Mechanical Engineering Uniontown, Pa. Alpha Tau Omega — pledge trainer; Lacrosse, freshman, varsit -; ASME. John Gilbert Woerner .Mechanical Engineering Saddle Brook, N.J. Delta Tau Delta; ASME. Norman Noah Zelenko Sociology and Education Forest Hills, N.Y. Pi Lambda Phi; Cosmopolitan Club — presi- dent; Basketball, varsitv; Varsity L Club; Hillel. William S. Werner Electrical Engineering Forn ' Fort, Pa. Theta Chi; Sophomore, Junior. Senior Class Cabmets; Lacrosse, varsity; AIEE; APO. Willlam Stanley Wolfe Elec. Eng. Eng. Phy. Washington, N.J. Delta Vpstlon — treasurer, president; Class Cabinet; IFC; Cvanide; Eta Kappa Nu; Glee Club; AIEE: IRE. Robert S. Zenorini Marketing Palisade, N.J. Phi Sigma Kappa — treasurer; Lambda Mu Sigma; Sabre Society — commander. John Paul Wetterau Industrial Engineering Mountain Lakes, N.J. McClintic-Marshall A-2 Town Council; Newtonian Society; Football — varsit} ' man- ager, freshman — manager; AIChE; AIIE; Can- terbun ' Club. Walter Whitefield, Jr. Accounting Orange, N.J. Town. Edwin R. Wilkinson Industrial Engineering Willow Grove, Pa. Alpha Tau Omega; Arnold Air Society; Music Festival; ASCE; AIIE; Newman Club; Sabre Society. David John Willlams Chemical Engineering ' Williamsport, Pa. Pi Kappa Alpha; Alpha Phi Omega — vice- president, president; Freshman Honors. Edward G. VCtlliams Engineering Physics Hasbrouck Heights, N.J. Sigma Phi Epsilon. Frederick Paul VColfert .Management Warren, Ohio Alpha Tau Omega: Brown Key Society; Music Festival; Basketball, freshman; ASCE; AMA; Ski Club; Sailing Club. Jay Henry Wolkowisky Mechanical Engineering Jersey City, N.J. Town; Newtonian Societ ' ; Rifle Team; ASME; Hillel. Paul Austin Worth Electrical Engineering Bethlehem, Pa. Lambda Cht Alpha; AIEE; IRE. Clarence E. Wright Elec. Eng. Eng. Phy. Yardley, Pa. Alpha Tau Omega; Arcadia — president; WLRN — music and program director; Pi Delta Epsilon; AIP; AIEE; IRE. Frank E. Yandrasits English Nazareth, Pa. Town; Town Council — treasurer; Newman Club; Campus Chest — secretary; Deans List; Sophomore Honors; Williams Prize in Eng- lish Composition, first prize. Roger Willlam Zerweck Marketing Summit, N.J. McClintic-Marshall B-2 — treasurer; Senior Cabinet; Brown and White — sports editor; Epitome — sports editor; Marketing Society; Campus Chest; HP Judiciary Committee. Ronald Norman Ziegler Electrical Engineering Allentown, Pa. Town; Delta Omicron Theta — secretary; AIEE; IRE; Mustard and Cheese; Williams Debating Contest Prize; Amateur Radio So- ciety; Radio Workshop. Peter Francis Zimmer Engineering Mechanics Union, N.J. Alpha Tau Omega — steward, house manager; Scabbard and Blade; Howard Eckfeldt Society; ASME; SAME; Newman Club. Arthur Charles Zinck, Jr. Metallurgical Engineering Wayne, N.J. McClintic-Marshall A; WLRN; Glee Club; ASC; Sabre Society; Mustard and Cheese. 393 Epitome. . . the year ' s story in words and pictures Editor-in-Clnef RICHARD K. BERNARD BiLsmess Manager EUGENE MERCY, JR. EDITORIAL STAFF Managiug Editor Edward M. deHart. Jr. STAFF: Richard E. Shulman Randolph L. Williams Donald W. Barney Senior Editor George W. Karr, Jr. STAFF: Michael J. McNamara Scheduling Editor Philip C. Mezey Indentification Editor Richard R. Husser STAFF: Robert A. Grinchuk William E. Bonnell Charles F. Miller III George R. Keiser Photography Editor Robert D. Stebbins STAFF: Richard L. Knoebel Harold B. Barnes Literary Editor Robert J. Paternoster STAFF: Ronald Freeman Henry G. Grabowski Richard S. Granat Robert P. Haigh Thomas H. Henry, Jr. Joseph F. Klein Daniel L. Klesken Robert D. Lindquist Ralph J. McKenna George U. Paulding III Arnold D. Roth Donald M. Selesko Sports Editor Joseph A. Varilla STAFF: Roger W. Zerweck Art Editor Charles J. Cox Financial Manager Stephen L. Solomon Advertising Manager Stephen W. Helbraun STAFF: Thomas R. Fuld Marc D. Lister Richard R. Husser Christmas Sales Manager Michael D. Rockman Administrative Manager Ira L. Friedman BUSINESS STAFF Sales Manager Arthur C. Brooks STAFF: Robert P. Gunst Michael J. McNamara James S. Weisberg Abram L. Groff Robert S. Draper Michael D. Rockman The final stage in yearbook production, checking page proofs, is a welcome chore for these EPITOME staff members. BUSINESS STAFF First row: Helbraun, Advertising Manager; Brooks, Sales Manager; Mercy, Business Man- ager; Friedman, Administratite Editor. Second Rou-: Groff, Solomon, Financial Manager; Fuld. Third rou: Draper. McNamara, Husser. EDITORIAL STAFF First row: Cox, Mezey, Scheduling Editor: deHart, Managing Editor; Bernard, Editor; Karr, Senior Editor: Paternoster, Literary Editor: Shulman. Second row: McKenna, Klesken, Haigh, Klein, Steinmark, Ades. Third row: Williams, Granat, Selesko, Husser, Identification Editor; Paulding, Stebbins. 395 Accounting Faculty 62 Accounting Society 66 Acknowledgments 3 6 Acolytes Guild 168 Administration 21 Advertising 351 AFROTC Faculty 53 Alpha Chi Rho 186 Alpha Epsilon Delta .... 44 Alpha Kappa Psi 65 Alpha Lambda Omega .... 149 Alpha Phi Omega 147 Alpha Pi Mu -80 Alpha Sigma Phi 188 Alpha Tau Omega 190 Air Force Crack Drill Team . 57 Air Force Rifle Team .... 56 American Institute of Chemical Engineers 83 American Institute of Electrical En- gineers and Institute of Radio Engineers 82 American Institute of Industrial Engineers 83 American Institute of Physics . . 48 American Society of Civil Engineers 82 American Society of Mechanical Engineers 84 Arcadia 133 Arcadia Associates 133 Arnold Air Society . . . . 55 Baseball 330 Basketball 312 Beta Gamma Sigma .... 64 Beta Theta Pi 192 Biology Faculty 34 Board of Publications . . . .134 Brass Choir 174 Brass Ensemble 175 Brown Key Society . . . .334 Brown and White 154 Canterbury Club 167 Chapel Choir 176 Chemical Engineering Faculty . . 77 Chemistry Faculty 35 Chi Epsilon 80 Chi Phi 194 Chi Psi 196 Christian Council 167 Christian Fellowship .... 168 Civil Engineering Faculty ... 5 Classical Languages Faculty . . 35 Class of 1962 136 Class of 1961 138 Class of 1960 140 Class of 1959 142 Clifl Clefs 175 Collegians 173 Cross Country 299 Cyanide 145 Dames Club 47 Dedication 4 Delta Chi 198 Delta Omicron Theta .... 46 Delta Phi 200 Delta Sigma Phi 202 Index Delta Tau Delta 204 Delta Upsilon 206 Discipline Committee . . . .132 Dravo House 251 Dravo A-1, A-2 252 Dravo B-1, B-2 253 Dravo C-1, C-2 254 Dravo D-1, D-2 255 Drinker House 256 Drinker 1, 2-A 258 Drinker 2-B, 3-A 259 Drinker 3-B, 4 260 Economics and Sociology Faculty . 63 Education Faculty 34 Electrical Engineering Faculty . . 72 English Faculty 36 Epitome 156 Epitome Staff 395 Eta Kappa Nu 81 Fencing 327 Finance Faculty 62 Fine Arts Faculty 38 Fight Night 337 Flymg Club 324 Football 284 Geology Faculty 38 German Faculty 38 Glee Club 174 Golf 325 Gryphons 277 Health Center 28 Hillel Society 166 History and Government Faculty . 39 Hockey 321 Howard Eckfeldt Society ... 85 Industrial Engineering Faculty . . 3 Institute of Research .... 29 Interfaith Council 165 Interfraternity Council . . . .184 International Relations Faculty . . 39 Intramurals 335 Kappa Alpha 208 Kappa Sigma 210 Lacrosse 332 Lambda Chi Alpha . . . .212 Lambda Mu Sigma .... 65 Leonard Hall 267 Lutheran Student Fellowship . . 169 M M lA, 2A 274 M M 3A, IB 275 M M 2B, 3B 276 Marching Band 172 Mathematics Faculty .... 37 McClintic-Marshall 2 ' 2 Mechanical Engineering Faculty . 3 Mechanics Faculty 72 Metallurgical Engineering Faculty . 78 Metallurgical Society .... 85 Methodist Student Fellowship . 168 Memoriam 1 Mining Engineering Faculty . . 4 Music Faculty 41 Mustard and Cheese .... 177 Newman Club 166 Omicron Delta Kappa . .144 Pershing Rifles 57 Printed and Serviced by The Kutzloun Publishing Co. Kutztoifn, Pii. Phi Alpha Theta 44 Phi Beta Kappa 42 Phi Delta Theta 214 Phi Eta Sigma 43 Phi Gamma Delta 216 Philosophy Faculty 41 Phi Sigma Kappa 218 Physical Education Faculty . . 283 Physics Faculty 40 Pi Deha Epsilon 160 Pi Gamma Mu 49 Pi Kappa Alpha 220 Pi Lambda Phi 222 Pi Mu Epsilon 45 Pi Tau Sigma 81 Price Hall 261 Psi Upsilon 224 Psychology Faculty .... 37 Public Relations 27 R. W. Hall Society .... 48 Religion Faculty 39 Religious Life Committee . . . 165 Residence Halls Council . . . 248 Richards House 262 Richards 1, 2-A 264 Richards 2-B, 3-A 265 Richards 3-B, 4 266 Rifle Team 326 Romance Languages Faculty . . 36 ROTC Drill Team . . . . . 54 ROTC Faculty 53 Sailing Club 300 Scabbard and Blade .... 56 Seniors 88 Senior Directory 380 Sigma Alpha Mu 226 Sigma Chi 228 Sigma Nu 230 Sigma Phi 232 Sigma Phi Epsilon . . . .234 Ski Club 320 Soccer 298 Society of American Military Engineers 55 Student Activities Committee . . 135 Student Chemical Society ... 48 Student Concert-Lectures Committee 134 Student Life Committee . . .135 Swimming 322 Tau Beta Pi 79 Tau Delta Phi 236 Taylor Hall 268 Taylor A 269 Taylor B, C 270 Taylor D, E 271 Tennis 333 Theta Chi 238 Theta Delta Chi 240 Theta Kappa Phi 242 Theta Xi 244 Town Council 148 Track 328 University Center Committtee . . 135 Westminster Fellowship . . . 169 Whos Who 146 WLRN 158 Wrestling 302 -i r«- ♦ , ! f T ' mi-mm : k : : im - :■S ' - ' !! !. -  % L ' ' ' u. ■w ' w ' H: H.. -v - ' ,.«B  . i« 5S Sj -iiii i i iii i wwin i |iiii !a« ' '
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.